Newspaper Page Text
I I KB a . - - DOMESTIC RECEIPTS. '•-■'"" Vetr York. June 24. :810. irf * *Cso!riu»a fCa'.). crate? 5.735 *^« *«*• ■ 'r. S*« Pear» <C*l). era.x*« 233 2-"t*« 20.672 (Peaches rCaU. crs.2i.2ie a*! • c^ji" »»»! Apples, fcb15....... 200 *Sc«si. *£2l" I.TM Potatoes, obis 44.413 cS*^ «• i Onions, b*>««... C 6 JET •■■•^ 1 1.250 ! Dried fruit, pkgs.. i.sen "V^ *£» Roatn. bbls «K> ffjf* «*»: Spiriu turPi bbls.. 315 £, !«» : e'ri.MPitcfc. bbl« irw> 5»-!P*fc «'<Ss!Tar. btji «5 5." •*•• " jJoiO : OIL Jab. bbls . 264 Jr.' £*• ' ' "** jojOieo Mock, pkgs.. r.23 ii ; - '** ; p«anuta. •«« 1.540 '■S^Vbasa 23 j Tobacco, .us.. . . 165 *£g-#*" .' ii4i Tobacco, tierces... 6 X-s. ?*** -1" «IS T •-*«• ■■■•• pkes ■ SSO C~s»a. i*n-- r»4.* Whiskey. bb!s SOS «***•"• 7©? Wool. Ua:«! • .... 45 out**- - - v . vsi ba'.^y 45 +,1 **?*•• GSiTVeol. sack*- £3 •&*■ P H< - -ton. baiea 2.165 i* 88 * 1 I tS 11.448 ;CofM«a 00. bbla. . 4.50 - -« 'rf- 4.'-<oiCoppfr. pieces .lO.BBS -ftH. Pl*P 1 *^ •"■ j«,SP- Copper a-.mtte. bags I^KT. a« •■^ I^K : BiOa. Mis . . . 450 r^^H'SSwi. 65 * ?ki =*- »»!« : - Sr7 j^'^^iv c . < (caj». bb:«.. n *£!«$■ « • ■"'■ : Er*s<3r (Cal>. bMa. So | s EXPORTS. vdi . JS^S'Fw*. bbte s« TtHr;tr S.«2!Beet fcbls SO DlffKV: X.73o!Eeef. w 4 « S -- 1 S«4" *' i E«oob. Hj SJ>.t»Oo *s»JS; !.M«^Katsa. Tfc 13.200 J^"^ J>.*J^;LAri Tb ... 21«.45<V gl%l :.02=:T*Uc»w. » t>.ooo .no*- X72.<SPiGr«a«. 254.00J 2*- X rA?.f*«fl Butter. Tb 11.103 S* 2 - m'mJs «O^iCJ-.^«^. 7b 6.240 ***SL? "-a* S.«39JOof«*d oil.- eats M.625 «S* I*'1 *' -"i"i TTT>'l.ttb cH. ja'E.. I^ll9o CAS- QUOTATIONS. v«- Xa 1 ICotioß. rcidSlns 15-35 PJJfr •• • • $: * f ~' s Coffw> No 7 , PJo S* **, V 1. V'-W i Sa:=ar. translated 5.i0 '"'-„, 2S 00 ! .-?.<*=« OK pme 40 awt- n** '■ Beef - **=»Ur — *w so ess en* «~ 22«t> IBeef, tn*ss 25 00 •_^' j^= «43 'Ta.iow. prime... €•» S^rTV S«S ! Peri. Mb . ..a a : «fv,:. . . 69% ! itaO. Mile West. 12« ie'r..:' «••■•■■' " '~2t*sSr. <ta=f^c basis. I ! GENERAL MARKET REPORT. Ne» T=rk, June _H. 1320. | itiTV—trKH AT— Active, with wide pnce *^T* Bar tier" %a3 ccr-sidsrable peilinjc 2?m MKVefßUas raises aid reports or coo i 2?*« S*i rar.;iii-n Northwest ard --uttered SeTever the ABMriOU eprinj wheat beH JH-yms hLrutvr. vrr» for faJr -Breather, ana £'r«O mrrrrr«"« report* repardinz •C—sfiSan ct the errir-r wheat Crop, caused ' — imjl hT'T "^ prices advanced rajrSS'.r. a fccshei troic the «arly fifdine. "■* " re Vjn=S ty prco?lc«"2t ceir.Tr.ission *_^ csrtna^ ty shorts. Heporta o£ r \ir.s Em cl the PrtntM cs.us*d active reaUzina iC ifffuMw «;£ lie market ioat part of tie 1»^ tst cloeni i-i a' ~' l advance cf %i@lVjic. ■ ■'■;_ wa» easy emrty. •p.iiL favorably reports iScax cttjp cr^i-H^ii« ia liussla, Arpr^ntina Syfi. but later pcteea rs":»d on predictions iiLiiMlft sti?r:«"i^. No 2 red here, $1 05 i,a. . • r to amy, and No 1 Northern, P*Vscsl=^. lob to arrive. CORN"— Active y*-s nor of tie fliy. Near the close th* — *•* s«xt*i c? • little -witt -K-heat and cio««ed rV"wrt advairce <* fc©*c No - com 6P^c K^-t.elevatiir. dorr -Flic basis to anlv-e elf. Bdjdn Hi -at CSVc nominal ob tc arrive. oCS-Tinn f*r!y. Tfccrr warn m tr ; -->-2erßtc de :*i b» zsi'T wllips. benevw. a&l prices at -4 ra*r rrsrc So ■ *o r^t tigrtier. Cash oats sa:x-a: white, 2S t« 33 r^. 445«3 4Tc: 7spi •*»* 3< r ' J <- - • 4«®49c. F.YE AND t^'.TT — XnTT! in* ' xBH KB m I - Icster itssk: Open. Hish. L-rs-. CJoc«-- dar. j -v ......Ilur" |1 OS SICS f « $j CiH JIC4V 5 .... ieC"«i 104% ICCVi lOS'j 102 V ;» 104., 105% 1O4=« 1 <J5 1W» WE !* — — o** «» i S .._.. — — €?==«, «9 , J — — €S!» Mii rvTEEIOB KTCEITTi*. rrijeat. Ccm Gets. !rij Z-^'S"" 43- i .«X» -7:-P,<>oo fir «•■ 360.003 C56.C100 335.0«» fterar CTO.O.'j 425.1>X> . . stABC 1 ' 1 ": QUBMbUBCBE FIcTT. V."h»at. Ccrn. r »jfcT u.ooo szjjoo ni.ooo W«ek-:". 54.000 DS.OOC' iT.nao irtrer 5.00 D 1,0-0 | CC77o\— lrrer"-i'ir. zz£ after an early de ni a3i«i, «rttli the rteadr *t _ net Best etilßS poteta. The market opened Mr *' c fier:!;n'" of 3 points to an aSvanee iZ joints. Saies were lcwer than iv». lut fef B3i resin ?t"w by crrti=ia<?d drr trsath-er tftf bnalß of Tesa* aafi f'^nfc&r showers tSe Eastsra belt Weekly movement figure*: ■k; receipts, b*>?, aealnst 33. W0 last ar; overiaad to miJie asi Cer.ada. T.S7T boJcx; ?sia". T.J<4 la»t year: t^jmherri mill tak{m?«. srrsi 10,000 ba".t«. ajrainet rs.t»i» last year; *-c! ««i at bzterior mm. 13.507 b»l-?t. •t* ?1.412 mi var; fcrouKfct -■: s'rht fi.r *■«: rr.«SS ba'es. apalaat 44.<3C2 last year. ■*■! cap r-,c-»-- - — recopu. 7.123,4-1 ■i eg&:m 8.E1T.2C2 lart - ■«■»- overland to as cd fl«m^». TX.4C7 bale*, against L3SL> *BE resr. soutierr: rrl'J •aJHr-.g-« 2.050.003 **■ tgsiaet 2.34 V 800 lart j-ear: stock at iii jfc two 1a €xc-ss cf September 1. 59.54JL '■■ ifana .i.s-52 'i.; -«ar; broupht irts sieht *» Sr Sr tie teiecn. 10.053.423 biles, against -•ri,RS i2rt.;-tir. Icsal contract prices: Tes?-r- Open. rL:£t. I^r»f. Close. clay. * — a*s7 a.Of) :4.?7 ir..o6aia.oß icuo •-' 15.0^ 15.10 14.82 :5 06*15.01 15.02 =T=t ...14.~ 14.77 14.65 14.74614.75 1i.71 «scier..ii.L- UJS loJS 13.23fe10.ri 13.15 i* ■ -12.47 1252 12.43 L 2.48&12.49 •. v *«eer..x:-S; liS5 1i.27 12.5«©12.36 U'-.'S £*£*er..1i.27 ITS 2 12.C^.g12.23 12.UJ £«7 rgtS 12-21 12.13 12.K5 12.25 32.U2 88?..U nn xii 7 12.2^312.23 12.21 g^gfl 1Z22 12.20 12.24^12.26 flu!'», Kill; tr.cet uichar^od at lo.'iSc SJ~S»« "^awS *-vtl Vj.&k for audSllcp fTfc.^* 1&-11S balat. I^verpocl caoi<es: B."»JIJPMat :e.;-..; talcs. Ctn») t^lee. l^ =C-r .,000 ( Aa-ricar: ►7-culatlon anj export. rLj™™, Btf* nfl i SCC-c: f-tiir« opeaeiJ !=2 « 2-t T^ir.** sivartce: doted barely Ik" ■■-.*''-'-" "" -- M*»er. -uae. 7.«6d; JT*^- •-s«d: ;-;'v-AUfusl. 7.46 d: Aaevet -^?*[- "ie^d. f^rte«;i-.-r-Ocrofc«r. C.Ti^d: ■ t5Hk«; Nrn-!^nb^i^r>eccTiiocr. |2 fl: ,.'£r* 1! ' 1 *:-J*-*aTr. 6.4 M; Jar/jary-3>t> £■ *■*£"* : Fetr-.tr-'-Marrh. 6.iSd: >tarcn iS ■ 4i " su; A?r::-ilay, 0.42 i; May-Juae. J^f;«*~Qßtet. -a-.-:, ra'.es of 13.500 ba^s. "5f a better tone, and .• the clone S5 r ? 6tt! ' rr; ' i "^re Una at ing 15 r oj a te * -^ a* V ~- ~*-*" " : '^ tht «-*r» st^adr at mEZ *° c ■-•=•" a<ivacce. Le«Jlr? -j, i..eraui «-a trorts xcere ayain bid* .? ••='?• bat C-.tre -Ris Uitie -reiin«. *Ba7 is am Jeliverr «lar Tor July ;! «P*ct*« Quit wtsterer coff.-e jaygW^rtß *c proapUy received. Harre G"J? k ch * r - i:r - '-0 :*: * Jraa 1 -- ■ (Cher. Kun '£-rZ~** c '■■ :*: * r*«T.=ic advance. Hio - •»'* ' O-T;r --* cartes •jachanffei' to mS-TS 3 *" ~ :<n tra^irr r.ot active. l»«~l_ ~J*. ■*■•' *— r- "-«-:r.s- to traall sui> ■-, .-iv :r :s Eißtoe rradee. «.nd prices 2 r " ">« fci^s cf 8 5-16 c Jor , •.. Loc2: contract prlcet: Tester ;-a» Ppca. High. Low. 'lose day. .jr •— - — — «.553<5.«V) f1.45 Ja^T «--" <".>•• 6. 50 «.e0&<5.«5 «-<5 fc?*' -~ ~ — «.eos«.