city galveston, octoberwilldose aeptember 27th. "ag^^ggg^^g^ ... or round triptickets, withor...

1
$730,000 City of Galveston, Texas GRADE RAISING 5% GOLD BONDS Interest April & October. Optional at Par. Dae October, 1944 Assessed Valuation (Feb., 1906) . . $22,740,000 Xet Debt (Feb., 1906) 2,430.033 Property owned by City (Feb., 1906) . 3.427,950 Foreign exports (1905-06) .... $166,317,642 Second only to New York. Havine Sold Over Two-Thirds. We Offer the Balance at 100 AND INTEREST. Circular on Request. N. W. HALSEY & CO. BANKERS 49 WALL STREET. NEW YORK PHILADELPHIA CHICAGO SAX FRANCISCO National Fire Proofing Co. ist Mtge. sVOeldi Notes. New London Gas & Electric Co. xst Bltgo. s*. New London Gas & Electric Co. ad Mtge, 5«4v 1 New York & Stamford Ry. Co. ist Mtg*. 5^ North Shore Power Co. ist Mtge. 6%. Pceksklll Lighting & R. R. Co. Ist Mt** 5%. Pittsburgh & Lake Erie ad Mt^e. 5%. Republic Iron & Steel Co. xst Mtge. Collaa. eral & Trust Sinking Fund, Gold Bonds 5%.! ***** F Water & Lt - Co. xst Mtge. Prior Lien 5-0. Spring Brook Water Supply Co. m Mtga. 5%. j The Tri-City Ry. & Lt. Co. 5", CoIL Tret m Lien. Virginia Portland Cement Co. Ist Mtge. 5%. Water, Light ft Gas. Co. of N. J. Western New York ft Perm. Gen. Mtge. 4ft. Yonngstown ft Southern Ry. Co. xst-53. Due October xsth,x s th, 1906. Sussex Co., Va, 4% Refunding R. R. Bond* City of Excelsior Springs. Mo., Funding City of Trenton, Mo, Refunding 454*. Dedham ft Hyde Park Gas & Elec LcsCsyi Ist 58. l *- n I>ca October 30th, 1906. Colorado Springs Electric Co. 5%. ~ UAKftttA kATtONiL aA>g V Twaafjr-UUrd; St. * Sixth XV., ; , w; i,. OOT?^tjLa«. ~>r^si QCA3JAJCATO COySQUPATED .> maC *f.n- as* Die coa^Ajrr. able October SlatT lflii Jf* oo^P^ar. pu^> \u25a0 ; c- v - a. coomwrxju —\u0084 IIILI 53*2 CHATHAM XATIOHAJ. m^«r*» ~- a~* .7*" " 'ATcmsoyrs 'annual report. •a. B-mphlet report of the Atchlson, Topeka & Santa Fe for the year ended June 80 has Arrived. Figures ehowlng the company-s prosperous year were printed In The Tribune * ge *Ln««Bber 9 from the advance sheet supplied by the company, the balance sheet, which So^in* the only Important feature not here covered: joiiov. d, m balance* Balancea - ..- \u25a0*£SCTS ; ——. i-cludin, ,June 80. 1006. Jtone 80. 1900. . X*-"* 6 S.«. "fErh?blt r A... ...*........... »454,25*,550 OS $443,632.630 06 za&U&Jtt&fefe equipment Curl^ \u25a0^SySSJS ( .e^**.KX,.6oo written 0ff.... *.«£«3»T H.^,630 v Extenslcns " J Sill"'":! 8 •»*\u25a0!-*« 171.814 47 : . E0«»PW« ~..»-2 U.PS&BS2 28 t.VO.tnyi B8^« . fc , f 4*MBrt.73S 84 $4:3.110.409 82 1 * 1 " \u25a0—-•"••"•\u25a0•\u25a0•\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0 aSS:t7SSa SS:t7SS 10.657.252 65 18 BalaaCT carrtea down - iq " s6o 1481.654.&30 00 $469.703.691 96 a^sne, ear it^^^ - 7 .7.277.86190 S^^spp||i^i ££ M* *sss . v \u0084 nvestnwr.ts f^wSi? f 817.806 84 £?•,":. '" 3 ?fi ?S!?. 6.066.100 63 P**™ 1 jlmre- «\u25a0 ;«^n-.lum 88.856 25 45.&89 !?_- TlustCiwiif \u25a0i" of N«w Tork; - fuel rtaarva fund ~ 884.622 86 412.67073 ~ Jl^|?«lS n.0*a. 253 « i;feS M .Govero!!^::::::::::::::::::::::. Govero !!^:::::::::::::::::::::: '111 ,_„ _„ «<*& &ttm tanfl Md in tank - 17.821.750 OS 9.68005483 <38,215.U7 80 $33.702.685 06 UAXunm. Jun fSo^SS. Jtoe'w so^ \u25a0»;: ===— TT—T-r^r^ ,181^0.00 ««*«*«»o<> preferred ».. J181,4&G.00OO0 _-" j>-ss amount Sn special trust: For acquisition of auxiliary 110.600.00000 ::n*s iio.soo.aant For lroprovezneots, extentlons. etc «.*as.«7o 00 ,-,..--„ 17,286.47000 U4.139.53000 U4.196.63000 114.109.530 00 fta £n£iV mortgag* 4 per cant bond* - $148.7».500 00 *US.Tb*.6» 00 li:u-ur.jr.t rnortpaee bonds 61.728.00000 M.725.0000f> sTrlk >i "r.ture 4 per cent bonds 21,203.00000 16.0&1.00000 TvVem OkUhoma Division first mortl««» P«r V^-.t hoods •• 6.128.00000 6.128.000 00 Osiaa*-' & ft. l>3uls Ralliray Conspany first mort- rttft ? per cent bond* 1.500,00000 1.500.00000 -<c Sen FraTielnco * San Joaxjuin \ alley Kall- *«, sjnpaay first mortrag.- I per cent bonds. . C 000.000 00 6.000.000 00 ConirtiU- 4 per cent honds. first Issue 10,10S»250 00 •82.420.000 00 ou=t pali up OB second issue of convertible 4 ocr cer.t bonds —•\u2666 &.O«S.7BO00 "»* f «2.g*238 m8C00<) 7a& - ° C ° ICT.4MJOO*) B»]axc* carried down _..*.. ............ «.277.60l 63 i <46C.708.<»1f1f) 884,880 000 5^7 *ent fund".!".ir.!!!~^.ll'.... 9401.84084 24.555 <>4 EsS s^ ::-;.v:::::::r.v::::.7::::::: 171.66640 994.74'J47 144.477 C" 408.81753 .-;.. nd 72,80000 145,86866 -:'-**.*\u25a0 * Sa=ta> T* Bailwa/ Company... $816.6fti $252.12« 96 ffiSi rn M a&m. co iiz<s7ors 96.00785 102,49640 412.67073 884.622 86 TfrAAr^t* or. rr*rfrr*4 ara common stock: U. 864.34500 X 18 on rreferrel «toe*. parabl* Au^rt 1. 'Oi.. $2,834.845 00 CncUtoe* divide ~ , 1 " 22225 arMWa Accwfi t«es not y«>t duo _..._...~. TTl.B»»ei 860.06484 *?"j££eFuet due *i —\u2666 •• $3.«2 1 40500 $3,608.013 00 r.ot r ™«:ted~ ~ —\u2666 ~ 4.0W.40143 58,<>22.405 00 $3,586.016 00 8.008.4M47 r r»»«Jted.- - 456.»646 807.443 47 *,06».4O148 3.008,458 47 HS^fS?^".' $3,940.12:02 »2,6«J.»>28 21 aSttsd««acte» ~ 2.761.49111 a2ML22S« balances \u0084 - 605,6.'-064 1.171.682 87 SSS--- - - ~ 7 . 7SS. 85660 IJ » 7 - 66a7S 2 - 17S - 63173 0.209.535 86 %z \u25a0 ;5B -:;::::;::::::::::::^ ;: 10.^:^^ - 6U^ $33.702,&8500 $80.219447 80 Birmingham Ry. Light & Power Co. 4%%. Carter Coal & Iron Co. Ist 53. Central Railway, Peoria, Ist Mtge. 5%. City of Dallas, Texas, 6% Funding Bonds. City of Estherville, lowa, Funding. City of Galveston, Texas. Citizens' Gas & Fuel Co. Terre Haute Ist Mtge. 5%. City Water Supply Co. Ist Cons. Mtge. 5%. Clallam Co.. Wash., 6. D., No. 39. Clinton Coal & Iron Co. Ist Mtge. s*. ' Colorado Springs Light & Power Co. lit ss. Columbia University Club ad Mtge. 4%. Columbus, London & Springfield Ry. Co. Ist Mtge. 53. Fulton Light, Heat & Power Co. ist Mtge. 5%. Greenville Water Co. ist Mtge. 5*- Imperial Elec L., H- & Power Co. xst Mtge. 53. International Nickel Co. 30-year S. F. 5%. Kansas City Southern Ry. Co. ist 3%. Lincoln Light, Heat & Power Co. xst Mtge. 5%. Maiden Electric Co. 5* G©^ Coupon Notes. Metropolitan Croastowa Ry. xst Mtg«. s*. Mexican Gov. 5% Internal Debt (pay from Ist until 15th of Oct. only). THE HAIX HCXAI COMPAVt. 87th Qnartarly DUldend Common^ itodk. "few Yerit. September g3ta t _lgw^_ A eaart*«ly dlriaend of ONS aXD ™™**£ v (I**O PEK CENT upon the common stoc* « £3+- pany has be« declai^d payable October ljt jj£^,^r kST holder, of record at the do** <jf »>«•*««•* 5 ' iS 1800. The transfer books n^°i^f TT e ?j^|^SrT7^ reopen October 2d. 190«. R. K. WAITER. 3«cr»tarT. Excursions. THE HAIX SIGNAL , COM ? A . Ti Quarterly UiTidend Preferred StoeJ; w ia#- New Tort, e«jrtenib*T Sti I so ** A ousrtsTlr dlTKJ*nd of ONSMJCARTEB OS £% FER tBNT (% of I<s trpon the preferred st3Ci rf IUJ Company has b«a fi-»clar*d payable Of^^^J^Jf gtooiholders of record at the close of I buslr -?* B > i!° I*!*1 *!* jrrth. 100«. said dividend being In addition to &•*£*?: cent dividend already ciocUu-*! and paid on ?h* P^«TJ* stock for the pr**en-. corporate year. Th* cansf er be«k« will dose aeptember 27th. "ag^^ggg^^g^ I^OTICE.— THE UNDERSIGNED HEREBY "*" derlar* th*lr Intention of forming a stock corporation to be known as tne Eastern Uf<> Inauranoe Company, t# b* locate In the Borough of Manhattan. City of ?»»w York, for the purpose of maklnr insurance upon th* llres or the health of person* and every Insurance appertaining thereto, and to grant, purchase or dispose of ajuiulti**. under and pursuant to the Insurance law of th* Btat* of New Tork Dated. August lflth, 1800. lohn 8. Uanseo. William E Mldfley. Charles A. Anderson. H?rb»r: Reeves, Max Helman. Mose* Nape'.baum. Krank I*Kcob- bach. Irving Emmons. John C Hanson. A. A. B**x»y. Charles X Hajnmond. Watson B Robinson. Aftca Church. William A Cross; Geore« Hoaktng. Instruction. Instruction, For Boyi ard Tour.g Men— dty. Instruction. THE HAWTHORNE SCHOOL. 850 WEBT TCI> STB£ET, Between Broadway anA VTest Sad Av«aa«. A DAY SCHOOL. FOR OXRZ.S. Frtmary. Intermediate an& Aoadesita department*. General. College Preparatory, and Special Our***. Spec la: Afternoon department, with study and reoreatlon under English and French, supervision. OPENB OCT. 4TH. Visitor* after Best 18th. MISS HI !.. E. OATITi JOBS MARGARET SWEET, A. 8., VASSAB COIXEOE; PH. D.. BRT> MATVII( MISS EVELYXE Trrr.T.tAnrt, rmsdPAXA, For Toung Jjadleß>— City. GOLD SEEKERS' MECCA. Charming Autumnal Excursion. BOSTON ANNUAL TOUR via Albany, Oct. 9th. 55.00 ROUND TRIP Including- Stopover at Newport, R. I. HUDSON RIVER DAY LINE, ON TUESDAY.' OCTOBER »TH. Albany to Boston via Boston and Albany R. R.. er "river, mountains, cities. souin>. m BULBS BY" BTKAMER. mo RAJ^ ALL FOR $5.00. Entire excursion for less than 14 regular rat*. Hudson Valley, the Regal Berkshire* in their Autumnal glories, or famous Hoosao Tunnel Route to Boston and back by Fall River Line. Send to Hudson River Day Line. r>*sbr*ss*s St. pint for folder. CHARMING EXCURSIONS WEST POINT. NEWBURGH AND PO'KEEPSIE Dally (except Sunday), by Palace Iron Day Lin* Steamers "New York." "Albany." and "Heudnclt Hud- son." Brooklm Fulton St. (by Annex). 