The evening world. Newspaper, July 21, 1902, Page 2

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* Revai..\ THE WORLD: MONDAY: EVENING, JULY 21, tle erat "ALL THE LATEST NEWS OF THE BUSINESS WORLD. mrado Fuel Fight. rhe fact that the fight for control of Colorado Fuel and aron has been STOCK MARKET. Man- Sharp Advance in rane nt ines laid out, but the platntit hattan Starts Gossip= i400 tearn some things through pers of Wall Street to} tat method which are denied them i i ny the Pa t. There seems to ‘ rtime. by the managemen| } Working Ove bo lttle doubt that the Gates-El- wood-Mitehell faction owns a ma- jority of the sinck and convertible taken to the courts interests the financial district not a little, The legal move may not win, according FOREIGNERS ARE BUYING. bonds actually marketed, but there remains an indefinite amount of Market Eased Off in After-|stock and bonds In the treasury which may be given life by the man- agement. It is to locate that as much as in hope of obtaining a list of stockholders that the actién is brought upon which argument is set Rating. in etocks continued onia| fOr is morning. = broad scale to-day. The volume of transactions was on about the same level as Jast week and prices were well sustained, as a rule. izing sales by the larger houses which|\; except those tntimately connected rere conspicuous on last week's ad-| w vance. It was profit-taking and a trimming of sails. In no quarter, however, was there a change of posi tion on the market by those who have been doing the recent leading. The bull card was Manhattan, which noon Due to Absence of} Professional Boomers—Gen- eral Feeling Is Firm. The late John W. Mackay was not widely known personally in Wall etreet. | He avidom visited the Jooality, and few persons knew him by sight. He mixed Talk of Telegraph Combine. The death of John W. Mackay has set the .ongue o. speculation wag- ging over the possibilities of tele- graphic consolidation, Mr, Mackay moved up the calumn decidedly. In the is understood to have been the in- absence of any a ediecuiatl the tHexible uiuence against a unification Gk aigcovared tn aan httan anathee wt the two great telegraph companies Loulaville and Nashviie, and was after 2nd their allied interests, but now the control. This story, absurd as it that he has passed away the point is| may seem on the face of it cepted seriously by many. In informed circles the report w: was ed that thore who succeed him niay Soften the position and yield to a ridiculous. | suggestions looking to closer rela- Wne granger roads wore srougly| tions, Persons supposedly close to Bameeany. olaes, Ravine Lore on" | the Postal ownership there is re- Mite nine ey beets | ote possibility of such a consumma- have made a more favorable impresion abroad than at honw, apparently, and| on, but they do not speak with the of absolute knowledge. tihe foreigners are tuking auld ot Amori- | confidence ere. late a “1” FEATURE (F GOSSIP IN AND | side. The policies which were fixed during} the lifetime of Mr. Mackay may be “unfixed” by the new regime, os * 8 falure of the New Jersey Court os to act In the steel infanctton se (o-day wae a disappointment to | the industrial specialists who were) cooked and primed for a decison ala- sclying the Injunction and leaving the management practically free to proceed with its conversion plan. Goulds Block Tunnel? | The financial sleuths of Wall street have found a new lead—some- thing novel to talk about. They hear tho rubber-footed rumor that Gould interests are behind the “hold up’ of the Pennsylvania project to tunnel under Manhattan Island and connect it with the mainland on the Jersey side and Long Island on the other, The whisper is supported by the theory that the breach between the Gould-Pennsylvania parties is irreconcilable, and that both sides wiil do everything possible to embar- rass rival plans. It ie recalled that the Pennsylvania did nothing to smooth the way of Wabash into Pittsburg, and that dt subsequently went to the length of ordering West- ern Union off its right of way, Peopie in Wall street are