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8 CRVRCR AND RELIGIOUS NEWS AND NOTES RIGHT METHODIST BISHOPS-ELECT TO BE CONSE CRATED TOMORROW. The i ight new bishops elected by the General Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church in Baltimore \slU be consecrated to-morrow afternoon in Lyric Hall. Baltimore. Three have been ..assigned to new episcopal residences In America created by the present General Conference, one will go to Buenos Ayr<=? and another to the newly created residence at Foo-Chow. China Dr. Edwin H. Hughes, who wu at the time of his election president of De Pauw University. Greencastle. Ind.. has been assigned to Ban Fran cisco. Dr. William C Smith, editor of "The Pitts burg Christian Advocate." will go to the episcopal THE NEW BISHOPS OF THE METHODIST CHT-RCH ELECTED AT THE BALTIMORE CONFERENCE. WILLIAM C SMITH. ROBERT M'INTYRE. WILLIAM F. ANDERSON. FRANK *L BRISTOU KUWIN H. HrGHES. residence of Portland, and Dr. "William F. Ander fin's residence will l.c Chattanooga, Term. Those ■rho -will have the new residences of St. Paul, Omaha and Oklahoma City are Bishops Mclntyre. Nuelson and Quayle. respectively. Elshop Frank M. Bristol goes to Buenos Ayres and Bishop Wilson S. Lewis to Foo-Chow. China. CARDINAL TO OFFICIATE. Primate of Ireland Will Lay Cor nersttone of St. Raymond's School. Cardinal League will lay the cornerstone of the new St. Raymond's parochial school, In Castl* Hill avenue! n*ar West Farms Road. 'West Chester, to morrow- afternoon, at I o'clock. The Cardinal will he assisted by Archbishop Farley and other promi nent churchmen. This win b*- among his last offi cial acts In this country, as be expects to return to Ireland early next month. St. Raymond's dab la one of the oldest in the city, its history dating back to the year 1750. when ir.any of the Roman Catholics of Westchester County ,•..:■ enrolled In Captain Corsa's West a** • m ma et • Y REQUIRINO NQ CARRIAGE to tub M£3^ss-@ias£hegm bath-houses, beisq directly ro^gytt-SG* »»«*!»•«■•»*■*■*»« ) OPPOSITE - £^* im~ THE SiAISERHOF ~ms FIRST. LEADINO. AND I RESIDENCE OF AMEKICAM LARGEST HOTEL. | ARISTOCRACY. R. Hr.htrlc.nti. Proprietor. Pension: Room and full board from S3 Religious Notices. ■••ntf- a line At Fifth Avenue Baptist Church, 4 WEPT 46TH STREET. THE REV. CHARLES F- AXED, D. d.. ■mill pr«-a.-h to-morrow (Sunday), both twidiia a» evtr • Services at 11 a. m. ar.l B p. m. Sunday School, rnorr.lnp at S^t. loING MEN?' AND YOUNG WOMEN'S CLASSES. A UNIQUE SERVICE by children or the FIVE POINTS HOUSE OF INDUSTRY, 155 Worth Street. HEAR THEM . C ING AT 3:30 P. M. OraxJm B- N. PENFIELD. Mas Doc. Furenstenfient. \VM B- GARBUTT. AT REFORMED CATHOLIC SERVICES.^ CKRIbT 8 MISSION i.'il WfK .*.Tth Bt.—AJteraooa. 3:30. Rev. tkXES O'CONNOR. Pastor- Rev. Dr. ALBERT KING pnaciies. "Ohritt* f-econd Com;ng."' ALL Unitarian). 4th awe . *•* St. Rev. THOMAS R. BtICER. pastor, wia preach subject: A F^TAL ECONOMY OF LIFE." services 11 a. m. a.. coreiaiiy ir.vlu-d. AT LENOX AVENLE UNITARIAN CHURCH. r . „., i-.,w- s"**t Services a c " eN SITT AND CCTiTURE. Jlev. 13ERLE .-? CROIX WRIGHT. Minister. BROADWAY TABERNACLE. , Broadway ar.d 56th ct. 11 A. — Public Worship £<-rrr<.->r. by the Rev. WILUIID F. OTT ARSON. p m . address by Rev-. FREDERICK J. STANLEY. D. D- BRICK CHURCH. _ >v WftJi Avrr.u». and Thiny-Seventh P^re*^ Minuter: Rev. WIIJ-IAM R. RICHARDs. D. D. r>- Rirhardf »:!! ireach at 11 o'clock ana at VESrKR SERVICE at 4. VTeekday Service, "S\'e-n'*lay. S p. m. i CHURCH OF THE ASCENSION". Firth aye. ar.l :f: f| th Bt Rev. PERCY STICEN'EY RANT. Rector Ham — Morr.inc service an<i s-ermon. 4 r , m _ Gaul s -The Holy City.- R«-V. WALTER E. CLJTTON SMITH will preach at botb Berrioe*. ... r . :r..—^3r. Aifxaader :r;lne »:;1 -: tmM on a Prophet s Vision." BCH. .-.