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<£e«<s which caanct be drawn Inside. T j*>re may be other open air pulpits in t * nf . metropolis, but ordinarily rectors BIJ< j curates consider their duty ended vhrn they have preached to the pews Inside- It is not likely that much use will be n^ade of the new preaching cross by the cl«-?T of St. Paul's. Little space is gvaflibl* there for open air congrega tions, and the. pretty gardens with Boscedas shrubs fashioned in Latin texts will have to be sacrificed if per vices grf. attempted from the hlgL plat foTr - tinder the bronse statue. The 'restoration of the quaint preaching of Tadcr and Plantapanet times outside of "'.STren's majestic structure will be as im practicable as the re-establishment of tn* annual folkmotes of Londoners by ♦he ringing of the rreat hell. The cross VIH -.« for ornament rather than tor ns«?: and certainly designer and sculptor nave made it a highly decorative work. -• - actual site of the old cross was discovered when the burial ground was c-rnverted into an ornamental garden. pnd it was permanently marked by a. nsTOBSXt. *rttn Inscription on th«* sur fn-«- level. That ha? been a shabby mun~~ of a. unique rentre of historical «nd religious associations, whpf the Tattle cf the Reformation was fought learned dfvisjea and sympathetic - fr p.Tvds and the independence of the * Encash Chun-}' prorlaimed. The new crcsh. while not a. replica «>f the old one, bin Q'Jeen Eleanor"? cross in front of ti>* Charing «^ross station, i? an ar tlstJc and beautiful souvenir of ■ hal lo^^d ppo\ in the dreamy reaches of the r a?t. I. X. F. Register tHis morning, on your way to business; iHis is the last day that the registry booths are open. A vote for the ftaputi -t- ticket is a step toward clean politics. Cast your ballet for Stimson. Register early and protect your vote. VO^K COMMON SAILOR American Seamen's Friend Society Marks Its e2d Anniversary. ••TS* **a is His. and H«- tniide it; nor hay ■w« any risht to consider ihf -' a BON or less Hi? tnaa th* hills and th" valleys He t^sc*. or tO vjthhoid «>ur ..... from U» • •Mimon fa'ikw. *lio hap never for an gnttast b^fi drni^rJ The notice of God. Ttofagh 11" ppinter tiie ship on tli** <-oral har. H* hath h«*r crew in rhar^r." " said Rev. r>r. Wallace MacMuHen at tl"* -SXadlsoa Av*nu^ Koipcopa' Churcto yester .^J*v. The oc-«sicn wai< th*» <>;ieht> -f-^cond Arn!v<rrary of iho American — amen's Friend Social v. *.nd Dr. Charles A. Stod <i«rd. jir«sid»»Tit. and M>\-»ra.l of the ts-u£t"t:s cf the society were uieaeuu "In :h" o,'d days of the sailing vessel tne bontla n » =-yrr.pathy and common danger iw? *w«*?rt pass«=r.p«?rs and cn>w m-ere stronger. A. <3 r. ■was out of this sympathy •'-.:-• ■ na aro <» tn^ American St-jimerfs FrK'nd So ciety." ebJ<3 Dr. Mat-Mulien. "T".:^ srood done tfc<? soc>:> ..as b«?en Inestimable. The society ha> seventeen chaplains in many rarTP of th<° world, and in the last year r*-ar!r 9">.^« ( teamen have attended their wrrices. Tb« shipw recked have r*?*»n clothed and f*d. and "••>» libraries, of fii ty volumes rach, are sent to pea. "The society has dor;* ar.d is atO] doin? blened •work. Let us then help as -we can In this •work, and pruy that - ■•■; may mul tiply Its friends and honor and inspire its *crk." ~haplain Edward M. Deem?, of liJ<? BO rdexy*a Instil ;:t«? for Merchant Seamen. No. ,v>7 West street, then speke of the many Tn-sFions of the society here and abroad. "We gr» iv.xo the pi*."" said he. "but you msst hold the r"p«=." THEATRICAL NOTES. • 'or.tracts have been signed by which F«-mj Ko'ker. la?t season a member of The Sew -;..;- compaay. «rtH become a star under the manugement of Henry TV. Sav age. His first iipr-earance will be in "The i'ir»-at Na:ne.'" a comedy by Victor l>eon. •ice of the librettists of "The Merry "U'jd^w." and Leo Fall. Charles Kiem's latest play, "The Gam- Mtt." whicr. is aoar filling a five weeks' 'rrareTiient in Chicago, will open in New -Tcrk at Mas'.ne QUotfa Theatre on C»<-to -_b»r Cl. In the cast are George Nash. Stevenson, William B. Mack. D*» vr,t; c. Jennings. Cecil Kingston. William r'^'^riro. Jan«- Cowl. Edith Parker and "Julia liay. Mr=. Leslie Carter will begin rehearsals this morning for "Two Women," by Ru p»Tt Hughe?. Frank Wonhinr will be her W dmc man. and others engaged for the Minporting «-<.t:ij^.ny are Harrison Hunter. '.■h.n<iov, H'jr«t. Arthur R. L2wrrn<.-e, Louis JJyle and H<-!-n Tracy. The F'.iul>erty are s<< well <?ati<;fie<i with the r**-epTi'»n "f "Madame Troubadour" at the Lyric Theatre, that they will give a •prize of ?"!.u(in f,»r «n American musical ."•iipoMition r >f '.he Kam« type. According " • ■ the «nn«uncement. the new piece Is **Vtart#d as the fir^t atirartion for thy: new "Barn F. st'-;i;bert Theatre which is fooii to 1« built in >ianhattsn. --.■. ].--]. ■ ■ _r. ;r ■ Beet < - ■ - T^llowinc the buocww °f tbe pcl ■ rmaaM * fw Trorkirg peoo^e at The New Theatre mi r— ~,'.r r 10. and Oscar HatnmTFt'in'f an '..T"?imc*ment that be would set aside M<m ■ <J«y '■•.•nine.- a* th<- Manhattan Opera -,T\^i%.f fnr a similar rurr***. Julius Hoff ritt-i v*>st*rday that he had had conferences .•»v «>- .»ral manager? and a number had .ifrr-~i to co-operate m the movement. f^ rr ... French ar.<J Dr. Houston Collteson. . ."*ho have, l^en apr*«ring at Sfinway 11a".'.. London, for Feven months, will begin S3 Arrerican tour at Mendelssohn Hall •trly n«rt month. They call their recitals of Art and Music' Dr. CoHlsson > ■■-. and singer and Mr. French ■' ■ painter, writer an«i lecturer. Emily st-v»»n* will be the only w^man in Ib- -s-' tot "Wben All Has B^n Said." a nwr play by Bayard Veffler. The title of :.**' slay w^s fleered in a contest for a ; prfee cf SIM offered by Lieblcr & Co.. who --» *"' prodoci rhe plaX rr-T^'!iliani [■aaaaassacaa promises * nov l-*y wbea he opens the Victoria roof Beat ♦s*turday with motion pjetures. By the. y.iit* of an invention called th» "mirror tcrtm" he says the picture-? may be eee.n p*rfecXly m hroad daylight. T<< r>: i- Co. ha.ye accept ««} a nc« r ! *>* »-:• Misi Harriet Ford. based on Judge Ben H L.::iO?f-v- 'The lieast and the Jungle. * c ray expose* the pbUflol ring In Den •'- and reveals th. methods of Jud.se. rjaaV »•»•> juvt-ni> court. •^arl O'-ey, Ooverrmr Oeneral of «;an/tda, "-'". Lady Orey hay tn« In\-lta 1 on at Wimhmp Ames to attend a per; T^nnanr* »l The New Theatre repertory •tnpany in Carj-la. They will see "The ilerry \Viv*-5 cf Windsor" at Montreal on .3 h*\ night o! October 2K. Us. Forbes-Robertson bade far«-w?»: at - - J-xiu*- EUott'a Theatre Saturday night. He •Ka* recatlled several timo*"at the end of t'e second art, and ias aewwaadad to ■■*■" a ?v*+" h. m which tie thanked Arner '"*v.s f.rt- the cordial way in which they '••*.: received 1-im ana hi.