the sun. (new york, ny) 1915-05-25 [p 11]. · uncertain swing to cotton prices jlnrkoi shows...

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UNCERTAIN SWING TO COTTON PRICES Jlnrkoi Shows Considerable! Ir- - roptilnrity In Sosslon of Usht Trndliiff. JTALIAX SITH.IE8 LARGE tClth Liverpool closed on account of tilMM n"'1 tnorn or uncertainty t,firAtK h" fnnr of th' Oermin roplr t, resident Wilson's note the cotton ritkt movul within narrow Itmttn yes. ttrdsy and purely a scalptnR affair. r..wt professionals fn,n'' " difficult to Vtep I'P w,ln fluctuations on account (( th Irresiitarity. There was a f ilrly Rood undertone In tv rarly tradlnc. The market made an itrir.ee of about points. Thin was f.Mwsd by a docllno of about 14 feints, hut a rally on covering left frees practically unchansed. Thora tii no featuro of Importance to the Mthfr. Some heavy rains were ret- orted In parta of the eastern belt ti scattered showers fell In Oklahoma portion of the central belt. The, crop In the Atlantic State ap. Mrs be somewhat spotted, flood rinds are reported In parts of Gorl. but more or tees Irregularity ii noted In Alabama on, account of tho drought. The June condition report will be ride up from replies dated to-d- lid will be published on Juno 1. Thus fir the season, while not brilliant, has teen fairly propitious and It Is thought tut the condition figures will be sev- ers! points above those of last year, ubsa the Crop Reporting- Board of the replTtment of Agriculture placed the condition at "4.. The definite entrance of Italy into Oil ru created little comment on the Cetton Exchange. According 1o the CrkU, the amount of cotton at Grr.on at the end of last week was 4SI.O0O .bales, compared with J8.000 tiles last year. Italian cotton mcr. chants appear not only to have fortl-fe- d themselves against any possible tcsrfltr. attracted no doubt by low jrkes earlier In the season, but It la !o assumed that German Importations ere made through Oenoa. A recent ntlmite placed the amount of Oerman cotton at the big Italian port st 309,000 bales. If Italy takes over t' !s cotton her spinners should have iwplles to last them well Into next kSOT futures closed steady. Open- - Mstv Low. Clns- - Prev. Inr. est est. Inc. closs. Mr,. ss; SM .M rift 9 1 ItlOtil Ail 9 TO "0 " M ' 9 01 S J M K 9 "fl .M . J.SJ Ive ie ii to i; tow lo.i:io.u vucwton Jia t" 1 10.10 lfl.ltirlO.H 1MSAM.H Xircii 1 19.4 10.14 19.413W U 1 I531M0 Spot cotton at New York was quiet, points decline. Middling, 9.70c. fosthern, spot markets were unchanged. Houston, 5 points decline, with New , (Jalveston 3.10c. Savannah Ss'.. llousiin 9.10c Augusta 9.13c and M'mphls 0.12c Tte New Orleans market closed r'ldy Trices were M t- - n to Onn- - lllrh- - Inw. int. em. em. 9 i t.vi 9I 9 11 M 9 71 9.V. 9 f7 i.a 93 3 17 917 S.S7 9.7S 9 90 CTos- - Inf. 9 lff 931 9.11ft 9 S.ttfJ M 9.W4T 9.91C .9 clos. KB flat 9.933 Si. The Liverpool market was closed yes-trrti- r. Liverpool Is due to open y to r!ws decline. Receipts ami stocks He- - Last feints. ye.tr. Stories. nir. (ll'wlon J.93 l.OfJ Orl.ans S.90 :.9.11 fTllnth 971 1.4H9 M.St4 M.771 rkL-to- 1.174 3.494 S.v tit -- .795 SI.MO llaiRrlon.. S14 M.I63 14.113 Xo!l.:e. 413 7,M9 Interior storks and receipts TT. Tna .! eeipts. yeir. Slocks, Ricon .. 3.IWJ 3.317 S9.3W .Mtmsali.. 1.11! 130.0M Aarmt . Loait zn :.: v4tmstl nnrt receipts to day. CtlTMton .. .. 4.9") to l.tm ,m oneant,. 7M l.ow Latt 9,ll 4.313 91 9M 61 9i 5 6 .. .V' .. 7t ... 11 St ... I .4 .. 1S 3 r.. to M 9 9 9 I'.at.prlic O! fQS Last . 4.313 s.i n To talthus far this 7,689,403 6,563.061 last year wpek. THE GRAIN MARKET. Prer. 91HT n:mn were: :J1.041 17I.S4 :9.73 1M.! Nnrlalk were: 10S.12t Vinnrtm hn1fK. year. 74.75! 44.347 M.101 ti.Kt year. season. bales iu.nt TVkeat Itnsler Political .Vews Dls rnnnled Corn Firm. The nrfse of wheat values yesterday at the smallest of many sessions. Vtlues were maintained after Initial Mkness, notwithstanding bear drives, r.wellaneout liquidation nnd talk of henige pressure from the Southwest. In which section the Investing operations will commence tii.t week. Traders conjured up numerous argu-fer.t- a from Italy's decision to take part ! the Huroprin conflict. That the Dar-imell- hhould be forced so as to glvu i outlet for the Kusslan crop this Ml w.is their favorite theory. Ad-f'- concerning the wheat situation Is Rujua are inconclusive, but It Is gen-rtll- y conceded that tho area has been Muced from 10 to 15 per cent, nnd "at tho amount of surplus old wheat ! t'clic'.ble. ftether the war will end earlier r" that Italy has cast her lot with Wt Allies w.is also much discussed, one were nuthorlttes In the trade Im-- nlth the idea that temporarily to foreisn inquiry for American wheat nw!4 l quickened, "o imnr- vrment In tho export demand iobfrod yesterday, with the day's WeictinnK (lgured at under 150,000 ahels p in understood that Interna-,:,- rl flnarei.il conditions are partly f.r tho lull In trading, while further oliservanrn of the Whltsun-- I h'lMays ahrnad Is also cited. The Merpo.i (run market will reopen Tiorning. ''rcmii.ep' Ve,itern Interests admit 'l tfcev are much perplexeil by the r,'"t wheat Kituation, nlthoiigh there 'apur sn heard of a lurking short ' Jf't in the Chicago May delivery tvi,"1 r,n'r,'r"ly strong rash situation. opinions nro Incidentally held by J7'a A at m, that ennsldernbla of the Jet buy ng nf wheat yesterday wns for Z 'h"r". who believed the Italian iiisepuntrd. Evidently there Is ofear of a comparatively bullish crop "Wt early In June. " crop despatches yesterday were i more sanguine tenor. Inglls sum-bli- 'i ,nf ""uatlon ns holding a possl- - ''r for a second record crop. Ills 'lement refers only to winter wheat, in no mention made of tho 10 per "i. ara Kaln In American snrlng "'1 Its admirable start. Hnow lh Sl'swiurl crop outlook nt O bushels, against 4,300,000 a year ta,l,i nt"'r Private experts are wing on 130.000.000 from Kansas, ffnjt I76.ooo.ooo last season. Prac-w- r rnUr beIt reolve showers h ii Wf'''1 ,'n'' Rn' '"sect ravages Uifri,k t? ch(,cJ,Al1 In many counties, r l,l,r,e"In f rusl jililJ.r'ient vlsibla v&s reduced to J'WMOO biishels. agnlnat 2S.6O0.000 rv!? ? "id 32,000,000 In 1914. Hj-- Ths closing strength of the a alt, "wompanled with rurrrore of Eh.wVL xrort business at Baltimore, 'ound a greaUy tfergrthened technical position. There was reference made to excessive rains In parts of the Hast and Southwest. Tho fact that farmers were indisposed to sell much corn doubtless hod much to do with tho recovery of more than a cent a bushel scored. The receipts for the day were only 669.000 bushels at In- terior points, against 913,000 a year ago, and the visible for the week win reduce! to 15.000,000. against 17,000,-00- 0 In tho preceding week and 11,000,-00- 0 a year ngo. During tho forenoon corn values were nt fractional recessions, due principally to the depression In other markets. The support wns light, and favorsrbla weather In Argentina was reported. Onlr The offerings of new crop oats were Iwnvy during the ,rly doling", Stop low orders precipitated the de- clines. Crop news was bearish, and tho first construction placed on tho Italian-Austria- n situation was ngalnst vnlues. A slight recovery ensued, when the corn Hat rallied. There was no Important foreign demand however. Provisions Packers were credited with giving support to the list. Kor-elg- n demand for meats has Improved. Hpeculation remains) quiet. Chicago prices: Whest. May July Slept Corn: May July Sent 6ts: Msr July Sept I'ork: July Sept Urd: July Sent An: July Sept., 1M 7J4 :, st Ml a JI.M .; itirh. est. if 1I7'4 HIS 744 7sl, 1S ;s MS s 1S.1R HIT tn 10.10 tow. est. New Votk prices were: 1M 13 iH tt4 74' TV, M M 4H ieo 1S.M 19 IS Ml 1U 10.R 19.V 10.) Open Illch Wheal.: inc. est. My July .. 4 K Clos- - Prer. close. IM14 131V, i4sH cos ' ls.1t 11.4? K 1010 10 S1 10 7 Low THE SUGAR MARKET. 1:1V, 73; 7tS 74! MS fS US. ls.oj isx 10.SO U3 Haw and Iteflned Are Firm Prices l7nrkstnsTed. The raw sugar market closed firm yes- terday, with the spot price unchanged nt 4.89 cents, duty paid New York. About 10,000 bags of Cuba changed hands here between refiners this prlco and 10,000 bags were taken for late June early July shipment 5.02 cents, duty paid New York. The refined sugar market was firm, with all Interests standard granulated at 6 cents. The demand for withdrawals was light, owing tho weather. The sugar futures market the Cof- fee Exchange was quiet, with prices slightly lower under Wall Street sell- ing. Total sales were 4,100 tons. Prices were: Msy June July All rurt September October November IVcemher January February Open- ing', S.TK quoting nigh. tow. est. est. 1.96 4.03 t.r. 4.M 3.99 J.99 Inr. 1MH est, Clou. Inr S.no 3.94 4. or. 4.13 4.3) 4 It 4.01 J It 1.70 THE STEEL MARKET. 177 .7S 10 02 10 M Clos- ing. 17H at or at to at t.t .7Z 4.0 3.7 Prer. clote. .9! 3.9t 4.n 4.10 4.01 l.7 1.72 Deniand for Shrapnel Still Leadi- ng- Feature. No mnterlal change In steel market conditions was reported at the outset of the week. The heavy demand for shrapnel steel continues the chief "factor of the market. The for- eign demand for ammunition Is keeping up at a high rate, and with the entrance of Italy Into the war there are pros- pects for an Increase In orders from the other side. Domestic conditions are shownlg signs of Improvement. The recent heavy car orders have already resulted In the placing of contracts for about 7.S.00O tons of steel by car makers and there are Inquiries before the market for about 150,000 tons more. BUSINESS TROUBLES. OSCAR nERI.EIt. shoe dealer, with stores at 134 Nassau etreet and 93 I.nox avenue. Manhattan, and M? Ful- ton street. Itrooklyn. made an aflxn-men- t to Marcus lletfand. A petition In bankruptcy was also filed asalntt htm hy creditors. Liabilities said to h about 140.000. He nesan business In April. 1911. SAMUEL KAPLAN HItOS.. INf. whole-sal- e and retail elothtnir at 149 Canal street. Manhattan, and 33S Ninth street, llrooklyn. made an alsnment to Reu- ben Oreenbaum. A petition In bank- ruptcy has also been filed atralnst the corporation by creditors. Liabilities es- timated at 150.000. The business was started In HM and was Incorporate,) In January, t9U. Capital stock, 110.000, Samuel Ksnlan ts president. MAPLRVrLLK WOOLEN COMPANY, wholesale dealer In boya' clothing, 7 Broadway, petition In bankruptcy by creditors. The company was Incor- - orated on June 13, 1913. Capital stock F 10.0O0. SARAH TlOvOfAN. 5 and 10 rent store, :54 Ninth avenue, nied a petition In bankruptcy; liabilities tl.049; assets 3734. JOflRF" SATMARY. It. 30 First avenue, for- merly a meat dealer, filed a petition In bankruptcy: liabilities 11.313; no assets. irAKK. sometimes known as Max Stein. bartender, S19 Rergen aenue. The Rronx. nled a petition In bankruptcy liabilities 11,951; assets, 11,175 In ac counts. Composition Confirmed. ni.TAS flllKCNHKItr. Judse Mayer has confirmed a composition of Ellas Oreen. berg, cotton goods. 103 Hester street, with rreilltors at 2S cents on the dollar, payable 10 renta rash and IS cents In three notes, at six. nine and twelve months. Liabilities. 113.04:, Petition Dismissed. LOUIS It. KATZ Judge Housh has the petition In bankruptcy filed on April 19 aanlmt Louis II. Kati, shoo dealer. 3073 Third atenue. on a settle, ment at 50 renta on the dollar, parable :0 cents cash and 30 cents In Ova notes. Schedules Hied. JAC1IMAN Oi:VKHH. men's furnishing roods. 10 nast Korty-secon- street, schedules show liabilities of 130,300 and assets of I. 394, nhlrli have been sold by the assignee for 15,000. SAVOY LUNCH, INC.. 100 Sixth arenue. schedules show liabilities of 33.919, nom- inal assets of 13,075 and actual assets of 11,100. Assignment. J. It, CUMMINIW, INC, plumbing con- tractor, 3007 Seventh avenue, assignment to Thomas J, Meehan. The business was started In 1359, The present com-pnn- y succeeded to It In April, 1913. Carolina A Cummlnri Is president and Jacob I. Wllklns secretary. Discharge From Il&nkmptry. Judge Hough in the United States Dts. Irlrt Court granted discharges to these bankrupts; WALTlllt F DUIINP, 207th street and Rostun road, formerly president of a realty romyanv: liabilities. 1117.337. SAMUBL II. VANDK.KHMITH. Forty. eighth stret and Ilroadway, nola broker; liabilities, 10, 549. DAVID RRAUN. 300 West 111th street, formerly painter: liabilities. $7,190. HARVKY C. COHCY, HO Nassau street; liabilities, 1310. HOI.O.MON KLKISCIIMAN, woollens. 97 Clinton street; liabilities. 10,5S. Fit i;t S. HAlUt, 1 Jay street; liabilities. I!,rl7 JU.NKOW1TZ A KLEIN, cafe, 104 Can- - nnn street; nubilities. 13,040, RO.HAItlO LAIIHA, roofer, Itys; llobtrltles. 13.177. IDAI.KNE C. LONO, actress, 138 West Forty-nint- h street; liabilities. 11.114. WILLIAM F. MAllORItlN, painter. Ill West Forty-secon- d strstt; liabilities, $17,001. NLI.I.IK J, READ, 13 West Forty. eighth street; liabilities, 11.116. SAMEUL ROSENTHAL clerk. 