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New-York Tribune from New York, New York • 16

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New-York Tribunei
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New York, New York
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16
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16 Dr. Lyon's PERFECT Tooth Powder IN ELE6ANT TOILET LUXURY. Used by people of refinement for over a quarter of a century. CALL FOR MORE TROOPS ANOTHER PAY of VIOLENCE BY THE COAL STRIKERS. THE SHERIFF OF UV.KRNK COrNTV.

IT.NN" TBUUE THE GOVERNOR UK LNABLK TO MAINTAIN LAW AND ORDER. Tl I 1 SUM THE TIMHt AT I Sept. A' o'clock this SheriflE Jacobs, of Luzerne County, sent a telegram to Governor Stone asking that troons be ami to Wilkesbarre and rtclnlty. He he is unable to ope with situation. A from Hanisburg says that no taken on Sheriff Jacobss request to-nipht.

and it is likely the Governor will investigate conditions as they exist in the vicinity of Wilfcesharre before sending U-ilkesbarre. r-' Sept the Keplment. Colonel A. added to the force of State militia In the strike this mornins. the snail army gave three hundred of its mm to-ni to the own Lebanon.

There of the American Iron and Steel Manufacturing Comsany are not inp -nd last nipht two aw were shot. the Ist Battalion of the Regiment, under Colonel Clement, went to Lebanon. closes a day of violence, of which the was the centre, while decplt the presence of the troops, was not a.to.ether orderly. situation now revives Uself into the ability of the two thousand troops now Hi the field to prevent the numerous cases of violence and interference With the rights of the men who want mi If they cannot, it is expected that the th Regiment. eigtt hundred men.

the remaining eight companies of the 4th Reciment and Battery will be added to the force, makins: the whole Third Brigade in the field. To-day and to-night the situation in die Wyoming region is shaping toward that end and it is believed that the Sheriff rannot much loncer shirk the responsibility of asking for troops. The 13th ordered out half an hour after midnight reached Olyphant at 6 Otis morning, where the camp will be maintained, according to present Plans. By noon the companies from Easton and from Montrose. outlying points, had joined the main body, and Colonel L.

A. Watres. who was in New-York relieved Lieutenant Colonel Stiiwell of the texnporarv command. General Gobin arrived at and spent most of the afternoon on the rene To-night he returned to Shenandoah and -will take charge there of the distribution of troops. NON-VNION MEN ATTACKED.

Before the troops reached Olyphant this morn- Jn? the strikers there had wound up Uielr rioting by an attack upon -Bert" and Charles Lunden. non-union workers. The two were stoned and beaten, and as they ran shots were fired, and they wore road as dead. "Bert" Lunden Is badly wounded that be is dying at the hospital to-night, and his brother is seriously injured. There is no clew to the attacking Later in the morning the regiment was aroused by the action of two of its members who attacked and thrashed two non-union men.

The soldiers were trrestel and this afternoon court martialed. The result of the inquiry has not been made known yet. Later in the day. when Superintendent Burkheisfr. who last night dvrinc the rioting shot Anthony Felak.

striker, was taken to Priceburg for hearing, an unruly crowd gathered that Companies A and awe rent to the scene to protect He was held without, ball, and with considerable effort was escrted safely to the jail In Bcramcn All th-n remained quiet until tonlslit. when dynamite was exploded over the Delaware. Lackawanna and Western at Lackawanna. This was badly shaken and wrenched that the trains on the Bloomsburg branch w. re delayed two hours.

Since then there has been no disturbance, the peace committees of the striker? being active among the reckless element. In "Wyoming- County rioting- raged all day. and the Sheriff's deputies mr kept in ferment of movement ami apprehension. In the night unruly crowds marched the streets of Plymouth, and between twenty and thirty non-union workers were held uj). several them were severely beaten, and the houses of two non-unionists were stoned and badly damaged.

Deputies who hurried to the were stoned before they managed to disperse the crowd. Borne of the strikers wore masks, and they were all armed with clubs and stones and many of them vith revolvers. PEACE COMMITTEES BUSY. Peace committees in carriages hurried about the town trying to do all thc-y could to preserve order, and had it for their efforts there, might have been serious bloodshed. As it v.

the town terrorized from end to end. At Nantieoke the conditions were somewhat timilar. The house of a non-union man was attacked and shots Bred at the No. 1 colliery and the guards attacked. Owing to the threatening attitude of a large crowd Of strikers, it took twenty- deputies all day to at I a non-union man was moving from Warrior Run to Nanlicoke.