••-. a ye. UTH. :■ D.. Pastor, [ir SUITI be! *t II a ra A . v . ::-: F FMTTH, Jr.. wUI ■■ ■ ■ ■ ■ : .. ■ - CHURCH OF THE MESSIAH. PtCßlUiilS). 34th tt . cor. Part aye D. ... . JBer. ROBERT OOLIA'ER, Lit. D. Ministers: JJ XK _ v . JOiix HAYNBS HOLMES. Gerricea at i! a. m. Rev. JAMES T. BIXCY. Fh. D.. will prrach. Subject : 'The Deve-loprr.ent cf a SouL Calvary Methodist Episcopal Chur l»th at aad nb a*e. ' Rev. PlTflmJ— 1- GOODELi. D. D.. Pa«tor. Pre*ct:r^ at M 45 a. m. by tie Pastor. 7:t5 p. JtataaJ Service. Aiire** by Pa»tor. CHTRCH OF ZJON AND ST. TIMOTHY, 334 W>st £7th »t. Rettor. Rev HENRY l^fßE<~K. D . C. I~ Ho i Communion S a. re.. M'.mir^ Irayer; preacher the Rector ........ 11 o'clocic Cioraj Service; preacher. Rev. UR. RUEHTON.. 4 V- ED CHURCH OF THE DIVINE PATERNITY «Ur.lv«ihal:Hi, -Central Park Weft and Wth at The Partor. Rev. FRANK OLIVER HALL, D. D.. will jireach at 11 a. m. CHRIPTIAX SCIENCE SERVICE?. Bunday mornlns*. II: Soadajr e««Btaca. 8: WMaes4ay *>\<>nir.*s. *. FIFTH CBVBtCH OF <:HHI?T. - IKNTIST 2» 'SMt W. 4iih kt. CALVARY. W. f.7: Dr. v«. akthi r, 11. a ITaierea Garden"; B. "True Genljt." Vesied' grarii choir <100 i, Bowmsr!. cond. CHRIST CHURCH. Broadway. flat at.. Rev. SEORGE A. 6TPJONO. Rector. — Services, S. 11. Rector, a. Evcn taagf liactor. _ . _ Chester military company and fought in the French and Indian wars. The Right Rev. Monelgnor Ed ward McKenna, the present rector, assumed charge of St. Raymond's In 1885. Tha school building in the rear of the church will be among the best equipped and most up to dat* school buildings in the city. The building will provide comfortably for about one thousand children. On the first floor will be a large auditorium, or assembly hall, while about twenty classrooms will take up the upper floors. It '.s said that Cardinal Logue BJid Monsignor Mc- Kenna have been lifelong friends, and that It is as JOHN L. NTJELSEM. a personal tribute to the latter'a work that the Irish Cardinal consented to lay tha cornerstone of his new school building. TALK OF DENOMINATIONAL UNION. More This Spring than Usual — Some Pres byterian Leaders Hopeful. There la more than the usual talk among chur<-h leaders about various denominational merger plans thle spring, probably becaaae of the annual. o.uad and other stated meetings of some of the la-e^ reUeiOOs boriiep. among them the Methodist. the Presbyterian, Reformed, United Presbyterian. Methodist Protestant and Baptist. Few leadura are sanguine about immediate organic union among the denominations. AH agree, however, that the discussions and th* acquaintances formed througj ons are lik.!y to be fruitful In the life of the various churches. The Presbyterian Church North, whio.n some of Its leaden are now calling tha American Presby tarian Church, has a few men, among whom is the Rev. William H. Rob^rU, the retiring mod»ra • its General Assembly, who are confidently Religious Notices. 20 cents a lice. CHURCH OF THE INCARNATION. HM^sr-n aye SSth ft— Rev. W. M GROSVENOR. D. I\ rector • a m. Holy Communion 11 a m.. Mnriflng »" >Jce and Sermon lectori 4 p. m.. Evenir^ Prayer and Address (rector) Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church, Filth a--?nue and 65th Street R»v. J. BOSS STEVEXSON. IX D. I Ministers. Rev. EDWIN F. HALI.EXBECK. D. D-. $ Services 11 a. ia.. 4 p. m.. 8 p. m. Dr HALLEXBECK ii:: preach In the morning and in the afternoon. The Sacrament of the Lord's Supper will li« observed. Bib c f'hool. •< -V a. m. Men's Bible Clae». -onducted by Dr. Hailonheik. 10" a. m. Prayer matins Wednesday evening at 8:1 K. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, Broadway and TSnb street. Pastor. I. ML HALDEMAX. 