imarching oni op**the conservative city is not sure that itwants to commemorate the ignoble er-rors...

1
Afloat-—a heavy, rough cheviot ulster, the belt-back tourist style; $25 to $32; ; Ashore— a light . weight, rainproof cravenette, the belt-back tourist style ; to $29. Wherever * you travel steamer trunks, suit cases, travelling rugs. \u25a0 Rogers. Peet & Company. 258 Broadway, opposite City Hall. SUfimSfc -"vat 1260 Brcadw»v. cor. 32d. . , ; and 04 West 33d St. _I__^ - m Advertlaem*nta firfniltteil Into these col- nln af are rffommenilfil to the readers of The Tribune an thorooshly reliable, and Imalneaa can be done by mill frith the advertisers trlth perfect safety. that Is. th» Harvard faculty 4o not. as they removed from the students* rooms all signs, whether stolen or otherwise. Story on what the "Old Grads" In th« university clubs think of this action of the faculty, with excellent photographs of rooms of Harvard students before they were denuded of siam? THE! DON 7 BELIEVE IS SIGXS op** MB BROADWAY. USS BROADWAY. T23 SIXTH AVEsl's, "THE TIGER OR NO STATUE." Salem. Mas 3.. Is torn by conflicting opinion* over the acceptance of a statue to the heroism of Quakerism -which a New- Yorker wishes, to present. It shows two Quakers stfUMltog -with a tiger. The conservative city is not sure that It wants to commemorate the Ignoble er- rors of Its fathers in Just this way. Photograph of the statue. Amusements. FEXWAY COURT. the most exclusive ' publtc"' maseum !n the world, owned by Mrs. "Jack" Gard- ner, of Boston. Account of the treasures which she has gathered, with specially IsJbbi photographs of the interior. \u2666 \u2666«»\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666> » » t M» MM M M \u2666»\u2666 \u2666 \u2666\u2666»» I "Marching On" I I JANUARY, 17%. I I FEBRUARY, 20%. t. X March,- 22%. X X- April, 29%. i X: The above percentages represent + X the gains in sales of the £ || Daily and Sunday ; 5 TRIBUNE,! \u2666 \u25a0 in the respective months of % X- 1903 as compared with 1902. X \u2666 X "Fall in and join the procession." + TJ ". . ; ... A i » iA A LiiiLill.Ll.l.i.i.i.i.i.Xl. MEXICO FROM A CAR WINDOW. Breezy account of a Yorker's trip through Mexico in his private car. and what he saw from Its windows. Photo- graphs. Designer and Manufacturer of ORNAMENTAL ANDIRONS, FIRE SETS, FENDERS, Etc. Repairing and Polishing a Sp«ciairy. FRANK H. GRAF. 322 SEVENTH AYE. TRAITS IX IMMIGRANTS. Interviews with immigrant officials" as to the desirable and undesirable traits which the immigrants now pouring ln here so fast show, when considered aa material for good American citizens. The Tribune Uptown Office is now located at 1,364 Broadway Between 36th and 37th St*. public School No. 105. Mott and Elizabeth-sts.— To be completed March 1. 1904. "Work stopped owing to :h» cart drivers' and excavators strike May 3. Public School No 110." Eroome and Cannor-»ts To be completed April 14. 1904. Work stopped be- cause of strike of cart drivers. and excavators. Public School No. 1S«. Manhattan. East Houston. Lewis and East Third-sts.— Largest elementary i-chool building in the world, to be completed in July. 1903. a:' work stopped. Carpenters on strike April 31; laborers. April 2? \u25a0 Public School No. ISO. Eighty-second-st.. between First and Second-ayes To be completed October IS 1903. Carpenters out April 2? All work stopped owing to cart drivers* strike. High School of Commerce, Sixty-fifth and Sixty- Eixth sts.. west of Broadway; building nearly com- pleted; carpenters on strike. Morris High School, One-hundred-and-sixty-sixth- Ft.. Boston Road and Jackson -aye . The Bronx: plumbers out April 3, thermostat men. April 13. carpenters. April 17; plasterers' laborers and ex- cavators. May i. Public School No. 14S. Havemeyer-st,, between North Sixth and Seventh sts.. Brooklyn, to be completed January 1. 13M; laborers out on strike. May L Public School No. 145. Central-aye. and Ncll-st.. Brooklyn; to be completed November L 190S; labor- ers' strike on work and excavations. May 4. Public School No. 145. One-hundred-and-sixty- fifth-st.. Tinton and Union ayes..' The Bronx: to be completed September 1. 1903; truckmen en strike May 1. and all mechanics have had to stop for wart of materials. Reports have not a* yet come In for balance of schools in Brooklyn. Queens and Richmond, but it Is expected the same, condition of affairs prevails. Public School- No. SI: Monroe and Gouverneur- -T--> be finish* d December. 1903. Carpenters out or. strike April S: Public School No. F9. One-hundred-and-thlrty- fifth-st. and L*r,cri--av«; be finished July. ISMS. Carpenters out on strike April 11. tar roofers April ( Work stopped owing to lack of material, through \u25batrike of truckmen May 4 Strikes Are Blocking Solving of (% Crowding Problem. -Strikes of various trade unions, together with the shutdown of the yaros of buildingmaterial dealers, as tol3 in The Tribune > cstenlay. are^ erl- w»ly liter* | work or. public school , buildings throughout the city. On various ! school buildings Jr. th.- course of erection, a list of which was given to * Tribune reporter yesterday at the buildir.jr department of the Board of Education, petty strikes have stopped wori entirely. Now that the building material dealers have closed their yards on account of demands of team drivers and truck- men. M seems impossible to finish the new build- Ings on contract time. .. . ,\, ; >> At the Board of Education it -was said that many or the strike? -which had delayed the work were not due to the -»a^e question, but to splitting hairs on minor points, and also to disputes between unions. Several examples were given. -In one instance.' the steamAttens' ' union put in some pipes which the plumbers' union declared they should have done— a strike. Another <-\u25a0** The electrical contractor on one of the build- ings sublet a contract to a non-union shop to hang: EDine fixtures. This firm agreed to employ only \u25a0Ssa men and pay the prevailing scale, and. al- though the fixtures were not to be hung for three momhs. the result was a. strike. Here is a. report on school buildings under date of May 6: Public School No. 24.. Manhattan. One-hundred- Stilt Isjssilj Silllli and Third To be com- pleted September. 1903. All work ceased because of truckmen poisg out on strike May .2. Impossible to get building materials. . f-v A I V»« Broadway and 3**h St. \u25a0 U/*.!-*I O Ev«.. S:ls. Mat. Wed. 4 Sat.. 2 13. CECIL SPOONER m MY LADY PEGGY GOES TO TOW.V. 1/riTU'O B'wiy I BEST SHOW IX TOWS. Krl IHS and 30—Great A-; -3' \u25a0*»\u25a0\u25a0 111 W lu'.h St I PRICES XSm. and sOc. AM JPI<&£ RESURRECTION TED MARKS' BIG CONCERT SUNDAY NIGHT. , MA ICCTIP GRAND CIRCLE. B'way & 39th St. ITIMJCO IIV Eve. at S. Mats, Wed.-& Sat. at i WIZARD OF OZ I EB?E B?: t Si WITH AIONTGOiiERY & STO.Vt. I Seats I^.Q U PRDPTfIR'^ COMEDY 4 VAUD. SHOWS. 25c . 50c. '\u25a0 rnUUlUn O Eve ryAft. 4 Eve. Res. 7.V Bx St». $1. '. OQrd Bitr All-Star Cth The Man From Vaudeville. «ay. Mexico. Vande. COth The 1OK" .MIXED PICKLES. wOst. Fatal Wedding. ' J st Bijc Vaudeville. TXX \u25a0» -/t t *tr» Broadway and 33d Street. Ers. ( itlanntUlUU * m Mats. Wed. & Sat.. 2:15. The Earl of Pawtucket Matinee May 12. ELSIE T^E3LJE. Seats now ••:!!.-.?. ORNAMENTAL SURGERY FOR DOGS. Methods by which veterinary surgeons alter the shades of dogs' noses, make straight tails curly, wrinkle th<» faces of bulldogs, etc Illustxared- CRITERION' THEATRE. B way and 44th «t- Last S Evgs. S:3O. Mats. TTed & Sat.. 2:W CHARLES HAWTREY, SUPPLY GETTIXG SHORT. GARRICK THEATRE. 35th «t .. near B war. SKIPPER & CO.. WALL STREET THE BACH FESTIVAL AT BETHLEHEM. PEXX. Portraits of the trombone choir of the eld Moravian church In which the fes- tival will be held next week; a'.3O pho- togTaphs of some of the si. - an account of their ancient function by H E. X NEW SAVOY THEATRE. 34th st. 4 B »iy. Evgs . s:ls. Mat:n»es WM 4 Saturday 2:15 EZRA KENDALL TH^ YE i GAR GARDEN THEATRE. 27th »t. 4 Mad.son tv*. Last S Evgs.. S:.W Mats. W<"l 4 Sat. at 230 THE ISTH CEXTt'RT r\/CDVU A Xl MORALITYPLAT. t-VtrVYIvIAIN MADISO.V SQ. THEATRE. 24th 9t.. near way. Evrs. S:3O Matinees Thursday & Saturday. 30. Geo. H. Broadhurst'a A Fflfll AND MfIMPY Greatest Comedy A rUUL HIS UVit I THE FAMOUS OLD JUMEL MANSWN. Efforts are being made by several so- cieties to have the city preserve this his- toric place, famous as "Washington's headquarters. Description, \u25a0with photo- graphs of th» mansion. HERALD SQU 1 & > W«ek». M *' nenHL-U THEA. Ev*s. fi:10. Mat*. Wt* * S»t. GRACE GEORGE in PRETTY PEGGY Knickerbocker Theatre. B'wny «£ 3Sth St. Last 2 weeks. At 8 sharp. Matlneei W«d. * Sit at 2. SKtfSSKS&MR. BLUE BEARD WALLACK'S. Evgs .. 9:15. Mats. Wei 4 Sat . 215 GEORGE ADE'S WITTY MUSICAL SUCCESS. I Sultan CIRCLE ££\u25a0* *;£ THE GREAT GOLDIX A CO.. WILFRID CLARK & CO. JULIUS TANNEN and OTHER BIG ACTS. MIiDDIV HILL THEA. 1> X . Aye. ft 4?d St MiiHHfll MATI>EE EVERY DAY. 35c. IHUIIIIMI OTHELLO. . HARLEM '[ Evgrs.. 8:15. Matinee Saturday "-IS. HofsK. I Joseph Jefferson .^STrISJ. 1 : CASINO Next Monday ITHLRUNAWAYSI Princess. B" way &2!»th. Evgs. 8:30. Mats Thur« * -Sat CHAS. E. EVANS. THERE & BACK CHAS. H. HOPPER. * I*r«»l\IL» Ot OAth BROADWAY T E H ,? ATR f lats 41 » | Fj*i Henry W. Savage Presents the New Musical Comedy "' PRINCE OF PILSEN fXTX^CT 1 JEjAMJLM In "THE CRISIS." "\u25a0IJJX JCLllllJJt i n ..THE CKISIS." ACADEMY **VMUSIC. 14th St. * Irving PI. S.ITHE SUBURBAN Prices. 25. 50. 75. ICO. Mats. W><i. & Sat.. 2 Eve . 8:13. week FRANK DANIELS £&£&: SECRETARY OF WAR ROOT has recently been adding mor<*ifarm land to his picturesque paternal estate on College Hill. Clinton. N. V .. where he was born. Description .and photographs of .the place. \u25a0 . ART OBJECTS FOR THE METROPOLITAN MUSEUM. Photographs of the first ones pur- chased by the trustees of the Metropoli- tan MuSeum of Art with funds drawn ». c ,-, . t.h« \u2666•yooruV'.o henuest of Jacob Roarers, of Paterson. N. J. TO HARNESS VICTORIA FALLS. The latest project of science to pro- cure electric power is to harness the mighty cataract of the Zambesi River, In Africa. Description and photographs. THE PASSIXG OF THE BEGGARS OF XFJVYORK. Picturesque mendicancy has been prac- tically eradicated by th« efforts of the Charity Organization Society. Account of many sstftifttosj del \u25a0 world of beggars. PIAXO MANUFACTURERS. Their national association -will soon hold a convention in Buffalo. Descrip- tion, with hoto?raph3 of the 'chief offi- cers. BIJOU Bwa LAST 3 WEEKS. ?v u s:». 20th * MARIE CAHILL Mat. Sat y. 2:13. in >A\fY BROWS. VICTORIA. 