stsg james mccreery gov. hr will st....

1
Paletots and Blouse Coats, made of black taffeta silk. 15.00 Blouse Skirt Coats,— made of black peau de s?oie or taffetas. Lined with white silk. 16.50 17.00 and 19.50 Half length black voile Coats,— with semi-titted back. Lace trimmed cape. 23.00 Full length t ravel linj? (oats, made of tan, olive or Oxford grey craven- ette. Twenty-thiiMl Street NEW- YORK DAILY TRIHINE. SATTKDAY. APRIL Si. MM. OTHER FEATURES TO APPEAR: HOICE NEWS THE MILITARY SHOW. Dashing photographs of United States cavalry and artillery practising difficult and dangerous "stunts" which they will repeat at th" military tournament In Madison Square Garden next -week. CASH or CREDIT (OWPERTHVVAIT %. 104 106 and 108 West 14* St. NEAR 6"?AV. BrooKWn Stones: FlatbushAv.nearMonSt. West 14* St. ESTB? <^t^^H^ i 8 C 9 RELIABLE CARPETS AX MINSTERS, 95 cts. per yd., (Reduced from 5t. 25) Newest Spring patterns and colorings, includ- ing tan. green and rose, also new Oriental ef- fects. 5 pc. PARLOR SUITS, $25.00, (Reduced from $14) Mahogany finish frames handsomely carved. Upholstered in Tapestry. . Great Reductions in Reed Furniture— Chair?. Rockers, etc. Aw. ••Charge" all accounts by using our LONC» CREDIT." PROMINENT ARRIVALS AT THE HOTELS. ALBEMARL.K— Marquis and Marchioness of Hertford and Liord Edward ana Lady Jane bey- Sou?, of London. FIFTH AVENUK-Senator G«orK« F. Hoar, of Massachusetts '/.";? Judpe M. Sweeney, of Naugatuck HOFFMAN— J. B. Lyon. State Printer. HOLLAND-Ex-Con- pregfman T. C. Coykendall. of Rondout. IM- PEHTALr-^olonel A. C Parks, of San Juan. P. R. MAXHATTAN-Alex Barms of Ix)ndon and Bish- op Tl-orthinpton. of Omaha. NKJHERLANI>-Ju ius OarSnkJe at Washington. WALDORF— J Becklej. president of the Toronto. Hamilton and Buffalo hallway, of Roihester. and Wallace T. Foote. of I'ort li*nry. Amusements. MADISON SQUARE GARDEN CLEANER WATER FOR THE BRONX. Proceedings are now bcinc pushed that win end in wiping out a lot of graves, stables and other objectionable spots which drain into The Bronx water sup- ply. Description and photo?. THE NEW CITY LIBRARY. The first photograph of the plans of the new city library front, at Fifth-aye. and Forty-second-st.. allowed by the archi- tects for publication. Afternoons at 2 aivi Evenings at S o'clock. Doors open an hour earlier- tor a. view of the Menageries. Warships. Freaks. Prodigies, etc. LAST WEEK. EXHIBITING IN BROOKLYN FOR ONE WEEK ON'LT. beginning next Monday. April 27. at Saratoga Aye. ana BARNUM & BAILEY GREATEST SHOW ON EARTH. America's Only Real Representative Sho-x. Presenting the Wonders of the Earth. .1rirrimfonipanii-'i. •- Menfißerlcs. llllMioitromf. AeriHl Enclaje. Spet-taoular I'rdndc Gallery of * reat<i. ONE HUNDRED STARTLING ACTS THE EARL OF YARMOUTH weds Miss Alice Thaw on Monday next at Pittsburgr. Advance account of the affair, with photos of laM principal par- ticipants. THE BUDDHIST TEMPLE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA has finally recovered two hideous Jap- anese idols that were lost in transit be- tween here and Japan. Striking photo- srraphs of them. CVCLO. THE KI\KTIC DEMON. BABY ELEPH.WT AND MOTHER. Two Performance* Dally at 2 and 8 V. 31. Door 3 open an hour earlier. _ A«mias*os to all. tneludir.j: numbered seat. » and 3" cent?. (2Cth an<J '.7th St. entrance* only.) Reserved seats. 75 cents. 11.00 and $1.50. according to location. (Madison A•. •-\u25a0 entrance only-> , v Private boxes. !>!x at:-. $12.(«> and ?1500 Stmt I box seats. *2.iv>and $2.5<>. \u25a0 _ Box o«lc« now open. Madison Aye. entrance, from 3 A. M. to 0 P. M.. for advance sale of seats from as."! upward. No seats reserved by telephone. , __^^___ A MINIATURE CONGRESS. with all parliamentary rules strictly ob- served, .is carried on by the boys and teachers* of Philadelphia High School. Photos and description. Twenty-third Street. Sizes to 12 years. 6.75 Children's double breasted Box Coats. Made of blue cheviot, lined with satin. Children's box-pleated and belted Russian Suits. Sizes 6 to 12 years. 5. 50 Trimmed with »ilk braid rmbroldfrT. 3. 75 Children's Serge Sailor Suits, Sizes 14 and 16 years. 7.50 Blue Cheviot collar! ess Box Coats, lined with satin. Sizes 14 and Hi years. 1 2.50 Homespun-cheviot Blouse Suits, trimmed with cloth or braid. Tucked or plain skirts. Blue, black or white polka dot pique suits. Mili- tary or blouse model, trimmed with lace or white pique. Skirts, plain or with double flounce. Sizes 14 and 16 years. 8.50 Misses' Suit Dep't. .Ird Floor. James McCreery &Co. WHAT IS GOING ON TO-DAY. Jjist fiay of circus at Madison fvjuare Garden. Am'ri'-An Matr^mati.-a-l S<v-iety. spring meeting. Colum- . bl» L'nivertKy. 11 a. 111. T>-r,:& of picture "f tb« late r"r "* n Edward K. S'.-.aw. Schfvl of Pr-Saeogy. New-York VnivereAy, Washineton Squ<«r<\ J :3'» p m. Ijayinpft cornerstone of lirst rresbyterian Church. \mi- lamsbrid^e. 3 p. m. Birth-lay dinner tor Senator Depew. Montauk Club. BnxddyD. <*v«»nin«:. Iyitos OxOt'9 musiraJ Cinner for TUcharfl Arnoia. cswV- ho-use. 6:30 p. m. v IMnr.Tfor Jamfs H. UcXtatm. vie* president of the Board of Aidermcn. Colorial Hall. Klatbush-ave.. Frook.jn. - \u25a0 Oradustion dinner of class of -ca. Xew-Tork Vniverslty I^.w School. fsh«rT>-'s. sreninc 8~-frt^aV dinner for th«> Willism P. TX-rery Association by Waller I?. Hunter. No. 112 West 1 at*— mil * . S:.V> p. \u25a0&. Tt«vi»-w or Sd ReKim-nt by the Rev. Dr. us Dix. .-.rmorj". Brooklyn, evening. <-tub nicht at xh~ T"niversity «:iub. \u25a0»«\u25a0 '-' I\u25a0' br Dwlgfal I-ithr<T> KlKiendorf. B p. m. M'-etinc of the Shakespeare, Club, Carnegie Buildir.S. S li. m. J-rep l»cturrf of the Board Of Kdaraticn. kp. —School So 1 <i>rner ...!•-. and C?thar:n«- Bis., •\u25a0L.rrathir.js \u25a0md Healih.'- Mr*. " M. A. SbotwtU; School No. 23 rarwr Malberry and BayaxU sL=.. "Texas. < harles V i«Mi<ll-S.'hool No. 54. One-lniTidred-ana-rourtn- and Amsterdam-aye.. ••American Sculpture/ i-T.r<v?' Sawyer KeUosr?: Amerltan Museum of Nat- ural HW*oiy. "The Mental and Moral Kvclutlnn \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 Man—Natural Selection and Ethical Evolution." Dr. ilmry X Crampton; Brthany Church. Ter.th-av<?.. r.ear'Thirty-Hftli-st.. 'The T«Jlow«tooe I'ark." Basil Rgrwell <Jreat Hall of < - ooT>er Ir^titute. ••Naples and Pompeii." 1»r. Auffu«ta J. Chapiu; St. Hartholomew - Lyceum H-11. No. SOS Kast Forty-seeond-st.. Th» -hemistry of Arjjs. liases and Salts." l*rciessor Will - Ibtti C. rer-kham; Young Men* Christian Association Mall No. 5 Wei* <>n--hundred- -and-twenty-fifth-rt.. " Vn' livenine with Tennyson." Mrs. Mary Klizaheth T>«-a-»e- Young Meii's Hebrew Association Hall. Nin*- tv-pe^nd M. and I^xineton-ave.. -Songs cf ~';ake- i=r*are." Mr=. Henrietta. Ppek^-Seeley. THE YALE PLAY. The annual Talc play ii! be presented next week, and la Oliver Goldsmith's •The Good Natured Man." Photographs of the students in costume. LABRADOR. Many sorrowful tales of the native "* that inhospitable shor«>. as t<-»M by a missionary from there who is visltin? ill!- city. Photos. Amusements. CIRCLE * M * SMTSIIT SAHAR^T HENRY LEE AXI> OTHER AM, STAR ACTS. MliDnflV HIM. thra. I>jx. a-. * 421 m m HHQi matixbe evbkv DAT. sr,c. HIUIIIlM! "PIDir.MIKAD WILSOXT" THE S. A. R. Description of the Connecticut Societj" cf th«» Son? of thf Am-riean Revolution, with pictures of its leading rr.embT?. HARNESSING THE HUDSON. Wei! illustrated article on one of th» largest dams in the world approaching: completion at Spier Falls, t»n miles above Glens Falls. Reviews of L' S Troops Marine?. National Guard. Naval Militia t *T*J the Duke nt Cornwall's Own Rifl^ from Canada, Every Night Gnu ' Military and Athletic Pro- \u25a0"•"Satixeks WEDNESDAY AND SATURDAY. Admission. r.»r. Re«erved S^rs. 91jOB, »1..^». C^BOX OFFICE NOW OPEN at Concert. Ha. l. En- trance. SMI St. side at th» Harden. llßAlMlfll TVwav & :»th St. I LAST TWO "A CHI^ESjE HONEYMOON.^ CASINO {"^Kffiffi 1 I M^'^ X Matinee To l":>:. A FAUNTLE.OY 1 " LITTLE LORD FAuNTLEhOY nnilinrOC Bway & 20th. Double Bill. P nINUtOO. K.f. "at 9 Mats. Thursday & To-day. 3. •j-itr-DC "Keeps audience laugh" g all 'Vj.'"- Herald. I nunC -Far and away season'! best farce."