11 A M —"THE CHURCH DISPENSATION; OR. CHRIST HE! IN THE SPIRIT." *, p v — WHAT WILL. PE TAKING PL.ACE IN' HE WEN WHILE THE ANTI-CHRIST IS RUNNING HI? FEARFUL COURSE ON EARTH 7" 4th in 70 weeks. of Daniel. Fourth Presbyterian Church, Cor. Weft End* Aye. and Mat St. Edgar Whitaker Woik, D. D., Pastor. "Dr WORK preaches at both services. Memorial P»rmon in evening, with patriotic music. HEALTH CONFERENCE, Carnegie Hal!, Sunday. June Tth. 1 P. M. Addres .. ANDREW ifCONNEL-L Subject: "What Is Vital Foi'c* — How Generated and Controlled. 1 ■ a- open discussion will follow. Madison Avenue Reformed Church, • or. nth. Rev. WM CARTER. Pastor. President Francis L. Patton, D. D., of Princeton. New Jersey, will preach, morning and evening. Prayer Mooting We-Jnaaday evening. MADISON AVENUE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. Northeast corner 73d it a:." Madison aye. Rev. HENRY SLOANE COFFIN, D. D. I'attor. Public Worship. 11 a- m.. and Children's Get\loa i.; 4 p. m. The Paster will p«-«*?h. No Evening Service. Madison Aye. Baptist Church, f"int. Rev. CORNELIUS WOKLFKIX. D. D . Minister. 11 A. M — .-;.:.:...; Bleaainc*." >j p m— ■ Spirit Emancipation." BIBLE SCHOOL »:45 A. M STRANGERS CORDIALLY INVITED. Madison Sq. Presbyterian Church, Madison avenue and 34th street. Rev. C. H. PARKHURSr D. D., Puter. Rev. GEORGE R. MONTGOMERY. AB»laU.nt Hliurier. Sabbath «ervice» 11 a m. and 8 r>. m. Mr. MONTGOMERY will preach. Manhattan Congregational, Broadway, between Ttith and 77th St». 11 a m. — Sermon. by Rev. Dr. LOVE. 6 m.— Rev. Dr. IGLEHART on the burning question, "The Ballot \eraus the Saloons." 7 * Metropolitan Temple, 14 t h JOHN WESLEY HILL 11 — "iTie Garten «" LJllle*." &_«jThe Volunteer Soldier." MEMORIAL BAPTIST. \Va«hlnjrt«in Square—ED WARD JUDSON; 'he Pastor, *"' preach, 11 a m , -T.'ie WaytMe Prayer." Unveiling of the La. arc* Window in Memory of James KJJott. 8 p. m.. "Flying, Running. Walking." ' MADISON C. PETERS. The Belatco. 11 o'cl Beats Free. Subject: "Htm NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, MAY 30, 1908. looking to see ell the churches of America which hold the Presbyterian aystem of government unit ed under one denominational nag. The succeis of the negotiations which brought about reunion with the Cumberland Presbyterian Church leads these men to expect similar success with other bodies. Few Indications can be found among other Re formed and Presbyterian bodies that they are seeking such union. GENERAL ITEMS OF THE WEEK. At tha Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church to morrow the Rev. Dr. Edwin L. Hallenbeck, the associate pastor, will preach at the morning ser vice. In the afternoon the Sacrament of the Lord s Supper will be observed. The fortieth anniversary o' the founding of St. Bernard's parish will be celebrated to-morrow at the church In West 14th street. Solemn high mass will be celebrated at 11 o'clock. The sermon will WILSON S. LEWIS. be preached by the Rev. E>r.' Henry A. Brann. of St. Agmes f 8 Church, who is an old college friend o? Father Healy, the rector of St. Bernard's. Th« baccalaureate sermon at New York Uni versity will be delivered by the Rev. Dr. Robert Mackenzie, pastor of the Rutgers Rivprslde Pres byterian Church, in the auditorium of the llbrary building. University Heights, at 4 p. m., to-morrow. The choir of All Souls* Episcopal Church and other associated choirs, under the direction of Daniel R. Phiiippi. will render a musical programme. The fifth and last address of a series delivered lit the men's meetings of the West Side branch of the Young Men's Christian Association by the Rev. Dr B. Parkes Cadman. of the Central Congrega tional Church, Brooklyn, will be given to-morrow afternoon in the West Side auditorium. Dr. Cad man will speak on "The Message of the Man of Nazareth to the Men of To-day-Its Scientific Basis, Its Meaning and Its Application." Two services cf special Interest will b« held In the Metropolitan Temple to-morrow. At U a. m. a Bower service is announced, and the Rev. Dr. John Wesley Hill, the pastor, will speak on "The Garden of Lilies." During the afternoon the flow ers contributed for the decoration of the church at the morning service will be distributed by the young people of the church among the hospitals and the sick of the community. At 8 p. m. there will bo a patriotic service, attended by the veterans of the 9th Regiment, representatives of Grand Army posts and other patriotic organisations. Dr. Hill will speak on "The American Volunteer Sol dier." Religious Notices. 