42 St 111 ADCI IT I f\ DAVIDBELASCO ffAfirltLU in -THE AH TIOVKFR \u25a0 BILLY WHISKERS; THE AUTO- BIOGRAPHY OF A GOAT. A Jolly story for feegr* ani sttr- riinnins BOTSCO I HEATRE ' #SffiTt T^t^ DAVIDBELASCO rrescnt» THE OAIU.ING ULA.NCHt: BATES li» OF.THE GODS. xew raws of \etv-york The city rh - 1 fmm spot never attainable before. A rnv- the oldest inhaOitanr of Ootha an additional sight of itors to the metroDoHs MEN WHO WANT TO WORK SCARED OFF A statement was issued yesterday by Secretary Crarv of the Lumber Dealers* Association. In which he raid that the only five yards which had not closed down were either owned or controlled by McPaine. president of the Yellow Pine Company. "Some st the papers are saying that the lumber dealers ha^\u25a0» threatened that they will not sell to employers of union labor." said the statement. "This is a mistake. No such threats have been made, ar.d no such action is contemplated. Our position is that we will control our. own business and protect our own employes from domination by an Irresponsible oligarchy of labor leaders known as the United Board of BuildingTrades. " Later a labor committee was organized repre- senting the lumber dealers, which gave out the fol- lowing statement in the evening: The last of the lumber yards to close in Man- hattan and The Bronx has closed. We are not pre- pared to say what it i«. We will keep closed until the team drivers and the building material drivers withdraw their demand that we employ only union drivers. The building material dealer*, -we under- stand, have made a similar decision. Chairman Davis of the. press committee, who has a lumber yard in Brooklyn, said that the Brooklyn dealers were delivering lumber in Brook- lyn, but would not deliver any in Manhattan and The Bronx while the trouble lasted. The lumber and building material dealers say they have no objection to the wages demanded. One building material dealer said: - If v:e- granted the demand for recognition of ..he union it would put us completely at the mercy of the Board of Building Trades. Every time that \u2666here would be any trouble with a contractor about any grievance they would go to the lumber or tuilding material dealer who supplied him and threaten a strike unless we refused to supply him. This would keep us in hot water all the time. We could not afford to put ourselves in such a position. Ex-Judge McConnell. of the George A Fuller Company, said that undoubtedly the shutdown in tie yards would stop all building unless it was coon ended. As the city did not allow the con- tractors Is keep a large supply of building ma- terials or lumber on hand, it would not be long before \u25a0II buiidir.g -was stopped. Business Agent Rogan of the Building Material Drivers' Union said that the union had opened negotiations with the Truck Owners' Association to get its member* to sign an agreement. If they •Sid so. he said, material could be brought from outside ports and building would go on. In such a ca*«? the shutdown would soon be broken. ; A prominent master -carpenter said yesterday that be tried without euccess to get lumber from a .member of the association This member, he j>ald, told him that he would have to pay a forfeit ifhe 'fcuripUed lumber. Lumber and Building' Material Men Firm About Lockout. "Th» member? of the Building Material Dealers' Association asd the Lumber Dealers' Association met all day yesterday at No. IS Broadway. The meetings were separate, but both organizations reluse to be dominated by unions and intend to t>tar>d by the non-union men. The brick manufact- urers' association is in favor of- adopting the same policy- While it Is denied that there is concerted' action, each organization knows exactly •what the others are doing, and there Is a general inter- change of ideas. IRVIXG PLACE THEATRE. Farewell Perform- ances of the F-rvr.czy Oper«-ua C-i.. with >l I V WER- BER. Everj- Eve? . Mat ?at , "DIE GEISHA." FIGHTING FOREST FIRES. How the fishting of forest fires in the Catskills and Adirondacks has b#en re- duced almost to a science. TCitft rho- tographs. AMERICAN ART GALLERIES. MADISON SQUARE. SOrTH. WILL CONTINUE UNTIL MAY 9TH. AMERICAN ) THIRTY-SIXTH WATER COLOR > ANNUAL. SOCIETY. ? EXHIBITION We«lc Days 9 to 6, SUNDAY 2 to 6 r-nCM WORM! IX WAX. »w Groups. EDEN CI X MATOGR AH. H. \u25a0If EE . Wonderful Electric Theatre. Aft..* Eve RULERS OX THEIR TRAVELS. Political advantages derived by nx- tions from the personal intercourse amon? their rulers demonstrated by Ex- Attache in connection with President Loubet's forthcoming visit to England. 14th St. Theatre, near «th aye Mats. Wed. A Sat tuc yw i*nu Aye in Thoir best nay. THfc OUnArloßi >.\i\f. FOR OFFICE. PASTOR'S. 14th *t . n>»r 31 av<s CONTINI'OT-3 2i"> & :V> CTS ADONIS TRIO, TOBIN SISTERS. nSKS & M~DONOfGH. PANTZER TRIO SAY ENGINEERS ARE WEAKENING New Haven Railroad Appeals to Sheriff for Protection. ."Bridgeport. Conn.. May 7 —On account of the strike Of trackmen here and efforts made by rtrikers from the Harlem River to induce track- men in neighboring places to quit work, the ,\>w- York. New-Haven and Hartford Railroad officials have Mkfed Sheriff Hawley to protect men who de- tire tv* work. In Stratford to-day the trackmen who quit work yesterday after a clash with some 'cf the Harlem River men, are still out. 'When ap- jroacbed cy the section boss to-day they declared -ifcat they were afraid to work, in spite of the fact that deputy sheriffs agreed to protect them. The Turf. MORRIS PARK RACES ... . WESTCH ESTER. V Y. -V. SECOND DAY, FRIDAY, MAY STII. The St. .Nicholas Hurdle Race, the l.nrch- mont, for thrt-e-) «-nr-ol<]«, add tour other races. MUSIC BY LANDER. Take 2<l Aye. "L. to Willis Aye.. thence by Special Trains direct to Morris Park. FIRST RACE. 2:30 V M FIELD. CO CENTS. ALL THIS AND MUCH MORI IN THF SUNDAY TRIBUNL Literary Review*. Sports of Saturday and the Week. Matters of Special Inter- e*t to Women, Entertaining Miscellany from The Tribune's Foreign and Amer- ican Contemporaries, a Page of Humor. Special Correspondence from London and Paris, the News of the World. Fifteen Reported to Have Returned to Work Kolb Still Missing. The independent tugboat urners stated yesterday tfcat the marine engineers on strike were beginning to back down. Fifteen members of the Marine En- gin**-rs Association, employed by the Montauk .Steamboat Company, returned to work yesterday "at $-i a week Increase of salary, but on the time schedule in force before they quit. ,The whereabouts of George A Kolb. business -manager of the Marine Kn#lneers' Benevolent As- sociation, who has been a prominent figure in the recent controversy between the Marine Engineers ; ard the tugboat owners, are still unknown. " TO-MORROW Order it of your \cvs>dealer or send in your Subscription. MM>.ll THIIIIM-:. <.ii» %f»r. #'- •*« months. *tiihrrt- nion<bi, s«»c. BROOKLYN BUILDERS ORGANIZE. Members of a!! the building trades in Brooklyn organized the Brooklyn . Builders' Protective Asso- ciation last riight. The organization's purpose is to resist the demands of laborers and mechanics "for more p*y A determination was shown to make a vigorous stand. Among those who took an -etfvs. par: In .the meeting were John McNameo, •Isaac Harris, P. J. Murray and W. V. CranXord. Seats were ordered from places as far away as Boston for Mr. Belasco's matinee of "The Darling: of th« God»" j-eiterdajTj, >j William Lorraine has purchased two plays which hf will produce this summer in London. One of them. "The Troubadour," by H. B. Hamilton, tin •will bring to this country in the fall, so he says, to star in . At th« West Nffw-York ball grounds this after- noon. Frank Moulan will appear in a new part, that of shortstop on the "Sultan of Suiu' bajl nine. The "Sultan" company will play the "Pilsen' company, and Raymond Hitchcock win be th.- umpire, with the choruses of "The Prince of Pil- sen." "The Sultan of Sulu" and "King Dodo" on the bleacher*, to turn down their thumbs. This afternoon at the Actors' Home, on Staten Island, a reception will be held to commemorato the flr*t anniversary of th" dedication. All who may be interested in the home are invited to ba present. Miss Blanche Walsh's rress agent has evidently had his passion aroused "up State." wh»re 'Resur- rection " if now being presented, for the announce- ment comes from Rochester that Miss Walsh has purchased <m estate n»ar Lebanon. Penr. . where she will found a home for the children of impecu- nious actors <»ThT children wtil be admitted :f there is any room left. Mjss GaHand wiil star next season, it is made public, in a dramatization of -Dorothy Vernon of Haddon Hall " Paul Kester wil! make the drama- tization Mr Kester seem? to have work enough for a Fitch on hand at prf-.^nt. Miss Galland's Jeadirsg man wi!' be William Lewers. An anr.our.eemert of tremendous impo^tanco "w-ss made at the Manhattan Theatre yesterday. Miss Jane Field, who plays a part in "The Earl of Fawtu'-ket." is goin^ to get married. Think of it' She has been on the stage hardly a year, but she will be married, so fhe savj, immediately and re- tire to private life. L p. Rider, of the firm of White. Ride & Frost, lumber merchants at No. 39 Cort!andt-st .. is to be her husband. He owns an automobile, which he brought to the stage door after the matinee Wednesday, taking Miss Field aboard When he brought her back for the even- ins performance she wore a diamond on her flng»r that had been ringless before. Thus tire automo- r.iie '.laims another victim! Daniel Frohman Announces Miss Loftus Will Star After Next Season. Daniel Frohman yesterday announced that he had made a three year contract to star Miss Cecelia Loftu!«. beginning season after next. He announced definitely also that she will appear as Mr. Sothern's leading wornm next season, thus setting at rest the various stories to the contrary. The first play in which Miss Loftus will appear as a star will be a comedy written fcr her by Mr. Sothern. It will, Mr. Frohman says, jrive her an opportunity to in- troduce some of her own songs and her imitations of famous actresses. J. Hartley Manners and Justin Htmtty McCarthy, her former husband, will also be commissioned to write plays for her use Her first engagement will V- at the new Lyceum Theatre In the early fall of 1304. NOTES OF THE STAGE. Fourteen Stories High To Replace the Old A. T. Stewart Building. 'BY TELE'iRAPH TO THE TRIBUNE. 1 Philadelphia. May ?.