uncharitable enouzh to gomplp that the visit of W K anderbilt to this country was not a glittering #uccess and that he might as well have remained on the other His coming was halled as the haroinger of peace and harmony in many quarters where relationships were becoming strained. a7 0 Control of Reading Mystery. The mystery of Reading control continues to deeply concern the Street. The very great nials that contro) has lodged in that quarter does not satisfy. The denial ean securities in t shape | = and in Great Britain has depresid their securities and reduced carniuy power to such a point that fore wn tal is turning legitimately atu this way. To such an extent is thi awe that bankers feel they may have’ to draw on thelr resou liquidate the heavy floating 4 ity the Old World (hroug ational exohang. markets debtedness {sin proces Dbysthe transfer of svouritie to the king of those who h: the financing General fractional loss in prices place during whe midd . Professional booming } left to itsel’, the me sommownat Hinissivn: Was reparied on a satiat je miscellaneous « dered. Posiponement of Jersey court In tic Won case pro one wa yor ti ent presou SORTS Bets at the slight eve di An quetacons. ty ing that other epectac u Olorado uel vid ponement of the argument néon gave the wpeeluist~ anes | the inter- | Phe in-| witch ds ty do} 269 Cats. 1) Ohio. Ind 100 ¢ Ind erly 6 resi. onetary conditions aie edgier, Call funds are in ample at ilow rates and time ioans are attitude atribating rance founda lion around in med the foreign easier home markets bomper crops are the Ue better fecling all Bnancial held Ino foal As the day adyanc uid stocks iveloped qualiues nip. Not omy Manha Pacit\: and the Wa ler concgerte buying by ( Spatagent. The Gould spec ‘backbone of the CHICAGO WHEAT STRONG. In Spite of Clearing Weather tn Grnin Belt Prices Were Maintained | ind. the C laities pri Ket | vt £8. & Atl IGHICAGO, July 2.—Palr weather af- devastating rains had almost no Degrish effect on grain at the opening to-day. ‘There was a dip when the woather may showed the greater part of the Missippi Valley clear with chances: for conticued fair weather. mmediately @ revive t week's bull- | t and prices allie { opencd 1-4 a $8 to 8 a i. lower ut 72 to 1174, Cubles ghowed ‘Southern Very little response to the local weak hee of Saturday, Phere were few trades in the corn pit early | July was easier and sold 34 F September started 1-4 a 8. Smaller t strength br aber to 6) JS 79 of fo 10Wer al 60 5-8 to 00 receipts and the whi @ reaction for Septe Ralpia wero ¥i6 cars, le, ‘Total cont walled 8i Re contract t stuft put ay | 60 busivels, ts opened more quiet tha H days, nuthou, for spy. n July Waa bid at! wo: very weak er by the muc clea rovisions were opening. ‘lod shorts, 1 Ce at the! 1 SHIPPING NEWS. ALMANAC FOR TO-DAY Gen rises. 4.46)8un vets. 7.20/Moon THE TIDES High Ws AM. PM AO > & Wentern TAS Low Water AM. PM. 2 wry | ge Kat OB 1 1.14 10.25 403 PORT OF NEW YORK. | AKRIVED, wih, Relbway 890 Howth. Rattway pf 00 MeL for Mt. J, GT 1,700 Bt, La Be Antwerp es F lnistol Toul 8 W W. pt & Iron Shields ‘BROKER DEXTER DEAD IN DENVER, Brooklyn Real-Estate Dealer's ; Whereabouts Not Known After He Failed--Body to Be Brought Home. The death of Frederick C. Dexter, in Denver, announced to-day, will Interest scores of Brooklyn people who suffered money loss through his fight In May, 1901, Dexter's death was sudden to St. Luke's Hospital, in week ago, suffering with what the phy- sich diagnosed as cholera morbus. He sank steadily and never rallied Dexter was supposed to be wealthy and was a member of exclustve clubs iit Hronklyn. where ho lived. His wife was Miss Maude Vall, of the family of the late Dean Hoffman. She brought a dower of $125,000 to her husband, who was an extensive real estate operator and partner of the late D. C, Brown, He was Iintrusted by many with their money for investment, and managed ral estates went well Fellett, of France, whose estate of $100,- He went Denyer, a All until the Countess de ylelded ty Insurance the n make up the shortage, though there is no