20 cents a line. Old First Presbyterian Church, sth aye.. 11th to 12th st Rev. HOWARD DUFFIELD. D. D.. Pastor. Rev J\MES A. M-CAGUE. Assistant. Services. 11 a. m. and S p. m. Rev. JAMES A. M'CAGUE will preach. PARK PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. 56th st. and Am- Pter'iarr. a •■•" Preaching, by the Pastor. Rev. Dr. AN SON P. aTTERBURY, 11 a. m. and 6 p m Rutgers Presbyterian Church, BROADWAY AND 73D STREET. Rev ROBERT MACKENZIE. D D . Minister. l ■■• ALLEN W. M'CURDY. Assistant Minister. Preaching at 11 A. M. by Dr. MACKENZIE * Preparatory service Friday evening at 8. Evening service discontinued. ST. BARTHOLOMEWS CHURCH. Madison Avenue and 44th Street. The Rev. LEIGHTON PARKS. D D . Rector. 830 A. MM — Holy Communion. 11 A. M. — Morning Prayer and Sermon. Preacher, the Rector. 4PM United Service of Oriental. Swedish, German Chinese and Enslleh Congregations, "preacher. Rev. LESLIE E. LEARNED St. Andrew's M. E. Church, 76th Ft., west of Columbus a'» GEORGE CLARKE PECK. D. D.. Minister. 11 a. m.— Sermon by the Minister. *.~ mr ~. s p m — Last Sermon in series on "SHORT LEOEVDB WITH LONG MEANINGS." Topic: "SPEED LIMIT." SOUTH CHURCH, Madison aye and 3 c th st. Rev. THOMAS REED BRIDGES. D. D . Minister. 11 a. m. — Morning Worship and Sermon. The. Pastor will preach. St. Paul's Methodist Episcopal Church, West End ay- and S6th St. Rev GEORGE P. KMAN. D. D.. Pastor. 11 a. m. and S p. in . • Preaching by Dr. M. B. CHAPMAN. SPIRITUAL AND ETHICAL SOCIETY, 74 West 126 th HELEN TEMPLE BRIGHAM, morning and evening, dosing meetings until October. THE MIDDLE COLLEGIATE CHURCH. 2d Ay. and 7th St. Rev. JOHN G. FAGG. D. D., Minister, will preach at 11 A. 11. Rev. A .1. MUSTE at 8 P. M. THE MARBLE COLLEGIATE CHURCH. sth Ay. and 29th Bt.. Rev. DAVID JAS. BfRRELL. D. D.. Minister, will preach at 11 A. M. and 8 P. M. Morning: "The Casket of Grace." Evening: "A Fountain in the Desert." THE COLLEGIATE CHURCH OF ST. NICHOLAS. sth Ay. and 4<*th St., Rev. DONALD SAGE MACKAY. D. D. Minister. Rev. Prof. HUGH BLACK will preach at 11 A. M. Rev NEHEMIAH BOTNTON. D. D.. preaches at 8 P. M. Subject, "The Trial of a Prejudice." THE WEST END COLLEGIATE CHURCH. West End Ay. and TTth St Rev. HENRY EVERTSON COBB, D. D., MlnliUr. will preach at 11 A. M. Rev THOMAS MBRIDE NICHOLS at • P. M UNIVERSITY PLACE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. cor. of 10th «t. Rev. GEORGE ALEXANDER. D. D.. Pastor. Public worship to-morrow at 11 a. m. and ft p. m At the mornln* sen-Ice the pastor will preach. At the evening service Rev. JAMES HARDIN SMITH will preach. In the afternoon of to-morrow th» Sacrament of the Lord's Supper will b* observed at 4. o'clock- Wednesday evening: servic« at 8 o'clock. West End Presbyterian Church, Amsterdam Aye and lor.th st Rev A EDWIN KEIOWIN I> D., Pastor; Rev J. GARLAND HAMMER Jr.. Asst. Pastor. Rev. S. R. ROSBITER I' I', will preach at 11 A M. Subject: "Invasion of the Philippines." Dr. KEIOWIN will preach at « P. M. on "Th« Banishment of Napoleon Bonaparte." WEST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, on 42>1 «t. l^tweenTKh and 6th ayes. Rev. ANTHONY H. EVANS. D. D.. rtlUf, :•* iradiw »t U*■ b. mni fp. hi, , VA WILLIAM A. QUATLfI. Of Interest v^ to XOomen. FOR CtIKLS ARRESTED Probation Association