AMERICANS OCCUPY GUILTY OF MANSLAUGHTER PEBBLES. … · | : S>or six cants a *' week a carrier wili...

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| : S>or six cants a *' week a carrier wili leave the daily edition o f The Journal t X ■ ' at your door, J &ou won't y e t ;' ?i dll the local % news unlessyou | X read tho "i-$4 I JOURNAL I Y t every afternoon | f. iSlti VOL. XVII. NO. 24. Vv ; ASBURY PARK, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY '27, 1900., -------- ----------p ----- -y~~~--- ----- “ —: --- V’.. PRICE ONE CENT AMERICANS OCCUPY NEW TOWNS IN EAST Our Boys Resisted sot One Place Only. : - Natives Passive—Colonel Haves and i Captain Casteel lead in Sue- .v, cessful Engagements. . * / MANILA.Jrin. 27i-—A dispatch from Scrsogon, dated Thursday, Jan. 25, Biyi Brigadier General Kobbe’s expedition baa occupied Sorsogon.Donaol, Bulau, Legan- pi, arid Vitae, on Catanduanes islant!. The only resistance was i at Legaspi, where five Americana were wounded and 45 dead and 15 wounded Filipinos Vwere found. V, . /■' .' . •■•It is eBtiinated that there are 125,000 bales ot hemp in these provinces and 70,- —000 bales in'the ports of Sorsogon and Legaspi. The United. States gunboat 'Nashville's shriipner burned 8,000 bale* ’ in Legaspi. •■ •• , i_ % The expedition- arrived off Sorsogon Jan. 20, and the town displayed white flags. General Kobbe and Colonel Howe, with a battalion ot the Forty-seventh in- fantry, landed ■ and raised the United States flag. The insurgent force, number- ing 300 men, evacuated the place. The natives were passive. During the morning of Jan. 23 the Nash- ville and Venus, with four companies of the Forty-aeventb regiment under Major Shipton approached Legaspi. Filipino flags werc flying. add the trenches were crowded. A detachment of 150 picked men, led by Major Shipton, landed on the beach about a mile north of the town, GUILTY OF MANSLAUGHTER At 2.30 O'clock todaiv the Case of Ge- naro" Gemlno, Who Killed Domenico; Bertone Went to His Peers. ' At 8 o’clock %day the jury In the trial at Freehold of Genaro Gemlno, the Ital- ian who killed Domenico Bertone of .West Park, returned a verdict pf manslaughter. ■He was sentenced tc ten years ,ln the state prison. :• Justice Collins began his. charge at 2, o’clock and finished at 2.80. The Jury then retired. The defense concluded lte case at 5.65 O'clock, . yesterday evening.'. At ,080 o'clock this ’morning Aaron Johnston be- gan his argument for the defence. He concluded at 12.15' o’clock/ Prosecutor Hejsley-torgued until ten minutes of 1 o’clock, when the court took a recess; PROCRASTINATION. The Ocean Grove Association 1 Still Dilly- Dallying Over Sympborilum Factory 'Scheme. " The Real Estate Committee, of the Ocean Grove Camp Meeting Association has given the Committee on Manufactures of theAsbury Park Board of Trade anoth- er set-back in the matter of securing: the the Nashville bombarded the trenehfesj \ transfer of tbe Symphonlon Manufactur- and the enem /' retreated to Albay, ing Company of New York to this city, w h o :- they were easily dispersed to the j The association people, were to bave met About 200 insurgents, armed ,with ri. ; last night and given a final decision con- : flea, forced BOO.unwilling -villagers, arm :: cernlng the grant of land desired for the ed with bows and arrows, to serve In the factbry site. But the meeting waa post- trenches in the close range street fighting poned till Monday, before the enemy fled. . The. Filipino dead ’ PEBBLES. Picked up Here ond There end Bunched for Quick Reading. It vrill pay intthe JouBSAfi. Few promenaders on the boardwalk last night. - V ‘ -j The legislature will be in session Mon- dayevcning. . t 'if- ... " > An additional story is being added to the Queen hotel, Ocean Grove. v >■ The bowling teams: of the Asbury Park Wheelmen will elect a captain' Monday night.' . ■/' " ''',; > . . : The Eintracht 8ing in the Mikado building,’J 8 O’clock. . . will meet londay evening at E.' P. Benjamin and O. E. Eskew;of Ai- lenburst have built new ice yachts for use on Deal: lake. The lakes are again frozen over. ' Should the cold snap continue,.there will be good skating by Monday. ' : The revival which has been .held iu the A. M. E. Zion Church! of West Park will be continued nextweek. ., v - The cottage of Jam^s Murtaughiin High street, Long Branch, was partially 4e*lr°yc(l by lire yesterday afternoon. . j1 . A benefit entertainment will be $ven the E. H. Btokea Fire company of OceaU Grove, Thursday evening, in Association hall. ; - Secretary Burnham reports that contri- butions to th 0/ Ocean Grove auditorium organ fund are being constantly received. Mrs. Grace Reiser Davis, leader of the Children’s Bummer Services in Oceao-tirove will erect a cottage'in Park Place avenue, Bradley Beach. -'-I:'' ■)’} On account of the present; severity, of the weather,'work has been suspended oil the new fire angino home ut Main street and , were toostly villagers who W attempt- 1 ^ ® ea^m e tte hustlers on ttl, , Asbury avenue. , - toV to flee. Bide of, the lake will go ahead in their The ^ from SeaSide. Park The expedition will proceed to Samar effort* to briDg^all-legltimate meana to^to Baruegat Oiiy i»'still being disriiBsed, rt O • I m 6 r\ . — -A Us - t n a -- *—■ aI. I bJ f _^ ^ . j-.' '.'a.a.'.t ^ ■ »i' and Leyte, where the Forty-third infan - try nnd a battalion of the Third artillery will be distributed. Tbe natives complain of lack, of food resulting from the blockade.. They are strongly opposed to the rethm of the fri- ars. Native priests are officiating in the churches. Lieutenant Colonel Webb C. Hayes baa bear upon the Grovers. . _ CHARLES PARKS ARRESTED. An Asbury Park Property Owner Must Pay His Young Wife SS a Week. ______ _ 'Ex-Alderxnan Charles Parks of New defeated an intrenched force of the one- York, *a summer resident of Asbury Park. /"In A m a iiI Ann 111 ™nd°fiveaw ero‘^ w o S n d ^ A “record8 of H *** ‘^ defendant yesterday in an action 'AtBerlcnn prisonere wns found. ....... -.-A- /:'ra»»udoDment 4n«f nonsupportbrought Captain Casteol, while scooting near by bis wife end deolded Id the Harlem Baras with his company, encountered pollcejcburt by Magistrate Pool. Parka la v400 inwirgentS; _He was re-enforced by year8 H ls wife Is^wefity* years, his junior. They have three .chll- • Captain GradeT and" the enemy driven , to Tnnay. One American killed and one was wounded. dren. Parks, has two daughters'by, his --------------- -------- ! first wife. AU'lived together until re- centlyln the ParksHotel, which he owns, ALBANY, Jan. 27.—The New York . « ^ .. . State Bepubllcan Editorial association, «-f>ghth avenue and Fourteenth. Streep composed of editors_of newspnperft^n_the Ne\V Yttrk. . . smaller-cltleBr-towuB nnd vlllafes-Df-the- — Mrs.-Parks-eays hnr BtepdaughJeraJiai state, at their meeting here adopted res- &uch,control of their f&ther that she wak oIutlona^ntnRonistlc to. the expenditure of $62,000,000 -for the improvement ot. the state canals. A’ majority of the edi- tor* came from anticanal counties' that mnder the proposition would not be taxed : for tbe improvement, but they used the argument that the improvement' was malnlj Tor th e benefit of through traffic from the west and that the cost should be defrayed by the United Statea govern- ment. ■j (V V. ratal MIU Fire. . , PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 27.—The An- *ora Manufacturing company’s plant was destroyed by fire 1 st* yvsterday, atd ine employe*. 'U n te Blackburn, aged 17, is missing. Her body la believsd'ta be in the ruins. Tbe factory was located at Ango- ra, In the southwestern extremity of the dty, and employed 180 fcanda_Jn the manufacture of cotton yores. The fire started in the “ffinle room” aad is be- lieved to have originated from an over- heated bearing on one of the machines. The loss Ib about $150,000, partly cover- ed.,by insurance. compelled to take her three children and move. She went to live at No. 250 West Sixteenth street. . She secured a warrant from Magistrate Pool, then In the,Jeffer- son Market Court, for her husband’s ar- m f on the~charge ot'nou-support.-- •:— The defendant waa not ready for trial At tbe time of bis arrest several days ago. Magistrate Pool took the ca^e to the Harlem 9durt, and yesterday after- noon disposed of It. He awarded to Mrs. Parks |8 a week, pending action for a di- vorce, which she says she will institute. Paris, It will be remembered, was ar- rested, here several year? ago,; charged with running a gambling house. WILLIAM E. SQUIER SUICIDES. . “When You Come and See Me You Can Go to Hell," His farewell Message. A man about fifty yeara old, who regts. w tered as “J. Di Heyman,CMy,’’at the hotel i Kept by John Wendelken at 828 Fourth Pilllasr of SlKOat Coirpa Vacancies. WASHINGTON, Jan. 27.—The war department has Issued on order pro- viding for the filling of vacancies iu the .avenue, New York, was found ; dead In signal corps by transfer from the lino of [ bed yesterday morning in hia room. A artny officers loss than 30 years of ags half empty bottle of carbolic acid:was on 1 and ,i _..ui ____ , —i.u t. . w . a n..» . * Hkui. who have served, at least two years passed a satisfactory examination. Tbo order provides that exceptions be made in the cases of officers witb distinguished war service, when the age Utah may be increased to 40 years. Another order al- lows 30 cents for every 20 miles of travel to discharged soldiers making their way home. " • " : Graham Receiver Canajefcarle B u k , CANAJOHARIE, N. Y., Jan, 27.— Edward’J. Graham, national bank exam- iner, of Albany, haa'been appointed re- ceiver of :the Canujoharie National bank. Which closed'its doors Thursday morn- ing, ’He says it will take a long time'to fully determine the condition.of the bank | Mr. Holbrook said, and had Impossible now to say ^ if yg sales Were successr ' whether it-wlll ever resume business. the table and with It a note, part ofvwhich was Illegible. As far as it could be de- ciphered the note read: • ■» “Dear Boys—Wbon you come aud 'see me you can all go to hell.!' . : v . A card on the table bore the name and address, “William E. Squier, commission broker,with Buggies Pros., 52 Broadway.” Henry Francis Holbrook,' manager for Buggies Brothers, called at the hotel tu the afternoon and told Policeman: Barber that the dead man waa Squier. He had asked to dosome business for,tha-firm, W ont Storm ot tbe Season. v . GENEVA, N. Y., Jan, 27.—The worst bliisard of the winter prevails bere. A . high northwest wind has drifted th£ snow 4 baity* aud traffic Is greatly impeded. Tb* stm ts are nearly deserted. Telephone and telegraph companies are, suffering considerably as : a result. of the high . Hrlnds. The mercury dropped 40 .degrees Thursday night. - ‘ • "-V: 1 They Kaow No thins Abant Hiller. . , MONTRBALs Jan. 27.—It Is snnounc- : cd on the very highest authority that the Dominion policy have no knowledge ot, the whereabouts of Miller, the Franklin syndicate; manager, and .that no repre- • Mntatlons have been made to them by • any of the United. States authorities In ths matter. -•• *.; ...; • . •• ...;?»* •:». )"---------- ' •Grenelle’s,Magic Corn, Cure; 10 cents., None .better.r-raaV.tfr. , i, ! ••■. ..-<. k’s.—Adv. ^edriow gessle *t,T«n^: he would receive a commission. - ; Last summer Squier ran the. Astoria Hotel In Cookman avenue, this city. The body was taken to , the morgub. " No money wpi found, but there was a payra ticket wblcb showed that Squier. had. pawned - an umbrella for flfteetf cents a few days ago. V The JonaitAL for local news. ' v ladles’ Muslin Underwear., We never carried '»■ larger stock, of Ladles? Muslin Underwear, than at. present. Styles are correct, -iforknianBhip perfect, as- sortment complete' aud pricing satisfactory. The 8MnauonCoMPANri—Adv. .. . Grenelle’s German Dyepepeia ! Cure- 50, fenUf-adv.tf. : . . i Trading stamps on cash purduues, at T(|nPrDeck's.—Aav. V'; '-; : i SQnfrfto. and it ia again reported that the road wili be built this year. ; . . .A school building, whose..cost is not exceed $12,000, is to be erected in Deal. The structure will be o: brick and is'to contain 4 rooms. 1 vy Mrs. A. B. Vaughn haa returned to Ocean Grove, where she will$occupy tke Mansion House, 77 Embury. avenue, as succeaactr to Mrs. Philip*, who ia in Cuba. . " Five new members have been added to the Washington Fire Company of Ocean Grove. ’ The company has. received' a quantity of new helmets and belts. r Ber. Dr. George B. Wight, pastor of .the First M. E. Church, will' address a men’s meeting in the .West Grove M. E. Church," tomorrow afternoon at 3.15 o’clock. Rev. Dr. George J. MIngins, postorof the Westminster Presbyterian Church, will de- liver an addrefb this evening before the W. C. T. V. of Long. Branch in that city. ■On account of the heavy winds, Indqpend- ence Hook and Ladder Company had ho race :io the stalls in the fire house last night, in order to render prompt service in case of .fire. * ' ' Mias Jeanette MacNaughtou has com- menced the erection of four cottages along thTrroaeSB: frout,-on-the-blockbounded-by- Heck, Ocean and Embury avenues,, Ocean Grove. • ,'| Qund is to be built next Lee in front of his ''Point, below Bsrnegat about $12,000, and will [ that piece of coast. .will.close Wednesday " Sunday will there- A large.fish month by ’Isaac be the only one The .game of next week. Ni fore be the last day enjoy partridge or quail ber. At present very few partridges rabbits are in market. ... Tomorrow ia ,ldecision”-day in tbe Weat Grove M. E. Church. Servicts appropri- ate to the occasion will be held. Members ofthb Epworth League, who made tbem- selveV responsible for the spiritual welfare of a certain number of unsaved persons, will make their report at the morning service. , The Cribbage Tournament. The scores to date In the winter crib- bage tournament, now being held in the Grand Avenue Hotel, are ib-follows: Mrs. Smith Mrs. Dftger........... Mrs. Dllts ................ Miss Sill..; ............ Mr. Kroehl; ........ ,. Mr. Kennedy Mr. Dager,...:., ..... , Mr. Shantz... ....... Mr.W. H. Bannard Mr. Stuart .... r ........ Mr. White........ . Mr. Stalee Mr. Winckler......... Mr. Dayton............ Mr. Smith............. Mra. -D-ivlfl.......,,... ! ••TMr.iGtenell»i..ji..i ’• Mrs, Kroehli;..;;....: !; i-Mff'Davll.':V.v«‘ .iI.: .'. '.'O', i-’-i'r- \n \..;i Won Lost ........ 12 9 ..: ..... 10 8 2 -7 ........10 11 ...... - 3 9 ........ 0 0 ......... 12 8 ...... . 0 ; e ........ 4 2 ....... 0 6 ........ 5' 7 ........ S 6 ......... 8 4 ........ 5 7 ........12 15 ....... :. 9 .9 .. 4 '■ 2 .......10 5 ....... 1;. 8 .••4.... O ' 0> , » 4 Soiibfit ftefMge In tbe Poatoffice. Kate. Hires, ^poorly:clad and forsaken- looklng womau, waa found this morning by Janitor Ei A^Clark ■ ; of the postofilce buildtng under the steps on the postoffice jjoor. The woman bad slept there all night In order to keep warm. Clark pulled her out and the woman went her weary way, carrying under her arm a package which she lpyarlably has with her. •' r-, . ■■ * . : : “ >.'• r •' .. . , . OraUgM,'20 fot 25c, at TenBroeck’a.-Adv, FALL OF LADYSMITH NOW SEEMS CERTAIN The. Boers Possess: Ten Miles of Strong < Fortifications'Along the Tugela River—Dismay and Gloom •... ■ in .London* LONDON, Jan. 27.—Seven days of .fighting have left the main Boer positions intact and, General Buller’s army 700 men weaker,: according to the.official cas- ualty lists, which seemingly; do not in: elude the Spion1 kop losses, as thoBe, last forwarded do not mention General Wood- gate’s wounding. . ..A', '' . England is posBCBsed by a depressing sens^'of failure, although not a wojd in criticism .of her generals and soldiers is uttered. Not mucb.L.effort is' made to place a happy construction upon General Buller’s bare 18 words telling of-the re- tirement from Spion kop, and there.is ah uueat^ Impression abroad that worse news is yet to come. ' At one of the military clubs last night the statement passed from one member to another, that the war office had receiv- ed an unpleasant supplementary dispatch from General Buller which was being held up for 12 hours. The war: office has the following dis- patch from General Buller, dated Spear-, man’s camp, Thursday, Jan. 25, noon: “General Warren’s .garrison, I am sor- ry-to say, I find this morning, had in the night abandoned Spi6n;kop." \ General Buller reports General War- ren's casualties on'Jan.'24 to be as fol- lows: Dead, officers, flf;' noncommission- ed officers and .men,'. 18; wounded offi- cers, 12; noncommissioned officers and men, 142; missing, 31. General; Buller’s. dispatch giving the list of British casnaltics is dated Sjiear- GENERAL MACDONALD. iri&ri’a camp, TTUltt~20,—1 0 5 5 -d r-m ^ ra o - there has been no delay in the communi- cations passing between General Buller and tbe war office. The killed include Colonel Buchanan-Rlddell of tbe King’s Royal rifles, lie, served’ in the Niger war of 1881. It is not clear wlu.-ther .the casualties inctode those at Spidii kop or only' those resulting from the fighting prior to the Bpion kop engagement. 'Probably as Un Immediate effect of the receipt of tbe news of the abandonment of Spion kop. by the Britlsb force under General Sir Charles Worsen orders have heeu sent to Aldarsbiot to have tbe Fourth jCavglry division hi readiness to embark for Bouth Africa early In February. ' • General Ctbctor Archibald Macdonald has-^urrlved' and assumed command of the highlanders at Moddor river, ' It iB expected tbat operatkms v will now be puBhed vigorously in that quarter. Harassed for hours by a heavy fire from the Boer gnus, General Warren was forced to evacuate Spion kop Wednes- day night after holding it for a day un- der- an incessant shell fire. < . .. 11 ! The-kopje carried by Warren in hia night attack proved to be only a small Ipart of tbe Boer defense, and the half hearted fight put up'by BoerB to hold, it indicates a wily plot to lure.Warren into a trap where bis troops could be cut to pieces without any risk to tbe Boers. No sooner had Warren settled down in the captured trenches than the Boers un- masked the guns they had so sedulously hidden through all the fivc^days of fierce preliminary fighting. From a high plaj-' teau dominating the captured trench, a tornado of shell and shrapnel,., broke loose. ' ; • • . - .. ,. The Boer gunners had the' riinge to an inch. All the time their guns had been silent the range finders bad been perfect- ing their work, and .when the moment came to tear off the mask the effect of that concentrated fire was overwhelming. And Warren was absolutely helpleBB in tbe trap: No guns had been or could be dragged up the steep hill that led to tbe trenches.: i . Retreat was put Of the] question while tb at bail of steel swept across the'hilltop". The billiide' would have1 run red" with -blood bad. Warren attempted' to with - draw in daylight i I Hour after hour tbe men lay in the trenches, hugging close to every bit of cover available: Bursting shells swelled the number ot dead and wounded every hour, but all through that long and try- in'g ordeal the men were forced to lie. there, the target of foemen who shot fast and well. Warren learned when too late that the position he reported to Buller made “the enemy’s position untenable’’ was so'eom- pjstejy dominated by the Boer artillery tbat its capture was only another ot tbe ' coady.'blunders tbat have marked every lion et the British campaign tbua far. It was aifljgersrontein ana BtorniDerg and Colenso repeated—only , worse,. JThe Highland brigade and Gntacre’s-m^n re - treated when the fire got too hot for them.1 Warren was forced to stand the rack all day long.' '■ ' The position of .LadyBmith Is now con- sidered hopeleBB. • Practically all of Bui- ler’s army was engaged in the attempt to turn the Boer Bank. The troops have been fighting without intermission ' since f»Bt Friday morning Mr. Spenser Wilfflnson, In The MorB-' . Ing Poet, writes ns follows of thd Spion kop loss: . “This is a serious matter, arid an at- tempt'will„not here be made'tb minimize. It,: for no greater wrong can be done tc our people at’ boirie than to mislead them about the significance of the events of the war. The right, way is to tell the truth as far as we know it.” But'facts from the neighborhood of‘tht Tugela are scantier than ever. The cen- -Bor8hip-riow is Blmply-prohibitive. , The Standard, which thinks' still mort troops will, be required and which com- ments upon the “astonishing manner in which South—Africu-swall^ws. up. troopi wholesale without any appreciable re- sult,” goes on to refer-to-the .continental jubilation and to the predictions regard- ing General Buller’s check. It says: “It is humiliating to find that the Natal terrain'has been more accurately, studied In Berlin than at our.own headquarters on the', Tugela.” v Tho Times publishes the following diB- patch from Frere camp; dated Wedrie* lay morning and evidently written be- fore the capture of Spion kop was known. •Alter describing the position of the Beers, actively intrenching and bringing fresh guns forward, the correspondent ..lays: -. '• “Their front extends ten miles, and we shall bave to try. to break it in the mid- 4>e. Every prisoner sayB the Boers will nt rer let ns reach Xadysmith. This Is VICE-PRESIDENT HOBART . EULOGIZED IN CONGRESS The House of Representatives Suspended Business to Honer the late Dis- tinguished Statesman from , New Jersey. '•".•*-A- The gredter part of the Eesslon of the house tpday was devoted to eulogies'oti'.i- the life and public services of the la to Vice-President Hobart. The tributes paid to bis memory were not the. usual per- ' j' functory eulogies, but expressed the love,, admirationjand respect In ,wblch.he was'- o universally held. Thoso who'spoko were ’ Messrs. Gardner, Stewart, Parker, Fowler' : and-Daly of New Jersey; Payne of New York, Dalzell and Broslusof Penneylvo- nla, Grosvenor of Ohio, Dolliver of Iowa,' > ! Richardson of Tennessee and Griggs ot' Georgia,’ ' v'' Mr- Gardner, ,who served for ^a^eral years in the New Jersey Senate with Mr. Hobart, presented the resolutions of regret and waB the first) speaker. Ho said In part: , _ “ We pause In our labors today to do bomage^to the memory of one who was not a member of this bouse, but who In his high office represented tbe suffrage and majesty of the great republic. 'Mr. ' Hobart was endowed with more admirable and enviable qualities than any other man •I ever knew. All men agree tbat bis was a most lovable personality. Informed men spoke of his acquirements; church- ! men of bis rectitude and deep religious ' canvictlons; the philanthropist of liisun- thcir last chance of preventing us, foi >ostentatious charity; business men mar- behind this hill lies open country without veiled at his business judgment f polltl- Jhp 'n?!m rS°fL„Ilrtn^bmw0m c,anB wondered at clear perceptions of they will strain every nerve to throw u», . - . , ' . 1 . . back bore.” the character and the value of Issues; states- A dispatch from Durban, dated Jan . m e n at |hls wide and early knowledge of 24. Buys: . ' national an^ International affairs, and all Blike at bis ready solutions of problems, 'One hundred nnd sixty Boera captured during General Buller’s recent opera- tions have arrived here. A Free Statei who is among the" recent arrivals BSys that President Steyn has been removing his furniture to Pretoria, where several it hiB officials have taken houses. however weighty and however intricate. HIb sympathy was as broad as the field of ' \ human struggle, and all classes felt Its touch, bo that when tbe dreaded message I t - is™td*M°ireported*kthatUnoChig gun» ’ °t hls departure flashed over the country V are now left in the Pretoria forts and the bitter tears fell on every hearthstone, A. that the Boers have exhausted their stock for all alike felt tbe loss of a friend.” of good Mauser -cartridges and-are. now Mr: 8t<iwiirt wh6 represents the district..' issuing cartridges formerly aindemned by , ,, .,, - , , ..•? •General Jonhert. .They- are aaid to lnw¥ ^ Mr.Hobaitlived, .poke In part- , manufacturing 12,000 cartridges and 200 as follows: .--t itbelis daily at the dynamite factory.” V | “Vice President Hobart Is dead. The . nation was profoundly startled at the sad German* Dlt<cr Toward England. t . ■xxr’. ' " —' ■ i: * . •».» BERLIN, Jan. 27.-Tbe latest news “cement.. When ^ . last saw him' from South Africa ia interpreted as a be was apparently in rob^Bt and vigorous signal defeat for the BrjtiBh._- The health, but the black robed messengfr of .;. Deutsche Tages Zeltung calls the British 1death beckoned from the hill tops and be ’ V poaitiori - there “smother ®tep into the followed witb the dying to ao .eternal turned from Gape Town without aniy ex- tratlon was unlqne, and the . unusnal ^ blanation on the part or*the British an- .friend8hip existing between the dead thwitieBT 'Tbe~GermairTirras-coiriinent8;j viee president 'and- our distinguished ' upon the fact with considerable heat. ! . . ______ _ ,., , . , , . An incident illustrating the bitterness of PreeWen* was of ,be tenderest k>nd, «Jd popular feeling in Germany against Eng* gave him personally and officially at-r1** land is the appearance of a pamphlet en- nity and Importance heretofore lacf titlri^^e-Final-.IUck°ning--Witb.3|,giTl^ nd,..ralBed.-tbi.'rffice. of .vlce-pre^ land." This pretends to describe events . - _- in 1931 and sets forth deBcriptions of na- i ^roin one perfunctory faculty to an val-battles in which Germany defeats alted power. fyf/t1 England, and-a general break.uptnt.the.. “Hls neighborsfand. friends<Mestknow Sritlsh empire enBuetf;1 with AuBtralia de- how|hIs .Bhortened time of life waa spent. daring her Independence and the other Bpjtish. colouieg^ being divided np amid various powers. ' '•"• ' 1 • • ' '• OLD MAIDS' CONVENTION. Mldas-ltke,every thing he touched turned to ,' gpld,tnd bis genial, robust and cheerful appearance loadedjblm down with prefer- ment[snd power.' * . ------- I “But it |ls not to 'tbe dead our words Pretty Ocean Grove Eilglbles Discuss the should be alone or psirtlcularly addressed, Trials and Woes of Ineflgtbles. j t)ut to the widowed wife and son, who “The' Old Maids’ Convention,”.a farce,' must carry tbls burden of sorrow . was given last night by a cast composed throughout a . lifetime. To this :grand . of ladies of Ocean Grove for the benefit . widow and stricken boy let our hearts go of the Ladles Auxiliary Association of the out with tenderness, sympathy and love, ' Ocean Grove Board of Trade. A laree and appeal to the Almighty, who la eB- audleuce was present in the assembly peclally tbe widows’ God, to strengthen' room of the Ocean Grove blgb school her in her loneliness for all struggles to building to enjoy the cleverly performed come; yjien she approaches the Eternal; skit. The characters were well enacted. Throne may she bid a fond sdleri to this and the eml aimed ut, to create hilarious world to embrace her beloved husband In laughter, was BttBlned, !. tfie'ilfe everlhBtlng.” / ■'• Miss Margaret Asay, as the president of At the close of the eulogies tbe HbuBe, the convention was regarded aa-excrucl- [ bb a further token of respect to MK 'Ho- atlngly funny. Mr*. J. E. Quinn, Mias <Alidu Patterson, Mrs. C. I. King. Mrs. Reuben Norris, MIbs Grace Hoffman were liberal contributors to the amusement of the- evening. Peyton .Woolston ran a machine .that did wonders for the old maids.. Eivin Burtls sang. Governor Voorhees In Washington. Governor Voorhees was In Washington yesterday on buslneBB In regard to the state’s expenditure for the equipment of troops In the war with Spain. Tbe audi- tor of tbo War Department has been be- fore the military committee at the capltol and arranged a plan which he thinks wljl lnBtire tfavorable action-by congress and early payment of the money. Governor Voorhtei returned to New Jersey last nigbt •.. ^ '-..• . Lowest pricee’ on" vegetables^ at Ten-. Broeck’s.—Adv. .. : Two-ply tar paper, $1.00 a roll, this week only,'at Newlin’BHardware Store.—Adv Special furniture Selflag. ' "1 ' Our iM nllure buyer SMiured a traln-load SoSeoftte new stock Ib h e rv ^ m e In lind look It over and learn the prices. We fril confident teeing will lead to baying.- TnfimBioB^O ompakt<—A 4 t. bart’Bmemory,.adjourned. Before the eulogies, began the confer- ence report on tbe census bill was adppted and an attempt was made to pass' ft^blll to pay tbe cost- ot. repairing tbe Mahjla cable, which Dewey'cut juBt beforij,#j6;.? great' victory. Opposition developed, 1^)1 boweyer, and It went over. • r - -■ b W &i ___ .... : - i Bosket Ball Tonight. i The Bay Ridge Athletic .Club of Brook- v ;j lyri will play the Oreos a game of basket: ball this eveqlng. In Central Hall. The : line-up fOrtbegame'I* as follows: obkos right forward Dudley, capt, leftiforwird HonHni ■ . ccntre • I Hay kidgk Ii. Flannery O. ’66dlne McCannfick OVaq. Smith Qco. Smith right guard SA. Bogtn <H. * leftjffuard H«!oroe—D r .D o r a n . . Hanin G. Bocara H. Watron Rare Basloess Opportunity . - ’■ p The Dairy Kitchen, in Keator Block, for rent with or. without hotel ,apartments, i- .i. Poesessiori given April 1, when present pro. , . prietors will movfi in their new hotel in Grand avenue, fiaquire of agents or owner.—Adv. Lowest prices for oranges at TeriBroeck’a. . Ladles’ Minstrels, Wednesday, February^ ;;-i lt-rtftr... •.. ' ' . • /