About o'clock this morning Joseph Harrison, a non-union man. who resides at Plymouth and at the Avondale mine, was awakened by a in his front yard. He claims that he discovered a numbor of men in th. yard and fired his revolver, which frightened them away. On investigation, he says that he found two sticks of dynamite under his front porch, to which was attached a lighted fuse.

Unknown persons removed a fish plate from the track of the Erie road at Hughestown. and when a work train passed over it the rail spread the engine, tender and one car running off the track. A number of coal and Iron policemen were summoned to the scene to assist in setting the car and engine back on the rails, when they v.ere stoned by a crowd of men and boys. "To-night in this city a large crowd attacked pome non-union men who were leaving the No 2 and Hudson breaker and stoned them. The guards from the breaker I mill to their and the crowd showed a Bomber of shots were exchanged before the crowd dispersed Joseph Rowlands, a seventeen-year-old boy shot In the back and slightly wounded The bullet is believed to have been fired by some one in the crowd.

THE SITUATION DANGEROUS. At Mahanoy City three non-union workers were severely beaten. Dozens of cases of less serious assault are reported and the situation is one which General Gobin terms dangerous. To-night had a long talk with Governor Stone about ordering more troops to the region as the present force, in view of the numerous cases of violence, is not sufficient to control the situation. If any conclusion was reached it was not announced, and it Is understood the Governor will await the developments of to-morrow before deciding what he do.

cannot send troops into Luzerne County until he is requested to do by sheriff To-night the sheriff Is In Hazleton and has nothing to say regarding the situation. The situation to-day at the washeries and the collieries was not materially changed. The strikers report that some of the workmen at the Avondale and the Jersey of the Delaware. Lackawanna and Western Company have deserted and Joined their ranks and that they are Inducing men at other places to quit. were not as many at work as an other days in the last couple of weeks because of the reign of terror throughout the region, men who had to travel from' homes to breakers without protection being afraid to attempt the journey owing to almost certain Interference.

In view of recent disorders in Mahanoy City Sheriff Beddell late last night issued a riot proclamation. Copies were posted about the main streets this morning. The proclamation calls upon the citizens of Schuylkill County to be law abiding, not to assemble for the purpose of interfering with persons going to and from their work, and that threats or demonstrations should not be made. Despite the proclamation, strikers' pickets were out all night in force, turning back non-union workmen and watching incoming trains. ANOTHER STRIKE OF SCHOOL CHILDREN.

The children in the Central High School of Plymouth went out on strike this morning because the building in which they were- attending school was heated by steam furnished by the Parrish Coal Company and was got by non-union men. After being out three hours, they were persuaded to return to their lessons once more. Wit and Keep it dark but the trend among men careful of clothes is to keep to dark colors this Fall. Many of our higher priced suits are quiet grays and brownish effects, relieved by' overplaids of brighter hues. Fall suits ready for livelier tastes, too.

$i6tos3B. Fall overcoats for all tastes. Si 5 to $30. Rogers, Peet Company. 25S Broadway, oo Warren.

opposite City Hall. fjII Broadway, cor. 13th. by ma il. and 140 to 4th Aye.

2260 Broadway, cor. and West 33d St. rany. rerelved several striker, dectared that WM works opn.M was the jinvr ehlgh and Wilkesl oal i om- produced about fiftj I TROOPS SENT TO LEBANON. AND STEEL WORKERS RESENT EMPLOYMENT OF COLORED MEN IN THEIR PLACES.

Harrisburg. Sept. 23. General Gobin. who is in command of troops in the hard coal strike region, was ordered by Governor Stone to-night to send the Battalion of the 12th Regiment to Lebanon to assist the Sheriff in preserving the peace, where the Iron and steel workers of the American Iron and Steel Manufacturing Company have been on strike for nearly five months.

The battalion, which has been on duty at Shenandoah ever since the troop? were sent there, left that town to-night for Lebanon, in command of Colonel Clement. The troops reached Lebanon shortly before 8 o'clock. A delegation from Lebanon called upon the Governor to-day and requested that troops be sent to that city, where rioting occurred last evening among the strikers. After consultation with Adjutant General Stewart and Attorney General Elkin. the Governor ordered the troops Bent to the relief of the Sheriff.

The men went on strike on May 5 The puddlers asked for an advance in wages from $4 to $430 a ton. but the company was willing to grant only $4 25. This compromise was refused by the workers. The strikers at that time numbered about one thousand men. and two thousand other employes were affected by the idle ness of the mills.

