visiis the week ix property j · •lookej over brooklyn ferry termi-ticl which citymay acquire....

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•LooKej Over Brooklyn Ferry Termi- ticl Which City May Acquire. J.!tvot I.it vth,j to l>ix»k'\n yesterday to lool; aT '.lie TMilf Hill ferry terminal, the city aav- 1:-^ :-c*n authorizes to acquire and operate the ferry tfc«re. He went v the guest of the Bush Termi- r.nl Con:?a-y. and vms escorted by delegations from the Merchants* Association, tl"'t 1 "' Brooklyn V.ij-:lij'd HoarJ of.Tratlo ar.«l the South Brooklyn Boatd at Trade. The Bush company" controls about three-quarters of a mile of waterfront ad- Joininp the ferry terrusnai, and has built piers to accommodate shipping which is BCHble to < Mate Cocking facilities ha Manhattan. The party was taken •... South Brooklyn in the tag Independence, of the Bush fleet, after the ilayor had inspected the police boat Patrol, ami half promised Captain Derm steam launches for the river police service. William P. King,cf the Mer- chants" Association, ar.d Mr. Bush explained to the Mayor trie need for Improvements in the ferry •:- vice. At the rew piers the May >- was carried about in one of the freight trains, and to ir"> top oi the, big warehouses la an open elevator. Then he walked elon? the roofs, ajid hr-d a view of Sunset Vark and Soutfc B. ook!yn and Flatlands. acro«=p to .laa-.aica Ilay. He said - . n.y to his hosts after a visit to th« ferry house at Thirty-ninth-st.. where he saw a Coney Island Saturday crowd fighting its way to the carp. A launch from his yacht, the jsnrprise. —as «wai:i=iK him there, and he was taktn aboard, without waiting for the feast that had bi*e:i prepared for him «nd the real of th^ party on the lnderiendence. Before he departed the Mayor expressod himself r.s delißhted and surprised at the work done on the .!»* docks, but he would not say what position he \u25a0would take en the oropositiOß that the cltv acquire tie ferry and increase the - \u25a0vice so that the trucks or the shipping men could be taken care of. H? admitted that some relief was needed. . He paid that he had not yet arrived .4: in* conclusion that the city should control ail the transit facili- ties 01" the city. FOR 5 ALE. A magnificent new five story \u25a0)£££** Basement Resi- dence. wide. » EAST STREET^ roms: 5 bath^. SOU. feet wide, substantially fireproof. 23 rooms: - baths. « dressing rooms; Otis automatic elevator. Many »p*c^ features Plans and particulars on application. CHAS. BUEK, Owner. 500 Fifth Avenue. DESIRABLE DOWNTOWN INVESTMENT PROPERTIES. RULAND & WHITING CO., - EKEOAN HT- - . Brooklyn Property for Sale. \ C.ENTLKM'N? COt'NTRY ?BAT ANO FAKJt New i olcnUl ii< •!.«•>. 7 fce<in?«>ms; dry «a.r"r. «tecUM> light. h»at: exposed n-'V:«>l p!uratir>< an.l »how— »ar^T«ee fieri 5 open nr*pl%c*s: p:»ixa» all aUtet: new •\u25a0mfNiil*- inss: 23 anea f.r.e land: Irn'j. *.--f-iragus. gardes: 65 ml»- alar oat. Penna. R. X. ; IK mile* from station; mic*d*o» roads: good market; school*, churches; valms. JSI.W* I ; price. $13."Oj: also W.Cfo worth 0 »-» fttntlmp*; h<?r9». \u25a0'\u25a03rn.«jr» et.c. Ex:raor<;;rAry off-r ta p*rT takiss vr*T?- thing for a«h. An \i-»\ c«sBpl«t» home, in p*rf»«t «>T<er; «]#var*4. cool. t)»a!thfal: no RUisan'-"*. j , traces. R. C, Room l.ii^-. -\u25a0 Broadway. New-York. 4T GRKAT BARGAIN —I aa~ i Bear C*r—el »•»«- :nrr Co.: highest point in courrty : 1.42« ft. .iltitt»d»S on N. T. «r Putnaaa R. R.. 14 *»t» Miil4i3C«. 7 iix-s: plenty fruit: grand vi#w; ttlMbl*. pasture, wonillatllt. takes] c- ri-j preserve, paying Investment iemo.iarr»ie>li J2i per sere. TRAVIS. 10 Cortlantft ."tree- JUST LOOK AT Three story and basement brick, all improvements, open plumbing, "porcelain bath, hard wood: SfSS*ii_*^aVS2» tint- condition; 20 minutes to .V \.; SUM cash. VMM mortgage; worth .*".""<' WOOD & KINGMAN. 13S REID AVEML, XKAR GATES. Brooklyn. N. Y. BUSINESS BLOCK for s»i» chap: rss icor-'l stor*» down and v, ie room? up. all irap*ov»»n"ttts . «»• o? Is* .V»xS»». on !»o 3tre»ts; pric^ «7.i«¥» Arpr^- *<» THOMAS vf_UA<SB Wiiuelwaiial ass .fc N^rwa: Csrsn. I^OR FARMS OR ACREAGE «\u25a0'\u25a0'•? SUBDIVISION. 00 Shore Property. Long Island. >»• T W POWELiI*. 35 Park Raw. N*w-Tor'«. HOTEU Atlantic City i>:V--- furni*V<i fin* opporturi;-- ty: $l«.C0o cash; ba_nc^i xaertgas*. MOtN 4 . .n» Melrose-ax.-*.. N. T. SI,OOO COMMISSION FOR YOU. S4OOO CASH. J6.000 MORTGAGE. SECURES $20,000 VALUED _ To settle estate, must sell 50 lots, cl— to P»nr.a. RA.I- road Tunnel Tf-rmlnus. on line of treat Improvement!". This property will sail for $50,000 within three years. In o'tirj-tion mears qui'-k pur^-ha— or »^-eate«t ba-: market to-day. fail on J. P. OOARK. Aitorr »>. BY ilanhattan-ave.. Brooklyn. A TSTATION.— IS rooms and 2 Bat»»: start**; *S/**>r A fV)O cash; sacrifice. SMITH Park Ride* K. 3 FL-\TBtT?H COTTAGE. 275 Lenox Road, near IVasa— Park; all improvements. E. DBI"ELU owner, --as Brocdway. New-York, Room SOS. Tel. 3.o=l—Cortlandt. To Lff /"or Business Purposes. LOG BRANCH. X. J.—For rent or *ale. has'lrjas Tr— » cottage. 131 G«rfl»l«1-a'-e 19 rooms, two ba' - «•: ; all Improvements: '.\u25a0.\u25a0*\u25a0!• fiimt*h»d: near oc^aa an<l d*-- r"t: carriage hem". eplendiij «hal» Ad<tre^ E. ~. HOWLANt>. Si YCt'.r. SB«»-»1 New-fork ~l" PROSPBKOt'S GROCERY: net profit $50 weekly: fine i: neighborhood; low rent: best references: rar- Mr- tunitv Call or address GEO. rRICK. 72S East 13<th Si METCCTIEN. Mo«!«rn ten room house, bam an 4 fly«» acres: twelve minutes from station: delightfully lo- cated, on asseaasaa roal; high ground. I&J0O will t— it. Address F. O. Bex 415. Metuch»n. ?*. J General Stone believe*; the course tvould attract foreign drivers, and in course of time, as the safest and best course in the country, would be- come the scene of international races. He said that there could be no objection to It from the taxpayers of the town through which it WOnHI pass, for it would increase the taxable property and relieve the public highway of a large measure of £ -ton obi > travel. E. B. Gall&her. chairman of the technical com- initt»* of the American Automobile Association, Is ;-»p.ri;ie a financial scheme for the railway. Preparing Financial Scheme for "Auto" Course to MonUmk Point. General Roy Stone recently suggested \u25a0 steel *— such as Use rtrip la dlurray-?t. rron the emstmi -andint; of the proposed Blackwcll's Island bris?re to Slontauk Point. General Stone sent a letter to the National Association or Automobile Manufacturers, in which he told of the unfortunate retult of the late raoior race, and of the advantages the railway Tvould Rive . This association and . Th,? American Automobile Association received Gentra! Stone s puggestion? favorably and he was asked to submit a plan for the rail. PLAXS FOR STEEL ROAD. J/7/; RHODES SCHOLARS. PARK PLACa near Broadway.— Whol» buildin*. five stor>- and basement, from January 1. PLASt. —4 : •.-\u25a0\u25a0 -id v. _____-_-__———————-——\u25a0 Furnished Ilounes to Let—Country. FOR S \LE.—IOO lot* in Susnytide Park. b*twean M'ra«- JT Tsiasw and Broir»vi]> in Harlem R. n\u25a0: J^li trad* for Improve* city property. Apply E. JJACEZ;r»— BACH. 50 Howarl-st.. city. . SIX PRIVATE DWELLINGS OFFEKHI For sal- or »xchang«. for countrr propers \u25a0 Cat».i Locaf»l n»ar l^.th-*t. a=3 El?tth-av». e!»vafe<l ttmOOi •-\u25a0 i-*hou?» section: modern: neT 9v« itory American basemen'? rise I'xl^ hardwood flri«h P^Jr^^ 1 - Morts3g° 51.V000 a' •">*•- each. Prtnapa!.. I. P. WAKE- MAN, l-^ Broadway. ALLENHURST, ASBTJBY PAKK. DEAL. Modern furnished Cottages for real MILAN ROSS AGENCY, Opposite Railroad stations. ASBURT TARK. N. J. ALLENHURST. X. J. 4 BARGAIN ?t»»n- heat*4 corner fee—»•: ?*rsj» pjrtlt A -_ $2m or l«» dourn. balance $17 monthly «iaehi»l»a la— t<-r.«t cth-r». ANSOX. .257 Brotfwar. DEAL BEACH. N. J. For rent, furnished house, new pa!at»-l aM d»corat»4. ample piazzas. ? bedrooms. 2 bath rccm3. dining room, kitchen, butler's pantry, laundry, saesßaa* cellar. !*-—» reception hall. gas. electric light", gas and coal ranges; barn, four stalls, carriage and coachman's room. DRAWER C. Allenhurst. V. J. A FINE CHESTER HTLL HOME at Bid nz> ' prt?»: 12 roo-na. parnuet floor*; st-am hear; lar?« coTnep lot- roacy special features; less than $13,000. COOLEY & WEST diet. Mount Vernon. N. Y. "f~v^R VI.E. Stock Firms. Dairy Farm?. Couatrr X" 3«at« Country Hones: all slses. price?. t*r \u25a0 famt.ua Oranse County, aioiyc Erie Railroad acd ta famous Wallkill Valley. catalogues. A. V. BOAK. Mfc»- 4!eT-iwn. N. Y. FOR. SALE-— A house aal ajwsmda. irn vie— ojer!<— Jt --; the Sour.l. and en the sSore. at .New-Rr'>*!le V. V 14 room? •_ laaasasaaaaaa*: one mica's from trolley; t*. minutes tr - iCK i .^ E >* H »^ UJI> _ N . gr* 251 Main-3t.. Xew-Kochelle. N. T. COOL BREEZY WYCHMERE (Ca~* CM : seayhnr" '\u2666•''•<: fir* HHi \u25a0"\u25a0**" fcr- ni«h»d- all ccnvenlenres; exeeH«Jrt w^f»r. cold, hot; long »^.3..n; rarely P3*; fine bathing. CAPE. South Harwich. Mais. SAYVILLE AND BAYPOR7, L I. A few desirable fumi?be<i cottag«» still uarented from $200 up. Cr-me out and inspect them and make offer. Catalogue on r«nu«st. J. 6. BDvTAaIM & SON. Say- ville. Long 'f'anil. . /. . FINE SUMMER RESORT FOB SALE— Beach land, in- cSklng SSdmss; very pleasantly **™±£ Odiornes Point, in the town of *r * " » J?!*'™* ""JLca.tle about »H miles from Postcffle-. Fcr»mwtu City. Postoffice addreis. J. WESLEY TOY E, Bex 314. Portsmouth. N. H. _________——. —— . FOR RENT. IN THE ADIROXDACKS. NEAR PAUL -T SMITHS—A L.XRGE. ATTRACTIVE CAMP: FULLY FURNISHED. AFFLT TO PAUL SMITH. AI>IROXI>ACKS OR ALEX D FHAW. II BROAD FT.. NEW YORK. For .Me or fo Let— Country. FT-RNISHEf COTTiIGK TO RENT— »w. ptcasaat. jn convenient; l«rg». «Irv r-o— «: -•-<- Wh!te Hotmtaina Adores Mrs ' '. J. JERREMAN. s>ieir H'!!. N. H * T SCARSDALE.— Colonial rotf-.?e3.»11Kc5- Am lmrrnvernents: hig-i gmat: pric«L *3J^ A 8 ° s*«>o. terms to snlt: enly 30 minutes out city. ««» tfins d<ii:v; real rapid transit. SVTAKTWOCT « «-0.. corner lCsth-?t. and Park- SHELTER ISLAND HEIGHTS. To rent for th» mssou a h«n<i«---^ Swiss -•'-•?» en the bluff overlooking the Sound. rtmtatnlDg stttiug rc«_, dining room, seven bed— is. kitchen, laundry ard bah- room- nlr»ly furnished: term* reasonable. Apply to HAKDT. YON BSRXCTH * CO.. 477 Bums— st . X. T. C\T?r"IL.L MOf'NTAI? - Dclightrul summer re-Uenca (j'rt ale. 2.500 '--\u25a0' co't-»ge. n!n^ rpema *n>l t-ath: completely furnished: large P>fff^- *^."^^ gar wt^pS^ 1 JKif rwA^^/« j ay&jg. AMONG THE BERKSHIRE?. —To r»r" for B— MBMi months ftirnl!*ed residence; IS rooms; modern con- , r .. Pr|r . extensive grounds; views unsurraseed : stat>i« with stalls for four hordes. rhi-.t"^r phs and r :^^!» cf _ >'. v JOHN H. HEAVITT. Williamstown. Mas*. r^» S . with-hrih ceiling, torf, *^»- £«£ iSSI I?-'- NY reference, 2O» T>jane >t.. New Yort. VDIRONDACKS. Elevation 1.400 feet; fu.—ifshed 7 room '-ottnge: bam: boats; fishing; Htrrlrlev Lake. Wllmurt. N. V . beautiful. Address S. H. H_4C_l~T Hinckley. N. V. Hr\T--v^ '-' aale «w»t or s—rtsawj* in »r.y part cf S' f«:ro:f «:ro: EDWIN W. FI?KE. Mount V«aea. N. T. ________—_———__ 4 FINELY furnished 14 r"<-m cottare. Churchill Par"« A Stamford. X. T. E. APAMS. I.SC7 7:h-ave.. N. T. Country Property to Let "VTORFOLK. CONN.. T.it'hf"!'! Hills .— P»Jr«t»heiJ r*>r- tage. 14 rooms. 2 baths, modern, spring was** loca- tion unsurpassed for h»alth and comfort, to let Nl tt<! season. Address P. O. Bit 31 1'». Norfolk. CM SUMMER gs?& . fOB BESH at a_X F |BEBT iMons, ? AB^ opp^tr- Das« ' : .__.'* I>TV P * rk N. J. BOGOTA. X. J. Beautiful furni£he<l h-xiF». 11 rooms, boating and bathing: half hour from ?>w_York: I". 1 * per month. W. H. X.. Room 623. 621 Broa<Jn-»y. FLt'HING L'Sg Island— Fcr renf. Cor July. Aus^st r^'runaVcur. H M PfXCAN. !.«» B-^way. ?.. 1. DAUS' COTTACES TO LET for aMMMi: fully furnished: mf&n i ""err«rt«; near end of board walk. Apply a' owner. Ds :- Cottage. No 5. or. Eldert-ave.. near Sur' Tfnllan<! Station. Rook- away Beach, or 111 John-Rt.. New-York. mr> RiVT FOR THE! SUMMER 'The Steven* Cer- T tarT Sm"t7n Eeach. L. I ; contain. »»«ty r 7n-« lare- anl a'r>-; mM»rn Itrrrovem-nr-: t.ir X - l»ws; SS&*lS££ wtt?flv. stalU room '^.« links and cr»m: ****;?** VJV J x- * hampton F?>ach. Lens Island. >\u25a0 Y. IT'OR RENT.— Cott»g» and V»afhou«e. at We« -*•»- 1 Park. Alexandria Bay. N. V : fully furnished: ?«t»sr Improvements: price $350 for season. Address Mrs. HIRAM T. IXGLEJHART. 47 Ter Eyck-st . WfetertOWß, X. T. Irn-HFIELD Conn —In th» '°* Eertohires. For r*nt / foi th» season, thlrt-cr room house t^J«= '"?£*. room." r^rh launcirv: hot ar.d cold water: fares--; fir* S Trcm depot. Worn*. »n1 rhurcner Arr ilr.. GEJVH TROWCFTPOE. Utchftelfl. Conn. IrV>R RENT Desirable ten room furnished bemw) « n shady street. in East 'range; favorable price to food tenant for three month.". Address MONTGOMERY LINDSAY. Agtnt, East Orange, or call at Room I.2K>. 2.'