10 Second avenue; liabilities, 111,400, II. &, II, SAFC1IIK, furs, 1 East Twelfth street! liabilities. 114,331. 8AHON nilOS.. kimonos, 91 Allen strsst; liabilities. 13,104. LOUIS SHAPIRO, manager of a lunch room, 101 East 171st street; liabilities. 11,339. ANDERSON A CO.. INC., an old pleno concern of (59 Fu'ton etreet, Rrook-ly- wjilch rscsntly madea general assignment to Edwurd IJ. Jordan, former Internal Rsvsnua collector; In- voluntary petition In bankruptcy filed against it by creditors. Jacob Ilrsnnsr, counsel for the Anderson com-ran- said that the assignment was the, first difficulty the company had vsr experienced and ascribed It to general business depression and lbs Buropsan CHINESE COMING TO WELD TRADE BONDS Commission Prom Orient Wants to Meet Merchants In New York. REPRESENTS MANY LINES Stanley II. Ttose,' acting commercial agent In charge of the Hureau of For- eign and Domestic Commerce, 409 Cus- tom House, New York city, has received a report concerning the. Individual wants of some of the members of the Chinese Trade Commission, who are expected to reach New York on June 1. The In- formation was sent by K. C. Torter, who Is accompanying the commission on Its transcontinental trip as representative of the Department of Commerce at Washington. This being a purely business trip taken by tho various Chinese merchants with tho view of Increasing nnd solidi- fying commerce between China nnd tho United States, the members of tho com- mission will be glad to get In direct per- sonal touch with New York business men. Kirms Interested In arranging In- terviews with any of tho delegates should, address them beforo June 1 In care of the New York branch of the Hureau of Foreign nnd Domeettle Com- merce, 409 Custom House. The following delegates are especially anxious to arrange personal Interviews: I.lm-Pa- k Chan, proprietor of tho Cheong Chan Exporting Haw Silk Com- pany of Canton, Is deslrlous of dlscusjtlng with locnl silk merchants the possi- bilities of American silk manufacturers opening branch office in Canton. He will be glad to meet any silk men In- terested in the Import of Chinese raw silk. Ll-C- hl Chu, secretary of the Chinese General Chamber of Commerce, Ghang-ha.- 1, wishes to meet Importers of hides, embroideries and furs, with a view of Increasing Chinese export trade in those lines. Bheng Chen of the Te Chang Cloi- sonne Company, Pekln, manufacturers of lacquer nnd cloisonne work, wishes to get In touch with Importing firms who have not o far done direct trade with the Orient. It Is suggested that this would be a good opportunity for firms whose European business Is cut off and who wish to import from tho Far East. Chla Yu. embroidery merchant ol Pekln. Is anxious to get In touch with a good Arm of Now York laco and em. t.0? broidery Importers, tin , Haleh Yu. director Hulchow Tea rrsiie 1 nion. xnnngnai, wm 10 ihkc direct connections for the sale of tea In the fnlted States. Chl-Che- h Nleh. proprietor of tho Hen Foong Cotton Manufacturing Company, Shanghai, Is Interested In the Importa- tion of American cotton, hut would also like to meet one or two good cotton commission houses In New York city who might submit to him tho typo of goods that might be utilized In the Chinese trade. Hunn-Y- I Hang, general manager of the Wah Chong Mining and Smelting Company, Shanghai, Is interested In In- terviewing users of lead antimony and Its seven! Slng-MIn- g Kung. director of the Hul Chang Machine Manufacturing Com- pany, Shanghai, Is Interested In making n study of flour mill methods In this country. andalso In machinery equip, ment. He would like to meet Important mnchlne equipment builders In New York city. THE PHILADELPHIA MARKET. Cr; lh riltLADCLPltlA from Sons and e tendencv. The first named stock with a gain of 2 points. Lehigh Navi- gation lost "a. Cambria Steel 4 nnd Traction and Philadelphia liapld Transit . The mramary 0,ien. Rich- - Ixisr. Clos. Sales et. ing. S5 Amal Copper ?v) American Can.. 3f, 3 Am Rallwaya, .. 7 naldwln loco. M 1M Raldwln Iak-- pf lim, :r. llutle Sc Sun 7!t. ::i Cambria Steel. .. 4ti, loo Crucible Steel f. F.Iee Storage ... Kno 170 Oen Asnh pf... 1!W ln Co N A. 6 Keystone pf.. 7TA Lake Superior ... 7, lhleh Nav stock 19 Ihlrh Valley 71 Miami 6il Penn R R 17 Penn Salt . . .. 14 Phlla F.lectrle.. 45 Phlla Co s Phlla Co mm pf HA Phlla R T ttfs, Reading Pressed Steel Tenn Belmont.. 175 Ton Mining,. Untied Imp Rubber 4971 Steel Union Trac. tveitnaen May 14. Aside closed I'nlon ing est. r,i :i4 Tel 474 35 7!S 534 91 74 J.14 31 7, SOS ... 774 10 Car. 4'.', 45 Copper . .. 3S 95 Ton 4': 99 Ols 10 II S U S 73: . . : : s TS 7 rri, !4. 30i M', 101, 4 31 Dt W t :t'i 474 71 :s m; ') 71 334 39 90S, 49 1H4 77S 4 si; 51 74 f4 :i; 474 74 7JS 70', :s lav; 90 73; 3.1 39 r:; 30H 4S 4t m 11 :t te, :n; C74 7S ::s 70t, ns 7 7 on 7 4 7! 11.11 71 l ti', in', w, 3S 3'. SS 1, t ti 7 7 7 LIS 7 1.18 k :s : 444 I4 444 4 r.4 M US 114 31 314 30i 304 494 49Tt 194 494 ?1 Wesfhnusej E 44 49 41 !! 4? 9 4 Coal, si si si si 1113 Wm Cramp A S, 39 33 3C4 3t nONDS. 1100 Am Gat A Elec St Kit SS4 H 4 svo Ilaldwln L 1st f.B.113 1074 lo; 1034 175Cani Steel sop M OS 9H 9t 9H 7fS Cam S so May '17 97 9 7 97 97 1975 Cam Stl so Feb '17 37 97 97 97 1000 Ih Val Coal fs,. 104 lftt Id 101 1000 Phlla II A W 4s 9t 9t M 9t yt) Phlla Elec 4s.. . si4 S04 W14 1.14 ltnoo PKU ir m 44s ttfs 974 97V, 974 l74 175 Phlla Co scrip 191. 9 9S f.G M 3 Phlla Co scrip 19H 93 91 93 93 torn W N Y A !' g m 4s - 7S 7 7C 1000 W NY A 1 1st Ss.1014 1014 1014 1014 BATTIItDAY. Paid by to hanks. I1.7IS.000 1's.til by bunks to 1,04:, 000 I.nis tn banks on day's trans- actions HINPB KRIDAY I.AflT, Paid hy to banks. 13,314,000 Paid by banks to Hub. Treasury. Loss tn banks Ixim to hanks same p'rlol pre- vious week I1H.000 5,658,000 t:,z7:,ooo U9.000 Mvc Mnrkrt. Receipts of beevsa for two days were 2, 135 head, Incluilnsr 3fH cars for ths market, fitters uere slow to a fraction loweri bulls strong, rows steady and thin cows Arm, The yards were clearsd. Fair tn choice steers sold at 7.7C9fl.0 per 100 lbs.; bulls at 15.(00 17.10, 1 extra bull at 17.79, cows at IJ.60fH7. Dressed bsef nu In moderate demand at steady prlcss, or nt imtflJIic. par ID, tor city dressed native aides. Itrrelpts or calves rnr two days were 10,010 hntd, Innludlng .8H for the mar ket, Veals were In fairly goixl ilemund, but on liberal receipts prices dropuM tow 0c. and the advance of last Friday uiui ist, The pens were cleared. Common to prime veals sold at J7W'J.r0 per 100 lbs, one hunch at IS. 75, culls at Id.tOffl (6.60, nn skim milk calves nf any Imunrtnnre. City dressed veals wera easy st lZmUc, country areaaeti uunui airuur i iuftro Itecalnta of sheen and lambs for two days were MIS head, Inrludlnc 17 Vj cars for the market, Hheep were slow and iWil 7Sc. sprlna lambs (quoted as Iambi herttfttr) atsody, last year's lambs (quoted s yeaninis rrom were SOc. lower. The pens were not nulls cleared. Common to food sheep (ewes) sold at M.CMiJ', per luu ins., a rew ut It.SO, culls at M. tnlseil sheep nt H.7.-- , W S7 .SC. lambs tt fOtfllSi yearlings at I7W 1 9.76. Pressed mutton lower at lJJtHc. ner lb., dressed lambs steady at JOif 2Jn.. dressed yearlings lower st lie tie., coun try dressed notnous iamta, M7 each. Ileceipis or nogs ror two nays were 1.991 head. Including I cars for the market Market easier and medium tn light weights old at IA at 4I.50OM.7I. THE SUN, TUESDAY, MAY 25, 1915. THE BOSTON MARKET. HOSrO.V. Mav 21 Activity Ir, lh.nl. Ing list again centred In American Zlna nnd Ilutto nnd Superior, both of which were strong early but closed with a loss ior me nay or nbnut a point each. Cop- per stocks opened higher, but later eased nlT. Closing prices as a rule showed small changes either wny. United Shoo Machinery was active on a statement "mi n extra dividend would ho de- clared and sold up to 6!i. but dropped back to 64 at tho close. Tho summary: Sales. 11 J nmaav a... 1 Aljromsh " v 1?, 64 M --U Amalgamated .... 7S 7S m'amatei rts. 1 Ms i 1 ! American Zinc tm ttij " - ..... ... ... loa. Arliona Com 7S fliitte A Pal 3 IM Ilutto A Sup - f"J Calumet A Aria.. MUj Calumet A Hecla.r.9 130 Centennial chin ism ISO Copper Range u 3r. T?at rimte ij 7tl rranklln 10 'u.' "iranny s;vt rights is 170 Hancock tm K Isle ..." 1J4 Kerr iik... .....' 4 Lake 14 i Mass Con u in.Varflower s 1 juv, . Michigan 390 Jlohawk 73 91". New Arcadian.... 10 ts Nipimng .;; a 13M North Ilutte 33 M North Lake JU M Old Colony gvj 76 Old Dominion M so Otarola nil WA Pond Creek 11? Qulncr ss V, Hay Cons.,. 54 Jon Santa Fe jt! 177 Shannon 9 1M Rhattuck i 1 St Mary's Ijind.. M 7 Sup A Dosion.... 3'i Ett Superior Cop so l.io Tamarack sa WS TYInltr 61; rU S Smelting.... 37 3t VS Smelting nf.. 4:, 110 Utah Cons 7R Utah Copper W. esu Ht Wolverine . ., ... t.1 100 Wyan.lotte , 1 is RAILROADS. 7 rtoston Albany.17. 10 Iloeton Klevsted.. ' 100 Post on & Wnr pf H S Fltchbnrr fif.. . 7 WNY N It A II.. 3H .a pm r.iwi m jty. si W End 6t Hy pf, M MISCELLANEOUS. Am Chem.... r. Am Affr t.nem pi ?z a Am Pnett Serv pf 14 PO Am Surar 10714 1 Am Siir.v pf IIS M Am Woolen pf... s 1! Am Tel A Tel. ...119 13 A ft A W I t 173 A 0 X W I pf... 19 r.,uon 3: Mass Gas pf... IS N K Tel... ..... & Pullman .. .... 50 Keecn Foiling.. 5 Sudft A Co ... to) United Frtilt . IMS I'll Shoe Miwh IV ,.151 i Un Shoe pf... M'i , ,j , o ....... . n, 110 Western Union. , RONDS 110V) A O A K 1000 Pond Creek ..95 THE BOSTON CURB MARKET. nosTON, May The closing Boston curb quotations; AsVut .MTartno ................. Pay Stale Oas Ilegole Rtnjthtm Ilnhemls lli'ton Ely. . nutte A London Calaveras Champion Conper. Chief CoctolUated Cortes Cornelia Consolidated Arliona... Consolidated Copper,,.. Crown Davis Daly Facie A Rluebell First National Copper.. Hnurhton Iron Blossom La Itnee Majeetii McKlnley Darrtgh Mexican Metals Mines of America New Ilaltlc K, 4 M iiti W Baldwin Ixicomotlve Nyad . market showed a slightly SV"0 ;::::;:;;;::::;;:::::: West'laml STATEMENT. roughs South ,:.i44 .IS nnd lwula amp lower, Miami Lake... Stewart Utah Metal, Unlte.1 Verde Katenslon.. Yukon Cold Si "i'i 'S THE PITTSBURG MARKET. I'lTTsnrRO, May Gas were 1014 steady. Ohio Supply gained a point reiiiiKnuuew nrsKf 1.10. price changes were mostly direction. The summary: Open. Itirh- - Cloa- - S.Uea. ito a tv .narr-- n 14 Col Oas A .. :.-- . Crucible Steel. . 311 Crucible teel nf. 91 .'I UUi 1114 - i nil iirewing i, 31 T.nne Star Ons Mfrs Light A II.. so Ohio Vnel 17t; Ohio Puel Stipply. 4.1 I OUIa Nat C,as. .. si w Pills rtrculnf 1'4 lilts Coal. ... 71 Pure 114 jo rnlnn 1'04 9 t'n ft t1, 1fl P S M West Drake ,14 3CS Vfest Klectric. .. its. THE CHICAGO MARKET. Chicaoo, May Clhlcago Pneti-mntl- c Tool, Carbide and Stewart Warjter wcro firmer, wtth trading moderate proportions. Ilocbuck easier, while small changes wer" recorded elsewhere. department summary Sales s Radiator 210 Pnen Tool Tom Kdlsnn M Illinois C A "3 : itisctm son S Public Serv pf Oils . 116 Pears Roebuck. Stewart Warner SO 10 1' S Steel .. L'nlon Carbide 134 H' pf EM 11'. Jl r.s S3 31 I. at K S3 11 ?4 K 47 PONDS. Incomo !ls J Com ts B0 Ss Open- - Low. Clou. i 190 r'tH lis 11S Ht am l.to U3 .1071, K74 1071, 14. asked Tt'rl Iteserre .:V easier Slock ttranny Mining 24. stocks Fuel closed Other slight cither est. Ing K.. Oil Oil 14 icm s.in tot Minitwr Nat Cat switcn Steel. Air 24. I'nlon Sears. dull. Phi Prick. Hy Pennies Quaker Swift 1S7 Cbl P.T rooo Edison 1fo SwKl irirh- - JS4 Alien- - Low. Clos. U9VJ 1131, l.H THE BALTIMORE MARKET. HAl.TlMnni!, securities market and featureless. Trices were stationary. The summary: Iow- - Clos- - rnntnn lITnns Tower pf..ll1 Cosden Bank ... 10 Mercantile Trust Uys Kle.' no.vps. 11001) rtinrleston Kleo JI ,Wrt t'lil Itvs 1st ,'s 3I; is w i n, Cons Coil Cs Cons (i.s. S4 rmn Klkhnrn Kurt 3s flm N Moh r.s p it), s tn U llya A K ts m'4 I. ulit. Inc. rat. est, Inf. 73 ti 19 H MW H lru4 S3 .1.1 7J4 5.1 im; 37', Itu ljtj M 11 Air Am : I" r7 SO lot 9 an I 95 M 4.1 93 IS S7 t, I1PH M 14 474 144 dull s H'i 173 171 l!n Ii :ily unit :it wo rrtl two ine 30un filz DALLY FINANCIAL CALENDAR. DIVIDEND. Company nnd Northern Ohio Trs'tlon nusrterlv Ptamliird of Kansas, qtiar- - .13 .00 .u .SS .7H .71 7V. .VI .42 .71 IS & K. M 23 23 T,s Ot : ,r. 1 (4 MH 1 4 13 S5 19 llt It 4 t t 1S.1J It'i Ht, 3'. n, 117 Oil 1VTJ f'.i r M9 4I4 JtU S U'l H74 nesdlns, quarterlv Ohio quarterly DIVIDIINDS I'AYAIII.K. American Wlnitnw Dow Chemical Dominion Cnltnn Mills llntneslake monthly.. Morih Pennsylvania Itiillrosd, quarterly rsoplss Uas, quarterly. 73 10 im r 4 : : 131) J'i 44', 57 ITS ITS 7 7 wi, t4 3H i (i i ti 11 HrH IS 991. 9V f7H 93 115 tt tt 19 SS tt .... s. 31 10 34 M f,t i: 44 si M 49 It 737 l.W ir.3 414 4 Ml, 95 i 44 r4 IS pt 47. : .. .. 