8: D«»bross«a Bt.. 8:40; W. 42d St., 8. W. l*»th St.. 9:10 A. M. Re- turning on down boat due 4Jd St. 6:30 P. M. MORNING AND AFTERNOON CONCERTS. OiLfiFiilDl nD©QsgflOQttffaQO TTdDanD 0 © Including the beautiful California Resorts, Salt Lake City, Manltou. Garden of tha Gods, Cripple Creek, Denver, etc., leaving th© Eastern cities Nov. 13, Dec. 12. Tickets provide for every trav- eling and hotel expense. No \u25a0worry or care. Stop-over privileges. Our trains run through to California •without the usual change. One way or round trip tickets, with or without hotel ao- commodatlons, sold with these trains. Tours to Curope. Mexico. Florida, etc "Write for Circulars. Individual Travel Tickets by all Railway and Steamship Lines. Full Information and reservations by telepbona. Tel. 6900 Grameroy. BOTfIIM & WHfITCOMB SO, 25 UNION' SQUARE. NEW YORK. Boston Philadelphia Pittsburgh Chicago, etc. Tot Boy« ami Totmg If »a— CR». t "* oßArwrArsa ADMrmtD to cquub. BerKeley yw.. Pupil, tausM f SI AA ? "™* *•«*• UcIIII fl i »**r™« wHhte WVII WW I «tW. throve FW^ it *TXH TEAJC The Bronx. Bo^« location overtookJng the H»d«oti (>\u25a0«*\u25a0 72d Street and West End Avenue, Inspection invited. Day or evenlna. Talepiaae, 1423 Coiumbua> ( TOWARD c. Z>tJiirilUs« Head Tfasi**: WOODBRIDGE SCHOOL, " 1* EAST 58TR ST. CTOR3iERI.Y 41T MADISON' ATE-> \u25a0TH YEAR BEQIN3 3EPTEJ4BIK gfrH. SYMS SCHOOL * WILI. IIEOFEN OCTOBER IST AT 23 WEST 43TH *yTR«B:T .Vrw fcnliaag» are to be at 4&-gi Eat tUt «tr»*t. ————_____ \u0084 Hamilton Institute for Boys 45 WEST BIST ST. <3fashattaa S<j. X.). Certificate Admit*) ro T millsn C«H*»re*v Vtftaanth Tear Begin* Sept. IS. XUua, OMalosraa, Special English and Modern Business Ci» Conducted try a Teacher of Slaay Ys*T«" Exp9rieni?» in Commercial Schools. TWELVE BOrS. SIXTEEN TO IWEITI will be r«ce'.ve4. * Intormatlon regardlaa tart is. *». at s-ihi»L CHAPIN-BUCKLEY ___ .School for E oy«- -* Saat «oth St. 87TII YXAJI BEGTSS THrRSDAY, SE2T. *tth. FRLUAKY DIPT COLLEGE PttEPA*V4.tO«T ' Saall cloases; study tour: ataletic*. B. LORD BwCKJLEY. A. 8.. Prlncb*! SPENCER'S » iilims School, Mb \u25a0\u25bc•.. llS** ay ».i«a ' keeclag. Soortoand. Bng'.lSA. Blgnest g~i , Irntt 4 tlon at lowest coat. For Bath. Bext»— C2^. LANGUAGES THE BEBXTTX schooi. OP XJaravxaxSt MADISON SQCAJftE 113? Brosxltrajr 7^ HAjtLJEM ESiSCHi Laaos Al**.,A I **., .or. UKI M. BROOKLYN " ft Cottrt 3*. KSkrAJCK \u25a0 Soaeaar . :'-.!ia«; Over 830 Branch** la L** Ha* Cst!aa» French Lector**, Proaonelatloa Verses, '»c-*<**ma>tnax <Z:zlti free to our psptis. Trial t.«ioej 3c«a. E'»«n«fctary and Advacoad. Prtv*>c* ud Ci**j b**>» mi. \u25a0 _ , Laasvoss at lchg*l or JV«tlsoc«. la»f or irvesJUL ?ncw TK&M9 B£<-»cs>rryti row. ~" PACKARD NIGHT SCHOOL IS PBJE-EMINEXTLY THE SCHOOL FOB THOSE WHO WISH TO EARN WHILE THEY LEARN A^ oomnwrolal branohea. InaMtoal taf^*; disadvantage, oaee anJ SMday rwbiiA pIStE- Monday. Wednesday and WtoT *£*****; *%&*?£ formation M to Day er Brtnlng ,B*«?t, B *«?t2 ns .*Jsf' 7-H7 -H the Packard Commercial ScaooL a" 1 *** and 23d £:. Piioco 101— Oraiaercy. Subway at •••*. De Lancey School for Girls, 801 West 08th St, Cor. West End At*. (Formerly 71 W. «sth and (68 W. I*ol St*.) 2Bth year begins Oct. I.':. Indlvldnal Instruction : Prepares for i_.l collegia. Separate Deliartxnent tot tmall boys. Kindergarten. Year Book on ajipUo4U -a. Barnard School For Girls NO COLLEGE APPLICANT FROM C 3 EVETIFAILED. SPECIAL COURSES FOR NON-COLLEGB GIRLfI. COLLEGE PREPARATORY. 431 West 148U» St. Kindergarten. Primary and Grammar, 131 Coavsnt Xy*. KRAUS SEMINARY for k.ndergarjners FROEBEL METHODS. 140 Central Park Weft, comer of 78th Street. w/Bo* Hours, on and after Sept ITth. 10 to II ft. ta. Teachers. "CVRST CIaASS TUTOR gives lnstmetlon Jn all \u25a0I- branches; reliable; thorough. DRISCOLL, Box 3, Trlbun* Offioo. SPANISH carefully taught. Lessons private or olass; at pupil's or my residence. Professor PRUNERA. 172 W. both st. Dancing Academy. GEORGE W. WALLACE'S SCHOOLS, WEST 360 West 83rd Street HARLEM 80 West 126th Street. WASHINGTON HEIGHTS—44s West 152nd Street Class and Private Lessons. Children. Adults. Circulars. LeBARON DRUMM SCHOOL^ 40 West Ttd «t. (Boy* In Primary CUMes.) Tnoreughly graded from kindergarten through COL- LBQE PREPARATION. R*op*t.a Ootoper ird, 1931. THE CLASSICAL SCHOOL FOR GIRLS. Mrs. Helen M. Scoylllo, 2043 Fifth AT«no«, Annex la Paris Feb. mt to J\il>- 1. Trar«l OUsaas. Full ooar«« In Music and Art. Special studies, or regular oourt* (or diploma. Certificate admits to College. Oj-ra- sastum. Home care and social Ufa. SIRS. Gabriel Harrison de Jarncttc's BOAKDLNG AND DAT SCHOOL. PRIMARY. INTERMEDIATEand ACADEMIC GRADES. Opens Octob«r 3rd. 688 WEST END. AYE. (Oorce? 88tn St.). THE VELTIN SCHOOL FOR GIRLS 1«M«3 WEST 74TH STREET. Connecting with and including 185 WEST 731> STREET. Reopens on Wednesday. October th* third. Hamilton Institute for Girls I WEST "IST STIVEET (Manhattan Sa- K.I TEN TEARS' COCKSE I.EADINti TO COLLEGE ENTRANCE OR SCHOOL IUPLOMA. OPTIONAL STUDY PERIOD FOR ALL CLASSED. Ih* Principal is at th* school daily from ten to four. Illustrated Catalogue. , "lISSESIcFEE'S SCHOOL FOR GIRLS, " 133 West 72d Mxr-t. Primary to college. Thorough Instruction. Moderate teas. THE MISSES RAYSON'S SCHOOL FOR OWLS. Reopens Oct. 4th. \ 164, 1(16. 168 West 73th Street. THE SEMPLE w.se'ths,. Boarding and Day Sc&oo. for dli;« and Kindergarten (formerly Leslie Morgan Site) GARDNER HOME SCHOOL FOR GIRLS, 607 FIFTH ATSNUsI BET. 4STH AND 49TH STS. NEW YORK INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL OF AST. Practical Professional School. Opens Oct. 1. EUSA A. SARGENT, 848 W. 37t1» St. Tel, illl Col. I\f?Sß MAR, WIIiDHD.- LaUn. Of***, English, XVL mathematics, college preparation; rapid advance- ment. Twelfth year. 2U9 West 100 th st. COMSTOCK SCHOOL. FAMILY AND DAY SCHOOL FOR QIRLS. Heopena October 4th. 31 WEST 4«TH ST. MISS DAY. Principal. \u25a0* riBS GERrJSITB CLASSES will was work on Octo- 'JM ber 4. at Bao West »4th St.. New York. Preparation for College ft specialty. Until Oct. 1 addreas as usual. 349 West End ay*. fTT&E Elllman School and Normal Training Class for Kin- J. dergartners. 167 W. 87th Be. X. T.. op*. Carnegie Hail. For Young Ladle*— Country. Missßaird's SchoolforQirls N'orwalk, Conn. 31th year. Intermediate. College preparatory and General Courses. Superior advantages in Musts. Art and the L*n«~uig9*. Oymnastom. The home htm Is ropier* with Inspiration. 835 gradate. «uc««s*ral la toe *««t ooOs«<sv 2Tta year. Prlmarr to oollefa. BERKELEY SCHOOL ££?* Btrong teachers. Instruction Urg*:r n{ttTll s^:i M . Hearty play, manual training, alnletioa. *x<nir»ioa«. Large playground close to school. Situation exceptionally healthful. 72d Street And West End Avtnae. Overlooking th* Hndsoa. . »^_+ - Inspeotloa Invited. Day or Evening appointments. BLAKE SCHOOL ™* L yon W. LESLIE, L M., Head Master. SPECIALTY: COLLEGE PREPMTIOH. InstrucUon largely Indlrldnal. ijMITEDTO 20 BOTS. Prospective patron* -will pl-ase call beCTreaa 10 •. m. and 1 p. m. Catalog on request. fAn OLD School— A THOROUGH School. MILLER SCHOOL 6t*nß»raphy. Typewrtttog. U^ fln f^Sl ness. Arithmetic. Commercial I*». rsn»—- ship. «c. OPEN* THE ENTIKE TEAK. [ Can or ™* for booklet. fa«>a» *°« i '* i J cau or B<raa £ ay and M^ht Sei»*loB». J A Thorough Business Training at one of the most reliable schools In OngJnrNiy PERlENCE^lnstru^r^^^^^ THE PAINE V«OW3» BUSINESS SCHOOL. 1931 BROADVTAT. COR. VEST CSTH ST. fOOLUIBia INSTiTUTE j H \u0084, w -o d St Dr. E. Fowlw. B S Pware's boy 3 for all iiiIJ|III»»T *>u£na£ f E Specialists la every subject. SmaU c 1 *"**- y Ptudy hours during school day. v . Lab < w ?, t^n?.^ - Optional mllltarj- drill, playground and «"f*£ I 3 privileges. Brilliant success in ooll*gi*t» •* \u25a0 9 amlnatlom Catalogues on request. IS Hl a - Telephone *94* Columbus. jB c OUUWB/ 4 CRAMWIAR SCHOOL. SoS ;^ Kto*»» OaSS Lab^atorl-. Gymnaaiun-.. At... •\u25a0\u25a0 K rounds. . :.:.. A. M.l H *a4m*ster*. F. F. WlLou.N, A. M.. i D ~ Collegiate School I. C. "nTygan. Principal. 841 WEST 7TTH STKEET. Boy* prepared for tf.« CoU*i*« and SclentlSe Soheola. PrfmC/oipartmrnt. W.U equips*! Ojmaasiam. »*- open* £eptemb«r Bt CUTLER SCHOOL M EAST 50?H ST. Reopons ilon lay. October Ist. FOURTEEN' GRADUATES ENTERED HaRVaIUX TALE. PRINCETON OR COLUMBIA IN* JT'XE. 1301. Manual Trainins. Ormnajium. OtttlnK v :.«***«. Classes of eight pupil* or le*s. and Individual at- tention In the preparation of Uaaons. For boys of from *even year* of as 1 * upward. Circu- lars en application to ARTHUR H. CUTLER. IRYINS SCHOOL (BOYS) Dr. L D. RAY Si WEST 8-tTU STREET. SMALL CLASSES. INDIVIDUAL. ATTENTION*. Gymnasium. Playgrour.d. Laboratories. No home studies for boys under fifteen, *• ail their lessons are prepared In schnol. THE SCHOOL NOW IN SESSION. YEAR BOOK ON REQUEST. OVER ICO GRADUATES IN" LEADING COLLEGES Barnard School For Boys Xo fads; ihoroush drill la essentials; firm discipline. Individual Attrniloa. Gymnasium. Athletic Field. COLLEGE PREP. ft UKAVIMAU. 7IX St. Nicholas A*S. ICINDCKOAK AND iiilMAi.Y :i» Lenox A»«. Session after school for Man day* studies. TRINITY SCHOOL. 130-117 «e»t 91st M. VOUNDED 17C». PRIMARY, GRAMMAR AND mail SCHOOLS. UNEXCELLEI* vnaan. PREPARES K«IR ALL. COLLEGES. OHEN.S SEPT. 24T11. B. St., B-wmy Opens Ooto&er i- Save tiui*. uoimi- aU>ar:a«atl i la oa« iwaUb FRIENDS' SEMINARY, FRIENDS' SCHOOL no to 33$ East ISta St, 119 to lii Bo^*rra*«ba*m *V, K*w Torth Bro«sC7a. N. T. KIKPrRGAR'nrS' »ad FOEyAEATOXT BCBOOUB fa* GIRL3 and BOT3. laairtattal '.!!*• . -_ .-Us-liiJ ooursa Include* I..v2COCa 3TEsS, yrCK 7 aBT, w iTfrffVK. TRAjXIxa I*?** piar*-r«jad* itOV-3tc ! !jLHij3L i Fail term t«s^.3 a*9t«m&*r itth. 133;. CATAIOOCI BSNT OX P.ECTTX"T. ALLIANCE FRANCHISE. FREB itv£.-.>i.-fO COURSES E? 37UC<3SI Oetot-r 1 Library BufloUac, Ctiirsitt* v3r%tS.tw aasl \u25b2Qdltarivun. Cs»U««« «r ngntoimß* ar4 .HnnictjiT^ yy>r particulars a^rwt dm 3*i rsjisit o* C* >'"si*sa rrm^caisa, Ooliur.Ma, t:B*»*«stty. »~— PASTEL STUDIO. Tutus rs*«rr»>d. tefrHswa. 13 to 13. tadlo M. BrasOiwßT AiotA* Otta St. T*,-). WEINGART INSTITUTE HHI-:043-5045 SEVENTH ATE.. COR. l.'2Xl> ST DAS SCHOOL TQM, »OT9 ASO OIEU R*op*aa W^dßexdajr. S«pt. 38. BonO. for nrnssiil— 8. WKtSOAWI. IT-'ati»it TTAUXN- uv^arias ZiBSOXS. J. 91OXOR TAU3TQ VAUna. •53 PAiUE a^!Ls>."jm, "rr"INI>EJtOAIITXSJand Prtmary ~**~i>' i ig I*l »* sjekjskssV -IV sWps C.silted). CoU«c» pr»parg;ory. TMoiiiri Acad*- Eia. X. T.Proe&*l Normal, 89 TC. 9ttth. Dr. rJA-pr.T;, Sjis» 1 rOWLKB * WTKIXA CO.. It liBSWs Eat '.n*. E^amlnaUocs d*::>- 10-4. :s £. ltd atrs**. Brooklyn. Adelphi College ~~~? - . ~T Recitation* b*#jta Laisyette At*.. (Uftos PI. as** St. Jcune* PI.. Brooklm. St^t. Si. NOIUIAL IK-»«H>I. For K!nd«rffarta«r« •»* Art T**«h«r». Session* begin B<>pt. ?». ART SCHOOL—Students silini lat any tian*. vi ii i j.'