1
Used by people of refinement for over a quarter of a century PREPARED BY <7 Financial Condition, January Ist, 1903 Sylvester C. DUNHAM, President. i or ll<irtror<l, GoiMMclicut. The Travelers Insurance Company RESERVES. ETC RESOURCES. SOFAS, $35 to $120, ( former prices $48 to $156 ) i Mahogany and Fumed Oak frames up- holstered in Tapestry. Velour, Leather and Mo- hair x»lush— All-Upholstered. CHAIRS, $15, ( reduced from $22 ) Mahogany, upholstered in Velour. ARM CHAIRS, $48 & $90, ( reduced from $62 & $115) Oak and Mahogany frames, upholstered^ in Tapestry and Velour. All the acme of beauty, durability and economy, as you "buy oftme maker" Geo. C.Flint Co. 43. 45 and47 WEST 23 ?ST. i near BROADWAY. factory: 154 and 156 west I9?STREET A BARGAIN ELYSIUM. It is easy enough to turn one's house into an earthly Paradise^ with our bargains. Library suits and odd pieces that are veritable Foun- tains of Youth for every one who dips into them. 2 & 5 pc. SUITES, #90 to $125, (former prices $120 to $163) Mahogany frames, upholstered in Velour and Moire Tapestry. J& pLINT'sfINEpURNITURE Railroad Bonds and Stocks, . $16,728,055.55 Loans secured by Mortgages, first liens, . . 7,415,963.86 Governm't County & Municipal Bonds. 4,336,549.30 Other Bonds and Stocks. . . 1,206,400.00 Loans secured by Company's Policies, 1,980,475.00 Cash on hand and in Bank, . 1,435,319.58 Real Estate 1,193,531.62 Bank Stocks, .... 1,153,837.00 Loans secured by Collateral, . 630,043.83 Interest accrued but not due, . 298,429.21 Deferred Life Premiums, . . 419,199,01 Prem's in course of collection on Life Pols 271,564.02 Total Resources, .. $37,078,367.98 Reserve Funds, to protect poli- cies 531,285,842.43 Losses in process of adjustment, 201,841.54 Life premiums paid in advance, 34,730.1! Special Reserve for taxes, rents, etc., 121,625.53 Reserve to protect security valu- ations, .... 100,000.00 Excess Security to Polio -Holders, 5,334,328.37 Total Reserxes, etc., . $37,078,367.98 1,564 Broadway Between 36th and 57thSti. The Tribune Uptown Office Is now located at General Greene Puts Detective on Alleged Blackmailers. Police Commissioner Greene made the signifi- cant announcement vest; •:•«!«>• that he had ob- tained information that new detectives at the Union Market station were trying to collect blackmail. This is the station where Captain Gorman was m command last Sunday when he was suspended by General Greene for per- mittinga violation of the Liquor Tax law to f M openly in the precinct. Yesterday General Greene transferred Captain Becker from East Thii»y-fifth-st. to Union Market, and told him to pet evidence against detectives there who had bf*>n trying to collect blackmail. Captain Becker formerly was a detective ser- geant, and was promoted about a week apo. Commissioner Greene called him to To] ice ad- quarters yesterday, and. in UK presence of Chief Inspector Cortright and Inspector Clay- ton, informed him that he was sent on a special mission to Union Market. General Greene said he had received information that the new ward- men m the Union Market station were attempt- ing to collect b.ackmail. He told the captain that it should be possible to detect crime inside the force as well as outside of II He asked him to d.. his best to ferret out the trouble. He re- ferred to the new wardmen. who have been there only a week. The Commissioner announced that after be had received charges against Captain Goruiail for failure to prevent an excise violation In his precinct. Sergeant Ryan, who became acting captain, had brought charges against Sergeant Frank Tierney. Roundsman Sullivan and Patrol- man Hennessy. These charges General Greene Mid he had disapproved. If they had been brought before the Gorman charges they would have been entertained, he said. "Then you are not holding responsible the men on patrol?" he •»\u25a0 asked. "The captain is held responsible," was the answer. N General Greene yesterday published an amend- ment to the rule which has required captains in send in monthly lists of suspected places. The amendment makes it necessary for captains to tell each month what work they and their detectives have done in efforts to confirm their suspicions and close up gambling houses and dens of vice. The rule as amended cuts out plenty of work for precinct commanders in parts of the city where gaming and vice have been al- lowed to go unrepress?d. The reports hereafter must relate the steps taken to enforce the laws regarding gambling and disorderly houses, concert saloons, dives and other places where dissolute persons congregate, the Liquor Tax law examinations of suspicious places, public sports and labor on Sundays; the names or patrolmen detailed for plain clothes and de- tective duty and the sen-ices performed by each. inspections and a brief report showing the general condition of the precinct. District inspectors In transmitting these must j? certify to their accuracy and at the same time submit the names of the plain clothes men and detectives on duty at the district office, and the services performed by each; and also a brief r«>r.ort showing the condition of ta*. district. WANTS TO EXAMINE FEANK FARRELL. Record of 1902. TOTAL CASH INCOME, - - - - - $10,210,000 INCREASE IN RESOURCES, .... 3,260,000 INCREASE IN CASH INCOME, - 1,300,000 INCREASE IN EXCESS SECURITY TO POLICY-HOLDERS, 320,000 NEW LIFE INSURANCE ISSUED DURING YEAR, - 19,370,000 PAID TO POLICY-HOLDERS, ... - 3,700,000 ADDED TO RESERVE FUNDS, v - - - - 2,940,000 Record to end of 1902. PAID TO POLICY-HOLDERS, .... $50,000,000 LIFE INSURANCE IN FORCE, - - - -. 125,000,000 NUMBER OF ACCIDENT POLICIES ISSUED, - - 3,320,000 NUMBER OF ACCIDENT CLAIMS PAID, - - - 394,000 Simnscmerug. C^mnscmenta. Glmnscmcnts. C A It N E<: I E HALL. To-nlKltt nt KtlS. I'rojrrnmine: n i.. SCHUMANN, Overture to "Genoveva, DOStOn O->. SI. PAINT-SAENS. Concerto for _ . Violoncello in A minor. Op. 33. CvmnhnnV LOBIKL.br. Two Poems for Orchestra: OjlliptiUlijf -Avant nue Hi na ten allies." \ er- t\rnUaoirn ' ~lne; "Vilanelle dv Dlable." Rollinat: UrCnCSIIO , DVORAK. Symphony No. 5. in E ; minor. "From the New World.' Op. .•.>. < Soloist. Alwin Schroeder FaHirdav Aft.. Jan. IT. at 2:30- I»r?>f?rnumie: ; BRAHMS. Symphony No. I. in C minor. .. n ' I Od 68* GOUNOD. "Stances de Sapho. Mr GBnCKB from "Sapho"; GOLDMARK Chorus of 1111. Übliunu Sp , rttg an<l spirits' Dance, from "Mer- lin": ELOAB. "Sea Pictures": WAG- Conductor, NKR. Introduction and I»ve Death from "Tristan and Isolde." Soloist, Kirkby Lunn Seats $150 to "'•.; nt Box Office. Tyson's (.">th Aye. Hotel) and Dltson'?. at regular prices. . Justice L»e.ventritt said it appeared to be a prying expedition on the plaintiff's part, but he reserved hip decision. District Attorney Jerome, who was In court, showed considerable interest whvn he heard the name of Farrell mentioned. He at once moved his chair up to the counsel table and listened to the argument. Several times he smiled, as though the story of Barstow's alleged loss of $11,000 interested him. Plaintiff Sues for $11,000 Lost in Gambling Burbridge Also Defendant. Justlc* I>v«ntrftt. in the Supreme Court, yep- terdiy. heard fimaif on an application to va- cate an ... obtained for the examination of Frank .1. F—Well before trial of a suit beirun by Rosen J>. Bar^tow, of West Chester, to recover fOjOK 1o?t in pamblins in this city. BarFtow brings bto suit apair.Ft Farrell. James Kennedy. Gottfried Walbaum. Frank Burbridsre and the Commercial rif-rks" Club, alleging that the men named wore comWned t<» run a pambHnc; house in rooms of the club at No. 31 West Tlnrty-tiiir.i-st.. and that he lost his U.'OM In play there between April IS and July ] of last year. He declares that under the camWinj law. he is entitled to recover the money, but the defendants named In the suit have refused to return It Th* examination of Farrell is to discover die copartnership between Farrell and the others named, th.- Commercial Clerks* Club having been us<d as a cloak for their pamblinK operations, it is allepp'l. Barsto^- says he has -.-ii told in conver- sation with many persons that such a copartnership \u2666\u25a0xisT<?<2. and the partnership between Farreli and WaJbnum has been referred to in the newspapers on many occasions, as also the relations between the other defendants. C. L.. Hoffman, in asking lor the vacating of the order, said it was merely a fishing excursion on the part of the plaintiff, who knew all the facts neces- eary for him to bring his suit. MB RDCLSSOII H A L V l»* David Baxter Son2[ BASSO. D - t 1 Hotvnrd llrockwiij at the riano. KCCllal Tickets s«l.«M> and *!.."»«> at tMtson's. METROPOLITAN OPERA HOI SE. GRAND OI'BUA SEASON IJM>a-ltMKt. Under the direction of MX. MAIRKE diß.tl. TO-NIGHT at Performance at Special Prices. Double 1.111. I.A FIL.L.E Dt? REGIMENT »The DauKhter of the Raiment ». sembrich, Van i.'auteren; Sall^nac. Gtlibert. Followed at 10:1." by PAGUACCI. Scheff ; Danl. Campanarl. Conductor. Klon. Frl. Eve.. lan. 16. at 7:3*— D*t Rinjr (Ips Nlbelungen. DIE WAI.KIRK. «aci.