11H14 lllli 3 V A A O A 10 k and SI .6 It SI 14 n y U IS s 1 1 s ? S : 10 47 41 fl I. l!.Mi 1"7J Ml, r St ll 4 1T1 13 St dli 40 00 tseiv I Oil, - pM S7W MS IJ's 1 31 3 ti J M 19 M 10 t si 7: f.7 3 4.' .." f7 74 S1 fl 1 14 U 94 119 9 19 Ml 153 1071, .14 .10 4' SI .1: .40 9 .17 l.l . , .55 .45 1 ,5' .70 .:t i mr nt In Low. Ing. et 37) 1114 1114 lot 3o 1V4 iss ioo 1VI .9t .is .SO W4 314 4IH MH ll't 10U :t4 :ii bid .:j 914 K, 10 31 . Klk Gas. IS 47 41 SI K4 ni? 1314 M04 elk. i:4 ir 47S Bond Tho Itlth. Ins. jro X1 ll fs 133 133 133 i'S f.t f3 :3 :.i 23 111 113 1H !lt, iw lon4 in.;, 137 13U', 117 107; po May 24. Tho Open. Illirh. Sales. inn, is?i, M Oas I'Vitj jmiij !l 40 fl Term. 15i 113 !4 H4 pfd 8 9M M0 7:1, r.. IS 171 IS? 115 ess 190 13S 1U 44 14 :s :; 14 mm up pr. Co Nat lit i3; 1M nf was (lis Chi rr'i Inc. est. est. 3&1 9M, !IU w. ir pn U.J H 137 is M was loir est est ing- cn 113 pf OT. !li I7U inoi IIX .ts .74 los. 100 U7H 113 4A 173 2.1 M inov, M (iiH 41 m MV, Ptock. Amt. Olass Mlntnr. 14' i: lOrj, 1 S '(. C5c, ft 12 GO TO PRISON FOR "POULTRY TRUST" Surrender to Servo Sentences After Fiphtfnpr Ycnrs to Escape Cells. SEE HOTE IN WHITMAN Twelve members of the "pon'try trust" who users canslcted of conspiring to com- mit acts Injurious to trade and com- merce, surrendered to Judge Wadhams In General flesstons yesterday. Kach of the twelve) was committed to serve a sen- tence of thre months. They were con- victed In August, 1011. Slnco that time their cases havo boon before the higher courts or. appeal. They were convicted before Judgo Hosnlsky after a trial which lasted nearly three months. In addition to the sentenco of Impris- onment cJCh defendant was fined IfiOO, This fine was paid beforo tho prisoners appeared In court. After the conviction was upheld by the Court of Appeals efforts wcro mado to keep tho twelve from going to JalU A petition Is now beforo Gov. 'Whitman asking him to pardon the defendants. As tho men walked across the Hrldge of Highs from the Criminal Courts Ilulld-In- g to the Tombs they still hoped that there would be some action by tho Gov- ernor In their cases before he leaves to- morrow for tho l'anama-IMclfl- e Impo sition nt Kan Frnnelsco. Attorneys for tho twelve men point out In their petition that the defendants arc all respectable merchants who had lecn convicted of crime after many yenrs of reputable business dealings here. Home or tho defendants are men of advanced age. Solomon Frankel, who was convicted with the twelve, died on Kobruary 20 last. A certlncato to that effect was filed with tho court. . The men who were sentenced were Ervlng V. Pwyer. Arthur O. IwyeT, westerberg. William W. Smith. Charlen It. Jewell, James N. Morris, William II. Norris. Charles T. Hawk. Charles Thatcher, Clenen Illshop, Sam- uel Werner nnd Charles Werner. District Attorney Perkins said yester day that It was the first Judgment Im posing terms in tho penitentiary urrorri persons convicted of violating the ami-tru- st net that had been nlllrmed In the united .states, whether under tho Fwl- - er.il or Stnto law. THE COFFEE MARKET. I'tltrirra Quirt Prices Close I'n- - rlrniiurrt to 4 Points Off. The coffee futures market was nulet and featureless yesterday, with prices at the close unchanged to 1 points oft on sales of 6,500 bags. Tho cnblo was de- layed nnd consequently no reports from tho Brazilian co.st.nnd freight markets were received. Prices were a little higher nt tho start In tho nbsence of offerings, but In the Afternoon there was some eclllng and active months sold off from 1 to , points. The local spot mar- ket continued dull, with prices un changed. Hrazlllan mnrkets wore featureless. Itlo 7s and Santrw 1s were unchanged nt 4150 and &IS00 respectively. Hlo nnd Santos receipts totalled 11,000 bags. Sao Paulo hail fl.000 nnd Jundlahy r.OOO. Tim rate of Hlo exchango on Lon- don was advanced to lH.d. Prices were: Mar June JlllT AtUtltt Sn'itember... O.mber November... Ilecnilrt'r.. . January February M.iri'h April.. High. Low. et. eit .70 73 70 e 37 t.H Clos. inr I rs I. !.i t. ft s: t. hi s 70 6 73 IS il t 97 7.01 Prer. close. .'. tl I t, f. M rl SI b.ti ( 73 S.74 tl Tt tt t M r! ! 7 C3 DIVIDENI) OUTLOOK BETTER. Further ltvimhle Action on In- vested Cnpltnl Kapeotnl, Dividend developments of the week were generally favorable and the outlook for future action on Invested cnpltnl continues to be better than It was a .tear ago, during tho period of depres- sion through which the country was then pasting. During the last week the Porto Tobacco Company resumed Its quarterly 4 per cent, cash dividend. The last previous dividend was paid nt that rate In December. 1S12. Since this disbursements hitvo been made In 5 .... ,..., a.. In TS. .1,1,. ln',la. pany declared an extra dividend of one-ha- lf of 1 per cent, during the pan week. I The unfavorable dividend developments took place In tho Central States Klec- - I trie Corporation common Mock, the Chesapeake and Ohio Hallway Company and the Hocking Valley Hallway Com- - i pany. In the case of the Central States j no action was taken on the dividend at all. while In tho case of the two other companies dividend action was ueterrni uillll llio unu iiiecuilg u in directors. BANKERS TO MEET IN DENVER. Interrstlnic Pinna for Investment Aaaoclntlon Cnnveiitlon. The fourth annual convention of the Invtstment Hankers Association of America will mivt In Denver on Rep. tember 20, 2t and 22. The Ilrown l'alace Hotel has been selected ns tho heailo.ua rtera, Tho committee havlnir In rharitn tho business sivvslons hns not yet wurke.l out that end of tho prnrrramnis. On Monday evenlnt?, Reptemlier 20, the Pen-ve- r Invrstment bankers will entertain nil dole-Kate- on top of Iyookntit Moun-ul- seventeen miles from Penver. Tho trip will bo mado both wn)-- s hy auto-mobil- e, On Tiicevlny, September 21, tho busi- ness sessions of tho tonventloii will be continued until luncheon, after which nil of the delegates will bo tnken by nulomoblln to ltes Paik, seventy-liv- e miles from Penver, In tho heart of the newly formed Rocky Mountain National I 'ark. On Wednesday morning. September 22 there will bo a tour of Kstcs I'.irlc nf nlmut fifty miles. ROCKEFELLER IN "MOP" PLAN. Deposits Ills; Notes, hnt Speyer A Co. still Mold nrr. John D. Itockefeller has deposited the Missouri Pacific notes he holds, m.iklnir tho total of notes thus far deposited for extension close to $15,000,000. It la understood that Speycr & Co. luts not up to this tlmo nitrccil to deposit Its Snmo of the directors eniriKed In the work of srvurlliK deposits of notes ex- pressed strops hopes yesterday nf se-- 1 curltiK thn deposit of close to the entire I2S, onn.noo and thus maklmr the re. orK!inlr..itlnn plan without a receivership a possibility. When Interests In the property wiri nsked yesterday If It wcro not trtlo Hint a receivership would havo to be, resorted to In order to reorirxnlze tho pad Mhcther or not tho notes lire ile. posited, It wns said that In Ihe event of the full lit posit of the notes beliifr therti would be no receivership In tho Immediate future, pending an at- tempt at reorganization without It, JURY TO TRY GROUT FOR PERJURY READY Completed After All T)ny Ses- sion Cropscy Opens for State To-dn- y. EUTIOT? WILL TIE DEFENCE The Jury in the trial of former city Comptroller Edward Jt. Orout on a charge of perjury wns completed nt I MB o'clock yesterday nftcrnoon nfter an alt day session beforo County Judge Lewis In Brooklyn. Of twenty-seve- n men examined fifteen were challenged, flvo by thn people nnd ten by tho de- fence. Those selected were: Theodore Cramer, manufacturer, 58 Fenlmoro street; Ira W. llardwlck, ad- vertising, 662 Host Thlrty-necon- d street : Christian L. A. Oerlten, meats, 4S3 Strat- ford road; Adolph lllmtnclrelch, men's furnishings, 402 Kast Fifteenth street; Lawrence J. Gannon, hattor, 4 43 Pros- pect place; John P. lJuler, Insurance, 2334 Tllden nvcnuo; Bernard Ormont, chemical engineer, (IBS Ninth street; Warren I'. Hdrls, salesman, 1 173 Hast Tenth turret; John T. Jleehan, furniture, 71 Van Huron street; IMward 11. Cook, coal. 1001 Dean street: James JI. Jlur-ph- musician. 136 St. Jlirk's place, nnd Lester V. llarklti, clerk, 3D2 Pacific street. It will be for these twelve men to decide whether Mr. (Irout, as president of tho now defunct I'nlon Hank, willfully swore to a false statement regarding the finan- cial condition of that institution, or whether, acting unwisely perhaps but In good faith, ho merely accepted state- ments passed on to him from tho time when David A. Sullivan, tho convicted bank wrecker, wns president of tho bank. Stephen II. Baldwin, attorney for Jlr. Grout, laid much stress on this In exam- ining prospective Jurors. Ho pointed out that all but two of tho Items men- tioned In tho Indictment were brought over from the Sullivan regime nnd wanted to know If the Jurors would give this due consideration. If shown that Jlr. Grout had no knowlcdco of them. An- other point on which Jlr. Baldwin dwelt was the possible duration of the cise. He e.ild It might last six week,s nnd naked each Juror If he thought ho could offer nn open mind to the defence after tho District Attorney had presented his evidence. The charge ngntnst Mr. Grout grows out of tho second collnpse of the Union Bank, formerly fie old Mechanics and Traders. David A. Sttllivnti. recently paroltd from Sing Sine, was president of tho latter Instltut'on. which fatlel during tho panic of UftT. It w.ih re- organized under the name of the I'nion Bank, a namo formerly bornn by one of Its branches, nnd Mr. Grout wns m tdo the reorcanlr.ntlon president, partly be- cause of his finnnclnl experience its city Comptroller nnd partly because it was thought that his name ntnl Mandlng In the community would help to offset the shadow that hung over tho Institution nftor Sulllvnn's rule. After thn b.tnk had c!oo! Its doors for the second time It was found tint Mr. Grout had overstated Its assets In sworn statements made to the State Hanking Department. This led jo two Indictments, one charging a misdemeanor ami the other felony, tt Is tho felony oliargo that Is being tried. The Indict- ment it as returned neirly seventeen mniths ago. after the flr-.- t Itul' tniont, .ucordlng to District Attorney ("ropsev, bad been etuas' til.ited by Supivme Court Justice JLirean. The Grout cise has been before the public In one form or nimther for three oars. It w only recently that District Attorney Cropsey, who will open for the State nt 10 o'clock was the sub- ject of Investlgttion by it spvclal com- mittee of the Brooklyn H.ir Aesorlatlun because of his i ference In nn after din- ner speech to certain member of the Kings county Judiciary as "hand plckcl" and ns "lap frlei.dV of Mr. Grout Judge Lewis, now presiding nt the trial, was appointed after the speech was mule. BANKER WYCK0FF SENTENCED. fiets n Yenr. lint Will Apply for (Vrtlllrntc of Diitilit. William V. Wyekoff, for ninny years a lending nttornev In llrooklyn and ljueens, nnd nleo president of the Wood-have- n National Hank, was eentvnrod yes- terday to one year's Imprisonment on lllackwoll'H Island by Jtidgn J. Marry Tlernan In the ijtieens County Co.irt for grand lar'env In the second degreo. In sentencing Wyekoff Judge Ticrnan granted n stay nf execution for two weeks to allow Wyekoff to make npplt-c.ttlo- n for a certificate of reasonable doubt. He riMiuestfd the warden of the Queens J.i.l to provide Wyekoff with facilities of settling his business, pending his motion. WHYARD MUST STAND TRIAL. Aynck Honil Contrnctor loirs Kf-fo- rt to llrfrltt Illdletlnent, New fitr. May 21 W. W. Whynnl the Xvack ro id contractor who tins ! indicted with llirt Dunn for allcce.l road crafMnir, lost v !n his la.st Ii'E.il raovn to escape Kolnir on trial here. Supremo Court Justice Tompkins do-- , nled tho motion of Henry Kohl, his counsel, to dismiss the Ind'ettnents ak'alnst Whynrd nml thn Aetna construe tlon Comjunv on tho croitnd that heni tho I i land Jury was taking tiietlm, in-- . Justli-- I N. Knpprr. ho presided imr 'the etraordlnnry hiksI'-i- (if the Su- preme Court, lias not In the niurt house. ' IVarlliK there were net enoiiKh it vail-- 1 ablo talesmen when fifty-seve- n had an-- , swcred the roll call, Justice Tninpkluh ordered another extra paiu l of seventy, five nnd then adjourned the ease iin'll , Thursday. Moss of Jv'eiv York county nppeare.1 to .vslsl District Atlor. ney Thom us (lairan Whvard s ontmsel announced nftor los'nir his motion to knock uit the Indi 'tment that h Is prepared to ro to -- rial. PLANS WORLD FILM DIVIDEND. Sclrnlrlc Will Propose .' Per Cent. ltinrterl . Ie-ii-n J. Selrnlck. and Keneral rrona4-'e- r of the World Cor-- p ration. Slid yestenlay that he would recommend Hut an Initial dividend of 3 per cent, bo deelarnl on tho stuck nt the directors' nieetliur on June 27 ami tlmt It bo iiuido it rn.ul.tr uuartcrly p ly. ment. Ho said tint a contract for the Hiiro-pea- u rights of the roinpany had In en irndo which would net m.iro than 200,-00- 0 a ear. COTTONSEED OIL. The trade was quirt nnd prices were without sltrnltlcant chump-- Political advices further