Has Large Home for Its Charges. The lustiest infant In New York City is the home which Miss Maude E. Miner, probation officer at the night court, opened last February at No. lfe West 10th street for women released from tne 1 courts on probation. Only two floors of the nous« were leased at first, and the assets were not worth mentioning On May 1 the entire house, compris ing four floors, was leased, and Is now fitted up so that twenty girls or more can be accommodated at once. Also an association has been formed which has for Its object not only the maintenance of the home but the development of probation work. Miss Miner thinks that a horn« of that sort is essential to the development of the probation sys •There mint be a place." she said to a Tribune reporter yesterday, "where a woman released In the care of a probation offlcer-lf. as often hap pens, she has no home but the streets, or some room where she has been living with evil compan ions-there must be some place where she can be received and studied a bit. We have to gain her confidence. Then she will tell the truth about her self, which generally she Isn't willing to do at first And then we can decide whether she can be helped or whether she is a woman for whom little can be done and who must be sent to some Institution. I don't fay that 99 per cent can be helped, or even » per cent, but some can be he!ped-and that worth while." of the new organization is the New The name of the new organization la the Ne-x Tork Probation Association. The officers arc: President, Judge Charles B. Whitman; first vice president. Mrs. William H. Baldwin, jr.: second vice-president. Edward T. Devlne; treasurer. Milton Einstein, and secretary. Miss Maude E. Miner. The board is not complete yet. but as far as named the other members are Mrs. William B. Rice. Mrs. V. G. Simkovitch. Miss Stella A. Miner. Judge Charles F Maclean. Judge Frederic Kernochan. Judge Joseph E. Corrigan. Homer Folks and John M. Glenn. Mr Einstein Is the man who just came forward with money for the rent-S6OO. Andrew Carnegie pledged $750 more— It was decided that more , room was needed— and Mrs. Russell Sage gave IBM, There are times when the home's financial horizon looks doubtful, but. money or not. Miss Miner goes ahead, and the money always comes. Miss Stella Miner is the sister of the founder of the horn* and has worked with her all along. One of them always sleeps there. It is Miss Stella Miner who has hunted around in second-hand shops and so succeeded, on a remarkably small sum. In making the house look really homelike and pretty. All the woodwork is freshly painted and the walls are newly painted or papered. On each floor Is a sitting room, where the girls can read or sew. Downstairs is a laundry, where they can do up their own clothes. The home has even acquired a cat— no mere kitten, but a comfortable, motherly cat. A baby lived there for a while, but la gone now. The baby's mother was arrested for making a disturbance in the place where the baby's father works. She had provocation, for she had gone there to ask him to support the child, and he. re fused. The magistrate before whom she was taken released her In Miss Miner's charge, and she was taken to the home, and her baby, there being no other place for It. was taken there, too. ' "We try to get rid of the girls as fast as wo can." said Miss Miner. "When they have homes and parents we try to get them back with their parents. That is another source of expense. Last month I paid the fares of ten girls back to their homes in the country. There was one little girl who worked In a mill In a Connecticut town. Sh« thought she'd like to see New York, and she came here, and very soon got Into trouble. Yet she wasn't bad, and when we got her with us and gained her confidence we found she was glad enough to go