< play. "The Pwaa »ag of th,: Third Floor lia< k." during he ■•• :rne of more tluin t«-\f n month*. He *n«i that he hoped to return next rear hi Jww jlaytr Mr. Forl e»-Rob«rt>on and his renpuy will be at the Weal End Theatre I! ..- »erk. aft/r whi'h they will begin a . lci.^ tour cf tiie country. PICE YPSILANTI Descendant of the Leader of Greeks' War of Independence. [Copyrlclit. 191f». by th» Brentiro«x! Company. 1 Prince Tp^iianti. who arrived with th* .princess in New York last week from Eu rope, bound for the international ballooning competition at St. Loui?. is descended from one or the leaders of the Greek war of independence, whose, memory hi pre served in this country through F«*veral towns, notably one in Michigan, being named for him. The prince. erkeae tvifv is an Hungarian, formerly a Miss Klep^ch. Is ■ s='">n nt t -' l *' Prince Gregory Ypsilanti who was for man years Greek Envoy in Austria. He died very suddenly, immediately alter having resigned his diplomatic oCHre in connection with a financial disaster in which he was iniolved. He is generally believed to have committed sulHde. Some weeks after his death his wife was declared bankrupt, al though as one of the four daughters "f the multi-millionaire «;-r . ....!«.- banker, financier and railroad contractor. Baron Simon Sina, she had inherited vi her por tion a fortune of $20,(«0.<v«>. Of h*r sisters. one married a Mavrocordatc. who '"= for m. time Gre«"k Minister at Part* w_hlle an oth«>r became the wife of th#» Due de Cas tries, brother of La Marecbale MacMahon. "When the Due if Castries di»-<l his widow rrarried. *n second's noes. v " in; '' Em manuel d'Harcourt. of the French ducal house of that -me. who ha» been the '' '- vate secretary and alter ego oi Marshal MacMahon throughout the term of his Presidency of the French Republic The vieomte ;ind the duchess are d^v<>t<-d to the turf and maintain one ■•' the finest and DKMt successful rarinc tlabies in France. AaM of the Prince Tpsllantl who is now visiting America fs the wife of Prince Philip Holieniohe-Sehillirgpfun-t. th«» r don son and heir of that old Prince Chlodwlg; Horfnlohc who was in turn Prime Minister of Bavaria, German Ambassador in Paris. Governor General of Alsace-Lorraine and Chancellor of the Empire, and the post humous publication of whose diaries by Ms y<vincer son. Prince Alexander, created bo sreat a sensation thre< years" ago, The Yppilanti? hall from Trebizund. are of Grp*»k origin and plaj^d a very impor tant role in the closing years of the Byzan tine Empire. Constantine Ypsilanti being en record as having in *"?<> married the daughter of Emperor Manuel 111 at Con stantHV-pi* 1 . being Invested by the latter with the office of Grand Master of the Pal ace. which in those days was equivalent to the post of Grand Vizier. R^maininc in Btjunboul after it.« capture bj? th«* Turks, they managed to win the rood will of the various Sultana, ailing the offices of physician in chief, of grand dragoman or chief interpreter to the Sub lime Porte, and of Governor to the Chris tian provinces of Turkey in Europe. As provincial governors they w*>re permitted to style themselves "pi-inee." ChristJana^be bag in those days considered unworthy of the rank of racha. which was restricted to followers of the Fropliet. lander Ypsilanti was Governor or Prince of Wal lachia and of Moldavia during; the last twenty years of the eighteenth century, and no one of his time stood higher in favor of Sultan Abdul Hainid I and of Selim 111. His son Constantine was also Prince or Governor of Moldavia and Walia. chia, and it was his son Alexander who was elected by the Gr«-*k nation as its leader and who first raised the standard of the Cross apainst the Crescent in its war of independence. His brothers. De metrins, George, Nicholas and Gregory, all took part in this war under his orders, their names being identified with mm or another of the battles of that struggle, and the prince who has just arrived, and who Is co much interested in ballooning, is a grandson of Prince Gregory a.nd makes Us home in Vienna. Of course, strictly speaking, the Tp?i lantis of to-day have no right whatsoever to the title of prince, for. in the first place. all nobiliary titles have not only been abolished by the constitution of the king dora of Greece, but their use has even b*^n forbidden under all sorts of pains and penalties. Then. too. the Ypsllantis were never recognized as princes by the Holy Roman Empire, nor were their titles as such confirmed ty any European mon arch, while the Turkish title of prince held by some at their ancestors wan merely ad personam and by -.'-• ofnee of provincial governor, the title ceas ing when their term of governor came to an end. Lady Dorothy and Lady Cardigan. At the time wlien old Lady Cardigan? scurrilous ••Ueminiscences" appeared, a year or so ago. and the scandalous stories contained therein were widely quoted as necessarily authentic, owing to their having v.ppn put in print by a woman who was alleged to be a peeress of the realm and ■ leader of English society. I pointed out in tbese letters that her stories culd at the be 5 t be only hearsay, since from the time when she had been turned out of her fath er's *joui^ ma a young girl, on account of b«r flagrantly public association with Lord Cardigan, then married to another woman. she had been rigorously barred from court and o-rracised by society, and that she had forfeited her Status a> a Widowed peeress wh-n nearly forty years M ■' - married, -n secondes noces. * Portuguese who styled himself de Lanca-str". The views which I then exj»res«^ have now t*~ n confirmed by her contemporary. Th« equally octogenarian Lady Dorothy Neville, in her reminiscences, entitled **l n der Five Reigns."