. i . ACADEMY— Graduates from Publlo - -.'\u25a0• admitted upon evldenc* of promotion. Karistr&ti^n Day* Sept l?-li. Reoltatton* B*gla sept. 1". aymnaalum' and AtMottc Field for us» of all OS;m lifton Place. Entrance) op*« morahs*; hour* dally •\u25a0» and af.»r S«rt- *• "\u25a0'"\u25a0 oircnlar* adlr««« TUB REOI3TrtAR. Ai*lyM Caii*g«. Breolclya. Life in Some, as Seen Through a Woman's Eyes. Of I much has fc»en written— the Euisculir.e point of view. How the Alaskan city pr»- eests itrelf to feminine eyes Is told in letters re- ceived ty New Jersey friends of an Eastern woman trho recent'.y Trent to that gold seeker's mecca. Her Impressions were not given with a view to pt:t!'.cailcn. bat to this use cf them she has no ob- jection. It was S o'clock of a eumaser'* rr.orning when the fhip bearing her husband and herself arrived la the Nome roadway two rr.!les out from the city. The sun was EhirJr.g brightly. "It's a wonderful thing to see the can shining all right." Hhe writes. 4 I car.r.ot describe the marvellous colorings en the Eky ar.d water. Frcnj the roadway (where all ships Bint ar.chor) I caw tils long low shore, lined with wooden buildings, eeen^sgly down to the water's e-ige. I felt a long wty from home that morning tad c-Et confess that I lcoked on this land of no right find this shcre without a harbor with much curiosity, seasoned, perhaps, with an unreasonable cisllke. Tie Bea is so shallow that freight and paaer can be unloaded only by means of barges ar.4 lighters, Mm to Bhore by tugs. As luck trculd have It there was not a ripple on the eca. Ee^etlmes the ship lies for days before either piSFer.gers cr crew can be sent ashore, and often \u25a0when tfce etcrsis come up Vissels must put back to pea les: they be driven on this inhospitable bee:h | •'Wcrds ran n<?v»r convey the desolation of th« i thir.fs J saw on landing, or the magnitude of the trr.e'.ls I Rr.flied. AH alone the shore are small wooden buiidlr.gg facing Front street, which is *the - street, but with back entrances opening- en the sea. Millions and millions of tin cans cf everj- eize and description are plied and •FtTfwri ufen the Bands. Nature with all her ferocipusr.ct.3 here Bf-^ms r.ot willing to carry out to sea and bury these signs of man's »dvfr.t in the Northland. The houses have open crair.s rjnnlr.jr to the sea, and the Emell from them fcoids la check th* fresh air from outside. And th* dogs: They are so queer and wolfish. I am beginning' tr> more Interested In them now. They are the winter beasts of burden, and as I ratch them J e;m see much that is noble In them. Eut they are so uncouth and ill kept: And for doj Wjaatioa Norr.e almost rivals Constantinople. Ear!;.- the oth^r morning In U-fs than a block I counted thirty <mtu, either lying etlll or passing jr.* as I walkfi from my apartment to the butcher Eiicp. Their howls at night are simply distressing; cot has only to Fhut his eves to think he is in I*cte's inferno, for the noise Is like the wa.i' of el', the eouls of the lost. One log begins, tfien »sre toja, end Boon there Is a chorus that can tever be forgotten. •^Tien I add that the dog* like to fight at sill Srari, you will wonder that I can vs!e<*p. But I do Wrif Weil, despitf- the howling and the other telfes cf an all n'.pht town. isinAK goes on for * bonra a day; no ore E*-ems to notice that »« is ix<]t:me with the sun utlll 6hining. I euy eighteen Jjo'jrs. but the activity up and down Front \u25a0tract k'T* up all of the twenty-four, anti the «Joor.s er<- u"v*>r closed. Near where I 11- is a tape and 6addle maker who always begins work £ i o'clock in the morn'ng and usually is busy till £ o'clock or midnight. \u25a0 The day of our arrival. **il past 5 o'clock in the morning-, the street was Crowded with people, teams and dogs. "Our rooms art ov^r \u25a0 drug etcre la the ma'.n •treet an>] really are moFt comfortable; other thir.gs be:ng uiKen into consideration, you car. fcwigir.t trhat a delightful eurprleo was mine *ivn :caw them. Indeed, the apartment Is ex- C")e:te!y dainty and artistic. There are three rocas-ii Bitting and dining room, a bedroom and a Ptcfaen. The elttir.g room is papered With grreen «rtrtuse paper, carpeted with a shaded green JVEton irtui proen filling around, and furnishci *"-th a w>athered oak dining table, a buffet with * le?-d»d glass door, dining cnairs end a big rocker. J«» is a scttlt stand for a palm, a lid jus iairf- bwaej and a line big window seat In the bay, X-.'f2 hipli wltn cushions. As a last touch, there J^e pretty ruttted net curtains at the windows. iiie kitchen is most complete, with one of those gwinhntlon kitchen cabinets. In tho bedroom Jr* 7*7 * is a bed which consists of spring* on legs. •*» « ooncfa covet thrown over, a. Morris chair, a chlior.ier. a burnt wood :ahlo and a long mirror \u25a0Ob ibeit, our canned things are kept la tM e-t-c. Off tli* kitchen there is what they can * cache— a pluco ror wood, coal ar.d washing ap- ptratui. i£sj et tjreakfast and lunch»on at home end «^a«-tlrr.es dinner, though for dinner we frequently c to restaurants— tl.e Cafe Royal or the North- t»^ tern M«**. The Moss claims to have the finest wsit In .\<in;f. The prices of provisions are so f~sz trat one must pick up gold to live in tms *aa. ililic i S «> ef-nts a quart; cola .age eggs, J' w "!f- do«-n. and Nome laid on»s, Jl and up '•" *':r.ter. B); oranges, frorr $1 a dozen up-, and £7* rr f s - I 1I 1 - a dozen. A small Bt«ak costs 1160. r* cJ canned goo<ls and cereals are Just double J2« they cost in th« states. We pay S3 a month i£wat.-r Knrfc* and J2>» for taking away tne **"*?•;. Trie cost of laundry may be estimated i«#s char^e of 25 cents apiece for shirts, or JLJJ I **** t:;. work done at home a slow worker E™W eeota an hour; JC is the usual orice for our .7| Cr >' *oik a wt-ek. exclusive of Ironing. , . '\u25a0•' conversational peculiarity which a stranger "-^s tattaatly is that Nome Ii ir. 1 and all the £*.» ' J he world is 'out.' Nfwylmyg call: "All me f" fp from the ••outside"!' I'eople ask how long jL? av * 1 l- i « L <v ":n' cr wwn you are Injr 'out.' - r,* tt etr*et life certainly '.« fascinating, and. as BjartfS htr f r ' J »» wha^ I have said it is pretty 5 a continuous performance The evening KSf B***8 *** is l*»« most interesting sight. Then «Jr~ l erreefa narrow way, lust wide enough for , o wagoris to pass, is filled with people. There \u25a0wff*? or evtry Americans shoulder to hi*.,, T with Nf;-rrocs Japanese, Chinamen ana 525~22 1< ari<J . too. there are* women dressed in •i*if fc ' V;< - la furs and eliks. In broadcloth and fe^r; *c f rned with laco. with ro»es and feathers \u25a0"^Srfte* 8a(1 Jewtls a"P lent y at the neck and ls ftfirc^t mining camp— world In Itself, \u25bavirVi.' for annths In the winter season from £* ' aitf r bul "self. it's a gamble and a s*rug- ssr Ju. . co»c wonderful reward*. When J saw l*u.!rfii' cc ''* i ' Ti °»>." I was amazed. Think of cSfr2 a »" s fll l of nugpT-ts to the bank! Xieau- i*-Aai, * c*"vc '*"v is made out of the old Ivory so '• ; t f '': ti-'' re - tlic * creamy stuff being framed in OsSv^V -«'re is almost everything you could f rcn >V..* fl . lho unifies of personal adornment, « . , uuck! to small stickpins. A large 12 Sr*s? * broart -jan-i of nugget* roeta from '\u25a0'\ry •,*' il'i 1 ' an<^ * n ~ian tilings In proportion. The tojkjr- ,Vu* Jt:rullv clouded and semi-transiiarent, i.tc a clear agate." TODDY IN INDIA. The "Times of India" contains the following il- luminating letter apropos of a controversy which has been raging In Its columns for some time past. Needless to say. the Indian variety of "toddy" is not ours, ar.d has nothing to do with "nightcaps of whisky and water." I have studied chemistry, and know It is practically impossible to obtain toddy In a pure state fit for food. It Is always more or less lii a state of fermentation and permeated with al- cohol. The toddy drawr never washes the earthen pot in which it is r .Ilectf-d. \\>r»> the pot In a clean state the ferment bacteria germs would be absent, and the toddy would k^ep unfermented and fit lor drinking. If drawn before sunrise It is \u25a0**«*> and free from alcohol, by 7 a. in. it Is bubbling with fermentation, and at 8 a. m. its sweetness tins nearly gone, and It Is string as Hash's beer But that is Just what the habitual drinker likes, and our government did a wise rhlrig when they with- draw the young from the temptation of toddy by jiuttinr on a prohibitive tax. This writer shows that i- ii- a demoralizing liquor hy stating that the habitual toddy drinker. in the absence of his favo- rite beverage, has become a drinker of toddy spirit Wisdom comes by experience, and the world is learning that Inno shape or form Is it wise to drink alcohol. It Is one of th«» temptations with which lbs) win* man will have nothing to do. In moderate <J(.*jes it ruins ore's health, and in excess It de- stroys the moral fibre, whether th« liquor used is toddr or toddy spirit. Abstinence best.—Pall Mai: ' agette. § WHY NOT TROUSERS? Just ut this season, when the rclnds of men from Bkowhepa.n to Los Acreles are perturbed by politics, and when the voice of the spellbinder Is dinning- In the ears of a long: auSering public, It Is refreshing to turn for a moment from these strenuous activities and con- template the moral nave which threatens to ruin th* beet sugar Industry In Bremar County, lowa. \u25a0Women, according to the news dispatches, have been employed for a long Urn* In the work of clearing the weeds from the beet patches. Discovering the ad- vantage of bifurcated garments In getting about among the b»»t patches, the weeders have adopted men's overall* and have cose merrily about their task:, re- joicing In heretofore unknown freedom of movement. Theh- work, gladdened by this unconventional costume, has beer, r.sor- than ucually satisfactory, and noxious weeds have failed to flourish to any extent In the beet fleM* which have been attended to by the fair weedera. But there Is r.o Joy without alloy, us the feminine destroyers of unauthorized vegetation soon discovered. Fonxe carping critic, presumably one of thlse persons i bo early In the season declaimed loudly against peek- a-boo waists end later Inveighed agalr.st the abbre- viated bathing suit, chanced to pa*.