«s 6.r.0 ■iSar^"- Cr< r F -~ f - ft 3 «.«StT«.7O 6.r.r. s*<-t«"s *<-t«" - * X B-* 5 ces eftn3;f..7O «.«n ~**x~ ' '' ' 5 ... €.% £^.3 e.«5 e.«se.;o 6.^ iStsjL;--- — — — e.70'a«.72 f!.€& 5^ I ••• c." 6.73 fi.7Sift«.74 <;.72 <itjr-"" '•• — — — 6.74ji«>.7.~. «*.7 a niri'Vx-^"" "~ C.731c.7S C.74 i'l lSpgg^*T«— Tmcttra aa^onictued. s*« » ii~ t:efccr: la:r t0 e3e 3o * s - ** l'"S*4 »t;: SLISr *.-iS^ ) B AOMEAL-FIM white -C:-, ViT^ $21 S5; «ta.udard ■^B «' ■ ■ - J^iaSwSl"— ?«^J*r farjy. owins to a I;1 ''; : " r '- t '- 1 »^ cf Jive i.oKi an 4 SttaZ i "'~ 1 '' V' !rA * *t t«« rarda. but *-<5. ;*-, Xf^ £• <i »J:*T3ly under iacreaacd SNTmsSo?* I**1 ** vas cr-tiite<l to parkins £•*. 12-V r*.:,' x r7 &lfea '-> ■; «^«*s, sssati'sso "'-^ * hcrt cie^-- *24 sOfe*2!». r-**tl? l »Hl' klt *""»*IC: family. «1»3 ? : ti p~£" e ' J:T ■"••>: ejtra ladia mns, •i ! 5i ~«>«e^' i ' ■ ?*"**- '=■» & *=c. DRESSED ftOCl&i? '* «*e; purs. 13-ic, CCT Sfe« L^l ls ?c;? c; » •*>- isc. I* 10. i"c: g^^r* q-ißt. lesiCHc. tallow— V -*is- g-^« IC.^O^rj.Wc; city. 12c Jff sS^.Aawjcj, 34c: Continent. 1320 c; V^^i* ri COTr r»oun< < . quiet, v gln.-. ■** --^^i^er; cieo. lie; city lard, 14 9 r<s»r ; ?-a««? -a«« Sr~ and Uichaarei. with • •^eet^r.r •*'*•'• w-ot»j a.t S.lsc net. less iff *sj^~l ,* he London market for fce*-t C'^aAa^? 3 !ut Bachmared. witt Jun*. t> 3r th Jivf-, at T4k S»d. rtiw hero t^t'fl^'' ol^ rr - uil rates for upot S. taotrf ~"' a r! "iP^^n<. Ortrlfucal. WJ J »tßii»i '--J; >J^ -=4 America la 2.6CS<>M> ICs_.7 CTe -*' ' l'i.2ia l*»t ■•• M* . ■ • lan ■ r iie-x- i^ e*° fr< - futures. Lake gyifi," € - ■? » UttTKe : Ct **»k-»-S; -'-^-''c. 12.12Ufe 12.37^. "" 05 » 22.63c: June. 32.55© ai'?2», r e' J?Uf> :-- —■«'sß2j«oc; sop **?" ? Ttu7Jt* /Ti« T -«adcn wcai; spot, **"^ s - -^J^** w Tor »- 4-2U 34.25c East l -t'ii u:u.fcatijrtd. £1^ !'«». i£*S|j)v-T I r f v'. : «pot. 5-t0©5.50c New *£* *t I^"-^* 81 tel Loul =- Lor.doa un- SB* IF 4?rj L .-* fc ,U, U ' US -^UXT at 4:«s icr &>. !!« •> t 1 f"ii'«Jiy Northern. *16 6«a l ij^ «a^, $le " 5 « * l « «. N« change S~?»iS ~?» ir *t« tu ts «nt:n« arm SnS? li.'t^'l Ulr «*»ay- qJi't and j^.ita. ijS* l ! s TiniPSNTINE—Vja t fc*^*** £•"-;- /•*■?• **■ KOSIN— Cczu- Sim-PS— Firm but «jai<* barrrfa? « *c,£ c * or ■tMdard white. In tbf^?.^ 1 Jl Inactive. and "price, at Spot Op * a - HUh. Lmr! Close. <say 7 Juas — — 7.504i7!v» 7>« July .: -« _~ _— 7.CST.SS T.t3 August '** '-^ 74«37-« 7HJ September -«^ -T" — T.EW7.SB 7.6tj OSS*? "S-S T0 *« mߣws 0» "* .... _ _ — (USs6.sl 6-iS COUNTRY PRODUCE MARKETS/ BEAVK ivii «, Neir Tork. Jum» 24. 191<>. end 4Wfc rEAS— Receipts. S3 bag. bean. Site * L^v 55 * 11 * 5 Mar** firm on *»«•«= tootffl i^ "* ht tTa4 *- Red Mdaey firm BEAV= m L:: "* '«eady. scotch peas quiet. i*4-U. S^JRSU?* 3 : njedlnm. choice. 2 40® «V A- te P°rt«S medium. ?2 10SJ2 20- pea rVJT. 6«2& wljite kitoey. S3 1<««3 16; re!; kidney S=Siia»^t£* < J* 36 *****: black turtle coup. &t?trt l-Sii*^**^" 0 " 11 *- «K-653 10. PEAS .Jl TT ER--R«»ce»pt £ 11.446 pk# 8 . More Iocs! 2£rm'*«f<" hu:r f "d -retty fair oai-of-toim rhTWi-h U " at '^ 1 a Iltu * "Wronger hoMin* and o.rii.f Tmdeß " f "^u^ery advanced «bou; .ua^uies are rurnlijfi off and there i« a m 2» tol^S^ 0011 of Bt -°* : k acceptable to be«: T^x^as faoiorr and- peckta* vtock are ?°'« t - < v-£ I^ a^* r J-. specials, a. ti^CSHc- *x- SSW «^ n-st, 2Sse2Tc: woonde" 554«36e: t^ X^i^ «f d »«T. tubs. flnm. 27- rood -t^ol 6p *' rla '' 23 Hr.-; extra*. a4^«-»c^&iS" Sr«S%'^? S H? s 5? 1"*1 "* =ie2lHc; pack tHLE>B — R^eiptß. 4.340 boxou Mark** .^o m?- to b. ° W clflanea OP- Fancy whit.' «?Si »re L? VtUlab!p at "t" t i < ". b at colored to bJ^?H hut com« Rood si«*d lots -Bill have In Harriea q*-«>:. Coofiderabic defective stock* State, whole milk, PP <H-i a h_Zf S?T; BlTlan - <*>!°re<3. "Hr; Site. «%T; to?£«d i*iffnl C: * vei *« prtm». 14c: fair i-r, % '® 1 i^ c; <*n"non, 10612 c: skims, -W^t!' 1~*c:1 ~* c: fin * ! - W%eilVic: fair to eood ' -Rf-iPt!.. 12.592 case? Arrivals "•til! --c. but deaJen. are ufing #r.Ttie May a -J eerlr Jnae stored r^,.. and prices eToVr no further acvaurc. Fair deiaajid chiefly for hip. 3:3,J offering, ar * of su ,: irr-pular qu/l ii?J" « , vv * 1 rang-o wid«; ? Dirties and cheeks Elc-w UM weak, stat*. Pennsylvania and near r^ n^ n H^« Wtlte , S - 25€2Sc - ratbertd. 'ig"^; - T .h "-• .sabered whiiee. Ba£^4c 'fi«3i 5, a h ;i£t - >ct * < » extras. »«2*c : extra firTr fe C ? =^f : , flrsta - 2 °e- 1 <=: fronds, "ugfju^ w. r crrajtf lirtW. Ko l! tor lS»^f 2 *^ ?° Orer - l^ltiWc; checks. ••-_*w;-- checks anc cracked, poor to rhrTTS— DRIED— Market quiet on «pot SSSSRIS^ fa future tie country i.ot t»-.e.^S. put exporters show no interest and it ar £££ti?SH at Noreaiber ArtlSSr'prtnS 1 ; riirTT«lLri»^w- ChOps S ™ Wim quiet, i hh ißi.i B i." ss — FRr.SH— Apple* Belling well t or *rd^- Curr * T> n . iotrer. Strawberries Jess plenty :erv Elacicberruee and raspberries hicber Zt£ *X*E£* scaTc - Oranges and sraperruit SSi» MuakmeJona firm, with California hlrter. s-i, •"^ - rood d«?tnar.j. Pineapple. in ** v > . enpply. APPLES, new. bbl. ,<1052 »: g-een. basket. KOrsrfi 00: rei 75c95l 75- PEABd r°sw^ "£ K&^SO: PEACHEt? Q*orxtaftndi Ecmti CaroJiaa. carrier. flg'Jl »>- PLUMS G^or «na carrier $1 2B€s] 75; CHEHRIES. red and tu*ck. S^b basket. 25»40c: white. in-.'^c umir =^40c; red and black, peach basket. 75c@Sl: wfcite and mo-ar. "''" sweet, quart 54?9c; I*. 43^; bout, quart. i*i^c: 7b. 4S7c; CURRANTS quart. 7310 c; PTRAWBnRRIEP. "Western Xew Tork, quart. lHil4. ; Platen Inland. HKton ur Irvinptotj. 6£V\ up-rlv«r. eUUc; Jenu-y. ]Mt; BLACKBERRIES, quart, Sgl2c: RASPBER RIES, red. pint T s^c. BLACKCAPS S«f6c: HUCKLKBERRIE?. North Carolina quart. 10£ ISc; GOOSEBERRIES, cuart. s@l2c;' ORAJ.GES. Ftorifia. box.. £1 5«»eS4 50: California. $1 CS® H 75; GIIAPETRUIT. Florida, boi. S2&o@f«: Ccban. $3 755J6 25; Porto Rico. $2 25^^23; tGOOSHSERRIES. quart. 5® 12.-. ORANGE?. da. box.* fl st«e:*4 K<: California, f 1 25® GRAPEFRUIT. Flcriiia. boa.. S£ r-o«f »5 n, ?1755? ( j25; Porto Rico. $2 25€*^£T> KMELOXS. rbvMa cmte. 75cG«2. QUlfor n;a. standard crate, $2 50@*4. pony crate, *^iis3: WATERMELONS. Florida, carload. $:»O<gs4oG: I«". *30S?60; FrN-EAPPI,ES. Flcrida. -rat-, $1 tgs2tO; Cuba. 65c€S-: Porto Rico. 55cSS2- HOI'S — The excellent crop reports from all sections, both In thl« country and Europe, indi cate a large r'^ld and have caused the market tc rule v«;ry quiet; no Important business on th« Coa*: and s£^££ cf oaly a few small lots in He* York State. • HAT A>T> — Steady on top grades, with very little lrsproi-enient on poorer sorts Considerable untold hay still in the eked, though stacks in transit lijrhi. HAT. t'E3o*r. prtol .a.r«- baies. 100 ft. 51 13: Noi 3 and 1. Ssc© flir^- « DP ns 75&S0c; pac>Jn?. s'>:. clever and clov*r, isised. 