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— ~~rZr*n anfl wholesale trade- coinins ports of • : cities continue to sFiow &|P Mjy^^g* of condiaons 111 the differ •Vide d . l "^ en Taking the countrj- as a U *&; , la or these-dlffer 5* 1 * »£T volun.c of transactions Is preat. 5 - ra^fna* taring the first half of & cr ?#!r-to this by their increase of 12.1 t'sy inaa» l^ vhli( , bark cle.inngs at New rer < :eI ": b vcr cent lower In consequence v-orfc *" ,*|A" actlvlty. thero is a gain or 55*^ outside of this city. Financial *» SffSJ f^Mif.n-.K depressed, and, pending £°*£! Srtatat»« and the adjournment &*?£*£*- Oierr are " lain expressions of rfCosjj"**; \ he develoynveats cf the re 4*** * rt f the year, aad these have a jssiedcr-or S Ycsstng effect, upon that £«■« or «Inn«ide'.^ which is tlj« vital ae t^' 3 "**,! • Sdustrial aud trade prosperity. «*="£ Sic doubt* are thoFf of the contest Mao=S *"" " ra «es. of the effect of loan ex cver railroa- » v»c?t on farm land* and if»S«|s aJ L r ei" c tfi and of the results of E^'JSoVai --^- and abroad. A raa^'^trV like this is ne\-cr-free from creat coa-"* ; anS lhc records Eboxr KS' «» «- «** a , d " usis \v ss e lf .^gX P«- sl *-'p. orf ii a3a 3 trade shows little to ;1 "' : " at n>w York during the latest charge. •* amounted to $:7.i17.TG7, an ex week fflg^'Jo over the .xp^rt.-. The tat c«s °- «- c v. as lhe imports, exhib- J^^^the last two years. W;tre«« «vs: -J" £t j;i rule* in trade and many lines CU '^,s"v -"hue fpecuiatlon. except in d cu ±ems in a vKiting stage, pending C 72^' \Tf«- of ultimate crop and price d eaT( 1,, Relatively saost activity In Job csiccnsfv, te centred in meeting current •*• %T^nd fall business still lacks form. £eir '*? t*kd« has shown some pain at :cad **&s££ Markets, but Is still classed as 6 • ' \.. ■ .-. :.s l-nseasonably cool **►•- is very commonly assigned as the trace. Jmt there are «*' ,* P lvjd«r. •.•;':.«■ fJpns th.at uncertainty *1» prices holds back future commit inllll*,.^'-,- best trade "reports come from 8 varttVePt '.'.:' there is rather more *:* r at' ••■"■'' Western- markets, though col** tret weather was a bar to activity at C l£» ' dtics. Southern trade is. on the E ?i» s"eh\lv better. Eastern advices are 55Lrti:ic in fOme lines, but 6i quiet g^iS trade as a whole. LIVESTOCK MARKET. New York. May 27. 1910. I isrrTES— Ew?!ps6, 115 cars, or 1.14S head. *^T .j. 100 cars direct to slaughterers and Vr «n* The markit; - cars on sale, all at »* - 0 ' c '; lv Trade slow for all sorts and *"* s-*d* rric< -f r,o more than steady; 4 cars S^S steers snid at *6SO!jjsb i»*t lUO 1b; SfiVf b'-!!s. f4 cows, $:H^ «"*; *^«'st<i be** cull at 10912 c per lb tor *'."!£. «id*«. •Ea'.«st-rrivat«> ca:>los from lx>n iS'rnotealive c*K»« al l««Xkc per Ib. dressed !<• *'" ' b<-el, "^'■'"•c -tr lh. Exi'orts from this port Sat 1■ • "05 ■ cattle and l.^'.*C quarters of beef. I gg^L«t.mwßntan A: Co.: l^ lVnnsylvania f^« -"■' ft average. $S per 100 lb; 1!». JifV IIS"; >1- "35 Jh - *'-^ --• "5* *"*. «n. jji Ohio. 1213 »\ *: c.:.. 19 Ken >,"..;«■ 's $7 40; 10 bulls. 1045 lb. $.". ."<); }i,rV ro Ib. iM2S: 1 Wisteii cow. i:.'"i bSM-'^ S7» :*■-. M3oi I. * lb. *4 1 •". ; ■ • - ... Jt>s ;■ . *■". 1". T. T'l'i a J S _, ro~n-i!"'cn Co.: 23 «sisti!>ry fed Ken l"S7 !h. $<? *.:.; 23. I<«7 lb. W«3; |« M). S4 Ind- 18 Pennsylvaala stwrs, 1256 lb. r«v -11 ll« £ <7 35: W OU& 1-JOS lb. Mv I*V WIS I*. 1^30; 13, 9W lb. ?t> 80; - I'-t RSO lb J4!^: 2 cot. S . 1050 Ib. WSO; S. i-;*li) fW: 7. W4 lb. M3O: l. 1030 lb, 14 »; 1. In ib. $4 10: s - 954 Jb - $;i7;;; J - 720 tt T*J)ia * Shannon ; 21 ■ -vivaria steers. i vult ,- 50 1 bull. 1430 lb. $5 r... t fibamherg & Son: 5 Pennsylvania steers, S?^f*ci.: 2 oxen. US 3b. 5650. li.^^i—K^fTirti 1 . Jt74, includinp 400 for itaßßket Veals actire snd higher; butter sk.a!n:'«fr.on:inaJ and unchanged. Ordinaiy rrtoTe veals fold ax *Sso©s»So j>«r WO Tb; ,••■■» r«t£*T- a * ew buttennUk*. $5 75. Dressed ««i?:i\P4ni higher: city dressrd veals. HVa S^yerTb: country crossed. 10®12',jc; dressed fcaf'nriiks, l^^'alHsC. ■ i,i(c_c c an ,j,=rs- Sfi veaif. 134 Tt> avcrap-e, iwVw^: I^*. ». S9; M. »25 Tb. .« tt 75; §Sai/J3 fti W; TT bctMindlkß. 152 !b. $5 75; r^d'calf 2-Vi ft,"f*. . Sta **!han«"n: PS veals. 131 Tb. f3 2f.: 40. atV»? 2.JW Q>. s"* >.. lfi rulis, 112 It-.. $«. S. Jafli & Co.: 74 veals. 142 Tb, $S 50; 1 cull. *vn IVAMBS— Beeeipti 20 cars, or Ufitm of which .Vs -oere for the marhet; 9 an to stle. Eheep snd lambs slow to 2T>c low ir- trflag tombs, SBc lower: pens wcr« rot t.«^>d S*«> »W at f4fi?T»2S r?r I'"^ ta:t-s J7f f! J : Foath*>m spring lambs, $10 .V>. : . . lrattnn lower, at .^Sllc pfr Tb; cr«sed Jcste auM. at 14517 c: dressed spring lambs, 17 ( Kerr.s ('on'.mis^iorj Comparsy: S">3 Vir rsli f?nr.c lamb?, «S Tb average, |MSO per lOrt f"w Maryland. «3 Tb. flO5«; 3«4 Buffalo tit?, fl T!\ S7 7S: 143 <"»hio,"7S Tb. ?7 75; 2 Vir pi.B'it! f7: f> Virginia s=ht-er. ISS R». |4SO. Mta i- Shrxnnn: 222 Ohio lambs, £7 Ib. ?r ( 25. MS&emm & ■<"r" r> •: 31» West Virginia sprinß lew. €5 Ik. EHM; R W«Et Virginia lambs, <S t. B*: * Ts>st Virginia fheep, 115 Tb. $4 75; 20, j.j jh, $4 jr, HOfiS — Becetptß. 9 ears, "r 1.721 head. Ia- Mbg l*e« than one-half car for sale. Feeling hta-& Jucd i Cn.: 10 stat* hogs, 1.7 ft. 11 OTHER CATTLE MARKETS. 'tMasft. May 27.- f* ATTL3— Rf-ceipts, LSW: rajy- «:~=rs f<s 2C.f?»- <J0: tons. ?4 si* i'&"fcf!frre. $4 2.">'S"4»i'7.'»; bulls. $t r*ofrs4 f«»; ahi fSJJfcS."; F'"ckers and feeder?. 7."«7 tlte POGS -Recc'-rts. 15.000; market. 5© 10c ls!sr: rhnic^. h^avy. SS n,%G*!4 00; butchers. t-EJfSC^: light nixed. $»SO@JSSS; choice. j?: ?:-:">■ r.a'-kinc. si' .V'Ss:» ",r«: riR- s - $•■• CHC: huik of saies. SH oUgSS) 60. SHSEP-R* cep«, 6rt>o' sheep. ~*>c. Inwtr: lamiif Flea'ly; fea,Sl3SesS4d: yeartlliK*; S6@s7; lair.bs. t'-'S 1 tmm Otr- May 27.— CATTLE— RrooiptF. ->.. tecluclrip 7(.<« ?nut*ierr.s; mßrk«t Ftealy: tt« fipcrt and Areraed t-e*-f rteerß, M - '"<r IS;fdr to gooi. $5 <*!$?" j0: Western. fr> 8-"@' CS; «;o--k^rs arid ffpders. $4 SOQfC 1.'. : South «« J4?sTir.- Boctbern cowt. .- -'■.-■ H«g)ltO: hetfere. $4 7C-aS7.TS: I'ulis. Ha J- Bh-«. Jl TiOS^7 75. HOGS — F.f .?^ipts. :?/)i«J« «tat-SClBc h;?h^r: top, t&T-n; bulk of sal^. t"?j9ss : h M vv. $840@f9S0; rack»rs and to:-.-i. J9SOJ-S;. 4f. ; litf,'. ?& 2Tj-:jso :-': pips. t* f 'StS2t> BHEEP— Hecelpta. i.l'JO; market •%; laatc. S7^S."«; smarting*, $.*fis ( > 3: ■An, J4 fc ( fsjr, J9; fives. $4 2."Qf "> SO; Btockem ?S»'aai?. May 27.— f'ATTLE— Pupriiv lleht; tt Ea. 1*305 J'-V'. prim<». {•■?$ i ' !'■*>. 6HEKP — tiir; prin>» wethers. $4 W.<&V. 1<1; culls C: «siT'^.. t2^s2 50; lambr. S^S?^; v*> 3! »f'J $51-f>«:4S. HOGS— Receipts hcht; r>riir.<> w^io. JnfliaTr.s. h*avv Yorker*. $!<7.": light -«P!«. ri«B, C9«o@s9 6&; rmirhs. (585875. tacianati. May 27.^-OATTL.EJ— Re>-«ipis. 575: "■* lae-Wgber: Jair to Alppera. *G 409 J^ 1 : ewtaaon, |SS@SSS. HOGS^-K«oeJpW. •S.fieady: botchers and Bbtopera. $•+ 4T>f2»f',t r.O; tsa ? ! *. J*>7' - '7*ft .Vi ?HEEP — Receipts. 3' ! S; •»% »sd «jtii*>t. $^7."a54 75. LAMBS— Active «« Buffalo. May 27 CATTLE— Receipts. 7^: "Ky- VEUlJ;— j':rr.-!pf 2,<J00; active ar.d r* BOGS-Hecelpts. 7^9; artiv* an-3 .-"Q *»»:: h^avy and muefd. S3 7of ?9 SO; York- SS?** I * s ; ri^s. $s»^t&-*ii *O: rouehs. W«5 g^.'. stars, «750©<8: dairies, $»305f»75. ■■■:■-.■ LAMH.S— Becefrts. l f '.<Xx»; slow; ''■''■•' etui tnix*:! Fhr«p. 2Sc.: •neth^rs. -Jik; Ffaiy; yariincs. SCtj^CSO; Vv-eth- ebeep, r^x-Q, fZ@H 75. "■SAGO GRAIN AND PROVISIONS. Siajo, j: 8 r 27.— The rigMmare condition in w*"*'- Ir »> efreared vr> this afternoon to a *P fiyrrp*. Lisht in th* wav of r=Trr»r,£H>«; \\ milling- ir.t"rt.