— Press. &nipi/ Preceded Ergs, at >:2" Mats.. 2:20 DMbfN. ••Man Who Stole- the Cn?«tlr." HERALD SQUARE^THEAJ!?^ 11 * 85 '?^^^ GRACE GEORGE in PRETTY PEG3Y MADISON SQUARE GARDEN. THE GREAT MILITARY. TOURNAMENT, MANAGEMENT MTMTARY ATHLETIC LKAGrn. '•• n i|nAV HIP LIT REVIEW by Secretary of War MONDAY NIGHT, kLIHI HOOT. escorted by Cadets of V P. Militar>- Academy. West Point, *** Evenint Parade by the Cadets. THE MOVEMENTS OF STEAMERS. FOREIGN PORTO. Liverpool, April 24 Sailed, steamers Cymric <Br). Thomp- son. New-York via Queenstown: Victorian (Br), j < 'a veil. New- Turk. Moville. April 24- -Sailed. Fteamer Ethiopia fßr). Lums- dane (from Olaegow), New-York. L^itli April23— Arrived, steamer Knaresbro (Br). Ty?on. \u25a0 -York. Lizard, April 24 -Passed, steamers Adria (Ger). Schaar- schmidt. Hamburg for Philadelphia; Potsdam (Dutch), Potjer. New-York for Rotterdam. Swansea. April 22 Sailed, steamer Exeter City 'Br I *. at kins. New-York. Bristol, April 24— Arrived, steamer Welle City <Br). Carey. New- York. Plymouth. April 24, \u2666\u25ba . '>< a Arrived, steamer Kron- prinz Wilheim (Or). Richter. New-York for Cher- bourg- and Bremen land proceeded) Southampton, April 'M. 12:15 i> m Sailed, steamer IVutschland (Ger). Barends ffrom Hamburg). New- York via Cherbourg. Shields. April 22—Sailed, steamer I'hoehus CGcr). Pchler- horet i from Hamburg! New-York. Stettin, April Sailed, steamer Alabama (Dan). G etscbe. New- York. Cherbourg. April 24—Arrived, steamer Kror.prin?. Wi!- h«lm <Ger). Richter. New Tork via Plymouth for Bremen land proceeded*. Sailed 5:20 p m. steamer ; Deutschland u>r). Barende if rum Hamburg and Southampton). N"<-w-Yrvrk Gibraltar. April 24— Passed. rteamer Shjmoea (Br|, \u25a0( "hap - Un. Yokohama, etc. for New-York. Alßiers. April 21 Sailed, steamer [ndradeo (Br). Ester- brook (from Yokrih.-inia. etc*. New-York. T'-inta dv Arnel. April 24 Passed. steamer Phoenicia fGer>. Schmidt. Genoa and Naples for New-York. Oenoa. April 24, l p t.i Arrived. steamer Prinaens Irene I fGert. ii,- \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0•\u25a0 inn New-York via Naples Naples. April Arrived, steamer Calabria (Br). Bridges. New-York via Marseilles and Leghorn. Palermo, April 22 -Sail".-!, steam?! Plcqua (Br). Kelkin? (from Trieste. eto. Ne->v-Y<irk. Patras. Afril 13—Sailed: steamer r^odovlea fAust), Bartu llch (from Trieste), New York. Port Said. Ajirll Arrived, steamer Indrawadl ißn. Condy. New-York for Aden Pinpapore ami Manila. Tarlfa. April 24— Pas! Bteamrr Indradeo (Br). Ester- brook. Yokohama, Hioico, Shan«! Hen« Kong, * Manila Sinear>or<\ Penanc and <">chin for New York. ?.lellK>urne. April 24 Arrived (previously!, steamer Essex ! ii!ri. McCil/con. New-York via St Vincent, c V. : ••\u25a0rs Perinsulai iPort). tot Lisbon New Red- \u25a0 iri 'Hr. Liverpool Seneca. Tamplco: Hamilton, Norfolk r-nd Newport News: Benefactor, Philadelphia: I rltish King <Rrl. Antwerp ia Gravesend: MaravaJ <IJr>. Grenada and Trinidad: Frnters iNor), Kingston: United monitor Nevada. Steamer Celtic (Br). Lindsay. Liverpool April 15 and Queenstown 16, to the White Star Line, with 366 cabin. 1,917 steerage passengers, mails and mdse. Arrived at the Bar at 0:07 a m. Steamer Tuscarora (Br), Scott. London April 9. to Philip Ruprecht. In ballast. Arrived at the Bar at 10:17 p m. 23' i. Steamer Colorado (Br>, Cox. Hull April 10. to Sander- son & Son. with \u25a0) cabin passengers and nid^f-. Arrived at the Bar at f> a m. Steamer Rotterdam 'r>uich), Peters. Rotterdam April 12. to Philip Ruprecht. in ballast. Arrived at the Bar at 4:0". a m. Steamer Washington <Ger>. Tholen. Rotterdam April 6 and Shield* 9. to Philip Rupreoht. in ballast. Arrived at the Bar at 10:16 a m. Steamer Bordeaux <Fr>. Lebarrler. Havre April 11. to the Compagnie Generale Transatlantique. with mdse. Ar- rived at th" Bar at 5 a m. Steamer Breiz Huel (Fr; mew. 2.833 tons). Rabin. St Nazalre April 7 and Cardiff 10, to master, in ballast. Arrived at the Bar at 9 a m. Steamer Weimar (Ger). Peterson. Genoa April * and Naples 10. to Oelrichs & Co, with 51 cabin and I.5iS steerage passengers, mails and mdse. Arrived at the Bar at 12:39 p m. Steamer Cherokee, Garvin. Azua April 13, San Domingo City 14 Macoris 16, San. ana and Sanchez 17. Porto Plato and Monte Crtsto IS and Turks Island 19. to William P Clyde C Co, with in cabin passengers, malls and mds*. Arrived at the Bar at 12:">0 am. .Steamer El Cld, Baker. Galvrston April 18, to J T Van Sickle, with mds«. Steamer Frl <Nor>. Wagle. Cardenas April 17. to W P M \u25a0*\u25a0-\u25a0 -. with sugar. Arrived at th-; Bar at 1 :."<\u25a0> am. Steamer Clitsapeake, Dalano, Baltimore^ to Ii C roster, with mdse Steamer Jamestown. Tapley. Newport News and Nor- folk, to the Old Dominion SB Co. with passengers and mdf-e. Steamer Oneiria, Chichester, Philadelphia, to William P Clyde £• Co. with mdse. Steamer Pomeranian ißn. White. Glasgow April 11 via Halifax 22. to Austin Baldwin & Co, with 4 cabin and 75 steerage passenger? and mdse. Arrived at the Bar at 7:30 p m. Steamer Jersey City «Br), FYanlciani!. Bristol April and Swansea !>. to James Arkell &Co, with mdse. South- east of Fire Island at 4:5."i p m Steamer Slcllla (Hall, Toscanlno, New-Orleans April 1«. to Hirze], Feltmann & Co, withm«ss« in transit. Arrived at the Bar at 5:30 p m. Steamer City of Augusta. Daggett. Savannah April 22. to the Ocean Ss Co with passengers and rndse. Sandy Hook. N J. April 24, 9:30 p m -Wind southwest, light breeze: clear. SAILED. SHIPPING NEWS. Port of New- York. Friday, April 24, 1903. ARRIVED. Brat6ber|r. Barbados, etc. Quebec ... 9:00 am 12:00 m Terence. Argentina, etc. Lamp & Holt 9:30 a m 12*0 m XI Slglo. Galveston. Morgan 3:00 pm Proteus, New-Orleans. Morgan 3:00 pm Alamo. Oalveston. Mallory \u25a0 r.:oopm Comanche, Charleston. Civile 3:00 pm MONDAY. APRIL. 27. Seguranca, Colon. Panama 9:30 a m 1:00 pm Princess Anne, Norfolk, Old Dominion. ".:<«> pm TUESDAY; APRIL. 28. Aurania. Liverpool. Cunanl 4:00 pm KaiFer Wilhelm 11. Bremen. NCJ L10yd.12:?.0 p m 4:00 p m Umbrla. Italy. Itilian 8:30 a m 11:00 a in Algonquin. Charleston. Clyde 3:00 pm Monroe. Norfolk. Old Dominion: 3:oo pm THE "YAXEY YAKES' VS. THE "MONK EASTMANS." These two grarigs of ruffians are now wag- ing quite a war on the East Side. Sev- ora! murders and many shootings hav<? marked the war so far. All about them. EMPIRE THEATRE. Broadway and 40th st- Evening. (»:2t». Ma».lne*s To-day & Wednesday. inijM HC3C\A/ THE Mnnn AID JOHN UntW THE HI'MMI.Mi BIKD. May 2. Last Night of the Present Empire. CJARRICIv THEATRE. Htk «t.. near B way. I^ast 7 Evgs.. J.:ir.. Matincs To-day & Wed.; 5:11 ANNIE KtISSELL in M!Ch AMD MEN. Harlem | Conried's Irving PI. Mat. "AltHeidelberg." Opera Ho. Theatre Company. .v tr'it. "Baerenfell." X xt WV. Amelia Blngham— "The t"ri>.lcy Mrs. Johnson." MENDELSSOHN HALL £{ : r r: :!\u2666• V, Mf;\nß ninH jd i\ as in i niir'Tfrd ™? aIuILIAN whn IfINF ITrS PARISI'S UIWlt-lMll U'HIIiUIIL II LU FOR IHI-: BENEFIT OK THE NEW YORK IX- riUJIAKV for HOMES AM) « hii.iiri;\. Tickets, at Tyson"*, the Manhattan, the Waldorf and at door. Evening. $.1.00. Afternoon. $2.00. }>11 0 A n\V \ V THBATRB tut n. «If wav " I}l\\ fAMJ It ill Ev." ». Mats. Today* We.l 2 Henry W. Savage Tre^ent-! the New Musical Comedy." P^SNOE OF SHIEt 5.9 Special I'ricts r4S&l«iy&3 %Si 8 BiUWfcilH 60c to $1.50. CHITKRIOV TIIKATRK. B'way and 4«th «t- Kvenlnn. »:» Matinees T.> la; X.- Werlnesr'av. 2:V>. CHARLES HAWTREY, fiSE'SGSSL BULGARIA. where the Albanian Christians arc h«»in? cruelly pr-rpeoutod by th-? Turk. T_>e- scription. with graphic phot >E\V SAVOY THEATRE. 34th it i B way. I-a«t 7 Evks.; *;V.\>. Matinees To-day I Wed.. .-.::. HENRY MILLER. VffSSSSP MARINE INTELLIGENCE. MINIATURE ALMANAC. Punris« Funs*t 1 - Moon rieea 4:04 ; Moon's ago 27 HIGH WATER. A.M.— Sandy Hook S:2S;Ov. Island <s f>> Hell Cafp 7:4!> P.M.— Handy Hook 5:57, (f0v. Island tf^B Hell Gate 8:19 INCOMING STEAMERS. TO- DAT. Vessel. From. _ Une. Gibraltar llsltrs. April 7 Roma Gibraltar. April 13.... Kabie El Monte New -Oilcans. April is Morgan Comanche Jacksonville, April 19 Clyde Pocahontas .Alster». April i 1i 1 Kesblt Jer&ey City.. Brlst. April 9 Bristol City Adra Si Micha Is. April 14 Sabine ';.!:.