A few weeks ago the company started up several of its rolling mills with non-union men. all of whom were negroes taken there principally from the South. The presence of the colored men greatly excited the strikers and there has been more or less disorder ever since. Lebanon, Sept This city was in a state of excitement all night. There was firing of pistols for hours the vicinity, of the American Iron and Steel Works, where the strike Is in progress.

The colored men who had just arrived at the works were terrified, as were the citizens in th- vicinity. About midnight William Haffman. seventeen years old. was shot and ho died in the hospital this morning. He wa a messenger in the office of American an" company, and had attended an entertainment in the opera house.

On bis was home he was struck by a bullet. nf A self-constituted committee of oimons of lianon waited upon the Governor hurg this afternoon, and earnest requesteo were unable to maintain order, and General and Adjutant General foi Tn filled with excited people this and the plant of the Anier lean workers brought -known person. INCREASING USE OF FUEL OIL. Coal has become so high in price that the subrtttution of oi, IS looked upon by many person, Bdutioi, of a perplexing OU fu iP ow- an fact. andwUlso.n teta the pUce of coal In many place, 1h- Iron Works and Drydock Company a Fiftv-Blxth-Bt Brooklyn, Is using crude oil 'f coal, and the managers of th rhat they find It perfectly seven steamships which are to be used I oil transport nj in York.

Fuel olK has u6ed for a 8 Purposes in many homes and apartment pifty-fourth-st A new npar i out with a system of Is to be 1 for the oil is placed in heating by oil throughout the lithe cellar and dance upon one furnace apartments. iiv at. ni method five is required, Cooking will be done wouW have to be watchefl and entirely by hot air or steam heatme will be eitn beating furnace on hf ahO ut 75 Th- cost of nn e-half barrels give cents a barrel- f)f and at the as much heat as one of coa at considerably. XV APPEAL TO THE CLERGY. tBTT Tnn Ar BU fo ilowing ap- WMk.sbarre F.nn was issuPd peal to of th.

nlt to-night by President T. r. Zwayer. of h- Alliance. being written by S.

O. Girard Free Will Baptist Church: To the Clery of Thermoply. Dear Brethren: American hum anlt are to where battles of I' 1 1" an uccessfu issuP be fought out. I allin ln our government was Christian democracy of the Fathers." laid nrm and true in tne intelligence. Its continuance.

they honesty and an nr Ob Vm of unlimited privbut of national concern, and in its bearings of tar reaching Import. The question Is one of hour, of toil or recognition of the union, bu of shall reign, the trusts or the the was clearly denned when Presiden of of Reading Railroad asserted the divine right or of this conflict may be a Paris with its reign of terror, or a Rone with an imperial Caesar a tyrants sceptre. The Alliance has for its objects the just settlement of the coai strike and the enactment of such State and federal laws as will regulate the affairs of corporations in their relation to their employes as win make strikes unnecessary impossible. We ask. Shall labor dispute? be settled in Christlan America by mercenary guards, armed puns, on the one hand, and desperation, born or starvation, on the other? Shall might become right in this twentieth century? Those who hold such of government and of human rights are anarchists of the reddest hue.

-or they are assasfins of ail that American manhood and Christian democracy hold dear. We call upon you to raise your voices in like prophets of old. for crushed humanity. Believing that the "laborer Is worthy of his hire. we call upon you.

Christian brethren, to unite with us la jUiat Uie present terrible crisis NEW- YORK DAILY TRIBUNE. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 24. 1902. Upholstery.

On Wed Sept. 24th, we shall display in this department a most extensive line of Upholstery Fabrics, comprising everything desirable to be found in the home or foreign markets, suitable for Draperies, Hangings and Coverings. (Estimates and designs submitted for draperies). Portieres. We will also show a most extensive assortment of the latest conceptions in made-up Portieres, at prices ranging from $4 to $40 per pair.

Couch Covers. In Couch Covers we will offer many unique designs, absolutely controlled by us In Imported Goods, from $7.00 to $30.00 each. In Domestic Goods, from $3.00 to Si 0.00 each. Taylor, Broadway 20th SU may end, peacefully and humanely, that the mighty cry may ascend the mercy seat and enter into the ear of the Lord of Pabaoth. till He stretch forth His arm and take heavy cross from the shoulders of humanity, snatching the hammer and spike from the hands of the modern the sun of hope hides his face, and amid the darkness of utter despair, toiling manhood, nailed to the cross of abject slavery on the Golgotha of avarice, cries.