«rp help*'! steady gWjl* wight nerves ctf the pj-eculators. Ise- Cs«ai a!ft> that holdings had all ...■.-. JU 58 - or at ka-t f r, reduced ai no longor to **9>teCMffiaLt« menace. Firal forar*^. ho«- .-• i.tha-jirh sharp]]' above tho l^w point of fi..*' **'* J ss/^>-o '» **c un^pr the previo-js j*lor -;«•»• crop futures^ and 2=siQ3o down for t..' /"wi 'r,!sh<-!l -upihanp*"/! to i%c f.ff. and J? V lower to Ha I,^1 ,^ high-r. Provisions gs*»tvme« rf ]r,-!i47 1 -c. Th» Bwt calm- SyMet in the «rhe«t fit wa? ar. nuthorlz«d kx"!?*"* 1 hy * h * «pf'-B*ed« p f'-B*ed l^adrr of th* w* 11 * 1 J^'«rr»>r;is ressniinc his holdings r * »ai., a *. r *" jl ■■ »■'« lo»eii had boon err-atjy «x- X?* l«J«y came- a surprise. IlroKfrs aci- the fina -ni?h -ahich he wa« conr«>ci»d SffM to i* Mriair.c op com. »!though fle (;«'. ic s at the tiiii*> araa unchpfked in vibfat tJr* «*!= risiU« tviiirr.ee of h.-avy aeUias *Jn^ T - tT lor<; 6n<-rs in this imarket. Rang* T; re •-■ U^^t: Qpe^ njrt JiOT . Clop*. day. S ?1 <(4( 4 Jl <i 44 $1 <o>i ?1 fC l 4l 4 $1 OS iJ m\ 5.4', -je-s, :>sw «'4 cL'.'" •• 63 -x !;-■» M%- IC's '^3 •^-■•- Win r *4 r,f,'4 s«'i t7H iv, i 6"'» '&U S7V SS'j ■'■ 7 « la, »» ss ?.t'4 '3RH 39% t-,* 27* S7 ! i 7AH. S7H 37 l i 35ifc 3 C », 23^ SC S4 SfiV. •qi '5 20 124'! i 2 "V> }2 */> 12 CO f,^'. :2: 2 2f UZi li 05 12 i 332 10 i^— v.--»a I2M i?2n i:m 12 20 V. 12ly 1-30 1207 1*33 12 01 Lv* ; C 4 22 r.2 21 ?iS X"2 22 fiS ' 2. S><> 21 M ~- SO -5 &i , FOREJGN MARKETS. y *JS~ " 2V2 V *■ -WHnAT-Spm dull; No 2 1 . r-°r -° stwk: futc-es iteur; «SUtf2l" : Jul - V - °" <:^rt- Oct..l<-r 0s «;'id. {* H*?S*r: .--!<! Anericaa mlsSedJ 5s 7'id; S2rL*?f ''* «<W: via Galvwton. r,s Gi. " 3 « »Ir^:« jL!v - r-'»nic3l.r -'»nic3l. PEA.-S— Cars«<lian. :fe WllW 11 - I "" 1 ' liii«-r.ts. 2^s !».i. HECK TT-^rs i^'.° nT"n T'"'- '-'" POHX— rrirac mess. ? f f< •'- ; }I<i f"H la Txmif n <PacUlc ro=st). 3*w2m "***«— a»il cat. 77*. 'ISACON*— s^Sij*V ri *: "J»«1 ril.. Va *A: «rl«r l^rr ;•> CVC V l0T3 ? --l«-ar ir!(301->B, il^ht. 72« M: ,:^—£.:,.f"' jrr '•-&.- 71* 'id .^iioui— ■"'^a-id t • P* I-AKTJ- Pr!rn« V.>~t»rn. - : r 1 •***• S««rtßr«i S7«. TAU p*- >h 2r ■ ;l*-«»e.; l *-«»e. £~Jlb~ Jl b 5S^- «X»TTOXs"KETJ OlL— Hail B*£^ "-FrG.«r.-«i:fw.-Bin. 12s M: i ! m %V'*y-3i-r<-. 55€ 3A U>'SE3ED I fiS-te*?^ $!*•■ Slrtta. 7.?. TIJaPBX ! 7)7 )S * fl - •!« Cr 42 *- r'' I-0.-IX— Anieriraa [v '■"-■■■■■ PE T^9-'ipM, 13 frrncs S3 Hy^ 5-^5 -^ 27.— OlEtSi;— Steady; fodiere. THE MARKER TOTAL DOMESTIC RECEIPTS. New Tork iiav " 1 7 lain IS" l^Wli Crease Lk«'"" o^i J; opp * r - X>ce...... R.giS g~£ £S::;: ;:SSr- s r- •••,s>. ; cases 21.Ui» Hidns bale« iS : T p«Utr>. pkgs 890 Hidet "W Oranges <Fla>, c» JUS i Orar. ee3 <Cal,. c» S.Ol^nd^CaU.^bls &^ EXPORTS. iP^iillll Be^f bbls "■ T^ IMb oil, ° I . sals. 18,205 • DDis - •-•■•• 13 Lub on. gals 31.900 CASH QUOTATIONS. Ir^ n & iffwSi^si •.N01.^r... , sugar.' g^nul^ed 5.25^ SRjgiAa s^jLard.Mdle W est. 12.53 •Nominal. _»El»vator, domestic basis. GENERAL MARKET REPORT. < -..'. >R-R -* IN mere was rLther'kJui and price, eariy declined sharply. ««* of 1% ej% c fro. n the p,-; i11■%,.-T*- representing a total decline of i?,* 9^ from the high point of the sea £?"„, * -ilmp was heavy at times and sentl- i IT/i V^f S^ beßrif:h 1 - Late In the day the mar ;^, V™' ,'- regaining part of the loss and clos.ng at a net decline of *i@2»ic Liver- SbSi^S riemnrallsod at the opening, but after sorting at a decline of about 2d rallied and SSS^ft^ftS^ low Of 1 S*X%d. Argentine x- K,?J the week wars L 968.000. against .•.!».<««> th«. previous week and 1,776 000 last «*i^ ; </, ust r alia shipped 765.000. compared V-;. '" ' " : " : - ( " ( - " . and India reported UUAK??: =iC«?<nsi ?S«.000 last week and 1. ■ l-OOA last year , Reports from Chicago said that 300.000 bushels of wheat had been sold lor shipment, and exporters reported 20 loads o. .Manitoba and durum wheat worked on the decline late Thursday Cash wheat here weak. Va 1 ,, QUOt -e, Si 04--, nominal, c 1 f. and V« nrt 7 1 ' 51 V % nominal, *o b. CORN ■; early, but late in ihe day values do c.ar.^d Bharply, closing »t a net lOSS of %ft 3> < "" , N \ : corn here. G6«c nominal, elevator^ corriestic basis, and export No 3. <>}i-c nom taat f o h. OATS-Moderately active and rfi^r', aosta« He lower for May and He de cllne to ♦ 1 c advance for the other months. «* - -J^ ,£ ere bmr * l V steady; natural white, "1 .'° /-? ,} b " . '!'--' * d 44^40c; clipped white, "* 1. ,4-V, 4 -V ' tt® 49c - Ktteat. including flour. exports for the week, according to Brad ~mV,% a , wreinite 8.594.144 bushels. a g Bins t 2.V18.165 last week and 3.1K2.809 last year; -i;:;;.: 11 -.- V 183^ 31 - 25 ! bushels, against 188, i«ik -i- 5 -tr/ CC SSS S0 X- , Corn • exports for th- M-f»v -Zx' •- ?io£ v , sh * :!? - against -'.-'.009 last ,N. . ,-? nd " - < ' ■- la -°t year: since July 1. 27. .,.-..!.., against 2a.919.578 last season. XEIV VOKK PRICES. Wheat: Open.v High. Law Close T " a e % r Ia - V *1 "« 51 06 y, OfrH 11 054 $1 08 July- ...... 1 02-i 1 O2H 1 <«n\ 101 -C 1 02% fcepu-mber. «9 m 974 *9^ I S2 Corn: July.. ... « »* ■• s i m% «7% Sept^ber. _ - _ _ 66!s 67 INTEUIOR RECEIPT.*. T -_- Wheat. Com. OatF. Jo-cay 287,000 423.000 4*l mo ' Last v.eck ■ . . 277.000 S^.OfK) 606.000 Vast 3" ea 278.000 9.000 530.000 SEABOARD CLEARANCES. Trl , Flour. AVhcat. Corn, ; 22.000 104.000 39.000 last w*pi 7.000 24.000 4,001) jLa«t year 21,000 IMMMD 32.000 COTTON — was a further decline early V.ut the prompt Flopping of May notices In *7ired fresh confidence, and the market later haa_a sharp advance, May gelling up from I 4I 4 V' C .,-° 10<l7c - whUe July rallied from 14.70 c to 14..1.K-. The close was steady, n-t 2 points low^r to 10 points higher, near months being : relatively firm, just as they had been r-::, tiveiy easy during- the earlier trading. The market will be closed to-morrow and on Mon- I day, while Liverpool and New Orleans wiil be open for business as usual. Southern spot markets unchan^d to -»c lower. To-day was ihe last reg-ular notice day for May contracts. but cotton can b<? delivered on short notices up to noon on Tuesday. Weekly movement f.g-ures: Port receipts. 66.293 bales, against 106.780 last year; overland to mills and Canada. 12.839, ajrainst ig.149 ] ast year; Southern mil] takings estimated i. 15,000, against 30,000 last j yf-ar; loss of stocks at Interior towns, 20 170. ; spainst .";."{. '•lll last year: brought Into sight for the «fek. flri.C^:!. against 123.120 last year. i Toial crop movement: Port receipts, 6.987, 403 bales t~>~> added t, against ;m;35.505 last year; j overland to mills and Canada. 755.556, against ' 1.1 7*.: r.'il la?t year; Southern mill takings, 2,035.000. agairn 2.24 A.600 last rear; stock st interior towns in excess of September 1. ; "U0.7".!. against 177.660 last year: brought Into Fight thus far this son, 0.027, 71<t, against 13.231,960 last year. Local contract prices: Ytstrr- Open. High. Low. Close. day. May 14>7 1.1.07 14.75 14.95f£14.9A 11 '-^ Vane .14.M1 14.83 14. v> 14.f».".'514 0«> 14 5 3 July 14.80 14S4r. 14.70 14.92@14.fi3 14. August 14.53 14.02 14.44 14.5K&14.C9 14.56 Rejnember. 13.42 13.49 13.35 13.4tVg13.4S 13.48 j October 12.72 12.70 12 67 12.75512. 12 74 ' November 12.68 12 «'2 -.';" •;. '.'s 12.65 12.64 December .12.52 12.."59 12.50 12.55ei2.56 12.56 January ...12.4S 12.55 12.46 12.53612.54 12.53 ! March ... . — — — iL'.-.0-all'.-.s 12.35 9pot ' qu!et. with prices .% points higher, at 15.80 c for mldiiling upland arid 15 55c for mid dling Gulf: sales, 5, _" dales Liverpool caMfs: Pl">t ri<.:':»x; palps. 