deterred trade. There were no simulative .ipc-aCv- of r, to liinl refiners were nn Imth eMes of tlio list In u small way. Spot May .liilv September., ('lemur pr i f. .t. ii " M f !.1i 'Jl ' III 61 U.STijC.Si Pt V e b'.l 3 f i t r. CM The Union Trust Company of New York offers n specint service to individual trustees who desire, to have the clerical and routine administration of their trusts carried on at n low expense by an expert organization. The Union Trust Company will rare for the trust property, assist In making investments and In sclllnR securities, collect the income and pay it over as directed nnd will render nccounts In the form in which a trustee is required by the Court to state bis nccounts. A trustee will avoid expenso and trouble by having his accounts kept in proper form. Correspondence and Interviews are Solicited. UNION TRUST CO. OF NEW YORK, 80 Broadway PERE MARQUETTE ROAD UNDER HAMMER OCT. 1 Underlying IlondholflcrB Have Gunrnntpcd to Bid More Tlinn S DrrnorT, JIny 24. The Pero Jtar-quet- to Ilallway system Is to be sold at nuctlon on October 1 on tho basis of an order Issued to-d- hy Judgo Arthur J. Tuttlo of tho Federal District Court. Tho Junior bondholders, who wcro ex- pected to submit a plnn for reorgani- zation of tho system, did not nppear In court, Formal conditions of the salo nm to bo nnnounced on June 7. Claims against tho system which hav been recorded In court actions and amount to moro than 0. The underlying bondholders, In their petition asking for the sale, of the prop- erty, havo guaranteed to bid a suffi- cient erum to clear away the equipment Indebtedness as well as their own claims. The equipment obligations amount to nbout 112,000,000, The under- lying bondholders claim In 28,000,000. It Is believed that the system will bring moro than ths 40,000,000 thus required. Interests in ths property In Nenr York said yesterday that no reorganiza- tion plan has been devised yet to take tho road out of receivership. It Is regarded that the reorg.tnizers will have plenty of tlmo before October 1, when tho road Is to be sold, to work out a plan. Informal conferences havo been held but thus far no dollnlte lines of a plan havo been laid down. The road has been In receivership slnco 1512, MADDEN ON TRIAL AS PROMOTER OF MURDER Gnus Loader Accnscd of Cnns-ins- : Two Associates to Kill "Squealer." Owen Madden, notorious KaneT leader who from time) to time) has ter- rorized the West Sldo and who has been arrested a half lozen times, was placed on trial for murder In the first degree before JudRn Nott tn Oencral Sessions yesterday .Madden Is charged with havinc or dered two of his associates to kill Will- iam Moore, eairod Patsy Doyle, who was murderod In a saloon at Eighth j .iwmto nnd Forty-firs- t street on the night of N'ovenib-- r 28 last. James ' Ward, alias Artiicur Illeler, one of tho two men who phot Poyle, was sent to S.nir Sins for not less than elshteen years. Tho other, John McArdle. called Hoppo. was sent to prison for thirteen Ass slant District Attorney Kdwnrds wi'I try to show that Madden stood on ihe oppolte corner when Doyle met his death. The clothlnK worn by Dovfo on the nlcht he wns killed was put In evidence. Thero are s.x bullet holes In tho s. A third man. who Is supposed lo havo helped In tho murder, has never been nrrc.i'ed. In his outline of tho evidence to be eaw l trv roc, He tho was not Adjournment case she yes. of 2M Mnclstrnte's the the tho the do. she tho do. told she not sho this Hhe and tho est turn On tho the ense do. t " the h.n I n lnianiitbles," 11 Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company Empire Building, 71 Broadway York, 3.1d, GENERAL MORTGAGE accordance with i.!,.rt.'",fr "'. and inlsi tola dsy drawn the Mink vli.; S fwl U7.TI 7M B771 77! Ml 137 Ii7sl llh.H 5J2S H2I 77.T11 (ISM H7iK 77.12 II7II 77f.ll I7J 717 Ifllil 7.3l WW 1 71 71M IWsJ 7.V) 7177 707 nimi 70IS 10021 M2S, IrtWI 11U27 nun inn.ii nnis soji n.iin hhss sill "111 I02H SI20 llrjll 12021 IllJtH ijioa, SPW 12ftl1 SI0I 10277 S2O0 S20J lftTOO uijs Sits 10117 12131 2SS 10377 SWS 103SS. S31I 101SS 12IM S.1IS S31B MW S400 04k9 StOS 122.1S S4IS 12.HM 1437 10.M1 12307 12 12.TJH S4.V1 I JUS S50.1 lmOH k.'.Ii I l(,2s 12372 1125 1721 ST27 1IS17I s07 IT.) si2.1 Ifsial 1072 MJ7 10TSI 12510 Wi 107M 107r.l 12.V1S u;,,M !I0 1IW31 H02I KW47 12.',71 0012 l;.M 1HS I"1V. mil-- , 12C21 Keill 12f;s irt7 12A.VI 11113 12171 III3I trrl 12f7r, ni.vt i2'oi Hl.'.0 I1H27 127IS H1l 1IOM I272S 0171 1111 127.M H110 Hill ltll.1 IH25 127M IM40 IllSt MVI Ullrl (1171 lUfll 12MII (iil.1 1207 1IS2I 1122S 171IS l 112.11 12V27 H341 11257 12S2S d57t 117A1 12S.12 Dins, H2Si 12M 11.111 IJMio (IVW H3I2 ("07 11371 12M21 Mil 1142.) 12127 OT20 ll I2,i;n tr.o,. md the the the slg for Ing 120 IM H70I liill poss Kie.S 12'I1I 12')1.1 I301S '.I 32 II 13237 132-.- 1 1273 1.12S-- I.13H1 11111 I31II 111-1- 11117 1.1121 13113 11111 urn 13507 1.1.11 13111 U.VU 1JVH12 lmsis 1.1077 l.vi'io 13731 1.17 1.1752 1.17.17 1.17U.- -. 137.S1 iren ISAM 1.1- - 15 11.V1 iwi 13.11 13011 l.KlSl I3'i7.1 1 r ll'"l HOI7 I mvi 14M.I Ull 11117 1 IJH-- I 11222 I I2V7 ti:'! 1X1 1i32i lllll I I. 17.1 11377 1111.1 11522 115.11 1I.VVI I H.V I 4"l the the wl" Mel lost C.1 I I'KHI in-- il 17.1 I'I i?m I ll"? I4 I I t mo I'I I 1.17.1 I4.I-I- I IMSt Mill 14 15107 1.1IVI 11211 1.127-- 15.U1 VI 15.121 15.170 15.192 15HOI I 1.W.H 1 7 trim lii'.l K073 I r.s0 10112 l'.07 10170 1IM 1MII 1CII 102HI 10212 1'2'U 1M22 K12I s 1M l'.l?:t I (VIST I'.in ltn 10421 loin 10.1.-- I050I li:m 11 II II177H ll.i.) Kill I 1MI1 1C1M IOI1I trio 10'UI 10'llt irwj 109M 17KI3 170.11 171 1 721! 17.113 17521 17HV.I I70.M 1771H 117-l- I7'V 17.r.2 1) 17'Ul l'llio IVI22 1011 111.11 VIM 10'.1 Hint l2iW IITti 1227 l7i l2lO 1201 1MS1 I I villi ISO H 131 1M0J ISSftl 11701 1724 I7.I1 l7.1S 1744 I17M I won 1S1I41 1027 Ksrio 1ll 1 4 147 10 t:i?5 tnryi 1 11570 11177 l'l.MI 1U17 t!i02 I'HW 11HVW lOi-- 1017S 1II7S3 W101 l(12S 11141 lllbul ! The on the w,r ii rcsie snd the ptlnclpnl the plus ten cent, will this una otter due .n,-- f 1 5VY?Vl'yA.NI roill-.W- I'i!.' -- ti s:t ( ," ti.o t ::. ml ,t sunnls-m-nt- nftreeiM..nt r J0- -. lun- - !. the ,n1 - lt. , ; ., ,,rl, , ,. . v par and to sum n rrtiftl.-- u:nj .'ii I r l'n nsyl ,, t mpu- 3 per ' t s ' li.l until o'rliick Mnv .'1, (IIISMIH 'MMI'IW " 3 1'hl'adelphli l'.i ! ,r, KI.IXTKINS Jlr. ho rr.uiioliiii i iioi-m- i c0. Madden was tho leader of Niilli-- im liil Mr, tlm; t'n- - loi k- - tho ncrecd ret rid of hnlili-r.- Doyle he had "suuealed on" T h. ,.M ler,""' ' 1 i,i-- k- ltnmanello, ono the men ri.ll.isi: Vivrin: stabbed Doylo bofnrn the murder. Mad- - ,h" ""ter o( th- - i .irs, a s1,,l ' f!"1. !' '"'""B nr tbe lers ths i. r,,marK10'1. I Iillt lltOl'i i M H.1T1N .'OM 1 had planned croak win t ... the Pntsy becnusn he a squealer. impinj U." lire.iiuir, ,r icl. . II.. Is and I h"'L"n 'Vi',1. ".'.'r tll1. lt ili ,fj,ii,c. fi- afraid of When lie had purpose f .irpr ,v K .k- -, nt he called a cop I wouldn't adopted hv the limi ind , thn dll, i' e ere Mr. IMwards eald Madden j sfc;"", UcV (ulinlsslons Marparet the I mm l II ' llnf tiad Horner. Hoth Corporation Into h n IT.;;"'.:' ' by the prosecu- - ?J VX'X. uV.a.r near the of the action thit be i ,.- - nnnn hnotlni- - nnd expected, snv carrv Into the en! aBre..m-n- t b it they Madden across tho street when I.e murderers shot Doyle. Jury was found In ml Then I'ollceman Starr told of llndlt's Doyle's body in :i hallway. said that owlnt; difficulty In get-t-r.- n information about murder Mad- den arrested until three weeks after thn crime. was taken In tho until ns Jud(?o Nott will ho Albany UPHOLDS GUILT OF SEERESS. I'rnphesleil I'll (lire, nml Is 1'iirliiiie Court niiys. .Iiideo In (leneral Sessions terdav handed down nfflrm-I- i tho conviction Maude Malcolm of West 10!th street, who was found irullty In n court nf fur-tun- c tolllntj. The Judire holds that of astrolocy nr palm readlnt: does not onine under ban of law uulins Bcneral mlvlcn as future Klmn. Mrs. Isabella Onodwln, n pollen teetlve, sworn that visited fondant tun! was that eat red meat nnd that would be married twien Kurope b'nr Information paid $2 then caused an and c, mvli nf the seeress ili'.'.sl'in Judce N'ntt merely sou consulting nml irlves erenerat advice as to future based upon such read-Itiit- s eharacler, no Inlllnc of fortunos Involved; but In this fend i further prophesied as speclllc events as nml travel In my Judgment sho prop- erly cnnvlcli Many pcndlnK hlnse on this FINANCIAL It r.non, of tnve.t- - teent Tlmketa i illon of Amorlea, nt Issued tin Important huMettn irestini: iu owlnit snlilecis se New ItiiJ. In terms nf licnrrsl have 11411 .11 1117.1 ti tIRM 70 IIVM II. llins 11(102 11771 inn limn trtlls nsji iroiti 11023 lotj7 hush nin; S13S 12(l.'0 I42 10271 12fV1 I02S1 12l10 131M 1J1M 1(tl1 12171 1012S 12IS.1 S.12S 104.W 12212 10439 12217 122J0 101t 10.VI1 HI 1HJ.11 in.V1) 123.T, s.11 I0.VW 12.U7 tOftls, 12.T.J 20 1f,.VI 12IIO 10007 12121 12120 1fl7S 12 I2.'.s 10737 1211)2 7't 12.VIJ 1S.MJ 107'.7 12M0 1AS2 12VC IOxvi 102 12(11.1 imw imo.1 IIOM 127'.0 1277.1 1I12J 127M 127lr.l 11310 USUI 12 1.11 1.11 IS II lis I. 102 I icj rcilccim-.- l sin-runt- s 3V4,.";" ritiiFi- - MMIItlMi rursmnt Mptember nt'w THI'XT C'DIMM, Trustee. TfMIT MUKTIVU. would: llverdenno Frieda science should rlfhtrrn MM imtififer 'ttv ovi bo hi IwiUPiC tttKlilOTl ".New cipiu'eo Law," March ,h.1'. lmn.ls Fund, 1202n 12IMS I2'MI l:M20 i:smi llfi 1.11UI 1.110.'. l.L'ri 11221 13TI1 13S2.1 1.131.1 13514 lfim 11711 137.11' 13H0 111"! Ills', 17 till 121 1.1 5111 SUM let 10 Ml 07 IN 12H .1isl 37 till in ut be nt on th it i.. Treniurer. 7. to mi n nreenient In i the vr- . I,.- -. of lor mi., as .f , it. ih nw ,,f in, tb ri K to 'IKAItn , c 4 ,ent T- - "b V. ul 1'. '.''i'V: M n : Kdwnrds is r.t of uf to of tn r te .., - tn r,, nf N Hi It It to i.e 1e; m nr Is n of a rat always !' nn th a h- - or on bv nn old to Ju ,r to be kr, wn U i m iv tn It Is of A to Madden to an opinion n to in n to to d I" A Anv ltholder npp'vtr c therefor to ths tbe (.,inptpv ill he a ,opy of ok to lute New 2ili li m Secretary of Into-- ! n'l .MeropiMtsn Com pi r iiMiiir.Mi iNTi:iu:vr. ATLAS POWDER C0MPANY.7 it ii i hi f ,hta tm m i v ; i!n; l(. th"-- " ii f . Otl Ihl !'! r it'll .it !2 ! k ii' .. k I i K o 'of-- u nin : o . .oi'k A. M. ii.o l!, r. n 1. t. I. I I I I. .i a it J 1 U. ra nt 13 9 iimiDKv- - covnilN-ii- n i'in:i-i:iiui:i- i in iiinn:Mi n st A - if. ' o' c. Ins been ., l,.rr"l H k nf this e ' To of 1 l. 1 .1 ,r In, I'', at lei yi op, n .Inn.. n ' i V T I) SIIKV11, ir DIE HOTEL FIRE. 11 HefllKee n Hilled nlim lllliers. "Where n palmist or nstrnloslit PnrKSKtii,, 21 deduce- the ehnnicter of per- - wen and t!.i of Is morrlniro wns NOTES. Mlchtcm fuilonliu 131 !1J2 prtrnium. int of TWO In it llrei "f unV' "W ileitniyei the four The are Chtrlei llilwanl 't, b ter wji n "ire e. it burnel in hid a iiioiu nu t find ImTkI.I on a i"i llip Injuries tn Irs (Ire w 1! an 's 'e " on be ' p " M' bs III Inu'iR V'tw.er. tl,,l i.ts Wl, i:uropo. U 4CV1 14721 410 1127, 1.VI2I Will 15.111 1.1117 1.1151 lM'ti 1517,1 1.115 15.V1I lfsmj Ml 15712 1.171.1 157H 15752 1.17011 O 1.1-- t.l-- sl 15'H.I I.V.KI l.'.ll.VI 1172 117S 1020 1'J.VI 10111 10073 11141 Iiwmi 10721 17.'ii 10711 107.12 1?17 liwni inio I1SI7 10MO 1I2.1 17022 fail I7UU 17IH1I 17H71 17(H2 17117 1710.1 17222 172.12 17211 17211 17.T.I 17201 17271 17.101 17111 17.111 17.170 171111 17I17H 17fAll 17ro i::m 1772.1 17720 17711 17'2 i7'ij.1 110)7 11027 1010 lim ini i:-i- lIM 1417 1411 1SI47 HIU 15.12 IMlU 1.1M 1041 1070 1711 172.1 11751 11701 IHIM IfWSS llll.'M 10107 1ICOS 102.10 1112.1.1 10217 102.14 10257 1H21H IMiW 111371 10279 1KC7 111.114 111.154 mvi 1U4t1 noij 1I'M3 In'rrni .Tune ISIS, hiituls. 'per oKlce ATI.- -. IUU. dated under. above certin. lery June e11nr Inter Ses,1 tenders Trustee un.l. toitrtn-te- d n11 llll.l. Tlil-.- J:,r AMI errercd said i.ii-m- i show that Kane that Tce who had r.XKi: tint, hive have I'am Dovle have been "!k him. tlcht and dare trust him" xeciite-- that had Z. 'm. made pjrls, with .".lied scene win, effect time. Thnt Nott and take lonir trip an-ni-- went and such cases rtiuo been eto, with enu-n- t con.rtll York. Apr!' riitf ami rnwjir ou''iti OIltftHIt iiii.k ctiMp ivy 1!'''.! l'.i-e- . I'o'iinii pi"i)i l'th. Kh...l-- 'i .lui.e checks tnal.e Treii llelu Ictlm Mav killed earlv j. de-i- McC-tii- ilouh mils, '.I'm1 Iowa Sky, It H i 31 'H 20 41 1.1 I l I e., 101 III. l of i:. " H ,u th-- I ii.. vttss . he In 'j"l ' tit it i iY. tsurr t5 I(l2 1075 li'in UT H'r. two biy The Tre eejru , i i, 'he ,li:- -. 15, ete i Ilo.iK i an 1st:, ., t M I - IN In Hell- - Itoy i . i The I I ' effe t I t I I l Two p. sons I v ih u ir- I w- - h l lt.l,.;'i D'onvri'is and 111 "V 1 !,. ni'iT tell .ii.il w IS U tl' tin 111 i w i,i ii ' I li.ir l nr n, t sand, rurfrr- - . i ed 111 I ie Ii tchin tu ol 'IS .s l') : , i'oeiri,e, eillstl. Still .11 ri i El' f 1 I 111 ( 1 I- -