* Just published. Lady Dorothy, ■who is one of the land marks of London society and one of its most popular figure?, is a sister of the late and fourth Earl of Orford. a daughter of th* third ear! and an aunt of the present rrc . she writes anewt Lady Cardigan as follow?: "I remember Lady Cardigan as an unmarried girl, dancing the cachuea with treat verve"; and then goes on to state "Lady Cardigan was little seen after her girlhood in society, which in her case sym pathized ...... she term? the unkind and inconsistent peculiarities of Queen Vic toria, who always, according to her own account. waj= strongly prepossessed against ber." There are two stories In Lady Dorothy » reminiscences, not entirely new. but so unknown in this country and so good in tiieir way as to bear repetition. One- of them refers to the citition of Loro. PaJaaerstoa aa corespondent In a divorce case, when he was • ring his eightieth year and was occupying the office of Pre mier. It was not the flrst time that Palm er! =ton had th • figured In the divorce court, but never before while Prime Min ister of the realm. The managers of the Tory parti' were exceedingly anxious to make use of this scandal (which was eventually Mttled before it came up for I trial) hi an an "' " k " P° n P&lmerston. with tirt ehjsrt of forcing him to resign the i ' m ier«h!p. and great pressure wan put Pf n l>0" d Bea.coswawM (then Benjamin | ntarajett) to utilize the matter in this faah fov the baaaftt of his party. Disraeli. L°" v refused to listen to any such Bug ! '"'*. 'saving that It was unworthy and R r^L\i*h"t" confer It. but. according (o I lldy Dorothy, he cynically adapted that wg> on f-r retraining from attack "■ r , p.. c , la connection with the af- Ing P^ m 77 that such an evl- l fair waa b.» iuthtul exuheranoa and v, jdet»o» of tP« -Baaawaarte" Prime Minister taUty of the ocx . would make him m -^ mashes than no teUs a good Hlory iUu^ Lady Doroth> d pruV crbial tacl iraun, the ff«" v of the House of tunilty of the « {h< , Duke Oaveadlaß. " — *"" J- to «y. the grand of L>evcnshire-t" al M/U-YORK DAILY TRIBT NE. MONDAY. CKTORER 17. IMP. father of the present duke of that ilk-and his brother. I*** George Cavendish, were Posting througn Germany, and on stopping at an inn •«*• told that they could be accommodated only in a room containing three bed*, one of win. h was already occu pied They had *&*** and retired to the apartment, tmt felt ■ < " ni " curiosity, and while bndfesstag « lr * w aside th« ted cur tain an.l took ■ momentary peep at tlio> occupant of •■'■■■'• third b-d. Then each got into his own t"<i a"'la "' l * lept soundly throuzh the nisrht N«rt morning, after they had breakfasted. P»« their bi " ■** ••*• walk ing ... of the hotel, the duke merely said 10 his brother, "(Jeorge. did you see the dead Uodyr; "Ye?." was the reply. And then they both -010 l intr> th<lir chaise and prooeeded on •ir J«« rnii >" together, with out anothT word. Lord Eustace's Golden Wedding. I>ord Eustace Cecil; who has just cele brated his golden wedding, la the only sur viving full brother of the. late Marquis of Salisbury, hifl wlf« hems a sister of the Earl of Eldon. He is a soldier by profes sion, served in South Africa, in the Crime an War. and in the Indian Mutiny, retiring as colonel of the Coldstreatn Guards to devote himself to Parliamentary work, representing South Essex in the House of Commons. He *■*■ for a number of years surveyor general of th« Ordnance, rod i<ro vice-president of the Great East ern Railroad, while his son Evelyn is also a railroad magnate and will be re membered in this country as one o f tha principal delcsrat^s of Great Britain to the International Railroad Congress at Was!.- Ington in IPGS. Evelyn Cecil, by-the-bye. was the las! Englishman to confer with Presi dents K nicer and -•• ■ before the out break of the Transvaal war. is member of Parliament for one of the divisions of Bir mingham, and was for some time the pri vate secretary of his uncle. Lord Salisbury, during the latter"s premiership. lvord Eustace Cecil was but two years old when his grandmother, the wife of the lirst Marquis of Salisbury, met with such a shocking death at Hathcld. the naces tral borne of the Cecil family Bince the days of Qiif-en Elizabeth. She had arrived there to vi. her son. the second marquis. and her grandchildren, including Lord Eustace Cecil, Lady Blanche (afterward mother of ex-Premier Arthur Balfouri and Lord Robert Cecil, who subsequently became, third Marquis of Salisbury and Conserva tive- Premier. The old lady la : retired to her sitting room to write some letters. It is thought that her high head dress knocked over a lighted wax taper, whicn icnit<*d some paper: on the table at which she was writing. The apartment was •soon In a blaze. When the alarm was raised the marquis rushed to the ■ ■ Be, a.nd was hor rified to find that his mother had locked the li^avy nia.hogany door of the room on the inside, and thai it could not be forced. Before the tire was subdued the entire wing of the houso was gutted and the body of the marchioness turned to a cinder. MARQUISE DE FONTENOY. HUYLER'S MEMORY PRAISED Hundreds at Service in Calvary Methodist Episcopal Church. rial service in honor of John 8. i died on Or >• r i. was held iy afternoon in Calvary Methodist : treel and Sev enth avenue. Among those m attendance ■ tree hundred of bis employes. A tetter waa read from K. Pulton Cut ting, in Which the writer mentioned the hearty sympathy Mr, Huyler had for all md civic movements which nromlard pood to his fellow man. "He com- In a remarkable degree." wrote Mr. ttensity of devotion with liber ality of thought. For him the distance to ix country musi ■ but a short Lay's journey." Wiiliam Jay s i Ing of Mr. in of affairs," sa.id that in his husiness and public life he was trans parently Christiaji. The B«V. Dr. K. Mason North, president of the Church Extension and CSty Mi.