30«Mic, STRAW, long m 45^50r: tuort 'and tatglai rre. Be; oat and wheat. 40c , LITE FOrXTBY— carload lota of iiv« poultry rnioadet! to-day. The lower price* met •M ■hflirfltj attracted a little more tracing. tm' it has b»*n Impossible to clean up. and t> 'cars are unsold la Jobbers' hands, mostly r.eavy fctrla. Xearty express receipt* selling s.owiy. BRC>IL.rR.- nearby. It). 24g26c; "Wertern ana i Southern. 22c. FOWLS, r.earby. 7t>, l.c; esters and Southern. 16c; ROOSTERS, old and young. i 13H-- TrFJJEYS, K»©l4c; DLCK3. 14c. laSBESIZ. 11": GUINEA FOWLS, pair. 60c; : PIGEONS, -'-• DREScED— WhiIe the deßianfi Cor current ue* for tMfa fowls has sho-srn little imarovement. sonic apeculaliva trading hae cc vT'ooed f-r^zen. and market ? cleaning up 'nM-'r-te^ »O€d dr>- picked fowls than ebectea. Scalded icetf exceeding dull ani have SS a* 16fll6*«c- Oic roosters s.ow. Broilers ■^T a-*iv€ deaari and more ccuie have b*en ;° 1 ." bmT^itikeaenßC «™, tacuat price. " "'SH--ab? about steady Frozen pooittr Si^S^ iSw-TCMCKi Western, aver s«T\te«t ' "cV- or tores. 18c; fair to goo* log !&• BROILERS, PWlaflett&la. fw *^; Ipatr '"f«Oc; farxy. 4 » to -pair and under It.. ffi • S2: cull S . 5^75,^ rroze s n-T.K- r^ :E3JP. broiirr-. corn : . ' . *^£ • CABTROTS "Id. bW or ba«, 1136 f^^i, , l»*»7sc PQUAEH, marrow, febl. 75c® mi -»^ SrES*/!^" bunches. $1©?1 50. LIVESTOCK MARKET. New York. June 24. IPI'J g a Hi t o^o|^. sal ßun°/ s t^ S3 fT ftl/™iv ? * cars et^cr* unsold. Common etars. $s^. J""s' * qqi-Vc p*r !b. Liverpool Le«X all to peru of Great Brluun. lieei, *" "" i- n A- Co ■ 2i» P^nAj-lvania Bteer». \g, S *S7 e S! c -l s.ta«l^-!5 .ta« l^-! *r>^. i. "■^ 33 M C ni. : ti«f* atlM * J SieerS ' sr^ »«• 7 - «• * *■ ' so: 7M re 15. "^ p» A ., . • i iosi; ib, $7: 2i> K^ntjicky. . CA iTarket Trad« gui« and prices 25c Ul * V.Xln^day. All »old that arrived iovmr than SSSa^J, >^ r 100 \b. for medium early at S . -n© «J -^ f «r i , hrow|>utf , anil ,5, 5 .. S^OK-c; country Silts— Vrß-.M""'^ fi tbrowonu, HO }b HUUge. »J> -O P er iuv "• .., lb 'Glortf-e & L H. rjilltnback^ •*! veala, 12» I>J ' e s V^r,? r « -"i^il'lC^W; IS but lirV'FP AND LA3185— B*ceipu. 2«rs cars .m?. m ?. I**1 ** < ,mc, and extra limb, "ta , n on of the «tock wm of m^ rat*d steady. sS^^iift vary lutle dema.nd, fl! "- r ';. - : ..viewer nfteen ear. SB aod P^«« J £out\rajr to prime «he*p »oitf STSSiifTKr S» » "dace to coo*. NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE, SATURDAY. -TT3T: L's. 191©. lainba. $0 25657 fifl: on«? car (extra prltr.e.. $« 23. r>r»«»fi mmtnn slow «ad lover at 3@ 10 lie; a few oholc- wcthera, lie: dressed /amba weak at 10® 14c. — Tobln & Shannon: 220 Kenfncky • nntbe. T»» lti average. R2S per 100 Ib 217 Virginia. 73 Ib. $7 50; 140. 68 ib $7- " > Ken lucky .-.he-p. 117 Ib. 54 75; o Vlrynila.'»3 Ib, «4 r« Kern* Commission Co 259 Vlnrlala lambs-. 0«i Ib. $7 40; 100,-70 li>. W23; 10 Wst Vir ginia «aeep. 04 H. M: C Vlr?lnia, 105 Ib. $4. MOOS— He^-ipts. 7H ears ot 1.172 head, ail fl it. e us ' ht * r - Frellns weak, m sympathy ■a-itri TTr«E:3rT>. and Bu2alo rr.ark^u OTHER CATTLE MARKETS. •Chicago, June 24.— CATTLE— Receipts. 2.G00; st*ac;>-. BUara. $6 i'»??s 8 25 : cows. 54 25055 73: MBn. *♦*•**»: *«Us. 54ffM75: calvti ?3© ** — ': etookers and feeders. *3 50©»T. 50 HOGS — r ! PI-S. 14.000; Sillf'c higher. Heaw, |»»B >**5: butchers. *» SO® s9 60; mixed. $S4<VQf»s<t- SVdSpeO; bulk of salk 336*9 a? SHEEf& i i-tcclpts. 3.000: *t«aay. Sham 75©54 75 | £ 25 ®* S 75; Uunbfi - W: apriac Cincinnati. June — — Receipts. 500 2525 and stPad i"- Fair to ftoo<i shippers $6 25© 5« ~>: aon-moo. |2©»4 25. HOGB— 27^- i r ii v^. aad «*ady. Butchers and shippers, '$» 25 "ITn -i ? 111100^ 53Q59 40. SHEEP— Receipts. -e00; doll arrt treak, "-^ 4l! ' ; lambs, steady and qaiet. $455C25. i ? ity - Juao 24.— CATTLE— Receipt*, D^Ji ll^^- I'l<M1 ' I<M awth«TJ»: dull and raL S S l^?,-* ll^ elJ>ort et< * rK - $'^S3O: fair pSm+S *;* - yS *" ••>; Southern. $3 40^50 50; l^'jn? ■**?"• »«©«50: £6uth-rn cows! HAr^ * S£2o^soa); calves. $4®s7 Ml HOGS -Rrrr: r .- S JSO^ mark-. .V,TI,V higher: top, E & !£St "*»• J? =& ® ?9 «■ Hear?-. JS 201© *Q-"i»^ fcers and butcher,-. »25g»40; Ile-ht. s»3^rs9 45: pl^. Js 73@59 10. SHEEP—W celpts. 1.000: market stlady. Laml* »■«•■ I O s ?^^- 11 " 8 *- 460@ «5: others. $4S-":4 S-": ewe i »o i5@54 ,v, stocker» and feeders. $2 50354 50. JEaat BaiTain. «J« J 2 ne » 24.— CATTLE— «r -ii" 5 " He«-iPts. 1.500: slow and ~*c higiier; S6 .o^-SS 25. HOGS— Receipts 5,60<J ?»i5l4 r 4 hIE^ r - Heavy -a^d'in^ed: *^«*>S5»75: Yorkers. $» 75fi$io- ni~^ £<» <Wf? yearhngs. afc , LA-MBS— Receipt*. »•««>.• ■ dull; yearUngs, 2jc lower; rearlings.^ 50(3^3 75 Ctoteef^lHMSaT «.— CATTLE-Supply light. cnoice, 5Njff5.,(. : prime. $7 75<a*j; SHEEP tuppljr light. Pri ln wethOT HS*9S4 75- culb ci'lves oo^^,! 2 -^ 1 -£SbV. »?«=£ 'vial . $S^'^S"s. HOGS— K«£ipts Hsbt. 2ft Workers ii-.avy. $» 60©53 «5 : (iptlt. $» 71^ «"•'■ pigs. $9»s@s9£o; roughs. $S«$S 00. [By Telegraph to The Tribune ] s? TvsS*- ¥^ £s§a£ 3^ 6 - s^©«c; calls and butcher lamb,; 4 ©se- : dl . Pl^ 4c dotrr. Common thin sheep dull otocA e»es. Plafa ewes sio-w. demand foTcS oioc^c e»es. Paun ewss siow. ! CHICAGO GRAIN AND PROVISIONS. j .l^i^f 0 ' Jun? 24.— W1M Bactaatlons. varying I almotrt 3r. wound up io-day in a net pain of *ie ! ♦2. x.- a l ? 1Jsl1 1 for wheat. Experts travelling in me Northwest issued sensational reports as to '"''"'■" crop losses, one authority putTing the prooabie North Dakota product at only about 40 per cent of th« total estimated by the govern- went en June 1. Light rains over the Dakotas. norrever. with cooler teinT>»ratures, halted what threatened to be a runaway market. Excited speculation also in corn and oats, where th^re •*»• final gain* of. rt*pecu%-eiy. K#%c to %c and %@7»r. Hoi? praducts at the close were down 5c to 27*/ic. Buying of wheat was the greatest in volume for this w*eh. Narthwestem markets at nr> time dnrtafc the session wore bo strong relatively an CJiJcago. a fact attributed here to selling: by millers. On the other hand- Southwestern exchanges joined in the bull enthu siasm. At the outset th" CKicaijo market backed up a little and then went forward -with a rush. ! Range of prices; Tester- | Wheat : ' Open. Higl;. Low. Close, day. . : Juiy 03 86Vi »6U 86% 07% j September. »7 ea% !»6«4 SB»i I>7 December. 97 »l#i N% 98% *T» ! July ' .. ,-.<■« co 1 * re - S»% s? s i Beptenibn- 9»^ «l r * ."v> 545 4 6O\v «>> December. 53U 56% 5S r>S 7/* i7 /*i SSW Oatf : July .- -a, 40% 38% .'> : « »* Beptimbe* 39S 40 &\i IW " »•>« | December. 39 k 40?* 38 * «-. »!4 j ( jujf rd !....5i2 5O 12 55 512 40 |T2« $12 September. 12 50 12 S3 12 35 12 4O 12 4 i Juh-.^/. ... 13 CO 13 00 1288 1387 12 97 September. 1. 60 12 62 12 42 12 4. 126? Jufv rk . 