rev, a, wallace, d. d., editor. ocean grove, n. j., saturday, … · 2014-04-01 · —christian at...

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REV, A, W ALLACE, D. D., Editor. OCEAN GROVE, N. J., SATURDAY, MAY 21, 1892. yOL. XVIII. No. 21. A Touch from tho Altar. Oh ! for a touch from tho altar, a touch of a living • • . co a l, ' ~ . .... Burning tho dross that is dimming the light of a ttembling soul, , Trembling, to speak for the Masters fearing bis name to extol; • * Oh! for a touch from the altar, tlmt touch, that alone mnk'cs w h o l e ; •’ • often, wo'vO caught liko the; prophet, sweet .glimpses of blessed Light; . Often, liko him wo havo murmured, ‘‘ Undone’! \ undone! at tho sight; •Naked, unrighteous, unfit altogether to. work for right Plainly wo saw hi tlio vision, our way, not his*, our delight, . • • .-> • . . ‘ • Only a coat from tiie altar, can purge oil the sin away 1 Only a touch from the Master, can gh'e the strength for the day,1 Only continual contact, today, to-morrow, for aje! .- • • ; Touched,- yea,, retouched every moment, each step nil along our way. , ' Then, when his voice is repeating, " ObI whou\ shall 1 send to bo Mc&sengcrs to the weary, to set sonie sh'i; captive' f r c c ‘.,', . . Gladly, wltii heart all aflame, yet so. humbly, on . bended knee '• Quickly wo’11 answer the Master, “ Send me, bere; . am I, send m o/’ - n c m<i‘C>ti(itutn. ; “ Saved'to Sin No More,” The Son of God c'nmo*1nti> into tho • worhl.to.be culled the Saviour of-sinners. , His name was to. be colled Jesua, because he should save his people.from their sins. Ho wlllsave them not only from the ties, ert of tlieir sins, but also from all. their power and pollution." To this end lie has opened for. them a fountain for sin and for uncleanness in which they may .better their sin-polluted souls anti have all their impurity washed away. His blood Is cleansing blood and cleanses from all sin. . “ He loved the Church, and gave himself for it, that he might sanctify and cleanso it, and that ho might present it to himself a' glorious Church, not* having- sp6t or ‘ wrinkle or any such tiling, but-that it should bo holy and without blemish.’* He ; will finally, present each and .every mem- ber of It faultless before the presence of tho divine glory with exceeding joy. It is the peculiar working of the Holy Spirit, whoso agency -the’ Saviour has procured, nnd whom lie sends into .tiie.’world to renew and sanctify the heart. At Its re- generation be begins this work, shedding abroad in it the love of. God, and ho never leaves it until he has brought it. to perfec- tion, making tiie believer meet to bo a partaker of the inheritance of the saints in light. Millions already in heaven have thus been made meetto .be partakers of that inheritance. Millions now upon tiie earth are.beiog made meet to be partakers of it, and so will it bo with respect to mil- lions more in the ages to come. The re- deemed .Church will consist of a great multitude which no man can number, all of whom shall have, washed their robes and have made them white in tho blood of • tbo Lamb. <\ .'Nor shall, thoso robes ever-be defiled again. Not one of that, great'compauy shall ever fall from his. exalted state of holiness and. of happiness., No more shall they bo tempted to sin. No more.shall they havo any bias to evil. No more shall they have any Inclination to depart from God. Their bias and inclination shall bo. wholly and ever God ward. They shall, be kept.by the power and grace of God’urito . everlasting salvation.: .. . “ Dear, dying Lamb, thy precious blood Shall never, lose its power, • Till all the. ransomed Church of God ; iio saved, to niu no more.” ’ . — Christian at Work. The Divine Emancipator, MY MUS. FANNIE II. CAltU. The Scriptures which explicitly (TeclHro that Christ came to open the prison doors, to undo every yoko, to -let the oppressed go free, &c., received graphic illustra- tions in a recent meeting of the .Philadel- phia general Methodist Episcopal alli- ance. : Whilst all who test!/led, witnessed to the power of Christ to deliver, it so . happened that there were several men present, who were formerly devoted sub. jects of King Alcohol, and in tholr expe- rience most emphatically declared, not only to their complete emancipation from bondage to.strong drink, but that s» radi- cal a change had been effected,, that they were truly now creatures In Christ Jesus. Much has been written and said recently concerning the Keely bi-cklorido of gold cure, and many of tbo -wretched victims of strong drink have applied to it for (Jellv- Oranco. -God forbid that any word of ours should oven seem to imply a dispar- agement of all or sundry of the so-called cures, for what in polite, phraseology Is called “ dipsomania,Mbut what plain peo- ple call by the less1 emphonlous namo.of drunkenness. But as We listened to tho clear, strong testimonies given at tiie above meeting, which weje but a few out . of hundreds, that have c /u;e tinder Our im- ediate. notice. we could not but rejoice! that there;was a sure and sovereign rerrie- j dy to all wlio would meet the conditions; Ono man said that, ten years ago in this city,’there was one .of..the most wretched and forlorn victims, of rum to •be found upon tho face of the earth.*’ Anyone; who would have ventured the assertion that there was hope for him/ would have been considered a fit subject for a- lunatic .asy- lum. And yet the 1‘les-jed Shepherd, through the instrumentality of .a devoted White Rlbboner, had found him. . To use his very expressive .summary™for. rags Ho gave him* comfortable raiment; fur husks, bread;. for -a v/igrant- life JI e* gave steady* employment; for separation- from wife and child, lie brought about a blessed reunion.; for bondage to appetite, with all the misery resulting.'therefrom, He gave not only. • perfect emancipation, ■ hut so siiet} abroad the love of God in his heart ■that the logical outcome was . that ever since, he has.been on the alert to tell the “ blessed. Story,” -, having traveled even thousands of miles, in the execution of the same.* . ,- , V- Vour correspondent knows the man from the’time of conversion to the pi’eserit, and can-testify to tho truthfulness of the same. Several others witnessed' most em- phatically upon the same, line; and al- though from'a scientific standpoint,' deliv- erance from the power, of Strong drink, after the appetite has controlled a.man for. years, seems not only an absurdity hut an impossibility, yet, according to the princi- ple that one well attested fact is worth a ton of theory, so to speak, and.as tho wri- ter has known scores of men-whose, life .was such that, right at their own door, atnoug those with whom they were touch- ing elbows every day, their-word would n'eyer. bo questioned, and ‘yet who -had' been for years the veriest slaves of apper tlte, what conclusion can she come .to, but that the Jesus of- Nazareth who cleansed the leper, who ^exorcised the demons, tfcc<, “ is the very same Jesus, the wonder-work- ing Jesus,Mand that the only reason* we do not see on every side evidences of the power which marked his life, whilst in the bpdy js our unbelief. ' * • '. Drunkenness. That the- man is not born,. says Sam Small, • who Is o f. his own .strength able to fight the terrible passions and ap- petites of debauchery. The man who can by his-own resolution reassert.-his man- lioocl, ami lift himself after once being down, has;not yet been horn, nor will ho ever be. I know;.I have tried. When-1 finally.reached the stage where my friends were becoming.alarmed and I tried to ro- aasert my manhood, I found that 1 .could as easily bind a lion of the African desert with a rope Of sand as I could stay the lusts arid passions of the flesh. I’ve pour- e.l over $30,000 into the tills of tiie saloon, keepers, and Lknow all of therr damna- ble tricks—that is, unless the devil' has taught them some new ones since I quit, six years ago; / You see people who say to. you in a proni pious way: •“Q, lean quit . When I ■want to. ;I take a drink when I please, but I don’t let It get the best of me.- I can quit w henj please.” O yes,-they can quit when they pleasej. I was at Dwight, a short tline ago and'saw a. big place out there-—the Ive el e y Institute. Great' insti- tutions t hese ICqeley - places. They aro springing up all over /the countrv, and- stock la selling way up.•• Now do you know what a Kooley Institute Is V -. It’s a place to help fellows to quit who'vo got ready and can't. ^ In many cities and towns can be found Bl-chloride Clubs, composed of 'men who have been cured at ono or another of the ICeeley institutes, and who are associated together for tlio purpose of aiding others, who “have got ready and can’t go to'these Institutions and get tbo 'help, which they have found so effective.. .'This Is a most commendable work which would com- mand the support of .the benevolent if properly brought to their attention; There are four, and only four, Institutions in this state where the genuine. Iveeley cure is administered ; one at White Plains, one at Geneseo, ono .at Blnghampton,J and ono at Westfield. There is room for many more, and the more there, are the greater the amount of- good that will be done. Tho Ocean Grovo Anniversary sermon to be delivered tho coming summer by Kev. Dr. T. L. Cuyler, of the Presbyterian Church, will be on Sunday morning,' July 01. The date given in last week's Rueoim was.wrong, but It is now corrected in the list of events -of tho season published In another column. • • •. . ... Scenes of Spring. * * . I wander'd hi a Umcly glndu, .Where,’ issuing from tho'forest shade. . ’.A little iimnutaiu Htream ’ • . . Along thelwindlhg valley play.’di - Heucuth tlio nmrnhig beam. Light o’er the woods of dark brown oak Tho Weat \yind wreathod the hoyerlng'srnokc, » From cottage roots eonccurd,; Below a rock abruptly broke’ , ; In rosy light reveal’d. ; . C- | ’Twas In iho infancy of May— The uplands glow’d In green array,... - : ; While Worn the runglpgeyo'-. The lesseldng landscape stretched away, '. \^To meet the betiding sky.- ; * . ./. *Tls sweet In solitude to hear ... The earliest muslo of the year, . < / The.lJlaekbirdM loud wild n o l o , -. " Or, from the winlry thicket d r e a r , ' - . ;. .. [■ : . Thw ThmtfhVstammerlng throat. In ruEtIosoll;udo *tis swoet . ^ - . 'i’ir.* earliest flowers of Spring to greet,— ' The v|olet from Its tpinh, . : - . i . ; Tho straw berry, .creeping at our feet,: . The sorrel’s simple bloom. [/'. Wievvforo I loro.the.ivalks of Spriu?,— ’r While still i hear new wat blors sing, ' • . ••; Fresh opening bells I seo) -1 . - : Joy flits on.every roving wing; Hope buds oh every tree. V.I font{/'oiliery; . .The Bottle, . Rev; .fo’hu G. Woolley, who Is quoted by the. Chridinii at U'orA: in its teinper-- arico column, .must be ono-;of the level- headed kind. lie says: . “.Four words answer all argument s.- ‘We m ust be politic,’ siiys one. ‘. Not .with my bottle.’ ‘ They will have it.* ‘ Not from my bottle.! ‘It-w ill always be tlr.unk.’ ‘ Not from, my bottle.* ‘ Men have a right to drink.’/' ‘Not from my boltle.’ It will be sold on the sly.’ ‘ Not.from liiy bottle;’ Perliaps the saloon Is to go on. I am not bound to abolish it, but only my lnterestln It, There are v 12,000,000- voters. lii - the United States, I'll Vote my fraction right, arid every tlmeX vote I’ll carry my.share of that election as long as God. is alive.' That may not do the saloon any harm, but will be good for me. I ant not. hound. to; be successful, but I am boiiud to'be true. A square man is never wrong side up. ‘ My.vote* -won’t count?’ Listen. ‘Abra- ham believed God, and It was'counted. Yes, the saloon may go on, like the brook, forever; and men may die in them; like flies, and hell'grow fat on drunkards; Women may still break their hearts in the vain effort, to woo their loved ones from the drink. Ladies may sip their wine,• boys'still-learn to drink, and’men burn their.hearts to a crisp In alcohol ; priests' may still desecrate God’s altars with It; the National-Capital niay . have a. saloon In either end; Senators and Representatives may be drunk.-on.the floors of Congress; the soldiers’ homes may still sell drink to. the ,old.soldiers; the mistress of the. White House may brew her famous punch.. Hut not from, my bottle.” ;/ Prom the Talmud. SELKCTIONS IIV IJKXJAMrN SUCAriHO. i.in: and DE.vrir A-iii: t.\ tiik row i:it of » T11K TONr.L'E. -«* ; Rabbi Simon, the. son of Gamaliel, com- manded Tobu, his servant, ono day to buy. tlib.best thing from all- tiie tilings which, he could get 1 'ti the market. Tobu went.and bought for him* a tongue. The next day Simon told him to buy tlio worst thing of all the things In the market, and lib bought for him a tongue; Then Slinon said, “ Now I. know that the Lord gave you wisdom,. hocaus(j. the tongue is indeed.the best and worst of‘till things, as it is written; ‘Life and Death Is in tiie- Power of tho Tongue.’ ’’ - • Tho lips of tho wise dispense kuowl- edgo.—Prov. J5 :7. ; .When Uubbl.Ishmael was traveling, a man met him on tho way'and blessed him. In reply Rabbi Ishmael said, “ Thy ans- wer Is written.” When ho. had gone far- ther on the way he was riiet by another man who cursed him. Rabbi Ishmael made the samo reply to this man, “ Thy answer Is written.” His disciples not un- derstanding askeu him what could he mean by replying to tho ono who blessed him and the ono who 'cursed -him In tlio same words. Aiid he said, “ It Is wrltten plainly, * I will bless them that bless thee, and curse .them that curse’ theo.' Gen. 12:3. . ANUUIANUS THU HOMAN ^EMrEHOU AND josiiua Tiiii.nA»m. • -diainaaKS—Is there a Creator of Heav. on and Earth?: Joshua—Everything created must have a Creator. . *' - *'ln.—Why does lie not reveal Himself so that all the creatures may see Ills glory aud believe oh Him ? Josh'.—AmHylio of His cr.eatures could stand out-and seo tho brightness -of' Ills countenance?'- . . -••• ;. ,' . .^•lif.^-It is only because you believe in a Creator that.yhu try th find'sosme excuse. . Josh.—Coine with nie'and look at the Sun and you will see‘IIis.glory. . j-t/i.—Who ca.irlook at the SiinV. Josh.— I will fight -you with your own ’weapons. If at that which is only one-; ten,thousandth Of the doings of Ills will you nro; not: abie -to look, - how much less then at God .Himself v. .'An.r-^IJut lie promlse(l that‘lie would, reveal III nisei f,w b on will it be? ■Joth.—rVifUiin - tiie .unbelievers havo- passed away rind God’s ‘pamo alone shall bo great; then tho glory of God will be re- veaied; •. . ;. V .’ Lettei* frcm Eev, C; li. Yatiaaa. ••■■/. : / i — i 'IliEAT-.VSI K.il-.WIONS roi! TttK SEAStl-S’ ; ' ISM. Bishops' Quadrennial1 Address. The Christian at work reviews this'.de- liverance tersely as follows: Our readers .will find the interesling .story'of Methodism as related in the pro- !: ceediiigs of the General Conference, wrll | set .forth'by our admirable, correspo'ndeut lit Omaha. IJitt we cannot let the occasion, pass without congratulating that great de- nomination on the progress it has made, as shown in the very .comprehensive and able Episcopal address delivered before tlio Conference. Tho book business of the ciiurcli is ilpurlshlng; there have been no'dissensions, arid the Church never pos- sessed so -intelligent a ministry as 'now\ The membership during-the past- four years has grown rapidly and'now nuinbers 2,292,09-1 communicants, and 44‘ i t000 souls, have beeu added to tho Church iu the last four- years. ' Contributions to missions have iucreased ^331,180. “ Higher .edu- cation In the ministry,” the report •states, “ is.Imperative,and no man should be al- lowed In our theological schools whose loyalty to the doctrine of our' Church Is not steadfast. The Church wants no tral tors.” Tne Epw'orth League—our-Metho- dist friends could not take up with the undenominational Christian Endeavor So- clety—receives great praise as a mediator between Sunday-school and Church. It has In three years sprang up from nothing to 3,000 chapters with. 500,000 members'. Tho national, university iit Washington is announced as a certainty,'and liberal en- dowuients aro askedi millions being neces- sary for Its equipment. . “ Tho Church de- mands an. Americanized franchise, as well as a naturalized franchise,” say tho Bis- hops. “ The continuation of foreign Ian-, guages and customs-In this country Is. wrong, arid'we are opposed to the teach- ing of foreign languages in our schools. We believe that the franchise should, bo nioro guarded, and foreigners should- be required to serve a longer appreticesh ip to secure It.” So too wp believe. B u t the* prospect Is that In this the politicians .will get the better of tiie Church people, ami of tho better classes .-.generally,- who strongly desire a betterment in the elec- tive franchise. Tlio Bishops douoitnce the centralization of Aveaith, and declare that if It is riot arrested there will be dan- ger to the social nnd State functions; Cer- tainly,, tho Church must-.act. It cannot side with wealth.. It must go with-, the tolling masses, and ho denomination -Is inarching-in closer touch to them than the MethodIsts. Tliey deserve hearty con> gratulatibns at-their.success, for they have not only attained it, but -what is better, they have fully deserved it.. A Beautiful Book, ]!Y MUS; J, C. C0M.IN4. * I am in receipt of the twenty-second nnnual report, of tlio President o f. the Ocean Grove Association, “ iJeart Culture by Sea.” IIow appropriate the name. As I tu.rir over its leaves my eye rests on the familiar faces of I>rs. Stokes, Wallace, Alday arid Simmons, and all the lay mem-, hers,, Including good Mr. Black of my. own State ; and I conclude that tho hook' Is orthodox: How natural the auditorium and postoflieo look, and EHm Cottage; In whibh our Inner woman has often been're- freshed with the good things of this life. Blessings on this Institution and thoso whp watch over It. My eyes are filled with tears wlieu I remember that there aro va- cant-seats at Ocean Grove.- -Four ; friends have gone up higher sluco I was thore last year, Madatnes Downs, Crane, Pomroy and Crane, rest from their labors. We shall miss "them on the platform In the temperance, and mothers’ meetings every- where. May this home beside the*sea. continue' to be as In tho past, a place where God is honored by lifting up a standard In behalf of Ills Holy dfty, thus perpetuating to re- motest generations that the Sabbath was made for man. / .. ’ ' Allegheny, Pa. ,. ' ,‘- ' D ear SCurrnit—Permit nie tlirough the U ecokd to reach the many lovers of Ocean Orovo and say tliat we hro. making plans for tho best summer .by the seaside for tlio thousands of young people.eyer known. I want thom «W. to be there at the.opening' service; June. 2f»,' arid agoin the Temple will ring with the joyoiii melody of song, praise and.salvation.' Pm gleaning’ very many things abroad' to give out (luring the summer days. Wo \vlll have all the oid j-ongs of by- gone days, find some how .ones too; We. wlU have. new featurps In the meeting/, an:] if I dared IM. Jet ont.snnie of the little secret Mipflses .I liave. for/.-ome- of. ;tlie ! g itherings.. • , ...• . * I Then we are. to have.'this'year one great1 Young Peopie’s Annlversary Day, August 7, whon the'whole' day i*3 to bo given to the happy woi-lc- of li’elping young‘folks whose years ran^’e from one. to a; huh-. dred-and.One. ; l.et every one who slugs bring their hymn book-, everyone‘who plays bring their Iristruuient, every- family bring all the. children, every friend'.'bring .their friends;.and in the meetings and ' out Of them we will have, by the blessing of God the best siuumer of all our lives'. :/ . . . C. II. Y atm An . J Londoiii'Knylitttil;May 7 , 75.05f. " . . 1 Vltiil isftll-thc larih with green, .. . Trcmbtiiw with white is every spvay ' And bent u-ith-birdwhose jingliig . Through $ir and soul is r!tu;ing. .’ Oh J siich-tbe'gloty of the licard arid seen .- . That ear arid eye want, naught beyond to-day. For ioI.oyc comes and tnfces'my hand, . ‘ ; - ; And pre.ves close with ivordand His heart and mine in meeting . / Feel Nature’s lionet, a-beating. W6 sum tiie'eternal, in tlio moment's valid,- . And ask what lies between God's .hoaveii and . thi«.. *• ,/ :. —7/>/i/ici’ 3 Iliznr,' Cookman. IhEt-ituts.' '.lACKsbNvrr.i.r-:, flohida. I wakened to the singing of a bird: - I heard the bird of Spring, and lo ! . ' At tils sweetest note’the iiowers began to grow, Grass.Jeaves and everything, , : • ... As Jf the green world heard " The trumpet of his tiny throat ... ;. . From end to end, and Winter and despair Fled at his melody and passed hi air, I heard at dawn the music of a Volce^ O'my beloved, then f^ald,*the Spring . 1 Can visit only once die waiting year; The bird can bring . . . *. Only tho seasbu’s song, nor his (he choice * To waken smiles or the remembering fear. But thou dost bring Springtime to every day, and at thy pall The floivcrs of life, no told, though leaves of au- turn fail.—jCmiiiry. * To the Pcopls of Monmouth County, The Law ftnt^ Order League’- ofMon-, mouth county, .through its Executive Com. mittee, appeal to. tliecitizens‘of the county for financial support In carrying out the purpose expressed in tiie following section ot its by-laws:. ‘ : “ Tho object Shull ha the 'enforcement of the criminal laws of this State.against gambling and the creation of a-popular sentiment against the same,” . ‘Tiie ofllcers, although very busy men, are devoting much time-and braving bitt.er .opposition in order to accomplish this Ob- ject, ajulthe League confidently looks to you for the .means to carry on the light, and already the re ;a re Imllcatioiis of a great triumph; if. proper assirtance is rcndeieil by the people of the county. . Please send all funds to .Mr.. Theodore Oves, treasurer, Aslmry.Park; X. J. Witli respect, , J as. S.Y aUd, Prcsi. S. Edwaud Youno, Xecy. * . . ;; Tho Serpent and. th? Doi’e in' Business. The'qualities of both creatures should be exhibited,by the man of business,’ He should be shrewd in. his dealings, prudent in his* investments ajid sagacious iu. ids selling. ; liut his serpent-wisdom, should be Jimiteil and subordinated by the harm- lessness 61 tho dove, H is the serpent that creeps forth , unaccompanied by the dove,-!>vhen a merchant takes advantage of the Ignorance of a ciwtomer. arid foists upon him an inferior article, .’or: takes more for’it than It Is worth;. It-.is the trail, of the serpent that tiie stockbroker leaves behind him, when he, for the sake of his paltry fee, inveigles the widow or- orphan Into precarious investments. The prouio- ter of bubble schemes.'ensnarlng tho.un- wary, shows the serpetit without any of the dove. It Is tbo hiss 'of the serpent tbiit Is heard when tlio rich creditor stands by his rights aud.shows no mercy to the man whoso back Is rit tho wall.. Money got by that kind of sharp Intelligence, ri’n- tnlxed, unqualified by love, Is. so much fuel gathered. fOV the tire of hell. I tT *5 not tho presence of tho wisdom of the ser- pent that, is wrong, .it is the absence of tho harmlessness of tbe^^dove.—The Treasury. Gulielma. Joy comesto theo, O bridegroom; Joy in this tender way; ' Through graceful art, of hand and heart,. Of Gulielma! • ; Accept it as from heaven, v . On this appointed day; ' For gloom of night, is touched'with light, ;. : '. .ByGullelmal - • J/iiy 17,180-3. ‘ ’ E. II. S. The following extract' rrnm a Jackson- ville papor of -recent date’ referring to Prof.. S.-B. Darnell’s j>i;ospeVou3 Institu- tion for the education of.the colored youtli,. is a deserved 'tribute to .tiie excellence of the school, and the efficiency of its princi- pal und his devoted 'corps’of. iristructorS;- “ Tiie exfiuiinatioiKot' this institution of learning are now; in grogress. The senior cl ass h as al ready fin ished' Its work and ten have passed tiie required , grade und will make/their orations on Friday ni glit at tho . Park opera-house. During tin* week.the other-.departments will have tiieir opportunities'to show the 'gains of a school year, • On Friday, morn- ing the standing In all' the grades and ■ classic department -wili lie read arid tiie school formally closed by c.omniencement. services at iilght. During an examination in April in U.S history Dr. Anderson, ot New York city, author of several histories, called, and be- low is ’his estimate of the work done in Cookman: . • ' Mins Vinla; V. LcucsOii: . . - :Dcur Madam—:i have written to my pub; lishers (isking them to send a copv of my new Grammar School History of the Uni. ted States to your address here In Florida. What I saw yesterday, in the Cookman In- stitute .was quite new to me, and was of In-, terest, particularly so . as- respects the ex- , miiiuation you.were conducting. In. United States bist'jr>\ - The amount that you re - quired almost took my breath jiway, atid to that effect I think, I expressed' myself to you. I have had a large experience iu teaching the subject;, have lectured on It before bodies of teachers in the school- room and on public occasions; and have improved-many opportunities (or observa- tlon, botli in this country.and In Europe.'' I ought to be familiar with the.subject as a teaching one in all its hearings. What' I have said .Is to give you confidence In my statemeut, and now for-my final ;state- .inent: ; * The amount of history that you required was far greater-than any auiount'.tha't I have ever seen In my examination In any school or other Institution at the North. It was'fit lea^t four times more than in tho examination for admission to the College of Now York or •tho Normal.college of ; that city; and greater by far than in the ex. aiuination fi>r grnduatloh from ..our New 'York State Normal school.or for teachers’ certificates of.the highest grade. • f iini pleased with the school, with the attention shown me by Prof, Darnell.and: yourself.and with tiie good work you are doing. God bless you. •/ J ohn J,'A ndkhson. The class In .United States history num- biir tw;efity:>lx . pupils.; They 'were all. present at iho examinajiort.. There were live who passed 9.and ahove^ hnd slxteeii . who passed the r><juIreil standard. • Sjmstbing for .You. The church of Christ was. born, at the. cross, but her muscles havo beeri‘’develop- ed bv toil.—Bishop Hurst. *’• 1 . • Those, wlio, without knowing.us, think. or.speak evil, do us no harm; it is not we they attack, but the phantom of their own' Imagination. '• . It does men’good to admire what .Is good and beautiful; hut.it.does them Im definitely more good to }ove it. We grow ' like what,we admire; but we ii.ecome one. with what we love; • .We are never without help. . We ‘have, no right to say of aijy. good • work, It Is. too hard for me. to do;, or of any sorrow, it is too. hard for me to hear; o.r of any . sinful habit, It is too hard foe me too over- coiiie.—Elizabeth Charles. . . Resolved, never to do anything which, If.L should see in another, I sh^ildconuta justoccaslou to despise him for or to think any moro meanly of him.—Jonathan Ed- wards, . . : '. / ; The best teacher of duties that'still Ho - dim to us Is.the practice of ..thoso we seo and have at hand.—Thomas Carlyle. An English leader of evangelistic work ' was asked what ho thought of the Salva- tion Army, and he replied:- “I do not like- It at all, but I believe that God Almighty does.—Rams Horn. . _ . "Self-knowledge Is the acquaintance with ourselves jvhIch shows us what we. are, and what we ought td bo, Ili order, to * .our • living comfortabiy and usefully here, and. happily •hereafter.—Mason. - . .