.it Broadway. MORRIM ORRI -- 3 Furnisheit haaaa V* raa*. «a vlult« fV Wh months: good lotion and Ra» v»-w; t»lipW» in heusr Address Owner. 14 Prcn^t-»t. FIRMSHEP HOUSE for rent. South Orange, X. J.. high elevation; June 15 to Sept. 15: $«•> per month; contains 10 rooms ana bath: all Improvements; con- veniently located For further parth'Ul*rs apply to J. CEAS. CTBRIEN. 141 Broadway, or Smith < ir, n \u25a0V-EWARI* N J— No. IM North P^a-i-s» : "^"* rS /".weiu-'g. nine reims: steam heat: elecrnc Jig!-?:. :• \u25a0> n.inut-f: troni uep-M an'l thirty ruinate* from N«w TO«; rent jr.". per montli. ; .N - _____—— OKF- DF THE FIVEST COVNTRY r.TSXDttCZS on () TSb.fa^VS of Lons Wand; lary hou^. .tail. a-.iund? in Brrt rta.»s condition; terms mHBIMt. , uj- c!uVr. rf RPXVK & rAKTLETT. Gr^nport. Long I»tond. T7UVE COTTA FOR RKNT. on Lake George, from J2TO to »6f>o: fully furnished; photographs may be seen at The New-York American"* Centra! Bureau. 1.370 Broadway. V.'. H. MlPri-K- WORTH. We« ?lde. I«al:e George. N. T. _ rr»O LET-Fln»« '."-aterj rcstdesc*. Vautifut Cfanford: T !.»: al! impnnrme-T*; la_wn. Oraad OM Ti«S; boating: near station. COOKTIQUT. ?-5 \u25a0r-v-i.' T7K>R RENT. In the heart cf the THOUSAND IFI.ANDS, J? a fumtrncd house, with ALL modern conveniences. Address Lock Box No. 4ftf.. Clayton. Jefferson Co.. X. T. FURNISHED COTTAGE to rent, at SUseonset. Xan- JC tucket: full particulars. Apply Mr«. NEFTEL. Z&ft West 106th-st. TO LET Nln~ ror>T» o^ttag"; ttzVanxry ranjre; bath: \u25a0well: near stati-n. Box 4<. Allfndale. X. J. EVST Qrcx;rE L. I— Furnished c«rtar»# to rent: *1V) to J4OO i-r «ea«<.-.n. AdJre«« KWfWI A JACKSON. 1 4 ROOM rOTTAGH to rent: J™V T ? v r, Taie ™*, : **' 'J. 4 :in<s trnnli. T. O. Box 11. Siaaifarl. D«Uwar« Count>. N. V . MUl'lTCUlir rilllllsliriii house, f- roorrr. sli Improve- *4.» month. AasM !*>\u2666 f>ran«e Road. Beal Estate Wanted. WANT2P flats in ITavlem. also IjttJAt r^-st.t \V r»»h. 'A " LFMBF.HT X, CO.. ISO N»ss"U>-»t VA>.'T!'''K''T. MASS. Cottage on Cliff, twelve room"; _^N modem improvements: fully furnished; private beaen an .l bath hou.'es. Address Box 7?. Tribune Uptown OfSce. l.Zi'A Broadway. T3ARTLY furnisheiJ. 11 rom«. summer, or all year \u25a0JL K«*i'ience. lawn, stable, garden: healthy; conven- ient to New York: all improvement*: electric lights. Bel!«. etc. >. V. E. KINSMAN. PlamfleM. X. J. RIVERSIDI ' : at, furnished, attractive re»i den iwb; .nv«-r.:-nce«. near ilepot. yacht Cll*>. ATWATEi:. 5.1 Lib-it, St. Easy 81 MM!CR HOME FOR RBINT.— <>\u25a0* mile from R. R. •taatoa; tarce 10 room farmhouse, partly furniabed: nteab located price reaaoaatli-. MARSHALL. SNOVBSI. I wn. N. J PHILADELPHIA STOCKS. Bid. Asked, i Bid. Asked. »i ka li .... '.ii North Perm ICTH \u25a0 Am Ry Co /. 43 \u25a0»\u25a0• ' Fhila Co 42 42', Cor, L i*.ip coir 6V, s*i! Perm RR C0. ... «2'i «3 do pre? .. "\u25a0\u25a0< 2n', Perm Steel com.. 40 M Cambria Steel... 23H 23%! do pref ........ 90 92 Con Tr of N .1. 67*S 8B ' Fenn Xi \eh Co. 1 D'amond Steel '-.• 1 . do pref \u25a0v. ",. [.-!,.. <. n.i Co. 63 07 ! Phlla Elec Co t.', fii 4 ,lo pref?; ::: 63 a I Phila R T 12% 13 Kler CO of Am. s% h%\ Phihi & Erie.... »>•_ Fmt Park T Co. 26 27 Sim Iron £• steel. 1* I* Ins Co of X A.. 24% "* Tidewater Steel. [>>hirh Nay . <'.« n> \V Cos of N J...3T8 2TS Lehleh •„!R '.: 4O^i 41 Ji Union Traction... 4r. 4^ -Varsden 2S 2% IT Gas Imp C 0... PW4 W»'ti Nat ... '•> * Wcisbaeß Co 20 22 *> *"* * mfNn ? . A«in <v> of irr Sa i!« - 3" 'Newark Pass 55.11.Vj bSpwSo^£m^ l'« jPeople-s Tra- 4P.IJW I<«X4 X .1 Con 5' .11.:' . 10.". 'Union Trac 4-... TO «' * Nat Asphalt 5». S" 4 ! OTHER MARKETS BY TELEGRAPH. Chicßgo June 13 COW! »nd heifers. $1 60iS$4 K>: can- ners 81 no»s2 99; bull*. *2 ."t»Q$4 25: calves, $2 50<3Sfi 7.-.; •i .., •\u25a0, fi>il >'-r . S4«iS> 53. Hogs—Receipts to-day. IS.OOB head; Monday. 15.080: left over. 2.fK)ii; m»rk<: rtenCy mixed and butcherß'. SS9OOSR9R: good to choice heavv.'jmanCJWSß: rough heavy. jr. tWtRSC 20; light. $5 SO (M8IC: bulk of sales. »6es6ao Sheep— Receints 2.0.V1; niarket steady; S""d to choice wethers. $4 fioess 50: fair to choice mixed. S3 23f154G0: native lambs. $4 50@$C 75; Western lambs. M3o»sß 75. riaclnnatl. June 13.— Woe* active and higher. $4 .^fd !\u25a0. SO. Cuttle Fteadv. S3 M90. Sheep steady, $2 IJG <: 2."..' Lambe steady. $4 25©57. , Kansas City. June 13.— Cattle— Receipt?. 275 head i-ativos .; native calves; market 1.-.62..C higher than Fn- rlav May '"•• choc*- export and dressed beer steer", $4 40 */*-. fair to 'bo d $.", .^OOS4 4<>: stackers and feeders. $2® 14 TO- Western fe.l steers. *ZtTiS4 ST.; Texts and Indian «-eer« J3F*4 40; Texas bow* *2fls3 25: uatlv- cows. *2 ssir native heifers. t2SOB>S4«O: c»an*rs. $1 25®52 4O; lv.ll?. «2 iiiiM 50: calves. ttTßgfg. Hogs— Receipts, J.-.0 head- market 10©ir.c higher then May 2B; top. 10; b- Ik of VaW. j.-,(uso heavy. $." 556*6 10; mixed packers. $-W)£s«Tff: light, S5 70**S5?<5: Yorkers. »sßo«iss%: pigs. asamMßSi Sh«-er ,—Ma-k-t nominal: MtlTelarab^ 34 '<(n*rS7 "5- Western lambs. ?8 .o©st 1O: fe<l ewes. S3 40 «V-"O- Texas c!lp™-d yearllnes. $3«0«»|640; Tera« ,fr n "e?i* sheon %". :-- - 15: cockers and feeders. lOM WlO The lncaVVards will be open for the receipt of foil Shipments of rattle, hogs and sheep on Monday, the 13th. for the first time in fourteen days. * \u25a0Ast Liberty. June I."..— Cattle steady: choice. t." 40© 15 50- nrime $5 151»53 35: good. »4 85©«. Hogs higher; prime heavies 4l«t« 45 : medium.. 16 45g?R SO; hea^- Yorkers 4."«5i5 -TO: light Yorkers and pigs. $G .Tftfj $r, flo roughs $4'-!?r. 7.'. Sheep steady: best wethers. ?4 •.<> '..a'-; choice yearlings, $5 2r»«sr. 50: veal calves. $7fr SAM FRANCISCO STOCKS. San Francisco, June 13.— official closing quota- tions for mining stocks to-day were as follows: A!ta O4!.ltistice 14 UnhaTcon .;. "' Kentucky crn «* Andes 15 Lady Washington C08... .05 Belcher .' 45|Mexlcan - I'"' Best i- Belcher 1.75 Occidental Con .£\u25a0; Bullion Os|Ophir l.«-« Caledonia 1.20 OrermM 40 Challenge Con «4|Potnel -!4 CY\r HflT *-** Sayaife ................. .11* Confldenc-K'*- ;•-•'— •'\u25a0• l-» Sac Belch«r. '?. Con Cal & Va 55, Sierra Nevada »\u25a0> «•.,.• imperial .»:,.<. -ate « Crown Point -' :St. Louis 17 Gould * <*urrv 41 Union Con SO Hale .\u25a0\u25a0 Norcross BOjlTtah Con \u25a0•- julja?.. 02! Yellow Jacket 60 PLANS FOR TWELVE STORY HOTEL. Plans were filed yesterday at the Bureau of Buildings, Manhattan, for a twelve story brie and terra cotta hotel, to be erected at the northeast corner of I^exinßton-ave. and Thirtieth-st.. on a plot 43.10x100 feet. Gilbert O:<"tt is the owner. C. Stimmetz is the architect. The cost is estimated at $400,000. RECORDED MORTGAGES. Judson. Alice, in Westchester and Bronx Title end Mortgage Guaranty Company: North Road, c 1, lot 34, map County Club Land Association, at Westchester. contains 2 437-1. OOO; 3 years. 6 per cent *2. 750 Baum, Jacob, and another to Harris MandW- bau:n and another: Stanton-st. Xos 134 and 136. n w cor Norfolk-st; building loan; 1 year, t> per cent 28.000 Cameron, Mary, to Guidltta Wsto: Sth-are or street, s s, 305 ft w of 4th-ave. Willlamsbrldge; demand, 5 per cent 500 McGuire. Thomas, to Anne M Delany: lot 84. partition, map Lott O Hunt estate. Van Nest nation; 6 years, 5 per cent, itold 1,500 Baumbach. Henrietta, to Dorotea B Baumbach; lOth-st. n s. ICO ft w of Avenue B: 5 years. C per cent 15.600 Gewlrz, Louis, and another, to Louis Gordon el el; Pike-Bt. No 25; prior mortgage. $34,000; 5 years. 6 per cent 4.^00 Haaren. John W. to Theodore Greentree: 115th- st. n s. 80.8 ft c of MomlngslSe-ave: 3 years, 6 percent 5,000 Burns. Peter E. to Frederick Schuck: 3d-av», ft c, 25.8 ft a of SOth-st; duo January 1. I*l6. 5 per cent .. 1.000 Realty Operating: Company to Louts Kahn: lOith- st, n s. 175 ft c of Columbus-aye: prior mort- frage, $16,000; 1 year. 5 per cent 8.000 Kenney. Anna T. to Dry Dock Savir.irs Institu- tion; 14bth-?t. r. s. 225 It w of Amsterdam- avp ; 1 year, 4 ! i percent 7,500 Equitable Realty Company to the Colonial Cor- poration; 12Sth-st. No 40 West: due June 1. 1904, 5 per cent 12.000 Lloyd Robert S. to Thomas J McCahlll. as ex - ecutor; 122d-Et, No 171 East; 10 years. 4 per cent : 2- 00 Heine, Fran-is, to Mount St Vincent Co-opera- tive Building and Loan Association: l!*2d-st. b \u25a0 29 ft •• of Belmont-ave: instalment*. 5 per cent 1.000 Kaufman, Ansel" and another to Charlotte ¥1 Moorhou«e- lOth-ave. w •= 20.1 ft n of .V.th-«T. )-:.4.-;H<>- also JOth-ave. iv =. 40?. ft f of 56th-st. 40 2xßo also Setb-st ? S. SO ft w of lf>th-ave: also 55th st. n B. SO ft w of lOth-aye: all lease- holds; Instalments, C par cent 4,500. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. Pleasant or 3d aye, w \u25a0, 12." ft n or 2d-st, r>f)x iih>: Sarah A Vrlgzs to William R Cramp *' P>ne-st. c » 687.fi ft n c of }sayard-st. IS.'.ixlO.; Charles II I^.ckwoorl to Smith Williamaor.; mortgage. $2.500 ••• *™ Frankltn-ave, c s, 236.6 ft s of 166tb-st. 64x 201. 10x64x201.11; Charles F Muioll to Smith Williamson; mortgage. $3.255 •\u25a0 10 ° i-..., >\u0084, 41. i f. 25x100^x25.5x100.1; Max V.'achsman to Jacob .< Haum : ni'ru;ase. $27.50" 100 !)th-ave s p. lot 563. map Waketleld, ltH'xll4; Mary A Finn and another to Giu.iitta Mi?to ... I.CCO 77th-st. ii .= 181.3 ft <\u25a0 of MadlsoD-«re. l^.OxlO-J.'J; Frederick W Jones, jr. to William G Park; b and I •\u25a0 10 ° lOth-st. n p. 120 ft w of Avenue B. 25x94.9: Dorotea 1! Baumbach to Henrietta Uaumbach; b and b I^ oo ° 9th-a\f'. x s, 306 ft w of 4th-ave. 50x114; map Waketleld; Giudltta Mlsto to Mary Cameron 1 33d- st, s s, 330 ft v of Bth-ave. 20x95.»: Carrie Metzger to Charles Rohe. jr. q c; re-recorded.. 1 177th -st, s s. 85.» ft <• of Central-aye. 75x12.»: Mayer 8 Auerbach to Teresa Wallach; mort- gas>. $4,0<1C» 10 ° St Nicholas, W \u25a0 20.4 ft I of 154th-st. 20.5 x100.4x203t96.1; Thomas B Osborn. referee, to the Manhattan Life Insurance Company 15,000 Plke-st. No 25, c s. 25x111.4; Barnett Levy to Louis Gewlrz and another: mortgage. $34.0<x>. . 100 Central Park West, ? w corner Ssth-st. 25»100; Asa R Davison to Frederick Beck; mortgage, ?7i>.oOfi •- 1 James Slip. No 7, * w comer Cherry st. 24x36.2; Julius B Fox to Joseph Wlttner. all liens 1 12*tn-st, No 40 West. 37.6x^9.11: the Colonial Corporation to Equitable. Realty Company; mort- gage. $45,000 * 107th-st n s 17."> ft of Columbus-aye. 78k10O.11; Louis Kahn to Realty Operating Company; mort- gage. $.!:.'. OOO * 24th-!-t. MOB tAB and 111 West. 50x114.10x501 114 7; Edward W Uarbour to <larcn< R Chap- man; 1-12 part - ***• 1221-st. No 171 East, 21xS^.7x irreg; Thomas -I McCahill, executor, to Robert S Lioyd 4,100 NEW BUILDING PLANS. Ll uvefve n sfor^ brick 'hotel? 43.10x100; for a twelve st..rv brick hote!. 43.MK100; « X Orcott ..wi:er- c "steinmotz. architect $400,000 Bank st. I s, 142 ft c or West-st; for a three story brick storage warehouse, M>xSo; Western Electrlo Company, owner; C Baxter & Son, architects \u25a0•\u25a0\u25a0•• ' 20no l"!>th st Nof 54 and r>R Fast: for a fix story brick nathooae. 50x56.11; F C Woodward, owner; R 31 Davis, architect •• 63.0n0 107th-st. « a 100 ft w of Enst River; for on« «tory Vian-e coal rackets. 62x88: Meyer Bros, owners: A 3 Ba-Jt. architect 5.000 THE BRONX BUILDING PLANS. White Pialns-ave.. west side. 9U feet north of Kleventh-st.. two story frame store and office. Mxfl.fi feet; William H. Keati^r. cwner; Michael J. Garvhi. architect; $2.5".i0. there was a pain of ITS per cent over the am month a year ago. Detroit show? a saln.5 aln . °[.I. I id.. San Francisco 131. Atlanta 124. Denver 109. Wa»hin«- ton 82. .Milwaukee .72, Buffalo 49. Allegheny «. St Paul 32. Cleveland 31, Los Angeles 23. Minne- apolis 5 and Philadelphia 3 per cent The losses v.ere confined to I'ittsburc where there was a decrease of 49 per cent. Chicago 37. St L.OUJ3 -*. Seattle 21, Brooklyn 10. Indianapolis 8 and Memphis 1 per cent. "In Chiea?o and the\W>st there has been rnucn improvement in huiWins operations in the last r^w days. It was the impression among people who are considered authorities on the subject that builrl- inpr would show a falling off as the month? ad- vanced, but from careful ami reliable source* it is stated thers i.= now much work in prospect and that instead of a decrease ther^ may be a remarkable Increase In building- from this on." REALTY NOTES. Folsoin Brothers were the brokers in the sale of No. C East Thirty-sevcnth-st.. the Peter Marie house, and No 8 TWrty-serenth-st^ the lfoei- ler house, to George C. Eoldt. The same firm was the broker in the sale of the Paran Stevens plot, at the southeast corner of Thirty-soventh-st. and Fifth-are, to Mr. I'.<>l<Jt. The a?rgresaU- number of square feet in that plot, which was recently bought by Tiffany & Co.. was 30.000. P. I:. Donovan has leased a suite of studios nt No. 9 West Forty-second-st. to Miss Kthel Wright for Joseph P. McHngh & Co.. and to R. Benvenutl a floor at Xo. 11 West Fortv-second-st. for James Slater. fTIO LET. Newly furnished hnj»*. 