-•!; April 18 Mallory •Campania. .........l.ivf-rrii'Ol. April 18 Cutiard •st Paul Southampton. April 16 American Nauplia Stettin. April 8 Uamb-Am •Blilcher Hamburg. April 14 Hamh-Am Aigotujul" lacksonvii:*-. April 21 Clyi" SUNDAY. APRIL. 56. Columbia Glasgow. April IS Anchor •1^ GascO(rne Havre. April IS French MONDAY. APRIL. 27. Vnderland Antwerp. April 18 .... .Red Star Boric Liverpool. April Is Whit*Star XlI><>rado Galveston. April I'l Morgan <"omus S*w-Orleaiui. April 22 Morgan •Caracas San Juan. April 2. Red O •Brlnps mail. OUTGOING STEAMERS. TO-DAY. Vessel Vessel. l\,r. Ltoe Mails <lose. tails. Ktruria, Uvorpool, Cunard ....1"::;" am 2:00 pin Attoria. Glascrow. Anchor 12:30 pna .":H0 p m Finland. Antwerp, lied Star 8:00 a 'ii 10:00 a m Ilckla. Dramatic >.-and-Am ll:«K)at» 2*o p m Manltou, London, At Trai« - !':«.ini r*tr;.-!.i. Hair.bun Haml Am 4:oi«i'»n Buffalo. Hull. \\il!=oii Mexico. Havana. N V & Cuba .... 10:00am 1:00pm Valencia. Jamaica. Hamb-Am :•'\u25a0<•• a m i:i:OOni I'once. San Joan. N V & I 1I 1 R '\u25a0>'*> a m 12:»' m Maracalbo. Venezuela. Red I> S:3oam 12:00 m SAN FRANCISCO STOCKS. San Francisco, April 24. The official closing quo- tations for mining stocks to-day were as follows: Alta MUustlee 10 Alpha Con «J T. Wash Con OS Andes IT m \ iin LOO Tl*-lohrr 50 Occidental Con M Best & BelctMT 1.50 Ophir I.M Bullion 16 Overman 50 <-ale.3onia 2.101 Potoel 21 Challenge Con 4.". Savage- Vi Cho'.lar -1 Sag Belcher IS Confidence 1.1" Pierra Nevada 72 '"on Cal & Va 1.851Syndicate («6 Con Imperial «- St. Louis 21 «""rt>Tvn point 291 Union r0r,.... (HI Gould & Curry 39 U7 tali Con !. 40 Hale & Norcro*! 6t>| Yellow Jacket 28 Julia 01': Accusation of Woman Who Seeks Partition of Grandfather's Estate. The trial of a suit brought by Katherine AVilson. aged nineteen, for the partition of the estate of her grandfather. Henry Wilson, who died in 1901. was begun before Justice. O'Gorman and a jury in th« Supreme Coon yesterday. Miss Wilson de- clares that her araadfjather left a will by which she and her sister. Mrs. Adelaide, Lyons, were to be the main beneficiaries, hut that the will was destroyed by her father. Charles EL AVilpon, and her uncle, Frank B. Wilson, to enable them to get their father's entile estate-, said to have been near •\u25a0 The father ami undo of the plaintiff deny that they destroyed tbe win, and say their father destroyed It some time previous to his death. Robert D. Kvans testified yesterday that he saw The will of Henry Wilson in IKQ4. After the funeral \u25a0'harles Wilson said to him that there was no will in evidence, that he had the combination to the o!<l man's shf-, a.::d that th^ girls would tret BE par cent of the property under the will, hut that he would not "stand for" the will. Evans said he and John D. Robinson were named as the executors of the will. Kvans said he never heard Henry say anything against his granddaughters, except that '"Addic" burned too much gas when her "beau" came to see her evenings. John D. Robinson, principal of Public School Xo 'M. testified that Henry Wilson ask.-d him to be an >-xf-r -utor of his will, and told him not to permit the hoys to bulldoze him. He never saw the will. Hr Gets Stay That Will Postpone Journey Till Monday. Justice Scott, in the Criminal Branch of the Supreme Court, yesterday handed down a de- cision denying a certificate of reasonable doubt In the case of "A'" Adams, the convicted "pol- icy king-." and Adams will have to go to 6ins Ping, have his head shaved and don a striped milt, to be^in his term of imprisonment of more than a year, -while his counsel try to get a new trial for him on appeal. The millions which the head of th- policy game was am* to collect from poor and credulous people of the city in th« years he had control of the same cannot be iafcen away from him. but they cannot save him from punishment. Adsme might have been taken to Sine Sing yesterday, but "Jimmle" Oliver, of his counsel, obtained from Justice Gieperich, of the Supreme Court, a writ of habeas corpus, returnable at 10 a. m on Monday. This will act as a stay to keep Adams in the city prison until that time. The \u25a0writ command* that Adams be taken before Justice Giegerlch. that the legality of hi* Im- prisonment day be passed on. The writ also calls for the production of the documents on which Adams Is held in the prison. It is not j believed that Justice Glegerich will require much argument before dismissing the -writ. Justice Scott In his decision paid: Ie the case at bar It did not appear that the j District Attorney had obtained the search warrant or directed Its execution or taken any part in the search or seizure of the papers. Hla whole con- nection with the matter appears to have been that after the search ha.i been made and the , _„,„, eelred. th*>v were delivered to one of his , aKi«t«nts. Nor did the defendant protest against cr Object to the sear b and seizure on the ground \u25a0 that it would amount to a violation of any right , of his The evidence was that he warned the persons havlnK the search warrant not to tako ; iavthtas because nothing in the room belonged , to "blm The ffer.^ral rule upon the adxnlsslbility of evidence obtained under such circumstances Is | \u25a0well stated in Greenl*af. Section 254 A, as follows: ; •'Although papers and other subjects of evidence , may have Wn illegally taken from the Posses- \u25a0 elon of the party acainrt whom they are offered. , or " otherwise unlawfully obtained, there is no j valid objection to their ndmissibi'.ltr, if they are pertinent to the Issue. The court will not take nottre how they we-e obtained, whether lawfully or unlawfully, nor will it form an issue to deter- mine that question." ; ; CHANGED CERTIFICATE FOR TRAPANI. Clerk Who. To Be Obliging, Aided Insurance Swindlers Dismissed by Dr. Lederle. j President Lederle of the Board of Health an- j nounced yesterday that he had dismissed Jean J. i Tate. a clerk ii: the Bureau of Vital Statistic*. | because he had been concerned In the Italian ln- j \u25a0araace fraud cases. Tate was dismissed for re- ; questing a. doctor to change a certificate of death. i .1. Trap.mi, the undertaker accused of being one I of the swindling band, told Tate. that the ln?uranc<s ; company which had issued a policy for Saraflne ! Clcone had refused to pay it because the word •"chronic" was in the death certificate, and that he would like to have the word i-hronic" eliminated , from the certificate. Tate to obiipe Trapanl wrote j to Dr. Moore, who had issued the death certificate, i and asked him to change it. Dr. Moore returned the certificate with the word "chronic" eliminated. ; Tate filed the changed certificate without consulting his superior officer. He received no compensation for his acts. FATHER Am UNCLE DESTROYED WILL. Amusements. VICTORIA 4 :f; vT ; T^ UST 2 WEEKS Walsh -RESURREGTI&N ACADEMY f'V MUSIC. 1 Itli St. A Irving PI. H EoS THE SUBURBAN Prices SO. 75. I.o<>. Mats Ti da; & Wed.; 2, Ev, S:ir.. WEST EM). Hftco Uo|wi||pU o |wi||p In '"SIS Mat. To-day. nOSB tiiGhlllo HOPKINS." A NEW EAST SIDE. A most interesting: description of a com- prehensive plan to improve th- East Side. Some of the f*»;iture«i of this plan are the widening of AHen-st.. the pur- rkMc of a waterfront for Corleara H<x>k Park, et>-. GARDEN THEATRE. CTth *t. & Madison «v«. »:v«>ninsTs. >:'."'. M.-itin*""!" To -«lav A- Wnirey.iar ":"(> MORALITY I > U\Y. C.Vt.l™<YSvlAlN MORALJTT PLAT. CVLnT iVIAIN MADISON SQ. THEATRE. '-*' SI near way Evening*- s :! " Matinees To day .v Thur*Jay. - 19 Greatest Comedy M rUUL ms tVIUfjCI Knlckrrborkrr Theatre. B'nitr & HSt> >t. \u2666Oi Month At 8 Sharp. Matinop To da) n '-\u25a0 SiaSKffi'Wß: BLUE BEARD SHALL DOGS BE MUZZLED? This burning question discussed frosts all point? of view. Illustrated by photos of dog?, nvjzzl^'l tirl otherwise. BIJOU SS% MARIE CA H I LL si-;?%jw;^ n nancy brown lltVl><; PLACE THEATRE. M.\T.TO-DAY. 1...,., : rp'fnrnißnw!" of »|>r>: I'l'Pl'K." with MIA «i:RHEH and the Ferencz] Operetta Co. BECASCO I -Z^~^J- EXTRA MATINEE THURSDAY. MAT TTII DAVID BELASCO pmenu THE iMiil l\i HI.AMIIi; BATES in OF THE CODS. i ,„.. TO-NIGHT TO-NIGHT. Saturday Evening. GIGANTIC ENTERTAINMENT AND RECEPTION. Actors' National Protective Union <Xi>." i of ,\>w York. Affiliated with tin" Federation of Labor. ..E.