back to her mother In Connecticut. "For girls who have no one belonging to them we try to get housework In the country— when they are Klrls we feel that wo can ask people to take into their homes. We take every pre caution to make sure that they are fit to go Into families. One of our girls went two months ago to work in a Quaker family in New Jersey. sh« Is there still, giving good satisfaction, an.l per fectly happy to be In the country. Yet when she first came, to us she was simply Incorrigible. She told one of us who visited her the other day that If it hadn't been for the time she spent here she wouldn't have been contented to go to work. 'That sort of made a break with my old life.' she said." Next week there is to be a wedding at the home. The bride-to-be, a round faced, wholesome looking girl of twenty, lived with the parents of the man she Is going to marry, and for a good while they and every one thought the young people were married. "So we think the best thing is for them to be married." said Miss Miner, "and the priest is coming here to do it. " These are the hopeful cases; others are quite different. Some of the girls who go there are just like other girls— clear eyed, honest faces. They are the ones who are found In time; others are wrecks— ruined by the life they have lived. In order that the girls might. if at any time it seemed necessary, be separated, one group from another. Miss Miner has kitchen arrangements on the fourth floor as well as In the basement. There is no compulsion about going to the home; women are not committed there. Most of them go gladly enough. Those who are placed elsewhere like to go back sometimes, too, for an evening or for a meal. Ten thousand dollars is the sum. needed for the expenses of the first year and $7,8<3 of that ha 3 been pledged on condition that the full sum is raised. .NEWS OF THE MARKETS. Gooseberries %( In" at 30 Cents a Quart — Ken nebec Salmon Expected Soon. There are many varieties of fish in the market Just new, but shad, and of course shad roe. qre very hard to get Salmon, which the fishermen call a good all-the-year-round fish, is 2o cents a pound, but with June 1 the Kennebec salmon Is expected In the market. The fish dealers claim that this is the "genuine" salmon, having quite a distinct flavor from the Western variety. It re mains In until September 1. Halibut at 15 cents a pound, cod at 8. sea bass .it 10 and porgies at 10 cents a pound sell at the same prices as last week, but there is a slight advance in weakfish. now g cents a pound, while bluefish has dropped fr^m IS to 15 cents a pound Brook trout is 60 cents a pound, haddock 8 cents and flounders 8 cents, the last, when cut in strips and cleaned of skin and bone, sell readily at 25 cents a pound as fillets of sole. Eels are 16 cents a pound, large mackerel 50 cents each and small ones 25 cents; lobsters con tinue at 25 cents a pound, soft shell crabs are 75 cents a dozen for the large kind and 50 cents a dozen for the smaller ones. A dainty little fish Just in Is the butterfish. which Is selling at 12 cents a pound. Poultry finds a ready sale these hot days, when meat seems too heavy to be considered. Roasting chickens are 22 cents a pound, the Philadelphia ones bringing 25 cents a pound. Fowls are 16 cents a pound and Long Island ducklings 22 cents a pound. The broilers look tempting at SI to $1 50 a pair, while squab are $3 50 to $4 a dozen. The meat market continues pretty steady. Sir loin steak Is 18 cents a pound, porterhouse steak 20 cents, prime roast 16 cents, chop roast 10 cents, crooked ham 12^i cents and boneless bacon 14 cents a pound. Loin of Jersey pork la 12V* cents a pound and genuine hind quarter lamb sells at 16 centa a pound. \ The beat butter is still 28 cents a pound; eggs con tinue at 23 cents a dozen; one-quarter Swiss cheese is 30 cents a pound and store cheese IS cents, but domestic cheese Is two cents higher, being 22 cents a pound. "Berries are all cheaper than last week, straw berries being 10 and 18 cents a quart, huckleberries 35 cents a quart and blackberries 30 cent* a quart. The flr.