suspicion that the fire was of in- cendlary orlgin, and only the heroin of Mrs. Dexter saved the lives of the rest of the family and of Bishop Browne, of Arkansas, who was a gue: Mr. Dexter disappeared after thi leaving his wife and two child-en de Utute, while many victims were out the ded sum to given some mortgages to Dexter to sell As Dexter had surrendered the his all tn ffort to repay his creditors and was ed to be somewhere in the West trying to recoup his fortune and repay the reat ne effort was made to find him , at forty-four, with these obliga- one stull pending, he js doad. Dextor's father, Marshall C, Dexter lives tn Brookiyn, and the son's body will be brought here and buried in Evergreens Cemetery ————— Ph 700 Tex. Pack 00 Tol, at, Le & Weat opie | 1.200 °Tol.. se. L. & Wt. Daltimore | bl t z t's eit is Bet fh siti tat _ OUTGOING #TDAMEHIPS, J ag Ah Hit ling, aver " TO-DaY, Oo) Union ihe... Mertolke _Deaary, Prog:eno, | ie Valen Basie ot OO val ING STDAMEETAS, DUB PO.DAY i one acento: Ving. Carolina Chem. t bes 4 Si at 4 1.80) Weate Ss ay, 8 Bat yy Be te ay He $43 Mile Comment ies Be 300 Wis. Sntrai oe. The fetal: ¥ of shares ‘ot bouds vitae er emphasis | thrown into the Pennsylvania's de-| ABOUT WALL STREET. is called “technical” and as not cov- ering the whole question, For in- Stance, it is urged that, while the Pennsylvania may not be buying | Reading control direct, it may be |doing it through Balttmore & Ohio, or through one of the great banking | houses, as it did Long Island and as it has conducted several imménse deals, The Street seems, however, to be gradually drifting to the con- vietion that ownership fs still with J. P. Morgan & Co, and the First National Bank part; Tf there is anything beliides idle talk in the elnister rumors of a «tock Jobbing Sntrizue Ddelind the hnthracite coal strike, dnveathgation fails utterly to Un- vover tt ‘The tate is seemingly the product of an overwrought imagination, oo Not Excited Over Trusts, ‘Wall street refuses to become ex- cited over the prospective politcal agitation on the trust question. Not even the publication by the Demo- cratic Congressfonal Committee of the difference in foreign and home prices of a long list of trust-made ar- ticles seems to arouse the interest of speculators. The possibilities of carif reviticr seem exceedingly remote to the average Wall street man and he hasn't time to borrow trouble so far ahead, when he has 80 many mat- ters of importance demanding dally ‘and hourly attention, There are times and seasons whon the Street is mightily moved by political agitation, but this is certainly not one of those periods, LONDON, July 21.—The Westminster Gazette says the directors of a number of spinning companies in. the Ashton ind Stalybridge districts of Lancashire | has een approached by agents of | Ame cotton growers with the view oft stile the former's properties. | Mootings of the shareholders of the cone Seerns affected will be held soon, TRAIN CRASH ON JERSEY CENTRAL. ‘Conductor Probably Fatally STRIKE PROTECTION, SAYS VILAS TO THE DEMOCRATS: Ex-Secretary of the Interior Sounds Keynote for a New National Campaign. AUKEE, July 21—Mr. will- Vilas, who was bSecretary MIL iam Fr of the Interior in President Cleve- land’s Cabinet, was recently asked! by Mr. A. F. Warden, Chairman of| the Democratic State Central Com- mittee, to give his opinion respect- ing political conditions, the possi- bilities of Democratic harmony “and the asstrane of the party's restor- ation to power and the rellef of the peaple from Republican maladminis tration.’ Mr. Vilas replied to-day In part as follows: “Nothing can be more evident to one who takes a broad view of the nature of public affairs or of our political his- tory than that achievement of good Is only to be won by leaving to the past the burial of its own dbad and pushing on undisturbed to the great ends open in the future Hope of People in Democratic Party “Whatever the alignments on past Is- sues, the Democratic party remains to- day the hope of the people of this land. On no other can be placed any just expectation of a rescue from the men- neing conditions that beset us. Any one can see who will see the truth that all the combinations of greed, all the plot. tera who work upon our Government win special gain at the cost of the peo- ple at large are to be found supporting the party now in power; for the Demo- cratle party they have, @# always, only hostility. “If ever deliverance is to come from| the rapacious combinations now in reat| control of the country’s affairs, If the | abuses of power which have put to! shame our national principles and tra- | ditions are to find redress the relict must | spring from a party which will vnite the people in defense of common w fare, in unflinching hostility to its insid- | lous and powerful cnemles. “Under the false and deceitful name CLAIMS BUILDING LAW IS VIOLATED. Richard S. Newcombe Asks Hurt in Collision at Sea Girt, but Passengers Escape Serious Injury. (Special to The Rvening World.) STATE CAMP, SHA GIRT, ND, July collision on the Oentr vf New Jorsey oc- cur orth of the Sea Girt station thig morning. A passen- ger ou ind south, In charge of Condue’ mes Van Houten and Bn- gineer Lloyd Clark, of Point Pleasant, ran Into the rear of a Freehold freight which was elther standing on the track ahead or was making 4 flying switoh trom a siding. It {a wald there was no red flag on the freight or at the crossing north of where the wreck took place. The engkie, No. 6, one of the new large horback variety, ploughed fts way Into the caboose of the freight and completely demolished it. The ensqie was throw om the track and Ei gineer Clark, who is married, was prob- 000 wan in Dexter's hands, came to["%y MiMly Wud America and forced tim to an account-| jumped and thus saved thelr rea ing. Then It was discovered that Nel phere wore but a few passengers, They was in @imculties. He wns forced to) were thrown about the cars, but none turn everything he owned into money | was seriously hurt . to meet this call, aud was still $20,000 =f a, short A fire that destroyed his home on LONDON MARKET DULL. Brooklyn's aristocratle Dyker Heights American Securities Prio The Active a enerally Advanc London market was dull heavy in all the home departments to- day, The feature was the continued weakness in the South African mining seourities, In which further forced liqui- Gution i expected a ‘The department for shares was the only American railway active spot in the amount they had inttusted to him. | Market Tmdine wus lively and | wired Among these was Rey, Dr. Reese F Al- figures at New York on Saturd. Sop, rector of Bt. Ann's Church, He had}, Console were flat at the opening, but Inter recovered. oe NOT FOR PROTECTION. remler Balfour Denies Proapece | tive Change in Hritten Polley. LONDON, July 21.—Henry Laboucaere | (Advanced Radical), in the House of | Commons askedsquestions intended to ellelt @ statement as to whether the resignation of Sir Michael Hicks-Beach, CURB MARKET FIRM the Chancellor of the Bheoquer, indl- ' ated whe poss! the adoption of & prospective p Good Inautry for Steel Fiver im | The Premier, A J. Halfour, sald there the Outelde Dealt, Was no ground for believing that any e volley. settled upon byt bine! The outside market opened fem, but! while the Chancellor wos a imembee ae few sales were noted, There was a good it would be anged his retirement, | thgulry for steel fives, which Were frac- —— |Donnily higher. American writing paner ai * franily blehor American writing pancriMiverpoot Grain aud Vrovistons, walned 1-8 LAV ERPOQOL, July 21.