— Estimates have been invited from Philadelphia builders for the new store to be erected by John Wanamakpr on the site of the eld A T Stewart building, in New-York City. It will b^ of fireproof construction, fourteen stories high, \u25a0with basement and sub-basement, and will have frc-nts of stone and terra cotta. The Fourth -aye. frontage will be IST feet Minches, that in Broadway U8 Beet IK in^h^s. that in East Ninth-st. 327 feet 7% inches, and that in East Eighth-st. 339 Gee* 4-^ inches. There will be a grand court in the centre. The cost will probably be between 13,000.000 and K,«m,00». Joseph Singleton, a Chinese merchant of this city, has on behalf of the Chinese colony offered to arrange a benefit performance for the Kishineff sufferers at the rhinese Theatre, No. 7 Doyers-st , or. Monday evening. Congressman Goldfogle will deliver an "address at the theatre. This is the first time the Chinese have expressed sympathy for the Jews, and their offer nas amused great interest on the East Side. The Zienteti have arranged a house to house col- lection for next Sunday, and are proving fairly successful in their endeavors to enlist the sym- pathy of Jewish merchants in th<=> form of a cift of 2 p*r Gent of the gro?? receipt? next Monday. WANAMAKERS NEW, STORE. Performance To Be Given at Doyers-st. Theatre for Kishineff Victims. Collections in aid of the victims of the Kishineff massacres have, it is said, been taken up in every city in th« United States. The reports received by the central committee show that already QMM has been collected, of which HMO has been cabled to Kishineff from this city. Chicago, Philadelphia, Pittsburg and Scranton. In this city the collec- tions have taken several shapes. Benefit perform- ances are being given at the Jewish theatres. The Windsor is devoting one-r.alf of the proceeds of five performances, beginning Friday evening, to the fund A special play has been written for this occasion called 'The Destruction of Ki?hineff." at the opening performance of which Mayor Low is to be present. CHINESE TO AID JEWISH SUFFERERS. Prisoner Held for Wire Tapping Swindle Recognized by Victim. When Central Office detectives arraigned eight men at the Jefferson Market court yesterday on the charge of wire tappinsr. one of tLem was singled our for th> additional charge of highway robbery He. esve his name as Benjamin Baldwin. The complainant against him was Ralph H. Reid, a plumber, of No. 171 W««t Seventy-Mghth-st., who declared he had lost about $2.<*io by becoming interested in the wire tapping game to beat pool- rooms Reid said his bookkeeper. Frank Lower?, bor- rowed money ar.d lost It in the game, and then took him to meet some of the wire tappprs at a saloon in Broadway, near Thirty-fo^rth-st.. last Saturday. Baldwin sat at a table in the place. A man who was called Wellington went to a tele- phone and answered a call. Then he said Locket would win the fourth race at Jamaica He asked Baldwin to take a bet of $7fl> on Locket, and asked Reid to put up the money. When Reid re- fused to make the bet. Baldwin said he didn't be- lieve Reid could ••flash a dollar bill " This made Reid indignant, he drew out a roli containing $730 Wellineton grabbed, the money and ran from the place, whiie BaJdwin held Reid. When Reid got Into Broadway. Wellington had disappeared, and when he returned to the saloon Baldwin had vanished. The Clergyman Says J. M. Britton Got. Offer from a Captain. Attempts were trade to bribe. Joseph M. Britton. superintendent of the New-York Society for trie Enforcement: of Criminal Law. into letting up in the crusade against Brooklyn poll captains tor permitting gambling to' flourish. according to trie Rev. Dr. Cortland Myers, pastor of the Baptist Temple, head of the executive committee of trie organization, who has been denouncing the police from his pulpit for several Sundays. According to Dr. Myers, a representative of a. certain captain in Brooklyn called on Mr. Britton and said: . "Say. the captain told me to ask, you what it would be. worth to call off this crusade." "Think of police captains having the boldness to send money to the very person who was bent upon proving their unrltness for duty, and asK that the matter be dropped for a price! said Dr. Myeis. "This incident shows the appalling condi- tion of a department which is supposed to punish lawbreakers, but i* itself so full of evil- that it is an aid, rather than a hindrance, to crime. That there Is bribery M as sure as that there is crime Superintendent Britton. after saying that he was sorry Dr. Mvers had spoken about the attempted bribery, because he had hoped to land the captain Interested, gave this version of It: "I think it- was Tuesday when a man came into this office and said: 'I see you are raising he with the police captains in Brooklyn. Don t joj think it poor policy to get after police officials in this wav He gave me what he said was his name, but he "lied. I think I know who he is.. however. He gave me clearly to understand that he was sent by a captain but I have no proof that he was telling the truth. If I had been allowed to work this thing up I believe I would have caught the captain. Of course, he will not come near us now. ACCUSED OF HIGHWAY ROBBERY. TOO. BFIBEFY TRIED MYERS. Port Natal. May 7— Arrive.! (previously), steamer Queen Louise (Brt, Heno. New-York via St Vincent, C v. Table Bt| May «— S»ll»d. steamer Corfe Castle (Br). ' Marshall. New-York. Singapore. May 7— Sailed, steamer Indramayo (Dr). Price. New-York. Montevideo Ma. Arrived, steamer Ca»lWa (Br). Smith. New-York tor rtuenos Ayrea and Rosario. Para. miv 6 Arrived, uteanvr Punstan (Rr). D<-an. New-York. South AfrlCJll Port. May 7— Arrived iprevloual>). steam- , er lxmiae Rf.th il!r«. Thompson. New- York for Auck- , lan-:, etc Si Thomas. May 7—Sailed, uteain.-r Fontabelle <Rr>. Mann (from Barbados. «tc). N.« York. Barbador, May s—Sailed, steamer Merchant Prince tßr>. Coull (from Santos, etc). New- York. Bermuda. Ma 7—Sailed, steamer Pretoria (Br), Mo- j i.-. --v. Naw-York. . . THE MOVEMENTS OF STEAMERS. V •. , FOREIGN PORTS. Cuxhaven, May •'»— Sailed, steamer Mannheim (Ger) Ock«?!mann. N«w-York.- Brow Head, •. May 7, «2»* a m Passed, steamers Celtic (Br>. Lindsay. New- York for Liverpool; 9-25 a m Aurania (Br). Potter, New-York for Liverpool. Queenstown. May 7. '12:24 t> mm hailed, steamer Ger- manic (Br). Smith (from Liverpool), New-York* 11:44 a m. arrived, . steamer Celtic (Br), Lindsay' New-York for Liverpool (and proceeded); 12:43 p m" Auranla (Brt, Potter. New- York for Liverpool (and proceeded). St Michaels. May 7—Passed. »tearr.»r Prlnze»« Irene (Ger) Dannemann. Genoa. Naples and Gibraltar for New- Southampton. May I— Arrived, steamer St Paul. Jamison. New-York (passed Hurst Castle ft:o6 a mi. London. May 7— Arrived, steamer Manltou (Br). Cannons. Hull". May »'•- Palled, steamer Hindoo (Br), Clark. New- York \u25a0 Shields k May «— Sall«d. steamer Dlamant (Ger). Lotz«» from Rotterdam!. New-York. Bremen. Ma] 5— Silled. steamer- Chemnitz (Ger). Jnnt- zen. New-York. ' \u25a0 \u0084 \u0084 Lisbon. May C— Arrived, steamer Alseria ißr), George. New Tort Gibraltar May 4. 5p m—Sailed, steamer Prtnzegs Jr»ne c<;.ri. Panneinann (from Geona and Naples). New- y, ij-^ Genoa May Sailed, steamer Gera (Ger). Hewers. New- York via Naples and Palermo. Naples. May «— Sailed, steamer He»p«rla ißr). Bake, . XiT-XuST'.:- :^V:; Steamers Deutsch'.and fGer). for Hamburg, via Ply- mouth and Cherbourg, Phoenicia (Gex), for Naples and Genoa. Jamestown, for Norfolk and Newport News; El Rio, for Galveston; Mlnnewaska. for San Francisco San Diego, Seattle, etc; United States revenue cutter Gresham land returned); Trinidad ißn. for Bermuda; La Savols iFr>. for Havre; Ullc-r tNon. for St Kttts. Barbados and Demerara. Havana, for Havana and Mexican ports Ctty of Washington, tor Guant<inam->. eu . Nacoorhee for Savannah; Romsdal (Nor), for Norfolk. Sahine ili:i for Cape. Town, iia St Vlnc»nt. C V. BluefieMit for Ralti- moje. Benefactor, for Philadelphia. Steamer Exeter City (Br». King. Bristol April 20 and Swansea 22, to James ArkeU A. Co. with mdse. Arrived at the Bar at 9 a m. \u0084.-,„ Steamer Consuelo <Br). Watson. Hull April 24. to Sanderson A Son. with mdse. Arrived at the Bar at noon. Steamer Graf Waldersee (Gar), Kopff. Hamburg April 25 Boulogne 26 and Plymouth 27. to the Hamburg-Ameri- can Line with 253 cabin and 2.401 steerage passengers, mails and mdse. Arrived at the Bar at 0:45 a m. Steamer Aler.e (Ger). Brambeer. vanilla April 11. Cartagena 13 Greytown 24 and Port I.imon 27. to 'he Hamburg-American Line, with 36 passengers, mails and md»e Arrived at the Bar at 9:2U a m. Steamer Bolivia (Ger). Wintzer, Cape Hayti April 18. Port de Paix 20, Port-au-Prince and Petit Goave 22. Mlragoav- and Jeremle 23. Kingston 25. Savanilla 2.'>. Port-au-Prince May 1 and Inagua 2. to the Hamburg- American Line, with 8 passengers, mails and mdse. Ar- rived at the Bar at 4 12 p m Steamer Kong Frode (Nor). Netlsen. Kingston April 25, Port- Maria 29 and Port Antonio 30. to the United Fruit Co with fruit. Arrived at the Bar at 6:30 a m. Steamer Urd (Nor). Hansen, Clenfuegos April 29. to \V D Munson, with sugar. Arrived at the Bar at noon. Steamer J M Guffey. Weilman, Port Arthur, Tex. April 30 to the J M Guffey Petroleum Co. with oil. Steamer El Paso. Patten. New-Orleans May 3, to the Southern Pacific Co. withmdse. Steamer Arapahoe. Kemble. Jacksonville May 3 and Charleston 6, to William P Clyde & Co. with passengers and mdse. ' Steamer Neckar (Ger). Harrassowitz. Baltimore May 6. to Oelrichs & Co. with 34 cabin and 4») steerage pas- sengers and mdse in transit. Steamer Hamilton. Boaz, Newport News and Norfolk, to the Old Dominion Ss Co. with passengers and mdse. United States - supply ship Culgoa, Doyle. Hampton Roads. May 6. Steamer Old Dominion, Burton, Boston, to the, Joy Ss Co, with mdse. Steamer Hector, Ksene. Boston, in ballast to F B Dalzell. Is bound to Perth Amboy. Sandy Hook. N .1. May 7. 9:30 p m—Wind .north, mod- erate, hazy Steamer Korona (Br). William, Guadeloupe April 15 Martinique 17. Barbados 21, Demerara 28, St Kitts 30 St Martins and St Croix May 1and St Thomas 2 to A E Outerbrldge 4 Co. with 53 passengers and mdse. Arrived at the Bar at 5:30 p m. Steamer Chattahoochee. Lewis, Boston, to the Ocean Ss Co, with mdse. ' SAILED. Port of New- York, Thursday, May 7, 1903. ARRIVED. INCOMING STEAMERS. TO-DAT. Ve««el From. Line. TV, rs " Glasgow. April 20 - : Vincenzo Bonanno. . . .Gibraltar. April 22 ZZH Regina Elena ::.:::. Gibraltar. 8$2:::::::::::. Minnesota, Swansea April 24 Ma nuel Calvo Nap.es. April 23 «-.«-,- •AHiar.ca Colon. May 1 Panama Buenos Aires Havana . May 4 Spanish Bismarck Hamburg. April 30 Hamb-Am «hlmoca Gibraltar. April 30 FlMar .\u25a0.\u25a0-.