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Page 1: REV, A, WALLACE, D. D., Editor. OCEAN GROVE, N. J., SATURDAY, … · 2014-04-01 · —Christian at Work. The Divine Emancipator, MY MUS. FANNIE II. CAltU. The Scriptures which explicitly

R E V , A , W A L L A C E , D. D ., Editor. OCEAN GROVE, N. J., SATURDAY, MAY 21, 1892. yOL. XVIII. No. 21.

A Touch from tho A ltar.

O h ! for a to u c h from th o a l ta r , a to u c h o f a liv in g • • . co a l, ' ~ . . . . .

B u rn in g th o d ro ss t h a t is d im m in g t h e l ig h t o f a t te m b lin g so u l, ,

T re m b lin g , to sp e a k fo r th e M as te rs fe a rin g b is n a m e to e x to l ; • *

O h ! fo r a to u c h from th e a l ta r , t lm t to u c h , t h a t a lo n e mnk'cs w h o l e ; •’ • •

o f te n , wo'vO c a u g h t lik o t h e ; p ro p h e t, sw e e t .g lim pses o f b lessed L i g h t ; .

O ften , l ik o h im wo h a v o m u rm u re d , ‘‘ U ndone’!\ u n d o n e ! a t th o s i g h t ;

• N a k e d , u n rig h te o u s , u n fit a l to g e th e r to . w o rk fo r r ig h t

P la in ly w o saw h i t l io v is io n , o u r w ay , n o t his*, o u r d e lig h t, . • • .-> • . . ‘ •

Only a coat from tiie altar, can purge oil the sin away 1

O nly a to u c h from th e M aster , c a n g h 'e th e s t re n g th fo r th e d ay ,1

O n ly c o n tin u a l c o n ta c t, t o d a y , to -m orrow , for a j e ! ■ .- • • ;

T o u ch e d ,- y ea ,, re to u c h e d e v e ry m o m en t, ea c h s te p n il a lo n g o u r w ay. , '

T h e n , w h e n h i s vo ice is r e p e a tin g , " O b I w hou\ s h a l l 1 se n d to bo

Mc&sengcrs to t h e w e a ry , to s e t sonie sh'i; c a p tiv e ' f r c c ‘.,' , . .

Gladly, wltii heart all aflame, yet so. humbly, on . bended knee '•

Q u ick ly wo’11 a n s w e r th e M aster, “ S en d m e , b e r e ; . a m I , s e n d m o / ’

- n c m < i‘ C>ti(itu tn . ;

“ Saved'to Sin No More,”The Son of God c'nmo*1nti> into tho

• worhl.to.be culled the Saviour of-sinners. , H is name was to. be colled Jesua, because

he should save his people.from their sins. Ho w lllsave them not only from the ties, e r t of tlieir sins, but also from all. their power and pollution." To this end lie has opened for. them a fountain for sin and for uncleanness in which they may .better their sin-polluted souls anti have all their im purity washed away. H is blood Is cleansing blood and cleanses from all sin.

. “ He loved the Church, and gave himself for it, that he m ight sanctify and cleanso it, and that ho m ight present it to himself a' glorious Church, not* having- sp6t or

‘ w rinkle o r any such tiling, bu t-that it should bo holy and w ithout blemish.’* He

; will finally, present each and .every mem­ber of It faultless before the presence of tho divine glory with exceeding joy. I t is the peculiar working of the Holy Spirit, whoso agency - the’ Saviour has procured, nnd whom lie sends into .tiie .’world to renew and sanctify the heart. A t Its re­generation be begins th is work, shedding abroad in i t the love of. God, and ho never leaves i t until he has brought it. to perfec­tion, m aking tiie believer meet to bo a partaker o f the inheritance of the saints in light. Millions already in heaven have thus been made m eetto .be partakers of that inheritance. Millions now upon tiie earth are.beiog made meet to be partakers of it, and so will i t bo with respect to mil­lions more in the ages to come. T he re­deem ed .Church will consist o f a great m ultitude which no man can num ber, all of whom shall have, washed their robes and have made them white in tho blood of

• tbo Lamb. <\.'N or shall, thoso robes ever-be defiled

again. Not one of tha t, g reat'com pauy shall ever fall from his. exalted state of holiness and. of happ iness., No more shall they bo tempted to sin. No m ore.shall they havo any bias to evil. N o more shall they have any Inclination to depart from God. T heir bias and inclination shall bo. wholly and ever God ward. They shall, be kept.by the power and grace of God’urito

. everlasting salvation.: .. .“ Dear, dying Lamb, thy precious blood

Shall never, lose its power, •Till all the. ransomed C h u rch of God ; iio saved, to niu no more.”

’ . — Christian a t Work.

The Divine Emancipator,

MY MUS. FANNIE II. CAltU.

The Scriptures which explicitly (TeclHro that C hrist came to open the prison doors, to undo every yoko, to -let the oppressed go free, &c., received graphic illustra­tions in a recent meeting of the .Philadel­phia general M ethodist Episcopal alli­ance. : W hilst all who test!/led, witnessed to the power of Christ to deliver, it so

. happened that there were several men present, who w ere formerly devoted sub. jects of King Alcohol, and in tholr expe­rience most emphatically declared, not only to their complete emancipation from bondage to.strong d rink , but that s» radi­cal a change had been effected,, that they were tru ly now creatures In Christ Jesus. Much has been written and said recently concerning the K eely bi-cklorido of gold cure, and many of tbo -wretched victims of strong drink have applied to i t for (Jellv- Oranco. -God forbid that any word of ours should oven seem to imply a dispar­agem ent of all or sundry of the so-called cures, for what in polite, phraseology Is called “ dipsomania,M but what plain peo­ple call by the less1 emphonlous nam o.of drunkenness. But as We listened to tho

clear, strong testimonies given a t tiie above meeting, which weje but a few ou t . of hundreds, that have c /u ;e tinder Our im- ed ia te . notice. we could not but re jo ice! that there;was a sure and sovereign rerrie- j dy to all wlio would meet the conditions; Ono man said that, ten years ago in this city,’there was one .of..the most wretched and forlorn victims, of rum to • be found upon tho face of the earth.*’ Anyone; who would have ventured the assertion that there was hope for him / would have been considered a fit subject for a- lunatic .asy­lum. And y e t the 1‘les-jed Shepherd, through the instrum entality of .a devoted W hite Rlbboner, had found him. . To use his very expressive .sum m ary™ for. rags Ho gave him* comfortable raim ent; fur husks, bread;. for -a v/igrant- life JI e* gave steady* employment; for separation- from wife and child, lie brought about a blessed reunion.; for bondage to appetite, w ith all the misery resulting .'therefrom, H e gave not only. • perfect emancipation, ■ hut so siiet} abroad the love of God in his heart ■that the logical outcome was . that ever since, he has.been on the a lert to tell the “ blessed. Story,” -, having traveled even thousands of miles, in the execution of the same.* . ,- , V -

Vour correspondent knows the man from the’time of conversion to the pi’eserit, and can-testify to tho tru thfulness of the same. Several o thers witnessed' most em­phatically upon the same, line; and al­though from 'a scientific standpoint,' deliv­erance from the power, of Strong drink, after the appetite has controlled a.m an for. years, seems not only an absurdity hut an impossibility, yet, according to the princi­ple that one well attested fact is worth a ton of theory, so to speak, and .as tho wri­te r has known scores of m en-w hose, life .was such that, righ t a t their own door, atnoug those with whom they were touch­ing elbows every day, their-w ord would n'eyer. bo questioned, and ‘ yet who - had' been for years the veriest slaves of apper tlte, w hat conclusion can she come .to, but that the Jesus of- N azareth who cleansed the leper, who ^exorcised the demons, tfcc<, “ is the very same Jesus, the wonder-work­ing Jesus,M and that the only reason* we do not see on every side evidences of the power which marked his life, w hilst in the bpdy js our unbelief. ' * • '.

Drunkenness.

T hat the- man is not born,. says Sam Small, • who Is o f . his own .strength able to fight the terrible passions and ap­petites of debauchery. The man who can by his-own resolution reassert.-his man- lioocl, ami lif t himself after once being down, has;not yet been horn, nor will ho ever be. I k n o w ;.I have tried. When-1 finally.reached the stage where m y friends were becoming.alarmed and I tried to ro- aasert my manhood, I found that 1 .could as easily bind a lion of the African desert with a rope Of sand as I could stay the lusts arid passions of the flesh. I’ve pour- e.l over $30,000 into the tills of tiie saloon, keepers, and Lknow all of therr damna­ble tricks—that is, unless the devil' has taught them some new ones since I quit, six years ago; /

You see people who say to. you in a proni pious w ay: • “Q, le a n qu it . When I ■want to. ;I take a drink when I please, but I don’t let It get the best of m e .- I can quit w h e n j please.” O yes,-they can quit when they pleasej. I was a t Dwight, a short tline ago and'saw a. big place out there-—the Iv e el e y Institute. Great' insti­tutions t hese ICqeley - places. They aro springing up all over /the countrv, and- stock la selling way u p .•• Now do you know what a Kooley Institute Is V -.

I t ’s a place to help fellows to quit who'vo got ready and can't.^ In many cities and towns can be found Bl-chloride Clubs, composed of 'm en who have been cured a t ono or another of the ICeeley institutes, and who are associated together for tlio purpose of aiding others, who “have got ready and can’t go to 'these Institutions and get tbo 'help, which they have found so effective.. .'This Is a most commendable work which would com­mand the support of .the benevolent if properly brought to their attention; There are four, and only four, Institutions in this state where the gen u in e . Iveeley cure is administered ; one at W hite Plains, one a t Geneseo, ono .at Blnghampton,J and ono a t W estfield. There is room for many more, and the more th e re , are the greater the amount of- good that will be done.

Tho Ocean Grovo Anniversary sermon to be delivered tho coming sum m er by Kev. Dr. T. L. Cuyler, of the Presbyterian Church, will be on Sunday morning,' J u ly01. The date given in last week's R ueoim was.wrong, bu t It is now corrected in the list of events -of tho season published In another column. • • •. .

€ ... Scenes of Spring. * * .

I wander'd hi a Umcly glndu,.Where,’ issuing from tho'forest shade. • .’.A little iimnutaiu Htream ’ • . .Along thelwindlhg valley play.’di - Heucuth tlio nmrnhig beam.

Light o’er the woods of dark brown oak Tho Weat \yind wreathod the hoyerlng'srnokc, » From cottage roots eonccurd,;Below a rock abruptly broke’, ; ■ ’

In rosy light reveal’d. ; . C - |’Twas In iho infancy of May—The uplands glow’d In green array,... - : ;

While Worn the runglpgeyo'-.The lesseldng landscape stretched away, '.\^To meet the betiding sky.- ; *. ./.*Tls sweet In solitude to hear ...The earliest muslo of the year, . < ■ /

The.lJlaekbirdM loud wild n o l o , -. "Or, from the winlry thicket d r e a r , ' - . ;. .. [■ :. Thw ThmtfhVstammerlng throat.

In ruEtIosoll;udo *tis swoet . ^ - .'i’ir.* earliest flowers of Spring to greet,— '

The v|olet from Its tpinh, . : - . i . ;Tho straw berry, .creeping at our feet,: .

The sorrel’s simple bloom. [/'.W ie v v fo r o I lo ro .th e .iv a lk s o f S p r iu ? ,— ’ r W hile s t il l i h e a r n ew w a t b lo rs sin g , ' • . • •;

Fresh opening bells I seo) -1 . - :Joy flits on.every roving wing;

Hope buds oh every tree. V.I font {/'oilier y;

. .The Bottle, .Rev; .fo’hu G. Woolley, who Is quoted

by the. Chridinii at U'orA: in its teinper-- arico column, .m ust be ono-;of the level­headed kind. l ie says: .

“.Four words answer all argum ent s.- ‘ We m u s t be politic,’ siiys one. ‘. N ot .with my bottle.’ ‘ They will have it.* ‘ N ot from my bottle.! ‘ I t-w ill always be tlr.unk.’ ‘ Not from, my bottle.* ‘ Men have a right to d rink .’/ ' ‘N ot from my boltle.’ I t will be sold on the sly.’ ‘ Not.from liiy bottle;’ Perliaps the saloon Is to go on. I am not bound to abolish it, but only my ln terestln It, There are v 12,000,000- voters. lii - the United States, I 'l l Vote my fraction right, arid every tlm eX vote I ’ll carry my.share of that election as long as God. is alive.' T hat may not do the saloon any harm , but will be good for me. I ant n o t. hound. to ; be successful, but I am boiiud to 'b e true. A square man is never wrong side up. ‘ My.vote* -won’t count?’ Listen. ‘Abra­ham believed God, and It w as'counted. Yes, the saloon may go on, like the brook, forever; and men may die in them; like flies, and h e ll 'g ro w fat on drunkards; Women may still break the ir hearts in the vain effort, to woo the ir loved ones from the d rink . Ladies may sip their wine,• boys 's till-learn to drink, a n d ’men burn their.hearts to a crisp In alcohol ; priests' may still desecrate God’s altars with It; the N ational-C apital niay . have a. saloon In e ither end ; Senators and Representatives may be drunk.-on.the floors of Congress; the soldiers’ homes may still sell drink to. the ,old.soldiers; the mistress of the. White House may brew her famous punch .. Hut not from, my bottle.” ; / •

Prom the Talmud.SELKCTIONS IIV IJKXJAMrN SUCAriHO.

i. in : and DE.vrir A-iii: t.\ t iik ro w i: it of • » T11K TONr.L'E. ■ - «* ;

Rabbi Simon, the. son of Gamaliel, com­manded Tobu, his servant, ono day to buy. tlib.best thing from all- tiie tilings which, he could get 1'ti the market.