My God. my God. why hast thou forsaken me and the Almighty answers with an earthquake that shall shake the foundations of our national edifice and rend asunder the rocks of our free Institutions. COAL PRICES Go HIGHER. OPERATORS MEET FOR "CONFAB" AND SAY STRIKE WILL END, SOME TIME.

Anthracite now be h.i'l at ranging from $11 50 to $2tl ton. Dealers eet any price ask. and are guided in demands by policy. Some favored customers obtain coal ar ton. others are glad to pay whatever may he demanded.

In the poorer districts it being doled out by the basketful at one cent a pound, or $20 a ton. hestnut and stove are the in which is the scarcity. al dea era say that no h.ird coal of domestic sizes has been received in New-York for many weeks, nnd that what liitl" is mined la bought up at ihe mine? before shipment. It would be almost Impossible to get two tons of anthracite from any dealer It is aagerted everywhere the prices will continue to rise until tht is ended. The importation of Welsh coal does not affect the price Last a cargo of 4,000 tons from Swansea arrived, and 12,000 tons more are ex within a short time.

This has already been bought up. and in no way relieves the present y. MEETING of COAL PRESIDENTS. The usual weekly meeting of the oo directors 'he Temple Company was yesterday at the Reading offices. No.

113 Liberty-st. There were present when the meeting began, at 1 o'clock. President Baer of the Reading, President Truesdale of the Lackawanna. President Fowler the New- York, and Western, President Olyphant of the and Hudson. President Walters til Lehigh Valley.

E. B. Thomas, chairman of the board of directors of the Krk-. i i Markle, of Markle and Alfred Steams, of Cox Hros Mr. Markle and Mr.

Steams Independent operators. In the morning Mr. Markle went ro .1. p. Morgan's office, and had -l long conferem with Mr Morgan.

He refused to tell the nature of th- trilk At the office of President Baer later he was asked about the statement John Mitchell that no licensed miners had returned to work In the sitr.e the began, last May. 'That Is absolutely 1 Mr said. There are several hundred certified miners at work to-day cutting coal." Commenting on the statement recently made by Mitchell that-he had always discountenanced violence, Mr. Markle said: "Ask Mr Mitchell if he has issued a peremptory order to each local of the United Mine Workers not to do any Illegal The point is this: If Mr. Mitchell says be has Issued such, orders he confesses thai h-cannot control the miners, for they have resorted to violence; if he says he has not such orders, he is in no position to maintain that is opposed to violence." JOHN MARKLE ANSWERS MITCHELL.

Mr. Markle's attention was called to the statement made by Mitchell that he had not called engineers, firemen and pumpmen with the purpose of letting the mines flood and the mining property to ruin. "Mr. Mitchell did all the Bteam men out Mr. Markle.

"In 1891, however, when there was a separate organization of the firemen and they went out on strike fcr an eight hour day Mit.heii. in order break up the Bremen's organization and force the men Into the United Mine Workers, sent men to take places of the strikers. He excused this action by saying that the property must not be injured or" the mines flooded. But this time, with the steam men in mine workers" union. Mitchell i.r-den-d them nut, and certainly st-nt no men to take their places." After the main meeting President Baer and three others, including Presidents Fowler and Truesdale, went Into a small office across the hall from the main offices, closed the transoms and locked the doors, and remained closeted together for over half an hour.

Merely a talk, an informal talk." said Mr Baer when asked what occurred at this aftermeeting. a confab, that was all." plaJned dent Fowler. Regarding situation in the anthracite fields. Pr-sident Baer said that every day showed a larger proportion of striking miners returning to work. When asked how much longer he thought the strike would last he said 'I am not a prophet.

The strike will end That is the one thine we may all be certain of But will not attempt to say when It will end President Olyphant said that nothing had occurred at the meeting, except that there had been a general discussion of the coal strike situation. "No new steps were taken." he said effect of the calling out of add-ltional trjops. I think it will result in more me going back to work, because of the additional security against violence afforded them." COAL Sl2 A TON IN BROOKLYN OFFICIAL ANNOUNCEMENT MADE BY THK TRUSTEES of THE EXCHANGE The price of coal ran up to $12 a ton in Brooklyn yesterday. Following a meeting of Brooklyn coal dealers, who say they have little coal on hand, this Statement was sent out yesterday to customer- The board trustees of the Coal Exchange recommend mat the price for family coal he made $12 a to take effect Tuesday morning. September 23 JOSEPH! GRKASON.