9.000 bales, including 4,000 late y*-st<riay: pj>er»-jlat!nn ■nd export, 500; Ameri can, £,0<»: called, 1,000. Futures opened quiet. 5 to 6 points lower: closed steady. 3 : i to 7 points iower: May, 7.7;tVsd; May-June, 7.7-i. Juri»=^-Ju!y, ~AYi l i<i: July-August. 7.''2 d; August- Peptember. 7.37 lid; September-October. ts.nM: OctObwr-Xovember. fi-74'.id: November-Decem ber, a.6Gd: I>foen.ber-Januan'. <'..''4- ; January i'>hruary. fi.t^'^d; February-March. 6.61 . March-April, 8 61d. ( OKI'KK — Oui*-t. with operations largely of a holiday character, as the exchange will be rio.-»>d to-morrow and Monday. Sale?. 6.750 baef=. with moderate offerings and some little hu>ing for foreign account. Tl •• feeling was Et«adi«r. :ir.d prices at th#> clnst- were un- i changed to 1 point r;et higher. European mar- J-:-1p Ftc-ady, Havre showing an advance of l i frar.c ami Hamburg <-'.OK«?d unchanged. It -, v c a holiday in Brazil. Several thousand ; May notict-s «•«* Issued during the day, but had no infiuer.ee c:i values. In spot there \Kp.f= a ir>o3erat* demand for Santos, and pries ■were firm. ttio quiet anrl unchanged on the basis <>f SUe for 7s. Local contract prices: Tester- Opr-n. Iligrh. Low. close. day. Kay .... - — — HJ lone "' — — — 6 20&6.25 6.20 i,.. v 25 6.25 6.25 6.20«6.25 620 \UKUft '.'.'.'.. — — — 6.30f«.35 6.30 Beoteraber . — _ _ ,-.:;.-.'., C.35 October.... _ _ _. C.4o<g«.4r. 6.4. Nov^rnbvr... _ — — e.40e«45 8.40 December. €.50 6.50 6..." 6.45 ' a fi. so 6.45 , January. .. — — — 6.4866.49 «47 i . ■ . ._ is. « «51«-fi52 '-■■■ . . -.- r:; ,; r,4 A prfl ;; 6.55 66* 0.55 6.55"6f1.56 654 I ioi li AM) ME.VI, — Inactive and unset tled' Spring patents, *5 30@ $'"• 4'); winter Ftraichts *4 705i?4?5: -winter patents, $5© «8S: yi'rlne c;^ar?, $4 356*4 80; extja No 1 wintrr *4 lOffj $4 50: • xtra No 2 winter, $.t S.» 111. Kansas straights. U 9QQ |5 05. RYK , FLOi;R-BarHy steady ; fair _ to , gond. S* «© *. .(,■ choi'-e to fancy. $4, 45«p»4 55. '''-," MEXI —St-ady; kiln dried. •:: .V BAG MEAL —Fine white and yellow. $1 40.. SI 45; coarsf. SISSeSISO. -W«tern quiet: city - Si atf ;"^ V-og *,■:■, , ■ hominy chop. $24 50 bulk. $25 70 sacks. OILMEAL, $:C. nominal. PROVISIONS .- and aside from . a ' mmmmmt $l«r,0«t«l7; AMS i n iT*c r.is'«. I3«ic. CCT MEATS-Pi.-kied •— !• .1. * mfiica 14 r.n, . Cfr.tlncnt, J...40.-. j «"»■ *«£* A 7r^c: V-ompound dull at 10« ! ]<;"■■" WWBK&%O: oleo. l»©l«c; city 3a ,•■■•■ but unchan E with ? { oriiula'.O quoted Bt 5.1T.C net. jess rtAOdsr d Br3T l"' a ' T h«, r^ «as a mor« active 1 P<r <-em in OV( , r holiday supplies. 1irl " "L™ w!t^ "intrlfugal. I*o tert. »t 4.27 c; Ilaw firm- wu., jr^a lasaes sugar. ravsooj* o«^Jl* - y h V London market for beet *? tr \% y \.ns"n^i md uncljaneed: May and JgS!ffl d lwi^«tt«! market, steady "'b» S-OOPrEft-Ktnrdardlmrely .toady: | • Mi\- -nd Junr-. 12.43012.55 c; Jub. ; 13.47%^ J2--«; t -\ l .'^v] 3 cd; future. £57 1-. don ea,s> . Kp i'.V"V 1 3e • trolytlr 12.63U9 Lake copr'!". l-'j».,' ' ---jo^oc TIN weak;, B3«: July- :i2 ' )0 * r f. Xo n49 15s: futttres. fir.l. , IStaAan f a*>' : *P?h ".4«e4 sOc N>w York, ...Co^42-."?f JTlast 1. 6 p RLTEH eas, ,pot. B d warnati . so i foundry N-,rtn ,„ ', k $i«W«t!T»: *• J NEW-YORK DAn.Y TRTBU>nE. SATURDAY, MAY 28, 1910. $18 75. Pig iron certificates -uacha.ng.ed.,_N.Q sales. ■ . -• MOLASSES AND SVRirS—Steady end un changed. . - ..." . : . NAVAL STOKES— Spirits turpentine steady, but quiet. Rosin , and tar • stead}': and un changed. : ' "-" ■ - OIJ^s — Linseed oil unchanged. Refined pe troleum steady at 7.75 c for standard white In barreln at New York. , ' . . i COITON.SEEI) OIL — Quiet, with gales of 7.100 arrela, Prices closed at unchanged to : 0 points decline. Local contract prices: Tester- Open. High. Low. Close. day Spot ' — — — 7.00@5.20 7.«0 June — — — 7.0008.20 7.90 July 7.81 7UI 7.00 7.80^7.112 7.91 September... 7.«8 7.56 7.80 7.87@7.50 7.SS October..... 7.3S 7.30 737 7.5&57.41 7.42 November... 0.85 085 0.85 O.WO^O.SO 6.8!> Dpcember... 0.54 6.54 6.48 6.53«tt.5S 0.r.9 January.. 0.00 6.50 C.40 0.54^0.(53 6.60 ■ COUNTRY PRODUCE MARKETS. New York, May 27. 1910. BEANS AM) PEAS — Domestic white beans selling slowly and feeling easier. Outside quota tion reached only In a small jobbing way. il ar row hoid firm; most of the business is still at $3, occasionally exceeded in a small way. lied Kid 1 ney strong; last sales at vi 75. Scotch - P«as i firm. BEANS, marrow, choice, bushel $3©'s3 00: ! fair to goud. $2ttO<(Xj;2l)s; medium, choice 37}* 952 40; pea. $2 37iS©$2 40; fair to go»d' $2 25© *2S2H; Imported medium, $2 10352 20- pea, i if:2 15e>2 25; white kidney, |2«3@#3 ; red kidney, I |ia7os^^3 75; yellow eye, $3 15; black turtle soup, 1 £-' 10© 2 85; lima, California, $3©130j- PEiAri Scotch, bags, busnel. $2 15i#$2 17 4 : — Receipts. 7.588 pUgs. General movement slack, and a good deal of stock will be carried over. Feeling steady on top grades of fresh creamer}', but easier on medium qualities, which are In better supply. Process well sus tained, and a firm market for both factory and i packing stock. Creamery, specials, n>, 29c- ex tras, 2bHc; firsts, 2»c. seconds, 27&27Hc; third* SiSi-J**** dairy tubs, finest. 26c; good to prime] : -:O«aic; common to fair, 2SViO2Se; process, spe jclaJs. 2ftc; extras, 25^25Hc; firsts. 24c; seconds, l»c; Western imitation creamery, firsts 24©3Sc j factory, firsts. 23 Vic, seconds. 22 ! ,-2!g.2ac; thirds. W*B2IH«; packing stock. No 1, Tl\ic; No -, : 22c: No 3. 20»*&21c. t HEEbE— Receipts, 2,638 boxes. The report of a 15c market at Salamanca Thursday had iitue influence here. There is uneasiness as to the outlook, although fancy cheese cannot be | bought under 14\.c. At that buyers are able to make a pretty close selection and little cheese Is commanding a premium. Skims steady on top grades, receipts liberal, but a fair movement, Mate, whole milk, new, specials. 15®15^:c; S?f2r colored or whits, 14^tc; average prime To *® 1 c: fair to Sood, 13@14c; common, 10<8 ir,V oid as *O quality, lC@Kc; skims, specials, «*«: fine 10%eUc; fair to good. 7?i@t»Uc; common. oH©7}ic; full skims. 2^g3^c. tGGV- Receipts. 21 - 95 9 cases. Market heav ily supplied. High grades about steady; medium urgently offered at .irregular prices. Graded \\ esters sell chiefly from 21@22c, with rare lots or extra lancy a shade higher, but bulk of sup ply of ungraded is freely offered at l9H©2olsc, v,lthv ,lth sale* at about 20c. . Dirties and checks sieaay. htate. Pennsylvania and nearby, hen nery whites, 24@2Cc; gathere-i. 22%©25 c; hen very browns, fancy. 23323Vic; gathered, 21 *4® -- 2c; fresh gathered selected extras 23 '^c; storage Packed, extra firsts. 21&@22c; firsts. 21 n"V » c iojC r^i- gathered extra . firsts, 21<g21%c; •,!'sts, 19 ' 4 / 2l) '«. c : seconds. lS^(gl9c; thirds and lower grades 17618 c; dirties, No 1. ISc: No 2 and poorer. 16®17%c; checks, closely selected, ? -£T,-L 17c; cnecks and cracked, average best. Poor to fair. 14g16^,c. talf!? 1 "S-^HIED— Home trade has been it.ng bold of spot evaporated apples a little more freely. and the market is firm at former quotations. In futures the country is not. offer ing' Probably November delivery prime could ntn >t .be sold over 6\c, but nothing to be had at V ,„„ "s?i. re - Kpr>t chops firm. Waste unchanged. APPLLS. evaporated, fancy. Ib, 10c; choice, tt@ BSic; prime, carlots, 7c; Jobbing sales 7@7Vlc; common to fair. 6®«^ac; IDUB. 6^@fjc; cores and skins. ICX> ID. $1 65g?l 73; chopped. I<X> IT). $1 «0@ }175; APRICOTS. California, Moorpark, 12® lS^ic; Royal. 10H@12c; PEACHES, peeled, 15 ©lbc; unpeeled. 