* by the beet fields and observed th« feminine weeders attlrad in their manly costume. Forthwith a shriek went up which rent the circum- ambient atmosphere. "Immoral:" cried the critic. •"Such a costume destroys the modesty of women. Dreadful!" And forthwith a war was started which. It Is believed, l*going to Jeopardize the beet crop, for now the weeds nourish luxuriantly, while the fair weeders vigorously defend their costume. Residents of the county have taker.' sides and a merry war Is In progress. Milwaukee P»ntlnel. A Lander of Time Past Grows Splenetic Over the Present. I had a shock the other day (write* "P.") on revisiting a certain remote gray Lancashire vil- lage. The old Inn, within whose dusky red- litlea parlor I have had majiy a Jolly meal, wai lii process of being knocked to the ground by a swarm of strenuous workmen. The genial rooms were dusty skeletons, all their kind shelters open to the "peering day." A piece of brand mw stonework, the first bud, bo to speak, of thsj now bulldlt.g, was already thrusting its star- ing freshness out of the decay. Skilfullydodg- ing lumps of falling plaster. I penetrated into this new parlor. Here, on a painfully clean ec-at, 6at the 'lulntessence of that village's wis- dom, wagging his red l^ard in Indignant elo- quence over his tankard. I timorously ap- pealed for Information. "New men. ne\v fangles." h<* Bald fiercely, and waved his polished brown stick. "T'owd Red L.lon were good enow for me, and me foyther afore me. 'Modren Im- provements,' they Bajfc; looks all right, bjjt it \u25a0 \u25a0•v.ar. young man; it won't wear. They're all for t' frame nowadays, and ne'er mind t' r "Take our fresh parson, now," he went on, growing a llttie fiercer. "Put me 'cad in f church on Sunduy morning', and wot do I see? Car pies t candle? i, young man. cangles!" "A bit ritualistic," I suggested. "A bit! Now, I'lltell you the story l told t' parson when 'c come to f \u25a0•« rre. A boy went to f grocer's in t' day time, I ears, to retch some things for 'is mother. 'I want cangi-s," says c. 'Canglee!' says the Fhoprnan. "Wot do yer want wlv cangles in the dayileht ! What did the parson say to that?' I ask'?d "Bay?" returned my friend, with tho radiant a.r of a victor. " 'Its a fine afternQQA/. h*; tajm —Manchester Guardian. THE VILLAGE SAGE. THE PRINT CLOTH MARKET. [By Telegraph to The Trlbore.l Fall River. Mass.. Sept. —There has been very rood trading In the local print cloth market throughout the week. The demand has been active, and covered a variety of goods, and as the pric«« offered have been generally acceptable, manufact- urers have- been free sellers. In fact, they have shown a disposition to meet the demand about as fully as they were able to do. in the degree Of. engagement of looms for tho period covered by the demand. The total of sales Is estimated at fully S50.0O) pieces. "Wide goods have had the call In the trading, but there has been fair trading In narrow goods, also the general market Is In a healthy condition, th» demand being governed by actual needs, the cupply of goods to be- had for five months ahead being evidently Insufficient to fully meet the demand. The- deliveries under contracts sold during the wf-ek will extend to March 1. The demand continues, and the- market is steady and strong at the basis of 3% cents for regulars and Ihi. cents for standard wide goods for deliveries extending from spot to February. The price- of 8»-lnch ?Sx72s has been advanced He Bine© last week. Wide goods for delivery before January are very scarce. Quotations are as follows: 25-lnch, 64*<>4s. 3*c: 28-lnch. 6<xCos. $*i: 27-lnch <*x6os. 3>*oi •7-lnch Kxs6e, "Tic; BS^-lnch 64x645. 6**o ;89-lncn, 68x728. £ 7 /ia ' _^___ v Iloboken. STEVENS SCHOOL THE ACADEMIC DEPARTMENT OF * STEVEN:* iN»nriT« o* TECUNOLOOT. Riv*r tJU—I b--we*r. Mil *:.1 i & 9t», Hobokan. X. X. R2OPtLN3 BEPTEJIBEa ITTH. 1M«, R»r'.s:ratior. da.' for applicant* tJ» a4msMSßS*> Wedneoday. Septe&Bbor i:*h. Examinations for admSaalon on Thursday and Friday. September 13th anil 1-Jth. Courses of *tui!v preparatory to Universities, ColW*-**, School* of Science, l.a.v ui:.l M-<'.!elae. The rat* of tuition for ail cUum la 1133 a. y»*r, *a> per imb», Wr «ataio««*> *&plr» &• rrUMla«k QUAINT BREWERY CUSTOMS. The brewers of a hundred years airo used to an- nounce- the qualities o$ their brew In quaintly worded advertisements. A Mr. John "Walsby. one of their number, announced In May, 1800. from the Sun Brewhousa, Battersea, Surrey, "a curious por- ter, called brilliant," which Is stated (says the writer) to bo "a genuine Porter, brewed on a pe- culiar principle, and for Its Brilliancy has never been equalled In this country." It had, of course, every other Imaginable virtue, and might be seen "any day at Mr. "Wake's, of th« Bedford Coffee- house, under th« Piazza, Covent Garden, he having a , constant stock on Draught for his Customers." Mr. Walsby modestly Informs "the World at largo" that ho thinks proper to announce Ms ale "In the most public manner. In order to plocure Its gen- eral and Immediate Introduction Into all parts of tho world." which is. at any rate, sufficiently com- prehensive. Evidently the little Sun Brewhouse became the Imperial Brewing Company six years later, a gvnlus for nuance being apparently one of Its proprietor's many gifts. In"the "Morning Chronicle" of June 25, 1806, wo read that at a common-hall" of th« City of Lon- don, held always for the purpose on Midsummer Pny f Messrs. Lnwar, Sanders, Brooks and Jones were re-elected ale-conners for the ensuing year. This Institution Is sometimes confused with that of ale-taster, but the two offices were really different. The ale-conners were Inspectors of weights and measures, as -we should now call them, but t«e ale- taster was concerned with the quality alone not at ale and beer merely, but also of bread, within the Jurisdiction of the court-leet by which he was ap- pointed. It Is eald that In times when the wearing of leather breech-s was common the ale-taster used to pour a little of the liquor to be tested upon a wooden bench, or "settle, ' and sit down upon It. If. after a certain length of time, which long ex- perience of this delightful process ehowed to be sufficient, he found himself adhering to the seat, the beer was considered not to be adulterated- but if. on the contrary, he could get awar freely it was proof that sugar had been used, which In those days was a high crime and misdemeanor. Another trick of the ale-tasters was to heat the end of a long clay pip« redhot and plunge It in the be»>r. If it came out as white as it was before heating It was taken to show that the beer was all right: but IfIt blackened, something Injurious had been used. Four ale-conners are still annually appointed for the. City of London, though It may be supposed that they have neither much work nor much pay Brewers" Gazette. LAYING OUT THE ROAD. Between virtuous resignation and Inertia is a border line sometimes hard to define. To put up for years with uncomfortable conditions when they Bright easily be beared Is a credit to no one's In- telligence. (Now. th© average country road is In the spring tlmo moat inimical to a man's good and regular standing In the parish, most hopeless for his horses.) Most country highways are laid along boundary or «ectlon lines or follow the prtrnl- tlvo paths, and are laid out with no reference whatever to gr»do. no thought of conformity to the lay of the land. The result Is that In a stat* like lowa there Is a higher percentage of grade than In the whole republic of Switzerland; up the mountain to the .op and down again Is the way the New Englander must go from one town to another; rarely does the road skirt a hill. Far better than to spend a large sum Inendeavoring to moke such a road of a better grading would be the money spent )n changing the road, having it planned by a competent civil engineer more in accordance with the lay of the land, bo that in tha \u25a0pn a it will not form a brook b-d for mountain torrents. It Is well to surmount difficulties. %ut ,t,t is quite as well to go around them when It can bo | conveniently done,— Country LAt*t la America* For Boys and Yotins; Men—Country. GERLACH ACADEMY. BIUEIXEL - NEW JERSET. THE SCHOOL, FOR TOUR BOY. j KEPTOX SCHOOL. Tarrytown. N. T. Preparatory for busin***and collet*. Limited number*. Term* moderate. " MACKENZIE SCDtOOI.. DOBBS FERRY-ON-HTJDBON, Pall Session September 24th. ST. PAUL'S GRAMMAR SCHOOL (Episcopal). Oreen'e Farm*. Connecticut.— Boys cnly: rharg«i moderate. Addre«» GILKEHT YEL.VEBTON TOMPKIXB. For Both Sexes— Country. ITTTHE LARCHES." CRANBURT. N. J An educational JL aanltarlum far children and other* of retarded mental development E. GORDON, M I).. Cranbury. N. J. School Agency. AMERICAN AND FOREIGN TEACHERS' AOE.NCY supplies Professors. Teacher*. Tutor*. Governesses, eta. to Coll**;** School* and famtlle*. Apply to Mr*. Jkl. J. -FULTON. 13 Union SQUare. Teachers' Agencies. MAIMEMOWKIXK M.L. *nOT I>n< tiers' Agency. 22 Eaat 3uth si supplies Profess.- Teachers, Tutors. Civvarvviaca, ate, to College^ tic 1 .oU an4 mmi.las. Financial. % Dividend Notices. Dividend Notices. NEW- YORK DAILY TRIBUNE, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 30. 1906. Financial. 26 BROAD STREET, Coupons payable October Ist, 1906. The New York Trust Company