«ki. Schumann-Heink. Homer. SchelT. Sajrsard, Marylli. Bridewell and Nordlca: Anthes. Van Rooy. Elir.blad. Conductor. Hertz. Sat. Aft.. Jan. IT. at 2—FAUST. Eames. Bridewell: Alvarez. Scotti. Ed. de Reszke. Conductor. Slanclnelli. Sat Evg.. Jan. 17, at 8 (at Pop. TANN- HAUSER Uadhkl. Seyirard. Mary.li; Gerhauaer. Blsphatn, Ulass. Conductor, Hertz. Sun. E>isr. . Jan. 18. at ft:30 Grand Popular Concert. Soloists: Sembrich (first appearance this season at these concerts). Brlder-ell; Dani. Bcottl Entire Opera Or- chestra. Conductor. Mancinelli. Mon. Evk.. Jan. 1». at 7:30 Der Rinse dcs Nlbelungren. SIEGFRIED. Xordica. Schumann-Heink. Scheff; Anthes, Van Rooy, Bispham, Conductor, Hertz. Wed. Evk.. Jan. 21. at AIDA. Gadskl. Klrkbj- I-unn. Marvlli : De Marchl. 'ampanari. Ed de Reszke. Journet. Conductor. Manctnelll. Frf. Evk.. Jan. ~J. at 7:3»>— Der Ring de 3 Nib«»lungen. GOTTERDAMMERUNO. Nordica, Reuss-Belce. Homer. Scheff. Bridewell; Anthes, Ed de Reszke. Bi»pham. Conductor. Hertz. WEBER PIANOS USED. METROPOLITAN opera hoi>e. Farewell P?rformances of BLEONORA DUSE r o- m °rrow Afternoon at 2 MAG DA Seats on Sale. $2.50. $1.50. $I.o<>. 75c. WAGNER OPERA LECTURE RECITALS BY "WALTER DAMHOSCII- Daly's Theatre. Mondays & Thursdays at 3 P. M.—To lay. "Parslfaf (wirh David Mannes. Violinist) : Jan. l»th. "Rheinßold" (with David Blspham). Jan. 2-"nd, "Walkure." Seats, Be to $1.00. HERALD ISpat'rp l "-->-- = Ilkllnbll THLATREI Telephone 70*-3S. Silt. RICHARD MANSFIELD for three evenlncs only and one matinee. In JULIUS C/CSAR. .MR. MANSFIELD'S LAST APPEARANCE HIMIK IN SHAKKSPERE'S <iBEAT TRAGEDY WILL OHIR SATl'linAY EVENING. JAN. IT. BEGINNING MONDAY, jan. 19TH. DEWOLF HOPPER 3; •N "MR. PICKWICK" . <?—? \u2666 DDIaJPCCC Kroadway & SMa St. Tele. 2452 I 'Evening rnINIICNN Mad. Mats. To-day & Sat. :at 9:30 '•MR. AMiREY BOIX'ICABLT scored an wdoVited triumph In 'When All the World Is Young, or 'HEIDELBERG.' **— X. Y. Herald. :;-K'.r.n';iK Monday, Jan. l»th. MR. LOUiS MANN in "THE CONSUL" SEATS ON SAUE TO-DAY. « \u2666 I* II © I Ski n n'way &39th St. I Mat" Wed. "A CHINESE HONEYMOON" NEAHINU ITS :{<m»tii PERFORMANCE. <>\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666<•\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666 ! MADISON S3. GARDEN. ~ I \u2666 i\ \u2666 THIRD ANNUAL \u2666 I Automobile Show I i Opens Sat. Eve., Jan. 17, at 8 o'clock \u2666 $\u2666»\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666»\u2666\u2666»\u2666»\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666»\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666 MRS. OSBORN'S PLAYHOUSE (YE ELIZABETHAN STAGE) reopen Jan. 27th **Komco & Juliet." DAI \/ ' Q B'wwy &SO at 8:15 f\ L I Cl Matinees \V«d. ,v Sat.. 2:15. THE BILLIONAIRE ESZ23& with farce In 3 acts. JEROME #YKES. Unqualified at overwhelming auccess. SI. NICHOLAS SKATING RINK CHAMPIONSHIP HOCKEY MATCH FRIDAY. JAN. MTU, •:« P. M. CKBSCCNT A. C. vs. HOCKET CLUB OF N. Y. MM.. 30c. H*»erved aMta, Otic, extra. HlanhSllani Broadway and 3Sd »tre«t. ., =. iinnullall t3\(c*.t MATIN OS SAT at 1 MRS. FISKE i SaS^ .•IjVo.VMUa P. M— Swond DOLMBTSCU CVNCEnT. gnu at llox OWea -m.l I>ttson'i. Arl ll X I \^ r\ ni cv K ». %ax 2r.c. a.v.. 6<vr. Mat. Dall* <exc't atoa i Be. I The .S«>«I«.» of Ju.llrr. TtU.> MAItKS" i:ia; Concert Sunday NUht. .;; ; IIX HALL. THIS iThur.-^.l Aft. at 3. Miss ETHEL IHIUN, .. Pianist Mr. ISiDOR SGKNITZLER, Violinist j Assisted by Mr. Herbert Witherspoon. $1 a:.(l VI. at Ditson'B. 567 B'way. MENDELSSO PIANO AND VIOLIN RECITAL. Ticket*. iNSURANCE COMPANIES BUY BONDS. Most of the $2o.Ooo.<Ky> 5 per cent one year notes given by the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Hallway Company, In payment for its one-half share of the Reading stock owned by the Baltimore end Ohio Railroad Company, have been taken by local life Insurance companies, it was learned yes- terday. The Mutual and New- York Life were the chief purchasers, the investment of the Equitable being rather smaller than that of either of the others. '^nffIAJESTIO !"' Broidn-ay and r>S)th St. Grand Circle. Opena TO-XIOHT at 8 o'clock sharp. Curtain Rises on A Kansas Cyclone. the WIZARD OF 02. JSStfiSK&i. BVt.3 181 O 114th1 14th St. THICKS U3C and SOc. T>\«iT<»U < S 14TH ST.. NEAR 3D AVB. CONTINUOUS. M^AND 30TCENTSJ Sherman & De Forrest. The Glee- SbT^wSo ft TheoL rhlnqullla. 3 Keatons. WASHINGTON STATUE IN SUBWAY PATH. President Cantor yesterday sent a letter to Presi- dent WUlcox of the Park Department, requesting him to have the equestrian statue of General George Washington, which for so many years has etood at Union Square, near Fourth-aye.. removed, because the subway is being constructed beneath it and a subway station will also be erected there, as well is a large public comfort station and & big- elec- trolier •with numerous electric lights on it. Accord- ing to Mr. Cantor, ifthe statue is allowed to remain \u25a0where it is. it will be in the way of these Improve- ments, and they will partly eclipse she view of the statue. Mr. Cantor suggests that the statue be removed to the site of .the statue of General Lafayette, which ie just within Union Square Park, facing Broadway and Four?' h-st., and The Lafayette itatue moved to some other conspicuous place In Union Square Park or Central Park. The Munici- pal Art Commission may consider the plan. FIVE PER CENT DIVIDEND DENIED. Denial from an authoritative source was given yesterday to a report that another dividend of 5 per cent had just been or would very soon be paid to th* members of th- United States Steel Corpora- tion underwriting syndicate. Beatrice Herford original Moooiosae* Marguerite Hall, **** Waldorf-Astoria. Friday. January I«. 3:30 P. V. For Benefit of St. Christopher's Home for restitute Children. Tickets. <!' At Tyson's, or at the door. First ' OTTYLK sad JULIETTE M»nfn Hall. *»?„»« SOXDHEIM [vS'&S America in a recital of compositions ?I aa J I i JI - M Amenca for Twr> Planos | at wtm'* EMPIRE THEATRE. Brnadirar & t«»th St. Evenings. .-\u25a0". Matinees Wednestlay & -,- succe^-H^r" 1 THE UNFORESEEN <;AKR|i X THEATRE. :r,th »t . near I»'w«>. Last 3 Nights. 9:m Last Matinee Saturrlav MRS. LANGTRY THE GROSS-WAYS* Monday. Annie Iln»»eU in Mil %M> ME\. MEM,' SAVOY THEATRE. 34th ?t. A n-ra.iv.ay. EVrs. S:2i>. Mats. \V»dnes=day and Saturday: Thß Girl With Green Eyes gaK'piias: CRITERION THEATRE- It %vav A t tth St. Ev'gs at b:ls. Matinee Saturday 2:1." JULIA MARLOWE £$&& This afternoon at 3. Daily Matlne<~»—except Sarurday. Mrs. France's HodK?on Burnett's <*hiMr<»:i's F!iy. THE LITTLE l'H!>t Madison Sqnnrc Theatre. 24th St; n'r B'way. Evks.. S:3<f. Mats. To-day anil saturliy. ELIZABETH TYREE In GRETHA GHEEH. i GARDES THEATRE. 27- St. and MaJison Aye. \ F>.»TT,ng.s. 7 4." sharp. Mruinee Sarurday. t:43L XTRA IIA.MI.ET MATINEE TIESDAV. A A T IE P n (VB LAST 2 WEEKS A? SOTHERN HAMLET .lan. 2rt E. H. Suthern in "If I Were Km*." KMCKERIIOCKEH THEATRE. D'wav ,t Sdth st. Last .1 Xtghts. I«ist Matinee Sit.. 2:15 S^; GOODWIN ELLIOTT „. \u25a0_. lm "THE ALTAR OF KRIKM)SIIIIV colossal. "MR. BLU£ BEAHQ 1 ' ro^j »x «. IRVING PLACE THEATRE. r? /^ ,Vt rV* THE GREAT GERMAN TOR. D(IiN Pi l.nnt .1 IVrfurmnnre*. -i)\s «;|{«»>k iit r." WEST END—BROS. BYRNE—B BELLS, BEC^CO THEATRE SffOiffiß'S" SLA\ U ciiE^i^,fi7 ant 3a nt 3 | Dl i r\!i Bway. 3nfh \u0084 Mars. Wed. * Srt. DiJUU Phooe 2224 Ma.!. Evk*. - -<>• "Another s=u>-cess." 9mI—TLTDE F'lTi'H'S THE 31RD IN THE CAGE RR ftA IV A V THEATnE. 4l*t St * irtrsy. DIMJAUII f\ X Evgs. 8 Mats U>l. * Sat 2 l^v-;;^ m SILVER SLIPPER- >«»» \ K.\ 1 11.- . liXHh Performance JAN. 1O ACADKMV OK MUSIC. 14th St. Jk Irx[r.s IT. l ii?i THE HIHETf i!!D Mi weeks mL 1111 1 1 ll LJ i Mil LI lllitJL. Prices. 25. s<>. T."-. 1 '»» Mats. Weit & Sat.. ... NEW YO!\K| l«l3AJ"!\.f COMES Eve.. 8:13. Mnt. .83|f| *S« V "»'«« Hfl SAT" Y. 2 IS. |W Mil Sail I HO.UE. Vletorln. 421 St.. li'»ay .4 Tth Ay Kv..8:15. Mir. Sitf. VIOLA ALLEN thY s £tebhal k gity. II \RI.EM BETHEI RARRYMORE. Evs. .-»:». Mai Sat «>\u25a0>. Iloune.l "A Country Moot and •fnr-nts. " NEXT IN «' Ut»nWIS-MAXINB Kl.r,lOTT|Baat» \VEEK. I In i't>- Alt» of J>ien<l.shlp." ?>n Sal*. 19 II nnl '; HILLTHEATRE. Lex. At* >:: St. ¥I!MH'1 ' .MATINEE EVERY DAY. -.-«•- II U II I Ml Marie WalnwrUht In I'A.MiLLE. waM afttC B'wav A SOth St. I MATLVEK3 VVALLALi\ 3K3 Kv ,i, »:15.- I We-i. & Sat.. - \u25a0*• •TTIEirES A « HKRRY INIT ." OEOHOE APES Witty Munical Suc:e»». SULTAN OF SULU \\ VI DORK- VVIORI SONG R^CITAt. Thcrs. Aft.. M\Y STIMSOX. Soprano. Tan rAIAAAIifP ORKENB at the Plan* . . TlciceU tl.Uk AT TUB WALDORF. \u25a0-» *v«~« ». t ' AVORLO IN WAX. New Group*. I-llF\ CM! MAT«'•i« Al* H . CL/C11 coronation of King Kdward. Aft A Ev^ M t SEE I DESK OI.TA . th« Wtoard. to^nUht * [ *. PKOtTOK'S 125 th St.. 23<1 St.. i £•"»- \u2666"iC* PROCTOK 3 sth ay «n.i -s«h st i "*": v He.eriVaiLV.r7 Aft, A E%e.