Secretary. Mr Qreasoa paid yecterday that the situation was serious, and that coal was scarce throughout the citj-. Coal being delivered to customers WEBER PIANOS We offer this week an extraordinary opportunity to careful buyers who would like to own a Weber but cannot afford th: price of an absolutely new one. To reduce stock and make room for new styles arriving from factory, we have placed on sale FORTY UPRIGHT AND GRAND Weber IN PERFECT ORDER, and many of them littJe used, at approximately One-Half Real Value Call or write at once, if you intend to buy this Fall and wish to secure an instrument of the highest musical excellence and acknowledged reputation on the most favorable terms. deviation from prices plainly marked and attached to each piano The WEBER PIANO COMPANY Fifth Avenue.

Cor. Sixteenth New York City pINE fTJRNITURE FASHIONS FROM FLANDERS. For genuine picturesqueness. no furniture has ever surpassed the delightful designs of the rich old burghers of the Netherlands. Sideboards, with the exquisitely decorative little cupboards and crannies, having saucer rails and cup hooks for "old blue." Curious tapestry and old leather are very effective with the dull tones of the wood, appearing to have just stepped from the canvasses of the old Flemish painters.

Chairs and Rockers. Settles. Swings. Plant and Smoker's stands, Magazine racks, etc. For the most artistic designs of every nationality, you must "BUY OF THE MAKER" Geo.

C.Flint Co. 4-3. 45 47 WEST 23? ST. NEAR BROADWAY. factory: 54 and 156 west only in half ton lots.

If they insisted upon a ton an effort was made to them off. "We are not paying attention to the heating problem now." added Mr. Greason. "That will come later. If the situation does not Improve we shall have trouble enough over the beating question." A dealer said yesteray afternoon that do fresh mined coal was coming to Brooklyn nowadays, and that all that was received was gathered at different seaport cities and brought there in barges.

A representative of the Brooklyn Union Gas Company said yesterday that all the coke made by the company was used, and they were buying all they could, He went on to say "For us the coal situation is a serious one. as we are paying $12 a ton for coal, and for an inferior grade at that, one which we would not even consider when coal Is plentiful. The output from this coal is 30 per cent, less than from the good coal, and, as a matter of course, the pas is Inferior. Rut we dolns: the best we ran under great difficulties to keep up the supply of gas." TO SUPPLY CHEAP COAL TO SCHOOLS. Mr.

Jagels. of Hall-Jagels-Bellls Coal Company, of Hoboken. appeared before Board of Education of that city last night and informed the members that he was In a position to secure from the Erie Railroad Company for the schools one hundred tons of anthracite coal at 1550 a ton. Mr said that he had been much Interested in the predicament in which the Board of Education was laced owing to the scarcity of coal, and he 1:.. succeeded In obtaining an option on the coal from the railroad company He explained that the Offer was a special one, and only held good for the schools.

BREAKER BOYS TO GO TO SCHOOL. TSUtQRAPH TO THE IVilk.csbarre. Sept. Instead of answering the breaker whistles a number of the little fellows who before the strike spent their days amid the dust clouds of the breaker, will now answer tfie school bell at ft o'clock, enjoy their recess at 11 o'clock, take their two hours for dinner, and at 4 o'clock be free foi the day. The experiment of trying to open schools for them was made successfully Nanticoke.

Yesterday a small room was opened. To-day two more were started, and there are more applicant: for places than the rooms will hold it was thought that the little fellows would object to the confinement of the schoolroom, but they are sensible, earnest lads, despite their few years, and, realizing th- of an education, dozens of them flocked to the school. Other towns will now try the experiment. There are some twenty thousand of these boys in the region President Mitchell Is much pleased. It has always been his ambition to gel the boys out of the mlne.H and Into the schools.

With no prospert of getting coal for the St. Mary's Roman Catholic Church at Lost Creek, Father Kelly yesterday applied to Superintend. Robert Mercur for permission to pick from the banks of the v.iii. Coal Company, and it beini? given tilts morning, two hundred men and boys belonging to the church started for the banks, and before the day was done managed to pick some fifty tons. The work will be continued again tomorrow.

HOME NEWS. PROMINENT ARRIVALS AT THE HOTELS. FIFTH W. Falrchlld. Of Oneonta.

and S. McCracken. of Philadelphia. Egan, president of the Ocean Steamship Company of Savannah. E.

P. Taliafero. of Florida, J. A. Crane, of Dalton, and Baron and Baroness of London.

K. S. Woodruff, of Trenton. MANHATTAN The Rev. Stephen Van Rennselaer.

of Montlcello. MURRAY HILL-Colonel G. R. Sanford of I.itchfield Burdett Loomia, of Hartford Colonel W. M.