-^ion Society. o f -which Mr. Huyler was treasurer, spoke of the bitter . philanthropist." lie said It was d"ubtful if Mr. Huyii ,- ever thought of •' as a. philanthropist; bJa philan thropy was of the kind that did not let his left hand know what his right hand did. Rev C H Ooodell. pastor of <"*alvary • Mr. Huyler belonged, told of his conversion in 1888, ar.d "»a;d that Mr. told him that at first be pavf one - Income to the service of his fellow man. then one-fifth, then one-fourth. • •■• Sue-half and v be quit keeping any ; : M. E. CHURCH BOARDS TO MEET Annual Gatherings of Administrative Bodies in Many Cities. r»;rtes for the annual meetings of the administrative boards of the Methodist Episcopal Church, •-■ ■ --Tip of the board of bishops, official!', ministers and lay men, were announced 'ast night. The ap propriations to he made will aggregate more than ?4,'K>o.nno. The more impor tant meetings are the following Board of managers of the Woman's Home Missionary Society, at Buffalo, Oc tober : '• to 27; general executive com mittee of th<» Woman's Foreign Mission ary Society, at Boston. October 27; semi annual meeting of the board of bishops, Washington. October J*>, and convention cf the National City Evangelization Union, at Pittsburg, November 1. The general committee fn r foreign missions will me»t in Baltimore on No vember 3 to make appropriations for for eign mission fields The general commit tee of the PYeedmai Aid Society will convene in Philadelphia on .November 8. • m November 10 the genera! committee of home missions and church extension will bold Its annual meeting in New York City, and the managing board of the Meth odist Brotherhood will hold Its semi-an nual meeting on November l«i. also in New York. IN THE BERKSHIRES. r«iea>ai •■ Tb« Trlboaa.] Laenox. ' • "■ '"« '■ Dahlgren and Somoia Dahljrren. of Newport, are ■ William D. Sloane has been confined to Elm Court for several days by an attack of bronchitis. Mrs. i> Percy Morgan and the Misses are visiting Miss Gertrude Parsons at Btooeovi Mrs. Montgomery Hare, who has been at Stonover. has gone to New York. Mi?s Ethel V. Foluom ha» closed Moun tainview Farm for the season Bhe will spend the winter in Pari.s. Major and Mrs. C. B. Bundry and chil dren, who have been visiting Mr. and Mrs. George Winthrop Foluom. have gone to New York, from where they win sail on Tuesday for England. Miss Ellen Buckler Is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Sedgwick. Mr. arid Mrs. Robert Brewster. of Mount Kifico. are visiting Captain and Mrs. John B. Barnes. Mrs. Henry V. Da I lei I" who has been a guest of Mrs. Churchill Oattcrlea, has gaaa to Washington. Mrs. Edward DeianeW of New York Is a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick S. Dei- Arrivals at the Hotel Asplnall are Mr. and Mrs T Shaw Safe, Mr. and Mrs. Louis McCagg and Mi.«." Augusta - %I ' •««. of N«woort; Mrs. T. W. Jackson, Mih.i Ixmls.j Jackson Mr and Mr.- George Brinkerhoff. Mr and" Mrs Edward Swift and Baron and HaronePH A. <* KlilK. Of New York: Mr. and Mr-- E Dennison Bement, of Huston, Colonel and Mrs. Gustav« Pabsl and Mrs. Thomas Wright, of Milwaukee William Robinson !h a guest of Miss Adele Knetiand at Fairlawn. W V Klncsland. jr.. of I'ari.s la a guest of Albert X Gallatin at the Curtis Hotel. Mrs. Alexander Van R«nssela«r and Al:ms Alt. c Van Renßßslaer, of New York, are iat the Curtis Hotel. SHE BINS THE SOUL Mme. Rique Is Founder of Uni versity for Its Culture. SURE CURE FOR INSANITY Would Abolish Asylums, as One- Fourth of Population Is Crazy, Anyway. Mm- Adele Marie Biaae. who wa* until recently head of tbeCtrcW of Universal Soul Freedom, is now the founder and teacher of th- -University for Soul Education and Mental and Material Elevation." New York has all sorts of universities for the training of every variety of talent and leaning and why not one for the soul, asks- Mme. Rique -The doors of all Insane asylums should be thrown open and the inmates turned loose." says Mme. Riqtie. -More, than 25 per cent of th" people walking around the streets of New York are crazy, and it is unjust discrimination to deprive a few of their liberty while there axe so many crazy people at large. This new develop ment of the soul will cure tbfl mentally af flicted They are ■<'■'■ one-idead. I have studied in hospitals, in asylums, and have delved and dug into every cult, and I now pee that by the culture of the soul insan ity can be definitely cured. In time it will be almost abolished. "The soul is here." continued Mm* 1 . Rique, tapping herself on the cheat, "right here in x definite spot I know it's here because that's where the breath of life is. and when you cease to breathe the soul dies. res, the f=eat of the soul is in the lungs '" The new university has started out well, according to its head. It is now some twelve months old and '■ working won der?. Uses No Books, Just a Compass. "In t!ip cults I have studied." she said. "1 have rejected all thai does not help in elevating the soul. I teach these students what is in themselves and how best to de velop It. We work with a compass— no books. On the compass are the four forces — physical, mental, moral and spiritual. It Is easy onoupii when you come to the first two. but people do not understand the latter, and yet they are the compel ling ones. There ar" seven qualities, and for each of these I use a symbol very similar to the Masonic signs. This morn ins in my lecture at Duryea Hall, in "West 7_d street, I used a ladder. Each rung is named — love, faith, and so on. "Now, the way to teach thes»- people to elevate their souls is to pet then to under stand the sixth s«-nse — oh, yes. there is a sixtli sense, without a doubt. It Is located In a .small gland of the brain, just in the centre of the forehead. From it reflects the intelligence of the brain." "Telling what is in the brain or com municating with some one?" Mme. Rique was asked. "Both." she replied. "It reflects the thought back to the memory and then you get comparison. That's what I teach my pupils : most people go along and see some thing and never think about it. But what I want them to do is to compare it. In trospection is everything. Vibration is. of course, the keynote of the whole thing. You must vibrate the brain. Don't let it go too much on one thing. By this devel opment perfect happiness and success is attained. Use all of its convolutions. Now. you know, each brain must be developed for its individual body, and each soul, too; but in time it will be Been that every per son baa attained the perfect, systematic harmony.' Says Thought Has Coior and Smell. Mme. Rique is a believer, too. in the theory that every thought has a peculiar smell. She also beHeves in the idea of color applied to thought. "Now. if you and I were talking in per fect harmony," she said, ''and we would forget all about ourselves and think only of the sympathetic attitude In which we were disrupting there would be a distinct blue ;rrounding us. But if a discord crept in a red spot would flash out. "For instance, sometimes, when T get a