-.F«li Urcb. The harlequin still lives, an is the symbol of de- generation on th«> Ktag«- to-day. The only way to remedy the depraved condition is by establishing a national theatre. This custom has bo spread that every city In Fran«-e. AQstria and Germany main- tains \u25a0 city theatre. Germany looks upon the stage as something other than a place of amusement. America does not. a national theatre in this coun- try would be a benefit to author and actor. Pen- sions could be ni.iish^ for actors as they de- served them. A national theatre would be the linguistic supreme court. It would oe the final ap- peal on questions of etiquette. It would tend to make morals better. Within six years, through the aid of high spirited American citizens wno have their country's best interests at heart, such a theatre would become \u25a0 reality and the lost art be enabled to c^iebrafe Us rejuvenation. CONRIED ON A NATIONAL THEATRE. Heinrich Conned, director of the Irving Place Theatre, delivered * lecture InGerman at Columbia on "The Erection of a National Theatre." He urged the foundation of euch a theatre. He aafd. in part: Steamer Hovlc ,Hr. lonea, Liverpool January- % with rods* and 3 cabin nMKnftn to th« White Star Line. Ar- rived at the Mar at 2.40 I' m Steamer Main «'»er.. lU.lte, Bremen December M. with ii .Is. 31t cabin and 896 steerage pan*onger» to Oelrtcbl & < -.. Arrived at, the Bar at %M •m. hte<inuir Erna (Ger>,- Bradherlnt,'. i'urt Maria January Port of New-York, Wednesday, Jan. 14. 1903 ARRIVED SHIPPING NEWS. Ve**el For Line. Mails close. Vessel Balls. Car>rl Barbados, etc. Sloman 5:00 m 7:00 a m f-i Mar Oalveston, Morgan 3:00 pm lißvina Havana. N V <\u25a0 Cuba 8:00am 11:00am Jefferson Norfolk, OH Dominion - 8:00 p m Kallir Prince Pernambuco. Prince. ... 12:00 m 3:00 p m iV«r#tairne7 Havre. French 7:00 am 10:00 am Tucatan Nai«u. NT*Cuba 12:<X» m 3:oopm FRIDAY. JANUARY 19. Iroquoln. Charleston. Clyde ? : £! pm Jame,t.,wn. Norfolk. Old />om 3:00 m Rio Grande, Mobile. Mallory 3:00 pm SATURDAY. JANUARY 17. Alleghany. Jamaica, etc. Hamb-Am... fl:80am 13:00 OS Bolivia Havtl. etc. Hamh Am ..... 0:30 a m 12:00 m Comuß " New -Orleans. Morgan - 3:« Op m CoTmo San Juan. N V & P R o:3'> a m 12:00 m inland \ntwerv. Red D 0:30 a m 10:00 a m F irnessla " law*, Anchor o:3(>am 12:00 m f"™!: Liverpool. Cunard 5:00 a m H :3O a m Lampa^a*. Galveston, Mallory. - 8:» p m I^ancaMrlan. Liverpool. Leyland..... - Monttou London, At Trans -• . . i 9:ooam Mexico Havana^ etc. N V & Cuba. .10:00 a m 1:00 pm MicomeduY- Hamburir. Hamb-Am 10:.i0am pf:",, Xnno Norfolk. Old D0m.... -— 8:00pm Wllla Newfoundland. Red Cr0w..... .10:00 a m I*o p m Trirtdad B*rm kJh. «aebe« 8:f>0 a m 10:00 a m OUTGOING STEAMERS. TO- DAY. Speakers at Hearing Call Rule to Limit Matches to 500 in a Box Its Work. Mayor Low held a hearing yesterday on the pro- posed ordinances concerning the storage, use and sale of matches, framed by the Municipal Explo- sives commission. The regulations, If approved by Mayor Low. go into effect March 31. One of their provisions is that there shall be match boxes in every room of a dwelling five and a half feet from the floor. Mr Caltanan. a Vesey-st. grocer, said that 11 the ordinance lining a dealer $50 for giving away a box of matches was adopted all retail merchants would be at the mercy of spies. General Eaton, chair- man of the Municipal Explosives Commission, said that in 1901 2.055 fires were directly due to matches. He asserted that it was notorious that New-Tor* was known as "the dumping ground for poorly manufactured matches." Fire Commissioner Sturgis resented the insinuation of the danger of a spy 'one match dealer opposed the regulation which .said only 600 matches could be packed in a box. He «aid he sold matches^ 1 000 in a box. for five cents a hoi He declared that the MO-match regulation had been inserted at the suggestion of the Match Trust. "Although little known." he said, "it is the great- est trust in the country." He asserted that if his output was limited by ordinance it would throw a iaree number out of work, ana that the poor people would be robbed. A representative of the Ohio Match Company, said to be an independent corporation said his company favored 500 matches to the box. He contended that. as a result of that regulation matches would be better and would be Pcha'rlc^c'am^u; general organizer for an anti- trust association, denounced the interests which, he charged, had suggested the regulation limiting m matches to a box. Rudolph U. Delapenha, who te%ald to control the sale of Swedish made matches this country, declared that the Diamond Match Company was such a powerful corporation that it could put all Independent match makers out of htifliness Ifit wanted to. retailers only oppose the ••\u25a0\" I understand it, the retailers only oppose the license fee and the penalty Clause." remarked Mayor Low "Yes. and we want the restriction against selling to a child of ten years stricken out" «;aid a grocer from Stat<*n Island. It is probable that with slight modifications the regulations will be signed by Mayor Low. Announcements. ICARIA. E & •w. A New Collar. E. & W. MARINE INTELLIGENCE. MINIATURE ALMANAC. Kunrl'e. Sunset 4:57 Moon rises 7:36 pm| Moon's age 16 " '" HIGH WATER. 4 m «s»ndv Hook B:42|Gov. Island 0:14 Hell Gate 11:03 P.SL-landy " H-k inisloov. Island BJWHeII Gate 11:36 INCOMING STEAMERS. TO-DAY. . Port. L.tne. . , '^irlan .Liverpool. December 31 I^eyland Uancasir an Copenhagen. December 24. -Scand-Am , ' c< } la LV ;.". . ..Southampton. January 4 American rS.^Si EmDireV Antwerp. December 31 I'hirnlx 5 1 \u25a0 ..L-rndon. January 1 At Trans . a ii« an' ....St. I>ucia, January 5 Norton !£!? « WilfenVl " -.l v \u25a0« Prince. January 7 Dutch L Y-rlr^V . .Palermo. December 20 Prince Tni»(r«'tv " ..Swansea. December 31.. Bristol city L .l»nda(t < lt>. "".'•• Hamburg. January 3 Hamb-Am Jr Zi 11 ...St Lucia. January 6.. ..Lamp & Holt *Thon«nii ...Palermo. December 31 Anchor \u25a0?\u25a0*'"\u25a0}•«\u25a0 .'....Bremen. January » N O Lloyd ,' ','" , tl'an '.'.'•' Glasgow. January 3 Allan-State \f MX I ieo' ' . Cadiz. December 80 r 'ns \vfiiem V. ..Port-au-Prince. January 8 Dutch FRIDAY. JANUARY 16. ... \u25a0'._ ..Liverpool. January 7 White Star •Cymric ..Galvcston. January 10 Mall ', ,- ii« .-- New-Orleans. January 11 Morgan •Grenada.'.'.'.'.'.". - I>ort BU Spain. January 7. ..Trinidad SATURDAY, JANUARY 17. . bo^.on . ..Copenhagen. January 2 :::: Scand-Am ii lian'ra ....Swansea. January 3 •li a"a "avole " '.'.'. . - - -Havre. January 10. French "'Si " ' Liverpool. January i<> Cunard M.»iii.n Prince Genoa. January 2 Prince Iv>V wdelnhla Southampton, January 10 ..American \V?l!« l City '.'...-..Swansea. January 3 Bristol City •Brings mall. ' THEY BLAME THE MATCH TRUST. THE MOVEMENTS OF STEAMERS. FOREIGN* PORTS. i , vornn ri Jan !\u25a0*— Arrived, steamers Tona-vnnda (Br). Brown New-York for Manchester: Victorian <1«r). Shepherd New- York; sailed, steamer Celtic (Br>. QU ein S n town;'ian WW HVH V0 4% p m-Arriv.d. steamer Teutonic (Hn McKlnstry. New-York for Liverpool (ami pro Southamrton Jan 14— Arrived, steamer St Paul. Jamison. Xew-York iVassad Hurst Castle at 11:10 p m London. Jan 14 .-\MI».I. steamer TMCSJrora il!r>. Payne. Bristo?. Jan r Arrived, steamer Boston City (Br), Wat r Antwerp. Jan!" IS— Arrived, steamer La Camplne (Dutch). Sclll^T'j'arrTj. 'l p l*ass«d, steamer St Paul, Jamison. New York for Southampton \u0084.„\u25a0 J.n 12— Arrived, steamer rt«-iiua (nr). Kelkinn. New-York via St Michaels for Venice ami Trieste. AlKl-TH Jan 13— Sailed. st?am-r Titfinla .lln. Remnart (from Manila, etc). New-York. Aden Jan 14 Arrrtved, ifeanwir Indnunajro (Bri.- Price. New-York via St ktlchaall for Singapore and Manila. Binampore Jan -Arrived previously, steamer Tbordhi (Nor)' Oramm. New- York via Aden for Manila. Hone Konu. Jan 14—Arrived previously, steamer Spltheal iUti Stewart. New-York via Singapora Colombo. Jan U— Sailed, steamer Beekenham (Br). from Calcutta for New-York. iiurrv .inn -Bailed, steamer Montezuma (Br). Troop. Nnw-York. Indian Port. Jan 14— Arrived previously, steamer Mel- bourne. < 4 -: r i . It/**. New-York via Norfolk for Kurra- rhee \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0..I i; imbay. Barbados, Jan 13— Hnll'-d, steamer Ce»rens<- (Br), Couch (from N«w~York>. I'Hra. 8t Thomas. Jan H— Arrived, staamsi Moltlu (Ocr), l)erap- wolf. -York, Steamers (-.pnrirl'' (Br) for Liverpool: Florida 'Nor). PM.^Dhla- Vlncenzo Bonanno (Hall. Pensarola; Buck- Mir i Port Antonio; Germanic (Br>. Uverpool: Hup>- man i H. r vnra (Nor) St Thomas, r^rbadoei.. etc; Ham- «un Norfolk anrt Newport News: El Monte. New-Cn- 1«m Ma-aras ?HrV Grenada and Trinidad: Berks. ; Harrt^urk oni barge^ : Ant.lla (Br), N as»«! Manna H«ta. tor P hl , a lm ore Manna Hata. for Baltimore. -, VontcifS^Bav 7 ft Ann's nay and Port Maria 8, with V;,.?t to f -Kr & Co. Arrived at the Bar at 7 am. "t- ,;Mara-aibo Purst, Mararalbo January 3. ,•,,,- andPWC* 7. with mdse and f. paseenßer. to n. 1 ;;;;;:,, BUM & Dallet't. Arrived at the Har at 10:30 ° Steamed El Dorado. Prescott. Gabreston January 8. with m i"teamer city "of Birmingham. Bnrg. Savannah January i^^oSS^'&SS£J^^ with ml- tr'^«!i ,cr 1 Ou^ndotU^Catherina, Newport News and SorM™ with 'and passengers to th. Old Dominion Co. SAILED. The ou--t;v of resuming dividends on the rom- monrtockhM not :*h, considered by the board of r J^,.;,,. and It would be beyond the province of the offlcm of the company to make any *ta omen as to what policy the directors would adopt In that regard Themana cement has not In contemplation [he construction of any new plants. There has at »o Ume betn the slightest question about the con- tlnJaSce of the payment of preferred stock diU- 55E COLORADO FUEL AND IRON PLANS, i J. C Osgood. chairman of the board at the Col- orado Fuel and' Iron Company, when asked yester- day about certain reports from the West concerning the company's policy, said: Henry G. Piffard has I.e. appointed temporary receiver for the fjenesee Salt Company, with a plant at Plntard, N. V . upon application of a ma- jority of its trustees for voluntary dissolution. •- SENATORS FORMALLY ELECTED. Sacramento, Cal . Jan. 14.