Upload: others

Post on 19-Mar-2020

0 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: City Galveston, Octoberwilldose aeptember 27th. "ag^^ggg^^g^ ... or round triptickets, withor without hotel ao-commodatlons, sold withthese trains. Tours to Curope. Mexico. Florida,

$730,000City of Galveston, Texas

GRADE RAISING 5% GOLD BONDSInterest April & October. Optional at Par. Dae October, 1944

Assessed Valuation (Feb., 1906) . . $22,740,000

Xet Debt (Feb., 1906) 2,430.033

Property owned by City (Feb., 1906) . 3.427,950

Foreign exports (1905-06) .... $166,317,642Second only to New York.

Havine Sold Over Two-Thirds. We Offer the Balance at100 AND INTEREST.

Circular on Request.

N. W. HALSEY & CO.BANKERS

49 WALL STREET. NEW YORKPHILADELPHIA CHICAGO SAX FRANCISCO

National Fire Proofing Co. ist Mtge. sVOeldiNotes.New London Gas & Electric Co. xst Bltgo.s*.New London Gas &Electric Co. ad Mtge, 5«4v 1New York& Stamford Ry. Co. ist Mtg*.5^North Shore Power Co. ist Mtge. 6%.Pceksklll Lighting &R. R. Co. Ist Mt**5%.Pittsburgh &Lake Erie ad Mt^e. 5%.Republic Iron & Steel Co. xst Mtge. Collaa.

eral & Trust Sinking Fund, Gold Bonds 5%.!*****F Water & Lt- Co. xst Mtge. PriorLien 5-0.

Spring Brook Water Supply Co. m Mtga. 5%. jThe Tri-City Ry. & Lt.Co. 5", CoIL Tret mLien.Virginia Portland Cement Co. Ist Mtge. 5%.Water, Light ft Gas. Co. of N. J.Western New York ft Perm. Gen. Mtge. 4ft.Yonngstown ft Southern Ry. Co. xst-53.

Due October xsth,xsth, 1906.Sussex Co., Va, 4% Refunding R. R. Bond*City of Excelsior Springs. Mo., FundingCity of Trenton, Mo, Refunding 454*.Dedham ft Hyde Park Gas &Elec LcsCsyi

Ist 58.l*-n

I>ca October 30th, 1906.Colorado Springs Electric Co. 5%.~UAKftttA kATtONiL aA>g

—V

Twaafjr-UUrd; St. *Sixth XV., ;

—, w; i,. OOT?^tjLa«. ~>r^si

QCA3JAJCATO COySQUPATED .> maC*f.n-as*

Die coa^Ajrr.

able October SlatT lfliit» Jf* oo^P^ar. pu^>

\u25a0 ; c- v- a. coomwrxju —\u0084 IIILI53*2 CHATHAM XATIOHAJ. m^«r*»

~-a~*

.7*""

'ATcmsoyrs 'annual report.

•a. B-mphlet report of the Atchlson, Topeka & Santa Fe for the year ended June 80 hasArrived. Figures ehowlng the company-s prosperous year were printed In The Tribune*ge *Ln««Bber 9 from the advance sheet supplied by the company, the balance sheet, which

So^in* the only Important feature not here covered:joiiov.d, m balance* Balancea- ..- \u25a0*£SCTS;——. i-cludin,

,June 80. 1006. Jtone 80. 1900. .X*-"*6 S.«. "fErh?bltrA... ...*........... »454,25*,550 OS $443,632.630 06

za&U&Jtt&fefe equipment Curl^

\u25a0^SySSJS (.e^**.KX,.6oo written 0ff.... *.«£«3»T H.^,630 vExtenslcns

"J Sill"'":! 8 •»*\u25a0!-*« 171.814 47

:. E0«»PW« ~..»-2 U.PS&BS2 28 t.VO.tnyi B8^«.

fc, f4*MBrt.73S 84 $4:3.110.409 82

1*1"

\u25a0—-•"••"•\u25a0•\u25a0•\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0aSS:t7SSa SS:t7SS 10.657.252 65

18BalaaCT carrtea down

-iq"s6o

1481.654.&30 00 $469.703.691 96

a^sne, *«earit^^ -̂7 .7.277.86190

S^^spp||i^i ££ M* *sss.v \u0084 nvestnwr.ts f^wSi? f817.806 84£?•,":. '"3?fi?S!?. 6.066.100 63P**™1 jlmre- «\u25a0 ;«^n-.lum 88.856 25 45.&89 8»!?_- TlustCiwiif\u25a0i" of N«w Tork;-

fuel rtaarva fund ~ 884.622 86 412.67073~ Jl^|?«lS n.0*a. 253 «

i;feSM.Govero!!^::::::::::::::::::::::.

Govero!!^::::::::::::::::::::::'111 ,_„ _„ «<*&&ttmtanfl Md in tank

- 17.821.750 OS 9.68005483<38,215.U7 80 $33.702.685 06

UAXunm. Jun fSo^SS. Jtoe'w so^\u25a0»;: ===—TT—T-r^r^ ,181^0.00 ««*«*«»o<>preferred ».. J181,4&G.00OO0

_-" j>-ss amount Sn special trust:For acquisition of auxiliary

110.600.00000::n*s iio.soo.aantFor lroprovezneots, extentlons.

etc «.*as.«7o 00,-,..--„ 17,286.47000

U4.139.53000U4.196.63000 114.109.530 00fta£n£iV mortgag* 4 per cant bond*

-$148.7».500 00 *US.Tb*.6» 00

li:u-ur.jr.t rnortpaee bonds 61.728.00000 M.725.0000f>sTrlk >i "r.ture 4 per cent bonds 21,203.00000 16.0&1.00000TvVem OkUhoma Division first mortl««»

•P«r

V^-.t hoods •• 6.128.00000 6.128.000 00Osiaa*-' & ft. l>3uls Ralliray Conspany first mort-

rttft ? per cent bond* 1.500,00000 1.500.00000-<c Sen FraTielnco * San Joaxjuin \ alley Kall-*«, sjnpaay first mortrag.-Iper cent bonds. . C 000.000 00 6.000.000 00

ConirtiU- 4 per cent honds. first Issue 10,10S»250 00 •82.420.000 00ou=t pali up OB second issue of convertible 4

ocr cer.t bonds —•\u2666 &.O«S.7BO00"»* f

«2.g*238m8C00<) 7a&- °

ICT.4MJOO*)B»]axc* carried down _..*.........—..... «.277.60l 63

i <46C.708.<»1f1f) 884,880 000

5^7 *ent fund".!".ir.!!!~^.ll'.... 9401.84084 24.555 <>4

EsS s^ ::-;.v:::::::r.v::::.7::::::: 171.66640 994.74'J47144.477 C" 408.81753.-;.. nd 72,80000 145,86866

-:'-**.*\u25a0 *Sa=ta> T*Bailwa/ Company... $816.6fti 3« $252.12« 96ffiSirnMa&m. coiiz<s7ors

96.00785 102,49640412.67073 884.622 86

TfrAAr^t*or. rr*rfrr*4ara common stock:U.864.34500X

18 on rreferrel «toe*. parabl* Au^rt 1. 'Oi.. $2,834.845 00

CncUtoe* divide ~ , 1"

22225arMWa

Accwfi t«es not y«>t duo _..._...~. TTl.B»»ei 860.06484*?"j££eFuet due *i —\u2666

•• $3.«2 140500 $3,608.013 00r.ot r™«:ted~

~—\u2666

~4.0W.40143

58,<>22.405 00 $3,586.016 00

8.008.4M47rr»»«Jted.-

-456.»646 807.443 47

*,06».4O148 3.008,458 47

HS^fS?^".' $3,940.12:02 »2,6«J.»>28 21aSttsd««acte» ~

2.761.49111 a2ML22S«balances

—\u0084

-605,6.'-064 1.171.682 87

• SSS--- - - ~7.7SS.85660

IJ»7-66a7S 2

-17S-631730.209.535 86

%z\u25a0;5B -:;::::;:::::::::::: ;̂: 10.^:^^-

6U^ $33.702,&8500 $80.219447 80

Birmingham Ry. Light & Power Co. 4%%.Carter Coal & IronCo. Ist 53.Central Railway, Peoria, Ist Mtge. 5%.City of Dallas, Texas, 6% Funding Bonds.City of Estherville, lowa, Funding.City of Galveston, Texas.Citizens' Gas & Fuel Co. Terre Haute Ist

Mtge. 5%.City Water Supply Co. Ist Cons. Mtge. 5%.Clallam Co.. Wash., 6. D., No. 39.Clinton Coal & IronCo. Ist Mtge. s*.

'

Colorado Springs Light & Power Co. lit ss.Columbia University Club ad Mtge. 4%.Columbus, London & Springfield Ry. Co. Ist

Mtge. 53.Fulton Light,Heat &Power Co. ist Mtge. 5%.Greenville Water Co. ist Mtge. 5*-Imperial Elec L., H- & Power Co. xst Mtge.

53.International Nickel Co. 30-year S. F. 5%.Kansas City Southern Ry. Co. ist 3%.Lincoln Light, Heat & Power Co. xst Mtge.

5%.Maiden Electric Co. 5*G©^ Coupon Notes.Metropolitan Croastowa Ry. xst Mtg«. s*.Mexican Gov. 5% Internal Debt (pay from Ist

until 15th of Oct. only).

THE HAIXHCXAI COMPAVt.87th Qnartarly DUldend Common^ itodk.

"few Yerit. September g3tat _lgw^_Aeaart*«ly dlriaend of ONS aXD™™**£v

(I**OPEK CENT upon the common stoc* « £3+-pany has be« declai^d payable October ljtjj£^,^r kSTholder, of record at the do** <jf »>«•*««•* 5'

iS1800. The transfer books n^°i^fTT

e?j^|^SrT7^reopen October 2d. 190«. R. K.WAITER. 3«cr»tarT.

Excursions.THE HAIX SIGNAL,COM?A. TiQuarterly UiTidend Preferred StoeJ; w ia#-

New Tort, e«jrtenib*T Sti Iso**A ousrtsTlr dlTKJ*nd of ONSMJCARTEB OS £%FER tBNT (% of I<s trpon the preferred st3Ci rfIUJ

Company has b«a fi-»clar*d payable Of^^^J^Jfgtooiholders of record at the close ofI

buslr-?*B >i!°I*!*1*!*jrrth. 100«. said dividend being In addition to &•*£*?:cent dividend already ciocUu-*! and paid on ?h* P^«TJ*stock for the pr**en-. corporate year. Th* cansf er be«k«willdose aeptember 27th. "ag^^ggg^^g^

I^OTICE.—THE UNDERSIGNED HEREBY"*"derlar* th*lr Intention of forming a stock corporation

to be known as tne Eastern Uf<> Inauranoe Company, t#b* locate In the Borough of Manhattan. City of ?»»wYork, for the purpose of maklnr insurance upon th* llresor the health of person* and every Insurance appertainingthereto, and to grant, purchase or dispose of ajuiulti**.under and pursuant to the Insurance law of th*Btat* ofNew Tork Dated. August lflth, 1800. lohn 8. Uanseo.William E Mldfley. Charles A. Anderson. H?rb»r:Reeves, Max Helman. Mose* Nape'.baum. Krank I*Kcob-bach. Irving Emmons. John C Hanson. A. A. B**x»y.

Charles X Hajnmond. Watson B Robinson. AftcaChurch. William A Cross; Geore« Hoaktng.

Instruction. Instruction,

For Boyi ard Tour.g Men—dty.

Instruction.

THE

HAWTHORNE SCHOOL.850 WEBT TCI> STB£ET,

Between Broadway anA VTest Sad Av«aa«.A DAY SCHOOL. FOR OXRZ.S.

Frtmary. Intermediate an& Aoadesita department*.General. College Preparatory, and Special Our***.Spec la: Afternoon department, with study andreoreatlon under English and French, supervision.

OPENB OCT. 4TH. Visitor* after Best 18th.MISS HI!.. E. OATITiJOBS MARGARET SWEET, A. 8., VASSAB

COIXEOE; PH. D.. BRT> MATVII(MISS EVELYXE Trrr.T.tAnrt, rmsdPAXA,

For Toung Jjadleß>— City.

GOLD SEEKERS' MECCA.

Charming Autumnal Excursion.BOSTON ANNUAL TOUR

via Albany, Oct. 9th.55.00 ROUND TRIP

Including- Stopover at Newport, R. I.

HUDSON RIVER DAY LINE,ON TUESDAY.' OCTOBER »TH.

Albany to Boston via Boston and Albany R. R.. er"river, mountains, cities. souin>.

m BULBS BY"BTKAMER.mo RAJ^

ALL FOR $5.00.Entire excursion for less than 14 regular rat*.Hudson Valley, the Regal Berkshire* in their

Autumnal glories, or famous Hoosao Tunnel Route toBoston and back by Fall River Line.

Send to Hudson River Day Line. r>*sbr*ss*s St. pint

for folder.