—Closing: Wheat Quite an active disposition wi No, 1 Norihors spring steady, Ga to trade in Oregon Short Lin ‘ yr firm quotations Mo, }' Gallfc Gulet, Ga, ide, | se faa! nsunes. tt July A) Sepuember, |hteel Suit Goes Over THI September | Spot firm, Arm Pe rg it TRENTON, NJ, duly S—No con dull; Beptomber, Se BA: October, Ge ference of the Court of Errore to Als-|* PorkPrime moss, Wostern, firm, sie pose of the UValted States Steel Corpora- Hame—Short cut, 4 to io Ib, steady [ton case was held to-day, as some of Segoe Ousberia Wout, 0 to a0 the Judges are away on thelr summ ar iwhort rib, 16 to M4 Ib,, yaoatlons, The conference will be neld| Arm, cid ‘ge Slat middles, light, 28 to Sept. 18, M4-1b., firm, long « middics, heavy, 35 to 40 Wb, th ar backs, 16 to 90 Ib) firm, ibe clear bellies, 14 to 16 1h. #trong, ghauida m, square, U to 15 tb, Arm, —————$$___ Capital seeking eafe !ovestment finds it through Sunday Worle ule, 8. id; short tia. for Writ of Mandamus Against Commissioner Stewart. Decision was reserved by Justice Hall in the Gupreme Court to-day on the ap- plleation of Richard 8 Newcombe for a DPeremptory writ of mandamus to compel Bullding Superintondent Perez M. Btew- art to compty with the proviatons of the Butlding Code, requiring that the cell- Inga, floors and studding In bulldings of over twelve stories, or 150 feet in heleht, be elther of fireproof materials or of wood which has been subjected to such f& process ns will, in the opinion of the Building Superintendent, render i; Gr proof, (Newcombe, who was rapresented by; Lawyer Austin BE. Presinger, olalmed that the contractors working on the new St. Regis Hote! at Fitth avenue and Fifty-afth street, the Lord's Court Bulking at No, 27 Willlam street and the Hanover National Bank Bullding at a] [Pine and Nassau streets had violated the law. It was asserted that although the at- tention of Superintendent Stewart had been called to the alleged violations he | by our count | Conals were m B.A. 7. STRONGLY CRITICISED IN COURT Magistrate Naumer Says It Fails to Look After the In- terests or Convenience of Its Patrons. nf protection to industry there haa arisen such a system of combining de- vices of logislation with the vices of bus- Jness management to obtain mastery of the people ns waa never before seen in this or any other land, the inlqulty of which It would be hard to find any par- aliel for, unles in Orlental countries. “At the pace the movement has attnined It can be bat a few years, If tt go unchecked, before rubstame | poys, ranging from twelve to sixteen Wally the entire range of manow- | years of age, were arraigned on com- facture, mining, trade and trana- | Plaint of Wiliam H, Henson, a conduc- portation will atand composed of |‘! 0 the Tlusing arenue uictloes few masters and millions of em- tor said they had pelted him with po- ployces, the Intter constrained to | tatoos, Magistrate Naumer, in the Myrtle Avenue Court to-day severely criticised the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company for its failure to look after the inter- ests and convenience of its patrons, Six trade only at what may be called | ‘The boys testified that the conductor practically ‘company atores,! and | had refused to give them transfers to all nericultnee will be helptensty | N2stTand avenue, and had kicked Will- i Jam Connors, a twelve-year-old boy. enanared, ay it already te to mo) fom the platform because they asked amall extent. for transfers, Charles Johnson, who “It is a painful record we have writ-| was not on, the ear, corrovorated the eG Gt ; testimony of the boys. ten on the ages of three yours Past.) “in reserving decision Magistrate or Americans who look to Washington, | aime geld eA the troutie, came Jefferson, Madison, the Adamses and | from Fhe tetaal OS the gon ctor to hy compiler of the ec) give the boys transfers. he are no RENEHae es ee See, of) fules the company can enforce as to ndependence and the Constitution, cor] Mules the company can, entorce as ty the rule of national conduct that should enlighten the truth of Ib haye had a great deal of trouble my- self In getting transfers and frequently have gone Without them rather than annoy the conductor by asking him for world with the love and rty, And that same must yet be wiped off by future treatment of} them, The company should look out for the unhappy Fillpinos according to the| the convenience of its patrons, This ‘rine we oi inherited, wo | they do not seem to do in any way. ey have dnherited, or S0)phis is not the first time I have had surely as justice rules the world Amer- innloy ee of the mante in which the {ca will bitterly atone for it In resuit-| employees of this company