«t of the gooseberrle» arc In the market thla European Property to Let. » T LONDON. ENGLAND. FURNISHED HOUSE TO * let — Seven rooms and bath; three months; In fashionable locality; Including Keneral cook, also elao trlo light; at t& • wonkly. Apply JOUH BCUOLTZ. 471 fltli »v»,. New Tork, week en* do not look too dear at ■£*. • V** California oranges remain at BO ana » "^ dozen, and bananas are 30 cents a hand CaUlorn watermelons a:, down to 90 cent. each plneaPP^ are also a little cheaper at 10 and •£££££ Hothouse grape, are $1 B0 a pound- £»«££' and are 75 cents a basket, containing two do* cherries are 35 cento a box. watercress Salad greens are plentiful and cheap. W Merer ,3, 3 5 cents a bunch, radishes are i «nts a each mint is the same, cucumber. are o cents heafl> shallots 15 cents a quart. lettuce ••jJ^J *~t parsley 5 cents a bunch, endive » cent8 B t«s ,- re and tomatoes sell for 15 cents a pound c 10 cents a bunch and beet tops 16 £™ Q ;trna Spinach is still 30 cents a P«£- J£V cent 3 a beans are 15 cents a quart "*£™ Quart this dozen. String beans are only 10 ce~" • a i Jeek. hut mushrooms have Jumped to SI a P Potatoes are $1 a bushel, wh lie *<*gtj 15 fetch 15 cents a quart. *»"**"*"%,£„ r . n t3 cents a quart, on on, the me. egCT *%*% * krnelon9 r.tLrsrJ ~r^ malntaln3 Its pries of 25 to 85 cents a bunch GLEANINGS- 'It is said that Sandrlnsham House ts jo .be- Queen', whole English life and J* l^ tb £ h S to Sves of her children and p-andch.ldren. There i to the Queen and her daughters They _na walked, motored, ridden. «rt— **^??*JZ miles in every direction around ,top Pi n? to take tea at some wayside !n« or rot tage when too far from **?«£*'!££££ when the bmer woma- calls for tea. Natura.ly the Queen loves her Norfolk horn-, and 1 . ne,^ -o takes such a deep Interest. The people who are- working for the suppression of street noises are perhaps rejoicing over the news that Paris is to be bereft of It. *~* ---J; clans, the Prefect of Police having forbidden the Is suing of any new licenses to them ' P lct " reSqU^ nn U _ siolans. but all are not well pleased, and are asking If it is not possible to carry the anti-noise crusade too far. There are some people who *?***«'£ of their morning sleep by the singing of th« > ■• «a* but shall they therefore be suppressed? Cranky people who write must blame some one when their thoughts will not Row. and their wrath in conse quence descends upon the street musicians but must other people therefore be deprived of these cheery sounds? A silent city does not altogether appeal to everybody. The snorting of motors, the cies of newsboys, even the hideous racket of the streetcars is a kind of tonic to many urban dwell ers, and they would feel as If they were living In a desert without them. SPECIAL ""'EUROPEAN COLUMMS. Foreign Resorts. WATtPLOO ..nXTIO* f% "* 1 1 1\ A i ttt > I The Metropole M if /a li! llr 1111 »-? / NEW LEADING HOTEL 81 Favorite Resort of m V ft OS MX m m m Sk>^ M 9fi ■ ,_: I Distinguished Americans. 50 yards Iron Bath*. S3 &. %^! *&& m / S a ■ ■ JJJ 1 Sanitation & Private Bath» by Mort. New York. ™ ' ' Proprietor M. Lehr. ITM^ leat " ai -- — HOTEL ANGLETERRE JL-^iIWJIIK-J' Bronchitis, Etc.