— George '". Perkins was formally elected United States Senator in Joint meeting of the legislature to-d«y. » Boise, Idaho. Jan. H.— The two houses of the legislature mot to-day In Joint session and after canva-ssing the vote for United States Senator, cast yesterday w B. Heyburn wan ofHclaily declared ;i«.',i.-,! to succeed Henry HHtfeld for the term of six years beginning March i. IMB. A reception was tendered Senator-tlect UeyiJUm to-night. ' What Is Going on To-day. Hearlnjt on Louisville & Nashville Railway merger case. before Interstate Commerce Commission, Federal BulMinc. morning. International <;ustoms Cuticle—. AMermanie Chamber, City Hall, noon. Xoon prayer zneetinc. No. IIS Kulton-st. Annual meeting and luncheon, drug trade Section of the Board of Trade and Transportation, No. 100 William- st.. 1 p. m. Rapid Transit Commission meeting, 3 p. m. Anr.ua! dinner .if the Holland Society, Waldorf-Astoria, 7 p. m. Annual dinner of the Republican Organization of the XIXUi Assembly District, Madison Square Garden Concert Hall. 7 p. m. Republican County Committee meeting, evening. Illustrated lecture by Gilbert Ray Haw-os on "Miners and Mountaineers of Southwest Virginia," Madison Square Republican Club. No. 1.140 Broadway, B p. m. Review of (Kith Regiment by General Roe, evening. Exhibition drill by the Him Battalion. Naval Militia, on board the V. B. S. New-Hampshire, evening. Reception for national and sit.jt*- officers of the G. A. R. by Alexander Hamilton I'ost, Lexington avp. and *>ne-hundred-and-t»-enty-fiflh-st., B p. m. Academy of Medicine meeting; No. 17 West Forty-thlrd- st.. - p. m. Reception and games of the 9th Regiment. No. 125 West Fourtoenth-st., 8 p. m. t People's Institute lecture, by Professor John R. Clark, on "Trade Guilds." Cooper T'nion. S p. m. Talk on "Art In Dress." by Frank Alvah Parsons, of Tearhers College. Columbia University. Young Wom- en's Christian Association. No 7 East Fifteenth- St., B p. m. Free lectures of the Board of Education, 8 p. m.—Educa- tional Alliance, corner East Broadway and Jefferson- st . "The Treatment of Bbock, F.leeding. Hump, Ex- posure to Cold and Frost Bite." Dr. Theron W. Kil- mer; School No. 3, comer Hudson an<l Grove sts., "The Cost nf \u25a0 Thine and the Pay of it*. Makers." Henry R. sTiissi j School No. 10. One-hundr'd-and- neventeenth-ft. and -• Nl<-holas-ave.. "l»henßiin." Mrs. Raymond Brown; Columbus Hall, Sixtieth between Columbus and Amsterdam avea., KMag- TK'tism." W. W. Kerr; School No. 148, EiKhty^nlnth- \u25a0l . between Cblumbua and Amsterdam ayes.. "The Hii iimilss." Professor <"hatles 1,. Bristol; School No. 170, One -hundred and eleventh St.. between Fifth and Ix-xinpton-aves., "How to Read English." Henry G. Hawn; SVhool No. MS, No. 26T) East Fourth "I^ater Greek Sculpture," Eugene .1. Bchoen. NEW-YORK CITY. The Rutgers College Alumni Association of this I tv is to hold a reunion at the. New- York Athletic Club to-morrow evening. Louis W. Stoiesbury. the president of the- association, is to preside, and the following an expected to speak: Governor Murphy of New-Jersey, Jonathan Dixon, Gilbert D. B. Has- broock. President Austin Scott of Rutgers College, John S. Voorhees, the Rev. Dr. Henry K. Cobb and George A. Viehmann. A debate on Socialism between Professor E. R. A. .s.-!ifman, president of the American Kconomlc Association and Professor of Political Economy at Columbia University, and M. Gaylord Wilshire. Editor of "Wilshire's Magazine," will take place at Coopt-r. Union on Friday at « p. m. The debate is under the Luspices of the People's Institute. it is expected to be extremely Interesting. Admission is tree. Women are especially invited. The Sinking Fund Commission yesterday ap- proved the tunnel franchise recently granted to the New-York and Jersey Railroad Compai.y. Immigration Commissioner William Wiltlanu re- turned yesterday from a short vacation at b\ranac Lake, and resumed chi-rge of affaire on Kills Island. The commissioner's health broke riown and his physician ordered him to take a complete rest. HOME NEWS. At a late hour m-night none of tho Cat Club of- Bdahi had received any official notification from the Connecticut Humane Society that their field trial must be abandoned. Said Mayor Charles K. Leeds: "I have the greatest respect for Mr. Haines ;-;:.i th. society he represents, and should lv have any authority here, and ask m<- '\u25a0> take any steps In the matter I should consider seriously any prop- osition he micht make. 1 am satisfied, however, that there will be no rat baiting at the Cat Show. \u25a0 Ex-Mayor Humor S. Cummings. prosecuting attor- ney for tiiv Hum.me Society of this State, declined to comment on Mr. Hatnes's proposed interference In tho matter. "1 think that the women who are managing the tat Show may saMy be trusted," he -aid "neither to break the law nor to offend good i.,ste. Until they do bo all criticism is out of Dr. Benjamin Bohannan an agent tor the Hu- mane Society, .-ays: ••1 think the position of Mayor Leeds and Mr. in this matter is a piece of foolishness. I don't see with what authority the Humane Society can stop the exhibition. Since time immemorial I has been the thing to pet rid of the mouse. And if the mouse must be dispatched there i- no Quicker way. 1 don't Intend to Interfere with tho \u25a0 ion." One thine: broueht out by the proposed exhibi- tion is the scarcity of mice, gome of the <'at t'lub members who have been looking: for available mice for the proposed trial report but little suc- cess the way from 10 to 3D cents apiece was offered to-day for' mice suitable tor the exhibition. At Police Headquarters the officers are guarding will: < xtra care their cape of pot white mice le.-t Borne of the bold members cart them off for the trials. Resentment Aroused by Report of Interference of S. P. C. A. Iby TEi.E<:i:Arn to OK TRinuxE.l Stamford. Conn.. Jan. v. When Mrs. Homer 8. Cumminss. president of the Connecticut Cat Club. remarked Jokingly a week or so ago that it would be <=port to have a field trial or mouse baiting for kittens at the coming show of the Cat Club hero, ami other women of the dub approved of the ide they little dreamed the consequences of the sug- gestion Mayor ' Leeds' a objection piqued the presi- dent and other members, and made th. deter- mined to have \u25a0 field trial for the kittens, with live mice as their prey. Yesterday, when the Mayor said he would offer no further objection. Mrs. Cum- mins^ and other members were triumphant. To- day there was consternation in the Cat Club when it became known unofficially that the National So- ciety tor the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals had Interfered in the matter through its president, John P Haines and had declared such an exhibition as contemplated contrary to law. Not only that, but the women who were Interested were liable to arrest and would really be arrested. When the story of Mr. Ilalnes's Interest In the matter reached Mrs Oumminßs's . ears she was Indignant. Her indignation was Increased by the fact that she is herself a member of the Connecti- cut Humane Society, and her husband Is Its prose- cuting attorney here. "By what right does Johiv P Haines presume to interfere in this matter? she .-aid. "The New-York Society for the Proven- am of Cruelty to Animals is entirely distinct from the Connecticut Humane Society, and that Mr. Raines could take it upon himself to notify the Connecticut Society of our limitations seems to- comprehensible. The Connecticut Society is better informed of what is going on in Stamford than is John P. Haines. and if it wants to interfere with our exhibition it can do so without any advice from him. His Interference in the matter is more uncalled for than that of Mayor Leeds. I resent it. It is absolutely unwarranted and officious, and as president of the Cat Club I declare now that it will not interfere in the least with our plans. Why doesn't Mr. Haines telegraph to England or some other foreign country and give out such orders? He doesn't exactly run the universe, I really wish he would arrest us all." CAT CLUB AND CONTEST. NEW-YORK DAILY TiOBtTNE, THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 1003. . . . Substantial and ... PERFECT bis ; ILi|fU!!i 9 TO (J Till NEW WARDMEN Theodore B. Starr Diamond Merchant, Jeweler and Silversmith, MADISON SQUARE WEST Between 25th and 26th Streets. Established 18<52. 15 years on John St. as Starr & Marcus 25 years as above. SPECIAL NOTICE. No connection with any other house in this line of business. v