6g-«Vsc; PRUNES 3®7'4c. . FBMTS— FRESH— Apples weak. Peaches In i^-nt euppiv. Huckleberries steady. Strawber ries l@2e higher. Oranges and grapefruit firmer, rwp cars of watermelons have arrived. Musk- e .i^^o s:car ' \. I'in-apples in heavy supply. AIPLES. Northern Spy and Baldwin, bbl. $4® f^vi^^ning, 5 3W >-255: Ben Davis. $3@s4; russet, V, t^lftv common. $2'g>3; Far Western, boxes, glTOv*3fiO; PEACHES, Florida, carrier, $2® »-o(>; Georgia, carrier, $2 2Ci<gs3; CHERRIES, sweet quart. 10©15 c; BLACKBERRIES North Carolina, quart. Js@>l7c; HUCKLEBERRIES. 12 gifc; STRAWBERRIES. Jersey, quart. 6f 0c ■ aware. Maryland and Virginia. 10c- Nor f- -K. Seec; ORAXGES, Florida, box. *i 50® f? °?i. X- allf ? rnla ' fl 50g?4; Porto Rico, $1 4 off W; (-iJtaii. $1CO@«8O; GRAPEFRUIT. Florida, £SL* 2 f* sSo; Cuban. ?2®ss; Porto Rico. $2# Sf2 ; Jamaica. $1 60©53 12; Nassau. $160® *?.?!,: MTJSKMELONS. Florida, crate, $2«ss! WATERMELON'S. Florida, in bulk. 100 $40# f J^; In barrels, each. 75c@$l ; carload. ' $40U@ California, box. 51 05543 85; i A? « PLES - "° r^a. crate, $ljfsl 73; Cuba, SISJ2; Porto Rico. $lfgs2 50. HOPS — A little better undertone, owing to more inquiry from brewers. In California some low grade Sacramentos have sold at lie and prime to choice Sonomas at 14c. Contracts are also being made at 12c in Sacramento. In Orgeon it is very difficult to buy good quality under l]<g-]2c, with little business reported. In New York .State there has been a little inquiry ana a few sales around 2»V. Crop conditions continue unchanged, with outlook good. State 1909. prime to choice. 2+§2'Jc,- medium to good. 22@~0c; Pa -irk- Coast. 190&. prime to choice, l&g 1 l.c; medium to good. 14£15 c; 1908, prime to choke, lO^llc; 2SKJ7. S^lOo; 1906 5S6c: Ger mans. itX't*. «; .■»-,- HAY AND STRAW— Th^re is a slightly bet .<>r ton? on top grades of hay. but medium and low grades are very little improved. HAY timothy, prime, large bales. 100 !t>. $1 13; No 3 to -No 1. ftOc@sl 10; shipping. bOc; packing:. 60© we; clover and clover mixed, (iOcgSl; STRAW, ion? rye. 66#70c; snort and tangled rye, 60c; oat and wheat. f>Oe. 1 rOII.TRY— ALIVE— Receipts, 2 cars of Western by freight and a few- scattering coops ! by express. With moderate supplies and a good demand the market has cleaned up closely and feeling firm, especially on fowls and roosters. Nearby broilers fairly plenty and slow feeling weaker. BROILERS, nearby lt>. 33-IF35c; West ern and Southern, 33c; FOWLS. Ib 19c- ROOST ERS, young and old. 12Vjc; TURKEYS 10gl4c- DrCKS. 13c; GEESE. 10c; GUINEA 'FOWLS. pair. We; PIGEONS, pair, 35c. DRESSED— A fair quantity of delayed fresh fowls came in to day, but with a good demand the market cleaned up closely, and more could have been sold than here, tone firmer than earlier in the week. Broilers in moderate supply and steady. Spring ducks and squabs have cleaned up fairly well. Frozen poultry quiet. Fresh killed — TURKEYS, Western, average best liens or toms l«c; fair to good, I6©I8c; BROILERS, Phlla., fancy squab, pair, 6T>@suc: fancy. 4 It) to pair and under. Ib, ■i'" : Peon.. 35c; Western, dry picked 30fi35c scalded. 28628 c; FOWLS. Western boxes, dry, 48 Tb and over, dozen, l&c; Si\ to 42 It) 17Hc barrels. Iced, cry picked. 4 lb and over. 18c: small. 17c; ecalded. fancy. IGc: Southern and Southwestern. 17^c: other Western. Fcalded, 14 .•;>: COCKS, old. lb. 14c; DUCKLINGS, spring. Long Island and Eastern, th. 21c; Perm.. 20<g21c; SQUABS, prime, larg-, white. dozen. $2.'.Og'S4; J. or. dark. 12. Frozen— TURKEYS, young toms. 1Vo2fl~; young hens, 18@2T>c; old toms. 23Hc; CHICKENS, broilers, milk fed. 23®28c; corn fed lt>a"2sc; roasting, milk fed. 20Q'23c; fryers 16@ 20c; com ted, l«©21c; fryers, 16217>6c" FOWLS cry picked, 13<gn*e- COCKS, old 14c POTATOES AM) VEGETABLES— New po tatoes in good demand at steady prices. Old film. Onions show irregular quality and value Asparagus less plenty and higher. Beets and carrots steady. Cabbages plenty and very low. Cucumbers 25c lower; receipts heavy. .Mush rooms higher. Peas sold well at steady prices; scattering sales aliove quotations. String beans la excessive supply and low, with more southerly Bt< k generally not worth freight. Tomatoes largely poor and prices low. although strictly fancy sell well. POTATOES, new No 1, 52@ $:525; No 2. $1 60fi$l 75; culls, l@sl 25; old bb< or bag, Sl@Jl 50; ASPARAGUS, dozen bunches, 75c@$3; BEETS. Virginia and South Carolina. lU<> bunches. $3354: North Carolina. %?.-!. .«:i 50; Bermuda, crate. Soc@sl; CARROTS, South Carolina, 100 hunches. $1 ,r>oigs3:, r >oigs3: Bermuda, crate. T."< 'i.?i. old. bbi or bag. (2e5278; CAULI FLOWERS. Southern, half- bbi basket, Soc@sl hothouse, dozen. $1 SOOS2; CABBAGES. Eastern Stiore. crate. 50©75 c; bbl, 40i@CV; Virginia, crate. 50@75c ; bbi, 40@60c; North Carolina, crate. 40@ 7. r »c: South Carolina. Flat Dutch, crate, 50@7. >c; Wakefi.:d. 40960 c; CrCITMBERS, South Caro lina and Georgia, basket, $msl 28; Florida, 76cS $1; hothouse. rt>. ?1@?2; CELERY, Bermuda, California -a*. $2-354: EGGPLANTS, Florida, box. $ISO©*2 SO: GREEN CORN. North Caro lina, crate. ?l«i?2; GARLIC. New Orleans. 100 Th. $50jr.; HORSERADISH, 100 Tn. $2©s3; KALE, nearby, bbi, 2. >650c; LETTUCE, South ern. basket. 15#28c; nearby, bbl, Soc<gsl; LIMA BEAKS. Florida, basket. $2<)s4: Bermuda, box. Sl&K; MUSHROOMS. 4-lt> basket. 40eS?l 60; ONIONS. Bermuda, crate. $1 12SS1 75; Texas, yellow. 75cS?l 7.".; white. 50c§?l B0; Egyptian, bag. C175&J2 25; New Orleans. 70 m bag, »128; OKRA. Florida. carrier, S2Bs4; OYSTER PLANTS. 100 bunches, J2if?s3; PEAS. Jersey, large, basket, ?1 r.o(ff?2: small, Jl®sl 00: East ern Shore, large. flfiO@sl7s; email. $15T$1 25; Baltimore, large, $1 37@$1 82; small. fiOc@sl; Virginia. large, half-bbl basket, 75c@Jl 2T>; sn:all. r,ik- '';$!, North Carolina. 50cSfl; third basket 60g75c; PEPPERS. Florida, large box, $ n 'as3: carrier, ft 25©$1 75: PARSLEY. New Orleans, curly, bbi. S2@s3; plain. $2 50M3;Ber muda crate, 2S#lße; lit -MAINE. Bermuda, crate 50675 c: RADISHES, nearby, 100 bunches, 50075 c: RHUBARB. $I@*l 60; FCALLIONS. 50 (R7sc: STRING BEANS. Virginia, wax, half-bbl basket $1250*2; gr«*en, round, basket, $1 ".'•'* $'»25- Bat $1 25'3.«1 50; North Carolina, wax, third basket. 50c@$l: prrwji, 75c8?l; South Caro lina, Georgia and Florida, green, basket. 50® 75c" wax 4f>'&<"<>r; New Organs. oft / B7.'»c; Ber muda Italian box, s<)p: SPINACH, nearby, hbl. aoeeoi SQUASH. SfflU-thern, will!*, box. fi^ 1180 basket. 50c«fl: yellow, box. $2©s2 50; basket 51 50©12: TURNIP?, rutabaga, bbi, $1 75 e*2BO: white, new. 100 bunches. r.Oc@s2: TO- M CT >F.S Florida carrier. 75cif?$l 7.">; hothouse, fb SSlbc: WATERCRESS. 100 bunches. $1® SI "0. BOSTON WOOL MARKET. Boston, M.iv 27. — "The Commercial Bulle tin" will say of the wool market to-morrow: "With the exception of 1,000 or 1.100 bales of low quarter blood South American sold by two local houses to 11 prominent New Eng ia-!<* mili at He, nothing of consequence is b«fn« done here this week. Business is gen , -i.,, very quiet, tho leading mills of the country being opposed to operating even at bottom price* The Boston merchant can neither sell wool In quantity to the manu .-'..•.'r-- nor buy the wool In the West at Prices wjirranted by present conditions. •••small sales of Ohio fleeces are betas made v- ; »'»c for quarter blood and at 290300 for f,: r . C !,!hs and half blood, but it will not l,e surprising if values d*c!!n« still further. ;>■• r . outlook I« not favorable for c materially Increased activity within .near future." The Rhlpments of wool from Boston to May •>n Inelu-ivr. were *n.72:i.4:.s pound*, against :JS 114 713 for th« earr:^ time last year. The J*oVipt»UO May 26. inclusive, were !»2.537,:M!) [.ouTids against 140.770,707 for the same period last year. T PRINT CLOTHS MARKET. Pb!l River, May 27.