2SSB 2BH 2315 25 SS 23 62 September. 22 77 22 77 SSS 22 80 23 85 PRINT CLOTH MARKET, Fall Elver. June C4.— Sales in the prim cloth market tor the week are estimated at 60.000 rieces Demand has been moderate. There have Emm email atfai of 27-!nch. 64 by 60s. at 3 We. but a> a rule die aUBI were unwilling to ao business at this Scare. Some scattered sales o, odd "goods were also made. On account of UK crtvai':ng dnlßeas in the market, 11 is expected tbatmany of the mills will shut *)« Fourth of Jutv Quotation.: 2S-incb. 64 «quare« «i •^-inch 64 by &X 3?sc; 27-incii. b4 by 60. 3*40, 3gi — (neb. 64 square?, s'sc; 39-Inch. 68 by 7. B?4C. :■. : FOREIGN MARKETS. ' Liverpool. June 24.— TVHEAT— Spot dull; .;:.'; e .^;ad-. July, *6 •%«: October. 6e S**l. December. 6e »d. CORN— Spot steady: old 1 American mixed. 5. Id; do via Galveston. 5s i^?d new Win dried, 4? u -i, futures dull: July Seirtember. 48 6d. P^S-Can^un^ 7s. FLOCK— Winter P»"^^,2B« bd HUFt in Wwtern lOSs W. HAMS- Short cut 7|S. ia im\'- Pumberland cut, .S?: short rID. >i*. c^ar ijeiiiea 74« 6d: leng clear middle*. l«ht, 7^" heavy 72e: short clear backs. 68s bd. IfeSK^SS S teB«»-Caiiadlaii finest white and colored, n w a« ROSIX tSSn ; lS«d fpOTBOTS M-R.nn.d. 7 4-! t !V=FED OIL. 36a. COTTONSEED OlL— Hull "toeKpo? -^ 4%d; TALLOW- Australian : in London. 34s 8a ! - London June Si.— RAW SUGAR— Centrifueal. H^ea- muse" vado. 12s 64. BEET SUGAIt-June i. c^ riKTTTV LINSEED — .June-July. 5.s ltd LIN-SEED OIL. 34^ sd. SPEUiI OIL, £32. PBTBOLEU»-.Vmerican. rcflneU. «J.d- «p lrlts. 7d i TCRPENTINI>-Bpirits. 44s 3d. ROSIN— Vmerican strained. 13b; fine. 13s 6d. * Antwerp. June 24.— PETROLEXTK. 19 francs » I centimes. _ WEEKLY COTTON STATISTICS. Liverpool. lons M -Fo'.lowins are the •weekly cotton statistics: B^ t Total sales, all kind* "1500S Total «aks. American • g.gg BBSiisb spinners' takings *-0W Total *-?iports ■• ■• •" 'ay Ouaaalty afloat: American il.ooo Total sales on epeculation *"; Total sales to exporters '**> •Including -.'"'" bales called or sold prior to February 12. CONDITION OF TRADE Dun's Revitsu- aays: Business confluence gains in Btrength as crop prospects improve and Congress en acts its important bills preparatory to ad journment. A3 is natural at this season of the year, the weather plays an mpor itant part in the markets. Ra in _ in the spring wheat territory' has banished the fears of drouth and confirmed th^ excel lent outlook for a grocd harvest. The ad vent of heat over a large section of the country has greatly stimulated retail trade, nearly til of the important trade centres Sin* reports to that effect In the dry- B market., next to reductions in price. Zi cottons, the important development 01 the week is the increase of optimistic sen timent and <his In spite of a volume of irTde below normal and the curtailment or •production in both cottons and woollens. ThY Iron and Bteel trade Is practically un ! ranged with stocks of pi? iron accuxnu latliil on the one hand and seme sis^s of ' increastae demand for steel products on ' the othe? The financial markets remain ve?y quiet, although looking considerably betfe- Railroads, in spite of the recent concession in deferring action on the pro ved general advance in freights are neatly encouraged by their success In in duc^riK the Chicago packing shippers to Lirr-e to an advance in their rates. An im- Ino-tTnt trunk railroad has succeeded in Marketing a large amount of equipment s£rt locates Money conditions are easy, notably in London, the world chief money Sfarket Owing to speculative dulness bank clearings at New York this week S =5 per cent under last year, and 6.9 n«fr cent ess than ir. 19*5. but outside of vLw York there were gains of C.I per cent Sf/l7 3 per cent, respectively. Th*> frreign frade situation Is further improved, and at vlw York in the latest week the exports ." k «^! 1 a large pain over the two p ?eced^nfyek«,%nd only J79.955 less than the imports. Bradstreet'fi says: Retail trade and most crop reports are, oiPtheVnole" better this week [he result SLinly of thi arrival of lon* delayed sea- SnKble -umraer weather. Aiding the im nrovemen^n retail trade, which at best. Poi ever is not up to expectations, baa been ihV offering of concessions in many lines of drvpood^Tand wearing: apparel. Exceptions to the improvement are In the Northwest, where the critical -late of the soring wheat and other crops, due to drouth, is noted. 2«fi So at many Southern points, where t.'ti i t-iJc i~ .UIJ quiet There has been ■ m " nV. - confld«nw In ordering from job wra anA wholesaler* for fall. based upon fie improved reports from the corn, totton. , land winter wheat crops, but in the VorthwWt there Is a disposition to await a Northwest uier th«- crop outlook before c^firl- to th« already fairly good business hooW for fall i" dn-soods and clothing, of the theory that there Is a £ m«r7 for food, at a price la found in the demand rcr X «non»e in the way of fairly ,0 the peneral reductions noted by P-rturan of bleached cottons and pay m^fi vreek. In industrial lines there °m;tte > e~id««e of improvement yet to be I EC£3- ..-..• - ' -—>~—^_. — ,-• CH« AND RELIGIOUS NEWS NOIES New Pastor of Evangelical Lutheran Zion Church Congr-agation Begins Work. At tlfr Evangelical Lutherarx Zlon Church, in East Stth street, to-morrov. morning the Bey. Dr. TTllliam F«PCIM "will preach his Introductory MMk He has been unanimously elected pastor of this church to succeed "the Rev. H. Hebler, who has served the cliurciifor eighteen years, and will soon return to Germany. The Rev. William Popcke was a student of theology and philosophy at the Royal University of Berlin, Germany, and came to' this country in ISSO. Since then he has been pastor of several larre Lutheran HE REV. DR. WILLIAM POP<TKjE. ew pastor of the Evangelical L.Titheran Zion Church. In East Mth street. churches in Detroit. Chicago and Buffalo •tt-ith lemarkable success. He is affiliated with the General Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of the United States. Tie will also be the chaplain of the Isa bella Home, in Amsterdam avenue, at 190 th street, and hold regular services atathis well known institution. His home is No 33S East .VHh ftreet. opposite the Zlon Cburch. AT TENT EVANGEL. The Rev. Dr .T. "vTilDur Cliapman wfH 'preach at both opening services in the Tent Evangel, in VTest 124 th and ÜBth streets, between Amsterdam and Morning side avenues, to-morrow at 4 and 8 p. m. Mr--. E. M. "vvTiittemorc, founder of tlie Door of Hope, wiil speak on Monday night. June 27; the Rev. E. S. Holioway, of Hope Baptist Church, on Tuesday and Wednes day nights; the Rev. A. T. Broeke, singing evangelist, on Thursday night, and the Rpv. G. W. McPherson. superintendent, on Friday night. The Rev. Dr. IJen G. Brough ton, the Rev. Dr. James M- Gray, the Rev. Dr. H. ML Wnarton, the Rev. Dr. Curtis Lee Laws and other well known preach ers 'wiH conduct a series of services in Tent Evangel all summer. Albany Smith, son of Gypsy Smith, and Jessie Van Camp. Boiflteta Tent Evangel No. -, at 163 th srreet and Lyman Place, near Prospect avenue, in The Bronx, will be opened on Sunday. July 3, ar. 4 and Bp. m The Rev. Harry Tajftr, of Andover. Mass., will preach in this tent during July. Mrs. Richard Hartley wfll conduct, children's v.