10 •ere*; garden X prowtt^i?: neat horn. £13 feet above tide; shady piazza: Ere Railway; near station: low rent. D. V. IIOWEU* Monroe.. N. Y. Furnished Apartments to Let. rp.i LET. Cottage in Sunset Park, adjeintnr Twllliist JL Park, near the New Sunset Park Inn; ha» ll\ing-room with op«n fireplace: dininc room: kitchen: S bedroom* and bathroom: piazz* on thr?# side*: rent for the reason. 9400. Photograph* and further particulars from K. 11. SCO- KIELD. 1 Madison At*.. N. T. TTVJFI KENT. Very ,i«.sir»hi» apartment on Rlv»r*Ma .P Drive: twelve room* and three bathrooms: satia- fnrtnry rererence* required. Adflre?s BARGAIN. Tribune ' 'trice. ._^^____ \"l^E OFKEft TO RENT A NEW 15 ROOM COTTAGE >> for the w»a«on. furnish^'l. Address W. S. TOBBI. \u25a0 •i^ar Lake CbtUE". Bwerkill. Sullivtn County. New- York I Unfurnished Apartments to Let. The very thing for libraries, public ; -i.\;r; and professional men. Mailed to any address for $1.00. paper covered; or cloth bound for $1.50. ISribune Index for 1902. To find date pise and column of any articla published in the DAILY and SUNDAY TRIBUNE, during the past year by refeninj to the i*^; 1A ROOM FINISHED COTTAGE. All le»»r<ne*nti : XU one hour rrom city: delightful loc*t:on: fen Kroondii: balhtnr and fi-hinf Addre»» MIN .IN? S«* "THE SUSSEX," 55 East 65th St. Hi*h els** rln-ator apartment t-.'.illdlnK: 'luht^ mom »u!t. trr T*r.t frr>o *>—i -- '<•• "'" > ri ">*- "t"T -*? ; BUILDING STATISTICS FOR MAY. •The Construction News" of June 13 says in an article on building statistic for May: -BuiUling operations in twenty-three of the principal cities of the country for Ma* make a highly satisfactory "howing. During the month just closed, accord- in- to Ipeclal reports to "Construction News/ per, £ weTe taken out for 7.711 b.n.d.n ? .mprove- ments involving a total expenditure of £*«8.88.. Gainst 7.512 permits, aggregating J31.MM33. an in- crease of 202 improvement, and $3.*15.75« this year over the corresponding period last year, or practl- f u,^w^v-three cities, sixteen show increase, varying from I to 178 per cent, while >*>yen have .Md varying from 1 to 49 per cent This is xon- sidered a remarkable showing. In Ne^ork Utj where building operations are under the blight of intense labor troubles, the Increase was » per cent. T*» met notable mere** is In Cincinnati, where Nicholson & Son have sold for John N. Steams to the American Express Company No. 217 to 22:: Bast Forty-second-st.. with the abutting property. No. 812 to --"- Baal Forty-third-sT.. four and five story" brick factory buildings, on plot l»x2*Uox 130x100.5x10x100.5 feet. The company recently sold its property at Madison-aye. and Forty-seventh-st. to the New-York Central Railroad. Edward Smith has sold to Joseph Solomon the southwest corner of Lexington-ave. and Ninety; fiftn-Bt., a four story tenement house, on lot :3.SxS.J Henry B. Bates has sold No. 250 West One-hui.- dre<J-and-nfth-st.. a five story American bosem«il dwelling house, on lot 15x100.11 feet. Emanuel Doctor has soft the sot. heast corner \u25a0>: First-aye; and Slxty-ninth-st.. a five story fiathouse. on lot 25x100 feet A Mr Ehrich has bought Nor. 282 and S3 Bey- entb-ave., two four story tenement houses, on a plet t»£*Sß feet. . . The estate or E. H. Kalira has sold to Frankel & Hand No. 81 East Third-si., a six stnry I r.ement bouse with stores, on lot ZSx9C2 feet. Rosansky & Ripapoft have sold Nos. IIS and 120 Cannon-st two six story tenement hcus-. on plot 50x100 feet. They have B MO «»W No. V-> Co-umbta- «t a" s'x story tenement house, on lot 2GxIOO feeti Vouis'levv has sold to L Liebowitz the southwest sHutft. His and One-hundred-and- uiln,'. .mm-; I.', a A- rtSij iathouse. on plot ».7x lot 27x100.11 feet. _\u25a0 .lames T. Barry has sold to Carrie Marx No. 35 West Otae-hundred-and-fourteenth-st.. a fire storj tenement house, on lot SOxtttU f.^et. The buyer takes In exchange a plot. 7l.ix4<u; feet, al the northeast corner of Ri<!cr-ave. and One-hundred- and-thirty-fifth-st. Barnett A Co. have sold for a Mr. Schiltwachter No tt Easi One-hundred-and-twenty-fiftb-st., a four story Bathouae. on lot 22x-:*.ll feet. !.,. J. Phillips & Co. have sold for Alfred GutwilHg to a client for occupancy No. HI West One-hun- dredth-si., a five story American basement dwell- ing bouse, on lot 18x100.13 feet TRANSACTIONS IN REALTY. Reid & Murnhy have soli for Caroline W. Se- bill< No. -2-; Lexington -ave., a five story brownstone triple Oathouse. on lot 2ti.fc.xioo feet, Frederick M. Wilson has sold No. fiOfi Kast One- hundred-and-thirty-ninth-et., a five story brick double Ratbouse. or. lot i£xloo fee*. Frederick T. Barry has sold for Maria Herter No. I,§B Lexfcgton-ave., a three stnry brownstone front dwelling house on a lot 37x9,"!. 9 feet. T!ie housv is between Seventy-third and Seventy-fourth BtS. Frances G. Kf-llor has sold Nof IK nnd 169 West Nint- 1\ -eighth-st.. two five story tenement houses, to William Arenfred. The northwest corner of Whitehall and Pearl sts. went to an outside bidder, Paul F. O'Neill, for $85,300. The parcel comprises a five story building, on a lot 28.5x62.1x2,-1.7x60.6 feet. The amount bid was about $53 60 a square foot. The Oilman parcel. No. 261 to 265 West Thirty- third St.. which was bid in by J. O. Scammel last February for JIOS.OOO. was sold yesterday to Jack- son & Stern for $78,250. a difference of $29,750. It is said that Mr. Scammel. on the day he bid it in, had an offer of $115,000 for it, which he declined. "The Real Estate Record and Guide" in its last issue says, in part, on the real estate situation: "We have received a number of inquiries as to the effect which the readjustment of general business conditions now taking place is likely to have upon the local real estate market. Of course, such questions cannot very well be answered until It has become more plainly apparent how far the. read- justment is going, and whether the recent liquida- tion in the stock market has been due to temporary financial conditions or whether it is really an an- ticipation of a period of depression. So far as can be seen at the present time, however, we should say that the effect of this alteration of. business conditions would be to change the character of the real estate trading without diminishing its amount. "Tenements are being erected at a largely in- creasing rate: apartment houses are being planned In very considerable numbers: the smaller busi- ness man is Increasing his factory or loft space, and we anticipate that In a year or so there will be a revival of the building of the small residence, both in Manhattan and The Bronx. At the same time an immense amount of private business will result directly from the public improvements now under way. Moreover, we believe the strength of the local position to be such that a ammunition in general prosperity and activity would Indirectly stimulate building In New-York. A large amount of new construction is undoubtedly being held up until the price of building materials becomes more normal, and a decrease in the prices of building materials would be one of the first effects of a slackening of general trade." Three, of the sales at the auction rooms on Tues- day were of more than ordinary interest. The sale cf the former home of the Knickerbocker Athletio Club, "t the southeast corner of Madtson-ave. and Forty-fifth-st., was knocked down to Adrian Iselin the plaintiff, for $410,000. The mortgage which Mr. I?elin held was for $400,000. It -was announced about three months ago that the property had been sold for about $550,000. At that time the foreclosure suit was pending, and it was supposed that the suit wouid be dropped. It is impossible to say how much of a loss the sale to Mr. Iselin for $410,000 represents. It is not known how much was paid on the contract. The defendant In the suit was John Davis Adam?. Market Not Wholly Slow, Despite the Usual Summer Did ness. Many persons are so disturbed over the building trades conditions thai they appear to have over- looked the fact that the hottest days of summer are near at hand, and that at this time of the year tew large transactions arc expected to be begun cr to be closed. Instead of thinking about work, the majority of leaders in realty matters are. read- ing pamphlets on summer resorts and preparing their plans for a vacation in the near future. Usu- ally. under the most favorable normal conditions, the market at this season of the year Is dull. Dulness ought to be and Is visible in the market, r.nd yet the market is not wholly slow. Consider- ing all things that are likely in any way to affect it. It la a good market. In. fact, it is such an ex- cellent market under existing conditions that there is sufficient cause to rejoice. A number of large and important transactions •were reported last week. The principal one, per- haps, was the obtaining of an option on the prop- erties No. 23 to 29 Pine by the Bankers' Cor- poration. It was said that the Bankers' Corpora- tion would exercise its option in September. It was said also that Kusseli Snge had bought, through Dr. John P. Munti. the well known physician. No. C32 Fifth-aye.. from Mrs. Jeanette P. Goln. On one day of the week William Wolffs Sons reported a large number of sales in which they were the brokers. They sold a five story building:, with stores, at the northeast corner of Sixty-ninth-st. and First-aye., to Daniel Lowenthal, for $39,500; No. 1.066 Lexington-ave.: No. 122 East One-hundred-and- twentieth-st., a five story tenement house, on a lot 25x95x100 feet, for $19,250, and No. 334 East Forty- si", enth-st., a four story tenement house, with store, on a lot 20x100 feet, to the ' Charles Hammel Com- pany, for $55.09t). The brokers in another important sale were 1... J. Phillips & Co. and L. Solomon. They sold for Fan- nie M. Crowley to James Hunter McHeffery No. 202 West One-hwndred-and-nineteenth-st., a five story double apartment house, on a lot 25x100.11 feet. George C. BoWt figured prominently In the news of the week. He bought from the Peter Marie es- tate the house No. 6 East Thirty-seventh-st.. where Mr. Marie lived. It adjoins the Holler house. No. 8 East Thirty-scventh-st.. which Mr. Boldt has owned for some months. He now has a plot with a frontage of about fifty feet and a depth of one hundred feet. He is thinking of making the two houses into one for his own occupancy.- ; it was learned also that Mr. Boldt was the buyer of the northeast corner of Forty-flrst-st. and Fifth- ave.. which was recently sold by Zelah Van Loan to Richard M. Montgomery. Mr. Montgomery rep- resented Mr. Boldt. In the last two months Mr, Boldt has figured in four important realty transac- tions. THE WEEK IX REALTY. j">lf encourasred the proportion l.* to be sot right: Canada will be given a much fuller representation than the niggard eight scholarships outlined in the will. Bui Mr. Parkin ban done much more by hi* Influence than give their effect to the in- structions of the will. Ho has helped to inspire oven Oxford with pride in her imperial prospects. There are plenty of ardent imperialists in .Eng- land and In Oxford. On occasions they have been unpleasantly noisy and agressivc; but it is rare to find in England a man who cares to proselytize and who will proclaim himself, what he Is con- tinuously and with pride. We are. as a rule, a little ashamed of our virtues, unless we are ac- cused of lacking them. In Canada and Austra- lasia, where personal feelings toward Imperial politics are more commonly argued and proclaimed. there is none of that odd shame or affectation of reticence which is one mark of what i 3 called, for want of a better name, the Oxford manner. Every one has heard the term colonial used (though only, of course, in relation to manner) as c sort of equivalent to provincial, with just such a touch of scorn. But even if now and then in the past man had reason to notice crudity hi this colonial manner, it is well for us to know that one aid* of this Oxford manner Is obnoxious, even repellent to a Canadian, In the present context Mr. Parkin has Mr. Rhode-- enthusiasm tor Oxford and its traditions. He has lived there for a while; he ha? met Oxonians, and communicates regularly with Oxford men. whom he considers among the greatest of living Englishmen; but what sort of a chill must he have received when a month ago he went down full of seal to arrange for the reception of the new scholars? Quite frankly, the whole place, but mostly the undergraduates, looked on the privi- lege as either a nuisance or a danger. Years ago Mr. Parkin, after inspiring Lord Rosebery with zial for the cause, wont round England lecturing on the federation of the empire. He was almost the first popular spokesman of the sentiment: and th" ardor which marked those early speeches has been greatly stimulated by late events, and mostly by Mr. Rhodes'*? will, In his vision a time might come when the Hen of Oxonian fellowship might knit the controllers of the empire's destiny all round the world and consolidate the friendship of the English speaking nations. It was a chance of furthering such a hope as this that the Oxford undergraduate, and in a less degree the don. looked upon as merely a nuisance. The scholars were callers Intentiptra* study—some would say a doze, outsiders breaking the meditation proper to an antique foundation, like the troops Invading the quietude of the Grand Chartreuse in Matthew Arnold's poem. The feeling of Oxford to the American strangers was that cf the monks to the •ntarae v.'