CHARMING EXCURSIONSWEST POINT. NEWBURGH AND PO'KEEPSIE

Dally (except Sunday), by Palace Iron Day Lin*Steamers "New York." "Albany." and "Heudnclt Hud-son." Brooklm Fulton St. (by Annex). 8: D«»bross«a

Bt.. 8:40; W. 42d St., 8. W. l*»thSt.. 9:10 A. M. Re-turning on down boat due 4Jd St. 6:30 P. M.

MORNING AND AFTERNOON CONCERTS.

OiLfiFiilDlnD©QsgflOQttffaQO TTdDanD0©

Including the beautiful California Resorts, SaltLake City, Manltou. Garden of tha Gods, CrippleCreek, Denver, etc., leaving th© Eastern citiesNov.13, Dec. 12. Tickets provide for every trav-eling and hotel expense. No \u25a0worry or care.Stop-over privileges. Our trains run through toCalifornia •without the usual change. One wayor round trip tickets, withor without hotel ao-commodatlons, sold with these trains.

Tours to Curope. Mexico. Florida, etc

"Write for Circulars.Individual Travel Tickets by all Railway

and Steamship Lines.Full Information and reservations by telepbona.

Tel. 6900 Grameroy.

BOTfIIM & WHfITCOMB SO,25 UNION' SQUARE. NEW YORK.

Boston Philadelphia Pittsburgh Chicago, etc.

Tot Boy« ami Totmg If»a—CR». t"* oßArwrArsa ADMrmtD to cquub.

BerKeley yw.. Pupil, tausM f

SI AA ?"™**•«*•

UcIIIIfli »**r™« wHhteWVII WW I «tW. throve FW^ it*TXHTEAJC The Bronx.Bo^« location

—overtookJng the H»d«oti (>\u25a0«*\u25a0

72d Street and West End Avenue,Inspection invited. Day or evenlna.

Talepiaae, 1423 Coiumbua>(

TOWARD c. Z>tJiirilUs« Head Tfasi**:

WOODBRIDGE SCHOOL,"

1* EAST 58TR ST.CTOR3iERI.Y 41T MADISON' ATE->\u25a0TH YEAR BEQIN3 3EPTEJ4BIK gfrH.

SYMS SCHOOL*

WILI.IIEOFEN OCTOBER IST AT23 WEST 43TH *yTR«B:T.Vrw fcnliaag» are to be at 4&-gi Eat tUt «tr»*t.—————_____

\u0084

Hamilton Institute for Boys45 WEST BIST ST. <3fashattaa S<j. X.).

Certificate Admit*) ro Tmillsn C«H*»re*v

Vtftaanth Tear Begin* Sept. IS. XUua, OMalosraa,

Special English and Modern BusinessCi» Conducted try a Teacher of Slaay Ys*T«"Exp9rieni?» in Commercial Schools.TWELVE BOrS. SIXTEEN TO IWEITIwill be r«ce'.ve4.

*

Intormatlon regardlaa tart is. *».at s-ihi»L

CHAPIN-BUCKLEY___.School for Eoy«- -* Saat «oth St.

87TII YXAJI BEGTSS THrRSDAY, SE2T. *tth.FRLUAKY DIPT COLLEGE PttEPA*V4.tO«T 'Saall cloases; study tour: ataletic*.

B. LORD BwCKJLEY. A. 8.. Prlncb*!SPENCER'S » iilims School, Mb \u25a0\u25bc•.. llS** ay ».i«a

'keeclag. Soortoand. Bng'.lSA. Blgnest g~i , Irntt 4

tlon at lowest coat.

For Bath. Bext»—C2^.

LANGUAGESTHE BEBXTTX schooi. OP XJaravxaxSt

MADISON SQCAJftE• 113? Brosxltrajr7^

HAjtLJEM ESiSCHi Laaos Al**.,AI**., .or. UKIM.BROOKLYN

" ft Cottrt 3*.KSkrAJCK \u25a0 Soaeaar . :'-.!ia«;

Over 830 Branch** la L**Ha* Cst!aa»French Lector**,Proaonelatloa Verses, '»c-*<**ma>tnax

<Z:zlti free to our psptis. Trial t.«ioej 3c«a.E'»«n«fctary and Advacoad. Prtv*>c* ud Ci**j b**>»mi. \u25a0

_ ,Laasvoss at lchg*l or JV«tlsoc«. la»f or irvesJUL

?ncw TK&M9 B£<-»cs>rryti row. ~"

PACKARDNIGHT SCHOOL

IS PBJE-EMINEXTLY THE SCHOOLFOB THOSE WHO WISH TO

EARN WHILE THEY LEARNA^ oomnwrolal branohea. InaMtoal taf^*;

disadvantage, oaeeanJ SMdayrwbiiA

pIStE-Monday. Wednesday and WtoT *£*****;*%&*?£formation Mto Day er Brtnlng

,B*«?t,B*«?t2ns .*Jsf'7-H7-H

the Packard Commercial ScaooL a"1*** and

23d £:.Piioco 101— Oraiaercy. Subway at •••*.

De Lancey School for Girls,801 West 08th St, Cor. West End At*.

(Formerly 71 W. «sth and (68 W. I*olSt*.)2Bth year begins Oct. I.':. Indlvldnal Instruction

—:

Prepares for i_.l collegia. Separate Deliartxnent tottmall boys. Kindergarten. Year Book on ajipUo4U -a.

Barnard School For GirlsNO COLLEGE APPLICANT FROM C3EVETIFAILED.

SPECIAL COURSES FOR NON-COLLEGB GIRLfI.COLLEGE PREPARATORY. 431 West 148U» St.

Kindergarten. Primary and Grammar, 131 Coavsnt Xy*.

KRAUS SEMINARY for k.ndergarjners

FROEBEL METHODS.140 Central Park Weft, comer of 78th Street.

w/Bo* Hours, on and after Sept ITth. 10 to IIft. ta.

Teachers."CVRST CIaASS TUTOR gives lnstmetlon Jn all\u25a0I- branches; reliable; thorough. DRISCOLL, Box 3,Trlbun* Offioo.

SPANISH carefully taught. Lessons private or olass; atpupil's or my residence. Professor PRUNERA. 172

W. both st.

Dancing Academy.

GEORGE W. WALLACE'S SCHOOLS,WEST

—360 West 83rd Street

HARLEM—

80 West 126th Street.WASHINGTON HEIGHTS—44s West 152nd StreetClass and Private Lessons. Children. Adults. Circulars.

LeBARON DRUMM SCHOOL^40 West Ttd «t. (Boy* In Primary CUMes.)

Tnoreughly graded from kindergarten through COL-LBQE PREPARATION. R*op*t.a Ootoper ird, 1931.

THE CLASSICAL SCHOOL FOR GIRLS.Mrs. Helen M. Scoylllo, 2043 Fifth AT«no«, Annex la

Paris Feb. mt to J\il>- 1. Trar«l OUsaas. Full ooar««In Music and Art. Special studies, or regular oourt*(or diploma. Certificate admits to College. Oj-ra-sastum. Home care and social Ufa.

SIRS.

Gabriel Harrison de Jarncttc'sBOAKDLNG AND DAT SCHOOL.

PRIMARY. INTERMEDIATEand ACADEMIC GRADES.Opens Octob«r 3rd.

688 WEST END. AYE. (Oorce? 88tn St.).

THE VELTIN SCHOOL FOR GIRLS1«M«3 WEST 74TH STREET.

Connecting with and including185 WEST 731> STREET.

Reopens on Wednesday. October th* third.

Hamilton Institute forGirlsIWEST "IST STIVEET (Manhattan Sa- K.I

TEN TEARS' COCKSE I.EADINti TO COLLEGEENTRANCE OR SCHOOL IUPLOMA. OPTIONALSTUDY PERIOD FOR ALL CLASSED.

Ih*Principal is at th*school daily from ten to four.Illustrated Catalogue. ,

"lISSESIcFEE'S SCHOOL FOR GIRLS,"

133 West 72d Mxr-t.Primary to college. Thorough Instruction. Moderate teas.

THE MISSES RAYSON'SSCHOOL FOR OWLS. Reopens Oct. 4th. \164, 1(16. 168 West 73th Street.

THE SEMPLE w.se'ths,.Boarding and Day Sc&oo. for dli;« and Kindergarten(formerly Leslie Morgan Site)

GARDNER HOME SCHOOL FOR GIRLS,607 FIFTH ATSNUsI BET. 4STH AND 49TH STS.

NEW YORK INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL OF AST.Practical Professional School. Opens Oct. 1.

EUSA A. SARGENT, 848 W. 37t1» St. Tel, illlCol.

I\f?Sß MAR, WIIiDHD.-LaUn. Of***, English,XVL mathematics, college preparation; rapid advance-ment. Twelfth year. 2U9 West 100 th st.

COMSTOCK SCHOOL.FAMILY AND DAY SCHOOL FOR QIRLS.

Heopena October 4th. 31 WEST 4«TH ST.MISS DAY. Principal.

\u25a0* riBS GERrJSITB CLASSES willwas work on Octo-'JM ber 4. at Bao West »4th St.. New York.

Preparation for College ft specialty.UntilOct. 1addreas as usual. 349 West End ay*.

fTT&EElllman School and Normal TrainingClass for Kin-J. dergartners. 167 W. 87th Be. X.T..op*. Carnegie Hail.

For Young Ladle*—Country.

Missßaird's SchoolforQirlsN'orwalk, Conn. 31th year. Intermediate. Collegepreparatory and General Courses. Superior advantagesin Musts. Art and the L*n«~uig9*. Oymnastom. Thehome htm Is ropier* with Inspiration.

835 gradate. «uc««s*ral la toe *««t ooOs«<sv2Tta year. Prlmarr to oollefa.

BERKELEY SCHOOL ££?*Btrong teachers. Instruction Urg*:r n{ttTlls^:iM.Hearty play, manual training, alnletioa. *x<nir»ioa«.Large playground close to school.Situation exceptionally healthful.

72d Street And West End Avtnae.Overlooking th* Hndsoa. .»^_+-

Inspeotloa Invited. Day or Evening appointments.

BLAKE SCHOOL ™*L yon W. LESLIE, LM., Head Master.

SPECIALTY: COLLEGE PREPMTIOH.InstrucUon largely Indlrldnal. ijMITEDTO 20 BOTS.

Prospective patron* -willpl-ase call beCTreaa 10 •. m.and 1p. m. Catalog on request.

fAn OLD School— A THOROUGH School.

MILLER SCHOOL6t*nß»raphy. Typewrtttog. U f̂lnf^Slness. Arithmetic. Commercial I*». rsn»—-

ship. «c.OPEN* THE ENTIKE TEAK.

[ Can or™* for booklet. fa«>a» *°«i'*iJcau or B<raa £ay and M^ht Sei»*loB». J

A Thorough Business Trainingat one of the most reliable schools In OngJnrNiy

PERlENCE^lnstru^r^^^^^THE PAINE V«OW3»

BUSINESS SCHOOL.1931 BROADVTAT. COR. VEST CSTH ST.

fOOLUIBia INSTiTUTE jH \u0084, w -od St Dr. E. Fowlw. BS Pware's boy 3 for all iiiIJ|III»»T*>u£na£ f

E Specialists la every subject. SmaU c1*"**- yPtudy hours during school day.

v.Lab<w?,t^n?.^ „-Optional mllltarj-drill, playground and «"f*£I3 privileges. Brilliant success in ooll*gi*t» •* \u25a0

9 amlnatlom Catalogues on request. ISHl

a -Telephone *94* Columbus. jB

cOUUWB/4CRAMWIAR SCHOOL.

SoS ;^ Kto*»» OaSS Lab^atorl-.Gymnaaiun-.. At... •\u25a0\u25a0 Krounds. .:.:.. A. M.l H*a4m*ster*.F. F. WlLou.N, A. M.. iD

~

Collegiate SchoolI.C. "nTygan. Principal.

841 WEST 7TTH STKEET.Boy* prepared for tf.« CoU*i*« and SclentlSe Soheola.

PrfmC/oipartmrnt. W.U equips*! Ojmaasiam. »*-open* £eptemb«r Bt

CUTLER SCHOOLM EAST 50?H ST.

Reopons ilonlay. October Ist.

FOURTEEN' GRADUATES ENTERED HaRVaIUXTALE. PRINCETON OR COLUMBIA IN* JT'XE. 1301.