-ork In both tents. TWO DEACONS ORDAINED. To-morrow ordinations of two Episcopal deacons will take place, both of them v unusual. Onr will occur In the Chun-h of the Holy Apostle?, in Xinth and will be conducted by Bishop Lines, of Newark, acting for Bishop Greer, of Xew York, who went last Tues day to North East Harbor In the hope of improvement in his health. The Rev. Dr. Henry K. Dealinger. until very re cently pastor of the High Street Presby tsrtaUQ Church. Newark, a church with a membership of five hundred, will become an Episcopal deacon. Bis ho ft- Line? will preach the sermon, and the presentation will be made by the Rev. O. S. Roche The Rev. Dr. Denlinger is a graduate of Princeton, and while pastor of a church in Bloomington 111., had in hi? member ship Vice-PreEident Stevenson. For six months he has been In charge of the Church of the Holy Apostles, and thip sum mer will continue in charge during the ab sence of the rector. At the crypt of the Cathedral of St. John, this city. Bishop Partrid.ee. of Kioto, will order deacon Ed mond Watson Fltz Simon, who is a brother of the Rev. W. F. Fits Simon, rector of, St. Mary's Church at Tuxedo. The ser mon will be preached by the Rev! Canon Jones, of the cathedral. AMERICA LEADS MISSIONS. The United States and Canada have wrested from Great Britain during the last year the honor of giving- the largest sum to foreign missions. Societies in Great Britain have little home mission work to do. n-racticallj' all of their work being in foreign countries, while in the United States and Canada the home contributions have had to be kept about even with the foreign. A result has lieen that for years Great Britain, has led the world in foreign mission gifts. This year America gives $9, 013,878, the largest sum yet, putting us at the top. The total gifts of all the Chris tian world to the non-Christian last year were $24,676,000, or about $1,000,000 larger than during any previous year. The number of missionaries In those lands sent out by Christian societies is now 19,280, while 98.38S men and women native in the countries in which they work form an auxiliary band of workers that is larger than ever before In the one hundred years of foreign ef fort. GENERAL ITEMS OF THE WEEK. The trustees of $he Church of the Holy Communion hay« issued an appeal for the raisins of a fund of 130.000 for making ad ditions to the church. The improvements contemplated include a stone porch at the iOth street entrance, repainting of the walls, improvement of the lighting system, com pletion of the window scheme, repairing of exterior stonework, new sidewalk and im provement of flse organ. Sir John Stainer's sacred cantata, "The Daughter of Jairus," will be sung at the special musical service of the Harlem Pres byterian Church to-morrow evening. Algernon Sidney Crapsey will preach to morrow morning at All Souls" Unitarian Church. The episcopal Chapel at "West Hampton Beach will open for services to-morrow. with communion at 8 o'clock in the morn ing. Other services ,will be at 10:30 a. m. and S:ls p. m. The Rev. Francis J. Clay Moran is the minister In charge. In the Old First Presbyterian Church the Rev. Dr.- Arthur, T. Pierecn. will preach at pie morning service on " Tiia Flail Percej*-, tion of the Saints." At the eventng service the Rev. James A. McCague will preacn on •The Will in Religion.* t "To My Adi"antage" will be the theme of Dr. George P. Eckman's brief address to morrow evening in St. Pauls Methodist Episcopal Church in connection, with the veeppr service. In the morning he will preach on "Out of tl^e World." At the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Chcrrch the Rev. Dr. John H. Boyd, pastor of the Fir3t Presbyterian Church of Detroit, will preach. Dr. Boyd has for six years been pastor of the larges: Presbyterian church in Detroit. The last regular service until September In St. Andrew's Methodist Episcopal Church will be held to-morrow morning. During th« summer the congregation of this church trill unite with that of Dr. Cobb's church, the West End Collegiate, at services to be held in the latter church. At Plymouth Church to-morrow morning there will be an address by Mrs. Balilngton Booth. * In spite of the heat last Sunday night, a great audience faced Dr. Reisner for his i Roosevelt service at Grace Methodist Epis ! copal Church. This week Dr. Reisner will ' give iiftcen minutes at the opening to j showing stereopticon pictures of the Pas sion Play, which he saw in 1300. The his tory and purpose of the play will be given. \his will be follow -.d by a short sermon on "Sunday Theatres." He will show how the Church may supplant the theatres. In the morning the sermon will prescribe "Happi ness for All." Next Sunday evening will be the last service of Dr. Keisner before he goes on his summer vacation. Shop meetings conducted by the Evan gelistic Committee of New York City will be in full swing during the coming week. R. H. Roper, of Chicago, has come to as sume special direction of the shop work for this season. Last year there were noon meetings In twenty-four shops. The num ber will be increased, in %11 probability, to fifty during the present season. Open air meetings for Italians began this week at Willlamsbridge. and others begin next Tuesday evening In Westchester. The Madison Avenue Baptist Church pur i poses to carry en its work during the sum mer months with as much vigor and ag gressiveness as at any other time in the year. The roof garden will be open every day for the benefit of the children of the neighborhood. It was open all winter, and from October to March more than four thousand children came to the roof for recreation. The various organizations of the church will use their equipment in the parish house every week, as usual. Tin: midweek meeting on Wednesday evening will continue, under the leadership of the Rev. F. W. Hagar, the assistant pastor. Sunday services win be continued mornins j and evening during July and August, the preachers for that period being Dr. A- T. Pierson, Dr. Hugh Black and the Rev. W. ] A. Cameron, of Toronto. The Madison Ave nue Baptist Church, being situated down town, opens Its doors to th« visiting public | during the summer, as it does always. Dr. Eaton