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Page 1: NEW The Travelers - chroniclingamerica.loc.govchroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030214/1903-01-15/ed-1/seq-14.pdf · CvmnhnnV Violoncello in A minor. Op. 33. OjlliptiUlijf LOBIKL.br.Two

Used by people of refinementfor over a quarter of a century

PREPARED BY

<7

Financial Condition, January Ist, 1903

Sylvester C. DUNHAM, President.i

or ll<irtror<l,GoiMMclicut.The Travelers Insurance Company

RESERVES. ETCRESOURCES.

SOFAS, $35 to $120,

( former prices $48 to $156 ) i

Mahogany and Fumed Oak frames up-

holstered in Tapestry. Velour, Leather and Mo-

hair x»lush— All-Upholstered.

CHAIRS, $15,(reduced from $22 )

Mahogany, upholstered in Velour.

ARM CHAIRS, $48 & $90,( reduced from $62 &$115)

Oak and Mahogany frames, upholstered^ inTapestry and Velour.

All the acme of beauty, durability andeconomy, as you

"buy oftme maker"

Geo. C.Flint Co.43.45 and47 WEST 23 ?ST. i

near BROADWAY.

factory: 154 and 156 west I9?STREET

A BARGAIN ELYSIUM.It is easy enough to turn one's house into an

earthly Paradise^ with our bargains. Library

suits and odd pieces that are veritable Foun-tains of Youth for every one who dips into them.

2 & 5 pc. SUITES, #90 to $125,

(former prices $120 to $163)Mahogany frames, upholstered in Velour and

Moire Tapestry.

J& pLINT'sfINEpURNITURE

Railroad Bonds and Stocks, . $16,728,055.55

Loans secured by Mortgages, firstliens, . . • 7,415,963.86

Governm't County & MunicipalBonds. 4,336,549.30

Other Bonds and Stocks. . . 1,206,400.00

Loans secured by Company'sPolicies, 1,980,475.00

Cash on hand and in Bank, . 1,435,319.58

Real Estate 1,193,531.62

Bank Stocks, .... 1,153,837.00

Loans secured by Collateral, . 630,043.83

Interest accrued but not due, . 298,429.21

Deferred Life Premiums, . . 419,199,01

Prem's in course of collection onLife Pols 271,564.02

Total Resources, . . $37,078,367.98

Reserve Funds, to protect poli-cies 531,285,842.43

Losses in process of adjustment, 201,841.54

Life premiums paid inadvance, 34,730.1!

Special Reserve for taxes, rents,

etc., 121,625.53

Reserve to protect security valu-ations, .... 100,000.00

Excess Security to Polio -Holders, 5,334,328.37

Total Reserxes, etc., . $37,078,367.98

1,564 BroadwayBetween 36th and 57thSti.

The TribuneUptown Office

Is now located at

General Greene Puts Detective on

Alleged Blackmailers.Police Commissioner Greene made the signifi-

cant announcement vest;•:•«!«>• that he had ob-

tained information that new detectives at the

Union Market station were trying to collect

blackmail. This is the station where Captain

Gorman was m command last Sunday when he

was suspended by General Greene for per-

mittinga violation of the Liquor Tax law to f

M openly in the precinct. Yesterday GeneralGreene transferred Captain Becker from East

Thii»y-fifth-st. to Union Market, and told him

to pet evidence against detectives there who had

bf*>n trying to collect blackmail.Captain Becker formerly was a detective ser-

geant, and was promoted about a week apo.

Commissioner Greene called him to To]ice ad-

quarters yesterday, and. in UK presence of

Chief Inspector Cortright and Inspector Clay-

ton, informed him that he was sent on a special

mission to Union Market. General Greene said

he had received information that the new ward-

men m the Union Market station were attempt-

ing to collect b.ackmail. He told the captain

that it should be possible to detect crime inside

the force as well as outside of II He asked himto d.. his best to ferret out the trouble. He re-

ferred to the new wardmen. who have been

there only a week.The Commissioner announced that after be

had received charges against Captain Goruiailfor failure to prevent an excise violation In his

precinct. Sergeant Ryan, who became acting

captain, had brought charges against Sergeant

Frank Tierney. Roundsman Sullivan and Patrol-man Hennessy. These charges General Greene

Mid he had disapproved. If they had been

brought before the Gorman charges they would

have been entertained, he said."Then you are not holding responsible the

men on patrol?" he •»\u25a0 asked."The captain is held responsible," was the

answer.N

General Greene yesterday published an amend-ment to the rule which has required captains

in send in monthly lists of suspected places. The

amendment makes it necessary for captains

to tell each month what work they and their

detectives have done in efforts to confirm theirsuspicions and close up gambling houses and

dens of vice. The rule as amended cuts out

plenty of work for precinct commanders in parts

of the city where gaming and vice have been al-

lowed to go unrepress?d. The reports hereaftermust relate the steps taken to enforce the

laws regarding gambling and disorderly houses,

concert saloons, dives and other places where

dissolute persons congregate, the Liquor Tax

law examinations of suspicious places, publicsports and labor on Sundays; the names orpatrolmen detailed for plain clothes and de-

tective duty and the sen-ices performed by

each. inspections and a brief report showing thegeneral condition of the precinct.

District inspectors In transmitting these mustj? certify to their accuracy and at the same time

submit the names of the plain clothes men anddetectives on duty at the district office, and the

services performed by each; and also a brief

r«>r.ort showing the condition of ta*. district.

WANTS TO EXAMINEFEANK FARRELL.

Record of 1902.

TOTAL CASH INCOME,- - - - - $10,210,000

INCREASE IN RESOURCES, .... 3,260,000

INCREASE IN CASH INCOME, - 1,300,000

INCREASE IN EXCESS SECURITY TO POLICY-HOLDERS, 320,000

NEW LIFE INSURANCE ISSUED DURING YEAR, - 19,370,000

PAID TO POLICY-HOLDERS, ... - 3,700,000

ADDED TO RESERVE FUNDS, v- - - -

2,940,000

Record to end of 1902.

PAID TO POLICY-HOLDERS, .... $50,000,000

LIFE INSURANCE IN FORCE,- - - -. 125,000,000

NUMBER OF ACCIDENT POLICIES ISSUED,- - 3,320,000

NUMBER OF ACCIDENT CLAIMS PAID, - - - 394,000

Simnscmerug. C^mnscmenta.Glmnscmcnts.

C A ItN E<: IE HALL.To-nlKltt nt KtlS.

I'rojrrnmine:n i.. SCHUMANN, Overture to "Genoveva,

DOStOn O->. SI. PAINT-SAENS. Concerto for_ . Violoncello in A minor. Op. 33.

CvmnhnnV LOBIKL.br.Two Poems for Orchestra:OjlliptiUlijf -Avant nue Hi na ten allies." \er-t\rnUaoirn

'~lne; "Vilanelle dv Dlable." Rollinat:

UrCnCSIIO , DVORAK. Symphony No. 5. in E;minor. "From the New World.' Op. .•.>.< Soloist.

Alwin SchroederFaHirdav Aft.. Jan. IT. at 2:30-

I»r?>f?rnumie:;BRAHMS. Symphony No. I. in C minor... n '

I Od 68* GOUNOD. "Stances de Sapho.

Mr GBnCKB from "Sapho"; GOLDMARK Chorus of1111. Übliunu Sp

,rttg an<l spirits' Dance, from "Mer-

lin": ELOAB. "Sea Pictures": WAG-Conductor, NKR. Introduction and I»ve Death from

"Tristan and Isolde." Soloist,

Kirkby LunnSeats $150 to "'•.;nt Box Office. Tyson's (.">th Aye.

Hotel) and Dltson'?. at regular prices. .Justice L»e.ventritt said it appeared to be a prying

expedition on the plaintiff's part, but he reservedhip decision.

District Attorney Jerome, who was In court,

showed considerable interest whvn he heard thename of Farrell mentioned. He at once moved hischair up to the counsel table and listened to theargument. Several times he smiled, as though thestory of Barstow's alleged loss of $11,000 interestedhim.

Plaintiff Sues for $11,000 Lost in Gambling

Burbridge Also Defendant.

Justlc* I>v«ntrftt. in the Supreme Court, yep-

terdiy. heard fimaif on an application to va-

cate an ... obtained for the examination of

Frank .1. F—Well before trial of a suit beirun by

Rosen J>. Bar^tow, of West Chester, to recoverfOjOK 1o?t in pamblins in this city. BarFtow brings

bto suit apair.Ft Farrell. James Kennedy. Gottfried

Walbaum. Frank Burbridsre and the Commercialrif-rks" Club, alleging that the men named worecomWned t<» run a pambHnc; house in rooms of the

club at No. 31 West Tlnrty-tiiir.i-st.. and that he

lost his U.'OM In play there between April IS andJuly ] of last year. He declares that under thecamWinj law. he is entitled to recover the money,

but the defendants named In the suit have refused

to return ItTh* examination of Farrell is to discover die

copartnership between Farrell and the othersnamed, th.- Commercial Clerks* Club having beenus<d as a cloak for their pamblinK operations, it is

allepp'l. Barsto^- says he has -.-ii told in conver-sation with many persons that such a copartnership

\u2666\u25a0xisT<?<2. and the partnership between Farreli andWaJbnum has been referred to in the newspapers

on many occasions, as also the relations betweenthe other defendants.

C. L.. Hoffman, in asking lor the vacating of theorder, said itwas merely a fishing excursion on thepart of the plaintiff, who knew all the facts neces-eary for him to bringhis suit.

MBRDCLSSOII H ALV

l»*David BaxterSon2[ BASSO.

D-t 1 Hotvnrd llrockwiijat the riano.

KCCllal Tickets s«l.«M> and *!.."»«> at tMtson's.

METROPOLITAN OPERA HOISE.GRAND OI'BUA SEASON IJM>a-ltMKt.

Under the direction of MX. MAIRKE diß.tl.TO-NIGHT at

—Performance at Special Prices.

Double 1.111. I.A FIL.L.E Dt? REGIMENT »The DauKhterof the Raiment ». sembrich, Van i.'auteren; Sall^nac.Gtlibert. Followed at 10:1." by PAGUACCI. Scheff ;Danl.Campanarl. Conductor. Klon.

Frl. Eve.. lan. 16. at 7:3*—D*t Rinjr (Ips Nlbelungen.DIE WAI.KIRK. «aci.«ki. Schumann-Heink. Homer.SchelT. Sajrsard, Marylli.Bridewell and Nordlca: Anthes.Van Rooy. Elir.blad. Conductor. Hertz.

Sat. Aft.. Jan. IT. at 2—FAUST. Eames. Bridewell:Alvarez. Scotti. Ed. de Reszke. Conductor. Slanclnelli.

Sat Evg.. Jan. 17, at 8 (at Pop.—

TANN-HAUSER Uadhkl. Seyirard. Mary.li; Gerhauaer. Blsphatn,Ulass. Conductor, Hertz.

Sun. E>isr.. Jan. 18. at ft:30—

Grand Popular Concert.Soloists: Sembrich (first appearance this season at theseconcerts). Brlder-ell; Dani. Bcottl Entire Opera Or-chestra. Conductor. Mancinelli.

Mon. Evk.. Jan. 1». at 7:30—

Der Rinse dcs Nlbelungren.SIEGFRIED. Xordica. Schumann-Heink. Scheff; Anthes,Van Rooy, Bispham, Conductor, Hertz.

Wed. Evk.. Jan. 21. at—

AIDA. Gadskl. Klrkbj-I-unn. Marvlli:De Marchl. 'ampanari. Ed de Reszke.Journet. Conductor. Manctnelll.