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Page 1: The Sun. (New York, NY) 1915-05-25 [p 11]. · UNCERTAIN SWING TO COTTON PRICES Jlnrkoi Shows Considerable! Ir--roptilnrity In Sosslon of Usht Trndliiff. JTALIAX SITH.IE8 LARGE tClth

UNCERTAIN SWING

TO COTTON PRICES

Jlnrkoi Shows Considerable! Ir--

roptilnrity In Sosslon

of Usht Trndliiff.

JTALIAX SITH.IE8 LARGE

tClth Liverpool closed on account oftilMM n"'1 tnorn or uncertaintyt,firAtK h" fnnr of th' Oermin roplrt, resident Wilson's note the cotton

ritkt movul within narrow Itmttn yes.

ttrdsy and purely a scalptnR affair.r..wt professionals fn,n'' " difficult toVtep I'P w,ln fluctuations on account(( th Irresiitarity.

There was a f ilrly Rood undertone In

tv rarly tradlnc. The market made an

itrir.ee of about points. Thin was

f.Mwsd by a docllno of about 14

feints, hut a rally on covering leftfrees practically unchansed. Thora

tii no featuro of Importance to theMthfr. Some heavy rains were ret-

orted In parta of the eastern belt

ti scattered showers fell In Oklahomaportion of the central belt.

The, crop In the Atlantic State ap.Mrs be somewhat spotted, floodrinds are reported In parts ofGorl. but more or tees Irregularityii noted In Alabama on, account of tho

drought.The June condition report will be

ride up from replies dated to-d-

lid will be published on Juno 1. Thusfir the season, while not brilliant, hasteen fairly propitious and It Is thoughttut the condition figures will be sev-

ers! points above those of last year,ubsa the Crop Reporting- Board of thereplTtment of Agriculture placed thecondition at "4..

The definite entrance of Italy intoOil ru created little comment on theCetton Exchange. According 1o theCrkU, the amount of cotton atGrr.on at the end of last week was4SI.O0O .bales, compared with J8.000tiles last year. Italian cotton mcr.chants appear not only to have fortl-fe- d

themselves against any possibletcsrfltr. attracted no doubt by lowjrkes earlier In the season, but It la!o assumed that German Importationsere made through Oenoa. A recent

ntlmite placed the amount of Oermancotton at the big Italian port

st 309,000 bales. If Italy takes overt' !s cotton her spinners should haveiwplles to last them well Into nextkSOT

futures closed steady.Open- - Mstv Low. Clns- - Prev.Inr. est est. Inc. closs.

Mr,. ss; SM .M rift 9 1 ItlOtilAil 9 TO "0 " M ' 901 S J M K 9 "fl .M . J.SJIve ie ii to i; tow lo.i:io.u vucwtonJia t" 1 10.10 lfl.ltirlO.H 1MSAM.HXircii 1 19.4 10.14 19.413W U 1 I531M0

Spot cotton at New York was quiet,points decline. Middling, 9.70c.

fosthern, spot markets were unchanged.Houston, 5 points decline, with New

, (Jalveston 3.10c. SavannahSs'.. llousiin 9.10c Augusta 9.13c andM'mphls 0.12c

Tte New Orleans market closedr'ldy Trices were

Mt--

n

to

Onn- - lllrh- - Inw.int. em. em.9 i t.vi9I 9 11

M 9 71

9.V. 9 f7i.a 93

3 17917S.S79.7S9 90

CTos- -

Inf.9 lff 9319.11ft 9

S.ttfJ M9.W4T9.91C .9

clos.KB

flat

9.933

Si.The Liverpool market was closed yes-trrti- r.

Liverpool Is due to open y tor!ws decline.

Receipts ami stocksHe- - Last

feints. ye.tr. Stories. nir.(ll'wlon J.93 l.OfJ

Orl.ans S.90 :.9.11fTllnth 971 1.4H9 M.St4 M.771rkL-to- 1.174 3.494 S.v

tit -- .795 SI.MOllaiRrlon.. S14 M.I63 14.113

Xo!l.:e. 413 7,M9

Interior storks and receiptsTT. Tna

.!

eeipts. yeir. Slocks,Ricon .. 3.IWJ 3.317 S9.3W.Mtmsali.. 1.11! 130.0M

Aarmt .Loait zn :.:v4tmstl nnrt

receipts to day.CtlTMton .. .. 4.9") to l.tm,m oneant,. 7M l.ow

Latt9,ll4.313

919 M

61

9i

5 6

...V'

..7t

... 11

St... I .4

..1S

3r..

to

M 99

9

I'.at.prlic O! fQS

Last

.

4.313s.i nTo

talthus far this 7,689,4036,563.061 last year

wpek.

THE GRAIN MARKET.

Prer.91HT

n:mn

were:

:J1.041 17I.S4:9.73 1M.!

Nnrlalk

were:

10S.12t

Vinnrtm hn1fK.

year.74.75!44.347M.101ti.Kt

year.

season. balesiu.nt

TVkeat Itnsler Political .Vews Dlsrnnnled Corn Firm.

The nrfse of wheat values yesterdayat the smallest of many sessions.

Vtlues were maintained after InitialMkness, notwithstanding bear drives,

r.wellaneout liquidation nnd talk ofhenige pressure from the

Southwest. In which section theInvesting operations will commencetii.t week.

Traders conjured up numerous argu-fer.t- a

from Italy's decision to take part! the Huroprin conflict. That the Dar-imell-

hhould be forced so as to glvui outlet for the Kusslan crop this

Ml w.is their favorite theory. Ad-f'-

concerning the wheat situationIs Rujua are inconclusive, but It Is gen-rtll- y

conceded that tho area has beenMuced from 10 to 15 per cent, nnd"at tho amount of surplus old wheat! t'clic'.ble.

ftether the war will end earlierr" that Italy has cast her lot withWt Allies w.is also much discussed,

one were nuthorlttes In the trade Im--

nlth the idea that temporarilyto foreisn inquiry for American wheatnw!4 l quickened,

"o imnr- vrment In tho export demandiobfrod yesterday, with the day's

WeictinnK (lgured at under 150,000ahels p in understood that Interna-,:,- rl

flnarei.il conditions are partlyf.r tho lull In trading, while

further oliservanrn of the Whltsun-- Ih'lMays ahrnad Is also cited. The

Merpo.i (run market will reopenTiorning.

''rcmii.ep' Ve,itern Interests admit'l tfcev are much perplexeil by ther,'"t wheat Kituation, nlthoiigh there'apur sn heard of a lurking short

' Jf't in the Chicago May deliverytvi,"1 r,n'r,'r"ly strong rash situation.

opinions nro Incidentally held byJ7'a A

at m, that ennsldernbla of theJet buy ng nf wheat yesterday wns for

Z 'h"r". who believed the Italianiiisepuntrd. Evidently there Is

ofear of a comparatively bullish crop"Wt early In June." crop despatches yesterday were

i more sanguine tenor. Inglls sum-bli- 'i

,nf ""uatlon ns holding a possl- -''r for a second record crop. Ills

'lement refers only to winter wheat,in no mention made of tho 10 per"i. ara Kaln In American snrlng

"'1 Its admirable start. Hnowlh Sl'swiurl crop outlook nt O

bushels, against 4,300,000 a yearta,l,i nt"'r Private experts are

wing on 130.000.000 from Kansas,ffnjt I76.ooo.ooo last season. Prac-w- r

rnUr beIt reolve showersh ii Wf'''1 ,'n'' Rn' '"sect ravagesUifri,k t? ch(,cJ,Al1 In many counties,

r l,l,r,e"In f rusljililJ.r'ient vlsibla v&s reduced toJ'WMOO biishels. agnlnat 2S.6O0.000

rv!? ? "id 32,000,000 In 1914.Hj-- Ths closing strength of thea alt, "wompanled with rurrrore ofEh.wVL xrort business at Baltimore,

'ound a greaUy tfergrthened

technical position. There was referencemade to excessive rains In parts ofthe Hast and Southwest. Tho factthat farmers were indisposed to sellmuch corn doubtless hod much to dowith tho recovery of more than a centa bushel scored. The receipts for theday were only 669.000 bushels at In-terior points, against 913,000 a yearago, and the visible for the week winreduce! to 15.000,000. against 17,000,-00- 0

In tho preceding week and 11,000,-00- 0a year ngo.

During tho forenoon corn values werent fractional recessions, due principallyto the depression In other markets. Thesupport wns light, and favorsrblaweather In Argentina was reported.

Onlr The offerings of new crop oatswere Iwnvy during the ,rly doling",Stop low orders precipitated the de-clines. Crop news was bearish, andtho first construction placed on thoItalian-Austria- n situation was ngalnstvnlues. A slight recovery ensued, whenthe corn Hat rallied. There was noImportant foreign demand however.

Provisions Packers were creditedwith giving support to the list. Kor-elg- n

demand for meats has Improved.Hpeculation remains) quiet.

Chicago prices:

Whest.MayJulySlept

Corn:MayJulySent

6ts:MsrJulySept

I'ork:JulySept

Urd:JulySentAn:JulySept.,

1M

7J4

:,stMlaJI.M

.;

itirh.est.

if1I7'4HIS7447sl,1S;s

MSs

1S.1RHIT

tn10.10

tow.est.

New Votk prices were:

1M13

iHtt474'TV,

MM

4H

ieo1S.M

19 IS Ml 1U10.R 19.V 10.)

Open IllchWheal.: inc. est.MyJuly ..

4 K

Clos-- Prer.close.

IM14

131V,

i4sH

cos'ls.1t11.4?

K1010

10 S1

10 7

Low

THE SUGAR MARKET.

1:1V,

73;7tS74!

MSfSUS.

ls.ojisx

10.SO

U3

Haw and Iteflned Are FirmPrices l7nrkstnsTed.

The raw sugar market closed firm yes-terday, with the spot price unchangednt 4.89 cents, duty paid New York.About 10,000 bags of Cuba changedhands here between refiners thisprlco and 10,000 bags were taken forlate June early July shipment 5.02cents, duty paid New York.

The refined sugar market was firm,with all Interests standardgranulated at 6 cents. The demand forwithdrawals was light, owing thoweather.

The sugar futures market the Cof-fee Exchange was quiet, with pricesslightly lower under Wall Street sell-ing. Total sales were 4,100 tons.

Prices were:

MsyJuneJulyAll rurtSeptemberOctoberNovemberIVcemherJanuaryFebruary

Open-ing',

S.TK

quoting

nigh. tow.est. est.

1.96

4.03

t.r.

4.M

3.99 J.99

Inr.1MH

est,

Clou.InrS.no3.944. or.4.134.3)4 It4.01J It1.70

THE STEEL MARKET.

177

.7S10 02

10 M

Clos-ing.17H

at

or at

to

at

t.t.7Z

4.0

3.7

Prer.clote.

.9!3.9t

4.n4.104.01l.71.72

Deniand for Shrapnel Still Leadi-ng- Feature.

No mnterlal change In steel marketconditions was reported at the outsetof the week. The heavy demand forshrapnel steel continues the chief

"factor of the market. The for-eign demand for ammunition Is keepingup at a high rate, and with the entranceof Italy Into the war there are pros-pects for an Increase In orders fromthe other side.

Domestic conditions are shownlg signsof Improvement. The recent heavy carorders have already resulted In theplacing of contracts for about 7.S.00Otons of steel by car makers and thereare Inquiries before the market forabout 150,000 tons more.

BUSINESS TROUBLES.

OSCAR nERI.EIt. shoe dealer, withstores at 134 Nassau etreet and 93I.nox avenue. Manhattan, and M? Ful-ton street. Itrooklyn. made an aflxn-men- t

to Marcus lletfand. A petition Inbankruptcy was also filed asalntt htmhy creditors. Liabilities said to h about140.000. He nesan business In April. 1911.

SAMUEL KAPLAN HItOS.. INf. whole-sal- e

and retail elothtnir at 149 Canalstreet. Manhattan, and 33S Ninth street,llrooklyn. made an alsnment to Reu-ben Oreenbaum. A petition In bank-ruptcy has also been filed atralnst thecorporation by creditors. Liabilities es-timated at 150.000. The business wasstarted In HM and was Incorporate,) InJanuary, t9U. Capital stock, 110.000,Samuel Ksnlan ts president.

MAPLRVrLLK WOOLEN COMPANY,wholesale dealer In boya' clothing, 7

Broadway, petition In bankruptcyby creditors. The company was Incor- -

orated on June 13, 1913. Capital stockF 10.0O0.SARAH TlOvOfAN. 5 and 10 rent store,

:54 Ninth avenue, nied a petition Inbankruptcy; liabilities tl.049; assets3734.

JOflRF" SATMARY. It. 30 First avenue, for-merly a meat dealer, filed a petition Inbankruptcy: liabilities 11.313; no assets.

irAKK. sometimes known as Max Stein.bartender, S19 Rergen aenue. TheRronx. nled a petition In bankruptcyliabilities 11,951; assets, 11,175 In accounts.

Composition Confirmed.ni.TAS flllKCNHKItr. Judse Mayer has

confirmed a composition of Ellas Oreen.berg, cotton goods. 103 Hester street,with rreilltors at 2S cents on the dollar,payable 10 renta rash and IS cents Inthree notes, at six. nine and twelvemonths. Liabilities. 113.04:,

Petition Dismissed.LOUIS It. KATZ Judge Housh has

the petition In bankruptcy filedon April 19 aanlmt Louis II. Kati, shoodealer. 3073 Third atenue. on a settle,ment at 50 renta on the dollar, parable:0 cents cash and 30 cents In Ova notes.

Schedules Hied.JAC1IMAN Oi:VKHH. men's furnishing

roods. 10 nast Korty-secon- street,schedules show liabilities of 130,300 andassets of I. 394, nhlrli have been soldby the assignee for 15,000.

SAVOY LUNCH, INC.. 100 Sixth arenue.schedules show liabilities of 33.919, nom-inal assets of 13,075 and actual assetsof 11,100.

