{"1": {"fulltext": "", "height": "2937", "width": "1965", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0001.jp2"}, "2": {"fulltext": "", "height": "2786", "width": "2018", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0002.jp2"}, "3": {"fulltext": "u^^^", "height": "2786", "width": "2018", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0003.jp2"}, "4": {"fulltext": "", "height": "2880", "width": "1930", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0004.jp2"}, "5": {"fulltext": "", "height": "2906", "width": "1962", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0005.jp2"}, "6": {"fulltext": "Entered according to Act of Congress, m the year 1873, by George L. Catlin,\\nin the Office of the Librarian (.f Congress, at Washington.", "height": "2880", "width": "1930", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0006.jp2"}, "7": {"fulltext": "Etac\\nJfAY", "height": "2901", "width": "2071", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0007.jp2"}, "8": {"fulltext": "mm\\nThe New and Popular Direct Route\\nTo the Lakes and the St. Lawrence.\\nTWO THROUGH EXPRESS TRAINS DAILY.\\nNEW JERSEYJDIVISION.\\nRates of Local, Excursion and Commutation Tickets,\\ntaking effect May ist, 1873, between New York or Jersey\\nCity and the following Stations.\\nSTATIONS.\\nNEW DURHAM\\nGRANTON\\nLITTLE FERRY\\nRIDGEFIELD PARK\\nBOGOTA\\nHACKENSACK\\nMAY WOOD\\nROCHELLE PARK\\nDUNDEE\\nPATERSON\\nriver:?ide\\nHAWTHORNE\\nVAN WINKLES\\nMIDLAND PARK\\nWORTENDYKE\\nWVCKOFF\\nCAMPGAW\\nCRYSTAL LAKE\\nOAKLAND\\nPOMPTON\\nBLOoMlNGDALE\\nWEST BLOOMINGDALE..\\nSMITHS MILLS\\nCHARLOTTEBURGH\\nNEWFOUNDLAND\\nOAK HILL\\nSTOCKHOLM\\nOGDENSBURGH\\nFRANKLIN\\nHAMBURGH\\nDECKERTOWN\\nUNIONVILLE\\nMIDDLETOVVN\\n$1.\\n$1.\\n$11.\\n1 c\\nS\\n$40.\\n41.\\n42.\\n43\\n43-\\n43-\\n43-\\n44-\\n44-\\n45-\\n45-\\n46.\\n47\\n47-\\n47-\\n48.\\n49-\\n5I-\\n5\\n53-\\n56.\\n57-\\n59-\\n61.\\n63-\\n67\\n69.\\n72.\\n74-\\n80\\n83\\n84.\\n86.\\no\\n$60 00\\n62 50\\n63.00\\n63.00\\n63.00\\n63.00\\n63-50\\n64.00\\n64i 5\\n65 .00\\n66.25\\n67-50\\n63 50\\n69 00\\n71 .00\\n75i 72-25\\nDOi 76.00\\n25: 78.50\\n75! 81.50\\n83.25\\n90-75\\n95-00\\n98.50\\n04.50\\n50I109.25\\n18.75\\n23.00\\n1133.00\\nI 50 00\\n1\\n?4-co\\n57.00\\n160.00;\\nLocal and Excursion Tickets sold at Depot offices. Passenger Depots, foot\\nof Courtlandt and Desbrosses Streets, New York, and at Jersey City,\\nCommutation Tickets sold only at the Treasurer s Office, m Liberty Street,\\nNew York\u00e2\u0080\u0094 dating from the ist day of the month in which they are issued.\\nWM. H. WEED, Gon l Ticket Agent,", "height": "2880", "width": "1930", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0008.jp2"}, "9": {"fulltext": "A GLANCE\\nAT\\nRIDGEFIELD PARK,\\nN. J.,\\nIts ^;vst, resent imtr Jfiituve.\\nA Description of the tract bounded by the Hackensack\\nAND Overpeck Rivers its points of Historical interest\\nITS recent improvements ITS NATURAL ADVANTAGES,\\nAND ITS AVAILABILITY AS A\\n8l]Ti WQR SUBlfRiA.N) VBLL^. BiSI]\u00c2\u00a9M\u00c2\u00a9iS\u00c2\u00bb\\nSi })eninsidavi qiioeris circiimspice\\nBY GEORGE L. CATLIN.\\n(An edition of 2000 copies of this work is published for gratuitous circulation\\nin New York, and along the line of Midland Railroad, between Jersey\\nCity and Faterscn.)\\nNEW YORK.\\n1873-", "height": "2906", "width": "1962", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0009.jp2"}, "10": {"fulltext": "^^ilitfitll Pirl\\n(SEE PAGE 13,)\\nA. BROWNSON, Proprietor.\\nWill be ojjen May Ist^ 187 J^^ for summer visitors\\nSEASON OF 1874\\nThe unparalleled success attending the past^season at this\\nnewly opened summer resort, gives promise of one even more\\nbrilliant during the coming year.