— Sales. for th« week es timated 'at from 60.000 to 100.000 pieces. The i .Vi'iiv of buyers to place orders for narrow ' swi* n account of the lnrlUpo*ltton of th« K<^ M ' c - „« tended ">in''.vhnt to hold down th« »vVv output Small fairs of wide styles Z?f£V£diy*l practic-ally ur.-htm?fd price.. there <- some little- inquiry, the sr»n ii Vnn» Is PtiH quiet and steady. Quota r*' X .'""t.inrrV 04 Squares.- 4c; 2S-Inch, 64x«0. g^aSH^lncb. 04 *iuares. Chic; SO-inch. CSx IS. 05AC. CHURCH AND RELIGIOUS NEWS NOTES Holy Rood Congregation to Have a New Building. The trustees of what Is locally known as "Th« Little Church at the Old Fort," at Broadway and 180 th street, yesterday voted to accept a very large offer for the church and Its site. The exact amount ls with held for the present, but it Is known that it considerably exceeds $200,000. The prop erty cost S.X"" 1 " 1 fl'torn years ago, r.mi there was added one building five or six years ago at a cost of about $10,000. The church is officially known as Holy Rood, and is the only one of the name in the United States. It is the furthest north of any Episcopal church in Manhattan, and, unlike all but one or two in this dio cese, it Is controlled by trustees, instead of a vestry. The rector is the Rev. Dr. Stu art Crockett. Because of its location it has become historic, even if less than twenty years old, Fin^e it occupies the site, or a part of it, of old Fort Washington. The church is a small stone one. built chiefly through the devotion and liberality of the Rev. W. O. Embury, an Episcopal minister who at one time was connected with the St. Saviour's Lodge, now gone, an ecclesiastical retreat, with the founding of which he had somewhat to do. Under tho leadership of its first priest in charge, who came from this retreat, it was exceedingly ritualistic, surpassing even St. Ignatius's and some others, but of late years it has changed its forms of service not a Mule and grown in its local support. Six month? ago the trustees purchased a new site, less noisy and in a better resi dence district, at 179 th street an.i Fort Washington avenue. It is the purpose to erect a new church in the English peipen dicular Gothic style, in which some feat ures of the Washington history belonging to the old fort will be retained. Indeed, it is near enough to retain its historic title. It is said that the new church in Fort Washington avenue will cost $125,000, be sides a parish house and rectory, to be built later, costing as much more. NEW CHURCH SCHOOL Community of St. Mary Lays a Cornerstone. Acting for Bishop Greer, Bishop Par tridge, of Japan, last week at Peekskill laid the cornerstone of a new school for the Community of St. Mary that is to cost $200,000, and be called St. Mary's School, a consolidation of a school of that name in th's city with what has been known as St. Gabriel's School at Peekskill. Taking part in the ceremony were the Rev. W. F. Lewis, rector of St. Peter's Church, Peek skill, and about a dozen other clergy. Following the ceremony luncheon was served, and the affair was made a village event. For more than thirty years the commun ity has maintained St. Mary's School, in this city, a preparatory school for g!rl3. Its location came to be undesirable through the encroachment of business blocks. St. Gabriel's School was founded by the same community In 1872. Now the two are con solidated. The new building will be Eng lish perpendicular in style and its material red brick. The community of St. Mary was established by Harriet Starr Cannon, French by ancestry, who had her training in work among the poor of the lower East Side of this city. The community has grown until now besides this school at PeekskUl there is St. Mary's Hospital for Children in this city, the House of Mercy at Inwood, seaside homes on Long Iplar.d and in Connecticut and schools In Wiscon sin and Tennessee. There are two prov inces, Peekekill having the novitiate of the Eastern, and Kenosha, Wls., that of the Western. NEW BAPTIST PLAN Laymen's Movement to Take Up Mission Work. At meetings held in this city, closing yes terday. Baptists or the country, represent ing fully three and a half millions of mem bers, mapped out a missionary- policy de signed to utilize the new interest which laymen are showing. Unlike some others. Baptists voted to include home as well as foreign work, and they created a general committee representative of every part of the country. This committee is made up of seventy-five from each of the three large Baptist or ganizations, Home, Foreign and Publica tion societies, and they generously conceded fifteen of 6eventy-five members from each organization to the women, representing the women's organizations. The new order of things is shown, therefore, in a mis sionary committee of 225, 180 of whom are men to 45 women. It was decided at the meeting held here to call the new venture the Baptist Lay men's Movement, and to select a little later an executive head, who snail be a layman. Sitting with the committee were members of an apportionment committee, another new thing in Baptist affairs. A part of the work planned for the new movement is a campaign among Sunday schools of Baptist churches of the country. Incidentally the schools are to be apportioned $150,000 as their annual sha^e of the money to be raised, and that was the sum fixed for the first year, but the principal aim is to give to children education along missionary lines. GENERAL ITEMS OF THE WEEK. "An Id«al Community" will be the sub ject of Dr. Burrell's sermon in the Marble Collegiate Church to-morrow morning. At the evening service he will preach on "Heaven." The Rev. Dr. John Lyon Caughey will preach to-morrow morning at the Harlem Presbyterian Church on "The Triumph of a Prophet." There will be a special mu sical service in the evening. At the Collegiate Church, in West End avenue, to-morrow, the Rev. Dr. Edward B. Coe will preach in the morning and the Rev. Thomas Mcßrlde Nichols will preach in the afternoon. The Rev. William Powell Hill will preach at all services in the Church of the Holy Communion to-morrow. The Rev. I. M. Haldeman will preach at the First Baptist Church to-morrow morn ing on "The Holy Human Temple." In the evening his subject will be "The Dis pensation of the Filling Up of the Times." The Rev. Edgar Hubert Masse wiH preach at the evening service of the Church of the Transfiguration to-morrow. Dr. Harris's sermon at Temple Israel to day will be on "Salvation To-day." The Rev. E. T. Sanford will preach a Memorial Day sermon to Kimball Post In the North Baptist Church to-morrow. The pastor will preach at all services be fore the Fourth Avenue Presbyterian con gregation in the United Charities Building to-morrow. At the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church to-morrow the Rev. Dr. J. ilunro Gibson, if London, wili preach. Dr. Gibson is pas tor of St. John's Wood Presbyterian Church and comes as a delegate to the World's Sunday School Convention, now meeting in Washington. He is an ex- Moderator of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian church of England, ex-presi dent of UM Free Church Council of Eng land and the author of many we.l known books. At the Brick Church to-morrow Dr Henry van Dyke will preach at 11 o'clock, t..e Key. Normao Thonms