treat Its patrons.” The Magistrate will announce his de- cision On Saturday in the caso of the boys. Ing suffering of her own. “But aot at once ean all national wrongs be redreased and those dome men must challenge first distraction, _ Protection rellef, 1 ar AMERICANS BEAT BRITISH IN AFRICA, Getting Firm Foothold in Ter. ritory Recently Conquered by British Arms — Trade Methods Are Superior. ‘, July 2L—The Trade Com- sent out to inquire into the methods for promoting Britiah. best trade In South Africa seems much tp. presse with the great activity of the Ainericans, In its first report sent home the Commission says America will be the greatest menace to British trade, add- ing that the Amertoans are making a fine effort to get hold of the market and are Introducing their practice of specialization and concentration with the same result as so well exemplified {n other parts of the world, As cabled from Johannesburg July 1, the members of the British Trade Com- mission were amazed at the amount of dusiness in steel building material which was offering, and commented on the indolence of the Britsh firms. They sald that so far as they were able to discover, only one firm, and that an American concern, had a capable representative in South Africa, and hid been securing immense ordere in ‘ape Town and at Johannesburg, at his own prices, for huge buildings’ up to fourteen stories, by being able to quote prices promptly’ and promise construc- tlon with American speed. ——_—— Reports from the west are of further rains In localities where there ‘had_al- ready been too much molsture. The stock bulls vigorously claim that the damage is local and cannot affect tbe Beneral crop situation, quick to profit. by dt.’ Its ews arsels have fomented war, have set the nation in quest of military glory and find its account In the controversy over imperialisn aie Minen Wenk on the Boerne. BERLIN, July 21.—Mines relapsed seri- an the Boerse to-day. owing to unfavorable reports of the situation of e Iron industry in Germany and Amer- | |} ica, whioh depressed local ehares gener- | ally. ‘Transvaals were easier. Interna-| intained. Turks declined , > on lealizations, | | | [20 BILLIONS IN | AMERICAN FARMS Prodigious Values of Agricul- tural Property of United States, as Shown by Census Bureau Report. H St. Gall an as over; though the patterns will be sold stores this Fall. The seasc it begins in New York; and a brilliant sale for quiet Ju business. And thritt, y wen WASHINGTON, July 21—The Census Bureau to-day issued a bulletin giving | the condigon of agriculture in the! || Will save a third toa half on United States for the year 1900. It! shows that there were wt that time | The variet 5,759,607 farms in the entire country, | which were valiel ot $16,674,094,247. Of this amount 60,198,281, or over | 21 por cent,, represented the value of of lace in detachable design Stock $3,078,060,041. | ‘Thess values, added to the value of the fara. gives a total, vue of farm | property emounting to) #80.61,0011 KEENE'S SON-IN-LAW RAN AUTO TOO FAST | ings—in white and cream o with extra, paige uts. Chantilly Galons in faney a Se to 15¢ a yard, worth 1 wd, worth a yard, worth 40¢ and 4%c a yard, worth 0c a yard, worth Te. 60c and 68e a yard, declined to Interfere, Assistant Corporation Counsel Flem- ing, in opposing the motion, anid a per- emptory writ of mandamus could not ismue, ae Mr. Stewart denied all New |combe' jf fact be submitted to a Jury He claimed the law had been fully complied with, —— LOVER KILLS GIRL. Her Stepfather Had Refanea Hie Com to Their Marringe, LPAVENWORTH, Kan, July %1— Théodore Pullen, nineteen years old, @hot Leila Madren, aged fourteen through the back, killing her because ellogations, ‘and the. dues one | BLACK CHANTILLY GALONS | Oc and 60c a yard, worth | ALLOVERS: 60c to $8 a yard, worth $1 While Speeding with Friends at the Rate of 45 Miles an Hour—Fined $15. Extraordinary Sale of LACES HESE Laces were secured by our buyer from the manufacturers who counted their season and not have to Jay away the laces for long either, is almost endless, and consists