\\n(For complete description of the house and its conveniences see page 12.)", "height": "2880", "width": "1930", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0010.jp2"}, "11": {"fulltext": "Ridgefield Park where is\\nit asks the reader, catching\\nsight of the cover of this Httle\\nbook, and undecided whether he\\nwill investigate the matter further\\nor not. Ridgefield Park Let s\\nsee. There are Lewellyn Park,\\nMenio Park, Rutherford Park,\\nMidland Park, Fanwood Park,\\nCentral Park, yes, and Mungo Park, but, (and it aways\\ncomes around again to the query)", "height": "2865", "width": "1952", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0011.jp2"}, "12": {"fulltext": "6 A GLANCE AT RIDGEFIELD PARK.\\nRIDGEFIELD PARK. WHERE IS IT?\\nOnly ten miles from the City Hall, and you can safely in-\\nvest a fifty on reaching there, say from Trinity Church, sooner\\nthan, by ordinary conveyance, Twenty Third Street. Try it\\nsome day. Inveigle your young friend Jones into a playful\\nbet that he can take a stage at the corner of Wall and Broad-\\nway, and be up at Madison Square before you are out at\\nRidgefield Park, ten miles away. Jones will lose fifty dollars.\\nFor you have only to step down to the foot of Courtlandt\\nStreet, or, if you are further up town, Desbrosses Street, cross\\nto Jersey City, take a seat in one of the spacious and elegant\\nMidland Railway coaches, and in thirty minutes find your-\\nself at the Ridgefield Park depot. These thirty minutes\\nhave been passed in a most enjoyable ride too. After pass-\\ning Bergen Cut and West End, the Midland skirts the west-\\nern slope of the Palisades to a point about on a line with\\nBull s Ferry, then shoots off north westward, crosses the Over-\\npeck River, or English Creek, and brings you to your des-\\ntination.\\nNow, if the reader will turn to the map he will be enabled\\nthereon more definitely to follow the route above traced out,\\nand will more clearly understand the topography of this\\nlocality. He will discover that Ridgefield Park comprises\\nthe wooded point or neck of upland known as Teaneck\\nRidge, formed by the confluence of the Hackensack and\\nOverpeck Rivers; that recherche Englewood on one side,\\naid venerable Hackensack on the other, are bu little over\\na mile distant that the recently completed portion of the\\nJersey City and Albany railroad here diverges from the Mid-\\nland, and, running northward, traverses the western border\\nof the ridge that Ridgefield station on the Northern Rail-\\nroad (running to Chambers and Twenty Third Streets), is", "height": "2880", "width": "1930", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0012.jp2"}, "13": {"fulltext": "A GLANCE AT RIDGEFIELD PARK. 7\\nonly a mile and a half away that the Midland depot is in\\nthe Park itself in short, that Ridgefield Park is the very\\ncenter of a villa tract teeming with railroad faciUties and\\npossessing natural advantages and surroundings, which can\\nunquestionably render it one of New York s most attractive\\nsuburbs.\\nSo, the whereabouts of Ridgefield Park, and the means of\\nreaching it having been duly impressed upon the reader s mind,\\nlet us rest here for a few moments under the grand old\\nforest trees which discriminating taste has spared to beautify\\nthe slopes and lawns adjacent to the depot. The Hacken-\\nsack flows almost at our feet, and across its silvery current\\nwe gain glimpses of a charming rural vista. Not always,\\nremember, has this quiet spot been so oft awakened with the\\nshrill whistle of the locomotive not always has the footstep\\nof the New Yorker, going to and from his daily business,\\ntrodden its grassy paths not always has the sound of the\\naxe and hammer, or the click of the instrument in yonder\\ntelegraph office been heard here in its sylvan shades. Yet,\\nthough only recently aroused to the march of progress, this\\nlocahty has an interesting history of its own, coeval with the\\nsettlement of Manhattan by the Dutch traders, many of\\nwhose names and descendants are to be found among its\\nresidents of to-day. Here, too, in the campaign of Wash-\\nington in Northern New Jersey, were laid the scenes of many\\ninteresting episodes, which, though of minor importance in\\nthe great history of the struggle, yet possess such local\\nmoment as to render them favorite subjects of recital to the\\ninhabitants of the present time.