letter. I read along, and there is a certain line—] .see a yellow glow over that line. T don"t like that, that's deception. Then when the person comes to gee me I work indirectly along that line they have writ ten, and when they come out and confess or explain a blue light shines about them. All of that, now. Is allied to the teaching of the university •I am convinced after all the cults and 'Isms' arc. thrashed out that this develop ment of the soul Is the fundamental idea. By Its application success can be attained. As I say, insanity can be cured, and the past tragedies of a life can be cured by tilling the mind that these scars are not the only thing for the soul to look to. "Married person?, whose souls are devel oped, would be kinder to each other, and persons who are thin kin of marriage would he helped in their selection, for in stead of selecting: just for a certain qual ity, they would consider more broadly. It's very simple when you come down to it. Mr. Edison's great Inventions seem almost mysterious until explained. They are sim ple principles. And this is simple, too — the four forces mental, physical, moral and spiritual. Remsmber! This is the last day on which you can file your protest against Dix and Tammany Hall. A vote for Stimson is a vote for decent government. If you don't register to-day, the last day, you will lose your vote. Get to the polls early! SOCIAL NOTES FROM NEWPORT. [By Telegraph to The Trihune. ] Newport. Oct. 16.— Mrs. William G. Weld closed her season to-day and returned to Boston in a special train, taking with her a maid who is seriously ill. Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Oelrichs are again occupying their own cottage in Kay street. They are planning to remain late. Robert Hone, of New York, has returned here for a late fall stay. Dudley G. tiautier has concluded his visit with Lispenard Stewart. NEW YORK FROM THE SUBURBS. Xew York is hard up and is selling its real eatate. It looks as though Central Park would have u» go if th.- city is ever to become solvent— Philadelphia Inquirer. New York needs additional transporta tion facilities across the Hudson. The In terest to those outside that city in in the fact that every such improvement tenda > lessen the congestion in the metropolis and promote that emigration from H which to tor the interests of the city Itself and for those of the surrounding t»-r ritori -Schenectady Gazette. At IIS worst this is a good land when Paine 1 - Vauglian ia able to say the New York slums are a paradise' compared with the slums of his own < ity of London. —Buffalo Enquirer A New York organization is moving to have* bills of far« printed iii English. Whether it Is "pota«e" or plain "soup there will be Just as much pleasure for th« rural visitor to go to the Waldorf and listen to the rich eating lt.-St. Paul Dis patch. New York In boasting about Its improved railway terminals, but In Intellectual de velopment New Yorkers have not yet grasped the idea of a union station.— Omaha Bee. In New York it is suggested (hat school lectures b»- given to train the younger treneratlon how to vote We may be. par doned for BUggeßtlng that much would de pend upon who whs empowered to do the training.— li.taai.l<««; Juuxa*' TWO NEW LONDON PLAYS Somerset Maugham's "Grace" — A Comedy by Warren Bell. By Marconi "Wireless.) London. Oct. 16.— The Klngsway The atre has been reopened, under the man agement of May Palfrey, with a farcical comedy by Warren Bell, entitled "Com pany for George." There were three acts, with continuous hut thoughtless merriment. Eva Moore was the princi pal actress, and played with charming vivacity. Kenneth Douglas, always good ; in youthful parts, supported her admira bly as a Cambridge undergraduate. A more important play. Somerset Maugham's "Grace." was produced with ; genuine enthusiasm at the Duke of York's Theatre. Irene Vanbrugh was I the heroine of this Somersetshire ro j mance, playing with sparkling charm in the comedy scenes, and reserving the re sources of her dramatic power for the passages of contrition over her own weakness and of passionate indignation i over the uncharitableness of those j around her. This thoroughly artistic performance was received with rounds of applause. Edmund Gwenn. Lillian McCarthy, Lady Tree and Denis Eadie supported her admirably. The moral of the rather morbid play was that charity should begin at home In the judgments of servants and underlings. OBITUARY. TOWNSEND C VAN PELT. After an illness of several months Town send Cortelyoo Van Pell died at his home. Ht ESghteenth avenue and 81st street. Van PeM Manor. Brooklyn, yesterday- T he funeral will be hHd from the New I Reformed Church, al Eighteenth avenue and Mth street on Wednesday. Mr van Pelt waa bora seventy-three years ago m the old manor house, which is tin standing, at BBth street and Twentieth avenue, fi* 1 was descended from a family of the oldest Dutch Battlers fes tak» up their rmkhin t In New fork. About forty years ago be went tt the house in which he died, and which was also built by his relatives, who al one time owned the territorj cuannlatng Van Pelt Manor aad Hatn Beach. The old boose was aaod by American oalcera during Urn Revolution. Mr Van Pell leaves ■ Wtf« GEORGE SEYMOUR. Philadelphia, Od lft Oeorge Seymour, former Minister of Finance, aember of U s Privy < ouncil and one of the n nent citizens of Jamaica, B. W. L, died to day from pneumonia ar the r^sirt.'n'-^ of I is son, Frederick Seymour whom h» waa visiting in this dty He - ty-nve years old. His body wiH be taken to Jamaica for burial MISS MAUDE VAN CUTSEN. [Bj T< I «rapii to Th. Newport K. 1., Oct IS. — Stisa Maude \'an Cutsen, a daughter ward Charlea Van Cutsen, <>f England, who ;n July with her brother aad sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Van onsen, died at the summer home of Mrs. C. C Pomeroy to-day. The cause of death waa pneumonia, which Miss Van • contracted hut week after leaving the Newport Hospital, where she had just re covered from an attack of typhoid fever. MR. DICKINSON GOES TO PARIS. Berlin. Oct. hV— Jacob M. Dickinson, the American Secretary of War. and party sla tted Potsdam to-day and started to-night for Fai:3. EDWARD N. WHITSON. Spokane. Wash., Oct IS.