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ANIN U.S. Doesn’t Seem to Mind Heat, ‘+ atid Shows Not a Sign of Discomfort. ’ NO SUMMER VACATION. Doesn't Worry, and Makes No|” Special Effort to Offset Hot Weather, - \. By Samuel M. Williams. (Weak Corresponiont of The Evening World.) WASHINGTON, June 21—Bh@ht- ing summer heat has fallen on the ‘White House, wherein lives and labors the hardest worked man in the United States—President Wood- row Wilson. He has vowed to stay om the job all summer if necessary to carry out the great reform polli- cies inaugurated by the new Admin- istration, and there is little chance of holiday for him before Septem- Der. The Chief Executive of the world’s greatest nation cannot get the rest and Fecreation from midsummer toll that thousands of daily laborers are able to SON HARDEST WORKED ” KEEPS COOL |. - WHILE CAPITAL SWELTERS lof work with apparently it I ratigue. tter physical condition than to-day. l¢ does not seem to mind the heat. He tas not lort a pound of flesh He averages 178 pounds. He has not called for any artificial means of overcom! thin Washington weather, There is one electric fan in the office, That ts all he has or seems to care for. fhe amount of work he te doing is amazizng," continued the private secre- tary. “The mere manual labor of slgn- (ue Lis name Is a task in itself. He uyessses between 300 and 400 signatures lay ‘The President does not seem to have made any particular change in his habits to meet this hot weather. He goes along at the same steady pace, setting through a tremendous amount ftort or He does not worry.’ The Presidential offic the most se- verely plain room in all the. White House, It ts @ round room, designed to be @ perfect circle 20 feet in diameter. Its ceiling 1s plain white. Ite floor has a light green rug of deep piling. The wails are covered with burlap painted dark green without the least decoration. 0 pictures hang in the room. At one side are three full length windows open- ing to the private gardens, Opposite 1s a white marble mantel piece, with @ small clock and an electric fan for Its only ornaments, There are four doors, Two of them lead to tho main corridor, A. third connects with the private secretary's office. The fourth opens to the Cabinet room, ROSES ALWAYS IN BIG VASE ON DESK Near to the windows the President's desk, a large Mat top end plece of light Mahogany, The most noticable object On it Js @ tall glans vase in which thero take for themselves. ‘Wherefore it is of interest fo observe how he prepares himself and orders his @ally ilfe in this trying climate of ‘Washington. ‘The ‘Capitol ts an exceptionally hot elty. There are many other places that higher temperature and more @weltering humidity. But Washington das e pecullar heat all its own, Lying Jew down in a pocket of hills at a dead wen level, yet miles inland from the cool- tng ocean breezes, there is an oppressive combination of heat and heaviness in the atmosphere. It is enervating and ‘wilting, productive of more perspiration, ps President Taft can testify, than any other city in the Union. The White House stands in a p:rk Where great shady trees, green lawns Bd deautiful flowers serve to heighten the {magination of coolness, even when 4 does not exist in reality, The hou: fronta to the north toward Penn- sylvania avenue, The rear windows Overlook the park extending half a mile OF more to the Potomac River, In sum- mer the front part of the White House fs unoccupied. The President and fam- fly live in what country folks would aM the back rooms. These rooms are more quiet and more restful they look away from the hot city and get first what there is of couthwesterly Breezes that come down from the Po- Qomac River Valley. SPENDS 20 HOURS A THREE ROOMS. President Wilson spends twenty hours out of each twenty-four in three mot ‘of the White Hovse—his office, his study and Ris bedroom. Ali of these face to the south and have long windows that are thrown wide open. The study and edroom are on the second floor of the main part of the White House, The of- fice is on the ground floor of the office wing. It has to be low down because the dMce wing is but one story high. Few men in any walk of life get out of déors vo little us ducs the President thgse days. Having his office in the wherein he lives, there 1s not e the advantage of morning and ‘evening journeys between them. From Bédroom to office chair ts not much more than one hundred feet and all under tho satne roof, Whatever exer- die he gets must be Gellberately sourht, He ie obliged to actually steal away like a truant from the burden of work und endless stream of official