Frf. Evk.. Jan. ~J. at 7:3»>— Der Ring de 3Nib«»lungen.GOTTERDAMMERUNO. Nordica, Reuss-Belce. Homer.Scheff. Bridewell; Anthes, Ed de Reszke. Bi»pham.Conductor. Hertz.

WEBER PIANOS USED.

METROPOLITAN opera hoi>e.Farewell P?rformances of BLEONORA

DUSE ro-m°rrow Afternoon at 2 MAGDASeats on Sale. $2.50. $1.50. $I.o<>. 75c.

WAGNER OPERA LECTURE RECITALS BY"WALTER DAMHOSCII-Daly's Theatre. Mondays &Thursdays at 3 P. M.—To lay. "Parslfaf (wirh DavidMannes. Violinist):Jan. l»th. "Rheinßold" (with DavidBlspham). Jan. 2-"nd, "Walkure." Seats, Be to $1.00.

HERALD ISpat'rp l "-->-- =IlkllnbllTHLATREI Telephone 70*-3S.

Silt. RICHARD

MANSFIELDfor three evenlncs only

and one matinee. In

JULIUS C/CSAR..MR. MANSFIELD'S LAST APPEARANCE

HIMIKIN SHAKKSPERE'S <iBEAT TRAGEDYWILL OHIR SATl'linAY EVENING. JAN. IT.

BEGINNING MONDAY, jan. 19TH.

DEWOLF HOPPER 3;•N "MR. PICKWICK" . <?—?

— —\u2666

DDIaJPCCC Kroadway &SMa St. Tele. 2452 I'EveningrnINIICNN Mad. Mats. To-day & Sat. :at 9:30

'•MR. AMiREY BOIX'ICABLTscored an wdoVitedtriumph In 'When All the World Is Young, or'HEIDELBERG.' **—X. Y. Herald.

:;-K'.r.n';iK Monday, Jan. l»th.

MR. LOUiS MANN in "THE CONSUL"SEATS ON SAUE TO-DAY.« \u2666

I*II©ISki n n'way &39th St. I Mat" Wed.

"A CHINESE HONEYMOON"NEAHINU ITS :{<m»tii PERFORMANCE.

<>\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666<•\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666

!MADISON S3. GARDEN. ~ I\u2666 i\

\u2666 THIRD ANNUAL \u2666

IAutomobile Show IiOpens Sat. Eve., Jan. 17, at 8 o'clock \u2666$\u2666»\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666»\u2666\u2666»\u2666»\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666»\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666

MRS. OSBORN'S PLAYHOUSE(YE ELIZABETHAN STAGE)

reopen Jan. 27th **Komco & Juliet."

DAI \/'

Q B'wwy &SO at 8:15f\ LI Cl Matinees \V«d. ,v Sat.. 2:15.

THE BILLIONAIRE ESZ23&with farce In3acts.

JEROME #YKES. Unqualified at overwhelming auccess.SI. NICHOLAS

SKATING RINKCHAMPIONSHIP HOCKEY MATCH FRIDAY. JAN.

MTU, •:« P. M.CKBSCCNT A. C. vs. HOCKET CLUB OF N. Y.

MM..30c. H*»erved aMta, Otic, extra.

HlanhSllani Broadway and 3Sd »tre«t. ., =.iinnullall t3\(c*.t MATINOS SAT at 1

MRS. FISKE i SaS^.•IjVo.VMUa P. M—Swond DOLMBTSCU CVNCEnT.gnu at llox OWea -m.l I>ttson'i.

ArlllXI\^r\ni cvK». %ax 2r.c. a.v.. 6<vr.Mat. Dall* <exc't atoa iBe. IThe .S«>«I«.» of Ju.llrr.

TtU.> MAItKS" i:ia; Concert Sunday NUht. .;;;

IIX HALL. THIS iThur.-^.l Aft. at 3.

Miss ETHEL IHIUN, . . PianistMr. ISiDOR SGKNITZLER, Violinistj Assisted by Mr. Herbert Witherspoon.$1 a:.(l VI. at Ditson'B. 567 B'way.

MENDELSSOPIANOAND

VIOLINRECITAL.

Ticket*.

iNSURANCE COMPANIES BUY BONDS.Most of the $2o.Ooo.<Ky> 5 per cent one year notes

given by the Lake Shore and Michigan SouthernHallway Company, In payment for its one-half

share of the Reading stock owned by the Baltimoreend Ohio Railroad Company, have been taken by

local lifeInsurance companies, it was learned yes-terday. The Mutual and New-York Life were the

chief purchasers, the investment of the Equitablebeing rather smaller than that of either of theothers. '^nffIAJESTIO !"'

Broidn-ay and r>S)th St. Grand Circle.Opena TO-XIOHT at 8 o'clock sharp.

Curtain Rises on A Kansas Cyclone.

the WIZARD OF 02. JSStfiSK&i.

BVt.3 181 O 114th1 14th St. THICKS U3C and SOc.

T>\«iT<»U<S 14TH ST.. NEAR 3D AVB. CONTINUOUS.

M^AND 30TCENTSJ Sherman & De Forrest. The Glee-

SbT^wSo ft TheoL rhlnqullla. 3 Keatons.

WASHINGTON STATUE IN SUBWAY PATH.President Cantor yesterday sent a letter to Presi-

dent WUlcox of the Park Department, requesting

him to have the equestrian statue of General George

Washington, which for so many years has etood at

Union Square, near Fourth-aye.. removed, becausethe subway is being constructed beneath it and asubway station will also be erected there, as well

is a large public comfort station and & big- elec-trolier •with numerous electric lightson it. Accord-ing to Mr.Cantor, ifthe statue is allowed to remain

\u25a0where it is. it will be in the way of these Improve-ments, and they will partly eclipse she view of the

statue.Mr. Cantor suggests that the statue be removed

to the site of .the statue of General Lafayette,which ie just within Union Square Park, facingBroadway and Four?' h-st., and The Lafayetteitatue moved to some other conspicuous place InUnion Square Park or Central Park. The Munici-pal Art Commission may consider the plan.

FIVE PER CENT DIVIDEND DENIED.Denial from an authoritative source was given

yesterday to a report that another dividend of 5per cent had just been or would very soon be paid

to th* members of th- United States Steel Corpora-tion underwriting syndicate.

Beatrice Herford original Moooiosae*Marguerite Hall, ****Waldorf-Astoria. Friday. January I«. 3:30 P. V.For Benefit of St. Christopher's Home for restituteChildren. Tickets. <!' At Tyson's, or at the door.

First'

OTTYLK sad JULIETTE M»nfn Hall.

*»?„»« SOXDHEIM [vS'&SAmerica in a recital of compositions ?I aaJI

i JI-MAmenca for Twr> Planos | at wtm'*

EMPIRE THEATRE. Brnadirar & t«»th St.Evenings. .-\u25a0". Matinees Wednestlay & -,-

succe^-H^r" 1 THE UNFORESEEN<;AKR|i X THEATRE. :r,th »t.near I»'w«>.Last 3 Nights. 9:m Last Matinee Saturrlav

MRS. LANGTRY—

THE GROSS-WAYS*Monday. Annie Iln»»eU in Mil %M> ME\.MEM,' SAVOY THEATRE. 34th ?t. A n-ra.iv.ay.

EVrs. S:2i>. Mats. \V»dnes=day and Saturday:

Thß Girl With Green Eyes gaK'piias:CRITERION THEATRE- It %vav A t tth St.Ev'gs at b:ls. Matinee Saturday 2:1."

JULIAMARLOWE £$&&This afternoon at 3. Daily Matlne<~»—except Sarurday.

Mrs. France's HodK?on Burnett's <*hiMr<»:i's F!iy.THE LITTLE l'H!>t

Madison Sqnnrc Theatre. 24th St; n'r B'way.Evks.. S:3<f. Mats. To-day anil saturliy.

ELIZABETH TYREE In GRETHA GHEEH. iGARDES THEATRE. 27- St. and MaJison Aye.\ F>.»TT,ng.s. 7 4." sharp. Mruinee Sarurday. t:43L

XTRA IIA.MI.ET MATINEE TIESDAV.A AT IEP n (VB LAST 2 WEEKS A?

SOTHERN HAMLET.lan. 2rt

—E. H. Suthern in "If IWere Km*."

KMCKERIIOCKEHTHEATRE. D'wav ,t Sdth st.Last .1 Xtghts. I«ist Matinee Sit.. 2:15

S^; GOODWIN 3£ ELLIOTT„. \u25a0_. lm "THE ALTAR OF KRIKM)SIIIIV

colossal. "MR. BLU£ BEAHQ1'ro^j»x «.

IRVING PLACE THEATRE. r? /^ ,Vt rV*THE GREAT GERMAN TOR. D(IiNPil.nnt .1 IVrfurmnnre*. -i)\s «;|{«»>k iit r."

WEST END—BROS. BYRNE—B BELLS,BEC^CO THEATRE SffOiffiß'S"

SLA\UciiE^i^,fi7ant3ant 3|

Dlir\!iBway. 3nfh \u0084 Mars. Wed. * Srt.DiJUU Phooe 2224 Ma.!. Evk*.

- -<>•"Another s=u>-cess."

—9mI—TLTDE F'lTi'H'S

THE 31RD IN THE CAGERRftA IVAV THEATnE. 4l*t St *irtrsy.DIMJAUIIf\ X Evgs. 8 Mats U>l. *Sat 2

l^v-;;^ m SILVER SLIPPER->«»» \K.\111.- . liXHh Performance JAN. 1O

ACADKMV OK MUSIC. 14th St. Jk Irx[r.s IT.lii?i THE HIHETf i!!D Miweeks mL 1111 11llLJ i MilLI lllitJL.

Prices. 25. s<>. T."-. 1 '»» Mats. Weit & Sat.....NEW YO!\K| l«l3AJ"!\.f COMESEve.. 8:13. Mnt. .83|f| *S«V "»'««HflSAT" Y. 2 IS. |W MilSailIHO.UE.

Vletorln. 421 St.. li'»ay .4 Tth Ay Kv..8:15. Mir.Sitf.

VIOLA ALLEN thYs

£tebhalk

gity.

II\RI.EM BETHEI RARRYMORE. Evs. .-»:». Mai Sat«>\u25a0>. Iloune.l "A Country Moot and •fnr-nts.

"

NEXT IN «' Ut»nWIS-MAXINB Kl.r,lOTT|Baat»\VEEK.I In i't>- Alt» of J>ien<l.shlp." ?>n Sal*.

19 IInnl '; HILLTHEATRE. Lex. At*>:: St.

¥I!MH'1 ' .MATINEE EVERY DAY.-.-«•-IIU IIIMl Marie WalnwrUht In I'A.MiLLE.

waM afttC B'wav A SOth St. I MATLVEK3VVALLALi\3K3 Kv,i,»:15.- I We-i. & Sat..-

\u25a0*•

•TTIEirES A « HKRRY INIT."OEOHOE APES Witty Munical Suc:e»».

SULTAN OF SULU\\ VI DORK- VVIORI SONG R^CITAt.Thcrs. Aft.. M\Y STIMSOX. Soprano.