Transcript of AMERICANS OCCUPY GUILTY OF MANSLAUGHTER PEBBLES. … · | : S>or six cants a *' week a carrier wili...

Page 1: AMERICANS OCCUPY GUILTY OF MANSLAUGHTER PEBBLES. … · | : S>or six cants a *' week a carrier wili leave the daily edition o f The Journal t X ' at your door, J • &ou won't yet;'?

| : S>or s ix cants a * ' w eek a carrier

w ili leave the da ily edition o fT h e Jo u rn a l t

X ■' a t y o u r door, J

• &ou won't y e t ;'? i d ll the local %

.» news unless yo u |X read tho "i-$4I JO U R N A L I

Y t every afternoon | f .

i S l t i

VOL. XVII. NO. 24. V v ; ASBURY PARK, N E W JE R SE Y , SATURDAY A FTER N O O N , JA N U A RY '27, 1900 .,------------------p ----- -y~~~--------“—:--- V’..

PR IC E O N E CENT

AMERICANS OCCUPYNEW TOWNS IN EAST

Our Boys Resisted s o t One Place Only. : - Natives Passive—Colonel Haves and

i Captain Casteel le a d in Sue- .v, cessful Engagements. . *

/ M A N IL A .Jrin . 27i-—A dispatch from Scrsogon, dated Thursday, Jan. 25, Biyi Brigadier General Kobbe’s expedition baa occupied Sorsogon.Donaol, Bulau, Legan-

■ pi, arid Vitae, on Catanduanes islant!. The only resistance was i a t Legaspi, where five Americana were wounded and 45 dead and 15 wounded Filipinos Vwere found. V, . /■' .' .• ■•It is eBtiinated th a t there are 125,000 bales ot hemp in these provinces and 70,-

—000 bales in 'th e ports of Sorsogon and Legaspi. The United. States gunboat

'Nashville's shriipner burned 8,000 bale*’ in Legaspi. •■•• , i_ %

The expedition- arrived off Sorsogon Jan . 20, and the town displayed white flags. General Kobbe and Colonel Howe, with a battalion ot the Forty-seventh in­fantry, landed ■ and raised the United States flag. The insurgent force, number­ing 300 men, evacuated the place. The natives were passive.

During the morning of Jan . 23 the Nash­ville and Venus, with four companies of the Forty-aeventb regiment under Major Shipton approached Legaspi. Filipino flags werc flying. add the trenches were crowded. A detachment of 150 picked men, led by Major Shipton, landed on the beach about a mile north of the town,

GUILTY OF MANSLAUGHTERAt 2 .30 O'clock todaiv th e Case o f Ge-

naro" Gemlno, Who Killed Domenico;Bertone Went to His Peers. '

At 8 o’clock %day the jury In the trial at Freehold of Genaro Gemlno, the Ital­ian who killed Domenico Bertone of .West Park, returned a verdict p f manslaughter. ■He was sentenced tc ten years ,ln the state prison. :•

Justice Collins began his. charge at 2, o’clock and finished at 2.80.

The Jury then retired.The defense concluded lte case at 5.65

O'clock, . yesterday evening.'. A t ,080 o'clock this ’morning Aaron Johnston be­gan his argument for the defence. He concluded at 12.15' o’clock/ Prosecutor Hejsley-torgued until ten minutes of 1 o’clock, when the court took a recess;

PROCRASTINATION.The Ocean Grove Association1 Still Dilly-

Dallying Over Sympborilum Factory 'Scheme. "

The Real Estate Committee, of the Ocean Grove Camp Meeting Association has given the Committee on Manufactures of theA sbury Park Board of Trade anoth­er set-back in the matter of securing: the

the Nashville bombarded the trenehfesj \ transfer o f tbe Symphonlon Manufactur- and the e n em /' retreated to Albay, ing Company of New York to th is city, w h o : - they were easily dispersed to the j The association people, were to bave met

About 200 insurgents, armed , w ith ri. ; last night and given a final decision con- : flea, forced BOO.unwilling -villagers, a rm :: cernlng the grant of land desired for the ed with bows and arrows, to serve In the factbry site. But the meeting waa post­trenches in the close range street fighting poned till Monday, before the enemy fled. . The. Filipino dead ’ •

PEBBLES.Picked up Here ond There end Bunched

for Quick Reading.

I t vrill pay intthe JouBSAfi.Few promenaders on the boardwalk last

night. - V ‘ -jThe legislature w ill be in session Mon-

dayevcning. . t 'if- ... " >An additional story is being added to

the Queen hotel, Ocean Grove. v>■ The bowling teams: of the Asbury Park Wheelmen will elect a captain' Monday night.' . ■/' " ''', ; > ■. .: The Eintracht 8ing

in the Mikado building,’J 8 O’clock. .

. will meet londay evening at

E.' P. Benjamin and O. E. Eskew;of Ai- lenburst have built new ice yachts for use on Deal: lake.

The lakes are again frozen over. ' Should the cold snap continue,.there will be good skating by Monday. ' :

The revival which has been .held iu the A. M. E. Zion Church! of West Park will be continued nextweek. ., v- The cottage of Jam^s Murtaughiin High street, Long Branch, was partially 4e*lr°yc(l by lire yesterday afternoon. . j 1.

A benefit entertainment will be $ven the E . H . Btokea Fire company of OceaU Grove, Thursday evening, in Association hall. ; -

Secretary Burnham reports that contri­butions to th 0/ Ocean Grove auditorium organ fund are being constantly received.