^-r, -.'-'.•. lI IST * i ON »TACE- HOKSTKaI MI\*iTKKl. FIRST PART— I«KM % IIDKVILI.E ACTS l\ AMERICA— IMKIIKSTI\(. rEATI'KES T V > !i. l Vi>s': K - GRAND CENTRAL PALACE I: ' r'ERPORMAXCE 8 Jl.J 1 . M. ADMISSION M r-TS. TO MA. .So wardrobe charge. I !'«\u25a0» &IITSICIANS FOR Till: SHOW AND HAM. The Turf. The Turf. THE PATRIARCH OF VENICE. A prelate little known outsM* Italy, but who. according '\u25a0• "Ex-Attach*." is the most probable successor to Leo XIII. \V\I.I. \CK*S. T^r*.. ':1V Mat*. To day * IV*d.. •_•:!.-. GBORRE ADITS wtTTT MUSICAL. illtCHt | SULIANsieSULU \u25a0StHS i EDMUND RUSSELL &Friday. May 1. 1 Id HAMLKT. Sfats oa tal*. A UrD IT A V «\u25a0 AND STH AVK m n ntn t M«r v! More Than Queen TEDMARKS 1 BIS CONCERT siNOAY tdGHT A farewell meeting for Mr. and Mrs. T-^igi An- pe!!nJ. of the IRaMaaaiaa Mission, in Italy, will be held at Mm Collegiate Church. West Knd-ave. and P»»venty-Eeveni.h-st.. or. Wednesday at S p. m. Postmaster Van Cott announces that mails from Hong Kong. March 24; Shanghai, March 2S; Yoko- hama, April 4. and Honolulu. April 15. reached San Francisco on Ike steamer China, were dispatched »>as!- at 6 p. m. on April 22. and ar« due Ii New- York on Monday morning. Mails for Cblna. Japan and Hawaii wll! close at the <Jeneral Postofflce. as «<iv*rtisf'i Bishop James IT. Van BBVBB of Porto RJeo will preach at St. Mark's Church. Tenth-st. and Sec- onfl-avs*, to-morrow at 8 p. m. The R*v. Dr. Howard Duffleld. at the Old First Presbyteriaa Church. No. J4 Fifth-aye.. willpreach •it 11 a. m. to-morrow on "StnUjrhtforwardness," and at 4.30 p. in. on "The Word of the Lord." At the annual meeting of the Municipal Art So- ciety In the galleries of the National Arts Club on Monday at S p. m. the president of the society will give th« opening address, and there will be reports from the officers and standing committees. After the meeting a supper will be held in the grillroom. At the thirty-second service of sacred song at the Union Methodist Episcopal Church, in Forty- »ighth-st.. between Broadway and Eighth-aye., to- morrow at S p. m.. the cantata "The Holy City." by Alfred R. Gaul, will be given by a chorus of Flxty voices, under the direction of William 11. Johns. At th*» Church of All Souls (Unitarian), Fourth- nrf. and Twentieth-st., to-morrow mon-ing, the pastor, the Rev. Thomas K. Slicer, •will preach on "How Does On© Soul 11. Ip Another?" At the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church to- morrow the Rev. Dr. Benjamin Ij. Agnew, secre- tary of the Board of Ministerial Relief in Phila- delphia, xrill prexch. as the pastor, the Rev. Dr. .T. Ross Stevenson, has accepted an Invitation to preach to the students of Princeton University. The leaders for the Fulton Street Noon Meetings i.fit -week are the Rev. E. L. Thorpe, the Rev. Alexander Shaw, the Rev. Dr. J. J. Reed, the Rev. X)r. Elmer A. Dent and the Rev. J. 1,. Blrchett. Irvine Bacheller. the author of "Eben Holden," \u25a0will address the men'H mass meeting in the West Side Toung Men's Christian Association audi- torium. No. SIS West Fifty-aeventh-st-. \u25a0to-morrow at 405 p. :a. NEW-YORK CITY. J«iI(C» Warren TV. Foster, in Par* 111 of th« Court of OeneraJ Sessions, yesterday sentenced John T. 'iofT, of Xo. 4-*l Canal-st.. to the peniten- tiary for three months and also to pay a. fine of syvi. Goff »\is convicted a. week a^o of accepting money from Italians to fret them positions as Ftceepers in the Street Cleaning: Department. At St. James's Methodist Episcopal Church, Mad- ls-jn-ave. and Om> w— a lif ni) al«l» al to-morrow rvcnJug:, the choir, assisted by Dm St, .Tames Choral Society, will sing: selections from •Th« Creation," by Haydn. AJiirCTifl «RAXD CIRn^E. B'«ar 55th Si. SViAjhoi'u s Ma ai - WI Z^AR O D, O t F T OZ | jg $150 DALY S STA^^CKS '"- The Earl ot Pawtucket I HSr* J^NT^fINEfuRNITURE OTHER WHITE SCHEMES FOR THE SEASHORE. How easy it is* to find frr<h effects in a popu- | lar style of furnishing if you only know where to look! Most novel and beautiful of all Is white enam- i died furniture, painted to match wall paper* | and cretonnes. The wood being thoroughly tilled i does not absorb the damp] .': pc. Bedroom Suites, ?.'H.<«>; Bureaux, $13.00; j Chiffoniers, with plass, (11.00; W-ashstaiids, i $.">.fX»; Chairs. $1..». Decorations to order, «'iir:i. Wall papers from ]<• ots. per roll: flowered i Cretonnes, 1.'."« eta. per yd. Inexpensive Summer , j Rugs in pink and white, blue and white, ktvpd. i ; and white, etc-, ''>\'.> ft.. $12.50. Besides these, there is a bewildering array of easy chairs in li^ht colored enamelled reed. j which may be artistically cushioned to match j | the other bedroom furnishings. All at factory prices, as you "buy oftme maker** I Geo. G.Flint Co. 43.45 and 47 WEST 23?ST. NEAR BROADWAY. ALL THIS AND MUCH MORL IN THL SUNDAY TRIBUNL Literary Brno**, Sports of Saturday and the Week. Matters of Special Inter- ,v' to Women, Entertaining Miscellany from The Tribune's Foreign and Amer- ican Contemporaries, a Page of Humor, Special Correspondence from London and Paris, the Senrs of the World. factory: 505 to 515 West 32d Street. Jersey City Woman Had Whipped It for | Upsetting a Plant. A jyr <iog belonging to Mrs. John Waldo, of j Harnion-st. and Randolph-aye.. Jersey City, yes- j terday jumped from the window of her apart- ments on the third Boor and v.-as killf-d. Mrs. j "Waldo believes the do?: committed suicide l>e- I cause she whipped It for upsetting a potted ! plant arhtat playing at>out the rooms with a kitten. .} The Turf. QUEENS CO. JOCKEY CLUB, Last Day To-Day at 2:30 P. M. Admission to Grand Ptand. f2 00- * jii^s $. 'Hi Har« trains Ifav* X 34Th St. l«i:.V> A. M 111 *1 12 .". 110 J.2'i. 1:3-.. 1:40. IJO P. M.. ani from F:«tbu«ii Ay«." 1U:56 A. M.. 12;10. 1. 1:20. 1:45. 1:48 P. U. THINKS DOG COMMITTED SUICIDE. April 27, 28, 29, 30, May 1, 2, 4, 5, 6. Six Races Each Day at Z.'M) P. SI. FIRST ~r>/x^y MONDAY, APRIL 27th. The Excelsior Handicap, $7,500. TRAINS DIRECT T<> THE TRACK. LEAVE EAST 34TH ST., NEW FORK, via LONG ISLAND RAILROAD 12 H> 12.30, 12.40, 12.50. 1.00. 1.10, 1.20. 1.30, ISO P. If. Parlor Cara on all trains LEAVE FLATBUSH AVK. llM'u 12.40 Um> 1 "i> l r> LEAVE BEDFORD STATION, 12.26 iLMt; 1 i«; 1.26 I ~, 1 LEAVE EAST NEW YORK, U.-T.. JL'..V., 1.15, 1.35, 2.00 1 >.. other days trains will l>r v follows: LEAVE EAST 34TH ST., NKW YORK, via L I C 12.16 12.40 1 «m» 1 lit 1 ;;i» 1.30 P M Parlor <';.rs on all trail \u25a0, , LEAVE FLATBCSH AVK.. 12.40. 1 (X) 1 "0 1 4.'. P M LEAVE* BEDFORD STATION, 12.46 1 <k; i ••»; 1.51 p M LEAVE BAST NEW YORK. 11.'..".. 1.15, i;;,-.. 2.00 P. M At) trolley cars to Jamaica connect with the track. Admission to Grand Stand, $2,00. Admission to fie .1 Mand, 75w. IVTXJSIO B"X" 3LiA.INri>:E2IFI. Order it of your Newsdealer or send in your Subscription. iu..uth». #1; thrrr- months. 3*** FRocTOß^ilii^i^ti § 23, $*»• |sSm*4,£.Av.- 58- s., u ,|.V";! .120 Cwja— « V....1. i\iS I ii Wiuthrit. ' i-Ki. ;-.-.. ....i ....... r- r-v t— k i WORM* IV WAX. JEew Groaps. pn c M1""I>i; M%r » G It. Ai»II . jfjlSEB. l|,.- \v«-k Ml' KOLTV To-t»l«ht 1 uuiiirs coVTWl'ni 9. •-«» * ::o « rv V M -..\'l. . i in:. rttßyojT * rREVUST. Jl^s J_'AM>i. lOaT * v. IJ.NTO.N. STSG SIXG FOR ADAMS. will publish photographs to illustrate how nearly completed are the build- ings which 3re to be opened to the world next year, and a description of many unique features of this fair which make it distinctive from pre- ceding expositions. AT THE ST. LOUIS FAIR Gov. Odell Governor Odell. with his staff and escort of Guardsmen, will leave Albany next Monday to take part in the dedication ceremonies of the St. Louis Fair. TO-MORROWS TRIBUNE We're titters Outfitters for men and boys with clothing, furnishings, hats and shoes fit to wear anywhere. Rogers, Peet & Company. 238 Broadway, opposite City Hall. and 7 and 9 Warren St. ..„.__ 842 Broadway, cor. 13th. A\ •" »HI •™" 11 ' and 140 to 14« 4th Aye. by mall. 1260 Broadrav. cor. 32<J. an.i 54 W>st 33d St. James McCreery & Co. Ladies' Coats. 16