-•- Galveston. May 2 Morgan Kansas City Savannah. May « Savannah SATURDAY. MAY 9 1 af' lphl^:::::::Ga:v^r oo MM aylT=v.v:.v^Sy I T=v.v:.v^S £5&:.7:..:. Jacksonville. May 6. .... ... . . -Clyde •Eeperanza Havana, May 6 N "i & Cuba SUNDAY. MAY 'O. •Laßre»agne Havre. May 2 French CaJabria .. ..- Gibraltar. April 30 Anchor •Brings mall.- \u25a0 OUTGOING STEAMERS. TO-DAY. vessel Vessel. For. Line. Mails clow. Mils. Cymric. Liverpool. Whit- Star. ... 3-00 pra Menominee. Southampton At-Tr»n? . - f^*!? Santiago, Tamplco. Ward- 13:00 m 3™P*? Colorado. Mobile. Mai lory 3 .00 P m Hamilton, Norfolk. Old Dominion 3:00 pm ..'.-. \u25a0 SATURDAY. MAY 9. .. ": . Umbria; Liverpool. Cunard 10:30 i m 2:00 p m Kroonland. Antwerp. Red Star n S: * am ,lmi m Ethiopia. Glasgow. Anchor 9:30 am 12:00 m Norge. Denmark. Scand-Am.. 11 a m 2:00 P m Konig Albert, Naples. N G Lloyd; 12:00 m :00pra Minneapolis. London. At Trans 4:t"Opm Buenos Aires, Caciiz. Spanish ,7T7^ - Neckar. Bremen. N G L10yd....: " I ? ; 22 am Pretoria. Hamburg. Hamb-Am 4:oopm Roma. Naples. Fabre Mexi"o, r Havana. Ward l'>: 00 am 1:00 p m Coamo. Porto Rico, N V & PR 9:ooam 12:00 m Maracas. Grenada. Trinidad 10:00 a m 12:00 m Alene, Jamaica. Hamb-Am 8:30 a m 12:00 m Zulia. Curacao. Red D 8:30 a m 12:00 m Partma St Thomas. Quebec B:3oam 12:0Om Arapahoe. Charleston. Clyde 3 : / X- - Nueces, Galveston. Mallorv 3: V? pm Excelsior, New-Orleans. Morgan 3:00 m El Norte. Galveston. Morgan 3:00 p m Jefferson. Norfolk. Old Dominion 3:Oopm MONDAY. MAY 11. Princess Anne, Norfolk, Old Dominion. 3:00 pm SHIPPING NEWS. WEST SIDE Y. M. C. A. DINNER. The annual dinner of the West Side Young Men's Christian Association was held last evening in the gymnasium of its building, in West Fifty-seventh- st. Over three hundred and fifty members wert present The Rev Dr. George C. Lorimer. pastor of the Madison Avenue Baptist Church. spoke on "The Achievements of Young Manhood." William M Klngsley was toastmaster. "The old saying that "deeds are our ancestors.' " said Dr. Lorimer "holds good to-day. An English traveller in this country once remarked that he had been unable to find a gentleman. An American asked him what he con- sidered a gentleman. The Englishman replied that a gentleman was a person who had never done anything, whose father had never done anything, and whose forefathers had never done anything. •Well.' said the American, 'we have many such in this country, and it is not strange that you have not men them. We call them tramps' "Theodore Roosevelt," said Dr. Lorimer, "is an example of the achievements which young men can pain in this country. He represents all the attainments of character. Judgment and capabil- ities which by careful preparation and consrlcn- i tious self-training \u25a0 young man may reach." MARINE INTELLIGENCE. MINIATURE ALMANAC Bunrlte 4:SljSun*et 7:2o|Moon set* B:l3|Moon'a ago ]] HIGH WATER. A.M. Sandy Hook 6:oojGov. Island 5:321 Hell Gate 8:21 P.M. S«ii«y Hook C;3uiOov. Inland «.<>2|Hdl Gatoß;s4 LUNCHEON FOR CONGRESSMEN. The visiting Congress Conmtttee on Rivers and Harbors were the guests at a farewell luncheon at the Union League Club yesterday afternoon given by Congressman Joseph A Goulden, through whose influence, chiefly, the committee was induced to visit the city and see for themselves the work that is needed on the Harlem Sl.ip Canal and adjacent waters, for which Congress is expected to make an appropriation. JOHN B, FORD LEAVES ALL TO FAMILY. fFY TELEGRAPH TO THE MUMUM 1 Pittsburg. May 7 —The will of the late Captain John B Ford was filed for probate yesterday Mr. Ford was the founder of Ford City and was reputed to be wealthy. He was a great philan- thropist and in his life probably built as many churche= as any man ever did in this country. Consequent^ it"is said the value of the estate is not so large as was expected. Ihe entire estate is left to the members of his family. Edward Ford, a sen. was appointed executor. The annual reception and banquet of the Fort Edward Institute Alumni Association will be held at the St. Denis Hotel, Broadway and Eleventh-st.. th!s afternoon and evening, from 4 to U o'clock. NEW-YORK CITY. The lecture on "The Duty of the Community," which Robert Hunter, of the University Settlement, was to give in the assembly hall of the United Charities Building on May 11. has been indefinitely postponed PROMINENT ARRIVALS AT THE HOTELS. VLBEMaRLE— F. Harry Wyndham Walker, of London. CAMBRIDGE— Baron yon Hengelmtiller, Austro-Hungarian Minister to the United States. ENDICOTT—A. H. Crocker, of San Francisco. GlLSEY—Captain F. Graham, of England. GRAND —Captain Charles H Clark. U. S. A. MANHAT- Captain J. de Lottemiere, R. A., of India, and A. H. Sartoris. of Kittery. England. PARK Commissioner \u25a0 George W. Aldrich. of Rochester WALDORF—Seftor Antonio Laza Arri- aga Guatemalan Minister to the United States, and E. S. Cramp, of Philadelphia. WHAT IS GOING ON TODAY. Brooklyn Horse Show. Reception in honor of first anniversary of Actors' Home at the- home. West Brighton. Stat»n Island. 2 p. m Ninth annual reunion and dinner of Fort Edward Col- legiate Institute. St. Dents, evening. - Dinner for Anthony Fiala. leader, of the Zippier Arctic Expedition. Young Men's Christian Association Hall. Brooklyn.. evening , New-York Genealogical and Biographical Society, address r.v William Winter on ."Jo»enh Jefferson and Other Comedians." No. 226 West Fifty-eight 8 p. m. Address by .Tames D. Carr on "The Negro's Viewpoint of the Negro Question." Manhattan Liberal Club. No. 220 ' East Fifteenth-st.. BP. m. . > . . ' nosinr exercises of Pilgrim Congregations. Church In- dustrial School. One-hundred-and-twenty-nrst-st. and Madison-aye.. 8 p. m. ... Meeting Of New-York section Of American Chemical So- ciety. No. LOS West Fifty-ftfth-st..- 8:15 p. m. HOME NEWS. Among the Most Important of Modern Times, Dr. Soper Says. Ithaca. N V . May I.— Or. George Soper. repre- sentative of the State Board of Health, who has been assisting the local authorities in their ef- forts to stamp out the typhoid fever epidemic made public to-night a report addressed to the Common Council of Ithaca, which covers his investigations. Concerning the statistics of the epidemic. Dr. Soper says; "So far as can be said at present, there have been 955 cases and P4 deaths. This ranks the epi- demic among the most important In modern times in this part of the world." Twenty-nine of the deaths were of Cornell students. Homoeopathic Alumni Enjoy "Ma- rine Bacilli Magnifique." . Twenty-nine. men received degrees at the gradua- tion exercises of the New-York Homoeopathic Med- ical College and Hospital, \u25a0in ' Mendelssohn Hail yesterday. Dr. W. H. Kins, the dean of th* fac- ulty, delivered the address, in which he said that the figures from the report of the ' State Board of Regents showed that the graduates of this col- lege had the highest averages in the State. The degrees were conferred by Anson R. Flower.' presi- dent of the board of trustees. Dr. J. H. Demarest awarded the certificates of the Metropolitan Hos- pital. Dr. G. W. Roberts announced that twenty- one had desired and received hospital appoint- ments. The Rev. Dr. W. M. Smith, of the Central Presbyterian Church, addressed the class. Frank P. Eklngs won the first faculty prize, a microscope, and will go to Flower Hospital. Thomas D. Blair took the second prize, a micro- scope, and goes to the Metropolitan Hospital. The senior honors went to E. B. Cook, assigned to Rochester Hospital; O. Dv Bois Ingalls, Cumber- land Street Hospital. Brooklyn; E. W. Kellogg. Flower Hospital; G. W. Whitney, Hahnemann Hos- pital, and R. A. Benson, Flower HospitaL The Fiske, or junior, prize was won by L. R- Kauf- m The dinner of the New-York Homoeopathic Medi- cal College alumni in the ballroom at the Wal- dorf last evening was declared to be the largest ever given. More than four hundred aoctors, with their guests, were, at the tables, and women filled the galleries. The "diet list" included such deli- cacies as -Marine Bacilli Magnifique. ' otherwise clams; "Appendix Saute, Surgical Dressing- :•\u25a0 Sal- ad» a Coroner." or carves' brains; '-Alumni Vivace a la Entente Cordiale." alias lamb chops, and to wind up "Laryngitis Assorties" an the pleasing "Habitare au Bacterie." vJ'V-j Dr. E. H. Zinnell, the president, made a brief ad- dress of welcome, and Dr. H. Worthlngton Paige was the toastmaster. Dr. King, the dean, talked on medical education, and Dr. Hal Bell convinced all that woman was man's inspiration through life. The Rev. Dr. Savage talked about "M. Ds. ana D Ds. " Professor J. E. Woodbridge described the physician's opportunity, and Lemuel E. Quigg gave his" ideas about "Sinament and Ginger. Nutmegs and Cloves." The silent toast, standing, was to the memory of Drs. Helmuth. Talcott. Allen and Deschere. Basts of Dr. Helmuth were the s-ouve- Trie alumni association elected these officers; President. W. A. Dewey, of Ann Arbor, Mich.; vice-presidents, J. C. Fahnestock, of Piqua. Ohio; Luke Corcoran, of Springfield, Mass.: C. E. Lane, of Poughkeepsie. N. V.; treasurer. W. G. Crump; recording secretary. A. W. Palmer; corresponding secretary, W. S. Mills; neurologist, F. C. Bunn; alumni trustee. W. L. M. Fiske, of Brooklyn; di- rectors C. E. Howard, J. P. Seward. I. Townsend. W. B. Winchell, G. De W. Haslett and William Tod Helmuth. ITHACA"S TYPHOID EPIDEMIC. TWEXTY-XINE SEW M. D.S. J|p pLINT*S pNEfUBNTTURE NEW- YORK DAILY TRIBUNE. FRIDAY, MAY & MM- SCHOOLS BEHIND TIME. 14 WOBK OS THEM STOPPED. Next TRIBUNE Sunday's SPECIAL NOTICE. No connection with any other house in this Sine of business Theodore B. . Starr Diamond Merchant, Jeweler and Silversmith, MADISON SQUARE WEST Between 25th and 26th Stre«t».. Established 1862. . . . . . 1C y«ar« on John St. «\u25a0 Starr * Marcus. 25 years as above. Wedding Gifts Will be right in line with .i varied assortment of in- teresting features. See below. A BIG TERRACE \ OF GREAT SPLENDOR is planned. for th* residents or Columbia Heights, from which they may have an •unobstructed vie of the Harbor and Bay of New-York. Description and pictures. FOR ARTISTIC BEDROOMS. GREEN OAK FURNITURE. :i-nc. *nJte« 8-4T.00 Chiffonier* 23.00 Wardrobe* 21.00 Toilet Table* I.V«*» Chairs, Rogers, Tables. Somnoles and Cos- turners to match. \u25a0 - A new finish in soft green, designed in grace- ful curved lines. French bevel mirrors, brass drawer pulls, etc Artistic Summer Rugs and Draperies to com- plete the color scheme. Correct furniture for every room at factory prices, when you "BUY OF THE MAKER? Geo. C.Flint Co. 43. 45 and 47 WEST 23?ST. NEAR BROADWAY. CARRIAGE E.VTRAXCE. 2S WEST 24TH ST. Factories: 505 to 515 West 32d St. SPECIAL MENTION.