Tobu went.and bought for him* a tongue.The next day Simon told him to buy tlio

w orst thing of all the things In the m arket, and lib bought for him a tongue; Then Slinon said, “ Now I. know that the Lord gave you wisdom,. hocaus(j. the tongue is indeed.the best and worst o f ‘till things, as it is written; ‘ Life and Death Is in tiie- Power o f tho Tongue.’ ’’ - •

Tho lips of tho wise dispense kuowl- edgo.—Prov. J5 :7. ;

.W hen Uubbl.Ishm ael was traveling, a man m et him on tho way'and blessed him. In reply Rabbi Ishmael said, “ T hy ans­wer Is written.” When ho. had gone far­ther on the way he was riiet by another man who cursed him. Rabbi Ishm ael made the samo reply to this man, “ Thy answer Is written.” H is disciples not un­derstanding askeu him w hat could he mean by replying to tho ono who blessed him and the ono who 'cursed - him In tlio same words. Aiid he said, “ I t Is wrltten plainly, * I will bless them that bless thee, and curse .them that curse’ theo.'Gen. 12:3. ’ .ANUUIANUS THU HOMAN ^EMrEHOU AND

josiiua Tiiii.nA »m .• -diainaaKS—Is there a Creator of Heav.

on and E a rth ? : •• Joshua—Everything created m ust have a Creator. . * ' -

*'ln.—W hy does l i e not reveal Him self so that all the creatures may see Ills glory aud believe oh Him ?

Josh '.—AmHylio of H is cr.eatures could stand out-and seo tho brightness -o f ' Ills countenance?'- . . -••• ;. ,' .

.^•lif.^-It is only because you b elieve in a Creator that.yhu try th find'sosm e excuse.. Josh.—Coine with n ie'and look at the Sun and you w ill s ee ‘IIis.glory. .

j-t/i.— W ho ca.irlook at the SiinV.Josh.— I w ill fight -you with your own

’weapons. I f at that w hich is only one-; ten,thousandth Of the d o in g s o f I lls w ill you nro; not: abie -to look, - how much less then a t God .H im self v.

.'An.r-^IJut l i e promlse(l th a t‘l i e would, reveal III nisei f ,w b on w ill it be?

■Joth.—rVifUiin - tiie .unbelievers havo- passed away rind God’s ‘pamo alone shall bo great; then tho glory o f God w ill be re- veaied; •. . ;. V . ’

Lettei* frcm Eev, C; li. Yatiaaa.••■■/. : / i — — i

'IliEAT-.VSI K.il-.WIONS roi! TttK SEAStl-S’ ;' ISM. ■

Bishops' Quadrennial1 Address.

T h e Christian a t work reviews th is '.de­liverance tersely as follows: •

Our readers .will find the interesling .story'of M ethodism as related in th e pro- !: ceediiigs o f the General Conference, wrll | set . forth 'by our admirable, correspo'ndeut lit Omaha. IJitt we cannot let the occasion, pass w ithout congratulating that great de­nomination on the progress i t has made, as shown in the very .comprehensive and able Episcopal address delivered before tlio Conference. Tho book business of the ciiurcli is ilpurlshlng; there have been no'dissensions, arid the Church never pos­sessed so -intelligent a m in istry as 'now\ The membership d u rin g - th e past- four years has grown rapidly and'now nuinbers 2,292,09-1 communicants, and 44‘i t000 souls, have beeu added to tho Church iu the last four- years. ' Contributions to missions have iucreased ^331,180. “ H igher .edu­cation In the m inistry,” the report • states, “ is.Im perative,and no man should be al­lowed In our theological schools whose loyalty to the doctrine of o u r ' Church Is not steadfast. T he Church wants no tra l tors.” Tne Epw'orth League—our-Metho­dist friends could not take up w ith the undenominational Christian Endeavor So- clety—receives great praise as a mediator between Sunday-school and Church. I t has In three years sprang up from nothing to 3,000 chapters w ith. 500,000 members'. Tho national, university iit W ashington is announced as a certainty,'and liberal en- dowuients aro askedi millions being neces­sary for Its equipment. . “ Tho Church de­mands an. Americanized franchise, as well as a naturalized franchise,” say tho Bis­hops. “ The continuation of foreign Ian-, guages and custom s-In this country Is. wrong, arid'we are opposed to the teach­ing of foreign languages in our schools. We believe that the franchise should, bo nioro guarded, and foreigners should- be required to serve a longer appreticesh ip to secure It.” So too wp believe. But the* prospect Is that In this the politicians .will get the better of tiie Church people, ami of tho better classes .-.generally,- who strongly desire a betterment in the elec­tive franchise. Tlio Bishops douoitnce the centralization of Aveaith, and declare that if It is riot arrested there will be dan­ger to the social nnd State functions; Cer­tainly,, tho Church must-.act. It cannot side with wealth.. I t m ust go with-, the tolling masses, and ho denomination - Is inarching-in closer touch to them than the MethodIsts. Tliey deserve hearty con> gratulatibns at-their.success, for they have not only attained it, but - what is better, they have fully deserved it..

A Beautiful Book,

]!Y MUS; J, C. C0M.IN4. *

I am in receipt of the twenty-second nnnual report, of tlio President o f . the Ocean Grove Association, “ iJeart Culture by Sea.” IIow appropriate the name. As I tu.rir over its leaves my eye rests on th e fam iliar faces of I>rs. Stokes, Wallace, Alday arid Simmons, and all the lay mem-, hers,, Including good Mr. B lack of my. own State ; and I conclude that tho hook' Is orthodox: How natural the auditorium and postoflieo look, and EHm Cottage; In whibh our Inner woman has often been 're­freshed with the good things o f th is life. Blessings on this Institution and thoso whp watch over It. My eyes are filled with tears wlieu I remember that there aro va­cant-seats at Ocean Grove.- -Four ; friends have gone up higher sluco I was thore last year, Madatnes Downs, Crane, Pomroy and Crane, rest from their labors. W e shall miss "them on the platform In the temperance, and mothers’ meetings every­where.

May th is home beside the*sea. continue' to be as In tho past, a place where God is honored by lifting up a standard In behalf of Ills Holy dfty, thus perpetuating to re- motest generations that the Sabbath was made for man. / .. ’ '

Allegheny, Pa. ’ , . ' ,‘-

' D ear SCurrnit—Perm it nie tlirough the U ecokd to reach the many lovers o f Ocean Orovo and say tliat we hro. m aking plans for tho best sum m er .by the seaside for tlio thousands of young people.eyer known. I want thom «W. to be there a t the.opening' service; J u n e . 2f»,' arid agoin the Temple will ring with the joyoiii melody of song, praise and.salvation.' Pm gleaning’ very many things abroad' to give out (luring the summer days. •

Wo \vlll have all the oid j-ongs of by­gone days, find some how .ones too; We. wlU have. new featurps In the m eeting/, an:] if I dared IM. Jet ont.snnie of the little secret Mipflses .I liave. for/.-ome- of. ;tlie ! g itherings.. • , . . . • . * I

Then we are. to have.'this'year one g re a t1 Young Peopie’s Annlversary Day, August 7, whon the'w hole' day i*3 to bo given to the happy woi-lc- o f li’elping y o u n g ‘folks whose years ran^’e from one. to a; huh-. dred-and.One. ;

l.et every one who slugs bring their hym n book-, everyone‘who plays bring their Iristruuient, every- family bring all the. children, every friend '.'bring .th e ir friends;.and in the meetings and ' ou t Of them we will have, by the blessing of God the best siuumer of all our lives'. :/

. . . C. II. Y atm An . JLondoiii'Knylitttil;May 7 ,75.05f. " . . 1

Vltiil isftll-thc larih with green, .. .Trcmbtiiw with white is every spvay' And bent u-ith-birdwhose jingliig •. Through $ir and soul is r!tu;ing. .’

Oh J siich-tbe'gloty of the licard arid seen .- . That ear arid eye want, naught beyond to-day.

For io I.oyc comes and tnfces'my hand, . ‘ ; -; And pre.ves close with ivordand

His heart and mine in meeting . /Feel Nature’s lionet, a-beating.

W6 sum tiie'eternal, in tlio moment's valid,- . And ask what lies between God's .hoaveii and

. thi«.. *• , / :. —7/>/i/ici’3 I lizn r ,'

Cookman. IhE t-itu ts.'

'.lACKsbNvrr.i.r-:, flohida.

I w a k e n e d to th e s in g in g o f a b i r d : -I h e a rd th e b ird o f S p rin g , a n d lo ! . 'A t tils sw e e tes t n o te ’th e iiow ers b eg a n to grow , G rass .Jeav e s a n d e v e ry th in g , , : • ...As J f th e g re e n w o rld h e a rd "T h e t ru m p e t o f h is t in y th ro a t . . . ; . .F ro m e n d to e n d , a n d W in te r a n d d e s p a ir F le d a t h is m elody a n d passed h i a ir ,

I h e a rd a t d a w n th e m u sic o f a Volce^O 'm y beloved , th e n f^ a ld ,* th e S p rin g . 1C an v is it o n ly o n ce d i e w a itin g y e a r ;T h e b ird c a n b rin g . . . *.O nly th o seasbu’s song , n o r h is (h e c h o ic e *T o w a k en sm iles o r t h e re m e m b e rin g fe a r.B ut th o u d o s t b r in gS p rin g tim e to ev e ry d a y , a n d a t th y p a ll T h e floivcrs of life, n o to ld , th o u g h lea v es o f au-

tu rn fa il.—jCmiiiry. *

To the Pcopls of Monmouth County,

The Law ftnt Order League’- of M on-, mouth county, .through its Executive Com. mittee, appeal to. tliecitizens‘of the county for financial support In carrying out the purpose expressed in tiie following section ot its by-laws:. ‘ :

“ Tho object Shull ha the 'enforcem ent of the criminal laws of this State.against gambling and the creation of a -popular sentim ent against the same,”. ‘Tiie ofllcers, although very busy men, are devoting much time-and braving bitt.er .opposition in order to accomplish this Ob­ject, a ju lth e League confidently looks to you for the .means to carry on the light, and already the re ;a re Imllcatioiis o f a great trium ph; if. proper assirtance is rcndeieil by the people o f the county. .

Please send all funds to .Mr.. Theodore Oves, treasurer, A slm ry.Park; X. J.

Witli respect, , J as. S .Y aUd, Prcsi.S. E d w au d Y ouno, Xecy. • * . . ;;

Tho Serpent and. th? Doi’e in' Business.The'qualities of both creatures should

be exhibited,by the man of business,’ He should be shrewd in. his dealings, prudent in his* investments ajid sagacious iu. ids selling. ; liu t his serpent-wisdom, should be Jimiteil and subordinated by the harm­lessness 61 tho dove, H is the serpent that creeps forth , unaccompanied by the dove,-!>vhen a m erchant takes advantage of the Ignorance of a ciwtomer. arid foists upon him an inferior article, .’or: takes more for’it than It Is worth;. It-.is the trail, of the serpent that tiie stockbroker leaves behind him, when he, for the sake of his paltry fee, inveigles the widow or- orphan Into precarious investments. The prouio- ter of bubble schemes.'ensnarlng tho .un­wary, shows the serpetit w ithout any of the dove. I t Is tbo hiss 'o f the serpent tbiit Is heard when tlio rich creditor stands by his rights aud.shows no mercy to the man whoso back Is rit tho wall.. Money got by that kind of sharp Intelligence, ri’n- tnlxed, unqualified by love, Is. so m uch fuel gathered. fOV the tire of hell. I tT *5 not tho presence of tho wisdom o f the ser­pent that, is wrong, .it is the absence of tho harmlessness of tbe^^dove.— The Treasury.

Gulielma.

Joy comesto theo, O bridegroom;Joy in this tender way;

' Through graceful art, of hand and heart,.Of Gulielma! • ;

Accept it as from heaven, •v . On this appointed day; '

For gloom of night, is touched'with light, ;. : '. .ByGullelmal -

• J/iiy 17,180-3. • ‘ ’ E. II. S.

The following extract' rrnm a Jackson- ville papor o f -recent da te ’ referring to Prof.. S.-B. Darnell’s j>i;ospeVou3 Institu­tion for the education of.the colored y ou tli,.. is a deserved 'tribu te to .tiie excellence of the school, and the efficiency o f its princi­pal und his devoted 'corps’ of. iristructorS;-

“ Tiie exfiuiinatioiKot' this institution of learning are now; in grogress. The senior cl ass h as al ready fi n ished' I ts w ork and ten have passed tiie required , grade und will m ake/their orations on Friday ni glit at tho . Park opera-house.

During tin* week.the other-.departments will have tiieir opportunities'to show the

'gains of a school year, • On Friday, morn­ing the standing In a ll' the grades and ■ classic departm ent -wili lie read arid tiie school formally closed by c.omniencement. services a t iilght.

During an examination in A pril in U .S history Dr. Anderson, o t New York city, author of several histories, called, and be­low i s ’his estimate of the work done in Cookman: . • 'Mins Vinla; V. LcucsOii: . . - •

:Dcur Madam—:i have written to my pub; lishers (isking them to send a copv of my new Grammar School History of the Uni. ted States to your address here In Florida. What I saw yesterday, in the Cookman In ­stitute .was quite new to me, and was of In-, terest, particularly so . as- respects the ex- , miiiuation you.were conducting. In. United States bist'jr>\ - The am ount that you re ­quired almost took my breath jiway, atid to that effect I think, I expressed' myself to you. I have had a large experience iu teaching the subject;, have lectured on It before bodies of teachers in the school- room and on public occasions; and have improved-many opportunities (or observa- tlon, botli in this country.and In Europe.'' I ought to be fam iliar with the.subject as a teaching one in all its hearings. W h a t ' I have said .Is to give you confidence In my statemeut, and now for-my final ;state- .inent: ; * • •

The amount of history that you required was far g reater-than any auiount'.tha't I have ever seen In my examination In any school or other Institution a t the N orth. I t was'fit lea^t four times more than in tho examination for admission to the College of Now York or • tho N orm al.college of ; that city; and greater by far than in the ex. aiuination fi>r grnduatloh from ..our New 'York State Normal school.or for teachers’ certificates of.the highest grade. •

f iini pleased with the school, with the attention shown me by Prof, Darnell .a n d : yourself.and with tiie good work you are doing. God bless you. • /

J ohn J ,'A ndkhson. The class In .United States history num-

biir tw;efity:>lx . pupils.; They 'w e re all. present a t iho examinajiort.. There were live who passed 9.and ahove^ hnd slxteeii . who passed the r><juIreil standard. •

Sjmstbing for .You.

The church of Christ was. b o rn , a t the. cross, but her muscles havo beeri‘’develop­ed bv toil.—Bishop Hurst. *’• 1 . ■• Those, wlio, without knowing.us, th in k . or.speak evil, do us no harm ; it is not we they attack, but the phantom of their own' Imagination. '• •. I t does m en’ good to adm ire what .Is

good and beautiful; h u t.it.does them Im definitely more good to }ove it. We grow ' like what,we adm ire; but we ii.ecome o n e . with what we love; •

.We are never w ithout help. . We ‘have, no right to say of aijy. good • work, I t Is. too hard for me. to do;, o r of any sorrow, i t is too. hard for me to hear; o.r of any . sinful habit, I t is too hard foe me too over- coiiie.—Elizabeth Charles. . .

Resolved, never to do anything which, If.L should see in another, I sh ^ ild c o n u ta justoccaslou to despise him for or to th ink any moro meanly of him.—Jonathan Ed­wards, . . : '. / ; •

T he best teacher of duties th a t's till Ho - dim to us Is.the practice of ..thoso we seo and have a t hand.—Thomas Carlyle.

An English leader of evangelistic work ' was asked what ho thought of the Salva­tion Army, and he replied:- “ I do not like- It at all, but I believe that God Almighty does.—Rams Horn. ■ . _ . "Self-knowledge Is the acquaintance with

ourselves jvhIch shows us w hat we. are, and w hat we ought td bo, I li order, to *. our • living comfortabiy and usefully here, and. happily •hereafter.—Mason. - . .

Page 2: REV, A, WALLACE, D. D., Editor. OCEAN GROVE, N. J., SATURDAY, … · 2014-04-01 · —Christian at Work. The Divine Emancipator, MY MUS. FANNIE II. CAltU. The Scriptures which explicitly

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<T E R M S , PO STA G E P R E P A ID .;0 n o co n y , Tour m o n th s , ..

; •* s ix m o u th s , . . . ..1 .50

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■ o lu b o f flvo o r m o re , o n 'o .y ea r, ea c h ,.

A d v e rtis e m e n ts in s e r te d a t t h e r a te o f te n cents- p o r l in e , o n e tltn o . F o r o n e , tw o o r t h r e e m o u th s, o r b y th o y e a r , a l ib e ra l re d u c t io n w i l l b e m a d e .

S A T U R D A Y , M A Y . 2 1 , . 1 8 9 2 .

F ifty , cents will pay. for the Ocean Grove R ecord./for- four/m onths, mailed to any address!

Postage .stamps' received a t this ofllce in payment of fifty cent subscript ions; and.

.fractious Of a dollar. ’Copies of tho Ocean Grove R ec o rd caii

always be had at the book-store, 27 'P il­grim Pathway. The. store [s open day

• and evening.Prof. S. C. Rue is preparing an excep-

• tlonally fine entertainm ent of music and elocution for Wednesday evening, June 1, a t Educatioual Hall. B eu rit in uiiud.

The storms of the w inter in their effect upon our ocean front lmve' involved an Outlay of nearly $2,300 in the repair of damages and the newly extended plank walk, ' ;• •• ' . ;• :• T he Recent remurkably line w eather is •bringing large numberso.f people to look after their Ocean. Grove property, and this

makes a harvest for grass cutters, house cleaners, professors' of the whitewash brush, and jobbing carpen ters.. The grass

• in some front yards at present is nearly knee high, aud growing every day.

Among the things to be especially no­ticed in tiie1 S lim m er’program, repub­lished in this number, is. the anniversary sermon to bo preached on Sabbath morn­ing, Ju ly 31, at 10.30 a . m ., by Rev. Dr» Theo. L. Cuyler, of Brooklyn, presldentof

.th e National-Temperance and Publication Society. I t will be his first sermon at Ocean.Grove.,

Mr. B .'Schapiro, the Hebrew student, who spent most on last, sum m er at Ocean Grove, and was so()f from here to Penniug- ton S e m i n a r y , f a i t h f i i l i y pursued his

.studies aM htrfinstituiion until compelled •/last week to take a.vacation on account of

the failure of his eyes. He is again at the Grove and Stopping at the cottage o t Dr. Susan F. Platt. He favors us with a few extracts from the 2Wwi((/, which we print in the preson't issue of tiie R ec o rd .