DAY IN always is kept a bunch of beautiful roses, A dozen books of reference stand- i on edge fill a desk rack. The other fAttings are plain—a blotter pad with all- ver corners, a glass ink top and a holder for pens, President Wilson has made one sum- mer rule, and that is to t @ Saturday holiday week during June, July and Aug Generally, he tries to play @ game wolf at some of the clubs around Washington during the morning and in the afternoon take a long auto- mobile rid, Jimmie Sloane, the clever and dashing secret service man, who ac- companies the President everywhere, says that Mr, Wilson Is s0 ccool on the golf links that he does not get heated up or perspire there, Next week Saturday, the President accompanies his family to the summer ken at Cornish, Ni y only a few days, returning to Washington Juby 6 to stay on his job until the tariff and currency reforms are accomplished facts, He will keep bachelor’s hall in the White House and have all the more time to devote to his absorbing work, MISS STEELE TO WED DEVEREUX MILBURN, NOTED POLO PLAYER 4 Engagement Kept Secret Till After Trophy Battle Now Announced. The engagement of Miss Ngncy G. Steele to Devereux Milburn, the famous polo player, has been announced by M! Steele's mother, Mrs. Charles Steel No. 11 East Sixty-second atreet. of The engagement has existed for some time, but it was de jed to wait until after the international polo match before making an announcements Mra. Steele, accompanied by Miss Steele and Miss Kathryne N, Steele, at- tended the Harvard-Yale boat races at eAlerts in order to get into the open But even under these trying condi- thens in torrid summer time President Wilson has established an exceptional White House record. ‘Mo hae not yet perspired, ‘Me has uot been seen to mov his , brow. Ho hes not wilted # collar oe bas not used o@ fan. oe bas not complained of the heat, Be has not ouce said: “Whew, but is hot” “x has not started the ice cooling ts under the offices. The President seems to prefer gray eolors in clothes. ‘The cloth is of light gummer weight, but not the exceeding- ly thin material affected by many offl- Giste of tho Government. His clothes for taytime wear are of the ordinary Duminens cut, jacket style, ile has not yet Gincarded his waistcoat, which is the summer custom in Washington, nor adopted soft negligee shirts, another prevailing style. Barring difference in weight of material, bis costume ts the game for summer as for winter HARDEST WORKED MAN UNITED STATES, SAYS TUMULTY, IN| New London yesterday and it was to friends she met there that the news of the prospective marriage of Miss Steele 6 made known, Miss Sterle is an enthualastic devotee cf outdoor sports, in which her flance has made so striking @ record, She attended the international polo games and cheered loyally for the American team. Only a few there, however, knew that she had any interest other than patriotism in the home team's success, Mr. Milburn fs @ son of Mr, and Mra John G. Milburn, The father was Presi- dent of the Pan-American Exposition at Huftalo and tt was In the Milburn home that President McKinley died, Tho family came to N York in 1905. Mr. Milburn as a lawyer, The son is a graduate of both Ox- ford and Harvard, In college he rowe juyed football, He 1» 4 member Meadow Brook, Aero, Racquet and Tennis Clubs, He waa the star of | the American polo team in 190, 1911 and jagain this year, | date has been fixed for the wed- | ain ance | BRINGS TWO KIDDIES HOME. sHINGTON, June -When Mra, Biv. Wilson spends more time in his office than in any other room, He goes there after breakfast, about 9 to 9.20 @clock, and save for an Interval for Iyncheon, usually remains until 4 in the week b/wpends at vic same desk and frequently takes work upstairs to the sacred study clore to his bedroom, where he burns midnight lights. Pri. vate Becretary Tummity declares with earnest fervor: “The President ts the hardest worked mon in the United States, But tt seome tq agree wh him. He never wes ia ‘ ernoon., An average of four evenings | P, Borland, wife of the Repre- |sentative from Mirsourl, met her hua: band at the Union station to-day she {nearly swooned. For Borland, siniling | happil: from the train shed | with t by, Kikgling Uttle girls~ informed adopted at Kansan City when ac € about to be sent ty an his astonished wife that he hi | the your ‘ound they w: yorphan asylu | Mrs. Borland’s final shock came when jthe discovered that six-year-o:d Jessie tw developing the measies, The Boriands bay an GRimenalet' alx-year-old son of gpa REY myers Be : % THE EV Police Marguerite Mooers Marshall. ROCHESTER, Pa,, Jung 21.