Upload: others

Post on 28-Sep-2020

2 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: IMarching OnI op**The conservative city is not sure that Itwants to commemorate the Ignoble er-rors of Its fathers in Just this way. Photograph of the statue. Amusements. FEXWAY COURT

Afloat-—a heavy, rough cheviotulster, the belt-back tourist style; $25to $32;; Ashore—a light. weight, rainproof

cravenette, the belt-back tourist style;to $29.

Wherever*

you travel — steamertrunks, suit cases, travelling rugs.

\u25a0 Rogers. Peet & Company.

258 Broadway, opposite CityHall.

SUfimSfc -"vat1260 Brcadw»v. cor. 32d. • . ,; and 04 West 33d St. _I__ -

mAdvertlaem*nta firfniltteil Into these col-

nlnaf are rffommenilfil to the readers of

The Tribune an thorooshly reliable, andImalneaa can be done by mill frith the

advertisers trlth perfect safety.

—that Is. th» Harvard faculty 4o not. as

they removed from the students* roomsall signs, whether stolen or otherwise.

Story on what the "Old Grads" In th«university clubs think of this action ofthe faculty, with excellent photographsof rooms of Harvard students before theywere denuded of siam?

THE! DON7BELIEVEIS SIGXS

op**MB BROADWAY.USS BROADWAY.

T23 SIXTH AVEsl's,

"THE TIGER ORNO STATUE."

Salem. Mas3.. Is torn by conflictingopinion* over the acceptance of a statueto the heroism of Quakerism -which aNew-Yorker wishes, to present. It showstwo Quakers stfUMltog -with a tiger.The conservative city is not sure thatItwants to commemorate the Ignoble er-rors of Its fathers in Just this way.Photograph of the statue.

Amusements. FEXWAY COURT.the most exclusive

'publtc"' maseum !n

the world, owned by Mrs. "Jack" Gard-ner, of Boston. Account of the treasures

which she has gathered, with speciallyIsJbbi photographs of the interior.

\u2666 \u2666«»\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666> » » t M» MMMM \u2666»\u2666 \u2666 \u2666\u2666»»

I"Marching On"II JANUARY, 17%. II FEBRUARY, 20%. t.X March,- 22%. XX- April, 29%. iX: The above percentages represent +

X the gains in sales of the £|| Daily and Sunday ;

5 TRIBUNE,!\u2666 \u25a0 in the respective months of %X- 1903 as compared with 1902. X\u2666

X "Fallin and join the procession." +TJ ". .; ... A i » iAA LiiiLill.Ll.l.i.i.i.i.i.Xl. MEXICO FROM A

CAR WINDOW.Breezy account of a Yorker's trip

through Mexico in his private car. andwhat he saw from Its windows. Photo-graphs.

Designer and Manufacturerof ORNAMENTAL

ANDIRONS,

FIRE SETS,FENDERS, Etc.

Repairing and Polishing

a Sp«ciairy.

FRANK H. GRAF.322 SEVENTH AYE.

TRAITS IX IMMIGRANTS.Interviews with immigrant officials" as

to the desirable and undesirable traitswhich the immigrants now pouring lnhere so fast show, when considered aamaterial for good American citizens.

The TribuneUptown Office

is now located at

1,364 BroadwayBetween 36th and 37th St*.

public School No. 105. Mott and Elizabeth-sts.—To be completed March 1. 1904. "Work stoppedowing to :h» cart drivers' and excavators strikeMay 3.

Public School No 110." Eroome and Cannor-»ts—

To be completed April 14. 1904. Work stopped be-cause of strike of cart drivers. and excavators.

Public School No. 1S«. Manhattan. East Houston.Lewis and East Third-sts.— Largest elementaryi-chool building in the world, to be completed in

July. 1903. a:' work stopped. Carpenters on strikeApril31; laborers. April 2? •

\u25a0

Public School No. ISO. Eighty-second-st.. betweenFirst and Second-ayes

—To be completed October

IS 1903. Carpenters out April2? All work stoppedowing to cart drivers* strike.

High School of Commerce, Sixty-fifth and Sixty-

Eixth sts.. west of Broadway; building nearly com-pleted; carpenters on strike.

Morris High School, One-hundred-and-sixty-sixth-Ft.. Boston Road and Jackson -aye . The Bronx:plumbers out April 3, thermostat men. April 13.carpenters. April17; plasterers' laborers and ex-cavators. May i.

Public School No. 14S. Havemeyer-st,, betweenNorth Sixth and Seventh sts.. Brooklyn, to becompleted January 1. 13M; laborers out on strike.May L

Public School No. 145. Central-aye. and Ncll-st..Brooklyn; to be completed November L190S; labor-ers' strike on work and excavations. May 4.

Public School No. 145. One-hundred-and-sixty-fifth-st.. Tinton and Union ayes..' The Bronx: to

be completed September 1. 1903; truckmen en strikeMay 1. and all mechanics have had to stop forwart of materials.

Reports have not a* yet come In for balance ofschools in Brooklyn. Queens and Richmond, but itIs expected the same, condition of affairs prevails.

Public School- No. SI: Monroe and Gouverneur-

-T--> be finish*d December. 1903. Carpenters outor. strike AprilS:

Public School No. F9. One-hundred-and-thlrty-

fifth-st. and L*r,cri--av«;—

be finished July. ISMS.Carpenters out on strike April 11. tar roofers April( Work stopped owing to lack of material, through

\u25batrike of truckmen May 4

Strikes Are Blocking Solving of(% • Crowding Problem.-Strikes of various trade unions, together with

the shutdown of the yaros of buildingmaterialdealers, as tol3 in The Tribune > cstenlay. are^ erl-

w»ly• liter*| work or. public school ,buildings

throughout the city. On various!school buildings

Jr. th.- course of erection, a list of which was given

to * Tribune reporter yesterday at the buildir.jr

department of the Board of Education, petty

strikes have stopped wori entirely. Now that the

buildingmaterial dealers have closed their yards

on account of demands of team drivers and truck-

men. M seems impossible to finish the new build-

Ings on contract time. ... ,\,; >>At the Board of Education it -was said that many

or the strike? -which had delayed • the work werenot due to the -»a^e question, but to splittinghairson minor points, and also to disputes between

unions. Several examples were given.

-In one instance.' the steamAttens''union put in

some pipes which the plumbers' union declaredthey should have done— a strike. Another

<-\u25a0** The electrical contractor on one of the build-ings sublet a contract to a non-union shop to hang:

EDine fixtures. This firm agreed to employ only

\u25a0Ssa men and pay the prevailing scale, and. al-though the fixtures were not to be hung for three

momhs. the result was a. strike. Here is a. report

on school buildings under date of May 6:

Public School No. 24.. Manhattan. One-hundred-Stilt Isjssilj Silllli and Third To be com-pleted September. 1903. All work ceased because oftruckmen poisg out on strike May.2. Impossible

to get buildingmaterials. .

f-v AIV»« Broadway and 3**h St. \u25a0

U/*.!-*IO Ev«.. S:ls. Mat. Wed. 4 Sat.. 2 13.

CECIL SPOONER mMY LADY PEGGY GOES TO TOW.V.

1/riTU'O B'wiy IBEST SHOW IX TOWS.KrlIHS and 30—Great A-;-3'

\u25a0*»\u25a0\u25a0 111 W lu'.h St IPRICES XSm. and sOc.

AMJPI<&£ RESURRECTIONTED MARKS' BIG CONCERT SUNDAY NIGHT. ,

MAICCTIP GRAND CIRCLE. B'way & 39th St.ITIMJCO IIV Eve. at S. Mats, Wed.-& Sat. at i

WIZARD OF OZIEB?EB?:t SiWITH AIONTGOiiERY & STO.Vt. ISeats I^.QUPRDPTfIR'^ COMEDY 4 VAUD. SHOWS. 25c . 50c. '\u25a0rnUUlUn O EveryAft. 4 Eve. Res. 7.V Bx St». $1. '.OQrd Bitr All-Star Cth The Man From

Vaudeville. «ay. Mexico. Vande.COth • The 1OK".MIXEDPICKLES.wOst. Fatal Wedding.

'J st Bijc Vaudeville.

TXX \u25a0» -/tt *tr» Broadway and 33d Street. Ers. (

itlanntUlUU *m Mats. Wed. & Sat.. 2:15.

The Earl of PawtucketMatinee May 12. ELSIE T^E3LJE. Seats now ••:!!.-.?.

ORNAMENTALSURGERY FOR DOGS.

Methods by which veterinary surgeonsalter the shades of dogs' noses, makestraight tails curly, wrinkle th<» facesof bulldogs, etc Illustxared-CRITERION' THEATRE. B way and 44th «t-

Last S Evgs. S:3O. Mats. TTed & Sat.. 2:WCHARLES HAWTREY,

SUPPLY GETTIXG SHORT.

GARRICK THEATRE. 35th «t.. near B war.

SKIPPER & CO.. WALL STREET

THE BACH FESTIVALAT BETHLEHEM. PEXX.

Portraits of the trombone choir of the

eld Moravian church In which the fes-tival will be held next week; a'.3O pho-togTaphs of some of the si.

-an account of their ancient function by

H E. X

NEW SAVOY THEATRE. 34th st. 4 B »iy.Evgs . s:ls. Mat:n»es WM 4 Saturday 2:15

EZRA KENDALL TH YEiGAR

GARDEN THEATRE. 27th »t. 4 Mad.son tv*.Last S Evgs.. S:.W Mats. W<"l 4 Sat. at 230THE ISTH CEXTt'RT r\/CDVUA Xl

MORALITYPLAT. t-VtrVYIvIAINMADISO.V SQ. THEATRE. 24th 9t.. near way.

Evrs. S:3O Matinees Thursday & Saturday. 30.Geo. H. Broadhurst'a A Fflfll AND MfIMPYGreatest Comedy A rUUL HIS UVitI

THE FAMOUSOLD JUMEL MANSWN.

Efforts are being made by several so-cieties to have the citypreserve this his-toric place, famous as "Washington's

headquarters. Description, \u25a0with photo-graphs of th» mansion.HERALD SQU

—1&> W«ek».

M

*'nenHL-U THEA. Ev*s. fi:10. Mat*. Wt* * S»t.

GRACE GEORGE in PRETTY PEGGYKnickerbocker Theatre. B'wny «£ 3Sth St.Last 2 weeks. At 8 sharp. Matlneei W«d. * Sit at 2.

SKtfSSKS&MR. BLUE BEARDWALLACK'S. Evgs.. 9:15. Mats. Wei 4 Sat . 215

GEORGE ADE'S WITTY MUSICAL SUCCESS.

ISultanCIRCLE ££\u25a0* *;£

THE GREAT GOLDIX A CO..WILFRID CLARK & CO. JULIUSTANNEN and OTHER BIG ACTS.

MIiDDIV HILLTHEA. 1>X. Aye. ft 4?d StMiiHHfll MATI>EE EVERY DAY. 35c.IHUIIIIMI OTHELLO. .HARLEM '[ Evgrs.. 8:15. Matinee Saturday "-IS.HofsK. IJoseph Jefferson .^STrISJ. 1:•

CASINONext Monday ITHLRUNAWAYSI

Princess. B"way&2!»th. Evgs. 8:30. Mats Thur« *-SatCHAS. E. EVANS. THERE &BACKCHAS. H. HOPPER.

*I*r«»l\IL»Ot OAth

BROADWAY TEH,?ATRflats

41»|Fj*iHenry W. Savage Presents the New Musical Comedy

"'

PRINCE OF PILSENfXTX^CT1 JEjAMJLM In "THE CRISIS.""\u25a0IJJX JCLllllJJtin ..THE CKISIS."

ACADEMY**VMUSIC. 14th St. *IrvingPI.

S.ITHE SUBURBANPrices. 25. 50. 75. ICO. Mats. W><i. & Sat.. 2 Eve . 8:13.week FRANK DANIELS £&£&:

SECRETARY OFWAR ROOThas recently been adding mor<*ifarm landto his picturesque paternal estate onCollege Hill. Clinton. N. V.. where hewas born. Description .and photographsof.the place. \u25a0 .

ART OBJECTS FOR THEMETROPOLITAN MUSEUM.

Photographs of the first ones pur-chased by the trustees of the Metropoli-

tan MuSeum of Art with funds drawn». c ,-,. t.h« \u2666•yooruV'.o henuest of JacobRoarers, of Paterson. N. J.

TO HARNESSVICTORIA FALLS.

The latest project of science to pro-cure electric power is to harness themighty cataract of the Zambesi River,

In Africa. Description and photographs.

THE PASSIXG OF THEBEGGARS OF XFJVYORK.

Picturesque mendicancy has been prac-tically eradicated by th« efforts of theCharity Organization Society. Accountof many sstftifttosj del \u25a0 worldof beggars.

PIAXO MANUFACTURERS.Their national association -will soon

hold a convention in Buffalo. Descrip-tion, with hoto?raph3 of the 'chief offi-cers.