Mrs. Grace R eiser Davis, leader of the Children’s Bummer Services in Oceao-tirove will erect a cottage'in Park Place avenue, Bradley Beach. -'-I:'' ■)’}

On account of the present; severity, of the weather,'work has been suspended oil the new fire angino home ut Main street and

, were toostly villagers who W attempt- 1 ^ ® e a ^ m e t te hustlers on t t l , , Asbury avenue. ,- toV to flee. Bide of, the la k e will go ahead in their The ^ from SeaSide. Park

The expedition will proceed to Samar effort* to briDg^all-legltimate meana to ^ to Baruegat Oiiy i» 'still being disriiBsed,rt O • I m 6 r\ . — -A Us - t n a -- *—■ a I . I b J f _^ . j-.' — ' . ' a . a . ' . t ^ ■ »i 'and Leyte, where the Forty-third infan­

try nnd a battalion of the Third artillery will be distributed.

Tbe natives complain of lack, of food resulting from the blockade.. They are strongly opposed to the rethm of the fri­ars. Native priests are officiating in the churches.

Lieutenant Colonel W ebb C. Hayes baa

bear upon the Grovers. . _

CHARLES PARKS ARRESTED.

An Asbury Park Property Owner Must Pay His Young Wife SS a Week.

______ _ 'Ex-Alderxnan Charles Parks of Newdefeated an intrenched force of the one- York, *a summer resident of Asbury Park.

■ /"I n A m a iiI Ann 111

™nd°fiveawero‘ w o S n d ^ A “record8 of H *** ‘ defendant yesterday in an action'AtBerlcnn prisonere wns found........ -.-A- /:'ra»»udoDm ent 4n«f nonsupportbrought

Captain Casteol, while scooting near by b is wife end deolded Id the Harlem Baras with his company, encountered pollcejcburt by Magistrate Pool. Parka la

v400 inwirgentS; _He was re-enforced by year8 H ls wife Is^wefity*years, his junior. They have three .chll-• Captain GradeT and" the enemy

driven , to Tnnay. One American killed and one was wounded. dren. Parks, has two daughters'by, his

--------------- --------! first wife. AU'lived together until re-cen tly ln the ParksH otel, which he owns,

ALBANY, Jan . 27.—The New York . « ^ .. . ’State Bepubllcan Editorial association, « -f> g h th avenue and Fourteenth. Streep composed of editors_of newspnperft^n_the Ne\V Yttrk. . . ’smaller-cltleBr-towuB nnd vlllafes-Df-the- — Mrs.-Parks-eays hnr BtepdaughJeraJiai state, at their meeting here adopted res- &uch,control of their f&ther that she wakoIutlona^ntnRonistlc to. the expenditure of $62,000,000 -for the improvement ot. the state canals. A’ majority of the edi­tor* came from anticanal counties' that

mnder the proposition would not be taxed : for tbe improvement, but they used the

argument that the improvement ' was malnlj Tor th e benefit of through traffic from the west and that the cost should be defrayed by the United Statea govern­ment.

■j (V V. r a t a l M IU F i r e . . ,P H IL A D E L P H IA , Jan . 27.—The An-

*ora Manufacturing company’s p lant was destroyed by fire 1st* yvsterday, a td ine employe*. 'U n t e Blackburn, aged 17, is missing. H er body la believsd'ta be in the ruins. Tbe factory was located a t Ango­ra, In the southwestern extremity of the d ty , and employed 180 fcanda_Jn the manufacture of cotton yores. The fire started in the “ffinle room” aad is be­lieved to have originated from an over­heated bearing on one of the machines. The loss Ib about $150,000, partly cover­ed.,by insurance.

compelled to take her three children and move. She went to live at No. 250 West Sixteenth street. . She secured a warrant from Magistrate Pool, then In the,Jeffer­son M arket Court, for her husband’s ar-m f on the~charge ot'nou-support.-- •:—

The defendant waa not ready for trial At tb e tim e of bis arrest several days ago. Magistrate Pool took the ca^e to the Harlem 9durt, and yesterday after­noon disposed of It. H e awarded to Mrs. Parks | 8 a week, pending action for a d i­vorce, which she says she will institute.

P a ris , It will be remembered, was ar­rested, here several year? ago,; charged with running a gambling house.

WILLIAM E. SQUIER SUICIDES. .

“ When You Come and See Me You Can Go to Hell," His farewell Message.

A man about fifty yeara old, who regts. w tered as “J . Di Heyman,CMy,’’a t the hotel i Kept by John W endelken at 828 Fourth

P illla sr o f SlKOat Coirpa V acancies.W ASHINGTON, Jan . 27.—The war

department has Issued on order pro­viding for the filling of vacancies iu the .avenue, New York, was found ; dead In signal corps by transfer from the lino of [ bed yesterday morning ■ in hia room. A artny officers loss than 30 years of ags half empty bottle of carbolic acid:was on

1 and ,i_. . u i____ , —i.u t . . w . a n. .» . * H k u i.who have served, at least two years passed a satisfactory examination. Tbo order provides th a t exceptions be made in the cases of officers witb distinguished war service, when the age Utah may be increased to 40 years. Another order al­lows 30 cents for every 20 miles of travel to discharged soldiers making their way home. " ■ — ■ • " ■ :G raham R e c e iv e r C anajefcarle B u k ,

CANAJOHARIE, N. Y., Jan , 27.—Edward’J . Graham, national bank exam­iner, of Albany, haa'been appointed re­ceiver of :the Canujoharie National bank.Which closed 'its doors Thursday morn­ing, ’He says it will take a long tim e'to fully determine the condition.of the bank | M r. Holbrook said, and had

Impossible now to say ^ if y g sales Were successr ' whether it-wlll ever resume business.

the table and with It a note, part ofvwhich was Illegible. As far as it could be de­ciphered the note read : • ■»

“Dear Boys—Wbon you come aud 'see me you can all go to hell.!' . : v .

A card on the table bore the name and address, “W illiam E. Squier, commission broker,with Buggies Pros., 52 Broadway.” Henry Francis Holbrook,' manager for Buggies Brothers, called at the hotel tu the afternoon and told Policem an: Barber that the dead man waa Squier. He had asked to dosom e business for,tha-firm ,

W o n t Storm o t tb e Season .v . GENEVA, N. Y., Jan , 27.—The w orst

bliisard of the winter prevails bere. A . high northwest wind has drifted th£ snow

4 baity* aud traffic Is greatly impeded. Tb* s tm ts are nearly deserted. Telephone and telegraph companies a re , suffering considerably as : a re su lt . of the high

. Hrlnds. The mercury dropped 40 .degrees Thursday night. - ‘ • " - V :

1 T h ey K a o w No t h in s A b an t H ille r .. , MONTRBALs Jan . 27.—I t Is snnounc- : cd on the very highest authority th a t the Dominion policy have no knowledge ot, the whereabouts of Miller, the Franklin syndicate; manager, and .tha t no repre-

• Mntatlons have been made to them by• any of the United. States authorities In

ths m atter. -•• *.; . . . ; • ■. ••...;?»* •:». )"---------- '•Grenelle’s,Magic Corn, Cure; 10 cents.,

None .better.r-raaV.tfr. , i, ! ••■. ..-<.k’s.—Adv.^ e d r io w g e s s l e *t,T«n^:

he wouldreceive a commission. ■ - ;

Last summer Squier ran th e . Astoria Hotel In Cookman avenue, this city. The body was taken to , the morgub. " No money wpi found, but there was a payra ticket wblcb showed that Squier. had. pawned - an umbrella for flfteetf cents a few days ago. V

The JonaitAL for local news. ' v

ladles’ Muslin Underwear.,We never carried '»■ larger stock, of

Ladles? Muslin Underwear, than a t. present. Styles are correct, -iforknianBhip perfect, as­sortment complete' aud pricing satisfactory.

T h e 8MnauonCoMPANri—Adv.

.. . Grenelle’s German Dyepepeia ! Cure- 50, fenUf-adv.tf. : . . i

Trading stamps on cash purduues, at T(|nPrDeck's.—Aav. V'; '-; : i S Q n f r f t o .

and it ia again reported that the road wili be built this year. ; . .

.A school building, whose..cost is not exceed $12,000, is to be erected in Deal. The structure will be o: brick and i s 't o contain 4 rooms. 1 vy

Mrs. A. B. Vaughn haa returned to Ocean Grove, where she will$occupy tke Mansion House, 77 Embury. avenue, as succeaactr to Mrs. Philip*, who ia in Cuba. . "

Five new members have been added to the Washington Fire Company of Ocean Grove. ’ T he company h as . received' a quantity of new helmets and belts. r

Ber. Dr. George B. Wight, pastor of .the First M. E. Church, will' address a men’s meeting in the . West Grove M. E. Church," tomorrow afternoon a t 3.15 o’clock.

Rev. Dr. George J . MIngins, postorof the Westminster Presbyterian Church, will de­liver an addrefb this evening before the W. C. T. V. of Long. Branch in that city.

■On account of the heavy winds, Indqpend- ence Hook and Ladder Company had ho race :io the stalls in the fire house last night, in order to render prompt service in case o f .fire. * ■ ' '

Mias Jeanette MacNaughtou has com­menced the erection of four cottages along thTrroaeSB: frout,-on-the-blockbounded-by- Heck, Ocean and Embury avenues,, Ocean Grove. • ,'|

Qund is to be built next Lee in front of his

''Point, below Bsrnegat about $12,000, and will [ that piece of coast..will.close Wednesday " Sunday will there-

A large.fish month by ’Isaac

be the only oneThe .game

of next week. Ni fore be the last day enjoy partridge or quail ber. A t present very few partridges rabbits are in market.

‘ . . .Tomorrow ia ,ldecision”-day in tbe Weat

Grove M. E. Church. Servicts appropri­ate to the occasion will be held. Members ofthb Epworth League, who made tbem- selveV responsible for the spiritual welfare of a certain number of unsaved persons, will make their report at the morning service.

, The Cribbage Tournament.The scores to date In the winter crib­

bage tournament, now being held in the Grand Avenue Hotel, are ib-follows:

Mrs. Smith Mrs. Dftger...........Mrs. D llts................Miss S ill..;............Mr. K roehl;........,.Mr. Kennedy Mr. D ager,...:.,.....,Mr. Shantz..........M r.W . H. Bannard Mr. Stuart....r........

Mr. White......... Mr. Stalee

Mr. Winckler.........Mr. Dayton............Mr. Smith.............

■ Mra. -D-ivlfl.......,,...! ••TMr.iGtenell»i..ji..i ■’ • Mrs, Kroehli;..;;....:!; i-Mff'Davll.':V.v«‘.iI.:.'. '.'O', i - ’-i'r- \n \ . .; i

Won Lost........ 12 9..: .....10 8

2 - 7........10 11......- 3 9........ 0 0......... 12 8...... . 0 ; e........4 2....... 0 6........ 5 ' 7........ S 6......... 8 4........ 5 7........12 15.......:. 9 .9

. . 4 '■ 2.......10 5....... 1;.

8.••4.... O ' 0> ,

» 4

Soiibfit ftefMge In tb e Poatoffice.Kate. Hires, ^poorly:clad and forsaken-

looklng womau, waa found th is morning by Janitor Ei A ^Clark ■; of the postofilce buildtng under the steps on the postoffice jjoor. The woman bad slept there all night In order to keep warm. Clark pulled her out and the woman went her weary way, carrying under her arm a package which she lpyarlably has with her. •' r-, . ■■ • * . : • • :“ >.'• r •' .. . , ■.

OraUgM,'20 fot 25c, at TenBroeck’a.-Adv,

FALL OF LADYSMITHNOW SEEMS CERTAIN

The. Boers Possess: Ten Miles of Strong < Fortifications'Along the Tugela

River—Dismay and Gloom • . . . ■ in .London*

LONDON, Jan. 27.—Seven days of .fighting have left the main Boer positions intact and , General Buller’s army 700 men weaker,: according to the.official cas­u a lty lists, which seemingly; do not in: elude the Spion1 kop losses, as thoBe, last forwarded do not mention General Wood- gate’s wounding. . ..A', '' .

England is posBCBsed by a depressing sens^'of failure, although not a wojd in criticism .of her generals and soldiers is uttered. Not mucb.L.effort is ' made to place a happy construction upon General Buller’s bare 18 words telling of-the re­tirement from Spion kop, and there.is ah uueat^ Impression abroad th a t worse news is yet to come.' A t one of the military clubs last night the statement passed from one member to another, that the war office had receiv­ed an unpleasant supplementary dispatch from General Buller which was being held up for 12 hours.

The war: office has the following dis­patch from General Buller, dated Spear-, man’s camp, Thursday, Jan . 25, noon:

“General W arren’s .garrison, I am sor- ry-to say, I find this morning, had in the night abandoned Spi6n;kop." \

General Buller reports General W ar­ren's casualties o n 'Ja n .'24 to be as fol­lows: Dead, officers, flf;' noncommission­ed officers and .men,'. 18; wounded offi­cers, 12; noncommissioned officers and men, 142; missing, 31.

General; Buller’s. dispatch giving the list of British casnaltics is dated Sjiear-

GENERAL MACDONALD.iri&ri’a camp, TTUltt~20,—1055-dr-m ^rao- there has been no delay in the communi- cations passing between General Buller and tbe war office. The killed include Colonel Buchanan-Rlddell of tbe King’s Royal rifles, lie, served’ in th e Niger war of 1881. I t is not clear wlu.-ther .the casualties inctode those a t Spidii kop or only' those resulting from the fighting prior to the Bpion kop engagement.'Probably as Un Immediate effect of the

receipt of tbe news of the abandonment of Spion kop. by the Britlsb force under General Sir Charles Worsen orders have heeu sent to Aldarsbiot to have tbe Fourth jCavglry division hi readiness to embark for Bouth Africa early In February. '• General Ctbctor Archibald Macdonald has-^urrlved' and assumed command of the highlanders a t Moddor river, ' I t iB expected tbat operatkms v will now be puBhed vigorously in th a t quarter.

Harassed for hours by a heavy fire from the Boer gnus, General Warren was forced to evacuate Spion kop Wednes­day night after holding it for a day un­der- an incessant shell fire. < . .. 11 !

The-kopje carried by W arren in hia night attack proved to be only a small Ipart of tbe Boer defense, and the half hearted fight put up 'by BoerB to hold, it indicates a wily plot to lure.W arren into a trap where bis troops could be cut to pieces without any risk to tbe Boers.— No sooner had W arren settled down in the captured trenches than the Boers un­masked the guns they had so sedulously hidden through all the fivc^days of fierce preliminary fighting. From a high plaj-' teau dominating the captured trench, a tornado of shell and shrapnel,., broke loose. ' ; • • . - .. ,.

The Boer gunners had the' riinge to an inch. All the time their guns had been silent the range finders bad been perfect­ing their work, and .when the moment came to tear off the mask the effect of th a t concentrated fire was overwhelming.

And W arren was absolutely helpleBB in tbe trap: No guns had been or could be dragged up the steep hill that led to tbe trenches.: i. R etreat was put Of the] question while tb a t bail of steel swept across the'hilltop". The billiide' would have1 run red" with -blood bad. W arren attempted' to with­draw in daylight i I ■

Hour after hour tbe men lay in the trenches, hugging close to every bit of cover available: Bursting shells swelled the number o t dead and wounded every hour, but all through th a t long and try- in'g ordeal the men were forced to lie. there, the target of foemen who shot fast and well.

W arren learned when too late th a t the position he reported to Buller made “the enemy’s position untenable’’ was so'eom- pjstejy dominated by the Boer artillery tbat its capture was o n ly another ot tbe

' coady.'blunders tb a t have marked every lion e t the British campaign tbua fa r.

I t was aifljgersrontein ana BtorniDerg and Colenso repeated—only , worse,. JThe Highland brigade and Gntacre’s-m^n re­treated when the fire got too hot for them.1 W arren was forced to stand the rack all day long.' '■ '

The position of .LadyBmith Is now con­sidered hopeleBB. • Practically all of Bui- ler’s army was engaged in the attempt to turn the Boer Bank. The troops have been fighting without intermission ' since f»Bt Friday m orning ■ •

Mr. Spenser Wilfflnson, In The MorB-' . Ing Poet, writes ns follows of thd Spion

kop loss: . • ’“This is a serious m atter, arid an at-

tempt'will„not here be m ade'tb minimize. It,: for no greater wrong can be done tc our people at’ boirie than to mislead them about the significance of the events of the war. The right, way is to tell the truth as fa r as we know it.”

B ut'facts from the neighborhood o f‘th t Tugela are scantier than ever. The cen-

-Bor8hip-riow is Blmply-prohibitive. ,The Standard, which thinks' still mort

troops will, be required and which com- ments upon the “astonishing manner in which South—Africu-swall^ws. up. troopi wholesale without any appreciable re­sult,” goes on to refer-to-the .continental

■ jubilation and to the predictions regard­ing General Buller’s check. I t says:

“I t is humiliating to find th a t the Natal terra in 'has been more accurately, studied In Berlin than a t our.own headquarters on the', Tugela.” v

Tho Times publishes th e following diB- patch from Frere camp; dated Wedrie* lay morning and evidently written be­fore the capture of Spion kop was known.

