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Archiver > NJHUNTER > 2002-01 > 1010438895
From: "M.F. Pickell" <>
Subject: [NJHUNTER] More Tidbits from Old Hunterdon County Newspapers
Date: Mon, 07 Jan 2002 13:30:12 -0800
Tidbits of Hunterdon County Newspapers.
HUNTERDON COUNTY GAZETTE, HIGH BRIDGE, NEW JERSEY JUNE 4, 1914
Mr. and Mrs. Grover Apgar returned to New York Sunday, after visiting his
parents Mr. and Mrs. Manchus H. Apgar.
Mr and Mrs Marshall Apgar returned to Newark Sunday night, after visiting
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. David W. Apgar.
Mrs. Silas Waters who has been ill at the home of her son, John C. Waters,
is improving.
W. R. Smith and wife of Orange spent the first of the week with the family
of Thomas B. Hoffman.
Peter A. Apgar of High Bridge visited at Anthony Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Alpaugh entertained guests from Trenton over Sunday.
Mrs. Grover Young and children of Milburn were visitors of Mrs. Sarah L.
Young last week.
Postmaster and Mrs. Elmer B. Ramsey spent Sunday in town.
Harvey Alpaugh returned to Newark Sunday, after visiting his mother, Mrs.
Elizabeth Alpaugh.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph D. Apgar entertained Mr. and Mrs. William Hart of
Stephensburg over Sunday
The Misses Martha Washer, May Washer, Mr. and Mrs Anthony Washer of Andover
were over Decoration Day guests of Rev. and Mrs. Harry P. King.
George Neighbour and son of Jersey City spent Sunday with his sister, Mrs.
Susan N. Wise.
Mr and Mrs Grant Apgar of High Bridge visited the family of William R. Hann
over Sunday.
Frederick Orts and sisters of High Bridge visited town Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Waldron Hoppings entertained guests over Sunday.
George Apgar and Elmer Apgar vacated the Apgar house Thursday. The former
moved to the Henderson house and the latter moved to the Beaty house.
Mr and Mrs George W. Staples entertained her parents from Hopewell Sunday.
Mrs. Jennie Osmun will spend the summer at her recently purchased house and
lot.
Miss Mamie Allen and Miss Helen Campbell of Paterson spent Saturday and
Sunday with Mrs. Anna Haggerty.
Mrs. Charles Stevens was on the sick list part of last week.
Miss Dawn Freeman of Newark was entertained this week by Miss Ela??? Beaty.
Mrs. Godfey I. Bryant sustained a sprained hip last week. She tripped and
fell from a porch.
Mr and Mrs. John H. Sliker of Newark were weekend visitors of Mr and Mrs
Samuel H. Sliker.
Mrs. John A. Seals is ill at her home at Farmersville.
Mrs Emma Lance of Anthony spent part of the last week with Mrs. Isidore
Topkins.
Death of Lorenzo D. Sutton
Funeral services over the body of Lorenzo D. Sutton were held today at his
late residence by Rev. Harry P. King, pastor of the M.E.Church. Interment
in the Lower Valley Union Cemetery, where Masonic services were held. Mr.
Sutton died at 8 o'clock Sunday afternoon, after a long illness. For the
past 16 weeks he grew worse, and for the past few weeks two trained nurses
were in attendance. Owing to the nature of the disease some time ago his
mind gave way and he was a great care. During the last week his condition
was such that his death was momentarily expected. During his illness he
was attended by several physicians and examinations were made by several
specialists. There being a diversity of opinion between the attending
physicians as to the cause of his death an autopsy was held by Dr. Frace of
Clinton, Dr. Hunt of Glen Gardner and Dr. Low of High Bridge. Leakage of
the appendix was given as the direct cause of death. Mr. Sutton was born
in Tewksbury township 68 years ago. He married Miss Mary J. Pickell,
daughter of the late Frederick Pickell of Pottersville. After marriage he
engaged in farming at Farmersville and later moved to Califon, where he
engaged in the coal and lumber business. He disposed of that and devoted
his time to farming, dairying and chicken raising. He attended the M.E.
Church and for several years until his death was a member of the board of
trustees. In politics he was a Republican, but never aspired to public
office. He was a member of Hobart Lodge, No. 175, F. & A. M., Hunterdon
County Forest, No. 18, Tall Cedars of Lebanon, Rialto Lodge, I.O.O.F., all
of High Bridge; Fidelity Lodge No. 123, K. of P., and Steward Council, Jr.