— Edward N. Whitsoa, judge of the United States cir cuit Court of the Eastern District of Wash ington, died at Mi home here last night, following an attack of paralysis. He was a pioneer of the Yakima. Valley. LEEMON M. BRUNDAGE. South NorwaJk, Conn.. Oct. ML— I miMl M. Brundage. Democratic Mayor of tnis city, died at his home here to-day, after a three weeks' illness from typhoid fever. At the time of his death he was secretary treasurer of the. Mutual Straw Ha: Coaa pany. He wad forty-four years oi>i and leaves a wii LAMBERT TREES BEQUESTS Jurist Wants Grandson to Live and Be Educated in America. ' By Telegraph to The Tribun".] Chicago, Oct. 16.— Pride in American ■•lti asoahip. and the hope that his grandson. Arthur Ronald Tree, will be educated and reside in the United States, instead of in England, where the father, Arthur M. Tree, rttides, were expressed In the will of Lam bert Tre<». former Minister to Belgium and Russia, which was filed yesterday. Un der the will, the son and grandson, who live in Warwickshire, England, are the principal beneficiaries The clause which relates to 'lie education of the grandson follows: •'It is my earnest hope that his father will se*» to it that my grandson is educated in the United State*, of which he is a citi zen, and where his pecuniary interests will be chiefly located, and where his fore fathers for many generations have lived and died." THE WEATHER REPORT Official Record and Forecast. — Washington. October 16.— The weather haa cleared in New Kngiand. Shorvers have- again occurred in the middle plateau region, and they hav<» extended eastward to the mi Idle Rockies. With the ex ceptloa of rain in Florida, the weather la n •»• fair quite generally in all sections east of th» Rocky Mountains. Throughout that area, the temperatures as a rule are exceptionally high for the teason. Maximum reading! of t>- degrees v-.-r.- reported at Pierre and Huron. S. D. There In a widespread area of maximum temperature of SO degrees and above, reaching from the east ern slope of the Rocities to the middle and south. Atlantic coasts. The position of th« tropical disturbance in th« Gulf of Mexico cannot tie dennitely determined from observations at Weather Bureau stations, hut reports by wireless from vessels m the Gulf indicate that the storm is moving westward, and that the- centre is already a considerable dis tance west of the Florida Keys. The swell at Key West Is gradually diminishing, while a moderate swell on the northwestern coast at Galveston baa been observed during- the last twenty-fnur Hours. As anticipated In the forecast issued Saturday night, the weather has cleared In th»» north At lantic eft* New England, and the -winds have shifted to westerly. Th*** winds have dimin ished and are now moderate. Fair weather will continue for t!:e next two or three days., with rroderate west shifting to northwest winds along the north Atlantic steamer route, which. it HI supposed, the balloon America will pursue. The conditions for the passage are most favorable, with the exception of -i tendency of the wind to shift to north of west, as the, course- is in a i Millnmiail; direction. Foreran t for Special Localities. — For N-w Bi.gland and Eastern New York, fair to-day and to- morrow somewhat cooler to-day; moderate Hli'llW«<il w'n^s. b»comln^ variable. For the District of Columbia. New Jersey. Eastern !\;nnny!vania. Delaware and Maryland, fair to-day ana to-mcrrow: somewhat cooler to tav; moderate, variable wteda. For Western New York and Western Pennsyl vania, fair to-day and probably to- morrow ; llKht. variable Wtßda, Observation* of United States weather bureau* tali«-n at 8 p. m. yesterday follow: City. . Temperature. \Veath»r. A'hnny 6«» <"l^ar Atlantic ■:• «•« < Tear Hottun w» 'Ipar Buffalo _ M '"!ear <^li-»pi tX. '"lenr Ifew Orleans 84 Clear -t I>(>ii!v 71 • '>nr Washington . ttß Clear f^ia-al Ofllrlal !;<-r<inl. — The. following official rer^rd from the Weather Bureau shews th« change* In the temperature for the last twenty four hour* In comparison with the corrcspondlne data of last rear: l»n». 1010 [ lf«X>. awl 3 a. in 4* BJ «p. m *■ •- •I a. m m r.- ap. m ♦" ♦*•"' 0 a. m 4ti Mo|ll|>. in 45 ■ 12 m ■ 4!> 7.1 112 p. m ''• — 4 p. m 50 77 Highest temperature yesterday. 77 decrees; ltrweat. 67: average, «7 : a\ erage tor ••orre»poii<l- InK •!••«•• la»t year. «.">. averuee for corresponding; dat« la "it thirty three yt-am :.» Local Forecast. -»• Fair today ami Tuemiav. Komcwhiit .-ool*,- tiv-.lav; moderate northwest "h'.u.iu. becoming \art&bj«. LONDON DRAMA American Romantic Comedies — Acting Better than Plays. London. October 1- Romantic comedy is a welcome sub stitute for odorous problem play of French origin. "Young 1 Fernald" is the work of two American authors. Miss Sutherland and Miss r»ix. who have al ready supplied Mr. Martin Harvey and Mr. Fred Terry with picturesque melo drama. The first night audience at the ■fans Theatre expected a glimpse of Miss Evelyn lllllard masquerading as a man; but the play was too modern in spirit for the introduction of. fanciful dis guises. It recounted a conflict between a middle aged author and a young girl, who, from different points of view, had set their faces against marriage — the man because he disliked fussiness. talk and distraction an'! was an apparently hopeless woman hater; the woman be cause she felt capable of doing a man work in the world and was in revolt aguinst all restrictions imposed by sex. Each was subjugated by the other be fore the fall of the curtain, and there was a most interesting struggle of tem peraments and principles before the high-spirited girl was curried away from the railway station in the arms of her strenuous protector. It was a high privilege fur seasoned playgoers to witness the fine perform- j ance of mat Millanl and Mr. Mi Wai— l tn this romantic duel. Each Imperson- j ated the character with vivid realism and played cleverly into the other's j hand. There was first the harassed , author, out of temper with a loquacious , aunt, incompetent servants and a silly sister-in-law, who insisted upon clearing ; his desk and burning his manuscripts, \ and when all his irritating relations were j bundled out of the lodge and he had announced that no woman should ever again cross his threshold there was Young Feraald, th» new secretary, knocking at the door and sweeping into the room with a fetching red gown. : There had been a mistake in the name; j a man had b-?en expected and a woman was not wanted on any terms, and cer tainly not on her conditions that clever ntss. companionship and efficiency were J not to be limited by th- claims of sn- j perior sex. As each t.»