The rellitt.ing of. t lx Atlautic House ; since the return.of M r .A. A. McDonald■ and family May 1st liar, made a very no­ticeable it'llprovement. T he entry,, ofllce, parlors and stairways, covered with- tiie best brussels carpet, and the walls hand­somely papered, give the Interior an air of elegance, surpassing any former period,

• and its table service never was better. Mr.' McDonald .has measurably recoveredfrom his recent illness, aud .‘will soon be able to give personal' supervision to all

' the affairs of this popular resort, as the guests of the season began to crowd in by every train:

Rev. II; C. McBride, who has-taken to him self a few weeks of leisure a t Ocean Grove, filled tlio pulpit' of Dr. Jam es •Moore, Greeoe Street Si. E. Churcb.-Tren. tou, N. J., - in the absence of Dr. Moore, who Is it delegate at Omaha, on last Sun- Sunday morning and evening. We learn that preacher and people enjoyed together a tim e of refreshing. If other cliurches

. whose pastors are away a t General Gonfer- ence need a supply, we sim ply give tlieni" a hint. Bro. SlcBHde’s address Is Ocean Grove, K .J . . ■ • *

Friend Levi 3 Stokes, of Germantown;■ Philadelphia,^father M r / W istar l i .:Stokes, moved; to . the . fam ily-cottage in Ocean Grove: last.week, accqrnpanied by id s j-^ister, "Mrs., H ulings,, M r;; Wm.v A.

; R icker and daughter, Mrs.-M aria Fenton.One loved form is no more with us—-the cherished‘mother, who wept to Heaven iu

• November of last year, and her absence is felt by many outside “of the little home

. circle!The fast Philadelphia Express, so popu

lar every seaspn with Ocean* Grove visi tors, leaving Broad Street in the ni.ter.nooh at 3.30,. nnd Asbury Park 'station, every morning at 7.25. was put . in service last Saturday, M ay 14, and . covers the inter­vening eighty-eight miles, with ten stops, in exactly two hours and ten minutes. The train is in charge of Conductor Aj-ers

Mr. D -D . Peak, of Ocean Grove, was summoned to the city of Philadelphia last week by the serious illness of his mother, wlio at an advanced ago departed this life ou Monday morning, 'May lO.

’ About tiie same tim e/ lie . learue.d that the body of his squ Walter, who was drowned in the Delaware lilver uine weeks before, had been recovered in .the nets of some fishermen near tiie spot -where the acci­dent occurred. The.body supposed to bo that of Walter, reported found some time ago, proved to lie some one else, but the latter was fully .identified, and decently Interred last .'Monday afteruoon iu the It. of P. Cemetery,:lfrankf6rd, Philadelphia.'

'T he funeral of M other . Peak.'w ill-take place Friday, May 20...

. Season of 1892.The Sum m er Program is not yet com

plete. Tha .following dates iire given of the p ro m in en t.meetings. -Other details are' be i it g w roii glit out w}th as in tic li ra |1 i d- ity-as possible, and t l ie T Program in full w iil.soon be published. The following dntes are given to auswei; questions which are constantly being asjko'd as t«> the 'tim e of different, meetings :

Auditorium opening day at Ocean Grove, Sabbath, Ju n e 20 jalsoStrs; Palm er’s meet­ing a t Tabernacle, 0 .a. m.., and Young Peo­ple’s m eeting in Temple, Rev. C. II. Vat* man, leader.

The Fourth of Ju ly oration at Ocean Grove, Monday, Ju ly 4, at 10.30 a. mv by Rev. John Hatidley, of Asbury Pjirk. . . \V .C .T .: : U ;.9r X e w ^ J ^ ^ > y i i r ;boM their annual meeting at. Ocean Grove, Wednesday and Thursday, Ju ly 0 atid 7. Prominent ladies will be present. Mrs. Em m a Bourne, leader.

T he K ing’s Daughters will m ake,their annual visitntiou this year, Monday, Ju ly 11, Mrs. M argaret Bottonie, president. -

T he Ocean Grove Sunday-school Assem­bly,/Rev* P r .. B . B ; Loom is,; conductor, witli nil'aide.corps of h elpers, wi 11 lie held Tuesday,- Ju ly 12 to ;=:21 • inclusive.. Rev. D r. Si m s/ Chimce.il or o f Syracuse Uni ver- sity, will deliver the baccalaureate' sermon Oil Sabbath,' J lily. 17, a n d R e v. J . E., Ad am s; pifttor o f . the ■ Mv E / Church; Morristown;' N ; ' J.,Vw 111 d el IVer tiie §;/p.; oration.;on Thursday*;J u ly 2t; / , ; - ;.V//:. ■ ■ ilje r^ ew .Je re^lH)ltt‘its;'AuuiversiViy.biiUuder tile direction o f t he Set;retai-yv Rev,J . -IT.; K n o w l e s , i) .D ;

. The -- :Africau. .. M ethd i.]is tE p iscopal Church,Jubilee, in charge pi one o f the bishops of the church, wjll be held on- Tuesday Ju ly 2l>. . Always au occasion of great in te res t . * •’ , .

The National Temperance and Publjc°- tlou Society, In charge of J . 2s; Stearns, Esq., will be held Wednesday Ju ly 27 to Sabbath Ju ly 31/ inclusive. T he" Silver Lake quartette will bo. in attendance and a 1 oiig a rray of distinguished speakers, in­cluding Col. Geoi W. Bain, the K entucky orator. *■' ■ • • ‘ ’ !' * •' ,- •■ T he tw e nty-th U:d anniversary. <>f.-the fi ret r e l ig io u s meetin g .lieId ’a t , Ocean Grove^: Sermon 'Sabbathuiorhi ng, Ju ly 31, by-Rev. Dr.Theodore L. Cuyler of-Brooklyn, N .V .

Ocean Grovo M emorial Day Monday, August 1, in the evening.

Tuesday August 3 tile Epworth League will, hold its Anniversary, Rev. M arshallO.veil of. Seabright presiding.

OuiThursday August 4 aud Friday Au­gust; 5 W omen’s Uouie Missionary Society of M..E. Church.

Young .People’s Anniversary, Sabbath, Aug.’7, C. H. Yatinau, leader. . .

. The Yoiiug Evaugelists, a six. days’ ser­vice, Tuesday! Aug. 9, to-Sabbath, Augi 14 inclusive'. Rev. C. II . Yatman, conductor.

The Women’s Encouragem ent Meeting, Tliu‘rsda3’, A u g -18, Friday, Aug. 19. Mrs. Rey. H enry Wheeler--^jlrsi Ke'nnard'Chan-, dler, Mrs. Grace W eiser Davis.

Saturday, A iig. 20,; 'Sabbath, .A ug. 21, Wouien’s • Foreign Mission’ary-; iSoclety.. Prom inent missionary' w orkers .from the foreign field will take part. ;.

The Annual Camp meeting, Monday, Aug. 22, to Thursday, Sept. 1( inclusive.

Opening sermon on Tuesday, Aug. 23, by Blsliop John I l. Vlncent, at 10.30 a . m.

. E . I I . Stoicks,’ Prcs'i.

The General Conference.The feverish interest felt in the great

M ethodist Quadrennial Council at Omaha ls:begi nn i n g .to subside, now th at t li e que's- tion'.of new bishops has been disposed; of and; the. editors and secretaries have ; beep elected; - A ll premonitions th iit tliis year’s session .Was likely, to tu rn out tiie most 1 m> portiint ■ ever, held 1 ri the .history o f th e ' Church seim to have ^eeu 'b u t windy ora; tory. L ittle or nothing,"as we supposed at the beginning,.In the'way of liew' legisla­tive enactment will be effected, and it is probable that most nf';the really, necessary business m atured.in committee will fall at the end for want of a quorum. .

The most notable events of,*the second week were fraternal courtesies with.Brit- isli • and,; Canadian Methodism; and sister denominations: In this country. A ll the addresses have .been well' received - except, that froui tiie representatives of the M. E. Church South, - whose Intonse- sectional predilections . almost created a ' storm,-of indignant repudiation. * -r“-- ... ■' T he;.in trep id ., leadfer of the . lay; dele­gates, Sir. John Field, of Philadelphia, gained .notiiing i^a te ria t for his caus6 by. separate- sittings, and created 'a needless • sehsatlou by h is at too ki on the Jle thpd i st Rook-Concern-management. - ■

The Church jit largo.will concur in ’ the refusal'tb eleciat^this tlme^^any more-l>i^iir ops; and It is just ■ possible;, th a t tiie Wo- nuVn question ’inay be solved by;a very simple process of revision in the siguiO- catiou of male ” and female,1.1 In regard to tiie broad - meaning of who. coustitute. the laity.- ■ ■; . -. *.-. D r. JJuckley is:reeiectedJeclitor,6f the Christian * Advocate, to\ which w’e all .say ‘‘ amen!)’ ■fBttt'.V few; changes. .have been UitUle in;!the o ther editors or. book-; agents and secretaries. :;New aspirants:‘fori high salnjried oiilces seotn to have no show," and tiie removal of the “ tim e lim it,’1 if ordered may prove a good measure, as the. clear understanding goes with it, that every

Methodist preacher is appointed for only oue year, and may move or be removed by concurrent action wij;h the powers that be.

Editorial Mention.. TJie Misses M argaret and Mary. G. Brad­

ley and their brother! Win.- S„ of Phila­delphia,'are. guests' at the A tlantic House tiie present week. ' • / V.- Mr. and Mrs. Youngs, of. B ridgeport; Coun., are stoppi ng jit the H ygeia ilotel. Sir. Y. being under the caie of Dr. D. M. Barr for recovery from' the effects o f lii grippe.. . • . . ' ;

Miss Murray* of >’ew York city, and. her friend, Miss M. M. Ferris, of Pough­keepsie, 'formerly frequent, visitors- at the Grove, are among the. recent arrivals at theAtlrthtic Hbtise/--'; v ;4 v-

: Mrs. C. Letterson’s house,:;9D Main live- nue, receives a iieW nauie-^-Tlie Capitol. I t Is- prominently- located, and avIII be readily foUnd. , .The inanagehicnt tjiis sea- sod -Will/-be iu Ve.^ierienceiV^'hiiiids, and. earl}; guests w ill have choice o f very.pleas- ant-rbphiSi.' ^ V /y e l j 11 - Rev; Joiin ;IDtndley w ill be away froin his p u ip itJn F irst SI. E . ;Cimrch, Asbury Park, next Sunday at a dedication, but lias made excellent • provision 'for .the- church . in' securing th e ' services o f Dr.; Stokes in tii e - in oi’ u ing and D r. Sic Carty, of Oce tin G r oy e; f o r. th o ' ey en i ng, s e r m o n .- : •;; , /^Great packing <iases; filled .with: toys and

faiicyvgbpds’ -have;; been.; arriving a t the Qcean'' G i ove. Ladies! Store 'th is week,■{ and the Slisses Fahs are Vbusy • hi arki ng *■ their heavy invoices fo r-th e .u su a l; attractive- display found at theif popular establish:, meut. Their business litis started up well for tho seasoti. , • •; • ‘ -1 -

The stately Slatision House has a uew proprietor in the person of Sirs. L. -Van- Note, a lady well, and widely known . in religious circles, aud thoroughly compe­ten t to take the best care of her guests; The Slanslon is prominently located near St. Paul’s Church, and near eubugh every otlier point of Interest in the Grove; •;

Work me u are; busily. Employed, a t ’ D r Barr’s Hygenic Institute ,iti a general re no- vfitiori.of the estaliilshment, - which, from present indications/wtH soon be as -bright and attractive in its wail paper, decorations and cither Iiiiprbvenients*:as1, a brand'.- 'now dollar. Dr. -McCartyis:superintendiug the work, and,a fpuntain• is p ro jec ted ; to ■ play on the liiw n out,of dbprs. » ; J i .;. •^ S lri'.Iienry C. Johnson;is ;prbprletqi; .of.

the'; newspaper/; periodical . and ‘ confec?. tiotiery stiind 1 n tlie post ofllce- ' /He lias stocked, up for.the season,and the.num ber of/ strangers: and • siuiuner visitors, who gather In the corridors at inall tim e in- crease every day. The R ecord will be for sale a t this stuud.‘ Slrs. G. W. M atthew s'has secured the Be'ubli Avenue House for the season of ’02. We never heard of a.guest a t this house that wasn’t more than- pleased with its situation and internal arrangem ents for solid comfort. Mrs. M. may be relied, upon to keep up and-Increase.its reputa­tion. Her card.will be fouud among our popular boarding house advertisem ents.'

Sirs. C. H. Clemeut, who opened and conducted the newly enlarged Llllagard, Oceau Grove, last season, has moved her quarters this year to Asbury Park, and Will preside ut The E llerslie, Third iive; nue, near Kingsley—a’nice.house in . first? class location and with attractive accom­modations for a pleasaut sojburu at the seaside. Hev card will1 be fouud In the R eco rd ;

We are■ pleased to; notice; th e . return o f Sirs. SI. F . S lcPherspn/ who spent .‘ several, of the win,ter mouths in Ctundeh, to h e r cohilnud ious Ocean ‘ Grove ..;.houie—the Bath Avenue House/;: Which: is now being made ready for th e ; guests o f . the- sea-tou. I t Is one of the most tru ly’ Uomo-llke and comfortable’ hoarding houses on the coast, and ..it could n’t be otherwise .under. Mrs. SIcPliersbn’s nuinagement. I t s ; location;' corner Central and -.Bath avenues/ is cqhr slilered one of the best in the,Grove.

About this.tlm e every season,, as regular as th e alipanac and the return of the blue birds/,Mrs.. A» - Israel} o f the well-known Osbbrn House, corner.of; Pitman, and Cen- tra l avenues/ may. be seen' la te . and early on- her extenslvb verandahs around; the second and . th I rd stories, th ro w i n g '. h 6r, bedrooms open to air and; sunshine; and briskly arranging comfortable quarters for, her coming.guests.. ;She inakes money every season 'and is not afraid'; to spend * a' good;deal of it in increased .facilities, fo r public .accpmmodatloA.;, This' is .why, tiie Osborn never, falls;.

The oldest wbmab in the' country who is a .preacher, . i t is thought,. is, tiie Rev; Lydia Sexton, o f Seattle, how i)3 years , Of oge. She has been in service about half a century* For e ight or teh years, she was au exhorter before receiving a .'regular .li­cense to.preffCh in 1851, ; Ohio, Indiana and Illinois were her field prior to 1870, when ' w ith hey husbapiUV slie . remoyed to Kansas. / She has; - twice visited Oceiitr Grove and delighted large audiences by her preaching and singing.• Seattle was adopted as h e r Lome; three, years ago/ Slip has since, then conducted/many revival and other meetings, but failing eyesight th re a t ens to terminate her activity ere long/ 81ie hopes to live to be a full hundred" years old. •'• '.

Boom ia HousefurniGhing' Goods,I1USY TIMES AT WAl.NHNHIT'S. .

That a retail general store iu Ocean ;Grove should become, through the busi­ness tact aud push ing etiergy of its pro- pvletor a controlling m art of trade aud ceutre .of; supply for many points in Sion- mouth county, and more distant parts .of the State, besides .'selling goods to city dealers, some ns fat- away as AVest Yiri ginlti, rellects a . good deal of credit on home enterprise.' Even a casual visitor passing the entrance doors of .the estab- lishiiient on Pitm an avenue, or in the. rear' on p lln street—fpr the mammoth store runs from one block through to the other; cannot fail to note the extraordinary signs of activity which for six days nnd even­ings e very week ru n tliel r c ease less rou n d si . W e;took a brief survey of ‘the interior the other day, and any . desdrlptiye words, we coUld.employ ;wouId be but tam e and

..trite com pared With the reali ty / • Th6re; Is Pvery/week- or . so some; specialty.. in m er:. chandise Varriyibg,V--wbicii.';;.f6r the : tim e being absorbs public attention. :The flurry this week; Is occasioned by tin immense purchase of . "..-• ...

' 111,UE AND ORaV.ENAMELED WARE. • of siicli . variety and excellence that the old-fashioned tin utensils for kitcheu and cham ber service , which • mostly required re pi aceni eiit ’every s easoh, I s th row n in th e shade by.this beautl.f.ul: -and • dui'a.ble class. o f goo^Is.; Sliy W iiInrlgiit • rrttf,tii) to N ew :York.'to .attend ,ti forced;sale i; recently^ and purchased •' . ; ' : • .• J ; Z:0 : .I1 UR)EE.Til0 li' 1*1 ECE3 • ’ *■/ .vj- iucl tiding; teaaiid coffee, pots fro iii a 'p in t ; capacity, to .the sh.e of.ifoilrteeii..‘.quarts. | Ever)- vh r ie ty o f ho use liold u tens II. is .i u - , Cl ud ed in th is , s j ilPudid; stock, - w a ter pi tcliy ers aud buoket.s, sauce paus,-bpiiers and j toilet sets /and at tiie- prices paid : for tills', prtrticuhir invoice, the gpods'are all,m arked i and sold at half or less than hajf the usual rates. -. . . ' ’. •' •- * I

This, however, is blit an item in the char-) acter of the business of the house. A short time ago,-in about the .same way, oue of th e .finest.stocks of splendid •/,"•••; <y.f

; *31RUSSELS' AND.'INOR A IN CARPETS • ever brought to Ocean Grove; Were secured at ; s u c h re d u c e d -prices; and ' offered on such term s.that’ tiie d iill weeks Of win­te r were ’ebliveiled.jill thrbugh with selling and jh a iiln g . new; carpets fo r the best hotels find d \Veili ngs with I n ; ten .miles of, this place. : T his carpet fitting is still; a prominent deportment of the house,;.nn.ci i n co nnectibn'. wj th It th e . sup pi y .o f fitte matt I ngs p rocured , i n large quantit ids at first.hands and soitl lower than ’any house­keeper can purchase; the same goods, in city stores,1 runs up to an astonishing ag- gregate in one sea'son’s trade.

IN THI-: LINK OF MATTRESSES,Mr. W ainright has made some fortunate speculations, purchasing the en tire1 outfit of large hpteis.and giving Grove and Park c us torn ers th e advantage o f ‘ fi rst-cl ass’ ar ti^ cles'at greatly reduced.cost; So with bed­room suits, luxurious 'spring bottoms aiid parlor furniture, upholstered-in.. the rich­est and most beautiful styles. :

FOLDING 11EDS . have lately become a popular .feature of W ainright’s contrivances,for greater con­venience and comfort in homes or hotels subject to sudden demands from unex­pected arrivals of guests. There are full size, three-fourth and single, and are so handy and luxurious that.those who covet good, sleep prefer them, and when not in use they cau be put aside asa tt'ractive articles of-furniture. ..‘i.'r'-<

We y: have; had occasion, freqUently; to notice the:superipr ,1. , ;••• y y :’;yP } ;:/;';

SILVER PLATED* TARLEWARE, :• which: the’ proprietpr.'/^as the ' knack of procuring in ’ such, quantity iiad variety, and o f :the'l)est- m anufacturers known In the trade,, thut those Who exam lne stock 'and prices al ways prefer to m ake ’ th e ir purchases here. Sluch Of. the delay and difilculty experienced in hotel and board-; ing-hbuse/conking has been simplified and accellerated bjv the utensils.fu'rnished at )Vdriwrights, anti among tiiese notably are the' splendid tea and; coffee -urns Avhlch were introduced last season and are always on hand.

: i L,\MPS, CHINA AND QLASSWAUE present •a-brilliant; appearance,.ahd cbiu- bine the useful and ornamental in.; assort; ment. and tasted All cannot, lie nccommor dated witliuhe popular electric l ig h t; but such improvements - are .‘constantly being made in the;burners for kerosene, and the brillitiucy and . safety of its u ses /in parlor- ciiandelier, or for readlngfround the cen­tre table, that: there i^.little need o f cbm- p luint ln mbdern times, and .much i of th e llluininatibn which; gives; Ocean Gr<»ye its hpme like iind happy 'character as one passes along its avenue's a t night; is due to -Wainwright’s store. ’ - ; ;; • . / : • /:

Our ’ general survey of the establish-; m ent would hardly-tie com plete without some ! reference to what.,has • fo r . a . few years piast been know n‘as Vv -VCv ■ . :THE'TFN CENT .COUNTER . • ;where a thousand and one articles'of daily and almost.hourly. utility are exhihlted,and hone of . which ; costs; o ver.' the . speclfiefl dime. To recapitulate .tlio many , other departments pf: this weU oMeced empprir um for the people’s coin fort/.lnclud Ing th e necessary'dust-.brusli and brooin for |iouse- cleaning, a better, stove f o r . heating or cooking/w ith all needed requisites of the

latter, and then, the groceries, bread, •meats, ohd many articles which taste and care require for iho table, the long cele­brated Ocean Grovo store never was a t a higher point of adaptation nnd popularity than i tw il lb b found any day’of the pres etit season of 1892..