—Sew up the slit skirt; purify the peek-a- boo; petticoats and plenty of them; call a halt on the hobble. These are a scattering few of the| war cries of the New morality in this Httle town, this town which is growing purer every minute. The dewdrop, the driven snow, the Easter Mily have nothing on Rochester, Pa. If you want to be an angel, go to! Rochester. You can’t escape the Rochester, Pa., Has a Fashion Code of Its Own, and | Transgression Means Arrest, Speedy and Inex- orable, for Feminine Offenders. @ wos a th ) Ad Boggs, Spoke to David W, Denton, who's a Baptist deacon and President of our Town Council and manager of a glass factory, and who ran for Legislature st year, Mr. Denton’s a good man. 1 did not happen to be-at the Council that night, but I heard he got right up and told ‘em all that silt skirts without any petticoats underneath weren't fit to be worn by women in the street, neither were gowns you could # through. He sald he felt that some- thing ought to be done about it. “So they namief md and a Morals EmMciency Commission to take the ter up- real serlously. Councliman Charles Fogel is about all that's laft-of'} the commission, which was appointed contagion of virtue, The goodnest the innocence, the healthful auster- ity of your happy, happy ehildhood will once more surround you, pene- trating into the cracks of your con-| science even as the soft coal soot loses itself in the folds of your decent drapery. And that drapery will be! decent, unfess you want to be ar- rested by one of Rochester's three noble policemen, See war cries. The plain fact of the matter is that while all the rest of the country has been talking about the dreadful things women do wear, Rochester, hag up and said that her women | shan’t wear them. | Burgess, Councilmen, clergy, press and police are all united in the! greatest little dress reform cam-| paign on record. And when you re- member that about every crime on the calendar, from mashing to mur-| der, has been attributed by some- body to some abuse of fashion, yqu will see how exceedingly seraphic a dress-reformed Rochester must be. ‘The time-tabdle helped to break the shock of travelling from Broadway to Brighton avenue, the main thoroughfare of this town, “Economy,” "Freedom" and “Indu: gave nudges to my sense of rightes ness and rebukes to my scepticism, and nary a slit skirt did T seo all the way up to the Hill to the office of Burgess J. M, Cargo. TWO SLIT SKIRTS STARTED RE- FORM WAVE. But it was a slit skirt, or, rather, two of them, which brought about the pres- ent pearl-like condition of affairs, This the story of Burgess Cargo: "There were two young ladies, I da not know whether they were of this town, ‘I truat they were not,” he be- man, with a iilitant white muztache. “And not once, but several times, they walked up and down our main atrec:. They wore skirts silt up to—er—above the knee, and—er—they walked In such a way that—er—there was visible & con- siderable preponderance of limb. It's hard to describe to a lady lke yourself,’ he broke off, apologetically, ““But~I— er—may say that bove the kn er—appeared a silk—er—band and pn bow of riboon, It-er—attracted the atcen= tlon of the young men," “And then what happened?" I prompt- d quite ed, for the good Burgess seem overcome by the horror of his r tions, But he brightened up. “Well, you see," he confided, “the |people of Rochester weren't going to Nor, sires. stand for anything like that. “We've got a church of ¢ gun, disepprovingly. He is rather a small | show Also he brazenly as some time ago, to do away with gam- bling in Roch ir. jut I've got my ideas about this dress thing. have been getting worse and ‘worse and they are bound to have an Influence on the young men.” lave you arrested anybody yet? i allowed Burgess Cargo, “Dut 0, I think it right arrests should be mae | if necessary. However, all thia ayita- tion is waking the women up, and I be- Heve they will dress more properly in the future. If necessary, force will be invoked to save decency." Here, incidentally, Ja the tce-formed | sartorial code of Rochester: 1, We slit skirts unlined. @, Mo skirts worn without petti- coats. 