•A lter describing the position of the Beers, actively intrenching and bringing fresh guns forward, the correspondent

..lays: -. '•“Their front extends ten miles, and we

shall bave to try. to break it in the mid- 4>e. Every prisoner sayB the Boers will nt re r let ns reach Xadysmith. This Is

VICE-PRESIDENT HOBART . EULOGIZED IN CONGRESS

The House of Representatives Suspended Business to Honer the la te Dis­

tinguished Statesman from ,New Jersey. '•".•* -A-

The gredter part of the Eesslon of the house tpday was devoted to eulogies'oti'.i- the life and public services of the la to Vice-President Hobart. The tributes paid to bis memory were not the. usual per- ' j' functory eulogies, but expressed the love,, admirationjand respect In ,wblch.he was'- o universally held. Thoso who'spoko were ’ Messrs. Gardner, Stewart, Parker, F ow ler' : and-Daly o f New Jersey; Payne o f New York, Dalzell and Broslusof Penneylvo- nla, Grosvenor of Ohio, Dolliver of Iowa,' > ! Richardson of Tennessee and Griggs o t ' G eorgia,’ ' v ''

Mr- Gardner, ,who served for ^a^eral years in the New Jersey Senate with Mr. Hobart, presented the resolutions of regret and waB the first) speaker. H o said In part: , _

“ We pause In our labors today to do bomage^to the memory of one who was not a member of this bouse, but who In his high office represented tbe suffrage and majesty of the great republic. 'M r. ' Hobart was endowed with more admirable and enviable qualities than any other man •I ever knew. All men agree tbat bis was a most lovable personality. Informed men spoke of his acquirements; church- ! men of bis rectitude and deep religious ' canvictlons; the philanthropist of liisun-

thcir last chance of preventing us, foi > ostentatious charity; business men mar- behind this hill lies open country without veiled a t his business judgment f polltl-Jhp 'n?!m rS °fL „Ilrtn^bm w 0m c,anB wondered at clear perceptions ofthey will strain every nerve to throw u» , . - . , ' . 1 . .back bore.” the character and the value of Issues; states-

A dispatch from Durban, dated Jan . m e n at |hls wide and early knowledge of24. Buys: . ' national an^ International affairs, and all

Blike at bis ready solutions of problems,'One hundred nnd sixty Boera captured during General Buller’s recent opera­tions have arrived here. A Free Statei who is among the" recent arrivals BSys th a t President Steyn has been removing his furniture to Pretoria, where several i t hiB officials have taken houses.

however weighty and however intricate.HIb sympathy was as broad as the field of ' \ human struggle, and all classes felt Its touch, bo that when tbe dreaded message

I t - is™td*M°ireported*kth a tUnoChig gun» ’ ° t hls departure flashed over the country V are now left in the Pretoria forts and the bitter tears fell on every hearthstone, A. that the Boers have exhausted their stock for all alike felt tbe loss of a friend.” of good Mauser -cartridges and-are. now M r: 8t<iwiirt wh6 represents the d istric t. . ' issuing cartridges formerly aindemned by , , , . , , - , , ..•?•General Jonhert. .They- are aaid to ln w ¥ ^ M r.H obaitlived , .poke In p a r t- , manufacturing 12,000 cartridges and 200 as follows: . - - titbelis daily a t the dynamite factory.” V | “Vice President Hobart Is dead. The ■ ■ „ . nation was profoundly startled at the sad

German* Dlt<cr Toward England. t • ■ . ■xxr’.' " — ' ■ i : *. •».» ■BERLIN , Jan . 2 7 .-T b e latest news “ “cement.. W hen ^ . last saw h im '

from South Africa ia interpreted as a be was apparently in rob^Bt and vigorous signal defeat for the BrjtiBh._- The health, but the black robed messengfr of .;. Deutsche Tages Zeltung calls the British 1 death beckoned from the hill tops and be ’ V poaitiori - there “smother ®tep into the followed witb the dying to ao .eternal

turned from Gape Town without aniy ex- tratlon was unlqne, and the . unusnal blanation on the part or*the British an- .friend8hip existing between the dead thwitieBT ' Tbe~GermairTirras-coiriinent8;j viee president 'and- our distinguished 'upon the fact with considerable heat. ! . . ______ _ , . , , . , , .An incident illustrating the bitterness of PreeWen* was of ,be tenderest k>nd, «Jd popular feeling in Germany against Eng* gave him personally and officially a t-r1** land is the appearance of a pamphlet en- nity and Importance heretofore lacf titlri^^e -F in a l-.IU ck °n in g --W itb .3 |,giTl nd,..ralBed.-tbi.'rffice. of .vlce-pre^ land." This pretends to describe events . - ■_-in 1931 and sets fo rth deBcriptions of na- i ^roin one perfunctory faculty to an val-battles in w hich Germany defeats alted power. ■ fy f / t1England, and-a general break .uptnt.the.. “ Hls neighborsfand. friends<Mestknow Sritlsh empire enBuetf;1 with AuBtralia de- how |hIs .Bhortened time of life waa spent.daring her Independence and the other Bpjtish. colouieg^ being divided np amid various powers. ■' '•"• ' 1 ■ • •' '•

OLD MAIDS' CONVENTION.

Mldas-ltke,every thing he touched turned to ,' gp ld ,tnd bis genial, robust and cheerful appearance loadedjblm down with prefer- ment[snd power.' * .

------- I “ But it |ls not to 'tbe dead our wordsPretty Ocean Grove Eilglbles Discuss the should be alone or psirtlcularly addressed,

Trials and Woes of Ineflgtbles. j t)ut to the widowed wife and son, who “The' Old Maids’ Convention,”.a farce,' must carry tbls burden of sorrow .

was given last night by a cast composed throughout a . lifetime. To this :grand . of ladies of Ocean Grove for the benefit . widow and stricken boy let our hearts go of the Ladles Auxiliary Association of the out w ith tenderness, sympathy and love, ' Ocean Grove Board of Trade. A laree and appeal to the Almighty, who la eB- audleuce was present in the assembly peclally tbe widows’ God, to strengthen' room of the Ocean Grove blgb school her in her loneliness for all struggles to building to enjoy the cleverly performed come; yjien she approaches the E te rn a l; sk it. The characters were well enacted. Throne may she bid a fond sdleri to this and the eml aimed ut, to create hilarious world to embrace her beloved husband In laughter, was BttBlned, !. tfie'ilfe everlhBtlng.” • • /■'•

Miss Margaret Asay, as th e president of ■ At the close of the eu log ies tbe HbuBe, the convention was regarded aa-excrucl- [ bb a further token of respect to MK 'Ho-atlngly funny. Mr*. J . E. Quinn, Mias

<Alidu Patterson, Mrs. C. I. King. Mrs. Reuben Norris, MIbs Grace Hoffman were liberal contributors to the amusement of the- evening. Peyton .Woolston ran a machine .that did wonders for the old maids.. Eivin Burtls sang.

Governor Voorhees In Washington.Governor Voorhees was In Washington

yesterday on buslneBB In regard to the state’s expenditure for the equipment of troops In the war with Spain. Tbe audi­tor of tbo W ar Departm ent has been be­fore the military committee a t the capltol and arranged a plan w hich he thinks wljl lnBtire t favorable action-by congress and early payment of the money. Governor Voorhtei returned to New Jersey last n ig b t •.. '-..• .

Lowest pricee’ on" vegetables^ at Ten-. Broeck’s.—Adv. ..

: Two-ply tar paper, $1.00 a roll, this week only,'at Newlin’B Hardware Store.—Adv

Special furniture Selflag. ' "1 'Our iM nllure buyer SMiured a traln-load

S o S eo ftte new stock Ib h e r v ^ m e In lind look It over and learn the prices. We fr il confident teeing will lead to baying.-

T n f i m B i o B ^ O ompakt<—A 4 t.

bart’B memory,.adjourned.Before the eulogies, began the confer­

ence report on tbe census bill was adppted and an attem pt was made to pass' ft^blll to pay tbe cost- ot. repairing tbe Mahjla cable, which D ewey'cut juBt beforij,#j6;.? great' victory. Opposition developed, 1^)1 boweyer, and It went over. • r

- -■ • ■ b W & i ___ .... ” : - i

Bosket Ball Tonight. iThe Bay Ridge Athletic .Club of Brook- v ;j

lyri will play the Oreos a game of basket: ball this eveqlng. In Central H all. The : line-up fOrtbegame'I* as follows: •

obkosright forward Dudley, capt, leftiforwird HonHni ■.

ccntre •

I

Hay kidgk Ii. FlanneryO. ’66dlne McCannfick

OVaq. Smith Qco. Smith

right guardS A. Bogtn < H. *

leftjffuard H«!oroe—D r .D o r a n .

. Hanin G. Bocara

H. Watron

Rare Basloess Opportunity . - ’■ pThe Dairy Kitchen, in Keator Block, for

rent with or. without hotel , apartments, i- .i. Poesessiori given April 1, when present pro. , . prietors will movfi in their new hotel in Grand avenue, fiaquire of agents or owner.—Adv.

Lowest prices for oranges at TeriBroeck’a. .

Ladles’ Minstrels, Wednesday, February^;;;-i lt-rtftr... •.. ' ' . • /

Page 2: AMERICANS OCCUPY GUILTY OF MANSLAUGHTER PEBBLES. … · | : S>or six cants a *' week a carrier wili leave the daily edition o f The Journal t X ' at your door, J • &ou won't yet;'?

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■ , ' f- : V; , : - / ^ , : ■■', \ / ' , ' . > 1 ■ , /> ^ . - " ‘V '

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, I'tBLIffftED'aVKEI Af-tEKNOON ••'< '•■ '. EXCEPT 8 CRD AT AT ' ;

THE.:ASBURY PARK PRINTING HOUSE ' ‘ ••' 718 MATTISON AVENUE,

W C .'1 ' ' ' ^VB^BY PARKt ' . I— 1. NKRJBRSBV.'■ V ’ -k •

* f e ‘: : : " - -- -. _f* O.'DRAWER F. • , -LQHa OUTAHCt TEUtPMOKI II ■".

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[..{ y ~ — Saturday, -J a tm a tT ^ f .- i9 0 0 .- - - - ,r I '® : ''; , / ..■;■■ .a . . . . 5T . . . 7 .& ;;> THE .JOURNAL'S SAJIIRDAY SERMONtTTE.P*'.'1 , Two. men went up into the tem ple to

pr*y; the one- was a Pharisee, and the ; : j, other a publican. Luke 18 ; 10. • j

! The church, that can' lay- claim to la membership of such individuals as tbe Pharisee in the text will also, claim to (ie

’.a model organization. The life of tills ’ Pharisee was most strict. He waa thank-

fe S fc ;i f a 1 for the fact ,that he'was not an oxfin iijr.;.; ' tlonor, an ub justm ah , an adulterer.- Jfle

fasted twice .a week, and h'e gave a tenth .M'. . ' of all be possessed. 'A rather exemplary. ,> ; / life! The letter of tiie law was hiB d«f* 4l\-' l ig h t- H e held biff physical naturV in

f .. check ;and could appear d e an and with S w ”' erect head and opein countenance In the Pf^.'Vi- ' sanctuary.. Those^wto mingled with him ■" muBt be aa he was, otherwise they would

pollute his immaculately religious exte- f e ; r i o r . He defrauded no one. He had the V " ' favor of tbs prieathood. His donations

'.were up to the theii regarded Scrip-.' ^ , tUre mark. W hat more could be expect-

f e ed of a member pf the church t Verily, guch a man is a pillar In the fashionable church of today.

But how empty the honor! iWhere was this Pharisee's righteous,

ness? N<St in his heart, but in his hand; '.; He was the sarcophagus of a dead rellg'-

iori. Hia soul was a void., Hia life waa a desert without a single oasis at which he alight rest and .commune with God in thankfulness for the ' blessings of the inner life. He Is today a monument to bant and bypocricy, twin virtues of a

. man-made religion. The church that con. tains such men aa he in 'its fold Is wel­com e to all the honor It'takes to itself. Christ, the meek and lowly, will not have that honor, will not know such religion, will not accept such deedB, for the right-

j edusnesa of the law is pO sed away tn the perfect righteousness of Christ, whoEe law is love. . •

The Pharisee’s condemnation lies not In the fact that he'could refrain from commit­ting the evils he mentions or in doing the good he did, but in tbe state of heart he reveals In thanking God that he la not as other men are or as the publlcan-who

• stood afar off. __The publican is the type of a humble

life. He felt his worthlessness and help­lessness. He realized that he was a Binful

„ man and that nothing he could do could .’ cleanse hia guilty heart. His prayer ia ., the penitent’s plea: “ God-be merciful to

m e'a sinner.” . In that prayer he was met j by God. In that prayer the mercy of God

was revealed to i l m, "for hTs TJearf'wa'rlQ" '“‘communion with, God - more than with --him self.. The 'scriptures of Chrlat that

ask humility and .a sorrow for known and unknown offences against His goodness and love bad appealed to that poor outcast tLMuMghty ^ c c i ^ ^ d M a - • ,T» a

The publican we may be at liberty to

Sunday Church Services:, The pastor, Rev. Dr.. George J . Mmgins,

W 11, preach"inyi the ■ Westminster Prenby-, terian Church a t 10.30 a.m . Topic; “A. Noble Character.” Illustrated lecture at 7.45’j , m; Sunday , school, at j2.30 p. m .Young_people’a qpeeting'at 6.46 p. m. ,. The pastor, Kevr.T. G; Keed, will preach in St. Paul’s Church, Ocean Grove, at 10.30 Jmqi. anil,7.30 p. tn. Sunday school,2 p.m Epwoiiyi League 6.30 p. m,

Rev. Dr. J . H. 'White, the pastor, will preach in the A. M.JE. Zion Chnroh, West Park, a t 1,0.45 a. m;. and 7.45 p. a. Morning sabj.MTt: "Tiro,SatisfactionR.” Evening top ic : “Profit and Loss in Religion?; Sunday school at' 2.iS0.p.jm.- Y-.P- Sf Q E., 7, p., m. ^ Rev. Hojrard T. Widdemer will' preach

i i the Xake Avenue hotel at 10.45 a. m. and 7.80 p.;in.!■’ In the West Grove M..E. Church,: Rev. W. T. Abbott of Ocean Grove will ' preach

:at 10,30 a. m.-; Rev. Dr. George, B. Wight will address the tnen’g' meeting.'at 3.16 p. m; Rev. G. H. Cowles will preiMih at 7:80, p. m. : Subject; “Belahazzar’a Feaat.” '

Rev. Dr. George B, Wight, pastor- of. the First Mefhodiat Church, will preach a t 10.30 a. m. and 7.30 p . ' m. Early prayer and class ineeting a t ,9.80 a. m. Sunday school at 2.30 p. m. Epworth League at 6.30 p,

Rev. Henry Ketcham of Westfield, N. J., will preach i n ' the ' Firat Congregational Church at, 10.30, a. m. and 7.30 p. m. Morn­ing, topic: “The Great Refusal.” Evening topic: “ Divitie- Encouragement.” . Sun­day school 4t 2.30 p. m ._ Y. ,P. S.'C. E. at 7.00 p. m. ' ., . :

•Rev. Albert G. Bale, the pastor, will preach in the F in t Presbyterian. Church at 10.80 a. m. and 7,30 p. m. ~ Morning; topic:“ A .Rational Saivation.’’i -E vening, topic: ‘Temptation, or Sense, at War.With Soul." Sunday school at 2 30 p. m. Y. p . S. C. E. at 7.00 p. m.

Rev. Z.. Clark Marten, the preach in the First Baptist Chiа. m. and 7.30 p. m. S' p. m.

At the Church’of the H oly 'Spirit mass will bg celebrated at 9 a. m , after which the -benediction will be prpnounced.. »-,

Professor James T. Schock of Keyport will preach in the Grand Avenue Reformed Church at 10.30 a. m. and 7.30 p. m. Sun­day school at 2.30 p. m. Y. P. 'S. C. E.б.45p.m. " , . '•.

: .. . WASHINGTON.

isstpr, will at 10.30 at 2.30

PersonallyrConducted To^ir via the Penn­sylvania Railroad.

The next Pennsylvania Railroad three- day person ally-conducted tour to Wash- IpgtoB, D^ C., leaves Thursday, February- 15. The rate, $14.50 from New York, $11.50 from. Philadelphia, w ith propor­tionate rates from other points, covers transportation for the round t r ip , . meals en route, transfer of passenger and ordi­nary baggage to hotel; two days accom­modations at the Arlington, Normandie, Riggs or Ebblt House, services of ex­perienced tourist agent and chaperon—Io ■ahort. .every item of necessary -expense

call the life of Christianity, tbe Pharisee the creed: The latter Is the letter, the former the spirit. As the church builds, so she wiU Btand or fail. As her member-' ship chooses between these two, so will the church perish or live. • A. B.

THE MIRROR.

Reflections of the Movements of Promi­nent Residents and Visitors. '

Captain Parsons of the ship “Jeremiah v Sm ith” is at the Hotel Clarendon, Ocean

Gtove. ' His vessel l i in I^ovidence.Miss Linda Staats of Philadelphia is- the

guest of the family of Mr. William R. Gar- ; rison of Ocean Grove-

A. H . DeH«v§n, a member of the Ocean Grove Camp ‘Meeting Association, is in

Jii Ocean Grove looking: after his property in- ' V teresU there.

durlng the entire trip, For.accommodatlons a t W illard's, Re­

gent, Metropolitan .or National Hotel, $2.50 less.- Side trips to Mount Vernon, Richmond, Old; Point Comfort, and Nor- folk at greatly reduced rates. '-;A iFrttcketS~goodsrto r~ ten “-daySi—with

special hotel rates after expiration of. hotel coupons,' - .. For Itineraries and, full information ap-'

ply to ticket agents tourist-agenti-1196 Broadway, New York; .4 Court street, Brooklyn; 789 Broad street, NeWark, N. J .;o r George W. Boyd, asslsta,nt general passenger agent, Broad street ’ station,' Philadelphia. ’

BEHil® THE WICHT,

The Doings o l the Various Secret Orders • -1 - hi Asbury Park and Vicinity. .

'The following Becret societies will.meet ■: ; this evening: .