Married,E v an s—Esuay.—On Tuesday, Slay 17,

1892, a t the home of the. bride’s mother, Xo. 20 S.- 17th S t , Philadelphia, by.Rev. E . H. Stoif.es/I ) /D ., George W . Evans, Esq., of Ocean Grove, N . J .; to SIiss J^'uli- elma, daughter of the late. W illiam K. Esray, of Philadelphia; • J?

The World's CpWmbian Exposition,v-V Send GO cents to Bond ifc Co.,’ 570 Rbbk' ery^ Chicago, and you will receive; p o st paid, a four hundred: page advance Guide ;to the Exposition, with elegant: Engrav­ings of - tiie. Grounds and Buildings, Por­traits o f its lending spirits, and a Slap of tlio City of .Chicago; all o f the Rules; gov* ernirig the Expositirin and Exhibitors, and all in formation which can be given out in advajice of its open)tig. /A lso,’ other En*. gravings and printed, information 'w ill.be sent you as puhiislied.: I t will'-iie - a very valuable; B ook 'and every person should secure a copy. 4 :

, In Spring Array.

Tlio mnmmouth brick store of Henry Steinbach, iit the corner of Cookman ave- pue iind Stain street, Asbury Pilrk,,evpn to tiiose- r.whb only survey: its intlgnificeiit. show' windows/ frbm -the- siderwaik, ::is a standing iiionuinerit of taste, gehius anti-a- wealth of seasonable . merchandise, wlilch it wouId'be d (Aicuit to surpass or equal in either.city or country.; B ut one m ust step insid o and pass througii the. establish in ent tb‘,get a correct idea o f1 w hat constitutes a iirstclass m odern. em porium to ■ m eet .the .recurring wants.p£ a live, seaside popula­tion. From base ment to abtic th is peer* I :iess stpre is stocked in its varlous.leadIng; departm ents for the .approachirig sum m er. 1 Dress’ goods, milli be ry: and all- kind S - o f elegant notions require the main floor fo ri their display. •• |; Down-sta i r s . th e- h ous eh old e r w ill find

everything of practical utility in the/fur- nisliing lin e / ' Up; stairs - the carpet and m atting rooms aret crowded with luxuriant goods; nud in.the.ready-niade.clothing like One caD see §25,000 worth of suits;.ready for' the wearer.; ' Some of.‘these are going, off ris low as live or six dollars a suit; aud decent wear at tiiat/ wh iie ' the 'order de-, partmeiit Is 1 ncreoslng every season.: The;J impression one recelvps from a mere glance around is that, the brick corner store more thau holds its own, and what.- ever be the .competition, patronage .will nuturally run iu its well .worn .groove, where the system, keeps so perfect that everybody is pleased.

Sir. Win. A. W hite, of the Ocean View House, corner of Central avenue and Broadway, lias;put in a very .useful sprlng: job in iiavi ng his comm odious house newly painted and the plum bing thoroughly over* hauled, so that the Ocean View never ap­peared better or was in as good sanitary condition as it is now. I t will beopen for visitors.as usual on June 1.

Sir. R. SI. Ferguson, who conducts the large fru it and vegetable m arket on Olin. street'near tho post ofllce, opened his place- last week, and • niakes a; very/ inviting dis­play. of everything in Ills line of.business,

. ' The 2'i‘€(t8U)iy .o f lleligious Thotiglit;-fox Pastor and People* .is on our tab ie for Slay 1r an enlarged form, with several new de- partineuts, and a new artistic and emblem­atic cover. These are Vevidences of aipros-' perlty well deserved. I t is a u b b le :m aga­zine,alw ays valiant for the truth. The frontispiece is' a portrait" o f /D r . A. J . ^row n, of Portland;. Oregon, in whose church the. Presbyterian Church holds its; General Assembly this year. A beautiful view of the, ;church ;iB. alsp given w ithi a' Sermon by Dr. Brown and iiis : biographi­cal sketch. The fu ll/serm ons by I)rs. Fahnce arid cVan-I>eWater; are . excellent. Several capital outline sermons follow. A Grand. iG x posi tory L ebture’- by professor vNliirphy of Bel fast, Ireland j a ‘ tlioughtfiil Exegetlpal Comment by Eir. Kellogg. A notable Critical Comment on. the Origin and Religious Contents of tiie psalter by. Prof.. J ; D. Steele, B. D .; Excellisnt iThoughts by ; several divines for Decora­tion Day Services^ H igher Crlticianl_l}i,; P ro f.; Terry j the Mosaic A uthorship/of the Pentateuch by D rv Item ensynder; A P en p icture o f . Archdeacon. ’Farrar with : portrait, by, Di1, :Cuyler; The. Sabbath; De,-; . fended by Dr.; K u eel an d ; ■ Thoughts for Pam ily Life. by p.r. /C uyler and Rev. S. p ren te r; Thoughts for the H our of P ray e r; Exposition of S. S.'Lessons by D r. SIo- m ent; Russia and. her Religion by Rev, C. SI. A lford ; -Current Religious Thought; Survey of Ghristlah Progress. I llu stra ­tive Thoughts, Beautiful Thoughts, Thoughts on C urrent Literaturej ^y 1th Ed- .ito r la ls o n E n la rg e m e n t/B o W is e a s S e r pents and Harmless as Doves,.l]he Serpent and the Dove lii Business, The Simplicity that is in Christ/; Religion in; the Homo, D efending the gospel.; Y early subscrip, tion,' §2.50.' • Clergyuien, SI ri^Ie.copl ea/25 cents. E. B. Treat, Publisher, 0 Cooper Uniou, New York.

tFrora our ReRUlar Correspoadeat.] .

Washington Lotter, . '

, W as jiin g to n , Slay 11, 1892.One question which has In some foi'm

beeu before Congress ever slnce there was a Congress, and which wiil prbbabl}’ stay there as, long as there is a desirable pieco of land owned by an Iudiau iribe, or ag- gregation of tribes is that relating to . the purchase of Indian lands by the Goveru- ment. This week the Senate, after tiie expression of opinions directly opposite to eoch other as to tho justice of the claim, by,such em inent Senators and philanthro­pists as -Sir. Allison, of Iowa, and Sir. Dawes, of - Slassachusetts, adopted by a vote of 43 to 13, a resolution w*hlcb de­clares it to be the opinioh of the Senate that, for reasons set forth in the report of the Committee on Indian Affairs upon the President’s message of February 17 laBt, as to. the appropriation,in the bill of Slarch 3,1891, for pay m en t. to th e : Choctaw and v ■Chickasaw, nation,- for thelr interest ini the Cheyenue and Arapaliop reservation, there is no sufiicient reason for;.interference in ' the.due.execution.of th a t lawi • The PreB- ident’s message referred to informed Con- gress that he had, in the discretion consti­tutionally vested in;him directed th a t .the money apprppriatedr-aboiit - $3,000,000—.' be w ithheld until.there was a fuller inv^s-. tigatioh of the matter,or. more legislation ’. uppri the sub jec t Tiie opponents of this resoiutiori whicii .;practicaiiy; orders’ th e . money to be paid, claim that no money isdtie these Indians,because .they were paidfo r.tlie irlands fi f ty y ea rs ago. ;

Ju s t Ice; W11 liiim Strong, ch It lr in a 11; d el i v- ei-ed -tiie; opening address at the celebration .' o f the sixty-eighth anniversjiry of: the • Am erican Sunday-school Union,, which was held here Sunday evening/:and iv very Interesting ad d re ss lt iyas.'- He ;liegan . by say ing tlmt little* was heard of the w ork of the Unioq', -.becauseinstead, of being de: ; nominational if was. conducted by ail de- no miriatloiis,1, atid .^it ;made .rib appeals-to : deribminational methods. :j. M ore,than;half of the Sunduy.schools iii this country, lie. 8aid/nvere.started by agents o f this Union, and the grand to ta l'to the..first of Slarch last Was 86,000.: Sunday-schools.'. 'D uring ;1 the twelve mbntlis'-ehdlng with February the Union organized 1,604 Sunday-schools ' in places previously destitute of religious . privileges, containing 7,018 teachers,and 59j55l scholars * aided , several thousand ;V schools al ready: establ ished ; distribu ted by . sale or g ift 0,548. Bibles and 9,115 Testa­ments I in nde v i si ts to 50,582 fam ilies; de. llvered 12,474 sermons and addresses; re- • ported 0,07^ conversions;; developed 210.; churblies froin Suhduy-achools/.hesldea se­curing regular preaching in many places. . •Is not that d work for oii}' organization'to.V be proud'.of-?; ;>;• ■

.'Rev, Joseph H^ McCulitigh, superin tend/i en t, of th e U n io n ’s . \vprk ;in • th e ,;South,-.^ ,uiade a few rem arks concerning; tiie work -/' of his diytsibn-;and showing.' the Union/? w as doing temperance as well as- religious work.; He cited a 'case/ where a Sunday- . . . -school: w as sta ated I n .a bar room in a lv e n / ' tucky mountain viliage, because there wa^ • no other place in 'which a ' m eeting could; f b e . held. T he result of. that m eeting;in such an unhallowed place‘was, the orgariU zation of a chuich with a membership- bf^ i 80, and t l i f ralsing of § 1,000 for; a church; :/ ii u {Id ing. . E igb t months after that • rneeti/ ing Sir. SlcCullagli again visited that mountain village. -He fpund the church .. . built, dedicated and pa idvfor; the bari ; keeper and h is wife active m em bers/ and, thfeir old est son at a th eologlcal seiiii uary equipping him self for the ministry. .'■//• T h 6 niUrOads sold excursion tickets at red uced rates for thei benefit'of the W ash­ington arid Baltimore people who wished to attend the meeting of the Presbyterian ■ General Assembly ; wl^ich is to be held a t Portland /O regon,' tfiis week: As the tick- < ets are good for ninety days quite a nuin- her of our people, took; advantage of th e / ’ opportunity to -visit tiie Pacific slope.;:; '. The temperance people whoi-have b een ;' working to secure Congressional' legisla­tion prohibiting, the sale of• i ntoxicating liquors , on the grounds of . the W orld’s F a ir are, o f corirse, pleased to learn that the attorney of-the.C hicago. W orld’s F a ir Board of Directors lias given -an o p in io n ; , that the H yde P a rk codew lliraake i t i l l e - / gal to soil intoxlcatirig 1 Iqiiors on the E x­position grounds; but they are not disposed ; to relax their efforts to .secure a. law th a t ' > cannot be set'aside . by, the Chicago local courts, as this .attorney’s opinion ;uiay .be -;’ when it;.will be to.o,;late to secure Congres­sional action. ; They wish to be absolutely certain that thb rum fiend shall be shut : p u t / . ; '•;•;-/• v '/ J - / /■;' P resident Harrison, has written a le tte r ' to p r : S. L. BaldwIn, secretary of the SIeth/ :;; odist Sllsslonary Society, explainlng why he slgried; the Chinese bill, but- lie. decline's. : to; make the letter public,; say 1 ng th a t;it ;, was a private , commuriication. Dr. -Bald-/ 'w in • greyibusly' wrote to M r / I lan iso n ^ stating his beiief .that tiie b ill; in question was highly, im proper and’inhum an /.• Senator, P la tt yesterday presented sev- oral petitions from 1 Cbnnectlcut churches asking legislation. for- the closing of the-. •• W prla’s: F a ir on Sunday. l ie said he was V in sympathy, with the objects o f the petl- / tiOners, but not w ith the threat contained - in the petitions o f future opposition to .; Co p ressm en • wlio voted ag«,l nst, closln g th e T id r on Sunday;;.;/. - /: .; .- /:

. The Association hos 1,800 .tons u f supe. rior ice storod away for sum m er u s e . . I t cost thls.year $4,340:90/

Page 3: REV, A, WALLACE, D. D., Editor. OCEAN GROVE, N. J., SATURDAY, … · 2014-04-01 · —Christian at Work. The Divine Emancipator, MY MUS. FANNIE II. CAltU. The Scriptures which explicitly

OamA.Isr (3a6^B.;BBGQBD, MAT 2l, 18©2

' Ocean Grove Ordinancus,A ii o rd in a n c e o r b y -law In ro Ia tJo n to s id b tv a ik s . '- l . B o i t o rd a in e d b y - th e O cean G rove C am p- m e e tin g A sso c ia tio n o f th o .M ethodist E piscopal C h u rch , T h a t I ts n a l l .b o th e d u ty o f a ll o w n e rs o f •lots fro n tin g * o n a n y o f . tiie s tre e ts o r a v e n u es

. w i th in .th e p re m ise s o f sa id A sso c ia tio n to eo tt- Btrucfcsidfcw alks In f r o n t o f . th o siim o o f e ith e r

. .c o n c re te o r flagc ing - o f tl i6 w id th a n d a t th o

.g ra d e .e s ta b lln h e d or. to b e e s ta b lish e d b y th o As-* so c ia tio n o r th e o fficers th o re o f j a n d to p ro p e rly

C urb th a sa m e n n d to k e e p th o s ld u w alk s w id en aro n o w q o n s t r n o te d , o r m a y liureaftfcr bo co n ­s t ru c te d , .and th o c u rb s a lo n g th e sa m e in . f ro n t:

. o f th e s e lo ts iu p ro p e r r e p a ir n nd nafo fo r travel,; a n d i f th o B ldow alka a n d c u rb s a lo n g sa id lo ts s h a ll n o t bo c o n s tru c te d o r .ro p a ire d a s a fo re sa id ,

• o r sh a ll n o t bo o f th o p ro p e r g ra d e 'a n d w id th 1. I t. s h a l l bo th e d u ty o f th e sa id A sso c ia tio n to n b tlfy : s a id o w n e rs to c o n s tru c t ,- r e p a ir o r re la y th e sa m e , w i th e i t h e r flagg ing Or c o n c re te ; a n d If

. s a id o w n o r o r ,o w n e rs sh a ll re fu se o r n e g le c t to ■ c o n s tru c t , r e p a i r o r ro la y th o sam o a s a fo re sa id ,

w i th in tw e n ty d a y s a f te r b e in g 's o n o tif ie d , th o sa id A sso c ia tio n m a y c o n s tru c t , R e p a ir o r re la y th o sa m e a n d c o l le c t th e ex p e n s’o th e re o f fro in s a id o w n e r o r o w n e rs b y a c tio n a t l a w /o r . m a y a d d th o S am e to th o a n n u a l -.asw H sm ent. o n sa id l o t m a d e a g a in s t sa id o w n e r, w i th le g a l in te re s t

■ .th e re o n ..- . . ' * ' • • • . • ■■■:'■•; •','. ' A p p ro v ed May, JO, 1892. . •'..':

. / . .E. II . STO K ES, P res id en t.G ;W ,.E V A N S , S e c re ta ry .. . / :

A n o rd in a n c e ' t o ro p 6a l a n fird in a n co e n ti t le d " A n o rd in a n c e o r Dy-law In re la t io n topside* w a lk s ” . .

. 1 . B e .l t o rd a in e d , b y th e . O c ean G rove’ C am p- m e e tin g A sso c ia tio n o f th e M e th o d is t E p isco p a l C h u rch , T h a t a n o rd in a n c e e n t i t l e d VAn f l rd k n a n c o o r b y -law in re la t io n to s id e w a lk s ap -

Ero v e d O c to b e r I I , bo a n d th e sam o Is here-y re p ea le d .' : ' * \ ? . . . . .u ••A p p ro v ed M ay; 10, 1802'. '

'. E . U. STO K ES, P re s id e n t. G. W . E V A N S, S e c re ta ry . . • •

SPECIAL NOTICES.

c HAS. W . K A ItSN E U , M. D .P H Y S I C I A N A N D S U R G E O N .

V ' . G ra d u a te o f b o th sch o o ls . - VS u m m e r ofllce-^-Opposite PostofflCo, O cean. Grove<

P ilg rim P a th w a y , c o r n e r J i t ; H e rm o n W ny. ,; 1109 S o u th 15th 8 tre c t , . . P h ila d e lp h ia , P a

R esp ec tfu lly re fe rs to 'R e v . E . H , S to k es , D. D.i R ev . A. W a lla ce , D .D ., a i id G eorge W ., E vans,

' E sq ., O c ean G r o v e . . - V \

D R. I . N. B E E G L E , .■ *; 7 8 S l n l n 'A v e n u e , - •; •■■.' :

O C E A N O U O V E j S i. J i

E H o u rs“ 7 1 o O.aVm ., 12. to 2 a n t i 6. to. S'P. St.

■•D osltriotrlc."

D EM ABGABET G. CURRIE,• I IO 5KEOI* A T J U S T . '.

120 M ain Avenue, . O cean G rove,: Diseases of wbmeuajid children a specialty.

OFFICEHOURS—7 to.10 a. in., i to 5, 7 to 10 p.m*

D R /S , G. W ALLACE,— D E N T I S T —

Office d n rin g T su m m e r. m o n th s In A ssociation B ulld irig ,O cean;G rove. E stab lish ed th e re lii I860.

R eg u la r office, 425 P e n n s tre e t , C am d en ; ST, J i

H a s a li th o m o d e rn a p p lia n c e s fo r ra p id w ork a n d .a l le v ia tin g p a in . Gas o r local an e s th e tic s u se d In .e x tr a c tio n . : -'VV . "

. R e sp e c tfu lly r e fe r s to R ev . K. II . S tokes. O .D ...R ev . A. W a lla ce . D .D ., Rev. R . J . A n d re w s a n d Dr. J . If. A ld ay , O cean G rove.

M RS. A. A. P H E L P S , .

M ed ica l E lec tric ian ,OOG BOND S T R E E T , ASBURY PA UK, N. I

R e g u la r t r e a tm e n ts a n d e le c tr ic b a th s , Mrs, p h e lp s h a s been v*-ry su c c e ss fu l1 in t r e a t in g d ls ea ses o f v a tio t\s k inds.’ C o n su lta tio n free .

BUY YOUR SUMMER SHOESA T T H E .

PILG R IM P A T IIW A .Y n e a r PosTOFFtcr.. -

Reliable Shoes a t Battom Prices.R E P A I R I N G N E A T L Y D O N E .

A lso a. full: lin o o f H a ts ,M e n ’s F u rn ish in g • Goods, U m b ro llas , etc ,'. 'E L IA S A. C L A R K ;. :

v .'• M an ag er.

FOR SALE— - A J .

Ocean Grove, N. J.T ho a u b so rib e r. so lo su rv iv in g m e m b e r o f tho

firm o f M orrow . D ay & Co., o f O ceau G ro v e a n d J e r s e y C ity , w ill sell a t low p ric e a u d o n eu sy te rm s , e i th e r th e

NATIONAL HOTEL,Or the Baking and Ico Cream Establishment,on M ain a v e n u e . Opposlto A sso o 'a tlo n B u ild in g ,

O c eau G rovo , N. J .

G E O . W . M O R R O W ,. HI M o n tg o m e ry S t., Je r so y C ity , N . J

To Let-^-A 35-Room House,H a n d so m e ly fu rn is h e d .' fo ld in g beds, A rtes lau w a te r,' co n n e c ts w ith sew er, fa c in g O cenn. O w n­e r ’s fa m ily Doard w ith p a r tie s . G ro u n d s 00x200. B e a u tifu l la w n . • F. S. SKLOVER,

■.,••••; 21 W. 42d S t., N ew Y ork , o r RECoitD.ofiice

TO RENTH A N D S O M E F U R X I S r i E I ) C O T T A G E

, o n M ai ii av e n u e , second b lo ck from th e O cean . R e n t StBO.- I n q u ire o f Rov. I. 81MMON8, D.'D,; D a n b u ry , C onn., o r LIN CO LN W .RIG HT, No. 33 M ain av e n u e , O c ean G rove.