BIJOU Bwa LAST 3 WEEKS.?vus:». 20th*

MARIE CAHILLMat. Sat y. 2:13. in >A\fY BROWS.

VICTORIA. 42 St 111 ADCIITIf\DAVIDBELASCO ffAfirltLU

in -THE AH TIOVKFR \u25a0

BILLY WHISKERS; THE AUTO-BIOGRAPHY OF A GOAT.

A Jolly story for feegr* ani sttr-riinnins

BOTSCO IHEATRE ' #SffiTtT^t^DAVIDBELASCO rrescnt» THE OAIU.INGULA.NCHt: BATES li» OF.THE GODS.

xew raws of \etv-york

The city rh - 1 fmm -» spotnever attainable before. A rnv-the oldest inhaOitanr of Oothaan additional sight ofitors to the metroDoHs

MEN WHO WANT TO WORK SCARED OFF

A statement was issued yesterday by SecretaryCrarv • of the Lumber Dealers* Association. Inwhich he raid that the only five yards which hadnot closed down were either owned or controlledby McPaine. president of the Yellow Pine Company.

"Some st the papers are saying that the lumberdealers ha^\u25a0» threatened that they will not sell to

employers of union labor." said the statement."This is a mistake. No such threats have beenmade, ar.d no such action is contemplated. Ourposition is that we will control our. own businessand protect our own employes from domination by

an Irresponsible oligarchy of labor leaders knownas the United Board of BuildingTrades.

"

Later a labor committee was organized repre-senting the lumber dealers, which gave out the fol-lowing statement in the evening:

The last of the lumber yards to close in Man-hattan and The Bronx has closed. We are not pre-pared to say what it i«. We will keep closed untilthe team drivers and the buildingmaterial driverswithdraw their demand that we employ only uniondrivers. The building material dealer*, -we under-stand, have made a similar decision.

Chairman Davis of the. press committee, whohas a lumber yard in Brooklyn, said that theBrooklyn dealers were delivering lumber in Brook-lyn, but would not deliver any in Manhattan andThe Bronx while the trouble lasted.

The lumber and building material dealers say

they have no objection to the wages demanded.One buildingmaterial dealer said:- Ifv:e- granted the demand for recognition of ..heunion it would put us completely at the mercy ofthe Board of Building Trades. Every time that\u2666here would be any trouble with a contractor aboutany grievance they would go to the lumber ortuilding material dealer who supplied him andthreaten a strike unless we refused to supply him.This would keep us in hot water all the time. Wecould not afford to put ourselves in such a position.

Ex-Judge McConnell. of the George A FullerCompany, said that undoubtedly the shutdown intie yards would stop all building unless it wascoon ended. As the city did not allow the con-tractors Is keep a large supply of building ma-terials or lumber on hand, it would not be longbefore \u25a0II buiidir.g -was stopped.

Business Agent Rogan of the Building MaterialDrivers' Union said that the union had openednegotiations with the Truck Owners' Associationto get its member* to sign an agreement. If they•Sid so. he said, material could be brought fromoutside ports and building would go on. In sucha ca*«? the shutdown would soon be broken.;A prominent master -carpenter said yesterdaythat be tried without euccess to get lumber from a

.member of the association This member, he j>ald,told him that he would have to pay a forfeit ifhe

'fcuripUed lumber.•

Lumber and Building'Material Men

Firm About Lockout."Th» member? of the BuildingMaterial Dealers'

Association asd the Lumber Dealers' Association

met all day yesterday at No. IS Broadway. Themeetings were separate, but both organizations

reluse to be dominated by unions and intend to

t>tar>d by the non-union men. The brick manufact-urers' association is in favor of-adopting the samepolicy- While it Is denied that there is concerted'action, each organization knows exactly •what theothers are doing, and there Is a general inter-change of ideas.

IRVIXG PLACE THEATRE. Farewell Perform-ances of the F-rvr.czy Oper«-ua C-i.. with >lIV WER-BER. Everj- Eve? . Mat ?at , "DIE GEISHA."

FIGHTING FOREST FIRES.How the fishting of forest fires in the

Catskills and Adirondacks has b#en re-duced almost to a science. TCitft rho-tographs.

AMERICAN ART GALLERIES.MADISON SQUARE. SOrTH.

WILL CONTINUE UNTILMAY 9TH.AMERICAN ) THIRTY-SIXTH

WATER COLOR > ANNUAL.SOCIETY. ? EXHIBITIONWe«lc Days 9 to 6, SUNDAY 2 to 6

r-nCM WORM! IX WAX. »w Groups.EDEN CIX MATOGR AH.H.\u25a0If EE. Wonderful Electric Theatre. Aft..* Eve

RULERS OX THEIR TRAVELS.Political advantages derived by nx-

tions from the personal intercourseamon? their rulers demonstrated by Ex-Attache in connection with PresidentLoubet's forthcoming visit to England.

14th St. Theatre, near «th aye Mats. Wed. A Sattuc yw i*nuAye in Thoir best nay.THfc OUnArloßi >.\i\f. FOR OFFICE.PASTOR'S. 14th *t. n>»r 31 av<s

CONTINI'OT-3 2i"> & :V> CTS ADONIS TRIO, TOBINSISTERS. nSKS & M~DONOfGH. PANTZER TRIO

SAY ENGINEERS ARE WEAKENING

New Haven Railroad Appeals to Sheriff forProtection.

."Bridgeport. Conn.. May 7 —On account of thestrike Of trackmen here and efforts made byrtrikers from the Harlem River to induce track-men in neighboring places to quit work, the ,\>w-

York. New-Haven and Hartford Railroad officialshave Mkfed Sheriff Hawley to protect men who de-tire tv* work. In Stratford to-day the trackmenwho quit work yesterday after a clash with some

'cf the Harlem River men, are still out. 'When ap-jroacbed cy the section boss to-day they declared

-ifcat they were afraid to work, in spite of the factthat deputy sheriffs agreed to protect them.

The Turf.

MORRIS PARK RACES... .WESTCH ESTER. V Y. -V.SECOND DAY,FRIDAY, MAY STII.

The St. .Nicholas Hurdle Race, the l.nrch-mont, for thrt-e-) «-nr-ol<]«, addtour other races.

MUSIC BY LANDER.Take 2<l Aye. "L. to Willis Aye.. thence by Special Trains

direct to Morris Park.FIRST RACE. 2:30 V M FIELD. CO CENTS.

ALL THIS AND MUCHMORI IN THF

SUNDAYTRIBUNL

Literary Review*. Sports of Saturdayand the Week. Matters of Special Inter-

e*t to Women, Entertaining Miscellany

from The Tribune's Foreign and Amer-ican Contemporaries, a Page of Humor.Special Correspondence from Londonand Paris, the News of the World.

Fifteen Reported to Have Returned to Work—Kolb Still Missing.

.» The independent tugboat urners stated yesterdaytfcat the marine engineers on strike were beginningto back down. Fifteen members of the Marine En-gin**-rs Association, employed by the Montauk

.Steamboat Company, returned to work yesterday"at $-i a week Increase of salary, but on the time

• schedule in force before they quit.,The whereabouts of George A Kolb. business

-manager of the Marine Kn#lneers' Benevolent As-sociation, who has been a prominent figure in therecent controversy between the Marine Engineers;ard the tugboat owners, are still unknown.

"

TO-MORROW

Order it of your \cvs>dealer orsend in your Subscription.

MM>.ll THIIIIM-:. <.ii» %f»r. #'- •*«

months. *tiihrrt- nion<bi, s«»c.

BROOKLYN BUILDERS ORGANIZE.Members of a!! the building trades in Brooklyn

organized the Brooklyn.Builders' Protective Asso-

ciation last riight. The organization's purpose isto resist the demands of laborers and mechanics

"for more p*y A determination was shown to

make a vigorous stand. Among those who took an-etfvs. par: In .the meeting were John McNameo,

•Isaac Harris, P. J. Murray and W. V. CranXord.

Seats were ordered from places as far away asBoston for Mr. Belasco's matinee of "The Darling:of th« God»" j-eiterdajTj, >j

William Lorraine has purchased two plays whichhf will produce this summer in London. One ofthem. "The Troubadour," by H. B. Hamilton, tin•will bring to this country in the fall, so he says,to star in .

At th« West Nffw-York ball grounds this after-noon. Frank Moulan will appear in a new part,

that of shortstop on the "Sultan of Suiu' bajl

nine. The "Sultan" company will play the "Pilsen'company, and Raymond Hitchcock win be th.-

umpire, with the choruses of "The Prince of Pil-sen." "The Sultan of Sulu" and "King Dodo" onthe bleacher*, to turn down their thumbs.

This afternoon at the Actors' Home, on StatenIsland, a reception will be held to commemorato

the flr*t anniversary of th" dedication. All whomay be interested in the home are invited to bapresent.

Miss Blanche Walsh's rress agent has evidentlyhad his passion aroused "up State." wh»re 'Resur-rection

"ifnow being presented, for the announce-

ment comes from Rochester that Miss Walsh haspurchased <m estate n»ar Lebanon. Penr. . whereshe will found a home for the children of impecu-nious actors <»ThT children wtil be admitted :fthere is any room left.

Mjss GaHand wiil star next season, it is madepublic, in a dramatization of -Dorothy Vernon ofHaddon Hall

"Paul Kester wil! make the drama-

tization Mr Kester seem? to have work enoughfor a Fitch on hand at prf-.^nt. Miss Galland'sJeadirsg man wi!' be William Lewers.

An anr.our.eemert of tremendous impo^tanco "w-ssmade at the Manhattan Theatre yesterday. MissJane Field, who plays a part in "The Earl ofFawtu'-ket." is goin^ to get married. Think of it'She has been on the stage hardly a year, but shewillbe married, so fhe savj, immediately and re-tire to private life. L p. Rider, of the firm ofWhite. Ride &Frost, lumber merchants at No. 39Cort!andt-st .. is to be her husband. He owns anautomobile, which he brought to the stage doorafter the matinee Wednesday, taking Miss Fieldaboard When he brought her back for the even-ins performance she wore a diamond on her flng»rthat had been ringless before. Thus tire automo-r.iie '.laims another victim!

Daniel Frohman Announces Miss LoftusWill Star After Next Season.

Daniel Frohman yesterday announced that hehad made a three year contract to star Miss CeceliaLoftu!«. beginning season after next. He announceddefinitely also that she will appear as Mr. Sothern'sleading wornm next season, thus setting at rest

the various stories to the contrary. The first playin which Miss Loftus will appear as a star will bea comedy written fcr her by Mr. Sothern. It will,Mr. Frohman says, jrive her an opportunity to in-troduce some of her own songs and her imitationsof famous actresses. J. Hartley Manners andJustin Htmtty McCarthy, her former husband, willalso be commissioned to write plays for her useHer first engagement will V- at the new LyceumTheatre In the early fall of 1304.

NOTES OF THE STAGE.

Fourteen Stories High—

To Replace the OldA. T. Stewart Building.

'BY TELE'iRAPH TO THE TRIBUNE. 1Philadelphia. May ?.—Estimates have been invited

from Philadelphia builders for the new store to beerected by John Wanamakpr on the site of the eldA T Stewart building, in New-York City. It willb^ of fireproof construction, fourteen stories high,\u25a0with basement and sub-basement, and will havefrc-nts of stone and terra cotta. The Fourth -aye.

frontage will be IST feet Minches, that in Broadway

U8 Beet IK in^h^s. that in East Ninth-st. 327 feet7% inches, and that in East Eighth-st. 339 Gee* 4-^inches. There willbe a grand court in the centre.The cost will probably be between 13,000.000 andK,«m,00».

Joseph Singleton, a Chinese merchant of thiscity, has on behalf of the Chinese colony offeredto arrange a benefit performance for the Kishineffsufferers at the rhinese Theatre, No. 7 Doyers-st ,or. Monday evening. Congressman Goldfogle willdeliver an "address at the theatre. This is the firsttime the Chinese have expressed sympathy for theJews, and their offer nas amused great interest onthe East Side.