>k the matter : seriously there was n<> alternative for I the intruder's abrupt departure lor the noon in a raging snowstorm, and when search was made for her it was she who rescued his younger brother and made a series of disclosures of superior talent an.l force. The frostbitten victim with sprained ankle was restored to con- J m lowawaaj an omelet and coffee were improvised when the servants had made a mess of a late supper, and the worried author, inspired by her sympathy and good sense, sat up all night to dictate to her a luminous chapter of his great work. The details may seem farcical iin print but good acting by these I sharply contrasted characters made the scenes Intensely real and interesting. With daylisbt the fwoltan relations re turned to the lodge to rind the young girl asleep by the fire with the author's Mil coat folded around her. and then the chatter became incriminating- and scan dalous, the sister-in-law dropping off , into hysterics and the snobbish aunt laying "down the law that there must be an immediate marriage, especially as the amanuensis was connected with one of I the blue blooded Northern families. The i suitor offered his hand to the girl in a j perfunctory manner, and she scornfully ! refused marriage because he was con ' strained to confess that he had not been converted to her ideas of the equality of the sexes and the injustice of denying to women full rights as workers, com panions and artists. A fine scene, in ■which each explained with telling force his or her prejudices and principles, ended with her flight to the railway sta tion, where in the last act she was found asleep in a railway truck. Argument had failed, and there was nothing left for it but a display of superior physical force. The woman hater, converted and conquered in the course of a single night, clasped the non-resisting lady in Ma arms and started bravely fnr York. This 13 the new and effective method ■■ bringing down the curtain with I gen era! guffaw when nothing remains to be said and nobody hi wholly convinced. Mr George Alexander's reversion hi romantic comedy at the St. James's is even more exhilarating than Miss Mii lard's adventures in Yorkshire. "D'Arcy |of the Guards." also imported from America, where it had the advantage of patriotic motive in the heroines strug < gle between love and duty, is enlivened I with glints of scarlet, th- rattle of rife and drum, the cheerful clink of glasses, sparkling talk about petticoats spies and war and a soldiers' chorus. "Sally in Our Alley." Critics complain that awl stage conventions are old and stale, yet not one of them was prepared for the pistol shot in the third act. which hi the heroine's response to D'Arcy's menac of force. The stage needs a complete ! set of revised conventions and artifices i precisely as literature requires a fresh i collection of metaphors and adjectives; but a play can be bright and entertain { ing, even if letters are dropped on the i floor for the distraction of jealous lov- e rs, or if strategic plans are mislaid in the general's cloak, or if the miniature ; of a doting mother be mistaken for the ■ likeness of a rival. The American play, | with all its rusty devices, has a cha"rm 1 ing love story and at least one dramatic situation; and it is a favorite kind of j entertainment, with bravery of uniforms I and picturesque eighteenth century cos tumes, which has not been seen at dM St. James's for a long time. Mr. Alexander uses a delightful Dub lin drawl and racy brogue in this Irish impersonation, and while he lacks the as surance and buoyancy of the belligerent Celt he is a chivalrous soldier, a Jovial companion and an ardent lover. He is an accomplished master of blarney, has an insinuating, persuasive manner an 1 plays his part with unwonted vivacity, making as much of the light comedy as of the love passages. Handsome and fascinating Is Miss Evelyn D'Alroy -is the patriotic American girl, and most becoming and fetching are the graceful eighteenth century fro* ami hats. Her most bewitching moment is when, with powder and patch, she tries to dis guise herself in cocked hat and martial cloak, and full use she makes of her one effective chance for emotional acting when she sees that she has wounded her lover, and sends out her heart after him in a piteous cry for forgiveness. Critics do not need to be censorious when there is so unexpected a tragedy followed by a tender wooing. Piquant and pretty is Miss Margery Maude, in .i subordinate part, showins already In her IBM bow rruch heredity Tia.i to do with the mak in? «>f an actress. Bluff and hearty ia 1 Mr. Barnes a.* th*» array doctor; dashing rind reckless 1. Mr. Tear!* as the hero ine's brother; ar.d Mr. Spencer Is tbe> best negro servant seen on the London stage faff many a da - Mr. Hall Caine> has obtained a fin* old style actor in Mr. Bransby Williams fas the leading part in 'Th<* Bishop J Son." the new version of "The Deem ster," at the Garrlfk. H» haa also found one of the brightest and most -.iDan ionabt*» terriers ever ><"n on the stascu and introduced it as th»- Inornate asso ciate of Dan ifylrca. Th*- drama aaa> become more intense fr«»m the vartuu* transformations and aUjn mor» consist ently gliximy. Th»-re ns^d tt> be -■•"-«■• of brightness in "B*-n-my-i7hre*."* *a Wilson Barrett dramatize! the story. Real there is little s>av> the darknes3 vt the Bler-.t. Th- same ci>mp!aint cannuc b«> mad.- of *Inr-.-.n.<«t I xnt Georgt." tri* new production from th*- French, at the Prince of Walaara, in whi<:h Mr. Charles Hawtrey is disiwrtins himself for tiie entertainment of his admirers. He pro duces his effects with -fie minimum of effort when he enacts the part of an ac complished and versatile liar. Hi Oscar Asche and Hiss Lily Brayton will soon return to London with "Count Hanni baT as the ir first play. 3lr. Maugham's comedy, "The Landed. Gentry." ' 3 under rehearsal at the Duke of York - wita Miss Irene Vnnhruieh hi a part that ha well suited for her brilliant style of act ing- On*; of th*; most hopeful promises of a rather stagnant Londoa theatrical season la the rumor that Mr. Cyril Maude will play Jefferson's part in rßljj Van Winkle." I * F OPEN ROCKEFELLER HOSPITAL Building Connected with the Research Institute To Be Inspected To-day. Medical experts from Philadelphia, Bos ton, Baltimore and New York will attend the aaeadßfJ of the new hospital of tha Rockefeller Institute pat Medical Research m this city to-day. They wtll inspect th» buildins. which stands south of the Re search Institute. on Avenue A. at East ijbih I »tr'-*-'. this afternoon from ?. to «> o'clock. i The hoard of directors will receive th» public— rird that means any one tnterest-4 in the work which this institution ts about, to undertake. It was said yesterday t!»t ! John D. Rockefeller would be present at th*- «>r>*-rir.g. but this could not be verin-?