Assignment.J. It, CUMMINIW, INC, plumbing con-

tractor, 3007 Seventh avenue, assignmentto Thomas J, Meehan. The businesswas started In 1359, The present com-pnn- y

succeeded to It In April, 1913.Carolina A Cummlnri Is president andJacob I. Wllklns secretary.

Discharge From Il&nkmptry.Judge Hough in the United States Dts.

Irlrt Court granted discharges to thesebankrupts;WALTlllt F DUIINP, 207th street and

Rostun road, formerly president of arealty romyanv: liabilities. 1117.337.

SAMUBL II. VANDK.KHMITH. Forty.eighth stret and Ilroadway, nola broker;liabilities, 10, 549.

DAVID RRAUN. 300 West 111th street,formerly painter: liabilities. $7,190.

HARVKY C. COHCY, HO Nassau street;liabilities, 1310.

HOI.O.MON KLKISCIIMAN, woollens. 97Clinton street; liabilities. 10,5S.

Fit i;t S. HAlUt, 1 Jay street; liabilities.I!,rl7

JU.NKOW1TZ A KLEIN, cafe, 104 Can- -nnn street; nubilities. 13,040,

RO.HAItlO LAIIHA, roofer, Itys; llobtrltles.13.177.

IDAI.KNE C. LONO, actress, 138 WestForty-nint- h street; liabilities. 11.114.

WILLIAM F. MAllORItlN, painter. IllWest Forty-secon- d strstt; liabilities,$17,001.

NLI.I.IK J, READ, 13 West Forty. eighthstreet; liabilities, 11.116.

SAMEUL ROSENTHAL clerk. 10 Secondavenue; liabilities, 111,400,

II. &, II, SAFC1IIK, furs, 1 East Twelfthstreet! liabilities. 114,331.

8AHON nilOS.. kimonos, 91 Allen strsst;liabilities. 13,104.

LOUIS SHAPIRO, manager of a lunchroom, 101 East 171st street; liabilities.11,339.

ANDERSON A CO.. INC., an old plenoconcern of (59 Fu'ton etreet, Rrook-ly-

wjilch rscsntly madea generalassignment to Edwurd IJ. Jordan,former Internal Rsvsnua collector; In-

voluntary petition In bankruptcy filedagainst it by creditors. JacobIlrsnnsr, counsel for the Anderson com-ran-

said that the assignment was the,first difficulty the company had vsrexperienced and ascribed It to generalbusiness depression and lbs Buropsan

CHINESE COMING TO

WELD TRADE BONDS

Commission Prom OrientWants to Meet Merchants

In New York.

REPRESENTS MANY LINES

Stanley II. Ttose,' acting commercialagent In charge of the Hureau of For-eign and Domestic Commerce, 409 Cus-

tom House, New York city, has receiveda report concerning the. Individual wantsof some of the members of the ChineseTrade Commission, who are expectedto reach New York on June 1. The In-

formation was sent by K. C. Torter, whoIs accompanying the commission on Itstranscontinental trip as representativeof the Department of Commerce atWashington.

This being a purely business triptaken by tho various Chinese merchantswith tho view of Increasing nnd solidi-fying commerce between China nnd thoUnited States, the members of tho com-mission will be glad to get In direct per-sonal touch with New York businessmen. Kirms Interested In arranging In-

terviews with any of tho delegatesshould, address them beforo June 1 Incare of the New York branch of theHureau of Foreign nnd Domeettle Com-merce, 409 Custom House.

The following delegates are especiallyanxious to arrange personal Interviews:

I.lm-Pa- k Chan, proprietor of thoCheong Chan Exporting Haw Silk Com-pany of Canton, Is deslrlous of dlscusjtlngwith locnl silk merchants the possi-bilities of American silk manufacturersopening branch office in Canton. Hewill be glad to meet any silk men In-

terested in the Import of Chinese rawsilk.

Ll-C- hl Chu, secretary of the ChineseGeneral Chamber of Commerce, Ghang-ha.- 1,

wishes to meet Importers of hides,embroideries and furs, with a view ofIncreasing Chinese export trade in thoselines.

Bheng Chen of the Te Chang Cloi-sonne Company, Pekln, manufacturersof lacquer nnd cloisonne work, wishesto get In touch with Importing firms whohave not o far done direct trade withthe Orient. It Is suggested that thiswould be a good opportunity for firmswhose European business Is cut off andwho wish to import from tho Far East.

Chla Yu. embroidery merchant olPekln. Is anxious to get In touch witha good Arm of Now York laco and em.

t.0? broidery Importers,tin , Haleh Yu. director Hulchow Tea

rrsiie 1 nion. xnnngnai, wm 10 ihkcdirect connections for the sale of teaIn the fnlted States.

Chl-Che- h Nleh. proprietor of tho HenFoong Cotton Manufacturing Company,Shanghai, Is Interested In the Importa-tion of American cotton, hut would alsolike to meet one or two good cottoncommission houses In New York citywho might submit to him tho typo ofgoods that might be utilized In theChinese trade.

Hunn-Y- I Hang, general manager ofthe Wah Chong Mining and SmeltingCompany, Shanghai, Is interested In In-

terviewing users of lead antimony andIts seven!

Slng-MIn- g Kung. director of the HulChang Machine Manufacturing Com-

pany, Shanghai, Is Interested In makingn study of flour mill methods In thiscountry. andalso In machinery equip,ment. He would like to meet Importantmnchlne equipment builders In NewYork city.

THE PHILADELPHIA MARKET.

Cr;lh

riltLADCLPltlA fromSons and

etendencv. The first named stockwith a gain of 2 points. Lehigh Navi-gation lost "a. Cambria Steel 4 nnd

Traction and Philadelphia liapldTransit . The mramary

0,ien. Rich- - Ixisr. Clos.Sales et. ing.

S5 Amal Copper?v) American Can.. 3f,

3 Am Rallwaya, ..7 naldwln loco. M1M Raldwln Iak-- pf lim,:r. llutle Sc Sun 7!t.

::i Cambria Steel. .. 4ti,loo Crucible Steel

f. F.Iee Storage ...Kno

170 Oen Asnh pf...1!W ln Co N A.

6 Keystone pf..7TA Lake Superior ... 7,

lhleh Nav stock19 Ihlrh Valley 71

Miami6il Penn R R

17 Penn Salt . . ..14 Phlla F.lectrle..45 Phlla Cos Phlla Co mm pf

HA Phlla R T ttfs,ReadingPressed SteelTenn

Belmont..175 Ton Mining,.

Untied ImpRubber

4971 SteelUnion Trac.tveitnaen

May 14. Aside

closed

I'nlon

ing est.

r,i

:i4Tel 474

35 7!S

5349174J.14317,

SOS ... 77410 Car. 4'.',45 Copper . .. 3S

95 Ton 4':

99 Ols10 II S

U S73: . .

:

:s

TS

7

rri,!4.30iM',

101,

4

31Dt

Wt:t'i474

71:sm;')7133439

90S,49

1H477S4

si;5174f4:i;47474

7JS70',:slav;9073;3.1

39

r:;30H

4S

4tm11:tte,:n;C747S::s

70t,

ns

7 7 on 7

4 7! 11.11 71 lti', in', w,3S 3'. SS

1, t ti7 7 7 LIS 7 1.18

k :s :444 I4 444 4r.4 M US 11431 314 30i 304494 49Tt 194 494

?1 Wesfhnusej E 44 49 41 !! 4? 94 Coal, si si si si

1113 Wm Cramp A S, 39 33 3C4 3tnONDS.

1100 Am Gat A Elec St Kit SS4 H 4svo Ilaldwln L 1st f.B.113 1074 lo; 1034175Cani Steel sop M OS 9H 9t 9H

7fS Cam S so May '17 97 9 7 97 971975 Cam Stl so Feb '17 37 97 97 971000 Ih Val Coal fs,. 104 lftt Id 101

1000 Phlla II A W 4s 9t 9t M 9tyt) Phlla Elec 4s.. . si4 S04 W14 1.14

ltnoo PKU ir m 44s ttfs 974 97V, 974 l74175 Phlla Co scrip 191. 9 9S f.G M3 Phlla Co scrip 19H 93 91 93 93

torn W N Y A !' g m 4s - 7S 7 7C

1000 W N Y A 1 1st Ss.1014 1014 1014 1014

BATTIItDAY.Paid by to hanks. I1.7IS.0001's.til by bunks to 1,04:, 000

I.nis tn banks on day's trans-actions

HINPB KRIDAY I.AflT,Paid hy to banks. 13,314,000Paid by banks to Hub. Treasury.

Loss tn banksIxim to hanks same p'rlol pre-

vious week

I1H.000

5,658,000

t:,z7:,oooU9.000

Mvc Mnrkrt.Receipts of beevsa for two days were

2, 135 head, Incluilnsr 3fH cars for thsmarket, fitters uere slow to a fractionloweri bulls strong, rows steady and thincows Arm, The yards were clearsd. Fairtn choice steers sold at 7.7C9fl.0 per100 lbs.; bulls at 15.(00 17.10, 1 extra bullat 17.79, cows at IJ.60fH7. Dressed bsefnu In moderate demand at steady prlcss,or nt imtflJIic. par ID, tor city dressednative aides.

Itrrelpts or calves rnr two days were10,010 hntd, Innludlng .8H for the market, Veals were In fairly goixl ilemund,but on liberal receipts prices dropuM tow0c. and the advance of last Friday uiuiist, The pens were cleared. Common to

prime veals sold at J7W'J.r0 per 100 lbs,one hunch at IS. 75, culls at Id.tOffl (6.60,nn skim milk calves nf any Imunrtnnre.City dressed veals wera easy st lZmUc,country areaaeti uunui airuur i iuftro

Itecalnta of sheen and lambs for twodays were MIS head, Inrludlnc 17 Vj carsfor the market, Hheep were slow and iWil7Sc. sprlna lambs (quoted as Iambiherttfttr) atsody, last year's lambs(quoted s yeaninis rrom wereSOc. lower. The pens were not nullscleared. Common to food sheep (ewes)sold at M.CMiJ', per luu ins., a rew utIt.SO, culls at M. tnlseil sheep nt H.7.--

,W

S 7 .SC. lambs tt fOtfllSi yearlings at I7W1 9.76. Pressed mutton lower at lJJtHc.ner lb., dressed lambs steady at JOif 2Jn..dressed yearlings lower st lie tie., country dressed notnous iamta, M7 each.

Ileceipis or nogs ror two nays were 1.991head. Including I cars for the marketMarket easier and medium tn light weightsold at IA at 4I.50OM.7I.

THE SUN, TUESDAY, MAY 25, 1915.

THE BOSTON MARKET.

HOSrO.V. Mav 21 Activity Ir, lh.nl.Ing list again centred In American Zlnannd Ilutto nnd Superior, both of whichwere strong early but closed with a lossior me nay or nbnut a point each. Cop-per stocks opened higher, but later easednlT. Closing prices as a rule showedsmall changes either wny. United ShooMachinery was active on a statement"mi n extra dividend would ho de-clared and sold up to 6!i. but droppedback to 64 at tho close. Tho summary:Sales.

11 J nmaav a...

1 Aljromsh " v 1?,64 M

--U Amalgamated .... 7S 7Sm'amatei rts. 1 Ms i1

! American Zinc tm ttij" - ..... ... ...

loa. Arliona Com 7Sfliitte A Pal 3

IM Ilutto A Sup -f"J Calumet A Aria.. MUj

Calumet A Hecla.r.9130 Centennial

chin ismISO Copper Range u

3r. T?at rimte ij7tl rranklln 10'u.' "iranny s;vt

rights is170 Hancock tmK Isle ..."1J4 Kerr iik... .....' 4

Lake 14i Mass Con uin.Varflower s

1 juv,. Michigan

390 Jlohawk 7391". New Arcadian.... 10ts Nipimng .;; a

13M North Ilutte 33M North Lake JUM Old Colony gvj76 Old Dominion Mso Otarola nilWA Pond Creek 11?

Qulncr ssV, Hay Cons.,. 54

Jon Santa Fe jt!177 Shannon 91M Rhattuck i1 St Mary's Ijind.. M

7 Sup A Dosion.... 3'iEtt Superior Cop sol.io Tamarack saWS TYInltr 61;rU S Smelting.... 373t V S Smelting nf.. 4:,

110 Utah Cons7R Utah Copper W. esu

Ht Wolverine . ., ... t.1100 Wyan.lotte , 1 is

RAILROADS.7 rtoston Albany.17.

10 Iloeton Klevsted.. '100 Post on & Wnr pf H

S Fltchbnrr fif.. . 7WNY N It A II.. 3H.a pm r.iwi m jty. siW End 6t Hy pf, M

MISCELLANEOUS.Am Chem....

r. Am Affr t.nem pi ?za Am Pnett Serv pf 14PO Am Surar 10714

1 Am Siir.v pf IISM Am Woolen pf... s

1! Am Tel A Tel. ...11913 A ft A W I t

173 A 0 X W I pf... 19r.,uon

3: Mass Gas pf...IS N K Tel... .....

& Pullman .. ....50 Keecn Foiling..

5 Sudft A Co ...to) United Frtilt .

IMS I'll Shoe Miwh

IV,.151

i Un Shoe pf... M'i, ,j , o ....... . n,110 Western Union. ,

RONDS110V) A O A K1000 Pond Creek ..95

THE BOSTON CURB MARKET.

nosTON, May The closing Bostoncurb quotations;

AsVut.MTartno .................Pay Stale OasIlegoleRtnjthtmIlnhemlslli'ton Ely. .

nutte A LondonCalaverasChampion Conper.Chief CoctolUatedCortesCorneliaConsolidated Arliona...Consolidated Copper,,..CrownDavis DalyFacie A RluebellFirst National Copper..HnurhtonIron BlossomLa ItneeMajeetiiMcKlnley DarrtghMexican MetalsMines of AmericaNew Ilaltlc

K,

4M

iiti

W

Baldwin Ixicomotlve Nyad .

market showed a slightly SV"0 ;::::;:;;;::::;;::::::

West'laml

STATEMENT.

roughs

South

,:.i44

.IS

nnd

lwulaamp

lower,

Miami

Lake...StewartUtah Metal,Unlte.1 Verde Katenslon..Yukon Cold

Si

"i'i

'S

THE PITTSBURG MARKET.

I'lTTsnrRO, May Gas were1014 steady. Ohio Supply gained a

point reiiiiKnuuew nrsKf1.10. price changes

were mostly direction.The summary:

Open. Itirh- - Cloa- -

S.Uea.ito a tv .narr-- n 14Col Oas A ..

:.--. Crucible Steel. .311 Crucible teel nf. 91

.'I UUi 1114- i nil iirewing i,

31 T.nne Star OnsMfrs Light A II..

so Ohio Vnel 17t;Ohio Puel Stipply. 4.1

I OUIa Nat C,as. .. siw Pills rtrculnf 1'4

lilts Coal. ... 71

Pure 114

jo rnlnn 1'049 t'n ft t1,1fl P S M

West Drake ,143CS Vfest Klectric. .. its.

THE CHICAGO MARKET.

Chicaoo, May Clhlcago Pneti-mntl- c

Tool, Carbide and StewartWarjter wcro firmer, wtth tradingmoderate proportions. Ilocbuck

easier, while small changes wer"recorded elsewhere. department

summary

Saless Radiator

210 Pnen ToolTom Kdlsnn

M IllinoisC A "3

: itisctmson

S Public Serv pfOils .

116 Pears Roebuck.Stewart Warner

SO

10 1' S Steel ..L'nlon Carbide

134

H'pf

EM

11'.