ft t vesper aer vlcp at 4 This ls Dr. van Dyke s la»t i Sunday In the Brick Ch»rch pulpit this j Fumraer, and tilth next Sunday's services | the summer ei.rpli?s beirln. Dr. Albert j Parker Flt< h. president of Andover Theo- ; logical Seminary, will preach on June 5 | and 19: Dr. Hugh Black on June 12; Dr. j Hujrh K. Walker, or I.cs Angeles, on June j 26 and July 3; Dr. Franclg Brown, president of Union Seminary, on July 10 and 17; Dr. Harris E. Kirk, of Baltimore, on Ju'.y 24 and 31; Dr. Rockwell Harmon Potter, of Hartford, Conn., throughout August, find Dr. Robert Mar-keneie. formerly of the Rut gers Presbyterian Church, throughout Sep tember. At the Church of the Puritans there will be a missionary service to-morrow even ins, at which members of the Student Vol unteer Movement and returned mission aries will speak. The Rev. Dr. C. J. Young will preach at the morning servlct. Ths regular communion service will be observed at the Madison Avenue Reformed Church at the 11 a. m. servlre to-morrow. The change has teen made from the first Sabbath in June to the last Sabbath in May because of so many starting for their country homes the. first of June. In the evening at 3 o'clock the last people's popu lar service for the season will be held. In the Old First Presbyterian Church the Rev. J. A. McCague will preach to-morrow on "The Trading Servantß." In the even ing George Washington Post, G. A. R-, will hold a Memorial Day service. The Rev. Dr. William S. Hubbell. chaplain, will ppeak on "The Precious Memories of the Veteran Soldiers." At St Andrew's Methodist Episcopal Cnurch the Key. Dr. J. A. Patterson will speak to-morrow at the morning Sfr\:'-c In the evening the Rev. Dr. George Clarke Peck will deliver a patriotic sermon. Dr. S. Parkea Cadman. at the West Side Young Men's Christian Association to-mor row afternoon, at 3:M o'clock, will con tinue his eeries of addresses on "Parallel Characters in History and Literature," tak ing for his subject "St. Paul the Apostle, and the Character of Sidney Carton," from "Tale of Two Cities," by Charles Dick ens. All are cordially invited to h^ar this most interesting speaker. The Rev. Dr. A. Edwin Keigwin, the pas tor, will preach a Memorial Day sermon in the West End Presbyterian Church to-mor row morning. Subject, "The Blue and the Gray." At 8 p. m. a special service in honor of departing new missionaries will be held, with addresses by the Rev. Dr. A. W. Ha'.sey and Miss Daisy Campbell. \t the Church of the Messiah (Unita rian i, the Rev. John Haynes Holmes will preach to-morrow at 11 o'clock. At the Church of the Ascension the Rev. Dr. Percy Stickney Grant, rector, the ser vices on Sunday will be as follows : Morn ing service at 11 a. m., with preaching by the rector. At 4 p. m. Haydn's "The Crea tion" will be given by the full choir and special soloists, under the direction oi Rich aid Henry Warren. After this week the special musical services will be discontinued until October. The Rev. Andrew F. Under bill will preach. At 8 p. m. there will bo a memorial service for the Grand Army of the Republic, with addrppses by Dr. Grant and Alexander Irvine. At 9 p. m. the after meeting- will be addressed by J. B. Yeats, an ultra-Protestant. "Tho Human Side of the Catholic Church." There will be a special musical service at the Harlem Presbyterian Church to morrow evening, the musical programme being entirely from Mendelssohn's composi tions. At the Scotch Presbyterian Church there will be services morning and evening. At 8 p. m. the pastor will exchange pa!pH3 with the former assistant, the Rev. Harold S. Rambo, of the Home Street Presbyterian Church, The Bronx. A devotional meeting will be held on Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock, and on Friday evening the recently organized Boys' Brigade will give a full dress drill. At the Fourth Presbyterian Church the Rev. Dr. R. C. Hughes will preach to-mor row morning at the 11 o'clock service, and the preacher in the evening, at S o'clock, will be the Rev. Dr. George Alexander. At the Church of the Incarnation to-mor row the Rev. Dr. W. M. Grosvenor, rector, there will be services morning and after noon, and the music, under direction »f Warren R. Hedden. will Include at 11 a. m. the prelude and andante, Fourth Son ata, Guilmant : Te Deum m G, Knox ; of fertorium, "Doth Not Wisdom Cry?" J. H. Rogers : organ postlude, "Grand Solemn .March," Smart ; and at 4 o'clock, evening prayer, prelude ; "Pastorale, " R. Strauss ; Magnificat and Nunc Dimittia in B flat, Stanford : anthem, "I Will Lay Me Down," tenor solo, Buck ; offertorium, a festival anthem for soloists and chorus, "O Joyful Light of the Holy Glory," Tours ; postlude, allegretto, Rousseau. Dr. Grosvenor will preach in the morning, and will give the lecture at 4 o'clock service. At the Park Presbyterian Church Dr. Anson P. Atterbury, the pastor, will preacn to-morrow morning at 11 o'clock, and in the evening at 8 o'clock the Rev. T. F. Carter, who is about to start for China, wlil speiik en "The Missionary Outlook." At St. Mark's Church to-morrow morn- Ing the offertory anthem "God Is Love," by Harry Rowe Shelley, win be sung by the St. Mark's Quartet. The service and sermon will be appropriate to Memorial Day. The closing service of the Emmanuel Healing Mission will be held at 8 o'clock in the evening. The pulpit of the Collegiate Reformed Church of St. Nicholas will be occupied to morrow by the minister in charge, the Rev. Malcolm James McLeod. • A Patriot's Song" will be the topic of Dr. George P. Eckman's address to-mor row evening in connection with the vesper sarvice at St. Paul's Methodist Episcopal Church, West End avenue and S6th street. There will be appropriate music by the choir. The service will be comprehended in an hour. The pastor will preach in tho morning on "The Truly Great," a sermon for Memorial Day. The subject of the lesson-sermon in the Christian Science churches to-morrow will be "Ancient and Modern Necromancy, Alias Mesmerism and Hypnotism, De nounced." At the Lafayette Avenue Presbyterian Church. Brooklyn, the pastor, the Rev. Dr. Cleland B. McAfee, preaches the fifth of a series of MtMMM on thf Sermon on the Mount: "The Safeguarding of the Mem bers of the Kingdom of Heaven, Regarding Quick Judgments. Religious RsMrvt ar.l re ligious Poverty." From May 29 to June 3 the International Young Men's Christian Association Train ing School at Springfield, Mas.-*., will cele brate its twenty-fifth anniversary. The training school is an unusual institution, which has grown up in response to modern social and religious needs. It has a threa years' course of study, enrolling 166 stu dents from all parts of the world. Twenty of these young men are from countries out side the United States and Canada. Them are twenty-six in this year's graduating class, most of whom are already under ap pointment In (Vina as widely separated as Dulny, Manchuria, the Panama Canal Zone. Quebec. Ontario. Boston and Colorado. To-morrow svemng at 7 .46 o'dlock, tho 335 th praise service will occur, when the music from the oratorio "Elijah, by Men delssohn.- will -b«"; sung, at th« Lafayette Avenue Presbyterian Church. Brooklyn, ? At Plymouth Church. Brooklyn, the Rev. Newell Dwisrht Hlllls will preach in the morning a Memorial Day sermon. In the evening. Dr. Hlllis will speak on "The Elo quence of the. War. Period, and Its Influence Upon the Emancipation of the Slave." To-morrow mnrnins. at 11:15, Dr. Ste phen S. Wiso will preach at the Fre« Syna gogue on "Heroes of P^ace; or. The Hero isms of Daily Life." This will b« a Me morial Day address. At the West Presbyterian Church the Re'-. l>r. A H Evans, the pastor, will prvach to-morrow at 11 a. m. on "C'.