Manual Trainins. Ormnajium. OtttlnK v:.«***«.Classes of eight pupil* or le*s. and Individual at-

tention In the preparation of Uaaons.

For boys of from *even year* of as 1* upward. Circu-lars en application to ARTHUR H. CUTLER.

IRYINS SCHOOL (BOYS) Dr. L D. RAYSi WEST 8-tTU STREET.

SMALL CLASSES. INDIVIDUAL.ATTENTION*.Gymnasium. Playgrour.d. Laboratories.

No home studies for boys under fifteen, *• ail theirlessons are prepared In schnol.

THE SCHOOL NOW INSESSION.YEAR BOOK ON REQUEST.

OVER ICO GRADUATES IN" LEADING COLLEGES

Barnard School For BoysXo fads; ihoroush drillla essentials; firm discipline.

Individual Attrniloa. Gymnasium. Athletic Field.COLLEGE PREP. ft UKAVIMAU.7IX St. Nicholas A*S.ICINDCKOAK AND iiilMAi.Y :i» Lenox A»«.

Session after school for Man day* studies.

TRINITY SCHOOL.130-117 «e»t 91st M.

VOUNDED 17C». PRIMARY, GRAMMAR AND mailSCHOOLS. UNEXCELLEI* vnaan.

PREPARES K«IR ALL. COLLEGES.OHEN.S SEPT. 24T11.

B.St., B-wmyOpens Ooto&er i- Save tiui*.uoimi- aU>ar:a«atl

ila oa« iwaUb

FRIENDS' SEMINARY, FRIENDS' SCHOOLno to 33$ East ISta St, 119 to liiBo^*rra*«ba*m *V,

K*w Torth Bro«sC7a. N. T.KIKPrRGAR'nrS' »ad FOEyAEATOXT BCBOOUB fa*GIRL3and BOT3. laairtattal '.!!*• . • -_ .-Us-liiJooursa Include* I..v2COCa 3TEsS, yrCK7 aBT, w iTfrffVK.TRAjXIxa I*?** piar*-r«jad* itOV-3tc!!jLHij3LiFail term t«s^.3 a*9t«m&*r itth. 133;.

CATAIOOCI BSNT OX P.ECTTX"T.

ALLIANCE FRANCHISE.FREB itv£.-.>i.-fO COURSES E? 37UC<3SI

Oetot-r 1 Library BufloUac, Ctiirsitt* v3r%tS.tw aasl\u25b2Qdltarivun. Cs»U««« «r ngntoimß* ar4 .HnnictjiT^yy>r particulars a^rwt dm 3*irsjisit o* C* >'"si*sarrm^caisa, Ooliur.Ma, t:B*»*«stty.

»~——

PASTEL STUDIO.Tutus rs*«rr»>d. tefrHswa. 13 to 13.

tadlo M. BrasOiwßT AiotA* Otta St. T*,-).

WEINGART INSTITUTEHHI-:043-5045 SEVENTH ATE.. COR. l.'2Xl> ST

DAS SCHOOL TQM, »OT9 ASO OIEUR*op*aa W^dßexdajr. S«pt. 38. BonO. for nrnssiil—8. WKtSOAWI. IT-'ati»it

TTAUXN-uv^arias ZiBSOXS.J. 91OXOR TAU3TQ VAUna.

•53 PAiUE a^!Ls>."jm,

"rr"INI>EJtOAIITXSJand Prtmary ~**~i>'i ig I*l»* sjekjskssV-IVsWps C.silted). CoU«c» pr»parg;ory. TMoiiiriAcad*-Eia. X. T.Proe&*l Normal, 89 TC. 9ttth. Dr. rJA-pr.T;, Sjis»

1 rOWLKB * WTKIXA CO.. It liBSWs Eat '.n*.E^amlnaUocs d*::>- 10-4. :s £. ltd atrs**.

Brooklyn.

Adelphi College ~~~?- . ~T Recitation* b*#jtaLaisyette At*.. (Uftos PI. as**

St. Jcune* PI.. Brooklm. St^t. Si.

NOIUIAL IK-»«H>I.—

For K!nd«rffarta«r« •»* Art

T**«h«r». Session* begin B<>pt. ?».ART SCHOOL—Students silini lat any tian*.vi iii

j.'.i. ACADEMY—Graduates from Publlo-

-.'\u25a0•

admitted upon evldenc* of promotion. Karistr&ti^nDay* Sept l?-li. Reoltatton* B*gla sept. 1".aymnaalum' and AtMottc Field for us» of all

OS;m lifton Place. Entrance) op*« morahs*; hour*dally •\u25a0» and af.»r S«rt- *• "\u25a0'"\u25a0 oircnlar* adlr«««TUBREOI3TrtAR. Ai*lyMCaii*g«. Breolclya.

Life in Some, as Seen Througha Woman's Eyes.

Of I much has fc»en written— the

Euisculir.e point of view. How the Alaskan citypr»-eests itrelf to feminine eyes Is told in letters re-

ceived tyNew Jersey friends of an Eastern womantrho recent'.y Trent to that gold seeker's mecca.Her Impressions were not given with a view topt:t!'.cailcn. bat to this use cf them she has no ob-jection.

Itwas S o'clock of a eumaser'* rr.orning whenthe fhip bearing her husband and herself arrivedla the Nome roadway two rr.!les out from the city.

The sun was EhirJr.g brightly. "It's a wonderfulthing to see the can shining all right." Hhe writes.4 Icar.r.ot describe the marvellous colorings en theEky ar.d water. Frcnj the roadway (where all ships

Bint ar.chor) Icaw tils long low shore, lined withwooden buildings, eeen^sgly down to the water'se-ige. Ifelt a long wty from home that morningtad c-Et confess that Ilcoked on this land of noright find this shcre without a harbor with muchcuriosity, seasoned, perhaps, with an unreasonablecisllke. Tie Bea is so shallow that freight andpaaer can be unloaded only by means ofbarges ar.4 lighters, Mm to Bhore by tugs. Asluck trculd have It there was not a ripple on theeca. Ee^etlmes the ship lies for days before eitherpiSFer.gers cr crew can be sent ashore, and often\u25a0when tfce etcrsis come up Vissels must put backto pea les: they be driven on this inhospitablebee:h |

•'Wcrds ran n<?v»r convey the desolation of th« ithir.fs J saw on landing, or the magnitude of thetrr.e'.ls IRr.flied. AH alone the shore are smallwooden buiidlr.gg facing Front street, which is*the

-street, but with back entrances opening-

en the sea. Millions and millions of tin canscf everj- eize and description are plied and

•FtTfwri ufen the Bands. Nature with all herferocipusr.ct.3 here Bf-^ms r.ot willing to carryout to sea and bury these signs of man's»dvfr.t in the Northland. The houses have opencrair.s rjnnlr.jr to the sea, and the Emell from themfcoids la check th* fresh air from outside. Andth* dogs: They are so queer and wolfish. Iambeginning' tr> b» more Interested In them now.They are the winter beasts of burden, and as Iratch them J e;m see much that is noble In them.Eut they are so uncouth and ill kept: And for dojWjaatioa Norr.e almost rivals Constantinople.Ear!;.- the oth^r morning In U-fs than a block Icounted thirty<mtu, either lying etlll or passingjr.* as Iwalkfi from my apartment to the butcherEiicp. Their howls at night are simply distressing;cot has only to Fhut his eves to think he is inI*cte's inferno, for the noise Is like the wa.i' ofel', the eouls of the lost. One log begins, tfien»sre toja, end Boon there Is a chorus that cantever be forgotten.•^Tien Iadd that the dog* like to fight at sill

Srari, you will wonder that Ican vs!e<*p. But IdoWrif Weil, despitf- the howling and the othertelfes cf an all n'.pht town. isinAK goes on for* bonra a day; no ore E*-ems to notice that»« is ix<]t:me with the sun utlll 6hining. Ieuy

eighteen Jjo'jrs. but the activity up and down Front\u25a0tract k'T* up all of the twenty-four, anti the

«Joor.s er<- u"v*>r closed. Near where I11- • is atape and 6addle maker who always begins work£io'clock in the morn'ng and usually is busy till£ o'clock or midnight. \u25a0 The day of our arrival.**ilpast 5 o'clock in the morning-, the street wasCrowded with people, teams and dogs.

"Our rooms art ov^r \u25a0 drug etcre la the ma'.n•treet an>] really are moFt comfortable; otherthir.gs be:ng uiKen into consideration, you car.fcwigir.t trhat a delightful eurprleo was mine*ivn:caw them. Indeed, the apartment Is ex-C")e:te!y dainty and artistic. There are threerocas-ii Bitting and dining room, a bedroom anda Ptcfaen. The elttir.g room is papered With grreen«rtrtuse paper, carpeted with a shaded greenJVEton irtui proen filling around, and furnishci*"-th a w>athered oak dining table, a buffet with*

le?-d»d glass door, dining cnairs end a big rocker.J«» is a scttlt stand for a palm, a lidjusiairf- bwaej and a line big window seat In the bay,X-.'f2 hipli wltn cushions. As a last touch, thereJ^e pretty ruttted net curtains at the windows.iiie kitchen is most complete, with one of thosegwinhntlon kitchen cabinets. In tho bedroomJr*7*7* is a bed which consists of spring* on legs.•*» « ooncfa covet thrown over, a. Morris chair,a chlior.ier. a burnt wood :ahlo and a long mirror\u25a0Ob ibeit, our canned things are kept la tMe-t-c. Off tli* kitchen there is what they can*

cache— a pluco ror wood, coal ar.d washing ap-ptratui.i£sj et tjreakfast and lunch»on at home end«^a«-tlrr.es dinner, though for dinner we frequently•c to restaurants— tl.e Cafe Royal or the North-t» t̂ern M«**. The Moss claims to have the finestwsit In .\<in;f. The prices of provisions are sof~sz trat one must pick up gold to live in tms*aa. ililic iS «> ef-nts a quart; cola • .age eggs,J' w"!f- do«-n. and Nome laid on»s, Jl and up'•" *':r.ter. B); oranges, frorr $1 a dozen up-, and£7*rrfs- I1I1- a dozen. A small Bt«ak costs 1160.r*cJ canned goo<ls and cereals are Just doubleJ2« they cost in th« states. We pay S3 a monthi£wat.-r Knrfc* and J2>» for taking away tne**"*?•;. Trie cost of laundry may be estimatedi«#s char^e of 25 cents apiece for shirts, orJLJJI

****t:;. work done at home a slow worker

E™W eeota an hour; JC is the usual orice for our.7|Cr>' *oik a wt-ek. exclusive of Ironing.,. '\u25a0•' conversational peculiarity which a stranger

"-^s tattaatly is that Nome Ii ir.1 and all the£*.» 'Jhe world is 'out.' Nfwylmyg call: "Allmef"fp from the ••outside"!' I'eople ask how longjL?av*1 l-i«L<vr» ":n' cr wwn you are Injr 'out.'-r,* tt etr*et life certainly '.« fascinating, and. as

BjartfS htr fr'J»» wha^ Ihave said it is pretty5 a continuous performance The evening

KSfB***8***is l*»« most interesting sight. Then

«Jr~lerreefa narrow way, lust wide enough for,o wagoris to pass, is filled with people. There\u25a0wff*? or evtry

—Americans shoulder to

hi*.,, T with Nf;-rrocs Japanese, Chinamen ana525~22 1< ari<J. too. there are* women dressed in•i*iffc

'V;<

-la furs and eliks. In broadcloth andfe^r; *cfrned with laco. with ro»es and feathers

\u25a0"^Srfte* 8a(1 Jewtls a"Plenty at the neck and

ls ftfirc^tmining camp— world InItself,\u25bavirVi.' for annths In the winter season from£*'

aitfr bul "self. it's a gamble and a s*rug-ssr Ju.. co»c wonderful reward*. When J sawl*u.!rfii'cc''*i'Ti °»>." Iwas amazed. Think ofcSfr2 a»"s flllof nugpT-ts to the bank! Xieau-i*-Aai,

*c*"vc '*"v is made out of the old Ivory so

'•;tf '': ti-''re-

tlic* creamy stuff being framed inOsSv^V -«'re is almost everything you couldfrcn >V..*fl. lho unifies of personal adornment,

«.,uuck! e« to small stickpins. A large12 Sr*s? * broart -jan-i of nugget* roeta from'\u25a0'\ry •,*'il'i

1' an<^ *n~ian tilings In proportion. Thetojkjr- ,Vu*Jt:rullv clouded and semi-transiiarent,• i.tc a clear agate."