3. Mo. suggesti shadow wa:sts. 4. Mo street wear waists out lower than the collarboms~ 5. Mo open work silk stockings, @, Mo costume immodestly out- Uning the figure. President Denton receives almost hourly telephone calls from dressinax- err to find out if certain costumes in protess of construction are pure. POLICE SHOULD WORRY: UP TO THEM. The police force of Rochester consi of Chief Jonas C, Kaszer, William P. Boggs and William Doutt. When inter- viewed they seemed just a bit dubjous about arfesting scantily clad ladies, but admitted they would have to obey the town authorities, There are about three thou So the hesitation of the force al | present size to proceed to drastic measures casts no reflection on the generally high moro! tone of the com- munity, A more serious problem ts that pre- sented by Councilman A. D, Brown, I regret to say Mr. Brown Is reported to have shown levity during the discus- slon by his fellow councilmen of the tople of censored clothes, and he told sold peek-a-boo waists in his rted that he had just marked down a particue larly transparent plece of dress goods to one dollar a yard from two dollars, in the hope of selling more of it. And he had the final rashness to suggest that it was a woman's own business how she dressed and did not concern | anybody else, not even councilmen, As for the women of Rochester, they are outwardly obedient to the new regime, ut { dlscovered some acrid protestants, “What does that bunch of counclimen ek-a-boo oF Iv’ know about clothe exclaimed one Indignant damsel, “If they did not do So much gaging at us they would | never have Iu ec we dressed im-| properly. I myself have seen several members of the council gathered ia t evening at the corner of New York and Brighton avenues, and the manner in ch they watched the women going | yn the street was enough to emoar- | rass any one, They are simply butting in on something that's none of their busines: nation, about, that there town, and the ministers, they preached | against the immoral insiuences of mod ern styles, The Rey. A. &, @inn, over |here at the Baptist church, he had a word to say, and so did the Iutheran minister, the Rev. A, M. Mehrkam, and the Rev. Frederick Cromer—he's Con- Sregationallat, MINISTERS TOOK UP THE MAT- TER WITH COUNCIL, “apd Are minleters and other folks | the ret women in town to wear o DID THEY DARE TELL AT HOME OF THEIR ACTION? Another woman smiled and hinted that the wives and daughters of some of the stern censors were themselves the worst offenders, “The wife of Councliman Blank,” she told me, “ / Here’s a City That Regulates Women ’s Styles; |DEATH OF VICTIM'S BRET GREASE } Slit Skirts and Peekaboos Against the Law | MOIHER RECALLS | IN ane he URDAY, JUN ve we ve ¥ skirt, The daughters of another coun- cilman wear more extreme modes th: aly of the other girls, I just gu men got thelr little curtain lec- aftor they’ returned home from the meeting.” “I'm not aurprised at anything in this town, aince they won't let you turkey soctal clubs, most innocent way at our party the other evening, and you should have seen every menter of the entertain- ment committee Jump onus, People here won't stand for indiscretion of any kind, and I suppose they are wise, although we young folks fusr a Uttle."* The fact remains that during the sev- eral hours I remained in town I saw only one sllt skirt and that had a per- fectly discreet petticoat underneath, I saw no extremes in low cut shirt waists, no skin Uxht frocks, no lace work allk stockings. KEyen Mr. Com- stock's bete noir “September Morning” was absent from the shop windows. Only one can't recommend the place to him as 9 summer home, because, whom would he have to reform? - possi diag LITTLE DAISY PICKER’S BODY FOUND IN RIVER. “Joe,” For Whom Child Truant Waited in Vain All Day at Bridge, Was Drowned at Play. The police of the East One Hundred and Twenty-sixth street station we know that six-year-old Charlie Mitchell, who played hookey from school to pick daisies under Washington Bridge, Har- lem River, told the truth yesterday, when in explanation of his truancy, he told the officers the he “was waiting for Joe to come up.” Floating down Harlem River, opposite One Hundred and Thirty-eighth strest, this morning, the river squad from Harbor B Police station found the vody of ittle Joe. They carried it to the Harlem Morgue. | Malf an hour later | Joneph Kiet sr. father of the lad, called and said it was his boy, Last Tuesday Joe and Charlle went out dalsy picking and didn't go to school. Joe ventured out to the end of | @ plank over the water and fell In and) disappeared, Charile waited for Joe to! come up until school was out. The police found hin at midnight wandering around East One Hundred and Tweniy- seventh street, —-— STYLES TRAP FUGITIVE, Chased Over Two on Broadway After a chase over this country and half of Canada Pinkerton Detective Donnelley arrested Samuel Gordon, alias George Wilson, to-day as he was! looking in a haberdasher's window at| Broadway and Forty-first street, It ts charged by Minthorne Woolsey, banker at No, %2 Nawsau street, that Gordon forged his name to a check for | $273 in May, 1910, while he was Mr, Wool: | sey's chauffeur. An indictment was found against Gordon at that time, To. day Magisirate Corrigan in the West Mide Court remanded Gordon to the Tombs for trial, ee ARRIV! | study. 