>rid. We admire with owe The exultlna thundor of your rac« : You jrtve the universe your \?.v.-. You triumph over time and space! Your pride of life, your tireless powers. We laud them, but they are not ours. The phrases tit well the American spirit, for which they were not meant, and the colonial. Mr. Parkin's tireless powers are as indisputable as the exulting thunder of his rhetoric: and the contrast of these with the timid, tentative groping, the academic weighing of advantages in junior ana se-ior common rooms at Oxford was as marKed as "the pennon plume and flashing lance" in the cloistral shade. ... \u0084,. After three weeks' contest the conviction, the exalting thunder, won. Within that time Mr. Parkin had dined at every hieh table, had poured out his breezy hopes in every common room, had thundered in the union. Before he left the ngnt was ovc-, the battle won. and. what is more, the business completed. The new scholars, so many o. then as in their condescension will accept the gilt, will come into residence in the autumn or iiM>i. The term will mark a stage in the history of Ox- ford, in one way the advent of the cosmopolitans will recall Oxford a little to its older constitution of the fourteenth century when genuine scholars fthough some of them had tendencies to poach in the king's forest at Shotover and not Infrequently used ahna mater as a pawnbroker) were more numerous than now. more keen, and gathered from many corners of the world. Partly it is a fear of this "very keenness, if it come, of which pxiora is afraid, lest it break out in pleas for technical in- struction, schools of agriculture, colleges of hy- giene But if one may judge from foreigners— Americans and remote Britons whom we have known in the past at Oxford—the newcomers may be expected to acquire an affection, even an exaK- cerate-d affection, for that in Oxford which has root In the remotest antiquity, as one naturally turns to a republican democrat for the most unblushing affection for court titles. Also, if the inference from experience is justified, there is not likely to be any close allegiance amonK the visitors An American from Xew-Tork will feel no irresistible prompting to link arms with the Bostonmn. much less- with the Nebraskan: the Britons will come from regions as far from each, other as from Oxford: more than this, there will be * S*" e desire among those who po to Oxford to do as Oxford does. and. if only for «pertence. to plunge into th* life of the place. We have Known an American who indulged in every sport (especially those he could not afford), joined all the clubs which would admit him. and would have put down his name for every school in the statute book, sole- v"f™™no sake of drinking the cup of ntMnM Sst^S^-is^exSe". SBSgg gg Ifwe suppose, though the estimate is o\er^ the Jf we suppose, though the estimate is over the "1 that in 1907 there will be three hundred schol- ars' in Oxford they will be distributed over twenty coile'ges! they will* be separated by the topographi- cal barriers, and no one who has not beer, f \°£ ford knows how hard to cross Is St. Ajdate. or \u0084„_ hiirh the wall between Balliol and lnnitj. congeries the atoms repelled and kept asunder by of their tutelage will be established at any rate a Wliiili p^kJ^e^vel was perhaps gj^J^S commonplaces of grammar and the s «£^> a con- Xenophon and Csesar. Indeed. "- su f f t;? > T)< t int \u0084f envy rt »°- w *f,lf i^if he '-nad not the idiom." mmmmmmß thorities in 2^* "wo 'in Voronto set out to visit In the different r^ions . Th« £»»£e \u0084 grades of ln- Chamberlain and M l ark In^n^tn in the knitting fluence. have In a sens* co. mut Rhodes's dream. line of his > ur^L^e among the yet unfeder- ln the balance °U°3 u t" c aB B of Rood omen to the ated colonies, wl >'^ h _j s a , it ls unpleasant in the jealous of old pre roßati^s onJy n the whole "g**JJ|_ O 5r |n bVhlocked and the trattu less often \ h ;\Vr p,rkn is successful taMjW* litiiifli little dishonorable to ncr " .. n her. if she the larger franchise. \u0084 vffafcfa the founder sFMWsmmM moam j, \u0084,,.r t o be held ta ""y^ nmPn should be estab- 'mmmmm d*Kre^ of ! Oxford's Great Opportunity and Great Honor. A- English view or the scholarship? at Oxford. founded by th" trill of Cecil Rhodes, la presented la "Macxnil'an's Magazine." by W. Beach Thomas, H? says: TVhen the gush of pride railed forth by Mr. Ehofies'e \u25a0c.-ill was over, \u25a0when even possible par- allel -with Csr-sar's testament had been worked cut. Oxford began to ask itself whether thi? great bequest had not. like other charities (as Maryle- fcone said to Mr. Carnegie) conferred more obliga- tion than privilege. The misgivings increased, and ft I \u25a0<! \u25a0\u25a0!<\u25a0. even more than heads of col- leges, came to look on the prospective scholars as r nuisance if r.ot a menace In spite of Young Oxford movements and secret gatherings in music •hops to listen to Inefficient politicians, the under- graduates, as a rule, Is a conservative of the «?n«st typ». There -was deep indignation among ; , few senior men at the suggested abolition of Grek in Responsions. In the case of the scholars the jealousy cf change went with a certain per- sonal jealousy. A first class scholarship at Ox- ford if worth £SO. a few of the scholarships at Hertford College as much as £100 a year. Why BboaM this Mandard be debased by the granting of £.W a year to all manner of aborigines to whom probably Greek was Greek, who if they had a nodding acquaintance with theology would never have beard "'the doctrine of the enclitic I>"? Ti.e pro^jactive scholars were the butt of every RMCtihMMm Backwoodsmen were depicted s* arriving with sisters and cousins and aunts. all of whom rat to sabsist on the £3CO. Th* r.eiir^Ft successor to verify drew with delight- ful \u25a0or \u25a0 picture cf "a distant prospect of Oriei." of the Thames flooded by the Murrutn- t.idp'-*. while the harassed don prayed for re- Urcm^rt to some sequestered spot on the banks cf the Cam. This flippant view of Oxford's new pllvHege alternated with pessimism. It is said by those who were mo«t keen to be- rid of compulsory Grerk in Responsior.s that they would certainly have succeeded. »f it had riot been for the genera] fear of innovation, fostered by the prospect of the _\:neriran scholars. The panic was much in- crt>s«><2 by many small, adventitious causes. Care- ful mothers wrote to -'The Times" complaining of lh«; abs-ence of bathrooms ana want of ventila- tion in college rooms. A few ludicrous articles were pcbUsbed in the- half penny Press in which a method was sketched enabling poor Oxford to tirir.g its •-.-.. a institutions up to the mark of modern <-omn»<*rce. Air. Rhodes's own allusion to the chilUishnes at dons in it-thods of finance pave a lead to thote writers who regard them as a lesitirnaif hutt for the slings as I arrows i.f Isrrorar.t criticism; ai:d naturally enough the feel- ings of men. at least as busy minded and progres- eive as the re t of the world, were not a little ruffled. Thus it came about that enthusiasm. which as \u25a0 frame of mind hi not regarded with taacb favor at the public schools or nt the uni- versitie* . m damped to the point of extinction. H«r<lly arybody looked forward to the fulfilment of that scheme about which Mr. Rhodos's hopes of continuous lnnuence centered. A similar de- cltne In fervor had eea experienced among The Americans. Are not Harvard and Yale, univer- sities of America, more ctr.-.ient than all the lect- area of Oxford? Shall the fon of Bostonian in- teUigeac« be lumped with the Nebraskan rough lider or the Australian backwoodsman? II is the commonest of all cements that Mr. Rhodes would I;avt done much \u25a0.••: to -•• : his Englisnman to ti.« Slates, where is the van or progress, than tcmjA the young American to temper his hustling Vigor "with the barren classicism of the home of lost ca-Jfcos. Now the German students, with th*fir thirst for education and without exec-ss of Ct'.d, fcave temporarily resolved, in some excess of ji^rron- Pan-Gerraaiiism or anti-British hostility, lv refuse the oCt-r. to organize a sort of posthum- ocs boycott of i..' jr. mi who defeated a German in th« rac- for Rhodesia. Et tv, Oecßuahi no re- ci.r to the parallel of Csewir) might have been the lint n&cke of Mr. Khodes's valiant spirit. •I^^p:i7 this perverted view is not unlversa.'. n^c- eraUtude of a man has left no cause tor v-eepins ia th« Colonies (if the word must be utetlj Kbcr* the reEpeci, almost one might ejv th<j r*v«;rcnce, or the testamentary thoughts oi Zlr. Rhodes s'tiU pre\-alls; arid by some odd prin- ciple cf contradiction, or perhaps compensation. liio tutbusias-m U much greater In Canada than ar.vTsrbei-..: else. Certainly Canada was the coun- try about which Mr. Rhodes had least knowledge. The r.i:: would irovitt it. apart from any cor- rotoraaia of personal knowledge. ii Is a thou- eind piues that he did not foresee the astonish- ing development of the Dominion: the cultivation , : t>.<- Northwest, the rroat harvests expanding J-etr by year 'I.- tissue of railways stretchitis *ut T.-ltt. unparalleled rapidity across the conti- ier.t where now the continuous lines of tract sr* iasui'iciiist i*> carry away one year's aarvosi l--Jc"«~«l:~ -...vl \u25a0 Jr.. The building or a second -to* Ire'™ ~vcu to «ca would have drawn from h.rn «arp cf those ?r*»at rough .hewn Idcu, o. ma wfai-j. f y-.-sr«.-i com;>arisoa with M.cha.l ar.uo. };• zsw iff© not «*ea<lily. cot -a hole, bill •\u25a0: II *«* In prophetic jr:inujse« through «. magnifyin, Slafc- But th<- class w*s never turned on anada. lu^otStJ. I fich^ ih* coal, the asbestos the foi'2. and. more polden than all the golden roro^ Fine nev«r touched his imasinaUon: a"' l , ;",?_?• 'i, SaS^Ja^^?d^^^^in^ •laaUdur ia IsterjiretAtioa v.h:ch Air- Kbofie* nun- NEW- YORK DAILY TRTBFXE. BtJXDAT. -TUNE 14. 1903 /?r«/ Estate. \u25a0ATOI VISiIS PIERS. CHAS. ii KAFTAN RORT. T MrT.'STT. Charles H. Easton & Cc. r i?e-a/ Estate Agents & Brokers. estates' managed. 16 West 42d St t.l ««>-«_ Country Property for Sale. J \T~E CAN PRESENT th« most <>!>lr>iMe r«rrtal sad *«,.» VV property in the "City of Homes." \u25a0—•\u25a0>»< \u25a0!• •«- vie* COOLEY & WEST ilrv Mo-ant Vernon. N. V. A IT SPECIAIirt to manascmenl a* property: •mmm AL assured gaud results: references guaranteeing •»?»%- r>. C. REID. UK Nassau st. :.- .\u25a0 > II^TATB. corporation or apppi, r>2 wishing <J«!rjW» J office at reduced rate*, appply 52 Wllllam-st.. lOtn flour. __^_____ City Property for Sale. 1O ACRES High ground, convenient locality, with Jars* STONB IWC-A.3NTSIOI>3" In good order, suitable for Institution. School or Home. Must be sold at one* to CLOSE IE_S-F__.r_ t :£3. For full particulars apply J. O. ID-A/VISS c*3 CO., MOTH AND IB avt; ROGKAWAY PARK. Ono Mile of Benrh on the Atlantic «nd <*»«•• Half Mile on Jaraai«-a Bar- . _ ft«~CTESS: I* I •~i»r t<» Roeicawty J**r* * *iC*« SI m|rl •*pr»s» »rain»: -an •,?<<. also. Briir* or ~*r 13. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0* loV:^ 1 V, boat™ BUILDING LOIS AND SITES NEW FINE COTTAGES FOR SALE. TTTLE C.rAJ!AN-TEEt> F.T TTT I ~ 'AST« **\u25a0 TTICST CO.. NEW TOKK. llichii Improved Restricted Froperty. LOTS $400 UPWARD Sale; cr. Easy Terms, ifl* Disc, fir Wfeoia Cash. FOR :rAF ANI> PASTICVLAES ADDRE33 THE - ROGUWAY PARK IMP. CO., LTD., 192 Broadway' and II John St., Corbin i;ui!din A . Third Floor. w h»-> *-l<«Jt!n:r the P»rk npplr \u25a0« our \u25a0.••• r«i.it- OJH*>«-. n'-at £>*\u25a0\u25a0>©?. C7T>. - ani bridges -nd electric roa<t «-il! toon crisg R-M?lui»av park -s-ithir. 4.'. n»nu*«s from Harlem. >*\u25a0>\u25a0 »• tn*- time to buy »r P •-<»«•-* •• Park. BARGAIN. Two five stor" apart— house* hi M.»th-»t.. near new underground static n; win tec—a «\u25a0 in value: any one look- ing lor an Investment from which they cani derive a good Income cannot do better. D. C. KEID. Ho Nassau -m. FOP SALE. BARftAIX I> .-»IO>TCU^in. J. . lleu»e \u25a0\u25a0•,\u25a0 11 room* »n ; r--«r?i all improvement: tfnall •table J.--1 pl-nty of SB«sh corner property, on trolley lint ore iei> fi-^TTi rrir». Apply F. BIRDS Ml SMITH, .-\u25a04-. r^^AT'^AT How About Your Chicago Beal Estate? reliable trpotfj im4« iftn r.:r*f>il Investigation. A_- pmissl?. thar*** rratonaNe. fiCIROE 2. NXWOOMB. 771 W. Mn'i'»' Chicago, m. T9