, , . Star of Asbury Council, No. 25,. Daugl;. ters of America, will meet' this evening in tho Appleby buililing at 8 (/clock.

. . . . .. .The Carpenters’, Union will meet thi . . evening in the Mikado building' at 8

o’clock.-:,.

LAWYER SUES RICH WIDOW.

Asks $251000 fo r Averting Contest of ’ Her Husband’s Will.

«>’ ab",. i'. Mw. Llll'an Loomis Dempsey, whose ' ^. husband, Thomaa'Dempsey, died last Sam.

• M-’.u jnbr and left her $1,000,000 has been, sued ' her lawyer,' Robert O’Byrne, for a fee• : XV -of 125,00ft r i l r . O’Byrne declare* that he

v '; ’ , prevettted t h e -relatives of Mr, Dempsey- • . from contesting the. will, which -gave

eveiTthing to tbe widow. • f- ■> >* ; • Mr8.,'Detnpsey la twenty-sevan yeara

’ ;HetL husband,: who -died a t Asbury' ‘ P a rk brijJilly & last,wa3 eighty-seyen yeara

‘fi Old. Slie"^afl"Ml8aL>nian W loks,'a school . r. mate 6f~Uc,Dem psey’s daughter,' and It

; v ^ l,?u ' ,%a8'oira visit ito her school frlehd^elght year* ago, that she m et M t-W thpsey , whom aaSThls h o m eln New Y ttk fa tth a

ii P a rk A v eh aeh d te l.^T h reech U d ren lftm bom to them. - Mr. Demptoy%/cniTarttr

- “ •“ , by hi® first wife were WilBon p , Demp- i1'- : 1 say ’Of Baltimore, and Mrs. Blchard P.V \ Needham o f Columbus, Ga.

To Sell Postage Stamps In Book Form., Postmaster-General Smlthi and Third

Assistant Postmaster-General Mad.den have been pertecting a plan to sell postage stamps In. book form. It- Ib' proposed to o Je r for sale two-cent stamps In books of twelve stamps at a cost of 25 cents each. The books will be of a size convenient to Blip In the vest pocket,wlth wax paper be­tween the stamps,- and with the division of mall matter Into classes, the rates of post­age'a ad other kindred Information printed on the outride. The one cent charged for th e binding and wax : paper will net the government a profit of |8 for each 1,000 books sold. I f one-eighth of the two- cent stamps used are sold in such books, the net profit to the department would be not less than $280,000 annually.

. | Suit Over a Plumbing Contract.~ A suit brought by John Leonard^ ;a plumber, against Myra Osborne, .wife of John Osborne of Belmar, to recover the sum of $104, balance due on a contract for plumbing, was tried today before Justice Borden and a jury of twelve men called fay the defendant, The verdlct jwas ln favor of the. plaintiff for the full amount.■ The trial cputlhueci three h ours.’ The dispute centered around the sirt» of the b&Ui tub ,the character; of work and, quai. lty of ^materlala,,, The plaintiff, claimed the work was first-clasa In every respect ; the defendant swore a nuuber, of wit nesses to the contrary. • -fj . . r •

Charles E! Cook, appeared for Mrs. Os­borne and) Samuel, A.’ Patterson ior Leon­ard; ’ ' - - j ' ■>, -. - ;" ’

l> ------------ — ' ' ' : '", . V The .Death Roll. '. j ,’ ■' -; ■ '

, Miss Louise £ . Pfeffe'r of Elizabeth,' slatet of' Albert1 Pfeffer1 Pf Ocean Grove, dled recently a t h e r late home. ; ,•-.j1' fij] J . . 1" ' » M . j , . v .-It? i’llt■J.'If [you want all the news you jtuwt'-rtiLtf th e JomtifAi, !r: / i -

Crenelle's Hasty Cough Cure. Sure cure; 25 cents,—adv.tf..

’ . ‘ W » T . ^ , V - ; V OA.A >eal& ia muff from a carriage on Aaoi

avenuo^potweon Prospect; arenue and uhmu±* street, Woat Park. Reward if;returned to; 806; Third aveatie, Asbnry Park. .;, -•. :

C O T T A G E W A N T E DWanted,-an unfurnished cottage of about six

rooms, in Ocean (irovo, by tho. year from April lV lOOO. /Rent muBt be • reaeonablB, Address ‘‘Cookman,” care JotlRNALofHce. ' 22tf

S c h o o l o f b h o r i h a n d :8 for shorthand

, , ;F O B SA I<E .• A doslrabla corner hotol property noir beach, alts 100x150 feet, 70 bedrooms, lolly furnished and wilt bo sold at .a barpain oa easy terpia. Cause of.SeUintr. othorbnslness. .. •• .' I’.

Address- A. N. B.,’; JouaHAt oflJce.' lO ltf

G i t A D IN G .Contractor for grading of all kinds. Privet

hedging a specialty. Cau on or address T^-v. Hendrickson, B82 Prospect ttvenne. P. C' Box1002, Ashnry Park.N. J . : lOOtf

lie t t<0.% ______________

Turnover a^iew leaf and resolve to smoke only the,,^ .

. - standard brands of Cigars 0. 0. and Tobaccos during the \ jtf,'d coming year. - ' i *W * ■ ^ " r fl#.

'0. BERINQER’S C'd 152-154MainJSt. Asbury P a r k ; ! ’

I . o f

PMfeaaional;

frvR8..‘dtYAN-'^ND BUBT, ' : , V Physiolaos and Surgeons, :• • :

aai ASbUry ive„isburyPark. Ji1.’ Office Hoars—8 tn IS a. m.: a to 3 ,• P to 8 p. m.■ ' - Telophona No. 8, ' j.'A . 8 . DUBTON, D .D .8 . " I . O'. Btt&TON, D.D.8. gUHXON BEOTHEBS, ■ , ; *

DENTISTS. ■; • 6S6 Cookman Avonuo, Aabuty Park,, rJ~*

Baadouino Batlillnar, 9, W_. Cor. Broadway and 38th Street, Now York

IKeW York ofilco closed from May until October., OKO. F. W ILB0B.DE • "_':Physidaa-«Rd-a'a eoQ, . ..

8.W. cor. Grand aiid Afibury"aveg«, Asbnry Parle*-

J^EAN THOMPSON, ^

, SXENOOBAPHEB AND TYPEWBITEE, - ’ OfHco',lob3Maln streot, Asbnry Parlc, N. J.

BesldeAoe, S4B.:MHn'Stroet,OceanOroTe, N .J.

C ^ ^ W ^ V ^ T - D A W ,Master in .Chancery. Supreme Court Examineri

Praotlce In U. B. Courts.Booms 10 and 11, Monmouth Building. . , •

i . r . hawhinb. _ nuMKOtmAno.gAW KINS & DUBAND," ; CObNSKMJBS.AT-LA.W ... . ;. 'Offlce»-ABbury Fark and Ocean GrOTO Bank

Bsdldhur, UaloSt. andUatUiou ArJubttry Park,......... - - ; .m .i ■.............■ ■ - ;

WE WANT Y0DR HOUSE

listed with us, to 'ten t for the

YEA? OR SEASON.

W e have p eo p le ; who are

waiting to rent houses.

A Full Line of Desirable

JEWELRY h i WATCHES

AND

SILVER NOVELTIES- , s iit a b ie for i : :

HOLIDAY PRESENTS.

CLAUDE J r WISEMAN,Optical Coods * 645 Cookman Ave., Eyes Examined Free Asbnry Park.

Meat Market

IIIE LEAD- OTHCnS fOllifllll

P o r k C hops P o r k L o in .S h o u ld e r L a m b Chops C h u ck S te a kPrime Bib Boast Beef......... .Sirloin Steak.... . . . . .. .. .. .. .. .. ..Porterhouse Steak..... . ....Bound Steak.......................... .Legs of Lamb;.....’........ ........Forequarter of Lamb.........ChickeoB.................... ..............Turkeys.............. ............ .Ducks............ ..’.........................Frankfurters.........!?...........S a u sa g e ..............................Sausage B leat................

3 lb *fo r 2 5 c

. . : . . : . i2 k o ib ......;;.-l6o lb.16 and 18c lb ...2 lbe for 25c ,;.....;..i.9o lb............ !.7c lb..........ii3c lb.......;...15olb........ ...il6c ib..........;10clb

_8 c l b...J .. .. ..8 C lb

Come and See Us 16 Business,

Telephone 61-A EDWARD E. HILL.

629 Cookman Avenue.

GOOD THINGS FOR . . .CAPITALISTS.

I f yotf are looking for good things in

Real Estatecome hi find see me. , , '

J . t i WORTMAN,716 Mattison Avenue.

j m r * am eellind tickets, to"Jacksonville Fla^ via the Ocean Steamship Lirfe, for $15.

■ of having Rubber Tires putt on your waK6n ?

(Dur factory is equipped to do work for you at cityf Prices. ] , ' .•

; ! ::: ZACfiARiA & CO.,723" HATTISOh AVEKOB, ' : K .

ASBURY PARK.Horse anfl Barbara' Clippers Careftmy around.

Utldettidser and' MbiUmer

* Cpteiii'and BuVtal’’Caiiteb' 00 luuid or tur- mined to ordor. Bpeclal attoutlon giten to training pictures. Telephone 181 B.

If you hkve not given us

ybur house to rent ’ ,

DO SO AT ONCE.

Co.Rooms 12-13, Monmouth Bnildln;,

Lj..r’. ■■ ■ - H ■ - -■ ' ’• \ ■ ' ■

H. W. Comer Mattison Ave. and Bond St.,

ASBDRY PARK. R..J.

as well as

,The Choicest Fresh and Salt '■.Meats; Poultry and Table

j

i m t t i m u m

main Street

The Weekly Journal) Both for

Tri-Weekly Tribiine j per Year

TB1IKMONDAY, WEDNESDAY, FW0AY.' ?ra«ticii|ly a DMLY, aiid.tMi C fl^ reS J WiOWN.

f i.ewr;a,nS'remarkably attractive publication,.profusely illustrated rtraits.and half-tones ; contains ail the striking news features of

the D aily,-Tribune. Special W ar Despatches, Domesticj and Foreign Correspondence,; Short Stories, Humorous Illustrations, industrial Infor- / mation, Fashion Notes. Agricultural Matters cait'fully treated, and Com­prehensive and Reliable'Financial aiidi M arket Reports/ i t is in'ailed a t Same hour as the daily edition, reaches a large proportion of .subscribers on 'date of issue, and each edition is, a,thorqughly :u^;toidate daily family newspaper for busy people. Regular subscription price, 8 i i 5 0 per year .

We furnish it with the Weekly Journal for $2 a year

NEW YORK WEEKLY TRIBUNE... PUBLISHED ON THURSDAY.

‘• For over fifty-eight years a National Family Paper for farmers aud,^ villagers, whose readers have represented the very best element o f our country population. ■ ; r

I t g iv « all important news of the Nation and World, the,m ost reli­able Market Reports. Fascinating Short Stories, an. unexcelled Agricul­tural Department, S c ie n ^ c and M^hanicaL Information, Fashion Arti- cles for the Women,-Humorous Illustrations for old and young. I t is “ The People’s Paper ” for the entire United States. • Regular.subscrip- tipn price, 91.00 per year. ’

We furnish it. with Weekly Journal for $1.25 a year.

S e n d a l l O r d e r s t o T H E JO U R N A L , A s b u r y P a r k , N . J .

•The Property I'U

advertised in this space in Saturday’s issue we sold that day. I f ybu are curious to know how great a bargain was ob­tained We can refer you to the buyer. - W e offer some others as bar­gains, particulars ;of which can be had for the asking. V " '

h o a r r o ss agency .

" "208 Main St. .-.--ii).:,i

- -prospective buyers of Christ- :;mas presents will find my flew store’completely stocked

' w ith ' modish1 Jewelry, rich • V 'Cut-gJ^Bs, ' handsome < Clodcs

’ aiict reliable SteHittg Silver . ‘ Novelties; together with a ‘ ’ carefully chosen link of ' Dia'-

' monds. 'J-1 • i:-!!■ ,7 .!Jewelry, Watchesani docks :-1 repalrea.thorooglilyi ahd quickly.

H : H . C k 5 w c I l 'vJ*<53yMattisc(n Avenue

Asbury Park; N . J.

♦ ♦ ♦ ♦

FOR SALE■ ' ' O ' .

- Exceptional :i Bargains in ’ v Real

EstateEasy Terms

A ls o

6 per cent.'-y-r

Mortgageit: :>•

t , p r o p e r t y W e s t P a r k w o r t h $ 4 , 3 0 0 ; w i l l s e l l f o r ,1 J s S iS o o . * ;;

H o te l i> A s b u r y P a r k , f u r n i s h e d , w o r t h $ 2 5 , 0 0 0 ; , ,w in s e n ...... :.... — ♦

A p p ly B o x 9 8 2 , A s b u r y P a r k , N . J .

0 ) O N M O U 5 > H © J ^ U S m A N D y ;

. CQOKMOUTH B U IIiD IU e ; pSBU'f^Y BAf*K.

i n n i t a l C I H i i A A A Bxeeutei *U tnute known to tbe law j losna money on bondi p l v w i v v w "and mortsraffe; roeolrea depotlts eubjoot to chock aud

„ * nllowi internet on dally balance* ;aotaa»tnuteet reglitrarSurplus, $ 2 5 ,000

A. O. TWINING, Pteddent. BBUCE 8. KEATOK, Secret, rj.

G. B.M.BABVEX, Vlee-Pretldent. . , D. C, CORNELL, Treaiurer.

,DIBBgXOES.O. IL Browu, Col. G. B. M; Harrer# i . Heury Ultehell, M, D. A. C. Twtalnc.J. H., Buchanan, ., ; Geo. F. Etoehl, John P.. O’Brien, H.H.Vreelaad,D. t i Cornell, Wm.J. Harrieon,

firaoe 3, Keator, M. D. • Perry B. Bniltb, luiao C. Kennedy. ; c, f . Milan Boas,

S. Di'W.Vroom

JH* Statute*. ™*nUtlnjt the 1 operation* ot aU t< aUaual Banka are ol, mieb *la» eon-, oeptlon that oon*dentlou*ly oontormed to.br Officer* ana JDlreetor*, no Juutltutlon ot :Banktn> awnoaene* the Na­tional for aeserred eosfldeuee of aniKWUrity to patron*.

I i

i) ' Mattison AveITJ

. rf‘and Bond St.

GEO, .v M.V,

. Oryanlxed February, 1888.Vlea Pre*.' Vice Prei.

- CotbparatlTeDetfoaltai > i:SepMmbenB,11 6 8 6 . . . . ' . . . . . . . . , , . . .* 9 7 8 ,7 9 4 B7» •.. e, le e s .; . . . . . . . . ' A .iSV .'./Sso,ill i s

....... - 7.1888 . . . . . . . . . . 6 0 ^ , 8 * 4 . 7 1 ^ .— PatroM jaluoblM received tor *ate knplu« free pt charge,

Foreign ExobangcTbdusbt and told. Collection* promptly acknowledged.—; . . . . . .

Xour bxulne** favor* respectfully *altcited. . ..

~ - ’ . 1— r —Boabd O T.lh*Kcrrcui,

Geo; F; KroeU,

S : " "•^ T “ 2.r£?rom' ■ .! .'AlbertlL Twining,J I H:' l ehertnin^O rtatt,' -’Wm. H if ,1 viCl', I * * - - . _________

Jobntoni - 1 BrucoB. Keator, ~ Chg*. A. Young,

■mii'il ■JyoviHathaway.

SUIT

T T ; - - ===== ..... . , , =M'' /■ hMiiaA

. . ______ ■) &2- -.f-n-r. ,j . >-y.y th tt wULblt-your-ifancr can .to made

eo w tta fa irp rlee .11 have a flne a*-

— - Workmanib^p and'At cannot bo ■-1 if';:, excelled tortto fci^Uw^prioed tailors.

iWUo?;.. 70S MattUon At©,, opp, F ln l N atl Baolr.

•' j~y ■

iPell Vera BAOUAQB, FBB1QBT, PUEHlJ TtFBB, THUUTOSrdtxd'all ;klads ot moT-c a big goods to any point In Aabury Park! Oceab Oroyo’ and vlolnlty at/noderac trtcei3Pp»k‘ otilce addrtia, Lock Bov. BIS, Aabtlty;Patk,'' Beridenco and office! fllO,6ejr»U avenue. :

, . HABBT » 0 8 t, Proprlstot]

Page 3: AMERICANS OCCUPY GUILTY OF MANSLAUGHTER PEBBLES. … · | : S>or six cants a *' week a carrier wili leave the daily edition o f The Journal t X ' at your door, J • &ou won't yet;'?

, • ■■ : r ; ; ■ ■ ■ - v .?■ ■- ~ T : — — r - — -—

Bow the 111 Fated GunboatWas. Taken by .'Filipinos...

,«> v v ,.i>r^ . ' -,n) »

BRAVE DEFENSE BY WOOD AND HIS HER

Thrill Ins: Story of the Klght, Cap­ture and Flnnl'K icape of Five ’

/- SnrvI vor. to the Amer- I lean Line.