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Page 1: STSG James McCreery Gov. Hr Will ST. LOUISchroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030214/1903-04-25/ed-1/seq-16.pdf · Mahogany finish frames handsomely carved. ... anese idols that were

Paletots and Blouse Coats,

made of black taffetasilk.

15.00Blouse Skirt Coats,— made

of black peau de s?oie ortaffetas. Lined withwhite silk.

16.50

17.00 and 19.50

Half length black voileCoats,— with semi-tittedback. Lace trimmed cape.

23.00

Full length t ravel linj?

(oats, made of tan, olive

or Oxford grey craven-ette.

Twenty-thiiMl Street

NEW- YORK DAILY TRIHINE. SATTKDAY. APRIL Si. MM.

OTHER FEATURES TOAPPEAR:

HOICE NEWS THE MILITARY SHOW.Dashing photographs of United Statescavalry and artillery practising difficultand dangerous "stunts" which they will

repeat at th" military tournament In

Madison Square Garden next -week.

CASH or CREDIT

(OWPERTHVVAIT %.104 106 and 108 West 14* St.

NEAR 6"?AV.BrooKWn Stones: FlatbushAv.nearMonSt.

West 14*St.ESTB? <^t^^H^i8C9RELIABLE

CARPETSAXMINSTERS, 95 cts. per yd.,

(Reduced from 5t.25)Newest Spring patterns and colorings, includ-

ing tan. green and rose, also new Oriental ef-

fects.5 pc. PARLOR SUITS, $25.00,

(Reduced from $14)Mahogany finish frames handsomely carved.

Upholstered in Tapestry. .Great Reductions in Reed Furniture— Chair?.

Rockers, etc. Aw.••Charge" all accounts by using our LONC»

CREDIT."

PROMINENT ARRIVALS AT THE HOTELS.

ALBEMARL.K—Marquis and Marchioness ofHertford and Liord Edward ana Lady Jane bey-Sou?, of London. FIFTH AVENUK-SenatorG«orK« F. Hoar, of Massachusetts '/.";?Judpe M. Sweeney, of Naugatuck HOFFMAN—J. B. Lyon. State Printer. HOLLAND-Ex-Con-pregfman T. C. Coykendall. of Rondout. IM-PEHTALr-^olonel A. C Parks, of San Juan. P. R.MAXHATTAN-AlexBarms of Ix)ndon and Bish-

op Tl-orthinpton. of Omaha. NKJHERLANI>-Ju iusOarSnkJe at Washington. WALDORF—J Becklej.

president of the Toronto. Hamilton and Buffalohallway, of Roihester. and Wallace T. Foote. ofI'ort li*nry.

Amusements.

MADISON SQUARE GARDEN

CLEANER WATERFOR THE BRONX.

Proceedings are now bcinc pushed that

win end in wipingout a lot of graves,

stables and other objectionable spots

which drain into The Bronx water sup-

ply. Description and photo?.

THE NEW CITY LIBRARY.

The first photograph of the plans of thenew city library front, at Fifth-aye. andForty-second-st.. allowed by the archi-tects for publication.

Afternoons at 2 aiviEvenings at S o'clock. Doors open anhour earlier- tor a. view of the Menageries. Warships.

Freaks. Prodigies, etc.LAST WEEK.

EXHIBITINGIN BROOKLYN FOR ONE WEEK ON'LT.beginning next Monday. April 27. at Saratoga Aye. ana

BARNUM & BAILEYGREATEST SHOW ON EARTH.America's Only Real Representative Sho-x.

Presenting the Wonders of the Earth..1rirrimfonipanii-'i.

•- Menfißerlcs.llllMioitromf. AeriHl Enclaje.Spet-taoular I'rdndc Gallery of *reat<i.

ONE HUNDRED STARTLING ACTS

THE EARL OF YARMOUTHweds Miss Alice Thaw on Monday next

at Pittsburgr. Advance account of theaffair, with photos of laM principal par-

ticipants.

THE BUDDHIST TEMPLE OF THE

UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA

has finally recovered two hideous Jap-

anese idols that were lost in transit be-tween here and Japan. Striking photo-srraphs of them.

CVCLO. THE KI\KTIC DEMON.BABY ELEPH.WT AND MOTHER.

Two Performance* Dally at 2 and 8 V. 31.Door3open an hour earlier.

_A«mias*os to all. tneludir.j: numbered seat. » and 3"

cent?. (2Cth an<J '.7th St. entrance* only.)

Reserved seats. 75 cents. 11.00 and $1.50. according to

location. (Madison A•. •-\u25a0 entrance only-> , vPrivate boxes. !>!x at:-. $12.(«> and ?1500 Stmt Ibox

seats. *2.iv>and $2.5<>. \u25a0

_Box o«lc« now open. Madison Aye. entrance, from 3

A. M. to 0 P. M.. for advance sale of seats from as."!upward.

No seats reserved by telephone. ,__^^___

A MINIATURE CONGRESS.

with all parliamentary rules strictly ob-served, .is carried on by the boys andteachers* of Philadelphia High School.Photos and description.

Twenty-third Street.

Sizes f» to 12 years.

6.75

Children's double breastedBox Coats. Made of bluecheviot, —

lined withsatin.

Children's box-pleated andbelted Russian Suits.

Sizes 6 to 12 years.

5.50

Trimmed with »ilk braid rmbroldfrT.

3.75

Children's Serge SailorSuits,

Sizes 14 and 16 years.

7.50

Blue Cheviot collar!essBox Coats, lined withsatin.

Sizes 14 and Hi years.

12.50

Homespun-cheviot BlouseSuits, —trimmed withcloth or braid. Tucked orplain skirts.

Blue, black or white polkadot pique suits. Mili-tary or blouse model,

trimmed with lace orwhite pique. Skirts, plainor with double flounce.

Sizes 14 and 16 years.

8.50

Misses' Suit Dep't.

.Ird Floor.

James McCreery &Co.

WHAT IS GOING ON TO-DAY.Jjist fiay of circus at Madison fvjuare Garden.

Am'ri'-An Matr^mati.-a-l S<v-iety. spring meeting. Colum-. bl» L'nivertKy. 11 a. 111.T>-r,:& of picture "f tb« late r"r"*n Edward K.

S'.-.aw. Schfvl of Pr-Saeogy. New-York VnivereAy,

Washineton Squ<«r<\ J :3'» p m.Ijayinpft cornerstone of lirst rresbyterian Church. \mi-

lamsbrid^e. 3 p. m.Birth-lay dinner tor Senator Depew. Montauk Club.

BnxddyD. <*v«»nin«:.Iyitos OxOt'9 musiraJ Cinner for TUcharfl Arnoia. cswV-

ho-use. 6:30 p. m. v

IMnr.Tfor Jamfs H. UcXtatm. vie* president of the Boardof Aidermcn. Colorial Hall. Klatbush-ave.. Frook.jn.-

\u25a0

Oradustion dinner of class of -ca. Xew-Tork Vniverslty

I^.w School. fsh«rT>-'s. sreninc8~-frt^aV dinner for th«> Willism P. TX-rery Association

by Waller I?. Hunter. No. 112 West 1at*—mil*.S:.V> p. \u25a0&.

Tt«vi»-w or Sd ReKim-nt by the Rev. Dr. us Dix.

.-.rmorj". Brooklyn, evening.

<-tub nicht at xh~ T"niversity «:iub. \u25a0»«\u25a0 '-'I \u25a0' brDwlgfal I-ithr<T> KlKiendorf. B p. m.

M'-etinc of the Shakespeare, Club, Carnegie Buildir.S. S

li.m.J-rep l»cturrf of the Board Of Kdaraticn. kp. —School

So 1 <i>rner ...!•-. and C?thar:n«- Bis., •\u25a0L.rrathir.js\u25a0md Healih.'- Mr*.

"M. A. SbotwtU; School No. 23

rarwr Malberry and BayaxU sL=.. "Texas. < harlesV i«Mi<ll-S.'hool No. 54. One-lniTidred-ana-rourtn-

and Amsterdam-aye.. ••American Sculpture/

i-T.r<v?' Sawyer KeUosr?: Amerltan Museum of Nat-ural HW*oiy. "The Mental and Moral Kvclutlnn \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0

Man—Natural Selection and Ethical Evolution." Dr.ilmry X Crampton; Brthany Church. Ter.th-av<?..r.ear'Thirty-Hftli-st.. 'The T«Jlow«tooe I'ark." BasilRgrwell <Jreat Hall of <

-ooT>er Ir^titute. ••Naples and

Pompeii." 1»r. Auffu«ta J. Chapiu; St. Hartholomew-

Lyceum H-11. No. SOS Kast Forty-seeond-st..•

Th»•-hemistry of Arjjs. liases and Salts." l*rciessor Will-

Ibtti C. rer-kham; Young Men* Christian AssociationMall No. 5 Wei* <>n--hundred- -and-twenty-fifth-rt.."Vn' livenine with Tennyson." Mrs. Mary KlizahethT>«-a-»e- Young Meii's Hebrew Association Hall. Nin*-tv-pe^nd M. and I^xineton-ave.. -Songs cf ~';ake-

i=r*are." Mr=. Henrietta. Ppek^-Seeley.

THE YALE PLAY.The annual Talc play ii!be presentednext week, and la Oliver Goldsmith's•The Good Natured Man." Photographs

of the students in costume.

LABRADOR.Many sorrowful tales of the native

"*that inhospitable shor«>. as t<-»M by amissionary from there who is visltin?ill!-city. Photos.Amusements.

CIRCLE*M*

SMTSIITSAHAR^T HENRY LEE

AXI> OTHER AM, STAR ACTS.

MliDnflV HIM. thra. I>jx. a-. * 421 mm HHQi matixbe evbkv DAT. sr,c.HIUIIIlM! "PIDir.MIKAD WILSOXT"

THE S. A. R.Description of the Connecticut Societj" cf

th«» Son? of thf Am-riean Revolution,

with pictures of its leading rr.embT?.

HARNESSING THE HUDSON.Wei! illustrated article on one of th»largest dams in the world approaching:

completion at Spier Falls, t»n milesabove Glens Falls.

Reviews of L' S Troops Marine?. National Guard. Naval

Militiat*T*J the Duke nt Cornwall's Own Rifl^ fromCanada, Every Night Gnu ' Military and Athletic Pro-

\u25a0"•"Satixeks WEDNESDAY AND SATURDAY.Admission. r.»r. Re«erved S^rs. 91jOB, »1..^».

C^BOX OFFICE NOW OPEN at Concert. Ha.l. En-

trance. SMI St. side at th» Harden.

llßAlMlfllTVwav & :»th St. I LAST TWO

"A CHI^ESjE HONEYMOON.^CASINO {"^Kffiffi1™ I M^'^X

Matinee To l":>:. A

FAUNTLE.OY1"

LITTLE LORD FAuNTLEhOYnnilinrOC Bway & 20th. Double Bill.P nINUtOO. K.f. "at9 Mats. Thursday & To-day. 3.•j-itr-DC "Keeps audience laugh"gall 'Vj.'"-Herald.

InunC -Far and away season'! best farce."— Press.