•v^lN C m N ATI BELL FOUNDRY GOSUCCESSORS IN BlYMYER^EUS TO THE

BLYMYER MANUFACTURING CO^CATALOGUE VVITH220D7£S7IMON|SlS.

J a n . .9 , l y . ';CHURCH.SCH00L-,FI RE ALARM

P le a so m e n tio n th is p a p e r

The Capitol,Form erly The Bryii Mnwr,

A lsu 'PA T E IiaO N . H OU SE, . .

. 95 M ain A v e ., Ocean d rove, N . J . ;A sp ac io u s a n d co m fo rtab le h o m e o n p rin c ip a l

av o n u o , a n d tilte d u p . w ith a l l m o d e rn conven lr •'. en c cs for p u b lic ac co m m o d atio n . G ood b ed s an d . g en e ro u s tab le . R a tes th o m o st reasonable .. •

MHS..C; L E P FE ltS O N , P ro p ’r.

C oal’and W ood.

T he above article a t L. :M .Taylor’s yard as ipw In price and as good \ti .quality as the m arket affords. Main.ofllce,; No. 702 Mattison ayenue.; .' . Branch . offices, •Shepherd’s grocery,'Emory street! ABbury Park, and Appleby’s real estate ofllce, Ocean Qroye. All orders promptly-dellv ered.' •••; . ■. '*»•::

N e w V o k k , .

. : • . . . • May 16th, 1892.’ W e assume the : complete

outfitting,,, o f . boys, as well as menv Everything, from .Hat? to Shoes ; but only of the rell able, sorts.

YVc can't describe the pretty costumes'for small boys—Kilts and first Knickerbockers—but they're as pretty as pictures.

£)ur Suits afld L ight Over­coats, fof larger boys, are made in the very best style; N or are good looking a n d : well: made clothes necessarily expensive., W c have all the other items of a boy’s outfit—Furnishings, Hats, and Shoes.

Men are selecting from... our stock, Spring Overcoats, Suits, and Trousers, instead: of buy­ing higher; cost custom gar­ments, and we are doing a large trade.in our- three-dollar Fiats. • y• F re e d eliv ery to a ll po in ts w ith in o n e h u n d re d m iles o f N ew Y ork C ity . .

RO G ERS, P E E T & CO.T H R E E 1 P rince,

[{ROADWAY J. VVnrrtn, . S T O R E S i j i d s t .

For RentT w o h e a v y c a u v n a liv in g Tontfi. w ith H its. 2 x 11

feet e a c h . D in in g room te n ts ll.xti e a c h . Krmno k itch en s e a c h 10x»o> A ll o n o n o goo d llo n r. F u r­n itu re , s to v e s d ish es , &b, : A rte s ia n w a te r; W ater closets;, s ew er, d ra in a g e . Oti . h ig h sh ad e d lots ii0x60.fi.; N . E. c o rn e r C ookm an a n d . New Y ork av e n u e s , O bean G rove; F o r re n t,fo r . th e season . T iie e n tire p ro p e rty for-salo.; : : • o . s . b r o a d b e n t , - ..r ' . v . ; ; . • .ConshTohoeken, P a.

AT LOW RATES '.FO R N l^flK D COTTAGES TO R E N T , n e a r th e O cean, a t B rad ley B eucb . N . a i l j o i u i n g O cean Grove. A ddress O w ner, C. II . Ch aw ford . '

FOR SALE.T n e v ery d es ira b le n o r th w e s t c o m e r o f M ain

an d P e n n p y lv a n la av e n u es . O eeon G rove. H ouse co n ta in s 12 room s, w ell b u il t a tu l in good o rder. T h ero a re tw o .lo ts fro n tin g on M ain av e n u e , size GlxGO. W ill sell c o rn e r house a u d lot for ?:1,'20C, o r th e w h o le for SI,COO. E n t iu ir e o f

•: :V.t v C. H . PO R TER. ,.. ' v ' . ’••. ■ .On.the. premise.1;

M A I N A V K N U 1 1

C t x x 5

(U nder New Management.j ' < ; •

‘ ' .OCEAN CrKOVE, N. J .

H o te l th o ro u u ld y re n o v a te d , n e w h a ir m a t t r e ^ e ^ —w o v e n w ire sp rin t* . ilr-t*elas« ta b le a n d fine d in in g h a ll, A r te s ia n w a te r , la w n 'te n n is c o u r t , m ic m in u te fro m A u d ito riu m a n d th re e m lu u tr s froa> o cc an . T erm s rcfasonabl«. A c n o m m o d a tlo u ^ fo r 150, w ith e v e ry c o m fo r t -a n d a t te n t io n to

> B ox 317*, *TIIO.S. P R E N T IS , P ru p rle ti.r , •g u es ts .

28 to 34 Bath avenue. . •- •' -• - Ocean.Grove, N . J.: . ; .SEV ENTEENTH SEASON. * •■:■.,

. M id-w ay b e tw e e n th o A u d ito riu m u n d th e oep 'an b e a c h . MU feet from th e .O cean .t T a s te fu l s u r ­ro u n d in g s u h d o x c u lie n t ? a n ita ry c o n d it io n . B est a r ra u g e m e n ts to r h e a lth a n d co m fo t t o t gucstu , O pen ns u s u a l .lu n o l.

. LOCK BO X , 2H7. > m s . O .K . P R IE S T , P ro p t le t o r . .

U c eiiii 'X ^U li-ivay jvN sefti,e 6 t ',. t b e ' . S i d e , - ; . . ' ' : ;

■’ ( ■: '

T h is sp ac io u s a n d e le g a n t nevv liouae l a t l y com pleted ', a n d p o sse s s in g . nil'.Uhe 'Im p ro v e m e n ts a n d c o n v e n ien ce s possib le fo r th e co m fo rt o t .s u m m e r visito rs, h an d so in ely - fu rn ish e d , w ill .b e o pened fo r guests a b o u t J u t ie l . i JS tigagem ents for. room s a n d b o ard now . in o rd e r . . , , . ,,

.‘v:.;’- - V 'H : • •: T /-B .^H U N T E R ,'-P ro p ric to h /;•

Bryn Maivr Hotel,. [ F O i p t E l I M ' CrEilMAXTOWX- H O U SB 1 v . t

. . . . : N , K , C o r n e l ' C e n f r a l a m i . IT e c l i A v e n u e 's . - .’

O C E A N O l t O V E , X . .1.

Con v e n ie n t to B each;' • Post Oillce a n d . A ud 1 to r i u o i. v ; G ood Ac com hio tl a t Ions.D esirab le loca tion .R easo n a b le l e r m i . . .

S p ecia l ra te s fur J u n e a n d S ep tem b er. B ox 5M60, . s i r s ; G / s . ' e k k e k s ;v P r o p r i e to r . .

fNo. 8 Ocean A venue, - . ‘£ ‘ Ocean Grove,* N;'J»’

O P E ^ S 'J P N E l . 'IS O i: . D irectly o n t i ie O c ean fro n t. • KOlI .Oeenh v i e f r o m a ll th e room *’: Con­v e n ie n t to A u d ito riu m a n d UosVs P av ilio n .- G ood'-!00111%: 1’K‘iin \n t ver« iudas.! Jj.in'itary; a r ran g e - lu e n ts e o o ip le te i : '. V-. •• ■ . ■ *• ?"/• ? . • • > ;

BOXW I7. ' ' " " " " ’M I HOLT

25 A tla n tic A ve., Ocean Grove, N . J .D e lle h tf u lly s i iu a te d n e a r tlie O c esn . W e sle y t a k e , A u d ito riu m a n d Y o u n z .P eo p le ’s T em p le ,■

la rg e ; th o ro u tth Iy fu rn ish e d ; w e ll v e n ti la te d room s. vAli m o d e r n ip iu ro v e m e iita ..; A ecOn'nnoda- lo n s fo r f if ty g u e s ts ; R a te s u n ti l J i i ’y 16 a n d a f te r S ept. 1, 5 l .p e r d a y ; fro m J u ly 1.5 to S e p t. .1', Sltisin g le , 3 1 1 to 520 fo r c o u p le s p e r w e e k . ' • V

B ox 0075. F. D. ltO SEX CP.A N S.

TO LET. .•The Amliei st House,Pitman avenue, within half biook of the Ocean,

• ODEAN. GROVE, N. J ,T h is d es ira b le h o u se c o n ta in s som e' « o r o o i i i s .

I s co m p le te ly fu rn ish e d a u d h a s b ee n p .u t.iiuhor* o u c h o rd e r a n d ic p u lr . ■ ;

A pp ly to. \ v. H . ,,JS; M ain • A venue, orM rs. M,: It. SiiHiMiEab on th e prem ises.

For Rent.3 2 R o o ih h , n e a r O cean . C am p;G round P ost Of-: lice, w ell e s ta b lish e d .'A ll im p ro v em en ts .

■ A p p ly :29 O L IX 8 T K E E T , ... B ox 3 i | ' : -.Ocean. G rove..

FOR SALE. .'B o a rd in c • h o u se —25 r o o m s ; fu rn ish e d ; tw o fclooks fro h i o c e a n fro n t. W.ell e s ta b lish e d . '•■

- . . . 'A p p ly to • • J . A . C ., . .L o ck B ox 2053, O c ean G ro v e, N; J;.

FOR SALE.A c h o ic e c o r n e r 'p ro p e r ty o n B roadW ay, O cean G rdvo , n e a r th o o c e a n . H a n d so m e c o tta g e i.O ro o m s, w e ll fu rn ish e d . T e n t—c lo th a n d fr a m e — 5 ro o m s .' L o t 00x00:- A r te s ia n w a te r a n d s e w e r co n n e c tio n . P ric e c o tta g e S3,500, T e n t §1,200, o r to g e th e r S4,500. . S2%000.on m o rtg a ttd . • ' ■ '.

• •;' W rite to '* O W N E R ,”■- j: • , 24 s o u th 0 th S ti . 'N e w a rk , N , J .

FOR S A L E ,O r w ill e x c h a n g e fo r O cean G rove p ro p e rty , a flno. e ig h t room C ottage a n d tw o lo ts 100x150 fe e t , l o ­c a te d a t B elm ar (fo rm erly O cean B each), T h is is a v e ry d es ira b le p ro p e rty a n d In close p ro x im ity to th e b ea ch .. In q u ire o f •

V . D. C. COVERT,' - . 2“ P ilg rim P a th w ay ; O cean G rove.

FOR SALE OR RENT.A 9 R o o m F n r n l s t i e d C o t t a g e ; c e n t r a l

lo c a t io n ; . . n e a r .W e s le y - L a k e . '; P r i c e $3000 .-

T e r m s e a s y . A d d r e s s , “ H O M E ,” ' •

C a r e R e c o r d O l l lc e , O c e a n G r o v e , N . J

FOR SALE.O ne lo t a n d cottage;: fu rn ish e d ; tw o b lo c k s fro m

th e Sea. • p rico $2,500. SI,000 ca sh , b a la u c e on. t im 9 < S 1 0 0 y e a rly ,a n d lh te re s t. ; "•/'. •

• B O X 205, O cean G ro v e ,‘ N . J .

COTTAGE FOR SALE82.000 w ill 'p u rc h a s e a v e r y :'qom m odlous, Ayell

b u il t ' a n d ' fu rn ish e d c o tta g e , ' $) ro o m s, G ood In v e s tm e n t. H a lf cash , in q u ire o f • • ■

D, C ,-COVERT, O c ean J r o v e , N . J .

FOR SALE.T w o a d jo lu iu g -lots w ith . co ttag e s a n d o n e

t e n t fram e a n d k ltc h e h —o n e o n c o rn e r , T h re e b locks trom th e Sea.- P rice .82,200 a n d §2.500, o r to g e th e r $i.500.- S2,000.cash, b a U n c e 011 tim e , to s u i t c o n v e n ie n c e . . . . ; »>' . . •i i •'•

B O X 205, O cean G rove, N. J . ‘

WANTED.S m all-sized C o tta g e , fu rn ish e d , nea f. th e beaoh , osseusion 'early in M ay;. .A ddress H. it ., Evening

Hulletifl ofllce, ’P h ila d e lp h ia , g iv in g lo ca tio n .

THE COLUMBIA,C o r n e r o f M a in n n d I^ e a c h A v e n u e s ,

• V ' ; 7 ■ O C E A N G R O V E , N / J*. v • ‘ ; • ‘ :

T h is p ro m in e n t house occup ies a p ro m in e n t p o s itio n ou O cean G ro v e 's M ain A v e n u e, w ith in o n e b lo ck o f th o O cean . P a r tfc u la r a t te n tio n to t h e co n v e n ien ce a n d com fort Of g u es ts .

B ox 2173, M RS. R. A.'SWAN% P ro p rie to r.

^THE BUENA VISTA, ;;S . W . C o r . B e n c h a u d E m b u r y A v e s . , O C E A N G H O V E , N . J .

T h is ho u se Is th o ro u g h ly e tp d p p e d fo r p u b lic c n te r tu ln m e n t. Cotnm artd^ flue O cean v iew . C heer, fu l surrbundiriK s. w ell fu r n lih e d room s a n d tlr^t-’c la ss ta b le . N ew m a n a g e m e n t. . '

M RS. M. B. H E R IT A G E , P ro p tle lo v .

OSBORN HOUSE, •Comor P itm an and Central A venues, Ocean Grove, N . J.

L o c a tio n th e m o st c e n tra l a n d des ira b le . R ep u ta tio n fo r tn h le a n d a l l hom e co m fo rts u n su r passed . P atronaR e iiic rca sin g ev e ry y e a r . E x p e r ie n c e d a n d p o p u la rm a n a g e m e n t.

u p t s i 3 i . \ v r ^ . ; v ' , • '.-.v v ;; m r s ; a : i s i u e l . P ro p rie to r. •

BEACH AVENUE HOUSE,C o r n e r B e n c h an c l ■ "W e.bb: A v e n u e s , ' ;. O c e a n G r o v e , N ; J ,

■ .One b lo ck from Q ceah . U nobstrue te il view .' P le a sa n t.v e ra n d a s , -p u re A rte s ia n w attfr. : M odern im p ro v e m e n ts . L argo d in in g b u l l . :' F irs t-c lass tab le .; S pecia l te rm s fo r Ju n e a n d Jtil)V .or.season. ;

B o x 2261; ; • • : • . : ^ v ^ ^ ; . '.M R $ ;g .W . M ATTH EW S, P ro p rie to r.

Hunter Cottage,84 JBriibqry Ayeritie, O c e a n G r o v e ,

C hoice a c co m m o d atio n s in p le a sa n t room s a n d good tab le . C h eerfu l su rro u n d in g s a n d n e a r th e sea . . R ed u ce d ra te s fo r J u n e a n d S ep tem ber.

: . M I33 SA R A H A . K N A PP , P rop’r . P . 0 . B o x 764; ■?.•■: ' • * ; *

Cowell House,30 \Y e b b A v e . , • ' O p e a u C rro y e , N . J .

Est^ibilsihcd re p u ta tio n ; S a n ita ry a r ra n g e m e n ts p e r f e c t . . S u p p lie d w ith h o t a u d co ld b a th s , N 'ear O cean fron t. •-Lock Box 2053. M RS. CAPT. COWELL', P ro p ’r.

New England Homo,■ C o r . B r o a d w a y a n t i N e w Y o r j i A v e . ..

H ig h a n d h e a l th y lo c a tio n . C o n d u c ted o n .tiie m o st ap p ro v ed p rin c ip les . Beds, fu rn ish e d w ith , lu x u rio u s h a i r m attresses'. Food o f t h o best, q u a l­ity h e a lth fu lly a n d p a la ta b ly cooked . A ll h o m e com forts. H ouso now .o p en fo r g u es ts . T ern is a lw a y s reaso n ab le ; . . .

. . v . M A R TIIA J . M IL L E R ; P ro p ’r.

The ChautaqUa.5 1 B r o a d w a y , O c e a n G r o v e , N X

;• • • T > v e i .f t u S e a s o n ^ :

H e a lth fu l a n d p le a sa n t lo c a tio n . C o n v en ien t to F le tc h c r L ako a u d O ceau b a th in g g rounds. H om o Comforts,, a u d b e s t a t te n t io n to guests. H ouse now o pen . .................. ..........

B ox 2<5l6. .

M RS. T . T . W IGHTM AN . a n d M. a . DOW NKR.

P roprie to rs .

Bath. Ave. House,C o r . C e n t r a l n n d R a th A v e n u e s ,

o c e a n ; g p . o v e , n . j . •

F ln o location*, n e a r th o A u d lto H u m , W e^loy L ako, O eean a u d B ath in g G ro u n d s. P ie a s a n ta c - c o m m o d a tlo n s . E n la rg e d a n d Im p ro v ed , r .

P . O. B ox yi2. M* F . MaoPU ER SO N , P ro p ’r.

a g e n ts n e e d a n sw e r. O w ners o n ly d e a l t w ith .

FOR SALE.P I V E . R O O M B D F C R V I S H E D C O T -

T A G K L o t 30xG0. N o. 25 OLIN ST., Octian: G rovo; n e a r th o B each; W afted b y O cean breeze?, la rg e p o rc h es , v e ry cobl. A rte s ia n w a te r; Only, 8 1 .2 0 0 . D u . V a n s a n t , 1122 V ino S t., P h ila d e l­p h ia , P a,

The Mansion House,■ N . ' E • c o r . E m b i i r y a n d N e w ’ Y u r k ' ■

, ’ . A v e s '. , . G c e a n G r p v e . ;. ;j

.This sp ac io u s a n d co m fo rtab le i’houso is now o p en fo r th o season , a n d w ill re m a in opo n a l l t h e y e a r ro u n d . I t is c e n tra lly . located,- c o n v e n ie n t to t h e b ea ch a n d A u d ito riu m .^ L arg e a iry roouis p le a sa n t s u r ro u n d in g s , h o m e-llko c o m fo rts a u d m o d e ra te In term s..,- : A ddress • - •■'■ B ox 2270.: ;■••■•• *' . L , VAN NOTfi, p ro p 'r .

BOARDIiMG.P le a s a n t room s w ith b o ard ; N o. 10 S q rf avonuo,

6 lx th house from th o o ce an ; T e rm s-rea so n ab le ;. A ddress • M ISS M. L. EDW ARDS; .

Box 107, O ceau Qrovo, N . J .

Hotel LeClievalier,N ortheast Cor.-'Webb and Central Avenues,

OCEAN G RO V E, N . J . . ,G re a t h e a lth re s o r t fo r w in te r , s p r in g .a n d su m ­

m e r. L o v ely c o u n try a n d s»*a sh o re d r iv e s , s ea a i r , .fny igq ra titic r p ino b re e z e s g fv ln g . s tre u g tl i a n d h e a l th to t ire d a n d w e a ry o n e s w h o need , tp r e c u p e r a te . t h e i r w astin g " e n e rg ie s ■ ' T ry - i t . T e r m s SO to 512 p e r w eek . S in g le m e a ls 50 c e n ts . T a b le b o a r d / ' ■... • • 'r."- ••• -.■•••- ,-

A d d r e s s A. L . W ILCOX,- B o x 250v

Hodsqn Cottage,V:.;* No. 24 Surf .Avenue, t- v

B etW een C e n tra l a u d B eacli, . OCEAN GROVE.

y ~ ) y -.o p s k x l l r i r s r s A s *A d es ira b le lo c a tio n , w i th h o m e-llk o com forts,

o n th o m o st re o k u ia b lo te rm s . ’ R a tes d u r in g fall a n d w in te r m o n th s u n u su a lly low . F am ilie s a c ­co m m o d ate d a t r e d u c e d ,p r ic e s , , ’•*« ■>.;;• B o x 66 ,t ' ;• &JRS. E. HODSON, P ro p rie to r

y y i l E X YOU GO TO N EW Y O R K ST O P A T ■

H O R T O N ’S ,1 4 8 W E ST 2 2 d ST R E E T .