«*r nexs of Vision." and at S p. m. on "A Working Faith." . At . the Metropolitan Temple to-morrow the Rev. Dr. John Wesley Hill will preach morning: and evening sermons appropriate to Memorial Sunday.' At 11 a- m. his sub ject will be "Our Decorated Graves." At * p. m the following Grand Army of the Republic posts will attend : John #A. Dlx Post, Peter Cooper Post. E. D. Morgan Post. George C. Meade Post and Farragut'-i Squadron. Dr. Hill will speak on "The American Flag." There will be special pa triotic music by the large vested choir at both services. The Rev. T. R. Slicer will preach to-mor row mom ing at Al! Souls' Church on The Way of the Moral Life." At the Broadway Tabernac'.e the Rev. Dr. Charles K. J:fTer«in tv'.U pr°a h to morrow mnrning at 11 o'clock. 'n the evening at 8 o'clock there will be an ad dress by Dr Arthur J. Smith, of the Evan gelistic Committee of New Tork City. Dr. J. H. Oarrisnn, of St. Louis, editor of "The Christian Evangelist," will speak at the morning service of the Lenox Avenue Christian church. Dr. Garrison has been the most influential man among the Dis ciples of Christ in the last quarter cen tury. He Is en route to the World's Mis sionary Conference at Edinburgh. On June 4 Ar.-hbi=hop Farley will dedi cate the new school, Marymount. the gift of Jan-.es Butler to the Religious of tr.e Sacred Heart of Mary. The sermon will be preached by^Monsignor Laveile. Follow ing the ceremony will be a reception by the pupils for his giace and the other dis tinguished guesta present. The Rev. Dr. S. Edward Y"ur.s "'ill r.reach both morning end evening in the Bedford Presbyterian Church. Brooklyn. His morning subject will be 'The Mission that Makes a Charmed Life." Tr.e Herta fcophs of Brooklyn will attend the evening gervico, when Dr. Young will preach a special sermon, entitled "All Sharing the Loads of All." A congregational discus sion will take place at the opening of next Wednesday evenings Fervii » on "How c«n We Make Our Church Influence Most Effective During the Summer Months?" The Rev. W. Merle-Smith will preach to morrow evening in the CssstVSj Presby terian Church on "Our Choices; or. Life's Real Crises." In connection with the Protestant oath of the English King, the Rev. James A. O'Connor and C. Whltley Muliin, of Brook lyn, will be the speakers at the Reformed Catholic services in Christ's Mission to morrow afternoon at 3:20 o'clock on the subject. "High Treason of Knerlish Cath olic Kings." The Rev. John Pon? will be the preacher in French at the Waidensian service in Christ's Mission at 2:30 p. m. At Calvary Baptist <~*"hurch, under the direction of Edward Morris Bowman, Cal vary Grand Choir will give to-morrow evening at S o'clock a programme of music on the topic, "The Praise of God in Nature." The Rev. Donald Maclntyre will deliver a short address. "A Patriot's Song" will be the topic of Dr. George P. Eckman's address to-mor row evening in connection with the vesper service at St. Paul's Methodist Episcopal Church. LAW INSTITUTE ELECTS OFFICERS. The New York Law Institute held its annual meeting tn the library at the Gen eral Postoff.ee Building yesterday. The fol lowing officers were elected: President, United States Circuit Court Judge E. Henry Laeombe; vice-presidents, Justice G-eorge L. Ingrahar.i, of the Appellate Di vision of the Supreme Court; former Judge Addison Brown and John E. Parsons; treasurer. Robert Ludlow Fowler; secre tary. Jordan J. Rollins; members of the ex ecutive committee, class of 1913. Robert L>. Deyo and William H. Harris; members of the auditing committee, Joseph Fettretch, Theodore Connoly and J. Brewst^r Roe; members of the 1911 nominating committee, Thomaa H. Hubbard. Benjamin N. Car doza, Everett P. "Wheeler, Edward S. Ra pallo and Louis Marshall. NEW "MET." MORTGAGE TRUSTEE. As a result of the recent merger of the Guaranty Trust and Jlori"n Trust com panies, complainants in the foreclosure Buits against the Metropolitan Street Rail way company. Judge Laeombe, of the United States Circuit Court, consented yes terday to the Farmers' Loan and Trust Company being substituted, and appointed it trustee of the mortgage for JI'J.OGO.OOO made to the Morton Trust Company, and dated March 21. 190?. The Farmers' Loan and Trust Company, as such trustee, will continue the litigation started by the Mor ton Trust Company. RELIGIOUS NOTICES. THE MIDDLE COLLEGIATE CUTRMI. '2A Aye. and "th St. Rev. JOHN O. FAGO. I). D, Minister, wi!! preath at 11 A. M. and 8 P. Jf. THE MARBLE t'OI.LEtiIATE (HIRCH, sth Aye. and 29th St. Rev r>AVin JAS. BURRELL, P. D. Minister, will preach at 11 A. M. ar.d 8 P. M. Mon.lng— "An Ideal Community" Evening— 'Heaven. " THE COLLEGIATE fill' II OF ST. NICHOLAS. -•>- A---- and i- ■ St. Rev MALCOLM JAMES McLEOD, Minister, will preach at 11 A. M. and » P. M. THE WEST END COLLEGIATE CHURCH. * West End Aye. and 77th St. Rev HENRY EVBRT.-ON i 088, D.D.. Minister, Sacrament of the Lord* Supper wil' be admin istered at 11 A. M. Rev. EDWARD It. COE. I) I) will preach. Rev. THOMAS MeBRIDB NICHOLS will preach at * :3 ° P. M. Subject: "Bread from Heaven." FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Broadway and 79th Street. PASTOR, I. M. HALDEMAN. * m— THE HOLY HOI rEMPIJC." a p" Sf.— "THE DISPENSATION OK TUB FILLING IP OK THE TIMES: OR. THE (iKEAT SECRET OF (.OI) PI RPO.ME TO PI 1 ALL THINGS IV » HEAVEN VM> IN F4RTH INTO THE HANDS OF CHRIM AS THE IMMORTAL MAN WHO IS GOD. \Nn TO MAKE THIS EARTH Hl.* FINAL DWELLING PI-AfE AND < ENTRE OF THE I M VERSE • . ' trinity Cburcb Sunday Services: 7.30, 10.30 a. m. (Sermon); 3.30, 8.00 p. m. We«k day Services: 7.30, 9.00 a. m.; 3 P * m ' CHURCH OPEN ALL DAT The public ts cordially Invited to th« 9«rvtc«3. both on j.i ii and on *.-.* day*. CHIRCH OK THE ASCENSION. Fifth Avenue and Tenth Street. Rev Dr. !*ER«*Y STI'-KNKY GRANT, Ttertor. 11 a m.— Mornln? service and »»r;r.<.ri tßector). 4 i- m.— Haydn* Tr.» Creation." Rev ANDREW T. TNPKi-.HiT preacher. b D m Memorial Service for the Grand Army *' of th« UeruhHe. Dr GRANT and Mr. .ALEXANDER IRVINE. s-r«»K*r».- ■ od. m —Mr J. B. YHV.\Tii. Th« Hi«nao Std« of the CatiioUc.Clsiircb." RELIGIOUS NOTICES-, FIFTH AVENUE BAPTIST CHURCH - - 8 --Wot Forty-sixth Street. . »- "r The Rev CHARLXH F. AXED. T>. D.. Mlal*te» Services at 11 and i '■ ' -."--if. __ ' M ? rr -.--■ by R*v. Dr. V.. H. F FAUNCE. President di Brown Unlversl:"- Evening:: Dramatic Recital o! the Boost el Job. by Prof. JOHN DUXBURT. of View* College, ET*!and. . - „„ »-__ BIBLE CLASSES, FOR . YOOO MEN ANT TOI'XG WOMTEA AT 9:30 A._M ; , . v CENTRAL PRESBYTERIAN* CHURCH. West 57th St.. bet. Broadway and 7th A v^. Rev. WILTON MERLE-SMITH. D. D:. Pastor. R<»v. G. I! SMYTH. Jr.. Assistant. Dr. MERLE-SMITH pr» .11 ■>"*•«« « p m E«- < •object: "OUR CKOICEo. OR. LIFE'S REAL CRISIS." Christian Endeavor meeting Sunday mftrnfn* at 9:-4>: Sunday School. 3 p. m. : Devotional meeting Wednesday eve.' af 9 ALL WELCOME. KQRTH PRESBTTERIM CHURCH Re»r JOHN r! "mvi Ph. 0.. Pastor 11 a. m.~ "Tha TriiUtjr of ftsllaioo."^ FIFTH AVENUE PRESBYTEHUM CHURCH FIFTH AVENUE •>■:■ =• WITH ST. Services at 11 A. M. and 4 P. M. Rev. J. Munro Gibson, D. D., U. D. Pastor St. John'? Wood '•».. — -.ir, CburcS. of London, will preach at both services. STRANGERS ARK CORDIALLY INVITEP. Madison Avenue Baptist Church MADISON" AYE COR. 31ST STREET. . . CHARLKS .-%. EATON. I) D., Pa*tor. 11 A. M.