21, 1913. ALL GOBBLED UP BY GOTTSCHALL City College Student Takes Eight Prizes and Seven Honorable Mentions, Students of the graduating class of the City of New York College are think- ing of getting out an Injunction against Morton Gottschall, elghteen years old, ot No. #7 Avenue St. Jahn, for monop- ollzing nearly all the prizes awarded at the commencement exercises Thursday, For the first time Im the history of the college, one student captured eight prizes and seven honorable mentions, Almost as soon as the exercises began the announ the student who ranked highest In all the studies of the year. That seem proper and as ophy, The audience had barely recovered i t one student should have taken two such important from thi thi FDI prizes when Dean Brownson announced that the Ward Med fallen to Morton Gott halt, After that it was intermittently atated, leaving intervals for gasps of aatoniah- ment, that Gottschall had won the Pra- (ger Memorial Prizo, for profictency in philosophy, the Gen- leval Tremain Prize of $139 for the bent ment came that young Gottshall had won the Pell Medal as it should be. A fow minutes later {t wae stated that Gott- shall had been given the Ward Medal for greatest proficiency In moral philos- in history had the Ketchum Prize Mrs, Martin Was Sentenced for | Smoked Bacon 411.6 Per Comm Complicity. in Murder of Higher Than K Was Ten a : Ocey Snead. Years Ago. et ALL MEATS MUCH HIGHER - Comparison of Prices Charged. in Various Cities of the |; United States. AUTOPSY IS ORDERED. Like Sister Who Starved Her- self, Woman Was Said to Be “Insurance Mad.” WASHINGTON, June $1.—Every peia- 4g ctpal article of food, except sugar, of the fifteen staples, representing appromie TRENTON, N. J., June 21.—A new mystery haa arisen in the death yeaters day of Mrs. Caroline B. Martin, mother | Of Ovey Wardlaw Martin Snead, whose | body wan found in @ bathtub at No & North Fourteenth street, Kast Orange, late in November, 190, Mrs, Martin, | who was charged with complicity In her daughter's murder, was sentenced to seven years for’ voluntary mansiaugh- | ter, Later she was adjudged insane. | Her death oceurred in the New Jersey | State Hospital for the Insane, That Mre, Martin died « natural death 1s not at all certain, and the Coroner has ordered an autopsy to determine the | Saupe of death. It is feared the weird | old woman of the celebrated “Bathtub mystery” may have met a fate similar to that of her daughter. * She was the third and last of the trinngle of strange women of which Ocey Snead wae the youngest and first to die, Her aunt, Miss Virginia Ward- law, who held for having « hand In her murder, was the next. She starved herself to death in the Essex County Jail while awaiting trial. \ Ocey Snead lived with her mother and aunt at No, 163 East Forty-eighth street, Brooklyn. Neighbors called it “The House of Mystery" because of the pecullarities manjfested by the occu- Pants and e In which ¢ shunned all social intercourse with the rest of the world. Mra, Martin and Mrs, Wardlaw were a@ombre res, Wh dressed in black. They were sald later, when the family history was uncovered as a reault of Ocey's murder, to be “insurance mad.” Ocey carried $30,000 life insurance. She.was @ young married woman with one child, an infant. who saw hervin tte called her ful, or at least as showing evidences of unusual former beauty. The few people who G14 Petietrate into the "Hduse of Mystery” learned tha: she wae in terror of the two black garbed old women with whom sho lived, Late in November, 1909, the body of this young woman waa found in the bathtud of the East Orange fouse, which was deserted. Mise Warilaw was the last person seen with ler and she was placed un arco. Mra, Martin seemed to have disappeared. While Mra, Martin was being sought for weeks by Aetectives, Miss Wardlaw protested in prison that her niece had committed quicide and produced a not in which @ statement was mado thi the writer intended to kill heréelf. This Note purported to have been signed by Ocey Snead. Subsequently Mra. Martin and another sister were arresto!, Sie Martin was caught in New York and extradited to New Jersey. While tre sisters wore awaiting trial Miss Ward- veiien<teaieal law died. - ; : ‘At the trial of Mrs. Martin one of the| Ne™ York, 10.4: Atinata, 27; main issues Wis the genuineness or, falneness of so-called “suicide note.” Sceeimens of Ocey Snead’s writing were produced and compared by experts with the writing and signature of the note. To convict Mra, Martin a Jury would have had to find the note a forgery. Mrs. Martin pleaded guilty. After serving @ few months of her sentence she was adjudged insane and trans ferred to the,@tate asylum, where sne remained untii her death, She was sixty-seven ‘years old, —_——— 440 PER CENT. INCREASE. fal Developments of our pe Sor Amertea. WASHINGTON, June 21.