Jlr.sS3

31 I.at

K

S3

11?4

K 47

PONDS.Incomo !ls J

Com tsB0 Ss

Open- - Low. Clou.

i190

r'tH

lis11S Ht

aml.toU3

.1071, K74 1071,

14.asked

Tt'rl

Iteserre

.:V

easier

Slock

ttranny

Mining

24. stocksFuel

closed Otherslight cither

est. Ing

K..

Oil

Oil

14

icm s.in tot MinitwrNat Cat

switcnSteel.

Air

24.I'nlon

Sears.

dull.

Phi

Prick.Hy

Pennies

Quaker

Swift1S7

Cbl P.Trooo Edison 1fo

SwKl

irirh- -

JS4

Alien- - Low. Clos.

U9VJ1131,

l.H

THE BALTIMORE MARKET.

HAl.TlMnni!, securitiesmarket and featureless. Triceswere stationary. The summary:

Iow- - Clos- -

rnntnnlITnns Tower pf..ll1

CosdenBank ...

10 Mercantile TrustUys Kle.'

no.vps.11001) rtinrleston Kleo JI

,Wrt t'lil Itvs 1st ,'s 3I;is w i n,

Cons Coil CsCons (i.s. S4

rmn Klkhnrn Kurt 3s flmN Moh r.sp it), s tnU llya A K ts m'4

I. ulit.

Inc. rat. est, Inf.

73 ti

19H

MWH

lru4S3

.1.1

7J4

5.1

im;

37',

Itu ljtjM

11

Air

Am

:I"

r7

SO

lot

9

an

I95

M

4.1

93IS

S7

t,

I1PH

M

14

474

144

dull

s

H'i

173 171l!n

Ii :ily unit:itwo

rrtltwo ine30un filz

DALLY FINANCIAL CALENDAR.

DIVIDEND.Company nnd

Northern Ohio Trs'tlonnusrterlv

Ptamliird of Kansas, qtiar- -

.13

.00

.u

.SS

.7H

.71

7V.

.VI

.42

.71IS

&

K. M

23 23

T,s Ot

:,r.1

(4MH

1

4

13

S5

19

lltIt

4 t t 1S.1J

It'i

Ht,3'.

n,

117

Oil

1VTJ

f'.i

rM9

4I4

JtU

S

U'l

H74

nesdlns, quarterlvOhio quarterly

DIVIDIINDS I'AYAIII.K.American WlnitnwDow ChemicalDominion Cnltnn Millsllntneslake monthly..Morih Pennsylvania Itiillrosd,

quarterlyrsoplss Uas, quarterly.

7310

imr

4 : : 131)

J'i

44',

57

ITS ITS7 7wi, t43H i

(i iti 11

HrH

IS

991.

9V

f7H93

115tt tt

19

SS

tt

....s.

31

10

34M

f,t

i:44

si

M

49

It737

l.Wir.3

414

4Ml,

95

i

44r4

ISpt

47.

:

....

11H14 lllli

3

V A

A

O A 10

k

and

SI

.6

It

SI14

n

y

U

IS

s

1

1

s ?

S

:

10

47

41fl

I.

l!.Mi1"7JMl,r

Stll

4

1T1

13

Stdli

4000

tseivI

Oil, -

pM

S7W

MS

IJ's

1

313

ti

J

M

19

M

10t

si

7:

f.73

4.'

.."f7

74

S1

fl1

14

U

94119

919

Ml

153

1071,

.14

.10

4'

SI

.1:

.409

.17

l.l. ,

.55.45

1

,5'.70.:t

i

mrnt

In

Low.Ing. et

37)

1114 1114

lot

3o1V4

iss

ioo

1VI

.9t

.is

.SO

W4

314

4IHMHll't10U

:t4:ii

bid

.:j

914

K,1031 .

Klk Gas.IS

47

41SIK4ni?

1314 M04elk.

i:4 ir47S

BondTho

Itlth.Ins.jro

X1 ll fs133 133 133

i'S f.t f3:3 :.i 23

111 113 1H!lt,

iw lon4 in.;,137 13U',

117

107;

po

May 24. Tho

Open. Illirh.Sales.

inn, is?i,

M

OasI'Vitj jmiij!l40fl

Term.

15i

113

!4

H4

pfd

8

9M

M0

7:1,

r..

IS

171

IS?115

ess

190

13S

1U44

14:s

:;

14

mmup

pr.

Co Nat

liti3;

1M

nf

was

(lis

Chi

rr'i

Inc. est. est.3&1

9M, !IUw.

irpn

U.JH

137

is

M

was

loir est est ing-cn

113pf

OT.

!li

I7U

inoi

IIX

.ts

.74

los.

100

U7H113

4A

1732.1

M

inov,M(iiH41mMV,

Ptock. Amt.

Olass

Mlntnr.

14'

i:lOrj,

1 S '(.

C5c,

ft

12 GO TO PRISON FOR

"POULTRY TRUST"

Surrender to Servo SentencesAfter Fiphtfnpr Ycnrs to

Escape Cells.

SEE HOTE IN WHITMAN

Twelve members of the "pon'try trust"who users canslcted of conspiring to com-

mit acts Injurious to trade and com-

merce, surrendered to Judge WadhamsIn General flesstons yesterday. Kach ofthe twelve) was committed to serve a sen-

tence of thre months. They were con-

victed In August, 1011. Slnco that timetheir cases havo boon before the highercourts or. appeal. They were convictedbefore Judgo Hosnlsky after a trialwhich lasted nearly three months.

In addition to the sentenco of Impris-onment cJCh defendant was fined IfiOO,

This fine was paid beforo tho prisonersappeared In court.

After the conviction was upheld by theCourt of Appeals efforts wcro mado tokeep tho twelve from going to JalU Apetition Is now beforo Gov. 'Whitmanasking him to pardon the defendants.As tho men walked across the Hrldge ofHighs from the Criminal Courts Ilulld-In- g

to the Tombs they still hoped thatthere would be some action by tho Gov-ernor In their cases before he leaves to-

morrow for tho l'anama-IMclfl- e Imposition nt Kan Frnnelsco.

Attorneys for tho twelve men pointout In their petition that the defendantsarc all respectable merchants who hadlecn convicted of crime after many yenrsof reputable business dealings here. Homeor tho defendants are men of advancedage.

Solomon Frankel, who was convictedwith the twelve, died on Kobruary 20last. A certlncato to that effect wasfiled with tho court.. The men who were sentenced were

Ervlng V. Pwyer. Arthur O. IwyeT,westerberg. William W. Smith.

Charlen It. Jewell, James N. Morris,William II. Norris. Charles T. Hawk.Charles Thatcher, Clenen Illshop, Sam-uel Werner nnd Charles Werner.

District Attorney Perkins said yesterday that It was the first Judgment Imposing terms in tho penitentiary urrorripersons convicted of violating the ami-tru- st

net that had been nlllrmed In theunited .states, whether under tho Fwl- -er.il or Stnto law.

THE COFFEE MARKET.

I'tltrirra Quirt Prices Close I'n- -

rlrniiurrt to 4 Points Off.The coffee futures market was nulet

and featureless yesterday, with prices atthe close unchanged to 1 points oft onsales of 6,500 bags. Tho cnblo was de-layed nnd consequently no reports fromtho Brazilian co.st.nnd freight marketswere received. Prices were a littlehigher nt tho start In tho nbsence ofofferings, but In the Afternoon there wassome eclllng and active months sold offfrom 1 to , points. The local spot mar-ket continued dull, with prices unchanged.

Hrazlllan mnrkets wore featureless.Itlo 7s and Santrw 1s were unchangednt 4150 and &IS00 respectively. Hlonnd Santos receipts totalled 11,000 bags.Sao Paulo hail fl.000 nnd Jundlahyr.OOO. Tim rate of Hlo exchango on Lon-don was advanced to lH.d.

Prices were:

MarJuneJlllTAtUtlttSn'itember...O.mberNovember...Ilecnilrt'r.. .

JanuaryFebruaryM.iri'hApril..

High. Low.et. eit

.7073 70

e 37 t.H

Clos.inrI rsI. !.it. ft

s:t. his 706 73

ISilt97

7.01

Prer.close.

.'. tlI t,f. Mrl SIb.ti( 73S.74tl Tt

ttt Mr! !

7 C3

DIVIDENI) OUTLOOK BETTER.

Further ltvimhle Action on In-

vested Cnpltnl Kapeotnl,Dividend developments of the week

were generally favorable and the outlookfor future action on Invested cnpltnlcontinues to be better than It was a.tear ago, during tho period of depres-sion through which the country wasthen pasting.

During the last week the PortoTobacco Company resumed Its

quarterly 4 per cent, cash dividend.The last previous dividend was paid ntthat rate In December. 1S12. Since thisdisbursements hitvo been made In 5.... ,..., a.. In TS. .1,1,. ln',la.pany declared an extra dividend ofone-ha- lf of 1 per cent, during the panweek. I

The unfavorable dividend developmentstook place In tho Central States Klec- - I

trie Corporation common Mock, theChesapeake and Ohio Hallway Companyand the Hocking Valley Hallway Com- - i

pany. In the case of the Central States j

no action was taken on the dividendat all. while In tho case of the twoother companies dividend action wasueterrni uillll llio unu iiiecuilg u indirectors.

BANKERS TO MEET IN DENVER.

Interrstlnic Pinna for InvestmentAaaoclntlon Cnnveiitlon.

The fourth annual convention of theInvtstment Hankers Association ofAmerica will mivt In Denver on Rep.tember 20, 2t and 22. The Ilrownl'alace Hotel has been selected ns thoheailo.ua rtera,

Tho committee havlnir In rharitn thobusiness sivvslons hns not yet wurke.lout that end of tho prnrrramnis. OnMonday evenlnt?, Reptemlier 20, the Pen-ve- r

Invrstment bankers will entertainnil dole-Kate- on top of Iyookntit Moun-ul-

seventeen miles from Penver. Thotrip will bo mado both wn)-- s hy auto-mobil- e,

On Tiicevlny, September 21, tho busi-ness sessions of tho tonventloii will becontinued until luncheon, after whichnil of the delegates will bo tnken bynulomoblln to ltes Paik, seventy-liv- e

miles from Penver, In tho heart of thenewly formed Rocky Mountain NationalI 'ark.

On Wednesday morning. September22 there will bo a tour of Kstcs I'.irlcnf nlmut fifty miles.

ROCKEFELLER IN "MOP" PLAN.

Deposits Ills; Notes, hnt Speyer ACo. still Mold nrr.

John D. Itockefeller has deposited theMissouri Pacific notes he holds, m.iklnirtho total of notes thus far deposited forextension close to $15,000,000. It launderstood that Speycr & Co. luts not upto this tlmo nitrccil to deposit Its

Snmo of the directors eniriKed In thework of srvurlliK deposits of notes ex-pressed strops hopes yesterday nf se-- 1

curltiK thn deposit of close to the entireI2S, onn.noo and thus maklmr the re.orK!inlr..itlnn plan without a receivershipa possibility.

When Interests In the propertywiri nsked yesterday If It wcro not trtloHint a receivership would havo to be,resorted to In order to reorirxnlze thopad Mhcther or not tho notes lire ile.posited, It wns said that In Ihe event ofthe full lit posit of the notes beliifr

therti would be no receivershipIn tho Immediate future, pending an at-tempt at reorganization without It,

JURY TO TRY GROUT

FOR PERJURY READY

Completed After All T)ny Ses-

sion Cropscy Opens forState To-dn- y.

EUTIOT? WILL TIE DEFENCE

The Jury in the trial of former cityComptroller Edward Jt. Orout on acharge of perjury wns completed nt I MB

o'clock yesterday nftcrnoon nfter analt day session beforo County JudgeLewis In Brooklyn. Of twenty-seve- n

men examined fifteen were challenged,flvo by thn people nnd ten by tho de-

fence. Those selected were:Theodore Cramer, manufacturer, 58

Fenlmoro street; Ira W. llardwlck, ad-

vertising, 662 Host Thlrty-necon- d street :

Christian L. A. Oerlten, meats, 4S3 Strat-ford road; Adolph lllmtnclrelch, men'sfurnishings, 402 Kast Fifteenth street;Lawrence J. Gannon, hattor, 4 43 Pros-pect place; John P. lJuler, Insurance,2334 Tllden nvcnuo; Bernard Ormont,chemical engineer, (IBS Ninth street;Warren I'. Hdrls, salesman, 1 173 HastTenth turret; John T. Jleehan, furniture,71 Van Huron street; IMward 11. Cook,

coal. 1001 Dean street: James JI. Jlur-ph-

musician. 136 St. Jlirk's place, nndLester V. llarklti, clerk, 3D2 Pacificstreet.

It will be for these twelve men to decidewhether Mr. (Irout, as president of thonow defunct I'nlon Hank, willfully sworeto a false statement regarding the finan-cial condition of that institution, orwhether, acting unwisely perhaps but Ingood faith, ho merely accepted state-ments passed on to him from tho timewhen David A. Sullivan, tho convictedbank wrecker, wns president of thobank.

Stephen II. Baldwin, attorney for Jlr.Grout, laid much stress on this In exam-ining prospective Jurors. Ho pointedout that all but two of tho Items men-tioned In tho Indictment were broughtover from the Sullivan regime nnd wantedto know If the Jurors would give thisdue consideration. If shown that Jlr.Grout had no knowlcdco of them. An-other point on which Jlr. Baldwin dweltwas the possible duration of the cise.He e.ild It might last six week,s nndnaked each Juror If he thought ho couldoffer nn open mind to the defence aftertho District Attorney had presentedhis evidence.

The charge ngntnst Mr. Grout growsout of tho second collnpse of the UnionBank, formerly fie old Mechanics andTraders. David A. Sttllivnti. recentlyparoltd from Sing Sine, was presidentof tho latter Instltut'on. which fatlelduring tho panic of UftT. It w.ih re-

organized under the name of the I'nionBank, a namo formerly bornn by oneof Its branches, nnd Mr. Grout wns m tdothe reorcanlr.ntlon president, partly be-

cause of his finnnclnl experience its cityComptroller nnd partly because it wasthought that his name ntnl Mandlng Inthe community would help to offset theshadow that hung over tho Institutionnftor Sulllvnn's rule.

After thn b.tnk had c!oo! Its doorsfor the second time It was found tintMr. Grout had overstated Its assets Insworn statements made to the StateHanking Department. This led jo twoIndictments, one charging a misdemeanorami the other felony, tt Is tho felonyoliargo that Is being tried. The Indict-ment it as returned neirly seventeenmniths ago. after the flr-.- t Itul' tniont,.ucordlng to District Attorney ("ropsev,bad been etuas' til.ited by Supivme CourtJustice JLirean.

The Grout cise has been before thepublic In one form or nimther for three

oars. It w only recently that DistrictAttorney Cropsey, who will open for theState nt 10 o'clock was the sub-ject of Investlgttion by it spvclal com-mittee of the Brooklyn H.ir Aesorlatlunbecause of his i ference In nn after din-ner speech to certain member of theKings county Judiciary as "hand plckcl"and ns "lap frlei.dV of Mr. Grout JudgeLewis, now presiding nt the trial, wasappointed after the speech was mule.

BANKER WYCK0FF SENTENCED.

fiets n Yenr. lint Will Apply for(Vrtlllrntc of Diitilit.

William V. Wyekoff, for ninny yearsa lending nttornev In llrooklyn andljueens, nnd nleo president of the Wood-have- n

National Hank, was eentvnrod yes-terday to one year's Imprisonment onlllackwoll'H Island by Jtidgn J. MarryTlernan In the ijtieens County Co.irtfor grand lar'env In the second degreo.