preaches his last sermons before vacation to-morrow morning and evening. John G. Hammond, superintendent of the Bowery Mission, speaks on the roof of the j 22d street Young Men's Christian Associa tion building. No. 215 West 23d street, to morrow at 5 p. m. Th* Rev. M. A. Reilly, of th» New York Apostolate. has b*en appointed by Bishop Farley to establish a new parish at Wood lawn Heights. Father Reilly has been a member of the mission band of the arch diocese for nine, years, and hi OM of the best known preachers of the rity. The Rer. Thomas J. McCormack, of S/. John's Parish, lately of the Catholic University, Washington, will tak«* Father Reilly's place -with the apostolate. \ The Rev. Dr. Elliott W. Brown, of North field, Aiass.. will preach at the West Pres byterian Church to-morrow at U a. m. Th!s will be the last service In the cburch ur.til September. The Rev. Edward S. Ralston, of Pough keepsie. N. V.. will preach at both services to-morrow in the Collegiate Church of St. Nicholas. This cburch will be closed for repairs during July, but will reopen on August 7. The Rev Dr. John A. Hutton, of Glasgow, Scotland, will occupy the pul pit during August. The subject of the lesson sermon *in the Christian Science churches to-morrow will be "Christian Science." At the Church of the Puritans the Rev. Dr. C. J. Young will preach in the morn ing. There will be no evening service. On the following Sunday and during the month of July s*x congregations will unite In this church each Sabbath. At the Metropolitan Temple the Rev. John Wesley Hill will preach morning and evening. The suoject at 11 a. m. will be ' xhe Cause and Cure of Divorce"' and at 8 p. m. "The Pugilistic Standard of Man hood." At the West End Collegiate Church the Rev. Thomas Mcßride .Nichols will preach. "Laving Through Things" will be Dr. Allen's subject at 11 a, m. at the Marble Collegiate Church. In the evening- at 3 o'clock he will speak on ' rhis Parable." At the Twenty-third Street Presbyterian Church the Rev. Dr. Frederick J. Stanley will preach to-morrow morning and even ing. Dr. Stanley for several years was connected with the Waseda University, Tokio. Japan. "The Inspiration of Malta and the Knights of St John for Twentieth Century Americans" will be Dr. S. Edward Young's subject at a service to be attended by the Knights of St. John of u*e Xew York region to-morrow evening in the Bedford Presbyterian Church. At the Fourth Presbyterian Church Dr. Edgar Whitaker Work will preach to-mor row morning. The evening service is dis continued. At the Church of the Incarnation the ser vices to-morrow will be as follows: 8 a, m., holy communion; 11 a. m., morning ser vice and sermon by the rector, and p. m., evening prayer. At the West End Presbyterian Church, in the absence of the pastor, the Rev. Dr. A. Edwin Keigwin, the Rev. James G. K. McClure, president of MeCormick Theo logical Seminary. Chicago, will preach. Dr. McCluro ia t4ie author of many books and celebrated as a preacher, being one of the favorites at Yale University. At the Scotch Presbyterian Church, In the absence of the pastor, the Rev. Dr. David C. Wylie, who Is fulfilling some en gagernenla at Montreal, Canada, the ad sistant minister, the Rev. Boyd McCleary. will conduct the services and preach at □ a. m. and 8 p. m. ' The last service of the season v. 11l be held at the Madison Avenue Reformed Cliurc!) to-morrow at 11 clock. Dr. Carter, the pastor, vrill preach as usual. The Bethany Memorial Sunday school will be held in the aft«rnoon at 3 o'clock. ( The .Fifth eaue. Presbyterian. Chux«a &s* In vited the Madison • Avenue Reformed Church to worship wltli them through the summer, and announcement of the same will be luiiiie at the service to-morrow morning. The services at the Lafayette Avenue Presbyterian Church have a peculiar in terest to-morrow- in that the day closes the season's work and also the use of the present large organ. Dr. McAfee preaches in the morning 00 "Some laapriaaini.a of Jesus as a Preacher." In the evening recognition is to be made of the final use of the organ, which is to be displaced dur ing thl3 summer by a larger and finer in strument, for which the subscriptions were recently completed. The evening music will be entirely from the compositions of John Hyatt Brewer, who has been the or ganist of the church for twenty-four years. The annual midsummer week of prayer will bo held in the new rooms of the Inter national Christian Police Association. New York branch, at No. 20+ East C3th street, beginning to-morrow. The Sunday meet ings are from 2:17, to ii p. m. Midweek meetings from 3 to 4 p. m.. except Tues day, which will «oe in the evening at 3 p. m. The Rev. Dr. Robert F. Y. Pierce will ! preach to-morrow morning at 11 o'clock and in the evening at S o'clock at the Sec ond Avenue Baptist Church. This church, will be open for ail services during the summer. The great open air services from the "world pulpit" every Sunday even ing at 7 o'clock ministers to congregations of from one thousand to two thousand at each service. In addition to the singing Ly the church chorus. Dr. Pierce uses rapidly drawn crayon sketches in present ing the truth, and his assistant pastors speak to the foreign people in many lan guages. Bishop W. A. Candler, of Atlanta, will preach In Calvary Methodist Episcopal Church to-morrow at IT a. m. The bishop is one of the greatest pulpit orators of the South. The monthly musical service at 8 p. m. t>y the combined choirs. Includes 1 orier address by the pastor. At the Church of the Ascension, the Rev. Dr. Percy Stickney Grant, rector, the set vices to-morrow will be aa follows: Morn ing service at 11. a. ni.. with preaching by the rector; evening service at 8 p. m,. when Alexander Irvine WfQ speak, anc 1 at 9 p. m., the usual after meeting will take place. At tfc* Brick Church to-morrorw Dr. Al bert Parker Fiitii. president ot Andover Theological Senonarj, will preach at 11 o'clock ami at vesper Service at 4 o'clock. The sacrament of the Lord's Supper will be administered at the .'lose of the morn ing service. This is Dr. Fitch's last Sunday this summer in the Brick Church pulpit. A: the Church of the Transfiguration Dr. Houghton will preach the morning sermon to-morrow. Xext week the church will be ; gin its weekly excursions to Rockaway and j Coney Island for nursing mothers and their children. On the 28th the parish summer house will open. At Calvary Baptist Church the Calvary . grand choir. E. M. Bowman, conductor, will render Gauls "Holy City " at »p. m. to-morrow, this being their last service of the season. At the close of this service the I choir will hold a valedictory service, at j which Dr. Mac Arthur, Oscar Saenger'and I otliers will make remarks. The conductor's I trophy