— "Present Problems Ja Our National Life — an "We Solve Them Without WarT* 8 P. M. -"The Gentle Art ot Self-Torture. wttl* Various Strsrsesteii improvements Thereon." strangers cordially invited. Madison Sq. Presbyterian Church Madison Avenue and 24th Street ■Rev. -C- 11. PARK HURST. D. V. fasts*. Rev. G. R. MONTGOMERY. Ph. D.. Assistant Minister. Sermon by the Pastor to the newly appointed Foreign Missionaries. 11 a ra. Dr. RICHARDSON, of India, »M preach a p O. The Church of the Divine PatenjJty. Central Park West and "6th Street. The Pastor. FRANK OLIVER HALL. D. D.. will preach at 11 a. ra. Subject: "A Hood Soldier or the Republic." A *ermon for Memorial Sunday. ; 10 a. m — Address In the Partsh H»us» by General James R. O'Beirne. upon ••Recollec tions and Logons of th<» Great Rebellion.'* UNIVERSITY PLACE PRESBYTERIAN Church, cor. of 10th st. <*ne block west fram Broadway >. GEORGE ALEXANDER. D. D. Pastor. — Public. worship to-morrow at XI a ns. and 8 p. m. At the morning service the Pas tor will preach. At th* *v*riin«- service He*-. Edgar W. Work. I>. P.. will preach. S?ervlca> preparatory to tl>» Communion in the Chapel. Wednesday evening ut 8 o'clock. ' ST. BARTHOLOMEW'S CHURCH - Madison Avenue, corner 44th Street. The Rev. LEIGHTON PARKS, D. D.. Rector. 9:34 a. m. — Holy Communion. 11:00 a. m.— Preacher, the Rev. R. S. W. WOOD 4:00 p. m. — Preacher. th» Rector. Special Musical Service. Fourth Presbyterian Church, West End-ava. and Slat ft. ED OAR WHITAKER WORK. D- D..- Pastor. P. ELWOOD ERICKSON. A*?istartl Rev. R. C. HUGHE?. D D.. will preach at 11 a. m.. and Rev. GBORGB ALEXANDER. P. P.. at 3 p. m. Calvary M. E. Church, 129 th Street and Seventh Avenue. Rev. CHARLES I* GOO DELL. D. D., Pastor. 11 a. m.— Sermon by Pastor. 8 p. hi. -Memorial Day. Service. Address by pastor before Lafayptta Poet. G. A. 8.-. arid ether Veteran organizations. . ■ OLD FIRST CHURCH Bth are. ltth to 12th st. -■----: HOWARD DUFFIELD. D. D.. Pastor. 11 o'clock service. Rev. J. A. McCAGUE. 8 p. m..- Memorial Day Service. George Washington Post. G. A. R. Address. Rev..WILLIAM S. HUBBELL. D. T. - MADISON* AVENUE METHODIST EPISCO PAL CHURCH. Corner »M>th Street. REV. WALLACE MACMULLEN. D. D.. Pastor 11 a. m. — Preachint* by the Pastor. Bp. m — Special Musical Service, at which the Cantata. "A Song of Thanksgiving." by J. H. Maunder, will be, suns by th» choir. ' ___^__ Broadway Tabernacle, Broadway and ."16th Street. ! The Pastor, Rev. CHARLES IV JEFFERSON". D. D.. wUI preach at 11 A. M. S P. M.— Dr. ARTHUR J. SMITH will speak. Wednesday. 8 P. M.. Prayer Meeting. St. Paul's Methodist Church, Wept End avenue and S6th street Rev. GEORGE P. ECKMAN. D. D-. Pastor. II a. ex— "THE TRULY GREAT." S p. m.— VESPER PERVICK: Special >lds<e. MADISON AVENUE REFORMED CHURCH. 57th st. and Madison a.v« . Rev WM. CARTER, D. p.. Pastor. 11 a. m.— Sacrament of Lord's Supper. 8 p. in.- Last of People's Popular Services for th© season. Quartet, chorus and congr?ja> tional singing. Address by Pastor. BRICK CHURCH Fifth Avenue and Thirty seventh Street. Dr. Henry van Dyk«> wll! preach at 11. Rev. Norman Thomas at Vesper Services at 4. Midweek Service.. Wednesday.. » p. m. m CHURCH Or THE .MES^LJ.II . (UNITARIAN). Park aw. and £4tti st. . Umitt<>r , jßev. Robert Collyer. Lit. D. Ministers.— , Rev - V)hn Ha: . ne3 Holmes. 11 A. M.: — Morning servtee. - _• — R»v JOHN HAYNES HOLMES will preach. RUTGERS FKKSBYTEKHN CHURCH. Broadway and 73d street. Preaching 11 a. m. and a p. m by th« REV. WILLIAM HIR.%M FOULKES, D. D. Morning subject — An ITrar^nt Gospel. Evening subject— f<oul Thirst tor Go 4. CHURCH OF ZIOX AND ST. TIMOTHY. .•534 West .17th Street, Rector, REV. HENRY I.rBE'K, D C. L. Holy Communion : '»■ m. MorntDsr Prayer; preacher, the Reeter.ll a m. Evensong: Preacher. Rev Dr. Rushton p. in. FOURTH ATE. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, Rev. WALTER DUNCAN BUCHANAN. D. D, minister pr«aei»»a to-morrow* in the assembly room of the United Charities Building. I<>9 East 22d 'St., at 11 a m. and $p. m Mid week prayer mating Wednesday. S p. m. _ RELIGIOUS SOCIETY OF FRIENDS—MEST ing for .worship at 221 E. loth st . Manhattan. at 11 a. m. and 4:30 p. m . and at 110 Seal mi r hern St.. Brooklyn, .at 11 a. m. Naw York Yearly Meeting. 2d day. Fifth month, 23d. at 10 a m.. until 3th day, the 23th.. DR. McIVOR-TYNDALL on "The Mastery of Fate," marvellous demonstra tions In Fsye'hic and O«reult Pr.-H-.r.iena. Sunday Eve . 8:15. Belasc© Theatre. W. 42rf and B'»»y- MADISON* ATE. PRESBYTERIAN* CHURCH^ Northeast comer of 73d st. Rev. HENRY SLOANE COFFIN. D. D. Pastor. Public Worship at 11 a. pi. and S d. m. j Rev. ROBERT MACKENZIE. D. P.. will preach. ~ »mm mantra cm men. 7t>th St.. west of Columbus ay». I GEORGE CLARKB PECK. D. D.. Minister. 11 a m. — Rev. J. A. Patterson, V. V H p. .m - Scrm«r: by thg Minister. CHURCH OF THE INCARNATION Madison aye. and 35th at —Rev. W. M GROSVENOR. D- D.. Rector; S a. m.. Holy Communion; 11 a. m.. Morning S«rvic« and serrnoa ♦R^cter*; 4 p. m .' Evening Prayer and address (Rector>. ALL ANGELS' CHURCH. West End aye and Hist st Rev. S. DE I^A.Vt-BY TOW.VSE.Vt), D. V.. Rector. Holy Communion. Sa. m. Morn ms Prayer and Sermon 11 a m Choral Evea eehg. 4 p J _jn._9'.rangers w«lcem». ! KEW THOUGHT ADDRESS— B-naseo-Repubtta Theatre. 42d 9ti«H n?»r Broadway. Sunday morning at 11. Mrs. MARY E. rHAPIN. of Bom ton, will speak on "THE VALUE OF LIV ING ' Open to the public free. ' LENOX. AVEME COLLEGIATE CHURCH, c«r. 123 d St.. Rev EDGAR TILTON. Jr.. D D.. Pastor.-r-ll a. m.. preaching by the pa»f>r. a p. m., address by th« pastor to th« Alexander Itamllton Post. G. A. R. ST. MARK'S. 2D AYE. AND I«iTH st REV. L. W BATTEN*. -Rector. — Holy Communion. 9 a. m.; Morning Prayer and Sermon, 11 a. m : Service, of the Emmanuel Healing Mission. 9 p. m. ; . ~JOf>AIVWRYWS7 DONALD MACTNTYRE. m^Ll 11- - Special Sonff Perilce: T*»J:sjht mTrt. Organ Recital; Brilliant TProßramrne. Calvary C.ruxid_CSeAr : __Bovm»tK_*yita. AT LENOX AVENUE I M i AKtAS CHCKrH: Corner 121 st Street. ? ie /. 3 ftt Eleven ••Fracments from the >ea>t" Koncludj-di. Rev SIERJ^E^Tj:ROJXU'IUGHT.p.D I ,Mini3ter ~ CHURCH OP* THE HEAVENLY REST. sth aye . ab«v<» 45th st Rev. HERBERT SHfPMAN. Rector. Servleea. * sn<t 11 a. m.. 4 p. m. _ • ~^"ESTrENI>~PRESB\-TEUIAN- (HVRfM. Amsterdam Avenue and 105 th Street. Rev A EDAVIN KKIGUIN. D. I>.. Pastor. preaches at 11 AM. and IP- » _^ WZ*T r«JE.HBVTERIV> CHL'KCH. on 4"d »t.. Wf«** :>>;i an 6th ay*». Rev ANTHONY H. EVANS D. P. Pastor. 11 A M and I MEMORIAL BAPTIST. Washington Square— EDWARD JCDSON, Pastor, will preach. 11. •*Th« Ministry of Laymen." and Rev EDWARD B. SIMMONS. P. "Our Beat Memorla!." VLX. SOULS il'nltartan*. 4th ay«.. 20th st. - Rev THOMAS R. BLirat. Pastor, will preach on "THE WAY OF THE MORAL LIFE." Ser vices 11 a. m. All cordt»!!y Invited. X PRESBYTERIAN f'Hl'Rl'H. StJth St.. Amsterdam «ve.— ll » m.. Dr. AXtON P. AT TERBURY- * V m.. Rev. T. F. CARTER will speak on_^Thg_Mll»»lonary Outlook." — RGKOR-MED CATHOLIC services, Christ's Mission 331 West :\7th «t. Afternoon. 2:30. Mr. wiiit'ley Mullin's «abject: •Treason of English Catholic Kings." ; ___ ""RELIGIOUS SOCIETY OF FRIENDS — v, pt ln |f for worship. 11 a. m . at 221 East 15th st.. Manhattan, and 110 Schemerhorn St.. Br"»ki>"n . , ■ - — BEDFORD PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. Nostranf* av#. and De*n st . Brooklyn. —Pas tor S. EDWARD YOUNG will preach at 10:43 end 7 4* - ~ GR.VCE riU'RCH. Broadway sort ti>th »t- >ervlre^ at X. 11. 4 ami ». 60 HEAR DR. HALDEMAN First Baptist Chnreh. B'way and "9th St. . SUNDAY EVENING. 9 O'CLOCK. ON "The filling Up of the rime*," 15