Tan rAIAAAIifPORKENB at the Plan*. . TlciceU tl.Uk AT TUB WALDORF.

\u25a0-» *v«~« ».t' AVORLO IN WAX. New Group*.

I-llF\ CM!MAT«'•i«Al*H .CL/C11 coronation of King Kdward. Aft A Ev^

Mt SEE IDESK OI.TA. th« Wtoard. to^nUht *[ *.

PKOtTOK'S 125 th St.. 23<1 St.. i £•"»- \u2666"iC*PROCTOK 3 sth ay «n.i -s«h st i "*":vHe.eriVaiLV.r7 Aft,A E%e.-.F«li Urcb.

The harlequin still lives, an is the symbol of de-generation on th«> Ktag«- to-day. The only way toremedy the depraved condition is by establishing anational theatre. This custom has bo spread thatevery city In Fran«-e. AQstria and Germany main-tains \u25a0 city theatre. Germany looks upon the stage

as something other than a place of amusement.America does not. a national theatre in this coun-try would be a benefit to author and actor. Pen-sions could be • ni.iish^ for actors as they de-served them. A national theatre would be thelinguistic supreme court. It would oe the final ap-

peal on questions of etiquette. It would tend to

make morals better. Within six years, through theaid of high spirited American citizens wno havetheir country's best interests at heart, such atheatre would become \u25a0 reality and the lost art beenabled to c^iebrafe Us rejuvenation.

CONRIED ON A NATIONAL THEATRE.

Heinrich Conned, director of the Irving PlaceTheatre, delivered * lecture InGerman at Columbia

on "The Erection of a National Theatre." Heurged the foundation of euch a theatre. He aafd. in

part:

Steamer Hovlc ,Hr. lonea, Liverpool January- % withrods* and 3 cabin nMKnftn to th« White Star Line. Ar-

rived at the Mar at 2.40 I' mSteamer Main «'»er.. lU.lte, Bremen December M. with

ii.Is. 31t cabin and 896 steerage pan*onger» to Oelrtcbl &< -.. Arrived at, the Bar at %M •m.

hte<inuir Erna (Ger>,- Bradherlnt,'. i'urt Maria January

Port ofNew-York, Wednesday, Jan. 14. 1903ARRIVED

SHIPPING NEWS.

Ve**el For Line. Mails close. Vessel Balls.Car>rl Barbados, etc. Sloman 5:00 m 7:00 a mf-i Mar Oalveston, Morgan

—3:00 pm

lißvina Havana. N V <\u25a0 Cuba 8:00am 11:00amJefferson Norfolk, OH Dominion

-8:00 p m

Kallir Prince Pernambuco. Prince.... 12:00 m 3:00 p miV«r#tairne7 Havre. French 7:00 am 10:00 amTucatan Nai«u. NT*Cuba 12:<X» m 3:oopm

FRIDAY. JANUARY 19.

Iroquoln. Charleston. Clyde ?:£!pmJame,t.,wn. Norfolk. Old />om 3:00 mRio Grande, Mobile. Mallory 3:00 pm

SATURDAY. JANUARY 17.

Alleghany. Jamaica, etc. Hamb-Am... fl:80am 13:00 OSBolivia Havtl. etc. Hamh Am ..... 0:30 a m 12:00 mComuß

"New -Orleans. Morgan

- 3:« Op mCoTmo San Juan. N V & P R o:3'> am 12:00 minland \ntwerv. Red D 0:30 a m 10:00 a mF irnessla

"law*, Anchor o:3(>am 12:00 mf"™!: Liverpool. Cunard 5:00 a m H:3O a m

Lampa^a*. Galveston, Mallory.-

8:» p mI^ancaMrlan. Liverpool. Leyland.....

—-Monttou London, At Trans -•.. i 9:ooamMexico Havana^ etc. N V & Cuba. .10:00 a m 1:00 pm

MicomeduY- Hamburir. Hamb-Am 10:.i0ampf:",, Xnno Norfolk. Old D0m....

-—8:00pm

Wllla Newfoundland. Red Cr0w......10:00 a m I*op mTrirtdad B*rmkJh. «aebe« 8:f>0 a m 10:00 a m

OUTGOING STEAMERS.TO- DAY.

Speakers at Hearing Call Rule to LimitMatches to 500 in a Box Its Work.

Mayor Low held a hearing yesterday on the pro-

posed ordinances concerning the storage, use and

sale of matches, framed by the Municipal Explo-

sives commission. The regulations, If approved by

Mayor Low. go into effect March 31. One of theirprovisions is that there shall be match boxes in

every room of a dwelling five and a half feet from

the floor.Mr Caltanan. a Vesey-st. grocer, said that 11 the

ordinance lininga dealer $50 for giving away a box

of matches was adopted all retail merchants would

be at the mercy of spies. General Eaton, chair-

man of the Municipal Explosives Commission, said

that in 1901 2.055 fires were directly due to matches.He asserted that it was notorious that New-Tor*was known as "the dumping ground for poorly

manufactured matches." Fire Commissioner Sturgis

resented the insinuation of the danger of a spy

'one match dealer opposed the regulation which.said only 600 matches could be packed in a box. He

«aid he sold matches^ 1000 in a box. for five cents ahoi He declared that the MO-match regulation had

been inserted at the suggestion of the Match Trust."Although little known." he said, "it is the great-

est trust in the country." He asserted that if hisoutput was limited by ordinance it would throw aiaree number out of work, ana that the poorpeople would be robbed. A representative of the

Ohio Match Company, said to be an independent

corporation said his company favored 500 matches

to the box. He contended that. as a result of thatregulation matches would be better and would be

Pcha'rlc^c'am^u; general organizer for an anti-

trust association, denounced the interests which,

he charged, had suggested the regulation limiting

m matches to a box. Rudolph U. Delapenha, who

te%ald to control the sale of Swedish made matches„ this country, declared that the Diamond MatchCompany was such a powerful corporation that itcould put all Independent match makers out ofhtifliness Ifit wanted to.

retailers only oppose the••\u25a0\" Iunderstand it, the retailers only oppose the

license fee and the penalty Clause." remarkedMayor Low "Yes. and we want the restrictionagainst selling to a child of ten years stricken

out" «;aid a grocer from Stat<*n Island.It is probable that with slight modifications the

regulations will be signed by Mayor Low.

Announcements.

ICARIA.E & •w. A New Collar. E. & W.

MARINE INTELLIGENCE.

MINIATURE ALMANAC.Kunrl'e. Sunset 4:57 Moon rises 7:36 pm| Moon's age 16" '"

HIGH WATER.

4 m «s»ndv Hook B:42|Gov. Island 0:14 Hell Gate 11:03P.SL-landy "H-k inisloov. Island BJWHeII Gate 11:36

INCOMING STEAMERS.TO-DAY.. Port. L.tne.

. ,'^irlan •.Liverpool. December 31 I^eylandUancasir an Copenhagen. December 24. -Scand-Am,'c<}laLV ;."....Southampton. January 4 American

rS.^Si EmDireV Antwerp. December 31 I'hirnlx

5 1 \u25a0 ..L-rndon. January 1 At Trans.a ii«an' ....St. I>ucia, January 5 Norton!£!? « WilfenVl

"-.lv \u25a0« Prince. January 7 Dutch

LY-rlr^V ..Palermo. December 20 PrinceTni»(r«'tv

"..Swansea. December 31..Bristol city

L.l»nda(t < lt>."".'•••Hamburg. January 3 Hamb-AmJr Zi11 ...St Lucia. January 6....Lamp & Holt*Thon«nii ...Palermo. December 31 Anchor

\u25a0?\u25a0*'"\u25a0}•«\u25a0 .'....Bremen. January » N O Lloyd,' ','",tl'an '.'.'•' Glasgow. January 3 Allan-State

\f MXIieo'' . Cadiz. December 80

—r'ns \vfiiem V. ..Port-au-Prince. January 8 Dutch

FRIDAY. JANUARY 16.... \u25a0'._ ..Liverpool. January 7 White Star•Cymric ..Galvcston. January 10 Mall', ,- ii« .--New-Orleans. January 11 Morgan

•Grenada.'.'.'.'.'.". - I>ort BU Spain. January 7. ..TrinidadSATURDAY, JANUARY 17.. bo^.on . ..Copenhagen. January 2::::Scand-Am

iilian'ra ....Swansea. January 3•lia"a "avole

"'.'.'..-- -Havre. January 10. French

"'Si" '

Liverpool. January i<> CunardM.»iii.n Prince Genoa. January 2 PrinceIv>V wdelnhla Southampton, January 10 ..American\V?l!«lCity '.'...-..Swansea. January 3 Bristol City

•Brings mall.'

THEY BLAME THE MATCH TRUST.

THE MOVEMENTS OF STEAMERS.FOREIGN* PORTS.

i,vornnri Jan !\u25a0*— Arrived, steamers Tona-vnnda (Br).

Brown New-York for Manchester: Victorian <1«r).

Shepherd New- York; sailed, steamer Celtic (Br>.

QUeinSntown;'ianWW

HVHV04% p m-Arriv.d. steamer Teutonic

(Hn McKlnstry. New-York for Liverpool (ami pro

Southamrton Jan 14— Arrived, steamer St Paul. Jamison.Xew-York iVassad Hurst Castle at 11:10 p m

London. Jan 14 .-\MI».I. steamer TMCSJrora il!r>. Payne.

Bristo?. Janr

Arrived, steamer Boston City (Br), Watr

Antwerp. Jan!" IS—Arrived, steamer La Camplne (Dutch).

Sclll^T'j'arrTj.'l p l*ass«d, steamer St Paul, Jamison.New York for Southampton

\u0084.„\u25a0 J.n 12— Arrived, steamer rt«-iiua (nr). Kelkinn.New-York via St Michaels for Venice ami Trieste.

AlKl-TH Jan 13—Sailed. st?am-r Titfinla .lln. Remnart(from Manila, etc). New-York.

Aden Jan 14 Arrrtved, ifeanwir Indnunajro (Bri.- Price.

New-York via St ktlchaall for Singapore and Manila.Binampore Jan -Arrived previously, steamer Tbordhi

(Nor)' Oramm. New- York via Aden for Manila.Hone Konu. Jan 14—Arrived previously, steamer Spltheal

iUti Stewart. New-York via SingaporaColombo. Jan U—Sailed, steamer Beekenham (Br). from

Calcutta for New-York.iiurrv .inn -Bailed, steamer Montezuma (Br). Troop.

Nnw-York.Indian Port. Jan 14— Arrived previously, steamer Mel-

bourne. < 4 -:ri. It/**.New-York via Norfolk for Kurra-rhee \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0..I i;imbay.

Barbados, Jan 13—Hnll'-d, steamer Ce»rens<- (Br), Couch(from N«w~York>. I'Hra.

8t Thomas. Jan H—Arrived, staamsi Moltlu (Ocr), l)erap-• wolf. -York,

Steamers (-.pnrirl'' (Br) for Liverpool: Florida 'Nor).