will also be presented to the division j making the highest average attendance for ! (ho season. PIPES OF MANY LANDS j Facts from History of Smoking— When Tobacco Is $4 Ounce. When tobacco was first introduced Into ; England the pipes In which it was used i wer» made of Tvalnut shells, ordinary ! straws serving for stems'. Smoking- was j then a luxury for the very rich, as tobacco ! sold for something more than 14 an ounce, jlt appears, however, that the "precious I stinks' '-for it was thus King James stig | matized "the fragrant weed" in his coun terblast gainst tobacco— became wonder fully popular In a very short time. John Aubrey, in his "History of Wiltshire," says J that: "In these days the .gentilmen had: silver pipes. The ordinary sort make use of a walnut shell and a straw. I have heard ray grandfather I,yte say one pips was handed from man to man round the j table. Within these thirty-five years 'twas scandalous for a divine to take tobacco." Walnut and straw pipes were soon super seded by clay pipes, and the Great Plague ! gave an additional impetus to smoking, for ' : it was said that nono c the tobacconists I ; died from the disease, say» The. .London j ; Globe." Pepys speaks of it in Tins connec- ! tion in his Diary. "I was forced." he says, i [ "to buy some roll tobacco to smell to and to chaw." The best clay pipes were made; ■ at. Ameabury, of Chiltern clay, and those [ made by a man of the name of Gauntiet, which was stamped on the' pipe bowls. were especially favored. For some inex- i plicable reason the earliest clay pipes were j | known generally as "elfins." Clays were ac one time nighty ornament- > | ed, and there was a great demand for pipes j ; bearing the heads of popular or unpopular I : people. When the Duke of Wellington tried ■ I to stop smok;ngr in the army he was rep ! resented on a pipe-bowl with his nose un duly exaggerated and a fiery glitter m his eye, while the stem of the pipe showed a , : subaltern with his fingers to his nose ' ! Great variety was shown in many of the«e i I pipes, especially those which hailed from ■' <ier:nany. a pipe from this country made in the eighteenth century is in the form of I a soldier with silver armor; his head lifts up and his body makes the bowl 01 the pipe, while the smoker inhales through a very prehensile toe. Some very beautiful ' pipes were made of Venetian glass but ' tney are far too precious to have ever been put to the use for which they were primar ily intended. The Black Forest pipe with its enormous bowl, capable of holding Quite half an ounce of tobacco, inspires a re spectful awe m the breast of any smoker save a Teuton. With their painted lcnta£ ' bowls, long, flexible stems and tallied j ?o°o r k at, and, with the very mild tobacco I jook ar, and, with the very mild toha«v>.-» commonly smoked in them, an more ? fttf mwable m appearance than In reality ] The Laplanders fashion their pipes' out of thin iron and walrus teeth, while thP natives of West Africa u?e wood Ind bone' and red clay, and the South African -m ' p.oys soapstone. The moot Inter^tinc tor .-ign pipe la the Eastern hookah, alfd it [, at the same time the most healthy the moat sanitary and the most pleasant for the smoke, pacing as it doe" throuSn water, loses all Us acrid properties TN-«« hookahs, or hubble-bubbles, are often most '■ beautifully made, and very handsome, a " so l l tely v different to the tumble "XarKnlie " I with which they are not infrequently con fused. "Narghile" is native Indian fo cocoanut. and this is what these pipe 3 are partly made of. the nut acting ait the re! : ceptacle for the nicotine. The red Indian ! war pipe l a an ordinary long stemmed pipe attached to the bead of a hatchet. Quite : different Is the calumet, or pipe of peace ; which has a stem about two an.! a half feet long, painted and decorated with feathers, and a very large bowL . A few years ago there was a tremendous ; boom in mcor«chaum pipes, and smokers took an almost childish pride in coloring them. But like all erases it wore itself out and nowadays comparatively f,» w men ' smok# a meerschaum in preference to a briar. There la something mJre hom»lv in ! an old briar pipe than in anything else TACOMA'S GREAT STADIUM. Tacoma's high school, which piaya an Im portant part in Pacific Coast ataletlcs is the only bi^h school in America having an Olympic utadium, if not the only one in the world. It is a ponderous mass of steel ami con crete, Ist completed at a cost of more than JUv.CCO. in a grulcli at one side of the high school building;. The gukh happened to be lust the rtßht shape for the stadium so but little excavation was required The structure is .-•!. Ip« ! Ilk*> a horseshoe; with the ■•; I; end overlooking Commencement Bay. It will seat twenty-rive thousand per sons, has a centre stullclently larj*" for basebtill. football, track and field events, tin 1 will ulso be Ji«etl for outdoor musical concerts and entertainments.— Popular Me chanics. BERLIN'S GIANT TELESCOPE. The flllp given to astronomy by the re cent disappointing visit of Hall« - comat has been taken advantage of by the head of the Treptow Observatory, near Berlin permanently to popularize tee science* among; th* masses. In the open air be has had erected what is claimed to be the largest telescop* la tii» world, aa4 all jmd : sundry— under proper supervision, i6 *- co ''* I-Tcan rr<*e|y avail of it to vl#r«r tte ?P» : efeaa firmament. The length of th* lnatro ! m^nr la seventy feet. which is eight fe^C * mor* inn th« fnaSIIIIIIVn e<iHatr»rial re fractor of thft Ycrkcs OllOTiiaUil'J. Cl»» !c*»o: bat. a* the leas is ©Kly tw»cr - wren laches la diameter, tU claim to t>» th© larjrest in the world Is untenable, for the diameter of the aiaas or mirror is tw» i deciding factor in estimating th* MBBCfIB lor a telescope. By this test th« Terfce* telescope, with a 45-Incfc object (class. I-* i well io front or that at Treptow. and s»* *ral others alao exceed ft. Two c* th« Greenwich classes execetf tvetrty-WB'ca Irenes.— Dundee .Advertfcier. RELJG-'GLiS NOTICES. TIEE JUI>DI.E (OI.UI IAT£ <lilfUH 2d A**. an<3 7ta St. . . R"v. JOK^ r; FAOG. I>. D.. lTfat«t«r. Rev. JoM«pli R. Slzoo will preacb at 11 A M aa* ■5 P. M - THE aiAEBLX: COLLEGIATE CUTBCH. 3t?s Are. and 2SHb; St. K*r. DAVID JA&. TU'RRELU O. IX. Xlnt*. t»r. Itev. Jotn ?. Allen. D. >.. win preach at 11 A M «arf > P. IT. Mm- •"I.tvtns Thr<%s^h Thlas«." Evening: "This Parable." the COLLEfiXATE CirrjßCM or m. n >frnoi_4«*. ':*'■ •■-'•■ sth Aft. ana 4Stl» St. Rev. HALCOLOI JAMES Me LEO D. «iai» t»r. Ret-. EffwartJ s< Ral«ton. ■■•? Po'ighk»»p «ie. X Y.r «rUI prea«H a: I! A. M. and * P. >f. TJTB WEST EXT> COLLEfTIATE CUL'UCH. West EJul Ay» and 77tb S». Rev. HEN-RT E\'ERTSO.V '-OBJB. D. D. Min ister. Rev. Thomas ilcßride Nichois win preach at 11. A. M. trinity Sbarcb , Sunday Service*. 