Davis. U. B. and Present rohn Hall, of the New-York. New-Haven and Hartford Railroad, of New-Haven.

NORMANDIK Mat-unit, of the Japanese Imperial Commission, of Toklo SAVOY- Angelo Myers, of Philadelphia and Bishop Alexander Mackay-Smith. of Pennsylvania. WALDORF Stevens, president of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad: T. Emerson, general traffic manager of the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad: D. B.

Martin, general passenger agent of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad; Wood general passenger agent of the Pennsylvania Railroad, and Judge, C. H. Aldrich, of Chicago. WHAT IB GOING ON TO-DAY. Raring at Gravesend.

Convention of the Episcopal of New Tort; Holy Trinity Church. St. James's i'irtsh. East American Institute flower show. Berkeley Lyceum.

National Baseball League James morning. of the lot New-York Volunteer Knstneer Rein'pnt. rahip-s Hotel. Midland Beach. Staten Island.

p. m. Meeting of Board of Education. 4 p. in.

Tammany Hall General Committee, evening, riinner for non --commissioned by officers of the tilth Raiment. Hotel Manhattan, evening. of the Vegetarian Society and address by Albert Tavlor on 'The Sanitary Laws of Moses." No. iai East 8 p. m.

NEW-YORK CITY. A free class In chemistry has heen formed by New -York Kvenlng Hlph School. No. 12A West Forty-sixth-st. There is not only no charge for the course, but the laboratory is free, and accidental breakage of apparatus will not be charged for The course will consist of five evening sessions a week, for twenty-four weeks.

Those wishing to register for the course can do so from 7:15 to o'clock in the evenings, at the school. Mayor Low has approved two ordinances changing the grade of the approaches to the New East River Bridge. The -streets affected in Manhattan are Uelancey. Clinton. Attorney and Ridge and in Brooklyn.

New South Fifth. New and RoeMing A resolution appropriating for the needs of the Fire Department has been approved by the Mayor. This money is to be expended for newsites for engine houses and in buildings, in the outskirts of Brooklyn and in Queens. Corporation Counsel Rives yesterday appointed Le Roy D. Ball.

of No West Slxty-eighth- an assistant, at C.5*10 a year. William Hauser. a. junior assistant in the Bureau oi Sixtet Open- The Tribune Uptown Office is now located at 1,364 Broadway Between 36th and 37th St 3. Ings, has resigned, and In his place John J.

Kearney of No. West has been appointed at a salary of JI.3W). ICARIA. E. 4 W.

A New Collar. E. W. Money loaned to responsible individuals without security. Confidential.

150 Na N. T. Office 729. Avoid baldness, pray hair, dandruff and thin locks by mine Parker's Hair Balsam. HlndTcoms.

the bAst cure for corns. IB MARINE INTELLIGENCE. MINIATURE ALMANAC. rises as- 22 HIGH WATER. i 12 02IOov.

Island 12:34 5:23 Hock 12 42 Gem Island Gate Ml UfCOMTSB BTEAMBMB. TO-DAY. Wseel From. Mondbeilo Gibraltar. September 10 RadnorVhirs Gibraltar; September 0 Nvanza braltar.

September Colorado Brunswick. September 20 Mallory Tic Liverpool. Septemlwr 7 Star FlN.tr" September 19 JacksonvllV. September 21 Clydo THtTRSDAT. SEPTEMBER 25.

Hull. September 13 September Xl Paso New-Orleans. Sept-mK-r 2" -Morgan FRIDAY. SUPTEMBER 26. September -JO French pwinif September 13 Medtfrriawa JnSar Swansea September Bristol City P.nira-za" Cruz.

September Ward St Ktti September 20 Quebec mall. OUTGOING STEAMERS. TO-DAY. For Malls dote. Vessel sails.

Ov-Unlr Liverpool. White Star X.l am Southampton. American Maitory Norfolk Old Pomlnlon 3:00 pm Cherokee Turks island, etc. Clyde. .12:30 Viler.

Guiana. Dmi-rara THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 25. miumbla. Hamburg.

Hamb-Am Bremen, Ll-y-i 1 Hohenzollern. Bremen. Lloyd am a llan Brazil Prlnc- 11 a 2:00 Yucatan. Ward 12:00 Charleston. Clyde 3-W Princess Anne.

Norfolk. Old Dominion. FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER Matanms. Tamplco, Ward ip Faloma.

Haytl. Cameron Rio Grande. Ndrlolk. Mallon Hamilton. Norfolk.