W ASHINGTON, Jan . 27 ,-T lie navy department has made public reports from Cockswain Greebe and Appiyntice Pow­ers, meinbors.ot the c r « ] ^ f the ULfntaA. U rdaneti, describing the capturo of that

. boat 'by the FiUpinoalSst'September. ln • Indorsing:, the reports ' Adinlrol Watson

says: tlia t tbejr show th a t the little gun­boat,1 uudoif command oj the late Naval Oadet.Wood, was gallantly defended and wns.ea'ptured only because she wag hard and fast aground. Oaptaln Wilde, adds to U s lodorsement the following:

. ‘‘The, conduct bf Mr. Wood and of the entire "crew under the terrible fire is praiseworthy to the last degree and re­flects additional luster upon the brilliant, record p i the United States faavy.” •,

Greene in his report says that the Ur- daneta grounded about a quarter of a

. m ile below Balanga, on the Orani river, £ about 10 o’clock a. m. Sunday, Sept. 17. "“A ll hands were sitting around the deck

ploying cards or rending, waiting for the1 tide, when' nt 3:30 o’clock two volleys were fired from the shore, almost .taking the deck. Most of the ammunition was below, but n't Cadet Wood’s order the men manned the guns flgjJLfloittthqred the enemy’s fire.in about 15.,m inutes.. Stone, the man a t the - Nordenfetdt;-hnd been shot twice when he, was relieved by Mr. Wood, who had been fiffng tbe 1 pound­er. Within five minutes Wood was shot through the stomach, Gray had been bit, Stone had his ear knocked oft and re­ceived1 another wound in his head. Gray continued to fire u small • rifle after re- cetviog bis wound. Powers put ten holes In one man with a Colt gun. The Filipi

was bit, the Colt gun red hot, the two firing pins on the 1

. pounders were broken, so th a t the gun could not be used; one barrel of the Nor- dehfeldt would not fire. and three or four- of. the Lee-rifles, had-broken extractors.' Wood revived and ordered ou t'the boat.-. Green advised that they stay by the ship

. until dark, but Wood instated on trying to reach the other bank. "The insurgents had reopened fire from concealed places, and the bullets were flying like hail when the boat got away, carrying the sailors v h o could not swim, while those w bo, could, hung on to the gunnet.

The Filipinos doubled their fire and ‘ rushed into the river after the boat. The

pars were hit untif finally only one was left, so the men started to swim ashore, leaving Wood dead in the bottom of the boat. Stone and Drummond were shot

■ dose to the boat, and Gray had been killed in the b o a t.. Green was helping H erbert ashore, and Powers was trying to save himself.

As soon as they reached the beach 25 bolo men rushed a t them, but their cap­tain prevented them from killing tbe sail­ors. They killed the Chinese servant, W y Lee, and Mitchell was shot , while in the water. The Americans i were confined In a stone convent for several-days and' then sent to P o ra c .; W ithin two days that place was attacked by the American troop*, and then the prisoners were car-

. rled from pne point to another untlf in the mountains five of them made their

___i-Pneapp and reached the American lines.

Xeir York School Money*. — ~-AJjBANY, <Jnn. -27.—State Snperln-

' tendent ot Public-Instructlon-Charles I t , . Sk inner: has announced the apportion- moDt'.of t i to school moneys'Jor the yearinAAi'1 a iiii

ans, |3sSjll.07;,salarlei of Sc^ogl.^oinmla- sidners, <• $114,000; ' contingentJ , fundo, ?8,000; state teachers’ library, $10,000; total, (3,850,000. Among the * amounts received by the various cities are: Alba-

. ny, $40,438; :.Binghamtpo,; $23,544; An- burn,' $14,482t Bdftilo,' $143,S89r N efr' York, $1,242,ISO; Poughkeepsie, $10,945; Rochester, $80,074; Syracuse, $53,GOO;- Troy, $20,532; Utica, $25:011.

Cashier Atkin* Arrested.N EW -YOBK; Jpn, 27.-THenry Athing,

19 years of age, cashier of the Pruden- tlal Insurance company pf Long Island City, waa arrested here yesterday on sus­picion of. robbery. Young. Athing was taken before a Island City magis-1

• t r i t e and 'committed without bail to aw ait examination on Monday. About

.ten .days ago Cashier Athlng1 reported to the police th a t two strange men entered the company’s office. and one of them pointed a, revolver a t him while he took $800 la bills from the desk and then fled, with his cpmpanlon.

Old Chicago . Bloelc Burned.-CHICAGO, Jon. ,27^-The five story

wwwMaspn block, 92, 94 and 00 Washington street,1 an old Chicago landm ark, <wbb al-

’js most totally ..destroyed by, fire.last night,, , , ’t The'intenslty.TJf the flames put to a «e- i-';.’ vere' test th e fireproof qualities of the ad­

jo in in g 'ta ll Chicago Title and Truqt, building. The damage to the building’ w as about $35,000. The loss oh.furnlture,

. . libraries and documents will, aggrgeate three tim es'as mucli. —>

Diamond Thief Captured.B O STO N ,, Jan.' 27.-^A. diamond thlet

captured on Tretaopt street, by Lawyer Georgo C. Dickson iri the act of trying to snatch Mr. Dicksqn’a shirt stud watf lden- tified by Inspectors .asjJao old t jmsr who has aervedhieveral torms’ln ppnal lnstltu-.

"T“ tlons;: The man gave his name as George ' i Donahue, but he Is known to the police aa

Daily; V I" / 1 ’ ; .’Mr. Phelps Some Better.

• N EW HAVEN, Jan . 27.—The coiidl- • tlqn of Hon. E .-J.-PM P»1> ejt-mlnister to ‘ ' England, who lo llbivlth pneumonia, was

reported more hoiieful'at'a'tlato hour Inst night. 'T h e sym ptom ra)^ Somewhat efli-

. ; ,co p ra^n ^ f9 ^ jita.ref»y6rj::'‘ ! ' i ■n , j ' — ;-------“

' PostmasieK*(AvDoln(ed.: * W ASHINGTON, Jan . 27.—The follow­ing fourth class postmasters have been appointed; ,Niwr„X«i;kr;Elm ,V<*|}i?y,,E. D. Arnold.’-; PctinsyJvanls-nMIUbrooik,,J>. D.

. - NORFOLK, Jan . 37.—The ,, B l „#team shlp.Em ir.has cleared for Manila

€HENDRICKiS THE MAN.'v j'cJ T***~***.* ’> > s

G overnor R oosevelt Selects1 t'he 9 jrra - ' cn le M in For T lnct, ...

ALBANY, Jan. 27.—Governor Roose­velt announced last night that he would send to the senate Monday evening next.

'riheiotn,lnatlbri;o^fpi^9rr.a6bii.tor;Pran- cfs - Hendricks of Syracuse ' io'.; succeed' Louis F . Payn as state superintendent of InSuTBnce. . > 'j:;

In making the annouhcement he said,: “Senator Hendricks was my -first choice for the fpositipri, but on two Occasions, he said, he could not possibly accept the ap­pointment on account of his private busi­ness matters. I appreciate bis)accept­ance very much. ; '‘ ‘‘On Wednesday he promised i me that h r would accept'. , I wish to; express my

Obligation to Judge Charles'.T. Saxton, former Senator Cuthbert Pound and for­mer Mayor Green of Binghamton; each of whom I consldered for the office and to each of whom.I wtote concerning a pos­sible appointment. ' Each of them told me that he earnestly hoped Xjwould get some one else to accept th» office.'-. Judge Sax-i ton desired to. remain oii .thescourt o f clalmsj bench. .Professor.. Pbund^xIlS not see. hbBr .;blp coljld #bllnqnlsn^hls pijofeiis1

'brshli)sat''Cbrripili \ C’.orpjc Sliiyor G' iebn hfi^buslnes.s1 intere^si^WtSeJi Jwould'.'i^fer' •fer.evwHh'.'an .acceptance/'v Bnt>fi6n sn'ld tbat he would accept jit if rj-found it nec- essary to name ilm , Judge Saxton wrote, to me a week ago urging.me/ to1 :prevali upon Senator ; Hendricks . to ' ncbepfc.A I have known Senatprx Hendricks-- for" a long period. We were In thtf- legislature together. H e 'is an old friend of mnny years." ■ . ■ . : '■ ,•

M’KINLEY’S MATE.Webster Davis Said to Be Slated Foi*

the Vlee Presidential Nomination.KANSAS CITY,. Jan . 27.—Webster

Davis, assistant secretary of the Interior and former mayor of Kansas City, has an ambition to become President McKin­ley’s running mate this fall, according to the Kansas City’Star. The S ta r sayt: >

“Davis’ closest friends here In Kansas City do not hesitate to express the belief th a t he went to South Africa on some mission other than in Bearch of health/ One of Daviij’. w arm est ndpaircrs tells of, a .^hyersa tlon ’l lp . ,b is d ^ l^ th o ;assiBt'ant! sbcretni'y of ,thd : ibterfor iri ^WashiiigtonJ nearly a year ago. " '

“ ‘I called on Mr. Davis in. regard to a pension claim. He introduced me to Car­o lin a .B liss . ..Bliss, talked of the future of Davis in politics. A fter we talked w ith Mr. Bliss rwb: went over to see the president. Mr. McKinley declared that Davis was destined to be a great man in the nation. The president questioned me closely about the standing of Davis in tho west and Bald that Missouri would bo very proud of him. « . : .

“ ‘Aftor we le»t tlie W hite House Da­vis told me he \yns slated for the qominn-' tion for Vice-president. H e declared the: president bad taken up the subject with him voluntarily. McKinley belleveB Da­vis can carry Slissouri for the Republican ticket. I

“ 'Ho wns sent on his stumping tour of, Ohio’ and but west for ho other purpose than to let the people see him. The trip to. South Africa is nothing more than a move on the political checkerboard to. bring Davis into prominence.’ ”

ENGLAND WANTS CANAL.Should Not Let the Clayton-Bnlwer .yrti.,:. Treaty Hlnd.eiv ' ■

LONDON, Jan. 27i—The Spectator, in the course of an important article nrgu- Ing that it Is entirely to the advantsrgo'of. G reat Britain that .the Nicaragua canal should be cut, urges the government to “anticipate the possibility of the' W ash­ington administration raising the problem of ' t he abrogattottW-rthe-Clajrton-Biilwer-

B U 8IN E S S RtV o o le ir9 Ia ilU ( 'l^ (> b J^ ra t||* iid S te eJ

Loivt-r—W liea tH lB h er.N EW Y 6R K , Jun. 27.—;R. G. Dan A

Co.’s weekly review of trade says:1 No, n e w s 'is not always good .news. Ne^y business ifo r m anufacturers this year ’ hasv boen light lu ' eonlo ■ branches and much below the r production last month. I t is perhaps too often forgotten th a t industries start this year with larger contracts .ahead than iever before,, and when hnif the work -of the whole, year hns been ordered In advance’ thero cannot continue quite" the patne activity ln new ’buying. ‘ 5

The woolen manufacttire has jiist open­ed a new season, with the largest trons- nctions ever kno^’ri in a single week, it is said, but in most other, lines contracts previously booked Would make “similar activity impossible. Yet there is seen enough of hesitation caused by, advanced prices to make inactivity try ing .. & ' /Iro n and steel prices’have been yielding

for several weeks and are a shade lower for products than a t any otbec-time since the.Mniddle of Septctt^ber, though bes- sem’btyilg- arid, billcts_.aro,. Htill, io scarce and Srmly - h e ld j th a t only ts p sales ’

’■afnonnting to 8,000.. tons »are ,onywhore 'reported.i , \ \

.Wheat; has '-advanced * cents*with no clear reason..for movement ei­ther way. .Western receipts are small,-

'M -four weeks. only 10,984,928 busbeh ■;hgnlnat:17^0O,2^7 1ast year; but the At^ lantic eip'Orts ,haVe ■ b'eei»Tpnly 7,737,474 bushels', “ floUr ."Included;- . aKolnst .17,037,- 383 last. year. Pacific exports show a little'gain, amountiiig to ‘8,311,230 bush­els for the Bame four weeks agalnBt 2,170,248-last year. but this is of no aid to Atlantic markets. ■

Stocks are scarcely holding even their moderate rise since' Christmiis. The av­erage for railwnys has declined during the week 23 cents per share and for in­dustrials 79 cents per Bhnre. The Indus­trial companies-are decid ing good divi­dends, and all know th a t many are doing an extraordinary business, but Becrecy of management and excesilvo capitalization affect the- list. Railway earnings contin­ue enough to encourage investors, in Jan ­uary 11 per cent larger than lost year and 15 per cent than in 1898, the latest week

treaty In an offensive form by voluntarily offering t< abrogate.the treaty. V i:

“ We should thus ' jlVold,” '• iaV’S' The nBpectatof," "being0’p u t’ into a ridlculouB position by seeming unwilling to yibld to pressure « l?Vu pfes^’urp being ifxert- §d^in! regaH 'tO .eothetliiog .^vhich It wasbur'ow nin toreS tltb jdb-r-rir—~ -f-—S “ W ejdo mot'W ant,; in lTliCt, to qnarrel jvlth America '.oyar. ajo.t doing something which would be greatiy to the advantage of the British empire. I f the canal Is to be made and cannot be nndor onr do'ntrol' it is Immensely important tbat it Should b^^n/tfie^fufndj.ot a'strong, fri?ndly,«nei traf power, jTrid, (Tod bp' thanked, there Is less fear of bur being a t war with Amer­ica' than with any other power in the world. W e do not believe C anada would block the way! In al m atter :<jpncerning the welfare of the whole empire."

; CONDENSED DISPATCHES.Plague appeared a t Noumea, New Cal­

edonia .islands., ... r~ ' .,■ , General Reyes was sworn in as Mexi­c a n minister of war. i • Tbs collier :Mlami sank off Vancouver lsljind with a cargo.' Loss, $2(30,000.

Carpenters a t the Paris fair struck for -better wages, causing great commotion, -„ .. The.tdivn of Hilo, Hawaii, terrified b y 1 plague, Rebelled, and troops may be sent .there. . '•

Jones Wolf, last of the full blooded chiefs of thp Chlckasaws>;, died a t Tisho­mingo. ‘ '

'.’ A New York syndicate was said to be buying two miles of deep watec front a t [Vancouver, B. C. *

Professor E. J. Phelps of Yale,, former-1 ly.tnlnlator to England, was reported dy­ing of pneumonia’. '" I t was reported that the Admiralty ls; land natives killed, and ate the crew of tlie trading schooner Nipamarra.; ■; .. ■! . , j ; ■ ----------------------- ;--------.a1'T German Imports.

BERLIN* Jan . 27.—G erm any’s im ports la s t year, according to an official s ta te ­m ent ju s t Issued, aggregated 5,495,000,- 000 m arks, w hich w as a s ligh t Increase uppn tha plrevious year. T h e exports ag-

‘grcgat^d 4;B17,000,000 markB, w hich w as an increase o t 141,000,000 marks upon tbejflgyirob o f '1 8 8 8 ,;-T h e pig Iron pro* ductlon fo r ,1839,w a s ovet1 8,000,000 tons, being an Increase o f 8 per cent. ‘ , *T

■ —____—_____ I_» i- J !•P la a m e S t r ic k e n T o w n I s o la t e d ,

„•> .BUEN.Og’^ Y R ^ , Jan. .<87.—Official notification buy buen received! of the ap­pearance of th e bujjbnle plpguc a t Ro-.

•sario on the west, bank of [the’ Parana about 230 miles ’by 'w ater Northwest bt, lJuenfl0u4 J^ ,;„T l?fc ' ’Kovernirferif hag. Is-.

, sued a decree of bjs'olntq Isolation.-..>-i b u ltu t* fo'b f e i ' t'i. ....•'. ‘------“ pi.|i

To Search For Amdree,.;B M ^ f f i t i ' f f ^ - . , a T -~H crr V ase; th e

polar explbrwfu aonouncas th a t ho w ill f f e d ' ap «*xpfdltIou, noxt sum m er Into-afe)-';

W ijltj ttff’hope of finding Andree, iisfng aeronaut; or .his Remains,

:h e r ;h o ta b U i... d t i l t i a U d ^ i I d ,

noithwestsrly winds.- 'r s r g s c s s r t : sxsvsst®

Failures for the week have been 231 In­the United States against 224 last year, and 38 in Canada against 33 last year.

THE TERRIBLE PLAGUE. VAlarming Reporta jot Its B a rsg e i In

.N ew Caledonia.VANCODVER, B. C., Jan . 27:—From

Noumea, New Caledonia, comeB the most alarming reports of the ravages- bf the plague which has been prevalent there since early in December.. ;There were 16 deatliB during the first ten dayB following the development of the malady. .

The origin of the plague, an account of which was brought by the steamer Mlo- w era, is attributed to the filthy quarters where a number of Japanese, Tonkinese and Kanakas were.lodged. The scourge is believed :to be local in origin, and all the K anakas have been isolated on an is­land adjacent to the town. .Up- to Dec; 23 there had been no deaths among the whiteB, eight of whom.hnd been infected,, but nine KanakaB, two Japanese and five Tonkinese had d ied 'o f tbe disease, ac­cording to tbe latest advices.

The western end of the town,, where the infection first1 developed, bas been fenced off wlfh a high galvanised ■ iron fcnce TOO-yarda long, including the water frontage.. The principal business housss, official 'buildings and the banking and shipping offices are guarded’by. a posse bt soldiers. Twenty buildings in the in- fected quarter of the town were demol- ished-by the health authpnttes, out as-; spite all tho-prec%ufiona the plagde con-' tinned to spread, according, to , latest ,ac-. counts. Much alarm is felt-.by^.the resi­dents, and business' Is ; quite a t 'a - stand­still. The natives believe the plague is a visitation of Providence and th a t ' It Is wrong to take m easures' tp check the dread dlseSBg.—Tbolr-ignm-nnce- aniK-ou-- perstltlon mak»’the<labora of the officials donbly arduous.

Collision In a Snowstorm.CUM BERLAND. Md„ Jan. 27 .—

Thf«e men were injured, one fatally, In a collision on1 the W est Virginia Central and Pittsburg railroad three miles south of this city yesterday.' ,:B'rsihk: Winter- stein, fireman, at Cumberland-, was se­verely scaldcd and may die. John Nee, conductor, of Cumberland -and Robert Allen, engineer, of SIndalraTUle._W. Va., were badly injured. Their train had be­come Btalled'on a tu rvbj'and owing to a blinding snowstortb It was 'not perceived by the crew of arib.ther freight train ap­proaching In time to1 avert the collision.