TODDY IN INDIA.The "Times of India" contains the following il-

luminating letter apropos of a controversy whichhas been raging InIts columns for some time past.Needless to say. the Indian variety of "toddy" isnot ours, ar.d has nothing to do with "nightcaps ofwhisky and water." Ihave studied chemistry, andknow It is practically impossible to obtain toddy Ina pure state fit for food. ItIs always more or lesslii a state of fermentation and permeated with al-cohol. The toddy drawr never washes the earthenpot in which it is r.Ilectf-d. \\>r»> the pot In aclean state the ferment bacteria germs would beabsent, and the toddy would k^ep unfermented andfit lor drinking. Ifdrawn before sunrise It is \u25a0**«*>and free from alcohol, by 7 a. in. it Is bubbling withfermentation, and at 8 a. m. its sweetness tinsnearly gone, and It Is string as Hash's beer Butthat is Just what the habitual drinker likes, andour government did a wise rhlrig when they with-draw the young from the temptation of toddy byjiuttinr on a prohibitive tax. This writer shows thati- ii- a demoralizing liquor hy stating that thehabitual toddy drinker. in the absence of his favo-rite beverage, has become a drinker of toddy spiritWisdom comes by experience, and the world islearning that Inno shape or form Isit wise to drinkalcohol. It Is one of th«» temptations with whichlbs) win* man willhave nothing to do. Inmoderate<J(.*jes it ruins ore's health, and in excess It de-stroys the moral fibre, whether th« liquor used istoddr or toddy spirit. Abstinence i» best.—PallMai: ' agette.

§

WHY NOT TROUSERS?Just ut this season, when the rclnds of men from

Bkowhepa.n to Los Acreles are perturbed by politics,

and when the voice of the spellbinder Is dinning- In the

ears of a long: auSering public, ItIs refreshing to turn

for a moment from these strenuous activities and con-template the moral nave which threatens to ruin th*

beet sugar Industry In Bremar County, lowa.\u25a0Women, according to the news dispatches, have been

employed for a long Urn* In the work of clearing theweeds from the beet patches. Discovering the ad-vantage of bifurcated garments In getting about amongthe b»»t patches, the weeders have adopted men'soverall* and have cose merrily about their task:, re-joicing In heretofore unknown freedom of movement.Theh- work, gladdened by this unconventional costume,has beer, r.sor- than ucually satisfactory, and noxiousweeds have failed to flourish to any extent In the beetfleM* which have been attended to by the fair weedera.

But there Is r.o Joy without alloy, us the femininedestroyers of unauthorized vegetation soon discovered.Fonxe carping critic, presumably one of thlse personsibo early In the season declaimed loudly against peek-a-boo waists end later Inveighed agalr.st the abbre-viated bathing suit, chanced to pa*.* by the beet fieldsand observed th« feminine weeders attlrad in theirmanly costume.

Forthwith a shriek went up which rent the circum-ambient atmosphere. "Immoral:" cried the critic.•"Such a costume destroys the modesty of women.Dreadful!" And forthwith a war was started which.It Is believed, l*going to Jeopardize the beet crop, fornow the weeds nourish luxuriantly, while the fairweeders vigorously defend their costume. Residents ofthe county have taker.' sides and a merry war Is Inprogress.

—Milwaukee P»ntlnel.

ALander of Time Past Grows Splenetic Overthe Present.

Ihad a shock the other day (write* "P.") on

revisiting a certain remote gray Lancashire vil-lage. The old Inn, within whose dusky red-

litlea parlor Ihave had majiy a Jolly meal, wai

liiprocess of being knocked to the ground by a

swarm of strenuous workmen. The genial roomswere dusty skeletons, all their kind sheltersopen to the "peering day." A piece of brandmw stonework, the first bud, bo to speak, ofthsj now bulldlt.g,was already thrusting its star-

ing freshness out of the decay. Skilfullydodg-ing lumps of falling plaster. Ipenetrated intothis new parlor. Here, on a painfully cleanec-at, 6at the 'lulntessence of that village's wis-dom, wagging his red l^ard in Indignant elo-quence over his tankard. Itimorously ap-pealed for Information. "New men. ne\v

fangles." h<* Bald fiercely, and waved his polishedbrown stick. "T'owd Red L.lon were good enowfor me, and me foyther afore me. 'Modren Im-provements,' they Bajfc; looks all right, bjjt it

\u25a0 \u25a0•v.ar. young man; it won't wear. They're

all for t' frame nowadays, and ne'er mind t'r

"Take our fresh parson, now," he went on,growing a llttie fiercer. "Put me 'cad in fchurch on Sunduy morning', and wot do Isee?Car pies tcandle? i, young man. cangles!" "A bitritualistic," Isuggested. "A bit! Now, I'lltellyou the story ltold t' parson when 'c come to

f \u25a0•« rre. A boy went to f grocer's in t' daytime, Iears, to retch some things for 'is mother.'I want cangi-s," says c. 'Canglee!' says theFhoprnan. "Wot do yer want wlv cangles in thedayileht ! What did the parson say to that?'Iask'?d "Bay?" returned my friend, with thoradiant a.r of a victor.

"'Its a fine afternQQA/.

h*; tajm —Manchester Guardian.

THE VILLAGE SAGE.

THE PRINT CLOTH MARKET.[ByTelegraph to The Trlbore.l

Fall River. Mass.. Sept. —There has been very

rood trading In the local print cloth marketthroughout the week. The demand has been active,

and covered a variety of goods, and as the pric««

offered have been generally acceptable, manufact-urers have- been free sellers. In fact, they have

shown a disposition to meet the demand about asfully as they were able to do. in the degree

Of. engagement of looms for tho period covered bythe demand. The total of sales Is estimated atfully S50.0O) pieces. "Wide goods have had the callIn the trading, but there has been fair trading Innarrow goods, also the general market Is In ahealthy condition, th» demand being governed by

actual needs, the cupply of goods to be- had for fivemonths ahead being evidently Insufficient to fullymeet the demand. The- deliveries under contracts

sold during the wf-ek willextend to March 1. Thedemand continues, and the- market is steady andstrong at the basis of 3% cents for regulars andIhi. cents for standard wide goods for deliveriesextending from spot to February. The price- of8»-lnch ?Sx72s has been advanced He Bine© lastweek. Wide goods for delivery before January arevery scarce. Quotations are as follows: 25-lnch,

64*<>4s. 3*c: 28-lnch. 6<xCos. $*i: 27-lnch <*x6os. 3>*oi•7-lnch Kxs6e, "Tic; BS^-lnch 64x645. 6**o;89-lncn,

68x728. £7/ia'

_^___

v

Iloboken.

STEVENS SCHOOLTHE ACADEMIC DEPARTMENT OF *STEVEN:* iN»nriT« o* TECUNOLOOT.

Riv*r tJU—I b--we*r. Mil *:.1 i& 9t», Hobokan. X. X.R2OPtLN3 BEPTEJIBEa ITTH. 1M«,

R»r'.s:ratior. da.' for applicant* tJ» a4msMSßS*>Wedneoday. Septe&Bbor i:*h.

Examinations for admSaalon on Thursday and Friday.September 13th anil 1-Jth.

Courses of *tui!vpreparatory to Universities, ColW*-**,School* of Science, l.a.v ui:.l M-<'.!elae.

The rat* of tuition for ail cUum la 1133 a. y»*r, *a>U« per imb», Wr «ataio««*> *&plr» &•rrUMla«k

QUAINT BREWERY CUSTOMS.The brewers of a hundred years airo used to an-

nounce- the qualities o$ their brew In quaintlyworded advertisements. A Mr. John "Walsby. oneof their number, announced InMay, 1800. from theSun Brewhousa, Battersea, Surrey, "a curious por-ter, called brilliant," which Is stated (says thewriter) to bo "a genuine Porter, brewed on a pe-culiar principle, and for Its Brilliancy has neverbeen equalled In this country." It had, of course,every other Imaginable virtue, and might be seen"any day at Mr. "Wake's, of th« Bedford Coffee-house, under th« Piazza, Covent Garden, he havinga,constant stock on Draught for his Customers."Mr.Walsby modestly Informs "the World at largo"that ho thinks proper to announce Ms ale "In themost public manner. In order to plocure Its gen-eral and Immediate Introduction Into all parts oftho world." which is. at any rate, sufficiently com-prehensive. Evidently the little Sun Brewhousebecame the Imperial Brewing Company six yearslater, a gvnlus for nuance being apparently one ofIts proprietor's many gifts.

In"the "Morning Chronicle" of June 25, 1806, woread that at a common-hall" of th« City of Lon-don, held always for the purpose on MidsummerPny f Messrs. Lnwar, Sanders, Brooks and Joneswere re-elected ale-conners for the ensuing year.This Institution Is sometimes confused with that ofale-taster, but the two offices were really different.The ale-conners were Inspectors of weights andmeasures, as -we should now call them, but t«e ale-taster was concerned with the quality alone not atale and beer merely, but also of bread, within theJurisdiction of the court-leet by which he was ap-pointed. ItIs eald that In times when the wearingof leather breech-s was common the ale-taster usedto pour a little of the liquor to be tested upon awooden bench, or "settle,

'and sit down upon It.

If.after a certain length of time, which long ex-perience of this delightful process ehowed to besufficient, he found himself adhering to the seat,the beer was considered not to be adulterated- butif.on the contrary, he could get awar freely itwas proof that sugar had been used, which In thosedays was a high crime and misdemeanor. Anothertrick of the ale-tasters was to heat the end of along clay pip« redhot and plunge Itin the be»>r. Ifit came out as white as it was before heating Itwas taken to show that the beer was all right: butIfItblackened, something Injurious had been used.Four ale-conners are still annually appointed forthe. City of London, though It may be supposedthat they have neither much work nor much pay

—Brewers" Gazette.

LAYING OUT THE ROAD.Between virtuous resignation and Inertia is a

border line sometimes hard to define. To put upfor years with uncomfortable conditions when theyBright easily be beared Is a credit to no one's In-telligence. (Now. th© average country road is Inthe spring tlmo moat inimical to a man's good

and regular standing In the parish, most hopelessfor his horses.) Most country highways are laidalong boundary or «ectlon lines or follow the prtrnl-tlvo paths, and are laid out with no referencewhatever to gr»do. no thought of conformity tothe lay of the land. The result Is that In a stat*like lowa there Is a higher percentage of gradethan In the whole republic of Switzerland; up themountain to the .op and down again Is the waythe New Englander must go from one town toanother; rarely does the road skirt a hill. Farbetter than to spend a large sum Inendeavoring tomoke such a road of a better grading would bethe money spent )n changing the road, having itplanned by a competent civil engineer more inaccordance with the lay of the land, bo that in tha\u25a0pn a it will not form a brook b-d for mountaintorrents. ItIs well to surmount difficulties. %ut ,t,tis quite as well to go around them when It can bo|conveniently done,— Country LAt*t la America*

For Boys and Yotins; Men—Country.

GERLACH ACADEMY.BIUEIXEL

- NEW JERSET.THE SCHOOL, FOR TOUR BOY. j

KEPTOX SCHOOL.Tarrytown. N. T. Preparatory for busin***and collet*.

Limited number*. Term* moderate."

MACKENZIE SCDtOOI..DOBBS FERRY-ON-HTJDBON,Pall Session September 24th.

ST. PAUL'S GRAMMAR SCHOOL (Episcopal). Oreen'eFarm*. Connecticut.— Boys cnly: rharg«i moderate.

Addre«» GILKEHT YEL.VEBTON TOMPKIXB.

For Both Sexes— Country.

ITTTHELARCHES." CRANBURT. N. J—

An educationalJL aanltarlum far children and other* of retarded mental

development E. GORDON, M I).. Cranbury. N. J.

School Agency.AMERICAN AND FOREIGN TEACHERS' AOE.NCY

supplies Professors. Teacher*. Tutor*. Governesses, eta.to Coll**;** School* and famtlle*. Apply to

Mr*. Jkl. J. -FULTON. 13 Union SQUare.

Teachers' Agencies.MAIMEMOWKIXKM.L.*nOT I>n< tiers' Agency.

22 Eaat 3uth si supplies Profess.- Teachers, Tutors.Civvarvviaca, ate, to College^ tic1 .oU an4mmi.las.

Financial.

%Dividend Notices.Dividend Notices.

NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 30. 1906.

Financial.

26 BROAD STREET,Coupons payable October Ist, 1906.

The New York Trust Company