The Zienteti have arranged a house to house col-lection for next Sunday, and are proving fairly

successful in their endeavors to enlist the sym-pathy of Jewish merchants in th<=> form of a ciftof 2 p*r Gent of the gro?? receipt? next Monday.

WANAMAKERS NEW, STORE.

Performance To Be Given at Doyers-st.Theatre for Kishineff Victims.

Collections in aid of the victims of the Kishineffmassacres have, it is said, been taken up in everycity in th« United States. The reports received by

the central committee show that already QMMhas been collected, of which HMO has been cabledto Kishineff from this city. Chicago, Philadelphia,Pittsburg and Scranton. In this city the collec-tions have taken several shapes. Benefit perform-

ances are being given at the Jewish theatres. TheWindsor is devoting one-r.alf of the proceeds offive performances, beginning Friday evening, to

the fund A special play has been written for thisoccasion called 'The Destruction of Ki?hineff." at

the opening performance of which Mayor Low isto be present.

CHINESE TO AID JEWISH SUFFERERS.

Prisoner Held for Wire Tapping Swindle

Recognized by Victim.When Central Office detectives arraigned eight

men at the Jefferson Market court yesterday onthe charge of wire tappinsr. one of tLem wassingled our for th> additional charge of highwayrobbery He. esve his name as Benjamin Baldwin.The complainant against him was Ralph H. Reid,

a plumber, of No. 171 W««t Seventy-Mghth-st.,

who declared he had lost about $2.<*io by becoming

interested in the wire tapping game to beat pool-

roomsReid said his bookkeeper. Frank Lower?, bor-

rowed money ar.d lost It in the game, and thentook him to meet some of the wire tappprs at asaloon in Broadway, near Thirty-fo^rth-st.. lastSaturday. Baldwin sat at a table in the place. Aman who was called Wellington went to a tele-phone and answered a call. Then he said Locketwould win the fourth race at Jamaica He askedBaldwin to take a bet of $7fl> on Locket, andasked Reid to put up the money. When Reid re-fused to make the bet. Baldwin said he didn't be-lieve Reid could ••flash a dollar bill

"This made

Reid indignant, he drew out a roli containing$730 Wellineton grabbed, the money and ran fromthe place, whiie BaJdwin held Reid. When Reidgot Into Broadway. Wellington had disappeared,and when he returned to the saloon Baldwin hadvanished.

The Clergyman Says J. M. BrittonGot. Offer from a Captain.

Attempts were trade to bribe. Joseph M. Britton.superintendent of the New-York Society for trie

Enforcement: of Criminal Law. into letting up in

the crusade against Brooklyn pollc« captains tor

permitting gambling to'flourish. according to trie

Rev. Dr. Cortland Myers, pastor of the Baptist

Temple, head of the executive committee of trie

organization, who has been denouncing the police

from his pulpit for several Sundays.

According to Dr. Myers, a representative of a.

certain captain in Brooklyn called on Mr. Britton

and said: ."Say. the captain told me to ask, you what it

would be. worth to call off this crusade.""Think of police captains having the boldness

to send money to the very person who was bentupon proving their unrltness for duty, and asK

that the matter be dropped for a price! said Dr.Myeis. "This incident shows the appalling condi-tion of a department which is supposed to punishlawbreakers, but i*itself so full of evil- that it is

an aid, rather than a hindrance, to crime. Thatthere Is bribery M as sure as that there is crime

Superintendent Britton. after saying that he wassorry Dr. Mvers had spoken about the attemptedbribery, because he had hoped to land the captainInterested, gave this version of It:"Ithink it- was Tuesday when a man came into

this office and said: 'I see you are raising hewith the police captains in Brooklyn. Don t joj

think it poor policy to get after police officials inthis wav He gave me what he said was his name,but he "lied. Ithink Iknow who he is.. however.He gave me clearly to understand that he was sentby a captain but Ihave no proof that he wastelling the truth. IfIhad been allowed to workthis thing up Ibelieve Iwould have caught thecaptain. Of course, he willnot come near us now.

ACCUSED OF HIGHWAY ROBBERY. TOO.

BFIBEFY TRIED— MYERS.

Port Natal. May 7—Arrive.! (previously), steamer QueenLouise (Brt, Heno. New-York via St Vincent, C v.

Table Bt| May «—S»ll»d. steamer Corfe Castle (Br).'

Marshall. New-York.Singapore. May 7—Sailed, steamer Indramayo (Dr). Price.

New-York.Montevideo Ma.

— Arrived, steamer Ca»lWa (Br). Smith.New-York tor rtuenos Ayrea and Rosario.

Para. miv 6—

Arrived, uteanvr Punstan (Rr). D<-an.New-York.

South AfrlCJll Port. May 7— Arrived iprevloual>). steam- ,er lxmiae Rf.th il!r«. Thompson. New- York for Auck- ,lan-:, etc

Si Thomas. May 7—Sailed, uteain.-r Fontabelle <Rr>. Mann(from Barbados. «tc). N.« York.

Barbador, May s—Sailed, steamer Merchant Prince tßr>.Coull (from Santos, etc). New-York.

Bermuda. Ma 7—Sailed, steamer Pretoria (Br), Mo- ji.-.--v. Naw-York. .•

. THE MOVEMENTS OF STEAMERS.V •. , FOREIGN PORTS.

Cuxhaven, May •'»—Sailed, steamer Mannheim (Ger)Ock«?!mann. N«w-York.-

Brow Head, •.May 7, «2»* a m—

Passed, steamers Celtic(Br>. Lindsay. New-York for Liverpool; 9-25 a mAurania (Br). Potter, New-York for Liverpool.Queenstown. May 7. '12:24 t> mm

—hailed, steamer Ger-

manic (Br). Smith (from Liverpool), New-York*11:44 a m. arrived,.steamer Celtic (Br), Lindsay'New-York for Liverpool (and proceeded); 12:43 p m"Auranla (Brt, Potter. New-York for Liverpool (andproceeded).

St Michaels. May 7—Passed. »tearr.»r Prlnze»« Irene (Ger)Dannemann. Genoa. Naples and Gibraltar for New-

Southampton. May I—Arrived, steamer St Paul. Jamison.New-York (passed Hurst Castle ft:o6 a mi.

London. May 7— Arrived, steamer Manltou (Br). Cannons.Hull". May »'•- Palled, steamer Hindoo (Br), Clark. New-

York \u25a0

Shieldsk

May «—Sall«d. steamer Dlamant (Ger). Lotz«»from Rotterdam!. New-York.

Bremen. Ma] 5— Silled. steamer- Chemnitz (Ger). Jnnt-zen. New-York.

'\u25a0

\u0084 \u0084

Lisbon. May C—Arrived, steamer Alseria ißr), George.New Tort

Gibraltar May 4. 5 p m—Sailed, steamer Prtnzegs Jr»nec<;.ri. Panneinann (from Geona and Naples). New-y,ij-^

Genoa May—

Sailed, steamer Gera (Ger). Hewers. New-York via Naples and Palermo.

Naples. May «— Sailed, steamer He»p«rla ißr). Bake,. XiT-XuST'.:- :^V:;

Steamers Deutsch'.and fGer). for Hamburg, via Ply-mouth and Cherbourg, Phoenicia (Gex), for Naples andGenoa. Jamestown, for Norfolk and Newport News; ElRio, for Galveston; Mlnnewaska. for San Francisco SanDiego, Seattle, etc; United States revenue cutter Greshamland returned); Trinidad ißn. for Bermuda; La SavolsiFr>. for Havre; Ullc-r tNon. for St Kttts. Barbados andDemerara. Havana, for Havana and Mexican ports Cttyof Washington, tor Guant<inam->. eu. Nacoorhee forSavannah; Romsdal (Nor), for Norfolk. Sahine ili:i forCape. Town, iia St Vlnc»nt. C V. BluefieMit for Ralti-moje. Benefactor, for Philadelphia.

Steamer Exeter City (Br». King. Bristol April 20 andSwansea 22, to James ArkeU A. Co. with mdse. Arrivedat the Bar at 9 a m.

\u0084.-,„

Steamer Consuelo <Br). Watson. Hull April 24. toSanderson A Son. with mdse. Arrived at the Bar at noon.

Steamer Graf Waldersee (Gar), Kopff. Hamburg April25 Boulogne 26 and Plymouth 27. to the Hamburg-Ameri-can Line with 253 cabin and 2.401 steerage passengers,

mails and mdse. Arrived at the Bar at 0:45 a m.Steamer Aler.e (Ger). Brambeer. vanilla April 11.

Cartagena 13 Greytown 24 and Port I.imon 27. to 'heHamburg-American Line, with 36 passengers, mails andmd»e Arrived at the Bar at 9:2U a m.

Steamer Bolivia (Ger). Wintzer, Cape Hayti April 18.Port de Paix 20, Port-au-Prince and Petit Goave 22.Mlragoav- and Jeremle 23. Kingston 25. Savanilla 2.'>.Port-au-Prince May 1 and Inagua 2. to the Hamburg-American Line, with 8 passengers, mails and mdse. Ar-rived at the Bar at 4 12 p m

Steamer Kong Frode (Nor). Netlsen. Kingston April 25,Port- Maria 29 and Port Antonio 30. to the United FruitCo with fruit. Arrived at the Bar at 6:30 a m.

Steamer Urd (Nor). Hansen, Clenfuegos April 29. to \VD Munson, withsugar. Arrived at the Bar at noon.

Steamer J M Guffey. Weilman, Port Arthur, Tex. April30 to the J M Guffey Petroleum Co. with oil.

Steamer El Paso. Patten. New-Orleans May 3, to theSouthern Pacific Co. withmdse.

Steamer Arapahoe. Kemble. Jacksonville May 3 andCharleston 6, to William P Clyde & Co. with passengersand mdse.

'Steamer Neckar (Ger). Harrassowitz. Baltimore May 6.

to Oelrichs & Co. with 34 cabin and 4») steerage pas-sengers and mdse in transit.

Steamer Hamilton. Boaz, Newport News and Norfolk,to the Old Dominion Ss Co. with passengers and mdse.

United States-

supply ship Culgoa, Doyle. HamptonRoads. May 6.

Steamer Old Dominion, Burton, Boston, to the, Joy SsCo, with mdse.

Steamer Hector, Ksene. Boston, in ballast to F BDalzell. Is bound to Perth Amboy.

Sandy Hook. N .1. May 7. 9:30 p m—Wind .north, mod-erate, hazy

Steamer Korona (Br). William, Guadeloupe April 15Martinique 17. Barbados 21, Demerara 28, St Kitts 30 StMartins and St Croix May 1and St Thomas 2 to A EOuterbrldge 4 Co. with 53 passengers and mdse. Arrivedat the Bar at 5:30 p m.

Steamer Chattahoochee. Lewis, Boston, to the Ocean SsCo, with mdse. 'SAILED.

Port of New-York, Thursday, May 7, 1903.ARRIVED.

INCOMING STEAMERS.TO-DAT.

Ve««el From. Line.TV,rs

"Glasgow. April20

-: •

Vincenzo Bonanno. .. .Gibraltar. April 22 ZZHRegina Elena ::.:::.Gibraltar. 8$2:::::::::::.Minnesota, Swansea April 24Manuel Calvo Nap.es. April 23 «-.«-,-•AHiar.ca Colon. May 1 PanamaBuenos Aires Havana . May 4 Spanish

Bismarck Hamburg. April 30 Hamb-Am

«hlmoca Gibraltar. April 30 •

FlMar .\u25a0.\u25a0-.-•- Galveston. May 2 Morgan

Kansas City Savannah. May« SavannahSATURDAY. MAY 9

1af'lphl^:::::::Ga:v^r ooMMa ylT=v.v:.v^SyIT=v.v:.v^S£5&:.7:..:. Jacksonville. May 6..... ..... -Clyde

•Eeperanza Havana, May 6 N "i & CubaSUNDAY. MAY 'O.

•Laßre»agne Havre. May 2 FrenchCaJabria .. ..- Gibraltar. April30 Anchor

•Brings mall.- \u25a0

OUTGOING STEAMERS.TO-DAY. vessel

Vessel. For. Line. Mails clow. Mils.Cymric. Liverpool. Whit- Star. ... 3-00 pra

Menominee. Southampton At-Tr»n? . —-f^*!?