—Garage-SUITES WITH PRIVATE BATH mm i~'S/ I A i^ ■lAI3 C I I I? J>4Mllnjc Hotel. Carlton Bestaarant Amtr. and Eal. J§& cA >> LA"vnAr &t»LL Society Patron*. Bnl la AH. Garaee. M GRAND MONARQUEhL. Dni?II!TI1?1VT Leading Fashionable Hotel of Dresden. fCc^"llni» Private Baths. Garage. Fine Garden. Cental Station. The Continenta MAYENCE-Hotel de Hollande —On Rhine— J Best position facing Steamer Landing and EVERY MODERN j Public Gardens. the Leading Family COMFORT ) House. Suite* and Room* with Private Bath, FRANZENSBAD. Hotel Kopp's- Konigsvilh (SUITES WITH PRIVATE BATH & VILLA BEAU-SEJOUR iNEWi PATROMZHD BY ROYALTY, AND BEST AMERICAN SOOETY. .MOTOROaRAOE. KRIU2NACH S THEJTO^gg^ "^^ (HH.PRFNS BBKXAKCS K.iHw.tv : r»i..itny- Ffnokfnr* Wwf p. f T ry I? \] o] T^L™ uS ? 9«9 «L OFt i U IS Iml I m W "*» Futisr a uratsT no\n » X ill 11 V 1 l\ Superb Locution. Man* R<» a* jg W «. J j \Mm^ 1 ' O ** lth B«stbs. Own Mineral Bdtri •a) 2 1 <£- *■"* H^ * 1 •""■" * J Hotel. Large Hall. 4uto gar j«j«» ni issFFnoßF park HoteH^^^ mJ \*J *>*J *%*J M— 4 ■— 4 m-J \~r K\ m. C.KAND OPE.X LOCATION". AFTOOAKACS ' Running Hot unit I .-1.1 «.\ it«*r rrtvnto B;ith«. 1 DUSSELDORF R al Hotd is-^ WLP \mJ k*J M^4 M-*4 m^r \*J A O pp* Station. Careful »tudy f.T American r-a^"** merit* Mtr* A. P'.chlor — lat* Ka!»«r!>i>f. P<»rlt* H(Hii!£-EXCELSIOR HOTEL iz^Ulfii&B Open the Year Round. Sumptuously Appointed. |1 T -^ Most Modern House. Splendid Position ~\^m mm *^ —MODERATE CHARGES— j UndT Same Management as The Grand Hotel National, Lncermd ENGADINE:— MALOJA (eooo fl a) £g - Unique Furnished Private Chalets for hire. Dnlr%oO YTaTfciol **' ■■■" The Ideal Spot in Switzerland for a long stay. .1 Cl 10.1 0. %*, *£. il"lti^*< The Famous Palace Motel has been entirely renovated, and embraces every modern requbltej Private Baths, ElßCtrk Light, Splendid Public Rooms. Latest Sanitation. "etc.; an L'nrivallc* ListofOut-of-I)oorSportsmaybeenJoyed:— Golf. Tennis. Boating. Mountain Trout Flshinsr.Climf>" ing, etc., while Indoor (lames of ail sorts are provided, including t.n^lish and French BiHiarjs ,&*v! lildiiti zERM^ TT - GeRrvER6RnT • .til way a To* aioat picturesque and delightful Sutnner Report ■ ■ " at the U—i af the MatUrkom tl«7»j ft.) -iM th* tZ»*nri Ufttali: <*&il**r "flUato Itmtm 1 ' u»jf7 H-t- awuai't I— *t>» «-v ttfdUu MOCCl*> JCIICr II ROUFF Dresses Mantles Furs 13.B0UltVARD HAUS3MAHH.PABIB. QARPET QLEfINSINa larsnt Jo th- World. ETery detail. THE ThK'^ART CO. WAREHOUSE ANT MOVING VAX*, Writ* or t»>phon« for mter«f«tln« bookVt | POLITICS FORGOTTEN Democratic and Republican Womea W2X Work Together for Jefferson Statue. Democrats and Republicans smoked a nlpa of peace at the Hotel Majestic yesterday a.*t-rsoc« when the Woman's Democratic Clnb c->brat-4 presidents' day. Mrs. John 3. Crosby. tHa r * m " dent told the visiting president* all aboct tr.e Jef ferson monument that her club Is goin? to erect, and said that Mrs. William Grant Ero^n. pro*. flaw] of the Weal End Woman's Republican Cab. was going to help. A chorus of approv^ ' "™* this statement, and M.S. AU'-e vsa -J~n^ who had Just heen made an honorary member, *ul; ■-We can all work for it— Democrats and Reno** We can an ««» llcans a have petitioned the Board of Alders:ea.'» -Wa hav<- petitioned OW Bon —sV< said Mrs. Crosby, 'to change the name of devaaOf avenue abov^ the park to Jefferson Boulevard. a=4 we propose M place ■■■■'■ monument at the "* ac « to the boulevard." The Jeffierson monument originated at "• r-cenn annual dinner of the club. Controller Metz. wio -* an honorary member, called attention to the ab sence of a Jeff-rson monument ta the city. a»5 the women decide to remove that reproach fross the fair name of the metropolis. Ctatrollet Meta subscribed $MW to the cause an<l Mrs. James Hajjea rave another 5"-™. The Controller is a rr.eab-r o* the monument committee, and the meetings **• held in his office. The Controller promised to tnsta!! "he -,«w o«scer» yesterday but he did not materialize, an 4 so they didn't get Installed. There were about f*er.ty-2va presidents present, among them betas Mrs. W'.illass Cummins Story, president of the City Federation. Foreign Resorts. EUSTON JUTIOV