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Page 1: VISiIS THE WEEK IX Property J · •LooKej Over Brooklyn Ferry Termi-ticl Which CityMay Acquire. J.!tvot I.itvth,j to l>ix»k'\n yesterday to lool; aT '.lie TMilfHill ferry terminal,

•LooKej Over Brooklyn Ferry Termi-ticl Which City May Acquire.

J.!tvot I.it vth,j to l>ix»k'\n yesterday to lool;

aT '.lie TMilfHill ferry terminal, the city aav-1:-^ :-c*nauthorizes to acquire and operate the ferrytfc«re. He went v the guest of the Bush Termi-r.nl Con:?a-y. and vms escorted by delegationsfrom the Merchants* Association, tl"'t1

"' BrooklynV.ij-:lij'dHoarJ of.Tratlo ar.«l the South BrooklynBoatd at Trade. The Bush company" controlsabout three-quarters of a mile of waterfront ad-Joininp the ferry terrusnai, and has built piers to

accommodate shipping which is BCHble to < MateCocking facilities ha Manhattan.

The party was taken •... South Brooklyn in thetag Independence, of the Bush fleet, after theilayor had inspected the police boat Patrol, amihalf promised Captain Derm steam launches for theriver police service. William P. King,cf the Mer-chants" Association, ar.d Mr. Bush explained to theMayor trie need for Improvements in the ferry •:-vice.

At the rew piers the May >- was carried about inone of the freight trains, and to ir"> top oi the, bigwarehouses la an open elevator. Then he walkedelon? the roofs, ajid hr-d a view of Sunset Varkand Soutfc B.ook!yn and Flatlands. acro«=p to.laa-.aica Ilay. He said - . n.y to his hosts aftera visit to th« ferry house at Thirty-ninth-st.. wherehe saw a Coney Island Saturday crowd fighting itsway to the carp. A launch from his yacht, thejsnrprise. —as «wai:i=iK him there, and he wastaktn aboard, without waiting for the feast thathad bi*e:i prepared for him «nd the real of th^party on the lnderiendence.

Before he departed the Mayor expressod himselfr.s delißhted and surprised at the work done on the.!»* docks, but he would not say what position he\u25a0would take en the oropositiOß that the cltv acquiretie ferry and increase the

-\u25a0vice so that the

trucks or the shipping men could be taken care of.H? admitted that some relief was needed. . Hepaid that he had not yet arrived .4: in*conclusionthat the city should control ail the transit facili-ties 01" the city.

FOR 5ALE.A magnificent new five story \u25a0)£££** Basement Resi-dence.

wide.» EAST STREET^ roms: 5 bath^.SOU. feet wide, substantially fireproof. 23 rooms:

-baths.

« dressing rooms; Otis automatic elevator. Many »p*c^

features Plans and particulars on application.