\\nIn every direction, writes the Rev. Mr. Taylor, Pastor\\nof the Reformed Church of English Neighborhood or Ridge-\\nfield, -the eye of the inteUigent beholder may rest on\\nlocalities sacred with memories of Revolutionary days. Here", "height": "2870", "width": "1884", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0013.jp2"}, "14": {"fulltext": "5 A GLANCE AT RIDGEFIELD PARK.\\nthe late centenarian, Derrick Paulison, was wont to tell us\\nhe saw the British drive off his father s cattle there the late\\naged Mrs. Banta saw carried a British sentry shot down by\\nsome stealthful patriot and there in the front of her late\\ndwelling, yet standing, she saw Washington drill his troops.\\nAlmost within sight are several houses traditionally pointed\\nout as having been either his headquarters or his resting\\nplace for a night or more, and in full view is the belt of\\nrocky and wooded heights which borders the Hudson, over\\nwhich Light Horse Harry led his daring companions in\\ntheir night assault on Paulus Hook. The biographer of\\nWashington remarks He achieved his object, a coup de\\nmain of signal audacity. He made an hundred prisoners.\\namong whom were three officers.\\nBut, however interesting these traditions and memories, it\\nis with the matters of to-day that the practical visitor to\\nRidgefield Park will undoubtedly prefer to engage himself.\\nThe first question which he will propound is\\nIs IT Healthful The gradual slope of the land\\nfor 125 feet towards the river on either side ensures a perfect\\ndrainage, and give a sure guarantee of healthfulness. But\\nthe best authority is the testimony given by those who have\\ndwelt here for a lifetime, or a long period of years. And,\\napropos of this topic, the Rev. Mr, Taylor, previously\\nquoted, contributes from his own experience the following\\ninteresting facts\\nIt has been for many years looked upon even by disin-\\nterested individuals as decidedly the most desirable location\\nor rural homes which New Jersey has yet offered to the\\ncrowded population of our great metropoHs. I am confident\\nthat when its superior advantages are fully made known, that\\nit will successfully compete with other rival points of interest.\\nAs we have looked upon it from our neighboring home, we", "height": "2880", "width": "1930", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0014.jp2"}, "15": {"fulltext": "A GLANCE AT RIDGEFIELD PARK.", "height": "2906", "width": "1962", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0015.jp2"}, "16": {"fulltext": "I O A GLANCE AT RIDGEFIELD PARK.\\nhave almost involuntarily exclaimed in the classic motto of\\nthe Peninsular State of the North-west, If you wish to see\\na delightful Peninsula, look around you. On the west,\\nsouth and east it is bounded by streams never stagnant nor\\nsluggish, navigable at all seasons of the year for such vessels\\nas are needed for pleasure or freight, affording also to the\\nweary business man ample recreation in bathing, boating,\\nhshing and fowHng.\\nThe site of Ridgefield Park and its adjoining countr} is\\nexceedingly free from all low malarious spots. It rises from\\nits several water fronts gradually and beautifully to a most\\ndesirable elevation, forming one of the most perfect\\nwater sheds imaginable. The soil is exceedingly fertile, hav-\\ning been for more than a century under the highest cultiva-\\ntion. It abounds with springs of water, cool, sweet and\\npure, while the salubrity of the atmosphere is well established.\\nWe have been personally acquaitited with 7nany individuals,\\nnative born, whose years had reached the allotted three score\\nand ten 7iot a feiv who had gone beyond it, and several nvho\\nhad almost reached the rare age of one hundred, and who\\ncould look upon the fifth generation of their descendants^\\nIs THE Property Improved? inquires the prospective\\npurchaser.