PM.^Dhla- Vlncenzo Bonanno (Hall. Pensarola; Buck-

MiriPort Antonio; Germanic (Br>. Uverpool: Hup>-maniH. r vnra (Nor) St Thomas, r^rbadoei.. etc; Ham-

«un Norfolk anrt Newport News: El Monte. New-Cn-

1«m Ma-aras ?HrV Grenada and Trinidad: Berks. ;

Harrt^urk oni barge^ :Ant.lla (Br), Nas»«!Manna H«ta. tor

Phl,almoreManna Hata. for Baltimore.

-, VontcifS^Bav 7 ft Ann's nay and Port Maria 8, withV;,.?tto f -Kr & Co. Arrived at the Bar at 7 am.

"t- ,;• Mara-aibo Purst, Mararalbo January 3.,•,,,- andPWC* 7. with mdse and f. paseenßer. to

n.1;;;;;:,, BUM & Dallet't. Arrived at the Har at 10:30°Steamed El Dorado. Prescott. Gabreston January 8. with

mi"teamer city"of Birmingham. Bnrg. Savannah January

i^^oSS^'&SS£J^^ with ml-

tr'^«!i,cr1Ou^ndotU^Catherina, Newport News and

SorM™ with 'and passengers to th. Old DominionS» Co.

SAILED.

The ou--t;v of resuming dividends on the rom-monrtockhM not :*h, considered by the board of

rJ^,.;,,. and It would be beyond the province ofthe offlcm of the company to make any *ta omenas to what policy the directors would adopt In thatregard Themana cement has not In contemplation[he construction of any new plants. There has at

»o Ume betn the slightest question about the con-tlnJaSce of the payment of preferred stock diU-

55E

COLORADO FUEL AND IRON PLANS,

i J. C Osgood. chairman of the board at the Col-

orado Fuel and' Iron Company, when asked yester-

day about certain reports from the West concerning

the company's policy, said:

Henry G. Piffard has I.e. appointed temporary

receiver for the fjenesee Salt Company, with aplant at Plntard, N. V . upon application of a ma-jority of its trustees for voluntary dissolution.•-

SENATORS FORMALLY ELECTED.Sacramento, Cal . Jan. 14.—George '". Perkins was

formally elected United States Senator in Jointmeeting of the legislature to-d«y. »

Boise, Idaho. Jan. H.— The two houses of thelegislature mot to-day In Joint session and aftercanva-ssing the vote for United States Senator, cast

yesterday w B. Heyburn wan ofHclaily declared;i«.',i.-,! to succeed Henry HHtfeld for the term of

six years beginning March i. IMB. A reception wastendered Senator-tlect UeyiJUm to-night.

'

What Is Going on To-day.Hearlnjt on Louisville & Nashville Railway merger case.

before Interstate Commerce Commission, FederalBulMinc. morning.

International <;ustoms Cuticle—. AMermanie Chamber,City Hall, noon.

Xoon prayer zneetinc. No. IIS Kulton-st.

Annual meeting and luncheon, drug trade Section of theBoard of Trade and Transportation, No. 100 William-st.. 1 p. m.

Rapid Transit Commission meeting, 3 p. m.Anr.ua! dinner .if the Holland Society, Waldorf-Astoria,

7 p. m.Annual dinner of the Republican Organization of the

XIXUi Assembly District, Madison Square GardenConcert Hall. 7 p. m.

Republican County Committee meeting, evening.Illustrated lecture by Gilbert Ray Haw-os on "Miners

and Mountaineers of Southwest Virginia," MadisonSquare Republican Club. No. 1.140 Broadway, B p. m.

Review of (Kith Regiment by General Roe, evening.Exhibition drill by the Him Battalion. Naval Militia,

on board the V. B. S. New-Hampshire, evening.Reception for national and sit.jt*- officers of the G. A. R.

by Alexander Hamilton I'ost, Lexington avp. and*>ne-hundred-and-t»-enty-fiflh-st., B p. m.

Academy of Medicine meeting; No. 17 West Forty-thlrd-st..

-p. m.

Reception and games of the 9th Regiment. No. 125West Fourtoenth-st., 8 p. m. t

People's Institute lecture, by Professor John R. Clark,on "Trade Guilds." Cooper T'nion. S p. m.

Talk on "Art In Dress." by Frank Alvah Parsons, ofTearhers College. Columbia University. Young Wom-en's Christian Association. No 7 East Fifteenth- St.,

B p. m.Free lectures of the Board of Education, 8 p. m.—Educa-

tional Alliance, corner East Broadway and Jefferson-st . "The Treatment of Bbock, F.leeding. Hump, Ex-posure to Cold and Frost Bite." Dr. Theron W. Kil-mer; School No. 3, comer Hudson an<l Grove sts.,"The Cost nf \u25a0 Thine and the Pay of it*. Makers."Henry R. sTiissi j School No. 10. One-hundr'd-and-neventeenth-ft. and -• Nl<-holas-ave.. "l»henßiin."Mrs. Raymond Brown; Columbus Hall, Sixtiethbetween Columbus and Amsterdam avea., KMag-TK'tism." W. W. Kerr; School No. 148, EiKhty^nlnth-\u25a0l . between Cblumbua and Amsterdam ayes.. "TheHiiiimilss." Professor <"hatles 1,. Bristol; School No.170, One -hundred and eleventh St.. between Fifth andIx-xinpton-aves., "How to Read English." Henry G.Hawn; SVhool No. MS, No. 26T) East Fourth "I^aterGreek Sculpture," Eugene .1. Bchoen.

NEW-YORK CITY.The Rutgers College Alumni Association of this

I tv is to hold a reunion at the. New- York AthleticClub to-morrow evening. Louis W. Stoiesbury. thepresident of the- association, is to preside, and thefollowing an expected to speak: Governor Murphyof New-Jersey, Jonathan Dixon, Gilbert D. B. Has-broock. President Austin Scott of Rutgers College,John S. Voorhees, the Rev. Dr.Henry K. Cobb andGeorge A. Viehmann.

A debate on Socialism between Professor E. R.A. .s.-!ifman, president of the American KconomlcAssociation and Professor of Political Economy at

Columbia University, and M. Gaylord Wilshire.Editor of "Wilshire's Magazine," will take place at

Coopt-r. Union on Friday at « p. m. The debate isunder the Luspices of the People's Institute. it isexpected to be extremely Interesting. Admission istree. Women are especially invited.

The Sinking Fund Commission yesterday ap-proved the tunnel franchise recently granted to theNew-York and Jersey Railroad Compai.y.

Immigration Commissioner William Wiltlanu re-turned yesterday from a short vacation at b\ranacLake, and resumed chi-rge of affaire on KillsIsland. The commissioner's health broke riownand his physician ordered him to take a complete

rest.

HOME NEWS.

At a late hour m-night none of tho Cat Club of-Bdahi had received any official notification fromthe Connecticut Humane Society that their fieldtrial must be abandoned. Said Mayor Charles K.Leeds: "Ihave the greatest respect for Mr. Haines;-;:.i th. society he represents, and should lv haveany authority here, and ask m<- '\u25a0> take any stepsIn the matter Ishould consider seriously any prop-osition he micht make. 1 am satisfied, however,that there willbe no rat baiting at the Cat Show. \u25a0

Ex-Mayor Humor S. Cummings. prosecuting attor-ney for tiiv Hum.me Society of this State, declinedto comment on Mr. Hatnes's proposed interferenceIn tho matter. "1 think that the women who aremanaging the tat Show may saMy be trusted," he-aid "neither to break the law nor to offend goodi.,ste. Until they do bo all criticism is out of

Dr. Benjamin Bohannan an agent tor the Hu-mane Society, .-ays:

••1 think the position of Mayor Leeds and Mr.in this matter is a piece of foolishness. I

don't see with what authority the Humane Society

can stop the exhibition. Since time immemorialI has been the thing to pet rid of the mouse.

And if the mouse must be dispatched there i- noQuicker way. 1 don't Intend to Interfere with tho

\u25a0 ion."One thine: broueht out by the proposed exhibi-

tion is the scarcity of mice, gome of the <'at t'lubmembers who have been looking: for availablemice for the proposed trial report but little suc-cess the way from 10 to 3D cents apiece wasoffered to-day for' mice suitable tor the exhibition.At Police Headquarters the officers are guardingwill: < xtra care their cape of pot white mice le.-tBorne of the bold members cart them off for thetrials.

Resentment Aroused by Report ofInterference ofS. P. C. A.

Iby TEi.E<:i:Arn to OK TRinuxE.lStamford. Conn.. Jan. v. When Mrs. Homer 8.

Cumminss. president of the Connecticut Cat Club.remarked Jokingly a week or so ago that it wouldbe <=port to have a field trial or mouse baiting forkittens at the coming show of the Cat Club hero,

ami other women of the dub approved of the ide

they little dreamed the consequences of the sug-

gestion Mayor'

Leeds' a objection piqued the presi-

dent and other members, and made th. deter-

mined to have \u25a0 field trial for the kittens, with live

mice as their prey. Yesterday, when the Mayor

said he would offer no further objection. Mrs. Cum-

mins^ and other members were triumphant. To-

day there was consternation in the Cat Club when

it became known unofficially that the National So-

ciety tor the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals had

Interfered in the matter through its president, John

P Haines and had declared such an exhibition as

contemplated contrary to law. Not only that, but

the women who were Interested were liable to

arrest and would really be arrested.When the story of Mr. Ilalnes's Interest In the

matter reached Mrs Oumminßs's .ears she was

Indignant. Her indignation was Increased by the

fact that she is herself a member of the Connecti-cut Humane Society, and her husband Is Its prose-cuting attorney here. "By what right does JohivP Haines presume to interfere in this matter?she .-aid. "The New-York Society for the Proven-

am of Cruelty to Animals is entirely distinct from

the Connecticut Humane Society, and that Mr.

Raines could take it upon himself to notify theConnecticut Society of our limitations seems to-

comprehensible. The Connecticut Society is better

informed of what is going on in Stamford than is

John P. Haines. and if it wants to interfere with

our exhibition it can do so without any advice

from him. His Interference in the matter is moreuncalled for than that of Mayor Leeds. Iresent it.

It is absolutely unwarranted and officious, and aspresident of the Cat Club Ideclare now that it will

not interfere in the least with our plans. Why

doesn't Mr. Haines telegraph to England or someother foreign country and give out such orders? He

doesn't exactly run the universe, Ireally wish he

would arrest us all."

CAT CLUB AND CONTEST.

NEW-YORK DAILY TiOBtTNE, THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 1003.

... Substantial and ...PERFECT

bis ;ILi|fU!!i9TO (J TillNEW WARDMEN

Theodore B. StarrDiamond Merchant,

Jeweler and Silversmith,

MADISON SQUARE WESTBetween 25th and 26th Streets.

Established 18<52.

15 years on John St. as Starr & Marcus

25 years as above.

SPECIAL NOTICE.No connection with any otherhouse in this line of business.

v