CHAS. BUEK, Owner. 500 Fifth Avenue.

DESIRABLE DOWNTOWNINVESTMENT PROPERTIES.

RULAND & WHITING CO.,-EKEOAN HT- - .

Brooklyn Property for Sale.

\ C.ENTLKM'N? COt'NTRY ?BAT ANO FAKJt—

New iolcnUl ii<•!.«•>. 7 fce<in?«>ms; dry «a.r"r. «tecUM>light. h»at: exposed n-'V:«>l p!uratir>< an.l »how— »ar^T«eefieri 5 open nr*pl%c*s: p:»ixa» all aUtet: new •\u25a0mfNiil*-inss: 23 anea f.r.e land: Irn'j. *.--f-iragus. gardes: 65 ml»-alar oat. Penna. R. X.;IKmile*from station; mic*d*o»roads: good market; school*, churches; valms. JSI.W*I;price. $13."Oj: also W.Cfo worth 0»-» fttntlmp*; h<?r9».\u25a0'\u25a03rn.«jr» et.c. Ex:raor<;;rAry off-r ta p*rT takiss vr*T?-thing for a«h. An \i-»\ c«sBpl«t» home, in p*rf»«t «>T<er;«]#var*4. cool. t)»a!thfal: no RUisan'-"*. j, traces. R. C,Room l.ii^-. -\u25a0 Broadway. New-York.

4 T GRKAT BARGAIN —I aa~iBear C*r—el »•»«-:nrr Co.: highest point in courrty : 1.42« ft. .iltitt»d»S

on N. T. «r Putnaaa R. R.. 14 *»t» Miil4i3C«. 7 iix-s:plenty fruit: grand vi#w; ttlMbl*. pasture, wonillatllt.takes] c- ri-j preserve, paying Investment iemo.iarr»ie>liJ2i per sere. TRAVIS. 10 Cortlantft ."tree-

JUST LOOK ATThree story and basement brick, all improvements, open

plumbing, "porcelain bath, hard wood: SfSS*ii_*^aVS2»tint- condition; 20 minutes to .V \.; SUM cash. VMMmortgage; worth .*".""<'

WOOD & KINGMAN.13S REID AVEML,XKAR GATES.

Brooklyn. N. Y. BUSINESS BLOCK for s»i» chap: rss icor-'l stor*»down and v, ie room? up. all irap*ov»»n"ttts . «»• o?

Is* .V»xS»». on !»o 3tre»ts; pric^ «7.i«¥» Arpr^- *<»THOMAS vf_UA<SB Wiiuelwaiial ass .fc N^rwa: Csrsn.

I^OR FARMS OR ACREAGE «\u25a0'\u25a0'•? SUBDIVISION. 00Shore Property. Long Island. >»•

T W POWELiI*.35 Park Raw. N*w-Tor'«.

HOTEU Atlantic City i>:V--- furni*V<i fin* opporturi;--ty: $l«.C0o cash; ba_nc^i xaertgas*. MOtN4. .n»

Melrose-ax.-*.. N. T.

SI,OOO COMMISSION FOR YOU.S4OOO CASH. J6.000 MORTGAGE. SECURES $20,000

VALUED_ „

To settle estate, must sell 50 lots, cl— to P»nr.a. RA.I-

road Tunnel Tf-rmlnus. on line of treat Improvement!".This property will sail for $50,000 within three years.

In o'tirj-tionmears qui'-k pur^-ha— or »^-eate«t ba-:market to-day. fail on J. P. OOARK. Aitorr»>. BYilanhattan-ave.. Brooklyn.

A TSTATION.— IS rooms and 2 Bat»»:•

start**; *S/**>rA fV)O cash; sacrifice. SMITH Park Ride* K. 3FL-\TBtT?H COTTAGE. 275 Lenox Road, near IVasa—

Park; all improvements. E. DBI"ELU owner, --asBrocdway. New-York, Room SOS. Tel. 3.o=l—Cortlandt.

To Lff /"or Business Purposes.LOG BRANCH. X. J.—For rent or *ale. has'lrjas Tr—»•

cottage. 131 G«rfl»l«1-a'-e 19 rooms, two ba'-

«•:;all Improvements: '.\u25a0.\u25a0*\u25a0!• fiimt*h»d: near oc^aa an<l d*--r"t: carriage hem". eplendiij «hal» Ad<tre^ E. ~.HOWLANt>. Si YCt'.r. SB«»-»1 New-fork ~l"

PROSPBKOt'S GROCERY: net profit $50 weekly: fine

i: neighborhood; low rent: best references: rar- Mr-

tunitv Call or address GEO. rRICK. 72S East 13<th Si METCCTIEN.—

Mo«!«rn ten room house, bam an 4fly«»acres: twelve minutes from station: delightfully lo-

cated, on asseaasaa roal; high ground. I&J0O will t—

it. Address F. O. Bex 415. Metuch»n. ?*. J

General Stone believe*; the course tvould attract

foreign drivers, and in course of time, as thesafest and best course in the country, would be-come the scene of international races. He saidthat there could be no objection to It from thetaxpayers of the town through which it WOnHIpass, for it would increase the taxable property andrelieve the public highway of a large measure of£ -ton obi> travel.

E. B. Gall&her. chairman of the technical com-initt»* of the American Automobile Association, Is;-»p.ri;ie a financial scheme for the railway.

Preparing Financial Scheme for"Auto" Course to MonUmk Point.General Roy Stone recently suggested \u25a0 steel

*— such as Use rtrip la dlurray-?t. rron theemstmi -andint; of the proposed Blackwcll's Islandbris?re to Slontauk Point. General Stone sent aletter to the National Association or AutomobileManufacturers, in which he told of the unfortunateretult of the late raoior race, and of the advantagesthe railway Tvould Rive. This association and . Th,?

American Automobile Association received Gentra!Stone s puggestion? favorably and he was askedto submit a plan for the rail.

PLAXS FOR STEEL ROAD.

J/7/; RHODES SCHOLARS. PARK PLACa near Broadway.— Whol» buildin*. five

stor>- and basement, from January 1. PLASt. —4

:•.-\u25a0\u25a0 -idv. _____-_-__———————-——\u25a0

Furnished Ilounes to Let—Country.

FOR S \LE.—IOOlot* in Susnytide Park. b*twean M'ra«-JT Tsiasw and Broir»vi]> in Harlem R. n\u25a0:J^litrad* for Improve* city property. Apply E. JJACEZ;r»—

BACH. 50 Howarl-st.. city. .SIX PRIVATE DWELLINGS OFFEKHI

For sal- or »xchang«. for countrr propers \u25a0 Cat».iLocaf»l n»ar l^.th-*t. a=3 El?tth-av». e!»vafe<l ttmOOi•-\u25a0 i-*hou?» section: modern: neT 9v« itory Americanbasemen'? rise I'xl^ hardwood flri«h P^Jr^^1-Morts3g° 51.V000 a' •">*•- each. Prtnapa!.. I. P. WAKE-MAN,l-^ Broadway.

ALLENHURST, ASBTJBY PAKK. DEAL.Modern furnished Cottages for real

MILANROSS AGENCY,Opposite Railroad stations.

ASBURT TARK. N. J. ALLENHURST. X. J. 4 BARGAIN—

?t»»n- heat*4 corner fee—»•: ?*rsj» pjrtlt

A-_ $2m or l«» dourn. balance $17 monthly «iaehi»l»a la—

t<-r.«t cth-r». ANSOX. .257 Brotfwar.DEAL BEACH. N. J.For rent, furnished house, new pa!at»-l aM d»corat»4.

ample piazzas. ? bedrooms. 2 bath rccm3. dining room,

kitchen, butler's pantry, laundry, saesßaa* cellar. !*-—»

reception hall. gas. electric light", gas and coal ranges;

barn, four stalls, carriage and coachman's room.DRAWER C. Allenhurst. V. J.

AFINE CHESTER HTLLHOME at Bid nz>'

prt?»:12 roo-na. parnuet floor*; st-am hear; lar?« coTnep

lot- roacy special features; less than $13,000. COOLEY& WEST diet. Mount Vernon. N. Y.

"f~v^R VI.E.—

Stock Firms. Dairy Farm?. CouatrrX" 3«at« Country Hones: all slses. price?. t*r \u25a0famt.ua Oranse County, aioiyc Erie Railroad acd tafamous Wallkill Valley. catalogues. A. V. BOAK. Mfc»-4!eT-iwn. N. Y.

FOR. SALE-—A house aal ajwsmda.—

irn vie— ojer!<—Jt --; the Sour.l. and en the sSore. at .New-Rr'>*!le V.V • 14 room? •_ laaasasaaaaaa*: one mica's from trolley;

t*.minutes tr-

iCK

i. E>*H» UJI>

_N.gr*

251 Main-3t.. Xew-Kochelle. N. T.

COOL BREEZY WYCHMERE(Ca~* CM : seayhnr" '\u2666•''•<: fir*• HHi \u25a0"\u25a0**" fcr-

ni«h»d- all ccnvenlenres; exeeH«Jrt w^f»r. cold, hot; long»^.3..n;rarely P3*; fine bathing. CAPE. South Harwich.Mais. •

SAYVILLE AND BAYPOR7, L I.A few desirable fumi?be<i cottag«» still uarented from

$200 up. Cr-me out and inspect them and make offer.Catalogue on r«nu«st. J. 6. BDvTAaIM & SON. Say-

ville. Long 'f'anil. . /. . FINE SUMMER RESORT FOB SALE—Beach land, in-cSklng SSdmss; very pleasantly **™±£Odiornes Point, in the town of *r•

*•"

»J?!*'™*""JLca.tle about »H miles from Postcffle-. Fcr»mwtuCity. Postoffice addreis. J. WESLEY TOYE, Bex 314.Portsmouth. N. H. _________——.

——.FOR RENT. IN THE ADIROXDACKS. NEAR PAUL-T SMITHS—A L.XRGE. ATTRACTIVE CAMP:

FULLY FURNISHED. AFFLT TO PAUL SMITH.AI>IROXI>ACKS OR ALEX D FHAW. IIBROAD FT..NEW YORK.

For .Me or fo Let—Country.FT-RNISHEf COTTiIGK TO RENT—»w. ptcasaat.jn convenient; l«rg». «Irv r-o— «: -•-<- Wh!te HotmtainaAdores Mrs

''. J. JERREMAN. s>ieir H'!!. N. H * T SCARSDALE.— Colonial rotf-.?e3.»11Kc5-

Am lmrrnvernents: hig-i gmat: pric«L *3J^A8°

s*«>o. terms to snlt: enly 30 minutes out city. ««»tfins d<ii:v; real rapid transit. SVTAKTWOCT « «-0..corner lCsth-?t. and Park-

SHELTER ISLAND HEIGHTS.To rent for th» mssou a h«n<i«---^ Swiss -•'-•?» en

the bluff overlooking the Sound. rtmtatnlDg stttiug rc«_,

dining room, seven bed— is. kitchen, laundry ard bah-

room- nlr»ly furnished: term* reasonable. Apply to

HAKDT. YON BSRXCTH*CO.. 477 Bums— st. X. T. C\T?r"IL.L MOf'NTAI?

- —Dclightrul summer re-Uenca

(j'rt ale. 2.500 '--\u25a0' co't-»ge. n!n^ rpema *n>lt-ath: completely furnished: large P>fff^- *^."^^gar wt^pS^ 1JKifrwA^^/«jay&jg.

AMONG THE BERKSHIRE?. —To r»r" for B—MBMimonths ftirnl!*ed residence; IS rooms; modern con-, r.. Pr|r. extensive grounds; views unsurraseed : stat>i«

with stalls for four hordes. rhi-.t"^r phs and r:^^!» cf_>'. v JOHN H. HEAVITT.

Williamstown. Mas*.r^»S. with-hrih ceiling, torf, *^»- £«£iSSI I?-'- NY reference, 2O» T>jane >t.. New Yort.

VDIRONDACKS.—

Elevation 1.400 feet; fu.—ifshed 7room '-ottnge: bam: boats; fishing; Htrrlrlev Lake.

Wllmurt. N. V. beautiful. Address S. H. H_4C_l~THinckley. N. V. Hr\T--v^

'-' aale «w»t or s—rtsawj* in »r.y part cf

S' f«:ro:f«:ro: EDWIN W. FI?KE. Mount V«aea.N. T. ________—_———__

4 FINELY furnished 14 r"<-m cottare. Churchill Par"«A Stamford. X. T. E. APAMS. I.SC7 7:h-ave.. N. T.

Country Property toLet"VTORFOLK. CONN.. T.it'hf"!'! Hills.— P»Jr«t»heiJ r*>r-

tage. 14 rooms. 2 baths, modern, spring was** loca-tion unsurpassed for h»alth and comfort, to let Nl tt<!season. Address P. O. Bit311'». Norfolk. CM SUMMER gs?& . fOB BESH

at a_X F|BEBT iMons, ?AB^opp^tr- Das«

': .__.'*I>TV P*rk N. J.BOGOTA. X. J.