\\nCertainly it is. Not after the manner of your professional\\nspeculator in real estate, who, acquiring possession of some\\nout of the way tract of land, no matter where, puts a sur-\\nveyor on the ground, ploughs up three or four so called\\navenues in one direction, and half a dozen streets at right\\nangles to them, dignifies them on his map by ^such high\\nsounding titles as Forest Avenue or Park Street, and then\\nstraightway announces a Grand Auction Sale of valuable\\nSuburban property. The people, the band and the auction-\\n\u00e2\u0096\u00a0eer suddenly invade the soHtudes some fine morning; but", "height": "2880", "width": "1930", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0016.jp2"}, "17": {"fulltext": "A GLANCE AT RIDGEFIELD PARK. II\\nalas, the visitors after looking in vain through swamp and\\nthicket for the stately avenues and attractive vilk sites which\\nthe maps had promised, take revenge by eating up all the\\nrefreshments, and then go away dissatisfied.\\nRidgefield Park, it may be stated in the first place, needs\\n^o such humbug and deception to bring it into popularity or\\ncommend its advantages and attractions to the attention of\\nthe thoughtful and observant purchaser. The eye of even\\nthe most careless passer by is arrested by its natural beauties,\\nand his lips involunarily exclaim What a pleasant place for\\na residence. And it is upon such intrinsic claims as these\\nthat the availabiHty of Ridgefield Park as a place of suburban\\nresidence is based.\\nThe property comprises some three hundred acres lying\\nprincipally along the summit of the Ridge, and extending\\ndown on the one side to the Hackensack River, on the other\\nto Overpeck Avenue, running parallel to the river by the\\nsame name. It seems to have been originally a portion of a\\ngrant made some time prior to 1669 to one Wm. Pardons,\\nand it would be interesting here, did time and space permit,\\nto trace its line of ownership down to the year 1870, when it\\ncame by purchase into the possession of its present proprietor\\nAt that time its nearest point of connection for New York\\nwas Ridgefield Depot on the Northern Railroad about two\\nmiles distant. But two years later came the Midland, with\\nits increased faciUties, and its depot and telegraph office\\nwithin ten minutes walk of any part of the property.\\nThe Bergen macadam road, passing within a short distance\\nof the Park, runs direct to Hoboken. On either slope of the\\nridge, long established thoroughfares, the Tea-neck Public\\nRoad on the west, and the old Hackensack Public Road on\\nthe east, intersect the Park, and aff ord communication in\\nboth directions with points beyond. Parallel or at right", "height": "2865", "width": "1875", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0017.jp2"}, "18": {"fulltext": "12 A GLANCE AT RIDGEFIELD PARK.\\nangles to these, other streets and avenues have been laid out,\\namong them -one, called Central Avenue, an hundred feet\\nwide, extending along the summit of the ridge, and com-\\nmanding a superb view on both sides. Fronting upon the\\nstreet leading to the depot, and on the beautiful slope over-\\nlooking the Hackensack, stands the Ridgefield Park HoteU.\\nan elegant structure, supplied with every modern convenience,\\nand accommodating an hundred and fifty guests. The\\ngrounds about it are attractively laid out with flowers and\\nshrubbery, while the shady grove adjoining them affords a\\ncharming sylvan resort for a summer s afternoon. The view\\nfrom the hotel, as indeed from any point on or near the sum-\\nmit of the ridge, embraces an astonishing variety and scope.\\nLooking east one sees the Overpeck Valley, and at its\\nfurther verge the western slope of the Palisades, dotted with\\nvillages and villa residences from Bergen to Nyack. To the\\nsoutheast the eye follows the winding course of the Hacken-\\nsack, and turning around to the west the observer descries\\nNewark, the Orange Mountains, Rutherford Park and Pater-\\nson, with Garret Rock frowning like a grim sentinel above\\nIt. Clothed in the purple hues of a summer sunset this view\\nequals in loveliness many of the soft landscape scenes of\\nsouthern Italy.