Andrade to Live In P o rto Rloo. SAN JU A N . Porto Rico, Ja n . 27.—

Census Director Dingman has sailed for New York on the Caracas. The family of former President Andrade of Venetue- ia, consisting of ten persons, has arrived here from Venesuela. • Andrade has been residing in the suburbs of this city for

.several months. I t ‘ Is rn m o red th at hp will ongagp In tgrlctilture now th a t he has been'joined by his family and th a t Porto' Rtco wllKprobably be 'h ia perma- nebt ho tae .1 w ' :'-y < J - ' 1

.' New Y o rk B firk«t« ,N E W YORK, Jan. 26.-F L O U R —fltate

and western u n se ttled -a n d held lOalOo. above buyers';'vtews; 'a(lnneaata patents, 13.T5at; w inter straights, tS.3Soj.4S; w lntar. e x tr a s ,: J2.6ea2.85; w inter patents, $3.60tt 8. SO. . • • ...», . .. .. .

W H EA T—Opened strong and advanced a ll th e’ forenoon on heavy ooverlng In­duced by sensational advances ln French m arkets; Maxbh, ’T514o.;'.. H oy , ,73 U -lea 74%c.; July, 741-18A74%o.' " V ? f 's

H T E -F lr & r sta te , EBaMo., c.- I. t , N ew York, car lota; No. 1 western, 60Hc„ f. q. b., afloat. , ' '•?]i r ; ' . ; V f t ; ...

CORN—Opened steRdy w ith w heat, but eased off jjn fler active pressure a t Chicago and cold w eather; May.~39Ha®Ub- _ ’-

OAT8—Quiet; but steady; track, w hite, state,.. 31o35c.; track, w h ite, western, 31a

(ZSfiL .'•■ *’*' . W Jr. W :2'-”:PORK—Stead y! mess.'HO.W all; fam ily, tl3al3.60. ' r ' - ? ' . . . r .... LARD—T'irxn;. prim e w estern steam ,6.26c. - ‘ ........•' ■......................

T - BUTOpR-"<9teady; . sta te dairy, 19aS4o.;. .'State cream ery, paaSoj ;i < :

C K EESE-^Stoady: fa ll madq, fanoy,* ilarge,»fU%aJ3c.; fa ll m ade, fanoy, sm all,- — !— ■ - -- ; ..........

'c ak f slato-'ttnd' Pertnsylvanla, SHP.J. Western,, ungraded a t mark^Uallo. f-B ljG ^R 4)Raw flrm^ ■ fair , refining. 3 U-l8cV; Soeritrltugal, 88 test, 4%o.; roflned' steadycrushed , 5.Boo.; powdered."MB)/' i

TURPENTINE—.Firm a t 63V4a$4o‘ i I j j ■ ^ O iM J ^ E g - a tf a ^ y j ; Orleans, 't ta

RICE—Firm ; dom estic, 4a*Vko.;’'.'Jap4ii,'1 ■'!.•>‘ 'zil •r -iy-'/ > . * *l,}

! 7 JJAwx>w-^fiay;; $ \ \ T , ' BoSttc.; country.^

! y z s R i t f y & n . & k ; ' v . /

• / » ..‘-v r* ( i v j » ^ 1 /-- / :

RUIBOID.

rTlie SUnOArd Railroad Of America.

1800. . >Tralne Leave Aabury Park—Weelc Days.

For New York aud Newark, 7.10, 8.60 a . u , 3.35,8.88 p, m,- '

For Eliisabeth, 8.50 aim.. 3 35; 5.88 p.m.For Babway, 8 60 a.m., 3 .35 ,6 .88p.m.For.Matawan, 8.50 a.m., 3.35, 6.88 p.m#For Long Branch, 7.10, 8 .50,11.00 a.m., 3 15,

3.35, 5.88, 6.40, 7.07 p. m. ( . vi :•For Red Bank, 7 .10,8.50 a.m.,“3-35, 5.88 pi to. For Philadelphia, Broad St. and Xrenton, 7.30, ■8.06 a.m., 13.15,4.07 p.m. A - For Camden, via Trenton and Bordentown,7.30,

8.05 a, m,, 13.15. 4.07p.m . ; iFor Camden,and rhiladelphia, via'TomiBiver, M1.28p,m , •" : r. : . :y •’For Toms Biver, Island Height# ahd intermedl*

ate stations, 1.38 p.m. - For Point Pleasant and intermediate stations,

10.50 a.m., 3.68. 6.10, 6.48 p.m . 'For New Brnnswiek, via Monmouth Junction,

8.05 a.m„ 13.15 ,4 .07p.m.v; . Traim Leave Hew T ork 'for Aehury Par* From West Twenty*third Street-Station* 8.65

a.m., 12.40, 8,25, 4.55 p.m. Sundays, 0.35 a.m., 4.55 p.m. . •

From DesbrosBos Street Station,: 0.00 a,m., 13.50, 8.40, 6.10. p.m. Sundayoi 0.46 a.m., 5.15 p.m. /

From Cortlandt Street Station, 0.00 ata., 13,50, 8.40, 5.10 p;m. Sundays, 0.45 a.m., 6.16 p.m. On Sundays will stop a t Interlaken and Avon

in place of North Asbnry Park and Aabnry Park toletdflpaeaenxers.Trains Leave Philadelphia (Broad Btreet) for'

A ih U T P ara .At 8.30,11.10 a.m., 8 .80.4.03 p.m., weekdays!, a Market St. Wharf, via. Camden and Trenton, Z 7.80,10.80 a.m., 3.80, 8.80 p.m. weekdays.

Leave Market St. Wharf, via Jamesburg, 7,80 a.m., 4.00 p.m., weekdays.

W ashington and th e South.L E A V E BRO AD 8T B E E T , P H IL A D E L P H IA ,

For Baltimore and WaBhington, 8.50,7.30,8,83,

6.05.6.30, 6.55 (DiningCar), 7.81 (Dining Car) p.m., and 13,30 night week«daya. Sun­days, 8.50, 7.30, 0,13, 11.38, 11.33 a.m., 1.18 (Dining Carl, 8.13,'4.41, (5.30 Con­gressional Limited, Dining Car), 6 .05,6.55 (Dininpr Car), 7.81 (DiningCar) p.m., and 13.30'nlght.

Tim stable a o t all other, traina of the system may be obtained a t the ticket offices or stations.

J. B. WOOD, Gen, Pass.Agt.J. B. HUTCHINSON, Gen. Manager.

JjEW YORK AHD LONG BRftHCHR. R.

I '- Time Tablditi effect November 10tht 1809.X STATIONS IN NEW YOBK.

Central B. R, of New Jersey, fpot ot Liberty and Whitehall streets. (South Ferry terminal.)

Pennsylvania R. E., foot of Cortlandt, .Dob- brbsses and Weat Twenty-third streets.Leave NEW YORK for ASBURY PARE and:r r : .t-Pcba -n - o b o v e . • ;• Foot of Liberty street: 4.80, 8 .30,11.80 a. m„

*4.80, 8,33 p.m .Foot of-Whitehall street (South ’ Ferry termi­

nal :) 8 .3 5 ,11.8ii a. in., *4 35 ,6 .10 p m. root of Wetft Twenty third street: 8.55- a. m .,'

13.40, *8.35. *4.55 p. m.Foot Desbrossea s t r e e t 9.00 a. m., 13.'50, *8.40,

*5.10 p. wFoot Cortlar a«rstreet: 0.00 a. m., 13,50, *8.88J.!

*5.10 p. u v -Leave ASBURY PABK aud OCEAN GROVE tor

NEW YORK, 6.17, *7.10, (Nowark and New- , York only), *8.00, 8.50 a. m., 13.10, 2.35,

4 00 ,5 .88 ,6 .30 p.m . -KFor Freehold, Trenton and Philadelphia,via Sea

Girt, Penn. R.R., *7.20, 8 05 a. m.',. 13.30, 4.07 p m. ,

For Trenton and FbiJadeIpbia,via Bonnd Brook route, 6.17, 8.00 a. m., 1340, 4 00 p. m ..

For Toma Biver and intermediate stations to '. Camden, 1 38 p. m. / v .For Belmar, Spring Lake, Sea Girt and Manaa-

duan, 7.00, 7.39, 8.06,' 10.37, 10.50 a, m.». 13.15,1,38,'3.58, 4.07, 5.10, 6.15, 6.48, 8.38

p. m. -■For Point Pleasant,7.00,10.37, .10.59 a. m, 1.38,

3.58,6.10 6 16 .6 .48 .8 38 p.m.For Long Branch and Bed Bank, 6.17, 7.10.

8,00,8X0,; 11.00 a. m. (Long Branch only), 13.10, 3.16 (Long Branch only), 3.35, 4.00, 6.88, 5,40. (Long Branch .only), 6.30, 7.0,7 (Long Branch only)* .♦Denotes expresa trains. ! ‘ .

RUFUS BLODGETT, J. R. WOOD, " Supt. N. Y. & L. B. R.R. O. P, A., Penn. R.R.'

H. P. BALDWIN, r ’.v. • G. P .A ., C.R.R.

,r* t*The F F V, a solid train o f Pullman veitibulB

sleepers, dining car and day coaohes, .....Ken York to Cincinnati and Louisville•via Washington without extra fare, leaviiig New York by Pennsylvania Railroad a t 4.55 ft. m., Philadelphia at 7.40 p.m .; a'rrives a t Hot Springs. 7.35 a.m., Cincinnati 5 p.m, Louisville £.15 p.p}., St. Louis 7.80 next morning’.^I'ast.CincinnatLExpw's3l week days, leaves. •New York. 8,00 a.mT^hUadelphia 10.36; rives Cincinnati 7.65 a.m., Louisville l l ? f l a.m., St. Louis 6.56 a.m., giving direct connections to points beyond. ~r"

First-class limited rates from Asbnry Park or New York to Cincinnati, $16; Louisville $10.50 ; St. -Louis, $31*35;. SanFranciBcO, $78.76: ex- cursion,Jtl48.50. 10 days* sto i^ ver a t Wash- ington, D. C., allowed all tickets. *;Park ana all New York and Long Branch Sta* tlona, and a ll principal Pennsylvania Railroad offices. ,

JOHN KURVY, Ticket Agent, FRANK MoCONNELL, P. A.

802 and 1823 Broadway, N. Y. H . W . F c i m O ^ *

Reala n d Insurance

3 2 2 M a in S tr e e t .Office formerly occupied by

WASHINGTON WHITE.

Insurance w ritten ln reliable companies and in good form.v Real Estate bought^ sold and exchanged. }• L ist of Cottages for rent. ■Money to Loan on Bond and M ortage. .

WILLIAM CIFFARD.

Office of Wm. Qiffard, Township Collector.

; Winter Mail Schedule.The post offlce winter schedule of clos­

ing and -arrival and collections and de­liveries, of malls In Asbury Park' has-been Announced and Ib as follows:- • ‘ < ■ ClidSE, . • . - ,

For New York and points north—7.80, 11.40am ; 8 .80 ,6 .00p.m .

For PhiJadolphia—’. . , - , — , — —For Philadelphia-via- New York—6.00 p m.

-7.00 ,11.40 am ; 8. 8 0 pin,

For. Newark—7.80 .11.40 am ; 1 .5 5 ,8 ,8 0 , 6 .00pm. ■- -• '*■' V .

For.Trenton—7.00,11,40 a ; 8.80 p m.. For Frooholdr^7.8O rl 1,40 am ; 8,80p m,

For Point Pleasant and way atationa^0.55 t a - t n t 4 3 . 5 K r f l . 0 0 . p n u 5 J \

For Ocean' Grove^V.OO a th f 19.05,0.00 pm , v T • ARRIVE. > "

- Front New York and points north—'7.00,10,37 am ; 1,38.3.58,6.80 pm .

From Philadelphia—7.00, 1^.04 a m ; 6,40^From ] Niwarfr roct^-V.’OO, lO.sV a m i 3,68, 6.80 PD.V-U rA U i V r

From Trenton—7.00,. 11.04u a m ; 3.A8, 6,40'pm ,,"" ** •Fr£m. Freehold—10.37, 1^,04 a m l 1.38,6;sop m . “ -*»

From Point Pleasant and way stations—8.00 am ; 13.10,4.00 pm ,

OwsnGrove—8,00 a m ; 13.00 m, -

* •'1 CoiAiECtlON B FROM StBKET BOXES.B .8 0 ,H .8 0 A t ;8 .8 0 > a .

’ .’ .-Vt‘ DELIYEEtES.<’ A 80.1i;:;“ )fa .8 0 p m .

' ‘vf y t f r i v 1

P ii-

" rotten?It may be you .overlooked a friend on

Christmas in your gift giving. If so,

ai New-Year’s token will atone for the’’ '" 'C /- ’7 f

lapse of memory. We have suitable ;5£

presents in> ' ; . ^

. . . D I A M O N D S . . . ■ i i

7.(1i;:r II:-. (;!l« fl l

Rubies, Emeralds, Gold and Silver Watches;*

Rings, Brooches,Pins, Charms, etc. Umbrellas^ and Canes, Fine Leather va Goods, Rich Cut Glass' ImportedBric-a-Brac,.Sterling', and Silver Plated - Ware, Gold and Onyx Clocks and " Bronzes, Eye Glasses, Black1 Ebony Good’s," Silver Brushes/ ! Combs and .Novelties.

srVo fa v ja fr (■ora l a t l t j i i filcov / T f>rr,j ;*j|q ■ iitft Titi^rnis.-.i v<t <•-.» —

J e w e l e r

Cornelius l-,!>•> V. i.! 6 2 4 . C ookm an j f v a n u q

m< >

1 • J :

t • t

tive home builders to consider;

T i p i T P H T T T T II '''■ Nature has-been kind toD ^al, U J D L l V j l l 1 IT U lv for at no other resort on the New <

Jersey Coast xan so many natural attractions .be found. H ere’are some of the features for prospecr >

V v : ; : ' - . / . . f l y

Healthful location, beautiful scenery, no mosquitoes, diverting pleas­ures, accessibility, (including express train and boat service), macadam- ’ ized and graveled streets, sanitary sewarage, pure artesian water, ilium} ' nation by electricity, congenial'surronndings, social advantages, club life, ' restrictions'from nuisances, clear titles, reasonable prices and suitable , term s. ■ \ ’• '■ J ,

W ith these points in' view| we would be pleased to have you visit ■

f|. 1 ”5- *•. . . • T... ti n: 7c.,f i.:o th e above there is a majz^iificent bluff along the

- en tire ocean front, landscape architecture, 18 hole golf course, f 15,000 clubhouse, and new tailroad station, which is.conceded to b e ; the finest on the entire line of shore resorts. -

TITLES. . . . . .. GUARANTEED *

b y t h e N e w j e r s e y T it le G u a r a n te e a n d T r u s t .’ Co. o f J e r se y C ity -j

A t a very m oderate cost. . ...., , - . , “ -i ’Prices a re low enough to guarantee safe and profitable investm ent T o those who d esire . to build we . are ready to make especially

attiactive tehns. • __: ., ’ • ’ ;W e shall be pleased to m eet visitors a t the station by appointm ent Highest references given and required. ~For appointm ent or other information address

FVTUNTIC (OUST L

Deal N. J. R E ^ V CO. f

1,\

T h e S w

In advertising is to get a good articfe to

advertise, something which good business

Judgment dictates the public wants and.,

wilFbuy. ‘ ^’

'rq. -. . ’ - •.. -

■ ,.o;< i.'tflfiIt,■.-»,*? ;s- v i*;..!;{^aclyertlsing^is to 'u se ' the! daily.' edition

of THE JOURNAL as the medium for malc.-

"ihg known thfe; merits of the article you'. . '. .. |'i-’ • ’ -3•want to sell. ;J 1 ” ■■ . * ,i

The Second Step

, i, TTH'TaTr ^!>a t>,->7 ; ~ i ~ n 7 7 i

. ....... - ■ ............................ { ............. M I . ........ . -i \ V • ............... -. - -- ... .- .................. _.... ____ y . „ . . - . .... I ’ ' ' ■> ......*1 •''V,Vf,'V*W - ■'. .iT'iuT-r-vtBl'.!

a - !a s i i

Page 4: AMERICANS OCCUPY GUILTY OF MANSLAUGHTER PEBBLES. … · | : S>or six cants a *' week a carrier wili leave the daily edition o f The Journal t X ' at your door, J • &ou won't yet;'?

STE1NBAC||; M PA N YSTEINBACH COMPANYA S v d s c t o f W lie B ajrinia C o U ti

F fo m th e B rfI of C h e ite i^ e ld 'a . - L etter* to H is Son* 1

JOB PRINTING

of every description at the

_ office of the

DAILY JOURNAL

A WOPDBP OFFICER’S ST

**

WORLDLY WISDOM. STEINBACH COMPANY5f-s,i(! ot .I s ltM t SoSerlB* &

Battlo Field ot Elaada)aaite.-'i 'a__ . t . ? ‘iS oa tb ' A frica .

STEINBACH COMPANY

■! ’ A' wounded officer sends.a long- le tte r to h is m other from P ieterm aritzburg •iospitol describing pis. ezperitaoes a t

th e .b a t t le of Elnndslangle, “I t was," 5se says, “a splendid feat o f a r m s , and I am m ost aw fully proud of m y rcgri- ] Bent, fo r we boro th e b ru n t o f th e day. '<

W e had » tremer,doua h a fe tim e of it, and were .unde* fire fo r 2% boera (oou- J alderably longer than any o th er corps),

N e x t to doing the' thlngB th $ t de­serve to be w ritten , there Is noth ing th a t g e ts a rmrfi more credit* and gives h im m ore pleasure, than, to w rite th e th in g s th a t deserve to be read.