'. . C e n tra l, q u ie t, h o m e-lik e . '

R ig h t ln th b h e a r t o f th o shopp ing , a n d am use- . m e n t d i s t r i c t ; c o n v e n ie n t to e v e ry w h e re .

81.SO P E R D A Y .

N O R T H A N D SO U T H

The Aurora,Surf and A tla n tic A vos;, Ocean Grove

Open May to O ctober. .

DONEDIN HOUSE Wc5tS » rM„O pen N ov. 1 to M ay 1, each- yea r.

MISS M. A. BULL, P ro p rie to r,

St. Blmp,COR; NEW. Y O R K AND M A IN AVEN U ES;

1 ’ ; OCEAN GROVE, N. J . • .

C en tra lly lo ca te d , oho sq u a re froili P ost Ofllce a h d A u d ito riu m . N e a r th o B eaoh ;' .

S u p erio r b o ard in g ac co m m o d atio n s. ■ •p . 0 . i o x 2052. M r s . m .m . C o m p t o n .

Bower Cottage,C O R N E R M A I N n n d C E N T U iV L A V E S . ,

OC&AK.QROVE, S - f .C en tra l a n d b e a u tifu l s i tu a tio n . N e a r ' p o st bfllco a n d o ce an b ea ch : •Hoiuo ac co m m o d atio n s a t re aso n ab le ra tes. O pen May. 1.

B ox 2220.. M RS. THO S. COLCLOUQH, P rop’r:

Thoroia N O u SURE CURE FOR EVER Y CA SE OF ASTHMA'' or "EVERY CASE OF HAY FEVER/' : bu t tlio w orat caaes,-1

i f uncomplicated by. organic disease, can bo

C U R E D TO S T A Y C U R E Dtty constitutional treatment

nnd. th la a t th e pa- v— ’ tlen t's .liom e.

1 W c tfpr.t ho fl f t ,ono wftlwiiU n thbr- ^ E 0

I (iui;h k;tu\vic(lL;i» of.th(; te 5 ^ 4

1 incurable Cases Declined.E xam in atio n fn*p by mntL

W e w a n t n a m e a n d a d d r e s s of ■ e v e ry s u f f e r e r fro m A s th m a on H a y F ever,

P. H A RO LD H A Y ES, M. D.} BU FFA LO , N .Y . '

Dr. B a rr ’sCentral Avo., three blocks l'rom AVcsley Lake.

F o rty ro o m s ; elcvat.»r, porticoes;- c ro q g e t g M u iiu s e le c tr ic lig h ts a n d bells*; o p en a l l tho y e a r . L argest s te a m -h e a tin g ca p a c ity , lin est b e d ­room s—on fiulto by tw os o r th ree s , w ith p riv a te b a th , gas, h a i r m attresses a u d flow ing w a te r.

R ates SI to S5 p e r d ay . R ed u ce d ra te s to f a m - . l lle s , d o cto rs an il p re ach e rs . • * -•*-

T h e sa u lta r lu m a n n e x —'J3 ro o m s—p r iv a te p a r ­lo rs ; p ro v id e s a ll b a th s , gases, e le c tr ic i ty a u d

sSiigo. Q peu to th e p u b lic , gy tr

g e n tle m e n .T h e o n ly co m p le te . T u rk ish a n d R u ss ia n b a th s

on th e co ast. .. . • • . - . \ •* •A re s id e n t p h y s ic ia n a n d co rps o f. n u rse s aro

p re p a re d to re ce iv e a n d t r e a t a l l non -co u tag lo u s cases, w ith sp ec ia lis ts in c o n s u l ta t io n ..

O pium a u d a lo d h o llc h a b i ts re ce iv e sp ec ia l c a re .D. M. B A R R . M; D., P roprie to r,

S u rg eo n Post 77, G. A. R ., P h ila d e lp h ia ; .

massiigo. Q peli to th e p ub A g y m n as iu m a n d n a tta to rlu .tn fd r lad fc s a n d

Afler'J:} y e a rs c o n tin u e d p ra c tic e In p h lla d c lp h a , a n d S y ea rs In e n tlro c h a rg e o f t h e P h i la d e lp h ia ; M. K. O rp h an ag e , H ia tts h is worir t«> tin* m ed ica l atid M irglcal d iseases o f .^ o m e n a n d c h l ld r c n ja n d g en e ra l cousuitH tio ii. Office ffo«»-» ; U n / P w • . . .

Atlantic House

OPEN A IL THE YEAR.

ATLANTIC HOUSE,Ocean Grove, N . J.

• O pen th e cA tlre y e a r . N ew ly p a ­p ered , p a in te d a n d re fu rn ish e d ; .F u lly e^ u jp p e d fo r th e com fort a n d p leasu re o f g u ests a t th e seaMdo*. S team h e a t :. In coo l w e a th e r . .S un parlo rs . L ibera l- ta b le an d re aso n ab le te rm s . P ro m p t re p ly to a ll in q u ir ie s . :

ALM ON A .,M C D O N A LD ,•. • v , . P ro p rie to r.

• The Alaska,SEV EN TH SEASON. OCKAX U HOVE.

D eiJch tfu lly s itu a te d 011 P IT M A N 'A V E N U E ,•second b o u se from th e b ea ch .

I ts fine ooeah v iew , la rg e cool- ye ram las , sp rin g W ds. S an ita ry plum bltiK , A rte s ia n w a te r, e tc ., o ilers >j»eclal in d u c e m e n ts to p e rm a n e n t a u d t r a n ­

s i e n t u u es ts . T ab le tlrst-claM . •' T erm s reusontible.» » N. If . K ILM ER,

:v a n d 5 P itm a n A venue, O ceau G rove. Lock Box ^ 7 . • •

THE WAVERLY,IU ach B 11 »*’) :

OCEAN GROVE, N .J .

Open M ay 15 to O ct./l.

A S tric tly . F its t-c lass '

F am ily . H otel.

:^ E n la rg ed a n d Im p ro v e d .

C hoice room s e n -su lte o r slng lo

. F o r T e rm s ,- K tc . , A tU lry s s ■

M. S. EDER.

B o a c l t lCnil o f O c e a n P a t h w a y , n o r t h sU le , . - O c e a n G r o v e , X . J .

/O P E N JV N E 1 to OCTOBER 1. ' / ‘ • :

D elight fully, situa ted ... A ll in o d e rn Im p rove iueu t? . C hoice room s e u s u ite o r sing le ,

p . O .'B oxvW . . / ' • M. M. R l'SSE L L , P rop’r .

. 18 S u r f A v e n u e ,

'T'lae G r e in ,Q c e n u G r o v e , X . .F. ;

T h is house is b e a u tifu lly s i tu a te d , o n e b lock from th o B each, a n d co m m an d s a flno O cean v iew . H a s boon e n la rg ed a u d th o ro u g h ly re n o v a te d . J a n u a ry 'p lu m b in g . A rte s ia n w a te r. Cool room s. S h ad y piazza. E arly v is ito rs to th e G rove w ill fiml' h e re , p le a sa n t h o m ellk o a c co m m o d atio n s Is now o p en . A ddress . ; R. S. W uO LSTO N, Box ?J13, O c ean G rove, N . J ,. •,

HOWLAND HOUSE,The Favorite Fam ily H otel. Ocean Grove,’N . J.

Im proved ac co m tso d n tio n s , w lilt fltnplc room a n d e v e ry fa c ility fo r tb e co m fo rt o f gueats:-. S c a le , o f ch a rg e s a lw a y s m o d era te . H ouse .uow o p e n for th e season .

. R evl S . II , ASAY, P ro p rie to r .-

Fifth Season.

'O S S ,Ocean P athw ay, Ocean Grove, N . J.

• L oca tion unsu rpassed .- F u ll O c ean v iew ; n e a r to B each a n d A u d ito riu m . - A ll m o d ern im p ro v e ­m en ts. S a n ita ry a r ra n g e m e n ts perfec t. R oom s h u g e :; s p rin g beds, h a i r m atrcsses . A r te s la u w a te r. Best a c co m m o d atio n s u u d h o m ellk o c o m fo r ts ..

Box SO#. . . MRS. M. C, DOWNS, P rop’r.

LAWRENCE HOUSE,Corner M ain and Central, Ocoan Grove, N . J.

.T h is w e ll-k n o w n a n d . p o p u la r h e m e , w ith Its c e n tra l lo ca tio n , wiilo v e ran d as , o ce an v iew , Im ­pro v e d sa n ita ry a r ra n g e m e n ts , h a v in g t e e n th o ro u g h ly ren o v a ted , Is now o p en for th e season , U om e com fo rts. T erm s a lw a y s reaso n ab le , '

LOCK BOX 2024. MISS M. W H IT E , P ro p rie to r.

GROVE HALL,F o r m e r l y G r o v e C o t t a g e , P i l g r i m P a t h w a y o p p , T h o m s o n P a r k .

T hroo a t t r a c t lv o buildlnir9, c o n n e c te d . Quo o f th o finest d in in g -ro o m s in O eean G rove.. E v ery d e s ira b le fe a tu re a j to lo c a tio n a n d so lid c o m fo r t . N ow opo n fo r th o sea so n .

B ox *15 J. ‘ * . . M RS. E . A, IR ELA N D , P ro p rie to r.

THE ELLERSLIE,Third A venue, near K ingsley, . A shury Park, N . J .

L oca tion u n su rp a sse d , po rfeo t.

F u ll o c e a n v low . All m o d e rn ' im p ro v e m e n ts . S a n ltn ry a r ra n g e m e n ts M RS. C. II. CLEM EN T, (fo rm e rly o f T b o L illa g a a rd ) , P ro p r ie to r .

Page 4: REV, A, WALLACE, D. D., Editor. OCEAN GROVE, N. J., SATURDAY, … · 2014-04-01 · —Christian at Work. The Divine Emancipator, MY MUS. FANNIE II. CAltU. The Scriptures which explicitly

n n T P . A T s T Q - S O T E R B O O R D , 2 & J ± T s i , 1 8 9 & .

MARSHALL’S' ST.KICTI.V TEM PERA N CE..

DINING ROOMS. FOR LAD IES AND G EN TLEM EN ,. *

1321 MARKET STREET,• T h re e do o rs ea st o f C ity H a ll, o p p o site •

. # W atm m aker’s .G ra n d D epot.

‘ PHILADELPHIA.

M eals to Order from 6 a . m; to 8 p . ra.;

Good R oast D imiors, willi th ree vego' tables, 25 cents.

T urkey o r Chicken D iuucr, 35 couts.L ad le s’ Koom u p s ta irs , w ith h o m e lik e accom m o-

• datlm tH .. P u re '•pritig w a te r;

BAKERY rO C T U ;T W ^ -R ? S K C O S D ST.

• J c e C ream , Ice?; Kronen F ru its iind Je llie s ;..W c d d h ics . a n d E v en in g E n le r fa lm n c n ts a sp e ­

cia lty .- E very th lu g to fu r n h li th e ta b le u n d set fre e o f ch a rg e .

N o th in g so ld o r d e l i v e r ^ w S u n d ay .

A. ALLISON WHITE,• S uccesso r to J a m e s A . G r lC ln g \tC o .

— OCEAN GROVE^PHARMACY

Pitman Ave., opp. "Til's Arlington,"OCEAN C R O V E, H. J .

D rup°, C h em ica ls , F an cy 0<V«1s, S ponges, P a te n t M ed icines; P h a rm a c e u tic a l P re p a ra tio n s , e tc .

S to re closed o n S u n d a y s d u rlm ;, c h u r c h serv ic es .

SUIVllVjER I QUELTfES, L is ten : a l l ne iv s h u n g ry p eo p le ‘T o t |i e m e n a c e w e w o u ld b rin g y o u ;N e w s o f fa > b ton 's tinetd fa b rle s •F ro m a c ro s s th e b rin y w a te r F u r th e sn rh iK -tline a n d fo r .s iim m er.

.. W h a t in P a rk n u d G rovo m o re w eleo/no T h a n th e co m ln tr o f th e sprln ix-tiine , . . ' W ith th o p ro m ise o f th e s u m m e r : .. .

. A nd w h a t n e w th in g s th e y devo lopo F o r th c -b c a d s o f o u r .f u ir d a u g h te rs ,

-. W (vea arid mothers*, a u n ts a n d s i s te r ^ ' N e w s o f ch o ic es t h a t* a n d b o n n e ts .C om e t o .O cean G rovo a n d tlnd th e m ,A t t h e w e lld m o w n M isses W o o lsto u ’s ,W hich Is o n th e n o r th e a s t e o r o e r - Of th e a v e n u e s M ain a n d J e r s e y . .I t is o n th e w e ll K now n c o r n e r , .A t th e w e ll-k n o w n I ta lia n ) V illa..W h e re y ou find th e c a t e w id e o p e n ,

: A nil w ith in .«ueh h a ts a n d b u u m ts .O f th e o d d e s t s ty le s a n d p a t te r n s T h a t th o fa r ie s e v e r fa sh io n e d .

- • S u m m e r h a t s n n d S u m m e r b o n n e t s , ! . .• S i llg ltu : b i rd s a a d t*nrr m e r d o w e rs .

A t su c h p r ic e s vou w ill w a n t th em A n d h e r e a f te r bo d e lie h te d ,T e llin g n il y o u r f r ie n d s a b o u t th em .

. W Is ju s t t h e c u m b e r T h a t y o u 'l l s ee a b o y e th e d o o r w a y ;D o n ’t fo rg e t t h e n a m e a n d n u m b e r . ’ .

MISSES WQQISTQN,9 9 M ain a v an u e , Ocean Grove, H. J .

km Ding StoreO C E A X G l i O V E , X . J . . .

fo r th e w in te r m o n th s to

, m,mi:PR ES C R IP TIO N D E P A R T M E N T C O M -

r-LETE A N D IN CHARGE O F GRAD­U ATES IN P H A R M A C Y .

P ric e s g u a r a n te e d a s lo w a s t h e b e s t g o o d s a u d h o h e s t deuM ug w ill p e rm it . :

S T E P H E N * b , W O O L L E Y .

:-uRKEFS:UftafuniEiHlmuld biMi-i-d tn e v rry fntnlly. A K'-c'iit box savi>s

■ k i'ti Oolltli-N o f your sh,..? tilll in u b h o rt tlm«\- It . .softfu*. ;iinl k< cji- st frmn iTarkluir «*r.

J’lV.lJ.'I.'ii.*. IH c u tn l- l ir h z l l l U>\ril1 ))fr ,i.lr .lit tv itte r-p rm d '.m K l t-'iv fsyonrsliriv 'U llw .

;t:;ti-jiram t*. 1; sn:iy ns.*ij on iln> Hm-ht k ‘ l t r nIh-w. A»k ym ir *1 i«»t-1l«-»d<-r f«ir V..J .t i .1 J S i...S ir :,. M iiu i s lu 't r.I'ur.uii.l-i-y JhiiVi.in • N. T h ird I'hhu.

• SCASQN OF J8D1, ■ .. LA R G E L IS T OF HOTELS.'BOARDING HOUSES,

COTTAGES. T E N T d AND LOTS FOK ' , • • IiEN T.A N D .SA LE. •

J p E X N S Y L V A X X A R A I L R O A D . .

TIM K TAHIdC, M AY 1 ft, 1 ' .*• ritAtNH i.kavkockan o n o v t: .

F o r-N e w York-. N e w ark , . E lizabeth* R ed .B ank • - G.'iO. .9.10 a . in .. l .lo . 3.JS, &.:»» p . m F o r M ata w an , V .10a..m . 1.IU. lM ‘>5.nn p. m ; F or L oup B ra n c h , fl flo. 9.10. JO.ty. 11.00 a .m . , 1.10,

. 5.ao,* r* to. t.o h p . m .F o r P h ila d e lp h ia (R road s t roo t), a n d .T re iit^n , “.’.‘j .

• 7 .W n. m .. 12.35. A :26 .te f» p , in . •• Cam<len. B urllnR ton a n d H o rd en to w n , v ia .T reu -

to n , 7.f»S. a .m .,- 12.25, l.«0. .'*.:<«*» p . m . . C am d en a u d P h ila d e lp h ia , yhv T o m 's JU ver, C.W)

' p ; m . ‘ ••F or Tom s R iv e r , I s la n d H e ig h ts a n d iu te n n e d in te

6 ta tious , l l ’.U'i a . m . 2.50 p m F o r P o in t P le a sa n t a n d in te rm rd ia te s ta tio n s ,

11.05 a . in ., 2 5m; M S ,r 10 p . in i \ . -t h a is s i.kavkkf.w YOUK (v ia OAUirtlnudt a u d Des-

• b rosses S tr e e t F e rr ie s) KoitocRAN guovk .A tii.W .'.U O a. m ., l i s o , 3 .l0 , f»;10.p. m .t h a i s s i . e u k »*HH.AiH:t.i*HtA (Hroftd s t r e e t ) FOR

ocean nn o v r .—w cck r».% Vs.A t r. ro . P.2*'. 11.M a .m ., :\.W, l.tw p .m . L ea v e M ar­

k et S t. W lm rf v ia C am d en a m ! T re n to n ,’<*. U\ 7.211. iO.:tO a . m .. ri.rso p .m . -Via. C aftideti a n d Ja m e sb u rg , 7.20 a .m .. t p. m .- .

. J . U. WOOD, G en 1 Pass. A gen t.. CHAS. E .T U G ll, G c n |i M auager.

J T E W Y O R K & L O N G B R A N C H R . R .

; , T IM E T A H L E .M A V J r ., l S f- 2 •

S ta tio n s In N ew Y ork—C en tra l K. R . 'o f N ew Jer». sey . foot o f L ib e rty S tr e e t ; I*. H. H ., foo t o f

' C o r t la u d ta u d D esbrosses S tr e e t s ; N. J . S o u th ­e rn R ailw ay , foot o f R ec to r St.-

l.KAVP. NEW YOUK FOR OCBAX GROVE, itC . C en tra l R .R . o f N -.J.—t.rjo. 8.15, 11.15 a m . , 1.30

•i.oo. i .a i , p . m . ■■ ■ •P e n n sy lv a n ia —a.Ut), ♦a.lO, a . m .. 12.50, *3 40^ 5.10 • ..p.m. ‘ •--••• •Leavo- N e w ark . R road S t. S ta tfn n , for O cean

• G rove, «te—8.22,1,1.25 a; m .. 1 Jr«,4.05, G.15 p.-m. M a rk e t S t. S ta t io t t - 3 59, 0.30 a .m . , L 1 C .10I. 6.36 p . m . •

LEAVE OCEAN OROVF. FOR NEW YORK, AC.C e n tra l R . R . of-N . J —G;i2, *8 (W, 10.1:5 a . m ., 2,10,

4 .10 .7 0-t p . m , .P e n n s y lv a n ia —0.50,9.10 a ra ., L10, *2.15,5.30 p .m . F o r P h ila d e lp h ia a n d T re n to n v ia . R o u n d B rook.

R o u te—G.12,8.00, a .m ., 4.10 p . r a . , • . .••• < : F o r B elm ar, S p rin g L ak e a n d S ea G irt—5.50, 7.00,

7 .25 ,7.5S, 1 0 .2 0 .U .0 o a .m .j 12.25.1.0J»,.2.41,2.50,• 3 25 ,'j 00,5 18, 5 J15. C.05, 7.10. S.lO p . m \

" ............. i -"* « r. r.ft - .0 0 ;

GEO,. K. HOUGH, Practical Tailor and Cutter,

• , (L a te o f P h ila d e lp h ia .) .:N o . Z P l i g r r J m P a t h w a y , a e n r l y o p p .

. l* o H t O i l i c e , O c e i u i d r o v e .