—Beautiful furni£he<l h-xiF». 11 rooms,

boating and bathing: half hour from ?>w_York: I".1*per month. W. H. X.. Room 623. 621 Broa<Jn-»y. FLt'HING L'Sg Island— Fcr renf. Cor July. Aus^st

r^'runaVcur. H M PfXCAN. !.«» B-^way. ?.. 1.DAUS' COTTACES TO LETfor aMMMi: fully furnished: mf&n i""err«rt«;

near end of board walk. Apply a' owner. Ds :- Cottage.No 5. or. Eldert-ave.. near Sur' Tfnllan<! Station. Rook-away Beach, or 111 John-Rt.. New-York. mr> RiVT FOR THE! SUMMER

—'The Steven* Cer-

T tarT Sm"t7n Eeach. L. I;contain. »»«ty

r7n-« lare- anl a'r>-; mM»rn Itrrrovem-nr-: t.irX-

l»ws;

SS&*lS££ wtt?flv. stalU room '^.«links and cr»m: ****;?**VJVJ x-

*hampton F?>ach. Lens Island. >\u25a0 Y.

IT'OR RENT.—Cott»g» and V»afhou«e. at We«—

-*•»-

1 Park. Alexandria Bay. N. V : fully furnished: ?«t»srImprovements: price $350 for season. Address Mrs. HIRAMT. IXGLEJHART. 47 Ter Eyck-st . WfetertOWß, X. T.

Irn-HFIELD Conn —In th» '°* Eertohires. For r*nt

/ foi• th» season, thlrt-cr room house t^J«= '"?£*.room." r^rh launcirv: hot ar.d cold water: fares--; fir*S Trcm depot. Worn*. »n1 rhurcner Arr ilr..GEJVH TROWCFTPOE. Utchftelfl. Conn.

IrV>R RENT Desirable ten room furnished bemw) «nshady street. in East 'range; favorable price to food

tenant for three month.". Address MONTGOMERYLINDSAY. Agtnt, East Orange, or call at Room I.2K>.2.'.it Broadway.

MORRIM ORRI--

3—

Furnisheit haaaa V* raa*. «avlult« fV Wh months: good lotion and Ra»

v»-w; t»lipW» in heusr Address Owner. 14 Prcn^t-»t.FIRMSHEP HOUSE for rent. South Orange, X. J..high elevation; June 15 to Sept. 15: $«•> per month;

contains 10 rooms ana bath: all Improvements; con-veniently located For further parth'Ul*rs apply to J.CEAS. CTBRIEN. 141 Broadway, or Smith < ir,n \u25a0V-EWARI* N J—No. IM North P^a-i-s» :"^"*

rS /".weiu-'g. nine reims: steam heat: elecrnc Jig!-?:. :• \u25a0>

n.inut-f: troni uep-M an'l thirty ruinate* from N«w TO«;

rent jr.". per montli. ;.N-

_____——

OKF- DF THE FIVEST COVNTRY r.TSXDttCZS on( )TSb.fa^VS of Lons Wand; lary hou^. .tail. W«a-.iund? in Brrt rta.»s condition; terms mHBIMt., uj-c!uVr. rf RPXVK & rAKTLETT. Gr^nport. Long I»tond.

T7UVE COTTA FOR RKNT.on Lake George, from J2TO to »6f>o: fully furnished;

photographs may be seen at The New-York American"*Centra! Bureau. 1.370 Broadway. V.'. H. MlPri-K-WORTH. We« ?lde. I«al:e George. N. T. _

rr»O LET-Fln»« '."-aterj rcstdesc*. Vautifut Cfanford:T !.»: al! impnnrme-T*; la_wn. Oraad OM Ti«S;boating: near station. COOKTIQUT. ?-5 \u25a0r-v-i.'

T7K>R RENT. In the heart cf the THOUSANDIFI.ANDS,J? a fumtrncd house, with ALL modern conveniences.Address Lock Box No. 4ftf.. Clayton. Jefferson Co.. X. T.

FURNISHED COTTAGE to rent, at SUseonset. Xan-JC tucket: full particulars. Apply Mr«. NEFTEL. Z&ftWest 106th-st. TO LET Nln~ ror>T» o^ttag"; ttzVanxry ranjre; bath:

\u25a0well: near stati-n. Box 4<. Allfndale. X. J.

EVST Qrcx;rE L. I—Furnished c«rtar»# to rent: *1V)

to J4OO i-r «ea«<.-.n. AdJre«« KWfWI A JACKSON. 1 4 ROOM rOTTAGH to rent: a« J™VT?vr,Taie™*,:**'

'J. 4:in<s trnnli. T. O. Box 11. Siaaifarl. D«Uwar«Count>. N. V .

MUl'lTCUlir rilllllsliriiihouse, f- roorrr. sli Improve-*4.» month. AasM !*>\u2666 f>ran«e Road.

Beal Estate Wanted.WANT2P

—flats in ITavlem. also IjttJAtr^-st.t

\V r»»h. 'A" LFMBF.HT X, CO.. ISO N»ss"U>-»t

VA>.'T!'''K''T. MASS.—

Cottage on Cliff, twelve room";_^N modem improvements: fully furnished; private beaenan.l bath hou.'es. Address Box 7?. Tribune Uptown OfSce.l.Zi'A Broadway.

T3ARTLY furnisheiJ. 11 rom«. summer, or all year\u25a0JL K«*i'ience. lawn, stable, garden: healthy; conven-ient to New York:all improvement*: electric lights. Bel!«.etc. >. V. E. KINSMAN. PlamfleM. X. J.

RIVERSIDI': at, furnished, attractive re»i

den iwb; .nv«-r.:-nce«. near ilepot. yachtCll*>. ATWATEi:. 5.1 Lib-it, St. Easy81MM!CR HOME FOR RBINT.—<>\u25a0* mile from R. R.

•taatoa; tarce 10 room farmhouse, partly furniabed:nteab located price reaaoaatli-. MARSHALL. SNOVBSI.

I wn. N. J

PHILADELPHIA STOCKS.Bid. Asked, i Bid. Asked.

»ika li .... —'.iiNorth Perm ICTH

—\u25a0

Am Ry Co /. 43 \u25a0»\u25a0•'Fhila Co 42 42',

Cor, Li*.ip coir 6V, s*i! Perm R R C0.... «2'i «3

do pre? .. "\u25a0\u25a0< 2n', Perm Steel com.. 40 M

Cambria Steel... 23H 23%! do pref........ 90 92Con Tr of N .1. 67*S 8B

'Fenn Xi \eh Co.

—1

D'amond Steel '-.• 1 . do pref\u25a0v.

—",.

[.-!,.. <. n.i Co. 63 07 !Phlla Elec Co t.', fii4,lo pref?; ::: 63 a IPhila R T 12% 13

Kler CO of Am. s% h%\ Phihi & Erie....—

»>•_Fmt Park T Co. 26 27 Sim Iron £• steel. 1* I*Ins Co of X A.. 24% "* Tidewater Steel.[>>hirh Nay . <'.« n> \V Cos of N J...3T8 2TSLehleh •„!R '.: 4O^i 41Ji Union Traction... 4r. 4^-Varsden 2S 2% IT Gas Imp C0... PW4 W»'tiNat ... '•> * Wcisbaeß Co 20 22

*> *"* *mfNn?.

A«in <v> of irr Sa i!«- 3" 'Newark Pass 55.11.Vj u«bSpwSo^£m^ l'« jPeople-s Tra- 4P.IJW I<«X4

X .1 Con 5' .11.:' . 10.". 'Union Trac 4-... TO «' *Nat Asphalt 5». S" • 4 !

OTHER MARKETS BY TELEGRAPH.Chicßgo June 13 COW! »nd heifers. $1 60iS$4 K>: can-

ners 81 no»s2 99; bull*. *2 ."t»Q$4 25: calves, $2 50<3Sfi 7.-.;•i ..,•\u25a0, fi>il >'-r . S4«iS> 53. Hogs—Receipts to-day.

IS.OOB head; Monday. 15.080: left over. 2.fK)ii; m»rk<:rtenCy mixed and butcherß'. SS9OOSR9R: good to choiceheavv.'jmanCJWSß: rough heavy. jr. tWtRSC 20; light. $5 SO(M8IC: bulk of sales. »6es6ao Sheep— Receints 2.0.V1;

niarket steady; S""d to choice wethers. $4 fioess 50: fair

to choice mixed. S3 23f154G0: native lambs. $4 50@$C 75;

Western lambs. M3o»sß 75.riaclnnatl. June 13.— Woe* active and higher. $4 .^fd

!\u25a0. SO. Cuttle Fteadv. S3 M90. Sheep steady, $2 IJG<: 2."..' Lambe steady. $4 25©57. ,

Kansas City. June 13.—Cattle— Receipt?. 275 headi-ativos .; native calves; market 1.-.62..C higher than Fn-

rlav May '"•• choc*- export and dressed beer steer", $4 40

*/*-. fair to 'bo d $.", .^OOS4 4<>: stackers and feeders. $2®

14 TO- Western fe.l steers. *ZtTiS4 ST.; Texts and Indian«-eer« J3F*4 40; Texas bow* *2fls3 25: uatlv- cows. *2ssir native heifers. t2SOB>S4«O: c»an*rs. $1 25®52 4O;

lv.ll?. «2iiiiM50: calves. ttTßgfg. Hogs— Receipts,

J.-.0 head- market 10©ir.c higher then May 2B; top. *«10;

b- Ik of VaW. j.-,(uso heavy. $." 556*6 10; mixed packers.$-W)£s«Tff: light, S5 70**S5?<5: Yorkers. »sßo«iss%:pigs. asamMßSi Sh«-er,—Ma-k-t nominal: MtlTelarab^

34 '<(n*rS7 "5- Western lambs. ?8 .o©st 1O: fe<l ewes. S3 40

«V-"O- Texas c!lp™-d yearllnes. $3«0«»|640; Tera«,frn"e?i* sheon %". :--

-15: cockers and feeders. $» lOM

WlO The lncaVVards willbe open for the receipt of foilShipments of rattle, hogs and sheep on Monday, the 13th.for the first time in fourteen days.*

\u25a0Ast Liberty. June I."..—Cattle steady: choice. t." 40©15 50- nrime $5 151»53 35: good. »4 85©«. Hogs higher;

prime heavies S« 4l«t« 45:medium.. 16 45g?R SO; hea^-Yorkers *« 4."«5i5 -TO: light Yorkers and pigs. $G .Tftfj

$r, flo roughs $4'-!?r. 7.'. Sheep steady: best wethers. ?4 •.<>'..a'-; choice yearlings, $5 2r»«sr. 50: veal calves. $7fr

SAM FRANCISCO STOCKS.

San Francisco, June 13.— official closing quota-

tions for mining stocks to-day were as follows:

A!ta O4!.ltistice 14UnhaTcon .;.

"'•Kentucky crn «*

Andes 15 Lady Washington C08... .05

Belcher .' 45|Mexlcan- I'"'

Best i- Belcher 1.75 Occidental Con .£\u25a0;Bullion Os|Ophir l.«-«Caledonia 1.20 OrermM 40

Challenge Con «4|Potnel -!4CY\r HflT • *-** Sayaife ................. .11*

Confldenc-K'*- ;•-•'—•'\u25a0• l-» Sac Belch«r. '?.Con Cal & Va 55,Sierra Nevada »\u25a0>«•.,.• imperial .»:,.<. -ate «Crown Point -':St. Louis 17Gould * <*urrv 41 Union Con SOHale .\u25a0\u25a0 Norcross BOjlTtah Con \u25a0•-

julja?.. 02! Yellow Jacket 60

PLANS FOR TWELVE STORY HOTEL.

Plans were filed yesterday at the Bureau ofBuildings, Manhattan, for a twelve story brie andterra cotta hotel, to be erected at the northeastcorner of I^exinßton-ave. and Thirtieth-st.. on aplot 43.10x100 feet. Gilbert O:<"tt is the owner. C.Stimmetz is the architect. The cost is estimatedat $400,000.