G reat ta len ts are above ihe general-, ity o f th a world, who n e ither posses* them them selves nor judge; of them - rig h tly in o thers; but a l l ' people a re judges o f th e lesser talents, -. such". .08,

;B u t th e cost-was dwfull We.hod only j civility, affabilit^jOad an ag r^eab V ad ro fth eifi dress'lind manner,,. iten ’officers in action, and five

/’w ere ■wounded; and of 32p^netj we had 11 killed nnd 33 w ounded; Sk c liave

^jjnog ^ye^ of^thelr' wounds. The Gor- • m2<Sb fosTevMi m ore Severely. The rea*.

c.sbns fo r th is were, in m y opinion, as •'.follows: F irs t, th e ir dark k ilts were

touch m ore visible thar. our khakis, and consequently fo rm ed ,a b e tte r ta rg e t; second, there were m ore of them . The Gordons a ll soy .that Dargul was th e m erest child 's play com {fared to t b Is.

"To re tu rn to my Own doings. H a y where I fell fo r about three-quarters o f an hour, when a doctor came and put a field dressing on my wound, gave me

; M in t brandy, pu t my helm et under my head as a pillow, covered me w ith a Boer b lanket which he had taken from

- a dead m an and then w ent to look afte r ■ some o ther poor beggar. I shall never

fo rget the horrors o f th a t n igh t as long aa I live. In addition to the ogony w hich m y wound gave m e I had two (sharp stones runn ing in to my back, I '■vas soaked to the skin and b itte rly cold, bu t "had an .aw ful th irs t;- tho torrent? o f ra in never stopped. On one side o f 'm e was a Gordon h ighlander in r iv in g fieUritmi and on th e o th er a Boer who had had h is leg chattered by a shell, ond •who gave ven t to th e m ost heartrend ing cries and gTOans. W ar is a funny game, m other, and no one can realize w hat its grim, ho rro rs are like till they see i t in a ll i ts barbaroufl'reality .

“I lay in th e ra in th e whole of the n ig h t, and a t daybreak w as pu t in to a , doolie by a doctor, and some natives car­ried ' me down to th e sta tion . Tbe ground-w as awfully rough, and. they ilropped me twioe; Ifa in ted both tim es? I- wns sen t dovpi to Ladysm ith in the hospin:! tra in : from th e Btation T wos conv<\v«l to tbe chapel (officer’s hospi­t a l ) ! ! ; a bullock cart, th e -jo ltin g of

I ^thieb .made roe fa in t again. I waa the - S a s t officer taken in. .1 Was then pu t

f-' ;to 'bed, and my wound w as dressed ju s t :t7 hours a fte r I waa h it. They then

£>■ gsroL me beef lea, which wns th e flrst ji^'food I had had fo r 27 hours: The doc-

■ .' -io rs all said a t f irs t th a t I had bees by a shell, b u t th a t is impossible,

for tbe enemy only had tw o gTins, and we h ad .tak en them both when I was h it: So the doctors now say thht 'it inust have been a very heavy explosive bullet, and, as an elephant gun was found 'c lose to w here I was h it, I ex­p ect they are rig h t. I t has m ade a big, jagged! hole in my shoulder,'wiiich you could pu t your hand Into. It hns blown .

- som e of the m uscles away, so I am afraid I shall always be a.bit stiff. They say i t will tak e an o th er ten w eeks b e ­fore I 8m fit fo r dnty , and I am very m uch afraid th a t m ost of the fighting

^ be owr*by*tJiflti tini6j4fi*6plt6p resen t cridct? condition of affairs."— Birm ingham (England) Post,

KO PLACE OF REFUGEHo Spot on Eartli W here • FnflUTe

I* -Safe from n Btnn wtih

“A very In te restin g fac t o i m odem l i f e 'th a t eeensg-to have escaped, a tten ­tion ,” rem arked a New Orleans law yer th e other, day, *?i® th a t th e wqrld has wiped i t s - la s t 'c i t y of refuge OS the m ap. There is no longer any sp o t on th e globe w here our-fugitlvggjtrpm ju's-

' tice a re eafe 'from extradition, .- . “W hen 1 f lrs t began to praotV e law an

A m ericas crim inal o f re tir in g ' dispo­sition bad a wide rouge of choioe in the m a tte r o f foreign residence. Spain, T urkey , Algiers, Jap an , Holland, Chili, Ecuador, ths- Ph ilipp isss, Cuba and a ll af C entral America; except B ritish HondurBB guaran teed secu rity t o ‘as­sorted brands of fugitives,-from m ur­derers down, and tb e l is t o f re so rts open «o sim ple embezzlers was very m uch larger. F o r years yon rem em ber

'every runaw ay bank cashier made a bee line for Canada, and tbe th ing go t to be a s tand ing joke, lik e tb em o tb e r- in-law gag and the m erry quips about plumbers. Nevertheless, tb e c irc le ” kept eadily -contracting, and one by one th e different countries entered id^p. m u tua l ^treaties and p u t .u p tb e bars, so th e American crook who wanted a.

, change of a ir began to find him self in the position p f Dick Swiveller, w hen he checied off th e London s tree ts he couldn’t traverse w ithout m eeting cred­ito rs . I t ’ was m igh ty -.hard work t0 4

, figure on t ft sa fe itinerary , Canada c lung tejjaoionsly to th e to u ris t trade b u t a t la s t she passed -a law against

• b rin g in g . Btolen p roperty i n to th e Do- , m inion, th a t p ractica lly excluded the

f littin g banker. 3 ap an w as bite of th e te s t o f th e d is tan t powers to adop t a.

" t r e a ty covering, w b a t a re colled -'crimes ag a in s t property,* anS th e ngw «w> ▼Istt was a severe blow to . felonious gentlem en In delicate health ,—I t robbed th en o f th ? b a lm y .c lim a te o f Yoke ham a. Eventually th in g s aimmertsl dow a to C entral Am erica, ond then by process o f "elim ination to Spanish Hon­d u ras. I h a t w as th e final eironghold o f th e fugitive, b u t In 1898 th e congress o f th e n a tio n approved a new tre a ty eJfeflse, eea ta in in g th e uenal estejaditlonr p ro rislona. ■ ; ' ' ' v 'J': '*'*'■ 5

“So, m t said ' before, th e re Is now no d t j f o f re fuge on th e face o f th e e arth ;

. .The *a»p With a warrant- g o ts where-.soever h e lists ."—N. .0 . Times-Demo

Verat.i " / . v ' , - - F s l r . l o t t N >' < / JTat£e?l~ S o n )y dau g h te r r e fe m d yon,

; Ju s t a s a m a tte r e f

j T he desire of pleasing is n t , least half the art- of doing it. ,

,Wheis you have found' ot^t t h e . p re­vailing possibK j of, any -iiEii , rem em ­b e r n o t to tru s t him w here .th a t p as­sion is concerned;-: > ' , - • . .

A m an is fit fo r n e ither -business n o r p leasure who e ith e r’ can n o t o r ' ;doe« n o t command and d irec t h is a tten tio n to She p resen t object, and Iwnteb ;fbr th a t tim e all o th e r objects fro m hia- thought;,. I really know no th in g m o re -c rim ­

inal, m ore n e o n , m ore-ridiculous th an . ly ing. I t is the . production of e ith e r liuiiice, c o v r a r d l c e v a a l ty , "

What* I m ean -b y tew - com pany, v h ic h should by a ll m eans be aTOid- ed, is th e com pany of those who, ab ­solu tely insignifioftat- iij themselves;" th in k they are honored by be ing ' in y o u r company,- who fla tte r every vice tiiid every folly you have In o rd e r t-o .engage-yon to' converse w ith them .

I f % m an has a ' m ind to -b e th o u g h t w iser and a wom an him dsom er th an th ey really a te , th e ir e r ro r is a com­fortab le one td :i.aem8elve8, .and an in ­nocent one w ith re g ard . to otfeer peor pie; and I w ould r a th e r Tnnke them m y friends by indu lg ing them in It, th an my enem ies by endeavoring- (and th a t to no purpose) to an'decelVo thenv

I believe- th e re is m ore judgm ent, ra- qtrired fo r p ro p er conduct o f X>nr vir­tu es than fo r avoiding th e ir cpposltB ■vices. -.

A com m on 'top ic o f fa lse , w i t and cold ra ille ry Its m atrim ony. I p re ­sum e th a t, m en aa4 w ives n e ith e r love sew- h a te e&eh o th er »>ore, ujson a®* oonnt o f th e form o f n u te ta k w y th a t baE been m jd over them .

T b .charncteristto . of a well-bred m an is to oOBverse witls* h ls in ferio rs w ithou t insolence, and w ith , U s -fiv perio rs w ith respec t and ease, '.

W rongs are often forgiven, b u t con­tem p t • never is; our. pride remembers, i t forever; i t Im plies a discovery o f w eakness w hich we tire rntfre carefu l to conceal th an crim es. > •

A Bpruceness o f dress is v^ry becom­in g at your age; .as the negligencc of I t impltes ob Indiffereney ab o u t pleas­ing , which doe1, no t beoomc ft -young fellow.

Give me b u t virtuoms actions,' and I* will n o t quibble and chicane about th e notive:'W hoever is in a h u rry shows th a t ,

th e th in g h e is ab o u t to do is to o hig fo r h im .. H aste and l u r r y a re very different :thingii.

Style is 'th e d tess o f th o u g h ts . , . i t is no t very /u n d erstan d in g th a t can., judge o i m atte r , b u t eveqrftejpieian ancl .- 'aws*'jtrdgB'-mare-or--less-of“St3fle.

‘1- have kno-wj, m any a m as andono by. acquiring a ridiculous n'ickij.uiie,

■f^yoii w ilTplease people, yon -m ust please them in th e ir own w ay; raid, as you cannot moke them w h a t th ey should be, ou m u st tak e them as they are.

fiio?i'tEty~i3tt»te'^orily-j-sure-l>aU-.shea..., you angle fo r praise.

Use palliatives-w hen you contradict,I aiw ays tre a t , fools and coxcombs

w ith g re a t cerem ony; tru e gccci Jsreed- I B r a j m tried the Salad D renicg which we pet on tale last week. "It is saolly delt in g no t being a sufficient b a rrie r clous; fine-to nse.with cold mc»t*, e te 'D o n ’tm i« th is bsrgsiat J.t will soon be gons.against them. i A Large Bottle o f Cream Salad DressSag for Sc* - -8

T H E L A T E S T N E W S' F R O M

P A R K E R ’SB e s t v a l u e s , s m a l l e s t l i v i n g p r o f i t s , c o n t i n u a l l y c r e a t i n g a g r e e a b l e s u r p r i s e s ; h a s m a d e t h i s

THE STORE WHERE THE PEOPLE BUY.For your breakfast eat cakes mftdevfrom ou:

Best Prepared Back wheat at 9c. pkge.Use with them either onr

F a n c y M a p le S j r u p , lO c . B o t t l e , or ourB e s t C kridten j b r i p S y r u p , I O c. q t . c a n ,

Also have a cup of our delicious Coffee. ,W« would recommend our

J r i m m iC ofiiae a t -2 5c. Ifc _.

But remember u e have a -

G oo^T ure dofltee a t 15e,lb ,■; - • -. . ■ \

' ■ ■ ■’ L; -We have a few;more of thoee Mackerel left.

^ F i n e

A wise m an will Uye> a t lea s t as m uch w ithin his, w it »a h is income.— W orldly Wisdom,

BRITISH ISLES* T0 KGUE&

Not more^tista two bottle* to » customer. -------- . __ t*

Best Fam ily flo o r , 49c per Sack.

i r i n n A.m 8e'p<ws ij»»K »a«e8 n d Diahrats Spoken, CoaaKlaar ' th e ■-

Cbantftel

Seven languages a re still alive in the B ritish isles; In England, English-w ith it* three and m any subordinatedialect*: iu SootlanB, Gaelic; in Ire­land. E rse; in Wales, W elsh;.ip the Isle of Man. Manx; in tbe channel island!;, a form of old-Norman, French and mod­ern French..

. • The G aelic/E rse. W elsh.and Manx do not differ very m uch in eissentialB. They a re all form s of one original lan­guage, of which an o th e rjo rm , the Cor­nish. was still spoken less than 120y ears ago. " , ‘

The Norse language; survived In pa rts of th e Shetland isles aS late as the end o f last century , and m any words of i t a re still in u se Jn th 'a t p a r t of the lring- dom . . ■ : ' " 1 , s

In some baronies of W exford a very ancient form of English, d a ting prob- sbl; trom th e tim e of th e earliest Eng- llsl» ,8ettlere in Ireland, existed till quite S e e n tly ; ~*T

I n . th e n o rth of Ireland , low land Scotch, m or» an tiquated th an b b j now f polteE I t Scotlaisd itse lf, is still sae<J am ong tlie descendants of th e Scotch settle?* o f . the. s ix teen th and seveti- teeatli eentnrie#i ' , -■;■ ■■■. ’ ,

. The ord inary "brogue* of -Irelaad is In m any cases 8!«re)y th e aixteefith cen­tu ry E nglish p ronundation .- And ipany Irish ism s, com m only supposed to be m istakes, a re «8prem»ioE« form erly In' tveryday us* In 'England, bu^j now ob­solete W ere, thongb '^fey liaT e sn irlved ' In^Irelaind' I n 'th e fo rm in v i lc l i th ey ■w(5re originally introdr.ced.—S tfay B to - riea. ' ‘ ’

i DM S r » lc .' N e ll-M ad e t him? Why, he wrote a lovely poem, to her.

Bells—les,. btrt she 'never read- it. When «lie saw the title of it she tore •ite whole thing np In "a €t of eager,, You sec, he called it “Lines os Haber* ?»ee."f-C»UjoHe Standard s«<l Tiroes-

Light C Sugar, 4c lb. Only S lbs to s cs>-- ■ totnef.

Light Perk, by piece. 5H C lh 4 lbs California Prunes* for 26e Anderaon’s Prepared Mince Meat, 7c pkge Good Early J m e Peas, 7c am

Condenred Milk, 8c can Good Salmon, 10c can Best Green Peas, 6 qts for 26c Table Pesrs, 10c can. ■Best California Apricots, 2 cans for 26c.

Sweet, Tender, Creamy Corn, at 7c. Can.' ■ • lOc. Can Cold Packed Tomatoes for 8(?.

Special for SATURDAY;20 F IN E , LARGE ECCS, 25c.

• BEST C AL IFO R N IA HAM S , 7c Ib, - HAM LETS , 7c Ib.

-------------------- ------------ -------;---------------- —------------—---------—---------- ---------------------- v

. -Our guarantee goes with all Bales. Satisfaction or your money back.Our specials are sold for cash only,'acd will not be charged at these price?

J. J. PARKER,604, 606, 608 Cookman Avenue,

Cor. Lake Avenue and Main St.O th er S to re s : . Telephone 6 9 ,

?-.*n«r B r a n c h , . M tt f e 'f M Is, Manaaqium, Asbury Park.S. W. KIRKBRIDE,

- - - and Builder*,.W .

The finest Bummer home* at peal were bull too* der my roperrUUm* Plan* famished aod estl* mate i cheerfully giten,

a » . ■Shop; f i m A fto c e m i HaXaSt

ASBURY PAWt.

M. M. CROSBIE,Plain and Omameqta|

SuoceefleftbFWH1TTLB & OIBSON.

ta r Paper, Sheathiaff Paper, Two ana Xbree-yly apart

Bmsmer&M AT& asd B&Slhisd,MKJRI PAEK.U, i .

THESE LOTS RANGE FROM ONE TO FIVE THOUSAND DOLLAR!

- The Streets o f Asbnry Parle a re 100 feet !»road, an . - advantage possessed by n o o ther Seaidde-

1 B esort on the Jersey Coaat. ’ ■. >■ ;vThere will never be another seaside Sown in Monmouth county thi;

will compare with the broad streets and open spaces, such as shown a the map of Asbury Park, This assertioc is based on the fact that i the ocean front-lands Setjaneec Seabright and Bamegat sre already lai out with streets averaging f i f t y p e r c e n t . i ,k ss in width than tho; of Astiury Park, without, such open spaces as Asbury Park.

W l i e r e p u r c b a o e r * e r e c t h a l l d i s g s t b e w h o l e a m o u n t o f p u r c h a s e m o n e y m a y r e m a i n o n m o r t g a g e , **■

Inquire of 8. T. BAILEY Part JAMES A. BRADLEY, Owner*

Leading Establishment in the State for High-grade Stock and Moderate Prices.

O. H. BROWN,SPRING LAKE,

N.J.LAKEWOOD,

N.J.F a r n t t a u p e ,

ItomMtlo sod to p tr te d .fo r w s if r*- QUtmseat.

t i t r p e t *b o n the noted looms of thi* sod

^ ^ jth s r countries.

for domestic ptuposai ic d proiroflpt■.C n t l e r y

for tbn table pt rieh sod poor.

Sstimstsf's

B r i O H f B n uto t the eonnolsaenr and art eollsctor.

E n n a v l n g t v .for the diawtnc room and library.

O p r o e ^ e w .. ■ ,. torhotd* and pH nts-

special dseorstlpua.B v e n tb l D f r... for tha fomUhlna of seashora

homes.or city .

i attanttoa to all Tblton« atTSo eheerfollr and eonitaons a ___________ ______c? na a u t s. Goods <JaU»eraa a t anr of the towns alone shorn frw

- InteSShiir mtrohasOTS era kisdiy adHjed to examine tb* citw and fresh ttook »* ta t. Borin* L*s» eitablkbment. Tims sadm aasv ***e£ to ontfittlaer eaitlnCoir $»rtiailr n fsun ish in f to t tha rtmwxst.

a H. BEOWBi, Spring Lake and lakewdol