O.U.A.M., both of Califon. Besides a widow he leaves one son and one
daughter, Dr. Adrian Sutton and Mrs. Frederick Creger, both of this place.
WHITEHOUSE REVIEW, WHITEHOUSE STATION, TUESDAY, AUGUST 31, 1926
Doings Hereabouts - Items Regarding People Of This Community And Other
Items of Interest
Chester Skillman is the possessor of a new Whippet Coach.
Mr. and Mrs. John Stone visited the first week at Ocean Grove.
Township Committeeman, David L.??re,, spent Friday in New York
John Lewis, of Dayton, Ohio, is visiting his aunt, Mrs. Emma Lewis.
George Henry of Chicago, is visiting Mr. and Mrs. John E. Seals.
Miss Kathryn Roche visited the past week with relatives in Lambertville.
Eight and 10 week old pigs for sale. The Ryman Farm, Whitehouse.
Five room apartment to let. Inquire of Emma Cook, Whitehouse.
Our dining room suits are beauties. Call and see them. S. A. Seals,
Annandale, N.J.
Geese and ducks for sale cheap. Good specimens for breeding. Frank
Schuber, farmer (or former) Alvah Pickell farm, Whitehouse Station.
Will sacrifice on a 1925 Food delivery truck, good tires and in good
condition in every way. S. & S. Candy. Whitehouse Station.
Window Sash, fine grade sash and frames, seasoned, at less than factory
cost. Various sizes. Linton A. ?luck, Vinegar Work, Flemington.
The Whitehouse Station Fire Company will hold their annual Clam Bake on
Sunday, September 12, on the new concrete road between Whitehouse and Lebanon.
For Sale - Binder twine, one of the finest grades of standard twine, $7 a
bale of 50 pounds, 5 or 8 pound ball. A little cheaper in larger
lots. Howard Burdette, Whitehouse.
Farm for sale, - 115 acres, known as the Wilson Farm, on the Readington
road, about 2 1/2 miles from Whitehouse Station. Immediate possession
inquire of Niels Kjeldsen, Whitehouse Station.
Miss Ethel Decker has returned from a motor trip to Vermont.
Miss Thelma Seals is visiting a week with Miss Sarah Apgar,at Rahway.
Albert Pontin was taken to the Easton Hospital last Tuesday for treatment.
The Berensmann house, just south east of town, is being wired for electric
lights.
David Biggs, of Mt. Airy, has been visiting here with Mr. and Mrs. J.
Sutphen Reger.
Miss Helen Burdette is visiting a week with her cousin, Miss Isabelle
Bogart, at Madison.
John W. Field, our coal and lumber merchant, has placed a new Chevrolet
truck in service.
Mrs. Jennie Sutphen is visiting two weeks with Mr. and Mrs Jacob Neff, on
the Oldwick Road.
Mr. and Mrs. George B. Seals have been visiting the Misses Ada and Margaret
Pursell, in Plainfield.
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Burdette have been entertaining Miss Elizabeth Bishop, of
Elizabeth for a week.
Mr. and Mrs. R. H. White have returned from a visit of several weeks with
relatives in Harrisburg, PA.
Mrs. Mary Sinclair is spending some time with relatives in Frenchtown,
Trenton and Point Pleasant.
Miss Emma Diebolt has been entertaining the Misses Wilhelmina and Catherine
Moenting, of Brookside.
The Misses Grace and Elizabeth Lindabury have been visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Lloyd Apaugh, near Far Hills
Miss Florence Van Syckle has returned from a visit of several days with
Mrs. Donald Hunt, in Philadelphia.
For Sale or rent - 6 room house at Whitehouse Station. Inquire of Mrs.
Mary Delpho, Whitehouse Station.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Warner of Melrose Park, L. I., are visiting here with
his parents, Mr.and Mrs. Edward Warner.
Mrs. Nan Vossler, of Los Angels, Cal. is visiting several weeks here with
her sister, Mrs. Hazel Estelle Lindsley.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas McPherson and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Alpaugh and family
were weekend visitors at Asbury Park.
Mrs. Hannah Lane, of Trenton, was the weekend guest of her daughter, Mrs.