of 18, 23 | and 45 inch Alloversa,; Edgings, Insertions, Bandings and | Galons, from %-inch to 12-inch widths. pulldingy: ant Wied Hye OF over a | styles of lace included are Imitation Point Venise, Imi- cent., represented ’ 4 SRG ERT ES tation Crochet, Batiste, Cluny, Repousse and Net pulldinge is | || Ground Laces; in white, cream and ecru. Also a few pieces ane vauue of tare implements and | in Embroidered Batiste Allovers, Edgings and Band- Some Laces from previous sales have been added, Among these are some Black | Here are the facts in detail: EDGINGS, GALONS and INSERTIONS— JOHN WANAMAKER, Store Closes Dally (Except Saturday) at 5 P. M. Saturdays at 12 o'clock. d Plauen same identical laces in similar at iull prices in many good on. ends in St. Gall long before a little hurry-work gives us ly, without hurting our Fall nen and shrewd dressmakers their Fall dress trimmings, Also patterns 8 and medallion effects. The nly, nd serpentine effects, to B0c, BBe to the. Oe to 60c, 650. rth 85c to $1 and $1 a yard, worth $1.25 to $1.5 | 1.25 a yard, worth $1.75 and 1:50 and $1.76 a yard, worth Talbot J. Taylor Is Arrested 2'to $2.50 a yard, worth $3 to $3.50. Bde to $1, to $5. Main Alale, Broadway, 4th Ave., 9th &l0th Sts, BAST WILLISTON, L. 1., July 21.— The fight begun by District-Attorney Formerly A. 1. Stewart & Co. James P. Niemann, of Nassaw County,| [Le against violators of the law relating to |the speed of automobiles is being vig- orously carried on. Five arrests have been made. Among her stepfather, Charles Peppard, a car- penter, had tefused to sanction th marriage, Pullen eacaped — The Wheat Market. The wheat market to-da tonally off. The chief feature was good te prices were: Wheyt— July, eptember, 77-5; De- comber, 16%; May, 7-8." Com—July, % i-;, Beptomber, do 1-2, 1 r, 6 bid; May, 1-4 to 4818 The The local cotton marker and easy to-day, with Sto 8 points lower, Sentiment in the early wa on Ciba BoMLBIY Ts eports of ¢ Was very he speculative support and room pale sid pot attempt to pally prices, ert call trading Was very quiét ‘and most part of a profemmlonal charactor, A City! iy i July, dail spened trace | weather conditions throughout the West. | July wae frm in Chicago because of the, the offenders was Talbot J. Taylor, the |New York banker and broker, sow in- jiaw, of James R, Keene, Mr. Taylor | was speeding along the Jericho turnpike the direction of the Westbury sta- on in when he was stopped by Deteccve man, of the Distr ttorney's of- qnd placed under arrest. He hed time the watchers along the ao at leged that he had covered of @ mile jn ten seconds, road continued poor trading, Corn was quiet)" Jat the opening, but later took on ood | wit’ ior ewan ruling the machine Sete i jAoive shaving by shore | Paylor “were two women, & prominent ba OpeNiae rioes wore: | Nan. Henk lamar and Another feng, eee 1-4; December, ett Taaler ee yenen bes ay orn—Beprember, | Foster Le ere ar Ip Gorn eeplember M5. Ho "is spending the mu e Codarhurst and goes to the “din der ay in hin autamoniie: Te a ole that “he generally Bevis the train to Sorn—duly, ST1-2; Septeint ane ending ett ® 1-4; Decomber, #14 ti John Green, Of Huntington, was fine 12 e Ho for Apped ie in an auto, Richar it New Yor! fehn, of BH Crescent street, Brook: regular Wheat—Jul Iny; Olto Keene, of the same address, Deoamoer, i}and Hubert Brennan, of No. 98 Hill cal, 103: ftrect, Brooklyn, wete each. fined $ + fcr ¢xcveding the speed limit wet by law On motor ¢} es Mey not be on the Menu but Grape-Nuts will be served at your Summer Hotel if you ask. , ME Downtown—S. W. Cor, Uptown—154 to 16) H. Tuesday Afternoon, From 1 o’Clock to 6, Both of Our Stores Will Be Closed, Wednesday Morning, at 8 o’Clock, They will reopen with every article of Clothing, Hats, Shoes and Furnishings, marked down from 30 to 40 per cent. for the Half: Yearly Clearing Sale. See Full Details in Tues lay Morning's Papers. BYCK BRS 'S OUTFITTERS, UPTOWN SPORE UPEN Evening’s and Wednesday Fulton and Nassau Sts, 125 h St., near 31 Ave, TH 0.90 PM. |

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