Santiago, Tamplco. Ward- 13:00 m 3™P*?Colorado. Mobile. Mailory 3.00 P mHamilton, Norfolk. Old Dominion 3:00 pm

..'.-. \u25a0 SATURDAY. MAY 9. . . ":.Umbria; Liverpool. Cunard 10:30im 2:00 p mKroonland. Antwerp. Red Star nS:*am ,lmimEthiopia. Glasgow. Anchor 9:30 am 12:00 mNorge. Denmark. Scand-Am.. 11 a m 2:00 P mKonig Albert, Naples. N G Lloyd; 12:00 m :00praMinneapolis. London. At Trans 4:t"Opm

Buenos Aires, Caciiz. Spanish ,7T7^- —Neckar. Bremen. N G L10yd....:

" I?;22 am

Pretoria. Hamburg. Hamb-Am 4:oopm

Roma. Naples. Fabre

Mexi"o,rHavana. Ward l'>:00 am 1:00 p mCoamo. Porto Rico, N V &PR 9:ooam 12:00 mMaracas. Grenada. Trinidad 10:00 am 12:00 mAlene, Jamaica. Hamb-Am 8:30 am 12:00 mZulia. Curacao. Red D 8:30 a m 12:00 mPartma St Thomas. Quebec B:3oam 12:0OmArapahoe. Charleston. Clyde 3:/X-

-Nueces, Galveston. Mallorv 3:V?pmExcelsior, New-Orleans. Morgan 3:00 mEl Norte. Galveston. Morgan 3:00 p mJefferson. Norfolk. Old Dominion 3:Oopm

MONDAY. MAY 11.Princess Anne, Norfolk, Old Dominion. 3:00 pm

SHIPPING NEWS.

WEST SIDE Y. M. C. A. DINNER.The annual dinner of the West Side Young Men's

Christian Association was held last evening in thegymnasium of its building,in West Fifty-seventh-

st. Over three hundred and fifty members wert

present The Rev Dr. George C. Lorimer. pastorof the Madison Avenue Baptist Church. spoke on"The Achievements of Young Manhood." WilliamM Klngsley was toastmaster. "The old saying that"deeds are our ancestors.'

"said Dr. Lorimer "holds

good to-day. An English traveller in this countryonce remarked that he had been unable to find agentleman. An American asked him what he con-sidered a gentleman. The Englishman replied thata gentleman was a person who had never doneanything, whose father had never done anything,and whose forefathers had never done anything.•Well.' said the American, 'we have many such inthis country, and it is not strange that you havenot men them. We call them tramps'

"Theodore Roosevelt," said Dr. Lorimer, "is anexample of the achievements which young mencan pain in this country. He represents all theattainments of character. Judgment and capabil-ities which by careful preparation and consrlcn-

i tious self-training \u25a0 young man may reach."

MARINE INTELLIGENCE.

MINIATURE ALMANAC

Bunrlte 4:SljSun*et 7:2o|Moon set* B:l3|Moon'a ago ]]

HIGH WATER.A.M.

—Sandy Hook 6:oojGov. Island 5:321Hell Gate 8:21

P.M.—

S«ii«y Hook C;3uiOov. Inland «.<>2|Hdl Gatoß;s4

LUNCHEON FOR CONGRESSMEN.The visiting Congress Conmtttee on Rivers and

Harbors were the guests at a farewell luncheon at

the Union League Club yesterday afternoon given

by Congressman Joseph A Goulden, through whoseinfluence, chiefly, the committee was induced to

visit the city and see for themselves the work thatis needed on the Harlem Sl.ip Canal and adjacentwaters, for which Congress is expected to makean appropriation.

JOHN B, FORD LEAVES ALL TO FAMILY.

fFY TELEGRAPH TO THE MUMUM1

Pittsburg. May 7 —The will of the late Captain

John B Ford was filed for probate yesterday

Mr. Ford was the founder of Ford City and

was reputed to be wealthy. He was a great philan-

thropist and in his life probably built as many

churche= as any man ever did in this country.Consequent^ it"is said the value of the estate isnot so large as was expected. Ihe entire estate is

left to the members of his family. Edward Ford, asen. was appointed executor.

The annual reception and banquet of the Fort

Edward Institute Alumni Association will be held

at the St. Denis Hotel, Broadway and Eleventh-st..

th!s afternoon and evening, from 4 to U o'clock.

NEW-YORK CITY.

The lecture on "The Duty of the Community,"

which Robert Hunter, of the University Settlement,

was to give in the assembly hall of the United

Charities Building on May 11. has been indefinitely

postponed

PROMINENT ARRIVALS AT THE HOTELS.

VLBEMaRLE—F. Harry Wyndham Walker, ofLondon. CAMBRIDGE—Baron yon Hengelmtiller,Austro-Hungarian Minister to the United States.ENDICOTT—A. H. Crocker, of San Francisco.GlLSEY—Captain F. Graham, of England. GRAND—Captain Charles H Clark. U. S. A. MANHAT-

Captain J. de Lottemiere, R. A., of India,

and A. H. Sartoris. of Kittery. England. PARKCommissioner \u25a0 George W. Aldrich. of

Rochester WALDORF—Seftor Antonio Laza Arri-aga Guatemalan Minister to the United States,and E. S. Cramp, of Philadelphia.

WHAT IS GOING ON TODAY.Brooklyn Horse Show.

Reception in honor of first anniversary of Actors' Home

at the- home. West Brighton. Stat»n Island. 2

p. mNinth annual reunion and dinner of Fort Edward Col-

legiate Institute. St. Dents, evening.-

Dinner for Anthony Fiala. leader, of the Zippier ArcticExpedition. Young Men's Christian Association Hall.Brooklyn..evening ,

New-York Genealogical and Biographical Society, addressr.v William Winter on ."Jo»enh Jefferson and Other

Comedians." No. 226 West Fifty-eight 8 p. m.

Address by .Tames D. Carr on "The Negro's Viewpoint of

the Negro Question." Manhattan Liberal Club. No. 220' East Fifteenth-st.. BP. m. . > .. '

nosinr exercises of Pilgrim Congregations. Church In-dustrial School. One-hundred-and-twenty-nrst-st. andMadison-aye.. 8 p. m. ...

Meeting Of New-York section Of American Chemical So-ciety. No. LOS West Fifty-ftfth-st..-8:15 p. m.

HOME NEWS.

Among the Most Important of ModernTimes, Dr. Soper Says.

Ithaca. N V. May I.—Or. George Soper. repre-sentative of the State Board of Health, who hasbeen assisting the local authorities in their ef-forts to stamp out the typhoid fever epidemic madepublic to-night a report addressed to the CommonCouncil of Ithaca, which covers his investigations.Concerning the statistics of the epidemic. Dr. Sopersays; "So far as can be said at present, there havebeen 955 cases and P4 deaths. This ranks the epi-demic among the most important Inmodern timesin this part of the world." Twenty-nine of thedeaths were of Cornell students.

Homoeopathic Alumni Enjoy "Ma-

rine Bacilli Magnifique." .Twenty-nine.men received degrees at the gradua-

tion exercises of the New-York Homoeopathic Med-ical College and Hospital, \u25a0in

'Mendelssohn Hail

yesterday. Dr. W. H. Kins, the dean of th* fac-ulty, delivered the address, in which he said that

the figures from the report of the'State Board of

Regents showed that the graduates of this col-lege had the highest averages in the State. Thedegrees were conferred by Anson R. Flower.' presi-

dent of the board of trustees. Dr. J. H. Demarestawarded the certificates of the Metropolitan Hos-pital. Dr. G. W. Roberts announced that twenty-

one had desired and received hospital appoint-

ments. The Rev. Dr. W. M. Smith, of the CentralPresbyterian Church, addressed the class.

Frank P. Eklngs won the first faculty prize, amicroscope, and will go to Flower Hospital.

Thomas D. Blair took the second prize, a micro-scope, and goes to the Metropolitan Hospital. The

senior honors went to E. B. Cook, assigned to

Rochester Hospital; O. Dv Bois Ingalls, Cumber-

land Street Hospital. Brooklyn; E. W. Kellogg.

Flower Hospital; G. W. Whitney, Hahnemann Hos-pital, and R. A. Benson, Flower HospitaL The

Fiske, or junior, prize was won by L. R- Kauf-m

The dinner of the New-York Homoeopathic Medi-cal College alumni in the ballroom at the Wal-

dorf last evening was declared to be the largest

ever given. More than four hundred aoctors, withtheir guests, were, at the tables, and women filledthe galleries. The "diet list" included such deli-cacies as -Marine Bacilli Magnifique.

' otherwiseclams; "Appendix Saute, Surgical Dressing- :•\u25a0 Sal-ad» a Coroner." or carves' brains; '-Alumni Vivacea la Entente Cordiale." alias lamb chops, and to

wind up "Laryngitis Assorties" an the pleasing"Habitare au Bacterie." vJ'V-jDr. E. H. Zinnell, the president, made a brief ad-

dress of welcome, and Dr. H. Worthlngton Paigewas the toastmaster. Dr. King, the dean, talkedon medical education, and Dr. Hal Bell convincedall that woman was man's inspiration through life.The Rev. Dr. Savage talked about "M. Ds. anaD Ds.

"Professor J. E. Woodbridge described the

physician's opportunity, and Lemuel E. Quigg gavehis" ideas about "Sinament and Ginger. Nutmegsand Cloves." The silent toast, standing, was to

the memory of Drs. Helmuth. Talcott. Allen andDeschere. Basts of Dr. Helmuth were the s-ouve-

Trie alumni association elected these officers;

President. W. A. Dewey, of Ann Arbor, Mich.;

vice-presidents, J. C. Fahnestock, of Piqua. Ohio;Luke Corcoran, of Springfield, Mass.: C. E. Lane,

of Poughkeepsie. N. V.; treasurer. W. G. Crump;recording secretary. A. W. Palmer; correspondingsecretary, W. S. Mills; neurologist, F. C. Bunn;

alumni trustee. W. L. M. Fiske, of Brooklyn; di-rectors C. E. Howard, J. P. Seward. I. Townsend.W. B. • Winchell, G. De W. Haslett and WilliamTod Helmuth.

ITHACA"S TYPHOID EPIDEMIC.

TWEXTY-XINESEW M.D.S.

J|p pLINT*SpNEfUBNTTURENEW- YORK DAILY TRIBUNE. FRIDAY, MAY & MM-

SCHOOLS BEHIND TIME.14

WOBK OS THEM STOPPED.

Next

TRIBUNESunday's

SPECIAL NOTICE.No connection with any other house

in this Sine of business

Theodore B. .StarrDiamond Merchant,

Jeweler and Silversmith,

MADISON SQUARE WEST

Between 25th and 26th Stre«t»..Established 1862. . .. . .

1C y«ar« on John St. «\u25a0 Starr * Marcus.25 years as above.

Wedding Gifts Will be right in line with.i varied assortment of in-teresting features.

See below.A BIG TERRACE \OF GREAT SPLENDOR

is planned. for th* residents or ColumbiaHeights, from which they may have an

•unobstructed vie of the Harbor andBay of New-York. Description andpictures.

FOR ARTISTIC BEDROOMS.GREEN OAK FURNITURE.

:i-nc. *nJte« 8-4T.00Chiffonier* 23.00Wardrobe* 21.00Toilet Table* I.V«*»

Chairs, Rogers, Tables. Somnoles and Cos-turners to match. \u25a0

-A new finish in soft green, designed in grace-

ful curved lines. French bevel mirrors, brass

drawer pulls, etcArtistic Summer Rugs and Draperies to com-

plete the color scheme.Correct furniture for every room at factory

prices, when you

"BUY OF THE MAKER?

Geo. C.Flint Co.43.45 and 47 WEST 23?ST.

NEAR BROADWAY.CARRIAGE E.VTRAXCE. 2S WEST 24TH ST.

Factories: 505 to 515 West 32d St.

SPECIAL MENTION.