William B. LaTourette, in East Whitehouse.
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob H. Dilts and Mrs. Elmira Kline were the guests Sunday of
Mr. and Mrs. Orlan Barker in Brooklyn.
Mr. and Mrs. George B. Seals have been entertaining their cousins, Mrs.
Arthur Vickers, and son Bennett, of White Plains, N. Y.
Alvah Ramsey is having a house constructed on the Stryker farm on the
Oldwick road. When completed it will be occupied by George Bush.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Moren, of Elizabeth, and Mr. and Mrs. Mortimer Cook of
Plainfield, have been visiting Mr. and Mrs. Frank Burd.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Sinster and daughter Nancy and Mrs. S. S. Swackhamer,
of Plainfield, have been visiting here with Mr. Frank Burd.
Before Judge Frank L. Cleary, in Somerville, last Friday, Archie Kagan, of
Gladstone, and employee of the American Express Company, pleaded guilty of
taking $288 from the concern. Sentence was suspended for a week.
Alvah L. Pickell was taken suddenly ill about a week ago and was removed to
the Somerville Hospital, where he has been under observation for the past
week. He is suffering with heart and kidney trouble and returned to his
home here on Sunday somewhat improved in health.
Harry C. Van Derveer and son Harold, arrived home Friday night from a
week's motor trip through the New England States. They journeyed 1,000
miles and visited the Berkshires, Green and White Mountains; Poland Springs
and Old Orchard Beach, Maine, and spent two days in Boston.
Marion M. Bonnell, who has been in the Muhlenberg Hospital at Plainfield,
for the past eight weeks, and who recently underwent an operation for
abscesses, underwent the second operation for the same cause last Thursday
morning. He is doing quite nicely.
The Zeek Baking Company, of Plainfield, is a defendant in a suit filed by
Mrs. Marice H. Able, James W. Able and James W. Able Jr., in which total
damages of $35,000 are asked. The Abels reside at Oldwick and it is
alleged that on October 8, 1924, a truck of the baking company struck the
Abel machine on the highway at Oldwick. All were injured and Mr. Abel
demands compensation for medical aid he had provided for the injured persons.
Mrs. Anna Hegeman, aged 72 years, was seriously burned about the hands and
arms at her residence at Oldwick a few days ago and is now in the Somerset
Hospital. Mrs. Hegeman, who is afflicted with rheumatism, wrapped her
hands and arms in cotton and had a fire started in the grate because of the
inclement weather. She was in the act of brushing about the grate, when
sparks from the fire ignited the cotton wound about her hands, which burst
into flames and inflected severe burns before it could be removed.
A reunion of the children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren of the
late Elsie Reid Alpaugh and Philip Alpaugh, of Potterstown, is being
arranged to be held some Sunday in September at the home of Walter Alpaugh,
a grandson, at Whitehouse. The couple had nine children - 6 sons and 3
daughters - of whom the following five are living: Oliver Alpaugh and Mrs.
Austin Eick, of Lebanon; Jeremiah N. Alpaugh of Pottersville; Henry
Alpaugh, of Pottersville, and Mrs. Isaac French of Trenton.
That our poultry producers understand stock and have the best is proven by
the awards at the Flemington Fair. The Ryman Farm, with their White
Leghorns, won first and second cock, first and second cockerels, fourth on
pullets, first on young pen and first on old pen. George S. Herder
captured all prizes with his rose comb Rhode Island Reds. A. L. Herder
returned with all prizes offered in the single comb Ancona class.
HUNTERDON CO. DEMOCRAT JUNE 23, 1938 PG. 3
Miss Ruth E. Pickel, daughter of Postmaster and Mrs. Nelson Pickel of
Clinton, and Bernard C. Ferguson, son of Mrs. Frank Ferguson of Pittstown,
were united in marriage on Saturday, June 18, 1938, at the country home of
the Rev. George M. Whitenack, Jr., in Doylestown, PA. The attendants were
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Akers of Balboa Canal Zone, brother-in-law and sister f
the bridegroom. The bride was attired in a white silk suit and pink
accessories and wore gardenias. The matron of honor was dressed in white
satin and wore yellow tea roses. They left for a honeymoon at the
shores. Both are graduates of Clinton High School.