&nipi/ Preceded Ergs, at >:2" Mats.. 2:20DMbfN. ••Man Who Stole- the Cn?«tlr."

HERALD SQUARE^THEAJ!?^ 11*85'?^^^GRACE GEORGE in PRETTY PEG3Y

MADISON SQUARE GARDEN.THE GREAT

MILITARY. TOURNAMENT,MANAGEMENT MTMTARY ATHLETIC LKAGrn.'••ni|nAVHIPLIT REVIEW by Secretary of WarMONDAY NIGHT, kLIHI HOOT. escorted by

Cadets of V P. Militar>- Academy. West Point,***

Evenint Parade by the Cadets.

THE MOVEMENTS OF STEAMERS.FOREIGN PORTO.

Liverpool, April 24—

Sailed, steamers Cymric <Br). Thomp-son. New-York via Queenstown: Victorian (Br), j< 'a veil. New-Turk.

Moville. April 24- -Sailed. Fteamer Ethiopia fßr). Lums-dane (from Olaegow), New-York.

L^itliApril23— Arrived, steamer Knaresbro (Br). Ty?on.\u25a0 -York.

Lizard, April 24 -Passed, steamers Adria (Ger). Schaar-schmidt. Hamburg for Philadelphia; Potsdam (Dutch),Potjer. New-York for Rotterdam.

Swansea. April 22—

Sailed, steamer Exeter City 'BrI*.atkins. New-York.

Bristol, April 24— Arrived, steamer Welle City <Br).Carey. New-York.

Plymouth. April 24, \u2666\u25ba.'>< a—

Arrived, steamer Kron-prinz Wilheim (Or). Richter. New-York for Cher-bourg- and Bremen land proceeded)

Southampton, April 'M. 12:15 i> m—

Sailed, steamerIVutschland (Ger). Barends ffrom Hamburg). New-York via Cherbourg.

Shields. April 22—Sailed, steamer I'hoehus CGcr). Pchler-horet ifrom Hamburg! New-York.

Stettin, April Sailed, steamer Alabama (Dan).G etscbe. New- York.

Cherbourg. April 24— Arrived, steamer Kror.prin?. Wi!-h«lm <Ger). Richter. New Tork via Plymouth forBremen land proceeded*. Sailed 5:20 p m. steamer ;

Deutschland u>r). Barende ifrum Hamburg andSouthampton). N"<-w-Yrvrk

Gibraltar. April 24— Passed. rteamer Shjmoea (Br|, \u25a0( "hap-

Un. Yokohama, etc. for New-York.Alßiers. April 21

—Sailed, steamer [ndradeo (Br). Ester-

brook (from Yokrih.-inia. etc*. New-York.T'-inta dv Arnel. April 24

—Passed. steamer Phoenicia

fGer>. Schmidt. Genoa and Naples for New-York.Oenoa. April 24, lp t.i Arrived. steamer Prinaens Irene IfGert. ii,- \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0•\u25a0 inn New-York via Naples

Naples. April Arrived, steamer Calabria (Br). Bridges.New-York via Marseilles and Leghorn.

Palermo, April 22 -Sail".-!, steam?! Plcqua (Br). Kelkin?(from Trieste. eto. Ne->v-Y<irk.

Patras. Afril 13—Sailed: steamer r^odovlea fAust), Bartullch (from Trieste), New York.

Port Said. Ajirll Arrived, steamer Indrawadl ißn.Condy. New-York for Aden Pinpapore ami Manila.

Tarlfa. April 24—Pas! Bteamrr Indradeo (Br). Ester-brook. Yokohama, Hioico, Shan«! Hen« Kong,

*

Manila Sinear>or<\ Penanc and <">chin for New York.?.lellK>urne. April 24

—Arrived (previously!, steamer Essex !

ii!ri. McCil/con. New-York via St Vincent, c V. :

••\u25a0rs Perinsulai iPort). tot Lisbon New Red-\u25a0 iri 'Hr. Liverpool Seneca. Tamplco: Hamilton,

Norfolk r-nd Newport News: Benefactor, Philadelphia:Irltish King <Rrl. Antwerp ia Gravesend: MaravaJ <IJr>.Grenada and Trinidad: Frnters iNor), Kingston: United

monitor Nevada.

Steamer Celtic (Br). Lindsay. Liverpool April 15 andQueenstown 16, to the White Star Line, with 366 cabin.1,917 steerage passengers, mails and mdse. Arrived atthe Bar at 0:07 a m.

Steamer Tuscarora (Br),Scott. London April 9. to PhilipRuprecht. In ballast. Arrived at the Bar at 10:17 p m.23'i.

Steamer Colorado (Br>, Cox. Hull April 10. to Sander-son & Son. with \u25a0) cabin passengers and nid^f-. Arrivedat the Bar at f> a m.

Steamer Rotterdam 'r>uich), Peters. Rotterdam April12. to Philip Ruprecht. inballast. Arrived at the Bar at4:0". a m.

Steamer Washington <Ger>. Tholen. Rotterdam April 6and Shield* 9. to Philip Rupreoht. in ballast. Arrived at

the Bar at 10:16 a m.Steamer Bordeaux <Fr>. Lebarrler. Havre April 11. to

the Compagnie Generale Transatlantique. with mdse. Ar-rived at th" Bar at 5 a m.

Steamer Breiz Huel (Fr; mew. 2.833 tons). Rabin. StNazalre April 7 and Cardiff 10, to master, in ballast.Arrived at the Bar at 9 a m.

Steamer Weimar (Ger). Peterson. Genoa April * and

Naples 10. to Oelrichs & Co, with 51 cabin and I.5iSsteerage passengers, mails and mdse. Arrived at the Barat 12:39 p m.

Steamer Cherokee, Garvin. Azua April 13, San Domingo

City 14 Macoris 16, San. ana and Sanchez 17. Porto Platoand Monte Crtsto IS and Turks Island 19. to William PClyde C Co, with in cabin passengers, malls and mds*.Arrived at the Bar at 12:">0 am.

.Steamer El Cld, Baker. Galvrston April18, to J T VanSickle, with mds«.

Steamer Frl <Nor>. Wagle. Cardenas April 17. to W PM \u25a0* \u25a0-\u25a0 -. with sugar. Arrived at th-; Bar at 1:."<\u25a0> am.

Steamer Clitsapeake, Dalano, Baltimore^ to IiC roster,

with mdseSteamer Jamestown. Tapley. Newport News and Nor-

folk, to the Old Dominion SB Co. with passengers andmdf-e.

Steamer Oneiria, Chichester, Philadelphia, to William PClyde £• Co. with mdse.

Steamer Pomeranian ißn. White. Glasgow April 11 viaHalifax 22. to Austin Baldwin & Co, with 4 cabin and75 steerage passenger? and mdse. Arrived at the Bar at7:30 p m.

Steamer Jersey City «Br), FYanlciani!. Bristol April—

and Swansea !>. to James Arkell &Co, with mdse. South-east of Fire Island at 4:5."i p m

Steamer Slcllla (Hall, Toscanlno, New-Orleans April 1«.to Hirze], Feltmann & Co, withm«ss« in transit. Arrivedat the Bar at 5:30 p m.

Steamer City of Augusta. Daggett. Savannah April 22.to the Ocean Ss Co with passengers and rndse.

Sandy Hook. N J. April 24, 9:30 p m -Wind southwest,light breeze: clear.

SAILED.

SHIPPING NEWS.

Port of New-York. Friday, April24, 1903.ARRIVED.

Brat6ber|r. Barbados, etc. Quebec ... 9:00 am 12:00 mTerence. Argentina, etc. Lamp & Holt 9:30 am 12*0 mXI Slglo. Galveston. Morgan 3:00 pmProteus, New-Orleans. Morgan 3:00 pmAlamo. Oalveston. Mallory \u25a0 r.:oopmComanche, Charleston. Civile 3:00 pm

MONDAY. APRIL. 27.Seguranca, Colon. Panama 9:30 a m 1:00 pmPrincess Anne, Norfolk, Old Dominion.

——".:<«> pm

TUESDAY; APRIL. 28.Aurania. Liverpool. Cunanl

—4:00 pm

KaiFer Wilhelm 11. Bremen. NCJ L10yd.12:?.0 pm 4:00 pmUmbrla. Italy. Itilian 8:30 a m 11:00 a inAlgonquin. Charleston. Clyde 3:00 pmMonroe. Norfolk. Old Dominion: 3:oo pm

THE "YAXEY YAKES'VS. THE "MONK EASTMANS."

These two grarigs of ruffians are now wag-ingquite a war on the East Side. Sev-ora! murders and many shootings hav<?marked the war so far. All about them.

EMPIRE THEATRE. Broadway and 40th st-Evening. (»:2t». Ma».lne*s To-day & Wednesday.

inijM HC3C\A/ THE Mnnn AIDJOHN UntW THE HI'MMI.MiBIKD.

May 2. Last Night of the Present Empire.

CJARRICIv THEATRE. Htk «t.. near B way.I^ast 7 Evgs.. J.:ir.. Matincs To-day & Wed.; 5:11

ANNIE KtISSELL in M!Ch AMD MEN.

Harlem |Conried's IrvingPI. • Mat. "AltHeidelberg."Opera Ho. Theatre Company. .v tr'it. "Baerenfell."X xt WV. Amelia Blngham— "The t"ri>.lcy Mrs. Johnson."

MENDELSSOHN HALL£{ :rr: :!\u2666• V,

Mf;\nß ninH jdi\ as ininiir'Tfrd™? aIuILIAN whnIfINFITrSPARISI'S UIWlt-lMll U'HIIiUIILIILUFOR IHI-:BENEFIT OK THE NEW YORK IX-riUJIAKV for HOMES AM) « hii.iiri;\.Tickets, at Tyson"*, the Manhattan, the Waldorf and at

door. Evening. $.1.00. Afternoon. $2.00.

}>110 An\V \ V THBATRB tut n. «Ifwav"

I}l\\fAMJItillEv." ». Mats. Today* We.l 2Henry W. Savage Tre^ent-! the New Musical Comedy."

P^SNOE OF SHIEt 5.9 Special I'rictsr4S&l«iy&3 %Si 8 BiUWfcilH 60c to $1.50.

CHITKRIOV TIIKATRK. B'way and 4«th «t-Kvenlnn. »:» Matinees T.> la; X.- Werlnesr'av. 2:V>.

CHARLES HAWTREY, fiSE'SGSSL

BULGARIA.where the Albanian Christians arc h«»in?cruelly pr-rpeoutod by th-? Turk. T_>e-

scription. with graphic phot

>E\V SAVOY THEATRE. 34th it iB way.I-a«t 7 Evks.; *;V.\>. Matinees To-day IWed.. .-.::.