7.30, 10.3* a. m. <Serm<m) : 3.30, 8.00 p. m. Wwfc day Serricm: 7.30, *.*• a. m.: 3 p.m. CHURCH OPEN' ALL PAT. The public U cordiallr Invited to th* Mf vir^«. twrt> «a *nnM*ar» and an w— a a>ass> FIFTH AMU: PHESBYTERIM GNU 131 FIFTH AVKXTE .VXD rirtT-rirm ST. Services at 11 A. 31. aa<l * P. X REV. JOHN H. BOYD, D. D., , o; trait. Mich., will officiate. Hernias Topic: "From S'^ioa to Peter." Afternoon Topic: "lilununaied <'onuM>* pltu*"." Strangers are cordially Invited. ST.EfI.ITHOLOMEW'S CHURCH M-»i!!«-)ti tve.. corner 4Ml} st. Th« Rev. Lni'ilTTOV PARKS. D. D.. Baaaar. U^So a. m. — Holy CoramunJoa. 11 a. m.— Preacher. Rev. JaATES 5. HOLLAND. • « £>. ».— Preacher. Rev. SYDNEY N. CBSH*R- Sd«cu»; Musical — Caatata, •0t..!- Tlm« [9 The Best" Bach TENT EVAKGEL OPENS Dr. J. Wilbur Chapsian wiU speak at 4 and *» I' M. Jus 2C. Noted s9«akers all w*«k- Mrs. E. M. Whittemof*!. Rev. E <». Rollow-ay acd others. West ■ tMth and 122111 Sta,. 6 ■?- I •» ,- ;i Am»tfrdam and Mornlas»Ui» Ay» MMi3OA x AYEHO£ BAPTiST CHURCH MADISON ATBZCtrC COR. 31ST STREET. CHARLE* A. EATOM. D. D.. Pastor. II A. M- — Tho Glorious Fuiare of th» American Church." <r P M — 'Sorrow the Mother of Jot" >TK-\.N(irR.S CORDIAJXT iXTTtXP. MADISON AVENUE METHODIST EPISCO- PaL CHrRCH. Corner *»th Street. Her. WALLACE MACirCLLEX V. I>.. Pastor. I] A. M.— Preacixin* 67 the Pastor. M> KVE.VINO SKRVICE. BRICK CHURCH Fifth Avenue and Thirty-seventh Striae*. Communion at clos« of Alornln? Servlc»» Dr. ALBERT PARSER FITCH. ft ual Ji«nt of Aitdover Seminary, will preach at 11 ; and M V«sp*r Service at 4. * Fourth Presbyterian Church, West End ay». and 91st «t. EDGAR WHITAKER WORK. D. V.. Pastor. P. EL. T ,voOD ERICKSOX. Assistant. You a 5 Pecpl«"» Meeting, 7 5. m. No £>'«ning Servio. MiDiSO* SQUARE CHURCH Ma^3or. Aye. and 24th Street. Rev. C H. PARKHTR3T. t>. D., PaMSK Rev. g. R. Montgomery, Ph. J>.. Assistant Mlniiter. gerric* II a M. Mr. Mcmtawnerr will preach. Xorth Presbyterian Church. 135tb Si., bet. Broadway and Amsterdam A- •■ Rev. John R. Mackay, Ph. D., Pastor 11 A. M. — The Kurtfulaess of Compromise." SP. — What Is a Horn* ?" - ' CENTRAL. PRESnTTEBL\N CHURCH. West 57th St.. J)*t. Broadway and T;h aye. Be.-. WILTON MERLS-SiTITH. D. D Pastor. Rev. C. H. SiITTH. Jr.. Assistant. liev. GEORGE H. sitr~H preactt^a jit 'a. m (No evening servlce>. Devotional ; Meetinc Wednyday aventng at 8. All ■welcome. .UAJDISO> AVE>"UE REFORMED CHURCH. 57TH 3T. A>"D ASADISOX AYE.. REV. VTSI. CARTER, D. D.. PASTOR 11 a. -xa. — Last service until September. Dr. CARTER preaches. All cordially invited. Ccn gr'sation unites durls? summer wltli Ave nue Pr>ssDyt<;rlan <"Burch. ITXrVERSITY PLACE PKESBTTERIA.V Church, cur. of 10th at ten? block west from Bruadway) — PnMiC •worship to-morrow at It a. m. and 8 p. m. At the services to-morrow Rev. A. W. HALSEY. r>. V . -nrill praadj. Ser vice Weitnesday evening In the Chapel at * o'clock. _________^__________ Broadway Tabernacle, Broadway and 56th Street. Rev. CHARLES E. JEFFERSON. D. D.. Paster. Rev. VW. A. KJRICWOOD. preaches 11 a. m. and S p-.jn. Wedn^dar. 3 P- rs . Prayer Meeting. CATHOLIC GfItfREBATiOML CHURCH (=on-Cftrlstlan>. 130 East 12St!S St. Open dUcuHlona: 11 A M- aad 8 P. at "This inadequacy of Christianity as worM re ligion." Calvary Mi E. Church, l-'Jln Street and Se-»«nd Av»na* Rev. CHARLES L. OOODELL. D. Pa»t«r 11 A. : -«rmon by Bishop W. A. Chandler. a P. M. — Musical service. Addres* *>y Patar. St. Paul's Methodist Church, West End Avenno and Wth Street. Rev 3EORGE P. EC KM AX. O. D. Pa*t«. 11 A. M. — -OUT OF THE WORLD." ? P. M — "TO MT ADVA.NTAOE." OLD FIRST CHURCH stii «vc. ntn to I2tsi sit. HOWARD DUFFTF.T.D. D. D.. Faster. 11 a. m.— Rev. ARTHUR T. PIER3ON". O. Dt S p. «i.— JA3JE3 A. M'CAQrjE: CH-CRCH OF THE ASCE>*i3IOX, Hflh Avenue and Tenth street. Rev. I>r. PERCY STICKXEY GRANT, XeSBSV. 11 a. — Mornins nenricrt (Rectcr). Sp. m.— Mr. ALEXANDER UiVIXB,. «;«utir. 1^ p. m.— .Vfter-Meetiny. CHURCH OF 2IOX AND ST. TIXOTKT. . SM West 37tn Stre«C Baeter. Rev. HEXRT LCBECSC X>. C. X. Holy Communion § a. m. Mr.rnintf Prayer: Preacher. Th» Ractor.lX a. m. Evenaonsr: Preacher, Rev. Dr. Ruahton _• p na. 3IAI>ISON AYE. PEE»BrrERIA>* CHTBCII. Northeast corner of T:srd Street. Rev. HENRY SLOANQ COFFIX, D. D.. Pajtar. Public worship at 10:30 a. m. Rev. J. JEFFREY JOHXSTOXE. Pa. D.. F. R. G. S-. of London, will awsh. WEST END PRESBYTEBLVX CHUBCH. Amsterdam Av«nu« and iOAttl Street. •1 ■ Rev. A. EDWIN KEIGWIN", D. !>„ Paotor. Rev. JA3. Q. K. McCLURE. D. D.. Li. D.. President MeConaJek Theological -*-minar'. Chieaj?o. prea;fa«a M 1! A. M. and » P. M. FOIKTH A\*E. PKESB\TERI-\X CHCBCH. Rev. WALTER DUNCAN BL'CUAXA>. IX TV . Minister, preaches to-morrow la tile AaaamblT Room Of the United Charities Bn!!diaa\ ICO Hast -21 st., si 11 a. m. and 5 p. in. Jfid-w«es sa«J«r gief ting Wednesday. S p. iii. *Yl>T A.XOUW'9 CHIKCU. TCih i«t_. west of Colsmbu« Aye. GEORGE CLAHKB PECK. D. I> . Mmfater. 11 a. m. — Sermon by the 3£lnliter. No Evening Ser»tc«. mm I'UF->BVTEKIA.N CHI'KCH. On 421 sr.. between Stti aaJ «th aver R«v ANTHONY H. EVAN'S, D. D.. Pastor. E«v. EUiOTT W. BROWN. D. D.. of North f.elJ. Magg.. xfl\l prrach ax 11 a. no. Thr tburcb of thf Divine Paternity. Central Parts H>«t and *6th »*r*«rt. Sermon by the Pastor. FRANK. OIJVER HALL, ,O. D.. a; II a m. Subject: -XICODEMirs THE PH.VRt.SEg~ ALL SOCL.-J fl'n:tartaa>. Foartij Avsnne 20th St.. R#T. THOMAS R. SLICER. Pastor.— -Rev. ALGEUXOX S. CRAPSET. D. IX. of Rot-h*9t»r, ■will Ci>n>luct services ana preach senacn. Ser vices .1 a■ M AH cordially invifd. 13 CHURCH OF THE IXCARN-ATION*. Uarfhion *'..■ ami 35tU St., Rsr. W. 11. tiROSVEXoR. D D., Hector. — S 1. m . Holy Communion: tl m. m., Mr: 1 Service and vrmon (Rector*; -i p. ro.. Evening Pn>yer. ' . LENOX AYE. COLX£*OIATE m RCMr~«or. 123J st. — R»v. EIXJAII TILTON. Jr.. D D. t Pastor. 11 a. tn., preachinij by t&« Pastor. H m.. Illustrated aAlre-a br th* Key. »*R.tXK J. i?Ct'D PER. _ Xl lI.KUo rKtSUVIEKIAX CHIBCJb. Br:a.lway and 7W st. Preaching at It «> .•:«.•!< by urn KEY. Kt>BKl{T MACtUSXtUS. O- D. CHURCH OS* THE HEAVEnLY RJBarr sth «v#.. shore 4ith »t R-v HERBERT JSIUPMAN". nectar. Servlta** .** and II a. m.. » pt ra. C.W.VAUY. WEST S7TH- ST.— DR. iIAC ARTIIUR. 11. •'Vacation RHSs'on": 8. Musical Service. «:nui» "Holy City." tall choir. Bow m!»n. ronductor. KEnj<llOLi> SOCtBTY Or"~FJUEXDS ' (Orthol <lox>. — Heelings for Worship. Hi East 20th St. Nessr Yorfc. II: Washington and Lafayette Xvm.'. Brook'vn. 10:45. * RBl.iaiOl-3 SOCIETY OF FRIEXDS^T Sittings tor wor»nip. Ham. at 221 E*st »SO) it.. Manhattan, aad 110 ScheraMrboraat Brooklyn VTSSX *3t> ST. P-RE=BTTSF.IAX CHtTRCH" ass; Mi aye — a»v predkbsck j. sTa\ _«- 35