Old Dominion ftniPPISG NEWB PORT OF YORK. SEPTEMBER 23. ARRIVED. Steamer Ancborla Gteacow September 11 and Movllle 12. with mdse.

cabin 203 paaaengen to Henderson Bros. Arrived, at the Bar at 23d Steamer Bull Nathlsen. Tilt Cove September 16, with copper ore 10 the American Metal Co; vessel to I. Bull -V Co Arrival at the Bar at m. Steamer Slrllla Sartorle, Genoa September and Naples 10.

with mdse. cabin and 1.014 steerage passena-era to Hlrzel. Feltmann Co. Arrived at Bar at v.To a m. Steamer Bremen (Ger).

Nlerlch. Bremen September 14 and f'herbouT-R 15. with m.lse. cabin and passengers to Olertchs Co. Arrived at the liar at in.

Steamer Melbourne Rose. Manila July Lafuan 12. Colombo August 1, Pom Said 24 and Malta 31. with and 4 cabin passengers to .1 II Winchester A Co. Arrived at the Bar at 2 a m.

Steamer Chaucer Mutrboad. Rosarlo and Rio -lanlero September 2. with milra to Husk Jevona. th- HlKhlands at 3:28 m. Steamer Tennyson Santos August Ri Janeiro September Hnhla 7.

Pernambtn-o and Barbados lfi. with and Hrt to Busk A- Jevons. Arrived at the Bar at 6:30 a m. Steamer Hero (Nor). Syvertse Montevideo, etc.

O(T Ulchlands at 4.4" m. Steamer Advance. Coming. Colon September with ami 25 liaaiOIHIH to the Panama Ft Ss Co. Arrived at the Bar at a m.

Steamer Diana (Nor). Stolts. Tarnplco September 12. with copper and lead to the American Smeltlnjc and Reflnlne Co. Will discharge at Perth AmU.v Steamer Matanxas.

Miller. Tamplco September 12 and Havana IS. with mdse and 1 cabin to James Ward Arrived at the Bar at 11:45 am. Steamer Mexico. Stevens.

Havana September 20. with and passengers to James Ward A Co. Arrived at the Bar at 12:45 m. Steamer Concho. Evans.

Galveston September 17 and Key West 20. with mdse and passensers to Mallory. Steamer Iroquois. Chlchester, Jacksonville September 10 and Charleston 20. with mdse and passengers to William Clyde Co.

Steamer Sasrlnaw. Hale. Georgetown and Wllmlnston. with mdse and passengers to William Clyde Co. Steamer Jefferson.

Dole. Newport News and Norfolk, with mdse and passenger? to the Old Dominion Co. Steam yacht Alcedo Passed In Sandy Hook at 1:15 p. an SAILED. Steamers Peguranca.

for Colon: Jamestown. Norfolk and Newport News; Benefactor. Philadelphia: El Porado. Galveston; Nordfarer. Savannah: tis.

Jacksonville; Nacoochee, Savannah. Katahdln. Georgetown: Tauric Liverpool; Coromla Montevideo: Moltke Hambure via Plymouth and Cherbourg: Kronprlnz Wllhelm njfri. Bremen via Plymouth and Cherbourg- Tonawanda Manchester; La Hesbaye (Dutch. Antwerp; Llsurla iltali.

Genoa and Naples; Strathford Fremantle. Adelaide. Sydney, etc. (Ft). Marseilles and Naples; United States lighthouse steamer Armerla.

Steamers Manna Han. Baltimore; Algonquin. Charleston and Jacksonville. City of Jacksonville. Jacksonville.

THE MOVEMENTS. OK STEAMERS. FOREIGN PORTS. Plymouth. Sept 23.

a Arrived, steamer Kaiserin Maria Theresia Wettln. New-York for Cherbourg and Bremen land Shields, Sept 23 Sailed, steamer Brilliant. (Ger). Keller. New -York.

Moville, Sept 23 Arrived, steamer Furnessla (Br), Toung New-York for Glasgow (and proceeded). Amsterdam. Sept Sailed, steamer Chester (Dutch). Ocken. New-York.

Bremen. Sept -Sailed, ship Columbus tGer). Stover. New- York (not previously): bark Elda (Ger). Tletzen.

New-York. Rotterdam. Sept 21 Arrived, steamer Etona (Br). Cantell. -York via Hamburg.

Sept 23. 5 Arrived, steamer Kaiserln Maria Theresta (Ger). Weyer. New-York via Plymouth for Bremen land proceeded). Boulogne.

Sept 23. 2 Arrived, steamer Potsdam. (Dutch). Potjer. New- York for Rotterdam tand proceeded.