HENRY MILLER. VffSSSSP

MARINE INTELLIGENCE.

MINIATURE ALMANAC.

Punris« Funs*t 1-

Moon rieea 4:04 ;Moon's ago 27

HIGH WATER.A.M.—Sandy Hook S:2S;Ov. Island <s f>> Hell Cafp 7:4!>P.M.—Handy Hook 5:57, (f0v. Island tf^B Hell Gate 8:19

INCOMING STEAMERS.TO- DAT.

Vessel. From. _ Une.Gibraltar llsltrs. April 7Roma Gibraltar. April 13.... KabieElMonte New•-Oilcans. April is MorganComanche Jacksonville, April 19 ClydePocahontas .Alster». April i1i1 KesbltJer&ey City.. Brlst. April 9 Bristol CityAdra Si Micha Is. April 14Sabine ';.!:.-•!; April 18 Mallory•Campania. .........l.ivf-rrii'Ol. April 18 Cutiard•st Paul Southampton. April16 AmericanNauplia Stettin. April 8 Uamb-Am•Blilcher Hamburg. April 14 Hamh-AmAigotujul" lacksonvii:*-. April 21 Clyi"

SUNDAY. APRIL. 56.Columbia Glasgow. April IS Anchor•1^ GascO(rne Havre. April IS French

MONDAY. APRIL. 27.Vnderland Antwerp. April 18 .... .Red StarBoric Liverpool. April Is Whit*StarXlI><>rado Galveston. April I'l Morgan<"omus S*w-Orleaiui. April 22 Morgan•Caracas San Juan. April 2. Red O

•Brlnps mail.

OUTGOING STEAMERS.TO-DAY.

VesselVessel. l\,r. Ltoe Mails <lose. tails.

Ktruria, Uvorpool, Cunard ....1"::;"a m 2:00 pinAttoria. Glascrow. Anchor 12:30 pna .":H0 p mFinland. Antwerp, lied Star 8:00 a 'ii10:00 a mIlckla. Dramatic >.-and-Am ll:«K)at» 2*o pmManltou, London, At Trai«

- —!':«.ini

r*tr;.-!.i. Hair.bun Haml Am 4:oi«i'»nBuffalo. Hull. \\il!=oiiMexico. Havana. N V & Cuba .... 10:00am 1:00pmValencia. Jamaica. Hamb-Am :•'\u25a0<•• a m i:i:OOniI'once. San Joan. N V & I1I 1 R '\u25a0>'*> a m 12:»' mMaracalbo. Venezuela. Red I> S:3oam 12:00 m

SAN FRANCISCO STOCKS.San Francisco, April24.

—The official closing quo-

tations for mining stocks to-day were as follows:

Alta MUustlee 10Alpha Con «J T. Wash Con OSAndes IT m• \iin LOOTl*-lohrr 50 Occidental Con MBest & BelctMT 1.50 Ophir I.MBullion 16 Overman 50<-ale.3onia 2.101 Potoel 21Challenge Con 4.". Savage- ViCho'.lar -1 Sag Belcher ISConfidence 1.1" Pierra Nevada 72'"on Cal & Va 1.851Syndicate («6Con Imperial «- St. Louis 21«""rt>Tvn point 291Union r0r,.... (HI

Gould & Curry 39 U7tali Con !. 40Hale & Norcro*! 6t>| Yellow Jacket 28Julia 01':

Accusation of Woman Who Seeks Partitionof Grandfather's Estate.

The trial of a suit brought by Katherine AVilson.aged nineteen, for the partition of the estate ofher grandfather. Henry Wilson, who died in 1901.was begun before Justice. O'Gorman and a jury inth« Supreme Coon yesterday. Miss Wilson de-clares that her araadfjather left a will by whichshe and her sister. Mrs. Adelaide, Lyons, were tobe the main beneficiaries, hut that the will wasdestroyed by her father. Charles EL AVilpon, andher uncle, Frank B. Wilson, to enable them to gettheir father's entile estate-, said to have been near

•\u25a0 The father ami undo of the plaintiff denythat they destroyed tbe win, and say their fatherdestroyed Itsome time previous to his death.

Robert D. Kvans testified yesterday that he sawThe will of Henry Wilson in IKQ4. After the funeral\u25a0'harles Wilson said to him that there was no willin evidence, that he had the combination to the o!<lman's shf-, a.::d that th^ girls would tret BE parcent of the property under the will, hut that hewould not "stand for" the will. Evans said he andJohn D. Robinson were named as the executors ofthe will. Kvans said he never heard Henry sayanything against his granddaughters, except that'"Addic" burned too much gas when her "beau"came to see her evenings.

John D. Robinson, principal of Public School Xo'M. testified that Henry Wilson ask.-d him to be an>-xf-r-utor of his will,and told him not to permit thehoys to bulldoze him. He never saw the will.

Hr Gets Stay That Will Postpone

Journey Till Monday.

Justice Scott, in the Criminal Branch of theSupreme Court, yesterday handed down a de-

cision denying a certificate of reasonable doubtIn the case of "A'" Adams, the convicted "pol-

icy king-." and Adams willhave to go to 6insPing, have his head shaved and don a striped

milt, to be^in his term of imprisonment of more

than a year, -while his counsel try to get a new

trial for him on appeal. The millions which the

head of th- policy game was am* to collect from

poor and credulous people of the city in th«years he had control of the same cannot be

iafcen away from him. but they cannot save him

from punishment.Adsme might have been taken to Sine Sing

yesterday, but "Jimmle" Oliver, of his counsel,

obtained from Justice Gieperich, of the Supreme

Court, a writ of habeas corpus, returnable at 10

a. m on Monday. This willact as a stay to keep

Adams in the city prison until that time. The

\u25a0writ command* that Adams be taken before

Justice Giegerlch. that the legality of hi* Im-

prisonment day be passed on. The writ also

calls for the production of the documents on

which Adams Is held in the prison. It is not jbelieved that Justice Glegerich will require much

argument before dismissing the -writ.

Justice Scott Inhis decision paid:

Ie the case at bar Itdid not appear that the jDistrict Attorney had obtained the search warrant

or directed Its execution or taken any part in the

search or seizure of the papers. Hla whole con-nection with the matter appears to have beenthat after the search ha.i been made and the ,_„,„,eelred. th*>v were delivered to one of his ,aKi«t«nts. Nor did the defendant protest againstcr Object to the sear b and seizure on the ground \u25a0

that it would amount to a violation of any right ,of his The evidence was that he warned thepersons havlnK the search warrant not to tako ;iavthtas because nothing in the room belonged ,to "blm The ffer.^ral rule upon the adxnlsslbility

of evidence obtained under such circumstances Is |

\u25a0well stated in Greenl*af. Section 254A, as follows: ;•'Although papers and other subjects of evidence ,may have Wn illegally taken from the Posses- \u25a0

elon of the party acainrt whom they are offered. ,or

"otherwise unlawfully obtained, there is no j

valid objection to their ndmissibi'.ltr, if they arepertinent to the Issue. The court will not takenottre how they we-e obtained, whether lawfully

or unlawfully,nor will it form an issue to deter-mine that question." ;

; CHANGED CERTIFICATE FOR TRAPANI.

Clerk Who. To Be Obliging, Aided InsuranceSwindlers Dismissed byDr. Lederle.

j President Lederle of the Board of Health an-j nounced yesterday that he had dismissed Jean J.i Tate. a clerk ii: the Bureau of Vital Statistic*.| because he had been concerned In the Italian ln-j \u25a0araace fraud cases. Tate was dismissed for re-; questing a. doctor to change a certificate of death.i .1. Trap.mi, the undertaker accused of being oneI of the swindling band, told Tate. that the ln?uranc<s; company which had issued a policy for Saraflne! Clcone had refused to pay it because the word

•"chronic" was in the death certificate, and that hewould like to have the word i-hronic" eliminated, from the certificate. Tate to obiipe Trapanl wrote

j to Dr. Moore, who had issued the death certificate,i and asked him to change it. Dr. Moore returned

the certificate with the word "chronic" eliminated.;Tate filed the changed certificate without consulting

his superior officer. He received no compensation• for his acts.

FATHER AmUNCLE DESTROYED WILL.

Amusements.

VICTORIA 4:f; vT; T^UST 2 WEEKSWalsh -RESURREGTI&NACADEMY f'V MUSIC. 1 ItliSt. A Irving PI.

HP°EoS THE SUBURBANPrices SO. 75. I.o<>. Mats Ti da; & Wed.; 2, Ev, S:ir..WEST EM). Hftco Uo|wi||pU o|wi||p In '"SISMat. To-day. nOSB tiiGhlllo HOPKINS."

A NEW EAST SIDE.A most interesting: description of a com-prehensive plan to improve th- EastSide. Some of the f*»;iture«i of this plan

are the widening of AHen-st.. the pur-

rkMc of a waterfront for Corleara H<x>kPark, et>-.

GARDEN THEATRE. CTth *t. & Madison «v«.»:v«>ninsTs. >:'."'. M.-itin*""!"To -«lav A- Wnirey.iar ":"(>

MORALITYI>U\Y. C.Vt.l™<YSvlAlNMORALJTT PLAT. CVLnT iVIAIN

MADISON SQ. THEATRE. '-*' SI near wayEvening*- s :!

" Matinees To day .v Thur*Jay. - 19

Greatest Comedy M rUUL ms tVIUfjCI

Knlckrrborkrr Theatre. B'nitr & HSt> >t.\u2666Oi Month At 8 Sharp. Matinop To da) n '-\u25a0

SiaSKffi'Wß: BLUE BEARDSHALL DOGS BE MUZZLED?

This burning question discussed frosts allpoint? of view. Illustrated by photos ofdog?, nvjzzl^'l tirlotherwise.

BIJOU SS% MARIE CAHILLsi-;?%jw;^ n nancy brownlltVl><;PLACE THEATRE. M.\T.TO-DAY.

1...,., :rp'fnrnißnw!" of »|>r>: I'l'Pl'K." withMIA «i:RHEH and the Ferencz] Operetta Co.

BECASCO I -Z^~^J-EXTRA MATINEE THURSDAY. MAT TTII

DAVID BELASCO pmenu THE iMiill\iHI.AMIIi;BATES in OF THE CODS.

i,„..

TO-NIGHT TO-NIGHT. Saturday Evening.