\\nSeveral handsome villa residences have been erected at\\nthe^ Park, and are occupied by New York business men. The\\nentire property is imperatively restricted against nuisances.\\nNo land will be sold except to purchasers who contemplate\\nthe erection of first-class residences, it being the intention of\\nthe owner of the property to render Ridgefield Park a village\\nof villas where people of refined and cultivated tastes may\\nreside, enjoying an immunity from the many annoyances\\nand nuisances incident to Hfe in most suburban villages.\\nThe drinking water is plentiful and pure, the property^", "height": "2926", "width": "1920", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0018.jp2"}, "19": {"fulltext": "A GLANCE AT RIDGEFIELD PARK.\\n13", "height": "2865", "width": "1931", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0019.jp2"}, "20": {"fulltext": "14 A GLANCE AT RIDGEFIELD PARK.\\nabounding in springs, from one of which water is pumped up\\nin pipes to a reservoir which supplies the Hotel. The ad-\\njacent waters of the Hackensack afford fine facilities for\\nboating, fishing and bathing. Should you wish to communi-\\ncate with your friends elsewhere there is a Post Ofiice, or,\\nfor more urgent need a telegraph office at the depot. In\\nshort, you are surrounded with nearly all the conveniences\\nof city life in addition to other advantages in the way of\\nhealthfulness and comfort, which city-folk never dream of.\\nWith such advantages, and under such influences as these,\\nthe future of Ridgefield Park is not difficult to foretell. In-\\ndeed it requires no great stretch of the imagination to picture\\nthis beautiful wooded ridge, ere many years have passed^\\nthickly dotted with elegant villas and inhabited by a commu-\\nnity exclusively composed of the wealthy and cultivated. In\\nthe great suburban New Jersey city, which ere )ong is des-\\ntined to enfold in one mammoth corporation all the populous\\nregion, extending from the Hudson River to the Orange\\nMountains, and from Paterson to Elizabeth, may it not be\\njustly expected that this beautiful ridge, adorned by nature\\nwith all the charms which could render it attractive as the\\nhome of man, and enriched and beautified by all the im-\\nprovements that modern civilization can suggest, will be\\nknown and recognized as the garden spot of New Jersey, and\\nas offering above all others claims for Convenience, Health-\\nfulness AND beauty.", "height": "2880", "width": "1930", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0020.jp2"}, "21": {"fulltext": "A GLANCE AT RIDGEFIELD PARK. 1 5\\nBANTA BROS.\\nDEALERS IN\\nCHOICE TEAS, COFFEES,\\nWIHES, SEGAES,\\nFcLiTLzly G-roceries,\\nAND\\nCANNED GOODS OF ALL KINDS\\nALSO, A COMPLE J E ASSORTMENT OF\\nPAINTS, OILS, VARNISH, GLASS AND BRUSHES,\\nWe receive the celebrated brands of AKRON FLOUK\\ndirect from the mills, sell them at LESS than New York\\nrates, and WARRANT every barrel.\\nOur stock throughout will be found to be the VERY\\nBEST, and our prices almost invaribly lowest.\\nWe request an examination.\\nCor. Main and Bridge Streets,\\nHAGKENSAGK, N. J.\\nFine Butter, Teas and Coffees Specialties,", "height": "2860", "width": "1910", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0021.jp2"}, "22": {"fulltext": "A GLANCE AT RIDGEFIELD PARK.\\nS. D. BETTS,\\nDEALER IN\\nloiii f iiililli\\nGOODS,\\nFire-Place Heaters,\\nRanges, Stoves, c.\\nfllACES, PLIMBING AND ROOFING\\nA SPECIALTY.\\nCOR. MAIN AND BERGEN STS.,", "height": "2880", "width": "1930", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0022.jp2"}, "23": {"fulltext": "A GLANCE AT RIDGEFIELD PARK. I 7\\nBALDWIN,\\nMAIN STREET,\\nHACKENSACK, N. J.\\n(One door above Odd Fellows Hall.)\\nALL THE LATEST STYLES OF\\nSoft and Stiff Fur and Wool\\nHATS\\nCONSTANTLY ON HAND.\\nMade to order and warranted to fit, at prices 25 per cent,\\ncheaper than New York.", "height": "2879", "width": "1911", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0023.jp2"}, "24": {"fulltext": "GLANCE AT RIDGEFIELD PARK.