Gtmcsemrnts. nCnALU THEATOEI 35th SC i Present! 813 JEFFERSON De ANGELIc Saturday OPERA COMPWVi casino. vr: r- dway aath st. THE EMERALD Sam S. Lee Shubert ILU Sam S.

Shubert and Nixon '5Lt, Ziminerman's of Mat. Sit A CHINESE HONEYMOON." By Dance and Howard Talbot. EMPIRE THEATRE. VIRGINIA HARMED in IRK Wednesday Matinees Oct. I "'J' Evening.

Matine, To-l ay Sat War TMERE'S MANY A SUP MADISON SQ. THEATRE. THE CLOW? TCESDAV-THE TWO THEATRE. 17-- EVENINGS 5.15. MAT.

MRS. PATRICK CAMPBELL In Her New Play, AINT JEASxirj. NEW SAVOY THEATRE. TIME. OCT.

SOI Last 10 To-day 4Sat ROBERT' EDESON THE ROGERS BROS. In Wallai-k's. R'nay Evs Mats. Ate -'n Month. Enthusiastically indorsed by people' ALICE FISCHER I it MBS.

JAM. niICO St ''oiombna Goodby Dussi UUOO st vl Sunday i Dus3 Farewell. Madison BROAOWAY Evgj at stats MAT TO-DAY. SALLYou AH EY CtnS. W.

WMtafca Old flbiali I 'Manhattan LAST WEEK OF THE AMKRICATt COMEDY. CAPTAIN MOLLY BEGINNING NE.VT MONDAY: MINNIE DUPKEE In a comedy. A ROSE PLVMOI TH '-TOWS. OPENS TO-MORROW MORXIXG. MADISON SQUARE GARDEN -ADM.

50c. Thursday Night HE l-n-imBB -Girls will taie part. bsnuins japansss cake to PsvflMfiainl I Box OfZc now open. Wedding Ceremonial Seats and at B'way 30th Begins 3. I I The New Musical Play.

DALY'S A COUNTRY GIRL. MATINEES THIS WEDNESDAY SATURDAY. 2. 1 66 gr Wfc Llb YHAMMERSTEIN l2d St. B'uny 4 Tth 11 I LULU GLASER in DOLLY VARDEN.

yriii I EE Mats. To-day NEW YUHR RICE'S KING HIGH BALL xray. JAST WEEK BIT ONE. DM DM Eve. IS- -Climaxes uIJUU "Undivibted 'bich HEARTS AFLAME lilO 114 th1 14th St.

I PRICES awl AMERICAN by IVI I- -Heia br the Enemy. Ma'- Dally Mon ..) 1 tLI deKoLtA. the WUard. I. MVS EE I 1 ea r.

at Brooklyn THEATRE LESLIE CARTER BOX OFFICE OPEN. ACAQICMV OF 80310H11H3 in I HARI.KM WAR a HOI 5 pp "tt" Kantzer Trio IV 411 th Concert i.ii^!ii:^> VJ JJ BMMET, THE Naples steamer Roma Harn.ien. Glrper.t!. etc. tor s-P' 0 steamer Xt-w-York.

StY FRANCISCO STOCKS. San Fr'anctsco. Sept. 2X-The official JJJJT tanons for mining stocks were oiJustioe 9 Alta Kentu a Alpha con Oljtadj Washington Andes er iw Cot Hullton Caledonia Confl.ienc* Sierra Nevada (S Mst LM i' i Hale iSiYeUovr Jacket Julia ECROPEAN PBODVCB MARKET. Sept WMQrnsm mmsmsm SO rib to.

4 JT; mll benie, Uto ln at Lard rtrm prime nctEWW- 3d: American flnw! 4Sj: 4 k- .1 Ve-r-ieum Rsdaaa aafcH i dull at THE BOSTON WOOL MARKET. In the market tnis lth lv nne. fine I tine lt 4.VW7C. Texas wool consent Fall spring. jt firm- with limited offering county, cleaned basis.

S3tfssc less. T5? Southern. tll! 7, a feature strong position of fine wool present market Fine wished nom firm. Ohio and lva Michisan -g XX and above. th ss 2A-.

There 1, more mcrulrv nT delaine vgoJ3 a small and prtfes firmer. Ohio deUlne. No 1. No T4nr 2rtc. The offerincs of Australian mlnaL Arf PjS.

here, rendertcic quotations 0 fine. stock Is nrmly. he.d at tha f. 2 averts choice, scoured basis. a.

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Pages Available:
367,604
Years Available:
1841-1922