—South Amer- fea me been increasing {ts machinery purchases from the United States more rapidly during the last few years thi any other part of the world, as shown by figures prepared by the Bure: Foreign and Domestic Commerc: family, showed a decided tall price on February 16, 1918, ‘with the average price for the texan period, 1990-1998, according to the tategt Investigations of the statisticians of Bureau of Labor. Sugar was 49 cent.; smoked bacon was 111.6 per higher, Increases In the other food were: ‘loin steak, 69.9 per cent.; steak, 14.5; rib roast, @2.7; pork smoked ham, @.1; pure lard, hens, 06.6; wheat flour, 37. 661; otrictly fresh eggs, 66; Decrease—! i Dallas, i Denver, 21.8; Seattle, 17.6. * Kansas Denver, Decreasee—Atianta, York, 9.9; Chicago, 13; Kansas City, | Denver, 66 ae an per F Cornmeal, Increases—Boston, cont,; Atlanta, 06; Chicago, 0 Kensie City, 36; Dalia, 46; New Orleans, ih9 San Francisco, 64; Beattle, 48 creases, New York, 0.1 per cent ver, 25, Strictly fresh eggs, decre: Dallas, 48 essay on “The Causes, Conduct and San Francisco, 17; Seattle, Conclusion of the Great Clvii War in|increase has amounted during the past reamery butter, we Me United States,” the James Gordon |decade to 40 per cent., whereas the en-|97 per cent. Atlanta, 17; Chicagq Bennett Prize for the be: essay in political aclence, und the Steers Prize | for the best work In the Art Depart- tire world growth of machinery export hag been only 173 per cent. The machinery shipped to Béuth Amer- Kansas City, 12.8; New Orleans, 10; ver, 4.9; Geattle, 27, ton, 9.5 per cent.; San ment. White potatoes decreasos—Hoston, 40! ‘An ironical member of Gottachall's |! {n 12 amounted to only $5,000,000, | , WY Nit, Pore sre aaeat Al a class remarked, when Gottschall wag| last Year It had Jumped to 62/,000,00. | ong: Chicago, 91; Kansas City, giving his address on “Idealism,” that |The agricultural implement trade to|Dajias, 308; New Orlpans, 21; Deavets it was easy to be an Idealist when you carried off two or three hundred doliars in prizes, and innumerable medals and distinctions besides, Gottschall is too modest to say much about his triumph. There is one thing Neved to excell tn one’ Two or three hours outside of lecture: fs enough, he thinks, and it has alw been his policy never than that, His mother, Mra, E.R. Ba net, attributes hi n's muccess to hi remarkable power of concentration, Ac- cording to her, he can carry on his work in spite af all sorts of confusion and tumult around him, Gottschall {* a phenomenon tn the sense that he han achieved unusual suc. coss without being in any way unbale anced or one-sided. During the past chemistry, poiltical aclence and art, PA Oe curred to-day of Facundo Mutls Duran, & Panama jurist. Bupreme Court of the Relations. to atudy more He has no favorite year he has plied himaelf with equal delight to He was Governor of Panama when tt seceded from Colombia and was tho first Chiet Justice of the nal Zone, He wes one time Secretary of Foreign that continent In 1902 was but $2,000,000; year it was $3,150,000, * the automobile trade grew from | $15,000 to more than $2,000,000, the trical machinery from $123,00) to 01,50 »0, the sewing "machine from $350,000 to $2,394,000, the typewriter from 475,000 to $1,000,000, and engines from $1,000,000 to ‘$3,600,000, w.4; San Francisco, ; Seattle. #8, last In the same decreases—! t 1k, increases—Boston, 1.6 per New York, L4; no change at A Chicago, Kansas City, Dalias, New leans or San Francisco, Decrease, uttle, 33 per cent, elt a FATHER AND SON MARRY. aud Assemblyman Carew | ja at Double Coremenm §, 5) PHILADELPHIA, June 21.—A wedding of father and son tek to-day in Holy Trinity Protetamt copal Church in this city. Judge Howard Carrow of the C —- 200 NEW LAWS IN MISSOURI. KANSAS CITY, Mo,, June 21,.—Nearly 20 laws passed by the last Legislature will become effective In Missourl on Monday. Prabably the one of greatest interest 4s the Orr antl-trust law regu- lating fire insurance companies, It 1s this bill that caused more than 180 ine surance companics to suspend writing business throughout the Brate, It 9 expected that lawyers will next week attack the Orr bill in the Court in. an effort. to have it declared