\\nJACOB KINGSLAND,\\nCirpiitsf I iilliii\\n34 DIVISION STREET\\nResidence, 107 Broadway. PATERSON N. J,\\nPlans and Estimates\\nFURNISHED AT SHORT NOTICE.\\nFirst-Class Work by Firsl-Class Workmen.\\nSATISFACTION GnARANTEED IN EVERY CASE.", "height": "2880", "width": "1930", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0024.jp2"}, "25": {"fulltext": "IRON AND STEEL.\\nO\\npi\\nO\\nCO\\nCO\\na\\nr\\nc/?\\nm\\nCO\\nzc\\n1\\nO\\nit\\nDO\\nC/0\\no\\n3\\n9\\n1)\\nH\\ntd\\nd\\nMECHANICS TOOLS", "height": "2880", "width": "1915", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0025.jp2"}, "26": {"fulltext": "", "height": "2896", "width": "1956", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0026.jp2"}, "27": {"fulltext": "A GLANCE AT RIDGEFIELD PARK.\\n21\\nI\\n*te,\\no-^i?", "height": "2906", "width": "1962", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0027.jp2"}, "28": {"fulltext": "22\\nA GLANCE AT RIDGEFIELD PARK.\\nTHIS COMPANY IS PREPARED TO FURNISH\\nMAFSofmiDSdEiiLEM,\\n(See page i)\\nCUTS OF HOTELS, DWELLINGS, Etc.\\n(See pa^e 13)\\nENGRAVINGS OF LANDSCAPE SCENERY.\\n(See pag^es 5 and 9)\\nBILL OR LETTER HEADS.\\n(See above)\\nRelief Plates for Newspaper, Book and Catalogue Illustrations,\\nAND\\nENGRAVING WORK IN GENERAL,\\nat prices which average about\\nONE-HALF OF BATES CHARGED FOR WOOD CUTS.\\nTheir work is engraved in very hard Type Metal, by a new chemical\\nprocess direct from all kinds of Prints, Pen and-Ink Di-awlngs.oTiginfl de-\\nsigns, Photographs, c. This process is in many respects vastly superior to\\nwood engraving. The plates have a printing surface as smooth as glass, and\\nttie lines are deeper than those of hand-cut engravings. We guarantee all our\\nplates to print absolutely clean and sharp on either wet or dry paper, and on\\nany kind of press where type or wood cuts can be printed. The attention of\\nmanufacturers proposing to issue Illustrated Catalogues is particularly invited.\\nL. SMITH HOBART, Pres t. J. C. MOSS, Sup t.\\nD. I. CARSON, Gen l A^ent.", "height": "2880", "width": "1930", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0028.jp2"}, "29": {"fulltext": "A GLANCE AT RIDGEFIELD PARK. 23\\nT. C. SUTTON,\\nRETAIL DEALEE IN\\nDry Goods\\nWHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALEE IN\\nDRESS MAKING\\nIN ALL ITS BRANCHES.\\nyaiai:\\n172 192 Main St.\\nPATERSON, N. J.", "height": "2906", "width": "1962", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0029.jp2"}, "30": {"fulltext": "^4 A GLANCE AT RIDGEFIELD PARK.\\nDIREOTOEY TO ADVERTISEMENTS.\\nTeas, Coffees and Groceries.\\n^^^^^^^os p^g^ j^\\nstoves, Furnaces and House Furnishing Goods.\\nS. D. Betts\\n1 6\\nHats and Caps.\\nBaldwin the Hatter\\nCarpenter and Builder.\\nJacob Kingsland jg\\nBuilders Hardware.\\nJ. A. Van Winkle\\nDry Goods and Carpets,\\nT. C. Sutton\\n19\\nTobacco, Snuffs and Segars.\\nAllen Dunning 20\\nFall and Winter Dry Goods.\\nHewson s Emporium\\n21\\nEngraving,\\nPhoto-Engraving Co 22\\n23", "height": "2900", "width": "1920", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0030.jp2"}, "31": {"fulltext": "ELIGIBLE PLOTS\\n-OR\\nAT-\\nRiDGEFIELD PARK\\nI BY APPLYING\\nON THE PREMISES.\\n1\\nPost Office Address,\\nRIDGEFIELD PARK, N. J.", "height": "2911", "width": "1952", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0031.jp2"}, "32": {"fulltext": "", "height": "2834", "width": "1639", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0032.jp2"}, "33": {"fulltext": "", "height": "2901", "width": "1858", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0033.jp2"}, "34": {"fulltext": "", "height": "2880", "width": "1930", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0034.jp2"}, "35": {"fulltext": "", "height": "2849", "width": "1936", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0035.jp2"}, "36": {"fulltext": "LIBRARY OF CONGRESS\\n014 208 794 7", "height": "2969", "width": "2060", "jp2-path": "glanceatridgefie00catl_0036.jp2"}}