Perfiom, fu rn ish in g th e i r ow n m a te r ia l c a n hav e ' i t m a d e u p in th o la te s t s ty le a n d m o s t s a tis fa c ­to ry m a n n e r. . ' • . ' :CUTTIN G, CLEA N IN G , R E PA IR IN G , PRES8IN Q

OLIN STR EET, Opposite P ost OiSce.• C IIU S. JU E , P r o p r ie to r . .

. B est a r ra n g e m e n ts fo r ra p id a u d th o ro u g h w ork . a t rcason'ablo prices. A r tic le s -c a lle d for a n d d e ­

liv e re d in a n y p a r t o f G rove o r P a rk w h e n di*6ired.■ O PEN A LL T H E . Y EA R ROUND. '

GOODRICH’S

7.5S a . in ., 12.25, -j (»o, B !-j p . ra . .F o r F re e h o ld —*7.‘2't,7,r>Siv.ui., 12 25,4.20, 5 p .m .For. T om s R iv er—U 05 a . m ., 2.41 p . m . •For C itm den a n d in tc riu o d in te s ta tio n s—2 4 1 p . ra. ♦E xpress ' RUFUS B LO D G E l'l',II. P. IU L D W IN , < M t a . P. A . C .J i. H a j x . J -

J'urt JtcnOhi'O }{ Ji. Ci>. [L a n e )., J . R . W OOD. O tn’l Pas. A oL P . R .R .

S .H EM M EM W A YjM A N U FA C TU R EIt O F'

Tents, Awnings,' FLAGS, & c . , •

015 COOKMAN AVE VUE,A S B U R Y P A R K , N .J.

Branch of 00 South Street, N ew 'York.

• Mildew-proof DuclcIs o n ly u se d , an d g o o d s g u n ra n te e d fo r . excel*.

, len e o o f q u a l i ty an d m a n u ta e tu re .

S end in y o u r o rd e rs e a r ly . P ro m p t a t te n t io n , low p rice s . •

REAL ESTATE■' - ' • AND •

IN S U R A N C E : A G E N T1)5 MAIN AVENUE,

' ' OCEAN GROVE, N, J .

P ro p ertie s so ld , re n te d , p u rc h a se d a n d in su re d . E s tim a te s fu rn ish e d n o n -resid en ts for a ll k ln d s o f Im p ro v e m en ts . P ro p ertie s ca re fu lly . w n tch c d . L o an s n e g o tia te d . C orrespondence p ro m p tly a n ­sw e re d . P .O . B o x 2080. .

L ea v e o rd e rs 50 H ock av e n u e , a n d fro n f o i • Lftdlea’ S to re , M ain av e n u e .

NO CONNECTION W ITH ANY O TH ER EX PRESS A tte n t io n to bag g ag e a n d fre ig h t d e liv e ry a t do

• no t, a n d th ro u g h o u t t h e G rovo, p ro m p t n n d s a t ­is fac to ry as u s u a l . O rd e rs p ro p jp tly a t te n d e d to

95 Main Avenue.

HOTELS, ' HOTELS,

; HOTELS.95 Main Avenue.

]> o a .im )ix g H o u s e s . • B o a k d i x g H o u s e s ,

.B oA ijD r.xG H o u s e s .

95 Main Avenue.COTTAGES, • '

COTTAGES,v c o t t a g e s .

lie iore R enting or Buying, Call on

C. M, WARD,95 Main Avenue.

.WILLIAM H. BEEGLE■ . (Successor to l l . B! Beegle.) •

R e a L E s t a t e• ■. ‘ AND—— / -

I n s u r a n c e ,-IS MAIN AVE ,

C O E - A - I s r ( 3 - I ^ O ' V E l .

SOTA I1Y rC llI .IC .

DANIEL C. COVERT,No. 27 Pilgrim P ath w ay, A sso ­

ciation Book Store,

: OCEAKGROVE. G EN E R A L A G EN T

F o r th o P u rc h a se , S iilc n n d R e n tin g o f . R e a l e s ta te . A lto , .

P ro p e r ty Im u rc d lu flrst.class com pan ies^ Ijn p ro v e m e tits m a d e fo r no n -res id en ts ,

P ro p e r ty c a re d for, ■L o an s n eg o tia te d a n d eoU dctions m ad e ,

. C om m issioner of.D ceds n n d N o ta ry P u b lic .P. O. Box 2136. . . C o rre sp o n d en ce so lic ite d .

C. SICKLER,Real Estate Agent

A N D C O N V E Y A N C E ! ',OCEAN UKOVE.

Coramissioaer of Deeds & Notary Public.Cottages and Lots Sold or Rented.

Fire Insurance in' Reliable Companies. Money to Loan on Mortgage.

OFFICE—NO. 76 M A IN A V EN U E ,N e a r A sso cia tio n Olllce. . . .

CHAS. E . BURDEN,m a i n s t r e e t ,

A s b u r y P a r k , J fo w J c r a o y .... DEALER IS .

Btoves, Kangos, Hoatore, Furnaces, Honso-Furnialiing H ardw are, Tin

S h eet Iron, and Copper W are.

Tin-Roofing,Gutters& LeadersA SPEC IA LTY .

C all a n d e x a m in e o u r “ S I» L E N 'D II> * * F iro P laco H e a te rs , H o te l a n d F an cy T ray s, Casterfl, S m o o th in g Iro n s, o i l S toves, P a te n t E u re k a Coffee P o ts .& c. '

Street Lamps and FixturesCONSTANTLY ON HAN D.

T h a n k in g o u r p a tro n s fo r p a s t favors, I re sp ec t fu lly so lic it a c o n tin u a n c e o f th e i r pa tro u n g e .

JOHN M. DEY,• (P e rm a n e n tly r e s id in g a t O ccan G rove,)

A R C H IT EC T ANE BUILDER,Is a lw a y s re a d y to fu r n is h p la n s a n d e s tim a te ? o f c o tta g e s i n ev e ry size a n d sty lo .

F o r good w o rk m a n sh ip a u d s a t i s r a c t o ^ te rm s , h o re fe re to n il fo r w hom ho b a a e re c te d co ttag cs , b o th In O cean G rovo a n d A sbury P a rk ,d u r in g th o p as t flR ccu y ea rs . \ .

JO H N M ; D E Y ,C or. B enson a n d M ain A ve ., O cean G rovo

WILLISFORD DEY,Room -224 E rnest Cranmer B lock,

DENVER,CO L O R A DO .

Real Estate, Loans and In-. vestments.

Some sploudid 8 per cent.- m ortgage loan investm ents for enle. /

C o rre sp o n d en ce so lic ite d .

T FRANK APPLEBY,

Real Estate. and

Insurance Office*0 5 M A IN A V E N U E ,

“ OCEAN G RO V E. •

Is now o p e n In c h a rg e o f ROB’T E . MAYO.

PROPERTY for SALE or RENT

L, V A R JG ILLU W E ,

a - I S O ' O E i ^ e i E 3 S ,

G LA S S W A R E , C R O C K E R Y ,\ '

T in w a re ,. H ouse-F u rn ish icff A r t ic k s

Gor. Central aud Olhi S is ,. O C E A N G R O V E .

C aveats, a n d T ra d e -M a rk s ob tained , an d nil P a t- Z e n t business con d u c ted fo r m o d e r a t e F e e s . ?

.O u r O f f ic e i s o p p o s i tc U. s . p a t e n t o f f i c e * , and wo can sec u rc p a te n t m less tim e th a n tu o se r rem ote from W ashington .• Send m odel, druw ing o r photo ., w t h descrip-1 tlon . W e ad v ise , if p a te n ta b le o r n o t, f r e e o n charge. O u r fee no t dub till p a ten t Is sccu red . J

, A P a m p h le t , “ l lo w to O b ta in P a ten ts ,” w ith I [cost o f sam e In th e U. S. an d foreign countries J• sen t free. 'A ddress,-

C.A .S!^O W & G O .• Op p , P a t e n t O r n c c , W a s h in g t o n , D . C .

H. D. CLARK'S Japanese Bazaar,

518 O ookraan A v ., n e a r G rand , .

A S B U R Y P A R K , N» J .

Fancy Canttlps, Fans ami Parasols, Screens, Lanterns anti N apkins always .on

•’ hand.Christmas nnd W edding Presents.

Orders Prom ptly,filled.

OPEiNT ALL THE YEAR,

H. B. B E E G L E ,0 0 E A N GEOVE, N . j'

J. S. FL1TCR0FT & BRO.,Sanitary Plum bers,

67 Hit. Tabor Way.OCEAN OROVK, N. J.

P a i n t iH , S I i i U h , T«*t*rn C o t f i i u t u l I .o n d 1 * I j » c h , G u n n i M l W n H ’r F l x l u m . •

JO BBIN G PRO M PTLY A TTEN D ED TO.

B ANIEL D. P EA K ,S u c c c s o d r l o i i j i o ; W . E V A N S ,

REAL ESTATE & INSURANCE, MAIN AVENUE, j,

.- Flrs.t o tllee taM o f the. Association* B u ild in g .

. G e n era l ligont for th e S ale a n d R e n tin g o f O c .n u G rove P i o p e n le s :

In su ra n c e p la c e d 'in re lia b le c o m p a n ie s n t low? e s t ra te s , * •

E stim a tes fo r a l l . k in d s of. Im p ro v e m en ts w ill rece iv e p ro m p t a t te n t io n . .

Collcutlotis m a d e a n d lo an s n eg o tia te d .

< 'o r r c # i > o m l c i i c o s q l i c l t e < l .

ALBEKT WILSON,Real Estate Exchange,

? l i s ? i l l ( f I n O U A v e . , ASilRL’l t Y P A R K .

R e a l E s ta te B o u g h t, S(>ld, E x c h a n g e d a n d R en ted . vft1?*Sp0c ia l a t te n t io n g iv e n to t h e se lec tio n

o f dcslrn b lo h o u ses Iti a d v a n c e fo r p a r ­tie s re s id in g n t a d is ta n c e .

WASHINGTON. WHITE,I t o o i u i o , d l o i i m m i t l i l l t i l l r i l i i K '

t ' o r . M 'n t t f u o n A v o . l i t n l H o i f i l SC.,

A S B U R Y P A R K , N . J .

REAL ESTATE & (HSURANCE-M ONEY LOANED ON FIR ST.M O R TG A G E.

L o ts f o r S a le In a n y p a r t o f S ta te . 'S e v e ra l F in e F a rm s on E asy T e rm s .

I h a v e -10 lo ts a t W e s t G rovo t h a t T w ill se ll on easy .{crm a t o p a r t ie s w ish in g to b u ild . A l-o som o a t W e s t A sb u ry P u rk —lh o f in e s t o h th e t r a c t —a n d a g r e a t v a r ie ty o f p ro p e r ty p la c e d w ith m o fo r s a le a n d to r e n t V ftv lae a t h o r o u g h k n o w le d g e o f v a lu a tio n s th r o u g h o u t th e S ta te , I t w ill p a y y o u to c a i io n rae.-.

J O S E P H T R A V S S ,Main Street, Asbury Park, N. J .

'K IN G ’S BRICK BUILD 1NG. - ;

A sp le n d id a s so r tm e n t of

Gold and S ilver A m erican and Sw iss W atch es, "

G o ld a * c i H te e l N p c o in c le t t .Theoretical and Practical Repairer of Chron­

ometers and Watches.H E R E A L L T H E T E A R ,

NOTARY PUBLIC.C om m issioner o f D e e d s fo r P e n n s y lv a n ia a n d

th o D is tr ic t o f C o lum bia .

B A IL E Y ’SCompound li«bt-«pro/iu}nff Sil. -tr.plattd Oorrugfttou GloaaR E FL E C T O R SAwondorful Invention for"tt'Churches.,

oto. Sati»/a(Hon gu a ra n te ed . C’Rtstoguo

n»n. *n<t price tl»l free.IL E Y R E F L E 0T 0R 0 0 . .JUb I'eno A il. I'ilUbBrBb, !'*.

JAS. H. SEXTON,Funeral Director

and Embalmer.A LA R G E A SSO RTM EN T O F CASK ETS, JETC.

CONSTANTLY O N HA N D .

Flow ers of any design a t fcbort notice.

P a r lo rs an d Office—No. 17 M ain S t.,ASBU RY PA R K , N . J .

A lso S u p e r in le n d e n to f Mt.; P ro sp ec t C em etery.

N. H. KILMER,Contractor, Oarpenter

AND BUILDER. , . 'P la n s a n d sp ee iilea lio n s fh rn ish e d . a n d esti­

m ates m a d e a u a ll k in d s o f c a rp e n te r w ork .

Jo b b in g of all k inds a ttended to.O. Box 2or»r>.

OCEAN GROVE.5 P ittf ian Ave. ?•»•»« aw*

P A R I S ; Human Hair Store,

611 Cookm an & 612 M attison A vs.,. •ASBURY P A R K .

L argo a s s o r tm e n t o f H u m an H a ir W orks. • N a t u ra l W a te r C u rls’g u a ra n te e d .

L ad les’ H a ir C u ttin g , S h am p o o in g , H a ir D ress­ing a n d C u rlin g by p rofessional F re n c h artists.-

M y C ircassian T o u lquo for t h e g ro w th o f th ob a ir a n d fo r re m o v in g d a n d ru ff a n d a l l co m ­p la in ts o f th o sc a lp n u d h a ir , h a s b ee n h igh ly^ ro- c o m m en d e d by th o b es t re s id e n ts o f A sbury P a rkP a rk a n d O cean G ro v o ..

No h u m b u g . Success in a ll eases.L ad les au d g e n tle m e n c o n su lta tio n free.My V elo u tin o fo r t h e face n e e d s o n ly a t r i a l to

be p re fe r re d to a l l o th e rs 1 .2 'tho m a rk e t. F re e t r i a l to a l l . - • . " - - ; ■ - v .. ■ -

P R O F. M M E . E . G R IS 0 N .

M I L L I N E R Y- A la rg e a sso r tm e n t o f th e la te s t n o v e ltie s o f

Trimmed Hatsand Bonnets,

fo r S um m er, a t low est c a s h prices,

MISSES WGOLSTON,N. Iv. Cor! Main and .N . J . Aves.,

^ OCE/VN G llOVE,

T iie - A .r l in o 'to ii ,• OCEAN GROVE, N . J . . ’

X c r o n n n o i l a t c i t t . j l t < . i i c n ( s . \ m v o p e n f o r I h o “ o j i n o u o ff !S 0 2 »• iind tvll! by c o n d i ct'.J-l in th y ^nm o lib e ra l tn a im e r fo r w ld e h It h a s a lre a d y beco m e '

, • • *«> fa v o ra b ly k n o w n .■ W M . P . D OLBEY , P ro p ’r.

THE LILLAGAARD,Abbott, near Ocean Avenue, .

—OCEAN .GKOVE, N . J .—

‘ O ne o f t h e finest houses l ic a r th e o ce an fro n t. E n la rg e d to 'f if ty room s. A ll m o d e rn im p ro v e ­m e n ts . C o m m an d s e x te n d e d o ce an v iew §. A ceo m m o d m lo n s tlrit-c lass . • ••

MISS M, A. EARLS, P ro p rie to r. ' M ISS L IZ Z IE M. D. EAU LS, M an a g er.

H k n r v C. W jn so b , P re s id o u t. ■. g e o . W . BvANa, V ice -P resid en t. E d m o n d E . D a y to n , C a sh ie r

BMATTISON AVE. AND MAIN S T ., ASBURY PARK. .

. Org a n ized jANtJAUY,l£80.C 3 A T » r X / k I - , $ 5 0 , 0 0 0 . S U R P L U S , 9 2 0 , 0 0 0 .

T ra n s a c ts a G enera l B a n k in g B usiness, Issu es F o re ig n a n d D om estic D rafts.P ro m p t a t te n t io n g iv e n to a ll m a tte rs e n tru s te d to u s . '

• ( O L L E C r i O .V S H A D E A N D , P K O M P T L f f A C K N O W L E D G E D .• , D I R E C T O R S : ,

N . E . BUCHANDN. J . S . FERGUSON. . GEO. W. EVANS.« . C CLAYTON. GKO. W. T R E A T . . J A. W A INRR1HT.DU. J . A. W.* llE T R JC K . JO H N H UBBARD. H EN RY C. W1NSOR.

' • 1 Y O U R,PA TRO N A G E SO LIC ITED .,

" T h o S ta tu te s re g u la t in g t l ;e o p e r a t io n s o f N a tio n a l B a n k s a r o o f su c h w lso c o n c e p tio n t h a t c o ^ sc le n tio n o u s ly c o n to rin e d to by U tllcers nn d D ire c to rs , n o .fn ? tl tu tio n o f n a u k in g ap p ro a c h e s t h e N a tio n a l, fo r d e se rv e d co n f id e n ce o f a n d se c u rity to p a tro n s .” . .

; ‘FIRST'.NATIONAL BANK, :i 'rg a td z o 'I F e b n m ry .d se c . '

GEOI’ F . K R O K IlL . P re s id e n t. •A LB ER T C. T W IN IN G , C a sh ie r .

O. n . BRO W N . V ico P re s id e n t . M A R T IN V. D A G ER, A sa’t C ash ier.

M attiso n A yg a n d B ond S tree t, A sb u ry P a rk .F o r c o n v e n ie n c e o f O c ean G ro y o p a tro n s :.

Office O cean Grove Cam p M eeting A ssoc ia tion B uild ing , Occan G iove, N . J .

I ’a p i t H l . 8 1 0 0 , « 0 0 : S u r p I i i N , ^ 7 0 , 0 0 0 .

T ra n s a c ts u e e n e ra l b a n k in g b u s in e s s . Is su e s .Ic tte ra o f c r e d i t a v a i la b le in tb o p r in c ip a l c i t i e s o f th o w o r ld . F o re to n a n d d o m e s tic e x c h a n g e s b o u g h t a n d so ld .

C o lle c tio n s c a re fu lly m a d e m id p ro m p tly a c c o u n te d fo r . . .BOARD O F D IREC TO R S I

G . F . K ro c b l. A lb e r t C. T w in in g , . •• I s a a o C . K e n n e d y ,B ra c e S . K c a to r . • O liv e r H . B ro w n , S am u el Jo h n so n ,M ila n R oss. M. L . B am m an . C h as . A . A tk in s ..John L. Coftlm ^ b e rm a n B. n y l a t t . ’ . . . . C bos. A . Y o u n g . .D. C. C o v e rt ' ’ . W in , II . B eegle. ' . .-

T H E P O L IC Y *-— O F T H E — ,~J ■

MANHATTANLife Insurance Company

INCONTESTABLE NON-FORFEIT ABLE

PAYABLE AT SIGHTContains no Suicide or Intemper­

ance Clause.^ Grants AbsoluteFreedom of Travel

and Residence. ;And is free from all Technicalities.

; j Privileges ond Gtiarantcea ore part of (bo Contractnnd appear written in tlio body of tlio Policy.

Survivorship Dividend Plan gives Investment:-and Protection. Send for statement, stating age.

A iIdroNH J A J I E N « . C’A I t n & S O N S , M a n n jre rH ,N o w M n n lm U a u U uil« llngr> S . E . C o r . E o u r t h a n d W a l n u t SIN ., lM i t la d c l i ih ln .

I l n p p y a n d c c n te n t Is a lio m e w ith “ T h e R o- C hester*," a la m p w i lh t h e l ig h t o f t h e m o rn in g . Call on R o ch es te r L am p C o., 42 P a rk P lace , N . Y . ,

ta on fUo In P h ila d e lp h iaa t Iho NuwHimjier A a v er •

■___ __ tlsJtur AiTenry o f Alessra.R A S O N - our u u tto rU td tn ;onts

F o r D ropsy , G rav el, B rig h t’s, H e a r t . U r in a ry o r L iv e r D iseases, N ervousness, &c. C nro g u a r a n - . teed . Offlco 831 A rch s tre e t, P h ila d e lp h ia . 81.00 or b o ttlo , 6 for 85. A t d ru g g is ts . T ry I t.