GIGANTIC ENTERTAINMENT AND RECEPTION.Actors' National Protective Union

<Xi>." i of ,\>w York. Affiliated with tin" Federation of Labor...E.^-r,-.'-'.•. lI IST*

iON »TACE-HOKSTKaI MI\*iTKKl.FIRST PART—I«KM % IIDKVILI.EACTS l\ AMERICA— IMKIIKSTI\(.rEATI'KESTV>!i.lVi>s':K

-GRAND CENTRAL PALACE I:'

r'ERPORMAXCE 8 Jl.J 1. M. ADMISSION M r-TS. TO MA. .So wardrobe charge. I!'«\u25a0» &IITSICIANS FOR Till: SHOW AND HAM.

The Turf. The Turf.THE PATRIARCH OF VENICE.

A prelate little known outsM* Italy,but

who. according '\u25a0• "Ex-Attach*." is the

most probable successor to Leo XIII.

\V\I.I.\CK*S. T^r*..':1V Mat*. To day *IV*d.. •_•:!.-.

GBORRE ADITS wtTTT MUSICAL. illtCHt

|SULIANsieSULU\u25a0StHS i EDMUND RUSSELL&Friday. May 1. 1 Id HAMLKT. Sfats oa tal*.

A UrD ITA V•

«\u25a0 AND STH AVK

m n ntn ™t M«rv! More Than QueenTEDMARKS1 BIS CONCERT siNOAY tdGHT

A farewell meeting for Mr. and Mrs. T-^igi An-pe!!nJ. of the IRaMaaaiaa Mission, in Italy,willbeheld at Mm Collegiate Church. West Knd-ave. andP»»venty-Eeveni.h-st.. or. Wednesday at S p. m.

Postmaster Van Cott announces that mails fromHong Kong. March 24; Shanghai, March 2S; Yoko-hama, April4. and Honolulu. April 15. reached SanFrancisco on Ike steamer China, were dispatched»>as!- at 6 p. m. on April 22. and ar« due Ii New-York on Monday morning. Mails for Cblna. Japanand Hawaii wll! close at the <Jeneral Postofflce. as«<iv*rtisf'i

Bishop James IT. Van BBVBB of Porto RJeo willpreach at St. Mark's Church. Tenth-st. and Sec-onfl-avs*, to-morrow at 8 p. m.

The R*v.Dr. Howard Duffleld. at the Old FirstPresbyteriaa Church. No. J4 Fifth-aye.. willpreach•it 11 a. m. to-morrow on "StnUjrhtforwardness,"and at 4.30 p. in. on "The Word of the Lord."

At the annual meeting of the Municipal Art So-ciety Inthe galleries of the National Arts Club onMonday at S p. m. the president of the society willgive th« opening address, and there willbe reports

from the officers and standing committees. Afterthe meeting a supper willbe held in the grillroom.

At the thirty-second service of sacred song atthe Union Methodist Episcopal Church, in Forty-»ighth-st.. between Broadway and Eighth-aye., to-

morrow at S p. m.. the cantata "The Holy City."by Alfred R. Gaul, willbe given by a chorus ofFlxty voices, under the direction of William 11.Johns.

At th*» Church of AllSouls (Unitarian), Fourth-nrf. and Twentieth-st., to-morrow mon-ing, thepastor, the Rev. Thomas K. Slicer, •will preach on"How Does On© Soul 11. Ip Another?"

At the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church to-morrow the Rev. Dr. Benjamin Ij. Agnew, secre-tary of the Board of Ministerial Relief in Phila-delphia, xrill prexch. as the pastor, the Rev. Dr. .T.Ross Stevenson, has accepted an Invitation topreach to the students of Princeton University.

The leaders for the Fulton Street Noon Meetingsi.fit -week are the Rev. E. L. Thorpe, the Rev.Alexander Shaw, the Rev. Dr. J. J. Reed, the Rev.X)r. Elmer A. Dent and the Rev. J. 1,. Blrchett.

Irvine Bacheller. the author of "Eben Holden,"\u25a0will address the men'H mass meeting in the WestSide Toung Men's Christian Association audi-torium. No. SIS West Fifty-aeventh-st-. \u25a0to-morrowat 405 p. :a.

NEW-YORK CITY.

J«iI(C» Warren TV. Foster, in Par* 111 of th«

Court of OeneraJ Sessions, yesterday sentencedJohn T. 'iofT, of Xo. 4-*lCanal-st.. to the peniten-tiary for three months and also to pay a. fine ofsyvi. Goff »\is convicted a. week a^o of acceptingmoney from Italians to fret them positions asFtceepers in the Street Cleaning: Department.

At St. James's Methodist Episcopal Church, Mad-ls-jn-ave. and Om> w— a lifni) al«l» alto-morrow rvcnJug:, the choir, assisted by Dm St,

.Tames Choral Society, will sing: selections from•Th« Creation," by Haydn.

AJiirCTifl «RAXD CIRn^E. B'«ar 55th Si.SViAjhoi'u s Ma ai

-WIZ^ARO

D,OtF

TOZ| jg $150

DALY SSTA^^CKS '"-

The Earl ot Pawtucket

I HSr* J^NT^fINEfuRNITUREOTHER WHITE SCHEMES

FOR THE SEASHORE.How easy it is* to find frr<h effects in a popu- |

lar style of furnishing if you only know whereto look!

Most novel and beautiful of all Is white enam-idied furniture, painted to match wall paper*| and cretonnes. The wood being thoroughly tilledi does not absorb the damp]

.': pc. Bedroom Suites, ?.'H.<«>; Bureaux, $13.00;

j Chiffoniers, with plass, (11.00; W-ashstaiids,i $.">.fX»; Chairs. $1..». Decorations to order, «'iir:i.

Wall papers from ]<• ots. per roll: floweredi Cretonnes, 1.'."« eta. per yd. Inexpensive Summer ,j Rugs in pink and white, blue and white, ktvpd. i; and white, etc-, ''>\'.> ft.. $12.50.

Besides these, there is a bewildering array ofeasy chairs in li^ht colored enamelled reed. jwhich may be artistically cushioned to match j

| the other bedroom furnishings.All at factory prices, as you

"buy oftme maker**

I Geo. G.Flint Co.43.45 and 47 WEST 23?ST.

NEAR BROADWAY.

ALL THIS AND MUCHMORL IN THL

SUNDAYTRIBUNL

Literary Brno**,Sports of Saturdayand the Week. Matters ofSpecial Inter-,v' to Women, Entertaining Miscellany

from The Tribune's Foreign and Amer-

ican Contemporaries, a Page of Humor,

Special Correspondence from London

and Paris, the Senrs of the World.

factory: 505 to 515 West 32d Street.Jersey City Woman Had Whipped It for |

Upsetting a Plant.

A jyr <iog belonging to Mrs. John Waldo, of jHarnion-st. and Randolph-aye.. Jersey City, yes- jterday jumped from the window of her apart-

ments on the third Boor and v.-as killf-d. Mrs. j

"Waldo believes the do?: committed suicide l>e- Icause she whipped It for upsetting a potted !plant arhtat playing at>out the rooms with akitten. .}

The Turf.QUEENS CO. JOCKEY CLUB,

Last Day To-Day at 2:30 P. M.Admission to Grand Ptand. f2 00-

*jii^s $. 'Hi Har«trains Ifav* X 34Th St. l«i:.V> A. M 111 *1 12 .". 110J.2'i. 1:3-.. 1:40. IJO P. M.. ani from F:«tbu«ii Ay«."

1U:56 A. M.. 12;10. 1. 1:20. 1:45. 1:48 P. U.

THINKS DOG COMMITTED SUICIDE.

April 27, 28, 29, 30, May 1, 2, 4, 5, 6.Six Races Each Day at Z.'M) P. SI.

FIRST ~r>/x^y

MONDAY, APRIL 27th.The Excelsior Handicap, $7,500.

TRAINS DIRECT T<> THE TRACK.LEAVE EAST 34TH ST., NEW FORK, via LONG ISLAND RAILROAD 12 H> 12.30,12.40, 12.50. 1.00. 1.10, 1.20. 1.30, ISO P. If. Parlor Cara on all trainsLEAVE FLATBUSH AVK. llM'u 12.40 Um> 1 "i> l r>LEAVE BEDFORD STATION, 12.26 iLMt; 1i«; 1.26 I~,1LEAVE EAST NEW YORK, U.-T.. JL'..V., 1.15, 1.35, 2.001 >.. other days trains will l>r v follows:LEAVE EAST 34TH ST., NKW YORK, via L IC 12.16 12.40 1 «m» 1 lit 1 ;;i» 1.30 P M

Parlor <';.rs on all trail \u25a0, ,LEAVE FLATBCSH AVK.. 12.40. 1 (X) 1 "0 1 4.'. P MLEAVE*BEDFORD STATION, 12.46 1 <k; i••»; 1.51 p MLEAVE BAST NEW YORK. 11.'..".. 1.15, i;;,-.. 2.00 P. MAt) trolley cars to Jamaica connect with the track.

Admission to Grand Stand, $2,00. Admission to fie .1 Mand, 75w.

IVTXJSIO B"X" 3LiA.INri>:E2IFI.

Order it of your Newsdealer orsend in your Subscription.

iu..uth». #1; thrrr- months. 3***

FRocTOß^ilii^i^ti§23, $*»• |sSm*4,£.Av.-58- s., u,|.V";! .120 Cwja— « V....1.

i\iSIiiWiuthrit.'

i-Ki.;-.-.. ....i.......r- r-v t— ki

• WORM* IV WAX. JEew Groaps.pn c M1""I>i;M%r» G It.Ai»II.jfjlSEB. l|,.- \v«-k Ml' KOLTV To-t»l«ht 1

uuiiirs coVTWl'ni 9. •-«» * ::o « rvV M -..\'l. . i in:. rttßyojT * rREVUST.Jl^s J_'AM>i. lOaT *

v. IJ.NTO.N.

STSG SIXG FOR ADAMS.

willpublish photographs to illustratehow nearly completed are the build-ings which 3re to be opened to theworld next year, and a description ofmany unique features of this fair

which make it distinctive from pre-ceding expositions.

AT THE

ST. LOUIS FAIR

Gov. Odell

Governor Odell. with his staff andescort of Guardsmen, will leaveAlbany next Monday to take part inthe dedication ceremonies of the St.Louis Fair.

TO-MORROWS

TRIBUNE

We're titters—

Outfitters for men and boys withclothing, furnishings, hats and shoesfit to wear anywhere.

Rogers, Peet & Company.

238 Broadway, opposite City Hall.and 7 and 9 Warren St. ..„.__

842 Broadway, cor. 13th. A\•" »HI •™"11'and 140 to 14« 4th Aye. by mall.

1260 Broadrav. cor. 32<J.an.i54 W>st 33d St.

James McCreery & Co.Ladies' Coats.

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