«l last nisht. Jerome D. Green, genera! raan- Lscr. said yesterday that h* experts tr> j make an announcement at 3:3> o clo<~k trii* I afternoon which will he ni mxvii Interest !to th" pub!i<-. [c declined to give- any tn- I timation o! the nature of the announce ment. _ WHAT IS GOING ON TO-DAT. Free admission to the AmerU-an Muaouai of Natural Hx3torr .Annual me«-tinsr of th*» American .Vs*-H-i3t:'Vj «C Public Acatanuuaa. Hotel ajsw. i»;.v> a. tn. I"rof*-r<s'!r f. G. A. Window on "Wat*r P-.ilu'i'-a anil Wat' r Purification." Horm-»» \l.mn Audi torium. T^ach-irs Coilette, .1 p. Ok lleetinis <>t the Am»rtcun Institute of E:>rtrtcai Engineer: . No. 33 Wt* «> «W«t. Sp. a*. DIED. Bcrd'n. Mary U". mm <;n:ce li. K'l.ry. |-a.rr:e H. ll^ver. for^. Hyrte. S*rah E. £?'". t - £?£> BORDEX Mary 'Whitteinore. widow a! the la?* Colonel William Eord K n, of New York, on Sat urday moraine. October 15. I9t<». at her tome. No. 3»4 Vose avc. rioutii Oranse. N. J. Fu neral private. HENT.Y— At A<r.ir-.- rasa, S. J.. "n Thursday. October 1«. l-'l". Ca.rri*2 Hea-iiry. wt»e or Thomas S. Henry. Funeral service* wlu b» heui m Tnnity Episoopai Church, Eroad St.. Newark. N. J.. on Tuesday. October IS. at 3:J> p. m Relatives and friends are invited to at tind. Intfc-ment in Mount Pleasant Cemetery. Fritnd» may view the remains at her late home. No. 1177 Broad »t.. Newark. N. J.. on Monday. rrr,m 2 v- m. until * .•■ m-. aa^."" Tuesday. -»m 11 •- m. until 1 p. m. ws» • ccns:a papers piea^e copy. HYDE— On Sunday. October I*. 1310. at her resident—. No. 3>2 Lincoln Place. Erooklyn. Sanin Elizaoeth. widow of 'h*; late Ja.bez B. Hyd^. of Brooklyn. Funeral arivare. KET-SEY— Ei:>'n Valcrte Ketny. widow of Pnv fr^s.jr \mhroßC Parsons Keisev. in h»r .-a y«ar. Funera.l at iJt-r boxoa, in Clinton. N. Y-. October ly. M^PCER — At. Yorfctown. Octoh*r IH. !!>!!>. <^rac» II daughter ot Jotin A- and Gra.-e Harter jl^— o- jn h»r *-*■•* year. Funeral services from the re?iieaoe of h#r fattier. John A. Mer cer Torktown. X. T.. on Wcdandaar. XW* 1 inst., a: I.M p. in. Train Icavea New TJrjc { i):iu a. 13. ; AT ' MKETINO of rh» Boart of O veraun of the National t^mo-Tatw Clur. he»'l thirf 13Xh day <if October. Wl'>. ise tjilowtas resolutions w-re .uiupiect: ■ 1 WTiei»*s. In tije wijUcm of Divirt* ProrrMen.-e. Cor.- 1 Meyer, for mac-.- years la*t past and *<r* the * Vie*- President of the National Democratic dub, has t*»fn removed from this llfp; therefor* Resolved. That Men. his fallow Gv*«iuunt sti** fortral expression Co the grief we feel at rh« lea* of our friend and a?socia:». Mr Meyer not only commantje.l th» resoert or the- comraunitv bw.nl— or hi.s sur*r!aTive abl'» ties but he endear"-! himself tr> »!! who kn»^ him by his jj-r.fleness of rianner. his k!nrfnes» tif h-arr and hia unwavering sympathy for the ui* fc rrunate. Proruir-nt xa t.f ia3 in the busm*?* wona »nit in the a'^airs of the State. Ji- was even on*"* rm'nTtT for h!"» r»s*roiis ohartfy-. The many »"» ci[.ient3 of which must tver hold his bene3c»»no» m grmteftll remembrance Tn his death the Nation and Stat« txarrt Io« • valued citizen, the cans •! --hanry an inriimrir astir friend. *n.t th" National Democrat ic t I>i!» an efflcer -whose enersry ar. 1 r»source fulness eon~ t'ibuted pre— eminently* ro Its success. ' Resolved. That aisiirance of cur eomiol«nc*» >* exrend-c! to Mr. Meyer's faniif tn fheir bereave ment. an<i that these resolutions be t rartsm it* ft to the er'>f 3trTok*-n fa~:lv and published. JOHN FOX. Fresidrot. i J. LKW 15 L.TON. Secretary- STTlFT— Cw'ober 12. .Tohn Swift asM a* yearm. Rerrtcea at Tie p>in-*n' Chnrrh. No». 24t-'-*£ XV-sr -J2d 5t -Frank K. i.'ampbell EuiUilrsJ- Frlends invited. ■WORK— At Madison. N. X. on October '-■ ia»ai \!ice C- tVork. wife of '-"harles A. Work an<t daughter of Horace A. Hutclsiss. Furera! ser vices at her late resilience. Madlscn. V. J-. oa Monday. October IT. at ll:3O a. m. Inrwrnwit in <_ireen-x"<xJ. :-»t -^ o'.lock •■• •-.'.. Cleve land r^P-rn ptoaM '-opy. CE.>tETERIES- ." J THE TVOODLATTN CEMETFRT j 1 is readily accessible by Rarfma »rai23 f. '"Si Grand Central Station. WeSstcr «n<± »rome> avenue trolleys ar.d by carriase. Lota Jl3O u^. T*>lrphon«» 4833 Graniercy for Book or V!««e or representative. CrT.ce. 20 East 23d ?:.. Ne-sr York City. I M>EBT*KEK?». FRANK E. CAMPBELL 241-3 W-sf 2M St. Chapeis. Private Rooms. Pr-.vata Arsbalaasaav fel. 13^4 Chels«a. SPECIAL NOTICES. NEW -YORK TRIBi SUBSCRIPTION RATES Dullt Edition. Oat- * >nt in « lt» ot >«w York. JttMJ 4'itT •">«* Hobokcn. Flfnherp. i »•> < — -t-.. >uml;«T Edition, i '■ in<i.r!c aaaaaai >*■»» tinr. Fl»e lent*. In New York <";!> rouil •u.V^-riherm w\'.l hr rharsril I "■"' p«rr r«p> e*tra ;"-i.i .1 K1I'II" ny n.\iL postpaid. Paily. prr nioalti JJ *. ' D»ll3. D" >- »' ••■ awawaF. i"" r yr:ir ,- - »•!» •! Daily an . >uiMiay. ••■ "••'• 9 t-n n-tily and laaaawr. »•» month .t 1 ForrtKU F— fa— tUtra. OFFICE*. . Ml v ovni'K- -No. TJ* Nassau str*»t. waiVl. "/tW:t OVrtcp-X* li wiuiaaa t-noWS OKKIOK-N.r I.UU Broadway, or any "SJaS w« s t u&ia -ti^i Aoj No. iia w«t WASHINGTON 81-ÜBAU— TT»story Building nEWAiIk bKANCU iJKFU'K— asaafi N. * Summer No. ?»♦ Br:ad street. AIIEHIi.'ANS AXUiL>-Vi> will siad TUE TRIB HRCSSELi' — No. & Montasue de Ja Cactr. tdUNDON — t)fflt.-e of TUB TKIBL'3i£» »t Danes Inn llous*". So.^pZ* Stxuod. American fcUi*r * Lomi>aay. No. ti '.Ut market. T^omai^ Cook. 4. Sim Tourist Ofilen. T mlaWa CtrcnJb Ttrown, Shipley Jt Co.. Xa in PaU Mall. - lirothcrs. No T L*)t^tiury. Th.- Uia&m otSte of TTIH TKIBUXC la a ctnv wnteai place la leave advertiawiMau aa*l sui* ■criptmna. i'ARI.H- Slunr . .v Co.. No. 7 Rn« Sertaai John Winai— No. ♦• Ru« acs P-::t-i Krurtea. I i:«»si'- tiureau. No. "-: Rue I'aaiMn. Ol»>r^sn. Uarjea it CU. No. a 2 3jul*vtrt T