WHITEHOUSE REVIEW, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1942 pg. 4
Mrs. Rachel Ann Titus, 85, widow of Richard Titus, died Sunday afternoon at
her home in Lamington after an illness of two years. She was born in
Oldwick, the daughter of the late Oliver T. and Salome Francis Lane. Mrs.
Titus was a life long resident of Lamington and a member of the Lamington
Presbyterian Church. Services will be held Wednesday at 2:30 pm from the
Layton Funeral Home, Bedminster. Burial will be in the Lamington
Presbyterian Cemetery. She leaves her sister, Mrs. Mattie B. Perry,
Lamington, and two granddaughters, Miss Aletta Clark of Somerville, and
Mrs. John Mason of New Brunswick.
David Jones, 72, a resident of Fairmount, died in his home Friday following
a several months illness of complications. A native of Wales, he came to
America as a small boy. ( I can't read the rest)
Busy Borough Of Lebanon News Items
Observe 51st Anniversary - In observance of the 51st anniversary of their
wedding, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis L. Apgar, Easton Avenue, entertained at dinner
Saturday. In the afternoon the couple went to Peapack-Gladstone to visit
Mrs. Apgar's only sister, Mrs. Mary H. Van Doren, who is 82 years old. Mr.
and Mrs. Apgar were married November 21, 1891 in the Cokesbury Methodist
Church parsonage by the late Rev. Henry Bice, then pastor of the
church. For many years Mr. Apgar was a fruit grower in the Cokesbury
vicinity. Retiring about 20 years ago, the couple moved to their present
home on Easton Avenue. Mrs. Apgar is the former Miss Fannie Philhower,
daughter of the late Peter P. and Elizabeth Hoffman Philhower. They have
three sons, Walter H., William C., and Peter P. Apgar.
Observe 4th Anniverary - Mr. and Mrs. Jacob W. Pickel, Highleigh Farm,
observed the fourth anniversary of their wedding Sunday at the home of Mrs.
Pickel's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Creed, Whitehouse. They were
married November 23, 1938 in Elkton, Md. The couple has two sons, Jacob W.
Pickel Jr. and Raymond Frank Pickel. Mr. Pickel, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Pickel, is associated in farming with his father at Highleigh Farm.
Mrs. B. A. Conover is confined to her home by illness.
Mrs John Dawes is ill of pneumonia at her home on Lebanon RD 1.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Apgar have moved from Somerville to Brunswick Avenue.
Theodore R. Apgar of East Orange visited Sunday and Monday at his home here.
Ira B. Goldsmith of New York City was a weekend guest at the home of B. A.
Conover.
John R. Henry, Cherry Street, who has been seriously ill, is somewhat
improved at this time
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Gusting and family have moved to an apartment at Lebanon
Valley Mills.
Miss Lena Hoffman was a Sunday dinner guest at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Sanford R. Ramsey.
Mrs. E. W. Sutton will entertain the Friday Afternoon Bridge Club this week
at her home on Easton Avenue.
Lieut. Willard R. Young of Camp Dix visited the weekend with his family on
Mountain Avenue.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Scuhvler, Easton Avenue, have gone to New York where
they will reside for the winter.
Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Clifford and family have moved from a house near
Pentecostal Assembley to Califon.
Mrs. Amy Felmley will leave Thursday to spend the winter with her sister,
Mrs. Hattie Eick, in Newark.
Mrs. Gifford W. Hoffman, "Pinelawn View" underwent a major operation
Thursday in Somerville hospital.
Mrs. William Duyckinck, Brunswick Avenue, is visiting her mother Mrs. Mary
A. Byrne, in Brooklyn.
Pvt. Kenneth Johnson, stationed at Camp Edwards, Mass., is home on furlough
with his mother, Mrs. Rachel Johnson, Stanton. Pvt. Johnson was formerly
stationed at Delworth, N.C.
Mrs. Emmett Smith, Brunswick Avenue, was guest of honor at the birthday
dinner party recently in the home of her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Henderson, Mt. Rose.
Lieut. John B. Van Derbeek returned to his post with the army on Friday,
following a 10 day furlough with his mother, Mrs. J. B. Van Derbeek, Bray's
Hill. Lieut. Van Derbeek completed an officers training course at For
Belvoir, VA just before his furlough and will now be stationed at Camp
Campbell, KY.
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