In sentencing Wyekoff Judge Ticrnangranted n stay nf execution for twoweeks to allow Wyekoff to make npplt-c.ttlo- n

for a certificate of reasonabledoubt. He riMiuestfd the warden ofthe Queens J.i.l to provide Wyekoffwith facilities of settling his business,pending his motion.

WHYARD MUST STAND TRIAL.

Aynck Honil Contrnctor loirs Kf-fo- rt

to llrfrltt Illdletlnent,New fitr. May 21 W. W. Whynnl

the Xvack ro id contractor who tins! indicted with llirt Dunn for allcce.l

road crafMnir, lost v !n his la.stIi'E.il raovn to escape Kolnir on trialhere.

Supremo Court Justice Tompkins do-- ,nled tho motion of Henry Kohl, hiscounsel, to dismiss the Ind'ettnentsak'alnst Whynrd nml thn Aetna construetlon Comjunv on tho croitnd that henitho I i land Jury was taking tiietlm, in--

.

Justli-- I N. Knpprr. ho presided imr'the etraordlnnry hiksI'-i- (if the Su-preme Court, lias not In the niurt house.

' IVarlliK there were net enoiiKh it vail-- 1

ablo talesmen when fifty-seve- n had an-- ,swcred the roll call, Justice Tninpkluhordered another extra paiu l of seventy,five nnd then adjourned the ease iin'll

, Thursday. Moss of Jv'eiv Yorkcounty nppeare.1 to .vslsl District Atlor.ney Thom us (lairan Whvard s ontmselannounced nftor los'nir his motion toknock uit the Indi 'tment that h Isprepared to ro to -- rial.

PLANS WORLD FILM DIVIDEND.

Sclrnlrlc Will Propose .' Per Cent.ltinrterl .

Ie-ii-n J. Selrnlck. andKeneral rrona4-'e- r of the World Cor-- p

ration. Slid yestenlay that he wouldrecommend Hut an Initial dividend of3 per cent, bo deelarnl on tho stuck ntthe directors' nieetliur on June 27 amitlmt It bo iiuido it rn.ul.tr uuartcrly p ly.ment.

Ho said tint a contract for the Hiiro-pea- u

rights of the roinpany had In enirndo which would net m.iro than 200,-00- 0

a ear.

COTTONSEED OIL.

The trade was quirt nnd prices werewithout sltrnltlcant chump-- Politicaladvices further deterred trade. Therewere no simulative .ipc-aCv- of r, toliinl refiners were nn Imth eMes of tliolist In u small way.

SpotMay.liilvSeptember.,

('lemurpr i

f. .t. ii " Mf !.1i 'Jl

' III 61U.STijC.Si

Pt V

eb'.l

3f it r.

CM

The Union Trust Company of New York offers n specintservice to individual trustees who desire, to have the clerical and routineadministration of their trusts carried on at n low expense by an expertorganization.

The Union Trust Company will rare for the trust property,assist In making investments and In sclllnR securities, collect the incomeand pay it over as directed nnd will render nccounts In the form in whicha trustee is required by the Court to state bis nccounts. A trustee willavoid expenso and trouble by having his accounts kept in proper form.Correspondence and Interviews are Solicited.

UNION TRUST CO. OF NEW YORK, 80 Broadway

PERE MARQUETTE ROAD

UNDER HAMMER OCT. 1

Underlying IlondholflcrB HaveGunrnntpcd to Bid More

Tlinn S

DrrnorT, JIny 24. The Pero Jtar-quet- to

Ilallway system Is to be sold atnuctlon on October 1 on tho basis of anorder Issued to-d- hy Judgo ArthurJ. Tuttlo of tho Federal District Court.Tho Junior bondholders, who wcro ex-

pected to submit a plnn for reorgani-zation of tho system, did not nppearIn court, Formal conditions of thesalo nm to bo nnnounced on June 7.Claims against tho system which havbeen recorded In court actions and

amount to moro than 0.

The underlying bondholders, In theirpetition asking for the sale, of the prop-erty, havo guaranteed to bid a suffi-

cient erum to clear away the equipmentIndebtedness as well as their ownclaims. The equipment obligationsamount to nbout 112,000,000, The under-lying bondholders claim In 28,000,000.It Is believed that the system will bringmoro than ths 40,000,000 thus required.

Interests in ths property In NenrYork said yesterday that no reorganiza-tion plan has been devised yet to taketho road out of receivership. It Isregarded that the reorg.tnizers will haveplenty of tlmo before October 1, whentho road Is to be sold, to work out aplan. Informal conferences havo beenheld but thus far no dollnlte lines of aplan havo been laid down. The roadhas been In receivership slnco 1512,

MADDEN ON TRIAL AS

PROMOTER OF MURDER

Gnus Loader Accnscd of Cnns-ins- :

Two Associates toKill "Squealer."

Owen Madden, notorious KaneT

leader who from time) to time) has ter-rorized the West Sldo and who has beenarrested a half lozen times, was placedon trial for murder In the first degreebefore JudRn Nott tn Oencral Sessionsyesterday

.Madden Is charged with havinc ordered two of his associates to kill Will-

iam Moore, eairod Patsy Doyle, whowas murderod In a saloon at Eighth j

.iwmto nnd Forty-firs- t street on thenight of N'ovenib-- r 28 last. James '

Ward, alias Artiicur Illeler, one of thotwo men who phot Poyle, was sent toS.nir Sins for not less than elshteenyears. Tho other, John McArdle. calledHoppo. was sent to prison for thirteen

Ass slant District Attorney Kdwnrdswi'I try to show that Madden stood onihe oppolte corner when Doyle met hisdeath.

The clothlnK worn by Dovfo on thenlcht he wns killed was put In evidence.Thero are s.x bullet holes In tho s.

A third man. who Is supposedlo havo helped In tho murder, has neverbeen nrrc.i'ed.

In his outline of tho evidence to be

eawl

trvroc,

Hetho

was not

Adjournment case

she

yes.

of2M

Mnclstrnte'sthe

the thothe

do.she tho do.

told shenot sho

this Hheand tho est

turn On tho

the

ense do.t

"

theh.n

I

n

lnianiitbles,"

11

Louisville & Nashville

Railroad CompanyEmpire Building, 71 Broadway

York, 3.1d,

GENERAL MORTGAGEaccordance with

i.!,.rt.'",fr "'.and inlsi toladsy drawn the Mink vli.;S fwl

U7.TI

7MB771

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! The on the w,r ii rcsiesnd the ptlnclpnl the plus tencent, will thisuna otter due.n,-- f

1 5VY?Vl'yA.NI roill-.W-

I'i!.' --tis:t ( ,"ti.o t::. ml ,t sunnls-m-nt-

nftreeiM..nt rJ0- -.

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lt. , ; ., ,,rl, , ,. . vpar and tosum n rrtiftl.-- u:nj

.'ii I

r l'n nsyl ,, t mpu-3 per ' t s

' li.l until o'rliickMnv .'1,

(IIISMIH 'MMI'IW" 3

1'hl'adelphli l'.i ! ,r,

KI.IXTKINS

Jlr. ho rr.uiioliiii i iioi-m- i c0.Madden was tho leader of Niilli-- im liil Mr, tlm; t'n- - loi k- -

tho ncrecd ret rid of hnlili-r.-

Doyle he had "suuealed on" Th.,.M ler,""' ' 1 i,i-- k-

ltnmanello, ono the men ri.ll.isi: Vivrin:stabbed Doylo bofnrn the murder. Mad- - ,h" ""ter o( th- - i .irs, a

s1,,l ' f!"1. !' '"'""B nr tbe lers thsi. r,,marK10'1. I Iillt lltOl'i i M H.1T1N .'OM

1 had planned croak win t ... thePntsy becnusn he a squealer. impinj U." lire.iiuir, ,r icl. .

II.. Is and I h"'L"n 'Vi',1. ".'.'rtll1. lt ili ,fj,ii,c. fi-afraid of When lie had purpose f .irpr ,v K .k--, nt

he called a cop I wouldn't adopted hv the limi ind, thn dll, i' e ere

Mr. IMwards eald Madden j sfc;"", UcV(ulinlsslons Marparet the I mm l II ' llnf

tiad Horner. Hoth Corporation Into h n

IT.;;"'.:' ' by the prosecu- - ?JVX'X. uV.a.rnear the of the action thit be i ,.- - nnnn

hnotlni- - nnd expected, snv carrv Into the en! aBre..m-n- t

b it they Madden across tho streetwhen I.e murderers shot Doyle.

Jury was found Inml Then I'ollceman Starr told

of llndlt's Doyle's body in :i hallway.said that owlnt; difficulty In get-t-r.- n

information about murder Mad-den arrested until three weeksafter thn crime.

was taken In thountil ns Jud(?o Nott will ho

Albany

UPHOLDS GUILT OF SEERESS.

I'rnphesleil I'll (lire, nmlIs 1'iirliiiie Court niiys..Iiideo In (leneral Sessions

terdav handed down nfflrm-I- itho conviction Maude Malcolm ofWest 10!th street, who was found

irullty In n court nf fur-tun- c

tolllntj. The Judire holds thatof astrolocy nr palm readlnt:

does not onine under ban of lawuulins Bcneral mlvlcn as future

Klmn.Mrs. Isabella Onodwln, n pollen

teetlve, sworn that visitedfondant tun! was that

eat red meat nnd that wouldbe married twien

Kurope b'nr Informationpaid $2 then caused an andc, mvli nf the seeress

ili'.'.sl'in Judce N'ntt

merelysou consulting nml irlves erenerat adviceas to future based upon such read-Itiit- s

eharacler, no Inlllnc of fortunosInvolved; but In this

fend i further prophesied asspeclllc events as nml

travel In my Judgment sho prop-erly cnnvlcli

Many pcndlnK hlnse on this

FINANCIAL

It r.non, of tnve.t- -

teent Tlmketa i illon of Amorlea,nt Issued tin Important huMettn irestini:

iu owlnit snlilecis se

New ItiiJ.

In terms nf licnrrslhave

11411.11 1117.1ti tIRM70 IIVM

II.llins11(102

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trtlls nsjiiroiti

11023

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sin-runt-s

3V4,.";" ritiiFi- -MMIItlMirursmnt

Mptember

nt'wTHI'XT C'DIMM,

Trustee.TfMIT

MUKTIVU.would:

llverdenno Frieda

science

should

rlfhtrrn

MM

imtififer

'ttv

ovibo

hi

IwiUPiC tttKlilOTl".New cipiu'eo

Law,"

March

,h.1'.lmn.ls

Fund,1202n12IMS

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till

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SUM

let 10

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IN 12H

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till

in

utbe nton th it

i..Treniurer.

7.

to mi n nreenientIni

the vr- . I,.- -. oflor mi., as.f ,

it. ih nw ,,f in, tbri K

to'IKAItn, c

4 ,ent T- - "bV. ul

1'.

'.''i'V:M n :

Kdwnrds is r.tof uf

to

oftn r te.., - tn r,, nf

N Hi ItIt to i.e 1e; m nr

Is n ofa rat always !'nn tha h- -

or onbv nn old

to Ju,r to be kr, wnUi m iv tn

It Is of

A to Madden

to

an opinionn

toin

nto

to

d

I"A

Anv ltholder npp'vtr c therefor to thstbe (.,inptpv ill he

a ,opy of ok tolute

New 2ilili m

Secretary of Into-- ! n'l .MeropiMtsnCom pi r

iiMiiir.Mi iNTi:iu:vr.

ATLAS POWDER C0MPANY.7

itii i hi

f ,hta tm m i v ;i!n; l(.

th"-- " ii f .

Otl Ihl !'!r it'll .it ! 2 ! k ii'.. k I i K

o 'of-- u nin :o . .oi'k A. M. ii.o l!,

r. n

1.

t.

I.

I

I

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.i

a

it

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U.ra

nt 139

iimiDKv- - covnilN-ii- ni'in:i-i:iiui:i- i in iiinn:Mi n st

A - if. ' o' c.Ins been ., l,.rr"l H knf this e 'To of 1 l. 1

.1 ,r In, I'', at lei yiop, n .Inn.. n ' i V

T I) SIIKV11, ir

DIE HOTEL FIRE.

11 HefllKee n

Hilled nlim lllliers."Where n palmist or nstrnloslit PnrKSKtii,, 21

deduce- the ehnnicter of per- - wen and t!.i

ofIs

morrlnirowns

NOTES.

Mlchtcm

fuilonliu

131!1J2

prtrnium.

int

of

TWO

In it llrei "f unV' "W

ileitniyei the four

The are Chtrleillilwanl 't, bter wji n "ire

e. it

burnel inhid a iiioiu nu t

find ImTkI.I on a i"illip Injuries tn Irs

(Ire w1!

an's 'e "

on be ' p " M'

b s IIIInu'iR V'tw.er.tl,,l i.ts Wl,i:uropo.

U

4CV1

14721

4101127,

1.VI2I

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1020

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10073

11141

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1?17

liwniinio

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1I2.1

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171171710.1

17222172.12172111721117.T.I1720117271

17.101

1711117.11117.170171111

17I17H

17fAll17roi::m1772.11772017711

17'2

i7'ij.1

110)7

11027

1010limini

i:-i-

lIM141714111SI47HIU15.12IMlU

1.1M

10411070

1711

172.1

1175111701

IHIM

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1112.1.1

10217102.14102571H21H

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10279

1KC7

111.114111.154

mvi1U4t1

noij

1I'M3

In'rrni .TuneISIS, hiituls.'peroKlce

ATI.- -. IUU.dated

under.above certin. leryJune e11nr

Inter

Ses,1 tendersTrustee

un.l. toitrtn-te- d

n11llll.l.

Tlil-.-J:,r

AMIerrercd said i.ii-m- ishow that

Kane that

Tce who had r.XKi: tint,hive

have I'amDovle

have been "!khim. tlcht

and daretrust him" xeciite--

that had Z. 'm.made pjrls, with

.".liedscene

win, effect

time.

Thnt

Nott

and take lonir trip

an-ni--

went andsuch

cases

rtiuo

been

eto,

with enu-n- t

con.rtllYork. Apr!'

riitf

ami

rnwjirou''iti

OIltftHIt

iiii.k ctiMp ivy1!'''.!

l'.i-e- .I'o'iinii pi"i)i l'th.

Kh...l-- 'i .lui.e

checks tnal.eTreii

llelu Ictlm

Mavkilled

earlv j.

de-i-

McC-tii-

ilouh

mils,'.I'm1

Iowa Sky, It H i

31

'H

20

41

1.1

I

l

I

e.,

101

III.

l

of

i:.

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H,u

th--

I ii..

vttss.

heIn

'j"l'

tit

iti iY. tsurr

t5

I(l2

1075

li'inUT

H'r.

two

biy

The

Tre

eejru , i i,'he

,li:- -. 15,ete i

Ilo.iK ian 1st:, ., t M

I

-

IN

In Hell- -Itoy

i

. i

The

I I

'effe t

I

t

I

I l

Two p. sonsI v ih u ir- I

w- - hl lt.l,.;'i

D'onvri'is and111 "V 1 !,.

ni'iTtell .ii.il w IS

U tl' tin 111 i w i,iii ' I li.ir l

nr n, t sand, rurfrr- -

. i ed 111 I ie Ii tchin

tu

ol'IS

.sl') : ,

i'oeiri,e,eillstl.

Still .11

ri i

El'f

1

I111

( 1

I--