RECORDED MORTGAGES.Judson. Alice, in Westchester and Bronx Title

end Mortgage Guaranty Company: North Road,c 1, lot 34, map County Club Land Association,at Westchester. contains 2 437-1. OOO; 3 years.6 per cent *2.750

Baum, Jacob, and another to Harris MandW-bau:n and another: Stanton-st. Xos 134 and 136.n w cor Norfolk-st; building loan; 1 year, t>per cent 28.000

Cameron, Mary, to Guidltta Wsto: Sth-are orstreet, s s, 305 ft w of 4th-ave. Willlamsbrldge;demand, 5 per cent 500

McGuire. Thomas, to Anne M Delany: lot 84.partition, map Lott O Hunt estate. Van Nestnation; 6 years, 5 per cent, itold 1,500

Baumbach. Henrietta, to Dorotea B Baumbach;lOth-st. n s. ICO ft w of Avenue B: 5 years.C per cent 15.600

Gewlrz, Louis, and another, to Louis Gordon elel; Pike-Bt. No 25; prior mortgage. $34,000; 5years. 6 per cent 4.^00

Haaren. John W. to Theodore Greentree: 115th-st. n s. 80.8 ft c of MomlngslSe-ave: 3 years, 6percent 5,000

Burns. Peter E. to Frederick Schuck: 3d-av», ftc, 25.8 ft a of SOth-st; duo January 1. I*l6. 5per cent .. 1.000

Realty Operating: Company to Louts Kahn: lOith-st, n s. 175 ft c of Columbus-aye: prior mort-frage, $16,000; 1year. 5 per cent 8.000

Kenney. Anna T. to Dry Dock Savir.irs Institu-tion; 14bth-?t. r. s. 225 It w of Amsterdam-avp;1year, 4!ipercent 7,500

Equitable Realty Company to the Colonial Cor-poration; 12Sth-st. No 40 West: due June 1.1904, 5 per cent 12.000

Lloyd Robert S. to Thomas J McCahlll. as ex-ecutor; 122d-Et, No 171 East; 10 years. 4 percent : 2- 00

Heine, Fran-is, to Mount St Vincent Co-opera-tive Building and Loan Association: l!*2d-st.b \u25a0 29 ft •• of Belmont-ave: instalment*. 5 percent 1.000

Kaufman, Ansel"and another to Charlotte ¥1Moorhou«e- lOth-ave. w •= 20.1 ft n of .V.th-«T.)-:.4.-;H<>- also JOth-ave. iv =. 40?. ft f of 56th-st.40 2xßo also Setb-st ? S. SO ft w of lf>th-ave:also 55th st. n B. SO ft w of lOth-aye: all lease-holds; Instalments, C par cent 4,500.

REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS.Pleasant or 3d aye, w \u25a0, 12." ft n or 2d-st, r>f)x

iih>: Sarah A Vrlgzs to William R Cramp*'

P>ne-st. c » 687.fi ft n c of }sayard-st. IS.'.ixlO.;Charles II I^.ckwoorl to Smith Williamaor.;

mortgage. $2.500 ••• *™Frankltn-ave, c s, 236.6 ft s of 166tb-st. 64x

201. 10x64x201.11; Charles F Muioll to SmithWilliamson; mortgage. $3.255 •\u25a0 10

°i-..., >\u0084, 41. i f. 25x100^x25.5x100.1; Max

V.'achsman to Jacob .< Haum:ni'ru;ase. $27.50" 100!)th-ave s p. lot 563. map Waketleld, ltH'xll4;

Mary A Finn and another to Giu.iitta Mi?to ... I.CCO77th-st. ii.= 181.3 ft <\u25a0 of MadlsoD-«re. l^.OxlO-J.'J;

Frederick W Jones, jr. to William G Park;b and I •\u25a0 10

°lOth-st. n p. 120 ft w of Avenue B. 25x94.9:

Dorotea 1! Baumbach to Henrietta Uaumbach;

b and b I oo°9th-a\f'. x s, 306 ft w of 4th-ave. 50x114; map

Waketleld; Giudltta Mlsto to Mary Cameron 133d- st, s s, 330 ft v of Bth-ave. 20x95.»: Carrie

Metzger to Charles Rohe. jr. q c; re-recorded.. 1177th -st, s s. 85.» ft <• of Central-aye. 75x12.»:

Mayer 8 Auerbach to Teresa Wallach; mort-gas>. $4,0<1C» 10

°St Nicholas, W \u25a0 20.4 ft Iof 154th-st. 20.5

x100.4x203t96.1; Thomas B Osborn. referee, tothe Manhattan Life Insurance Company 15,000

Plke-st. No 25, c s. 25x111.4; Barnett Levy toLouis Gewlrz and another: mortgage. $34.0<x>. . 100 •

Central Park West, ? w corner Ssth-st. 25»100;

Asa R Davison to Frederick Beck; mortgage,

?7i>.oOfi •- 1James Slip. No 7, * w comer Cherry st. 24x36.2;

Julius B Fox to Joseph Wlttner. all liens 1

12*tn-st, No 40 West. 37.6x^9.11: the ColonialCorporation to Equitable. Realty Company; mort-gage. $45,000

*107th-st n s 17."> ft <» of Columbus-aye. 78k10O.11;

Louis Kahn to Realty Operating Company; mort-gage. $.!:.'.OOO

*

24th-!-t. MOB tAB and 111 West. 50x114.10x501114 7; Edward W Uarbour to <larcn< R Chap-man; 1-12 part

- ***•1221-st. No 171 East, 21xS^.7x irreg; Thomas -I

McCahill, executor, to Robert S Lioyd 4,100

NEW BUILDING PLANS.Lluvefvensfor^ brick 'hotel? 43.10x100;

for atwelve st..rv brick hote!. 43.MK100; « X Orcott..wi:er- c "steinmotz. architect $400,000

Bank st. Is, 142 ft c or West-st; for a threestory brick storage warehouse, M>xSo; WesternElectrlo Company, owner; C Baxter & Son,

architects \u25a0•\u25a0\u25a0••

'20no

l"!>th st Nof 54 and r>R Fast: for a fix story

brick nathooae. 50x56.11; F C Woodward, owner;

R 31 Davis, architect •• 63.0n0107th-st. « a 100 ft w of Enst River; for on«

«tory Vian-e coal rackets. 62x88: Meyer Bros,owners: A 3 Ba-Jt. architect 5.000

THE BRONX BUILDING PLANS.

White Pialns-ave.. west side. 9U feet north of

Kleventh-st.. two story frame store and office.Mxfl.fifeet; William H. Keati^r. cwner; Michael J.Garvhi. architect; $2.5".i0.

there was a pain of ITS per cent over the ammonth a year ago. Detroit show? a saln.5aln. °[.I.Iid..

San Francisco 131. Atlanta 124. Denver 109. Wa»hin«-ton 82. .Milwaukee .72, Buffalo 49. Allegheny «.St Paul 32. Cleveland 31, Los Angeles 23. Minne-apolis 5 and Philadelphia 3 per cent The losses

v.ere confined to I'ittsburc where there was adecrease of 49 per cent. Chicago 37. St L.OUJ3 -*.

Seattle 21, Brooklyn 10. Indianapolis 8 and Memphis1 per cent.

"In Chiea?o and the\W>st there has been rnucnimprovement in huiWins operations in the last r^wdays. It was the impression among people whoare considered authorities on the subject that builrl-inpr would show a falling off as the month? ad-vanced, but from careful ami reliable source* it is

stated thers i.= now much work in prospect and thatinstead of a decrease ther^ may be a remarkableIncrease In building- from this on."

REALTY NOTES.Folsoin Brothers were the brokers in the sale of

No. C East Thirty-sevcnth-st.. the Peter Mariehouse, and No 8 TWrty-serenth-st^ the lfoei-ler house, to George C. Eoldt. The same firm wasthe broker in the sale of the Paran Stevens plot,at the southeast corner of Thirty-soventh-st. andFifth-are, to Mr. I'.<>l<Jt. The a?rgresaU- number ofsquare feet in that plot, which was recently boughtby Tiffany & Co.. was 30.000.

P. I:. Donovan has leased a suite of studios ntNo. 9 West Forty-second-st. to Miss Kthel Wrightfor Joseph P. McHngh & Co.. and to R. Benvenutla floor at Xo. 11 West Fortv-second-st. for JamesSlater.

fTIO LET.—

Newly furnished hnj»*. 10 •ere*; gardenX prowtt^i?: neat horn. £13 feet above tide; shadypiazza: Ere Railway; near station: low rent. D. V.IIOWEU* Monroe.. N. Y.

Furnished Apartments to Let. rp.i LET.—

Cottage in Sunset Park, adjeintnr TwllliistJL Park, near the New Sunset Park Inn;ha» ll\ing-roomwith op«n fireplace: dininc room: kitchen: S bedroom* andbathroom: piazz* on thr?# side*: rent for the reason. 9400.Photograph* and further particulars from K. 11. SCO-KIELD. 1 Madison At*..N. T.

TTVJFI KENT.—

Very ,i«.sir»hi» apartment on Rlv»r*Ma.P Drive: twelve room* and three bathrooms: satia-fnrtnry rererence* required. Adflre?s BARGAIN. Tribune''trice. ._^^____ \"l^E OFKEft TO RENT A NEW 15 ROOM COTTAGE>> for the w»a«on. furnish^'l. Address W. S. TOBBI.

\u25a0 •i^ar Lake CbtUE". Bwerkill. Sullivtn County. New-York IUnfurnished Apartments to Let.

The very thing for libraries, public ; -i.\;r;andprofessional men.

Mailed to any address for $1.00. paper covered;or cloth bound for $1.50.

ISribune Indexfor 1902.

To find date pise and column of any articlapublished in the DAILY and SUNDAYTRIBUNE, during the past year by refeninjto the i*^;

1AROOM FINISHED COTTAGE.—

All le»»r<ne*nti:XU one hour rrom city: delightful loc*t:on: fen •Kroondii: balhtnr and fi-hinf Addre»» MIN .IN? S«*"THE SUSSEX," 55 East 65th St.

Hi*h els** rln-ator apartment t-.'.illdlnK: 'luht^ mom»u!t. trr T*r.t frr>o *>—i

--'<•• "'" >ri">*-"t"T-*? ;

BUILDING STATISTICS FOR MAY.

•The Construction News" of June 13 says in an

article on building statistic for May: -BuiUling

operations in twenty-three of the principal cities

of the country for Ma* make a highly satisfactory

"howing. During the month just closed, accord-

in- toIpeclal reports to "Construction News/ per,

£ weTe taken out for 7.711 b.n.d.n ? .mprove-

ments involving a total expenditure of £*«8.88..Gainst 7.512 permits, aggregating J31.MM33. an in-crease of 202 improvement, and $3.*15.75« this year

over the corresponding period last year, or practl-

f u,^w^v-three cities, sixteen show increase,

varying from Ito 178 per cent, while >*>yen have

.Md varying from 1 to 49 per cent This is xon-

sidered a remarkable showing. In Ne^ork Utj

where building operations are under the blight of

intense labor troubles, the Increase was » per cent.

T*» met notable mere** is In Cincinnati, where

Nicholson & Son have sold for John N. Steams

to the American Express Company No. 217 to 22::

Bast Forty-second-st.. with the abutting property.

No. 812 to --"- Baal Forty-third-sT.. four and fivestory" brick factory buildings, on plot l»x2*Uox130x100.5x10x100.5 feet. The company recently sold

its property at Madison-aye. and Forty-seventh-st.

to the New-York Central Railroad.Edward Smith has sold to Joseph Solomon the

southwest corner of Lexington-ave. and Ninety;

fiftn-Bt., a four story tenement house, on lot :3.SxS.J

Henry B. Bates has sold No. 250 West One-hui.-

dre<J-and-nfth-st.. a five story American bosem«ildwelling house, on lot 15x100.11 feet.

Emanuel Doctor has soft the sot. heast corner \u25a0>:

First-aye; and Slxty-ninth-st.. a five story fiathouse.on lot 25x100 feet

A Mr Ehrich has bought Nor. 282 and S3 Bey-entb-ave., two four story tenement houses, on a

plet t»£*Sß feet. . .The estate or E. H. Kalira has sold to Frankel

&Hand No. 81 East Third-si., a six stnry Ir.ement

bouse with stores, on lot ZSx9C2 feet.Rosansky & Ripapoft have sold Nos. IIS and 120

Cannon-st two six story tenement hcus-. on plot

50x100 feet. They have BMO «»W No. V-> Co-umbta-

«t a"s'x story tenement house, on lot 2GxIOO feetiVouis'levv has sold to L Liebowitz the southwest

sHutft.His and One-hundred-and-uiln,'. .mm-; I.', a A- rtSij iathouse. on plot ».7x

lot 27x100.11 feet. _\u25a0

.lames T. Barry has sold to Carrie Marx No. 35West Otae-hundred-and-fourteenth-st.. a fire storj

tenement house, on lot SOxtttU f.^et. The buyer

takes In exchange a plot. 7l.ix4<u; feet, al thenortheast corner of Ri<!cr-ave. and One-hundred-and-thirty-fifth-st.

Barnett A Co. have sold for a Mr. SchiltwachterNo tt Easi One-hundred-and-twenty-fiftb-st., afour story Bathouae. on lot 22x-:*.ll feet.

!.,. J. Phillips & Co. have sold for Alfred GutwilHg

to a client for occupancy No. HI West One-hun-dredth-si., a five story American basement dwell-ing bouse, on lot 18x100.13 feet

TRANSACTIONS IN REALTY.Reid & Murnhy have soli for Caroline W. Se-

bill< No. -2-; Lexington -ave., a fivestory brownstonetriple Oathouse. on lot 2ti.fc.xioo feet,

Frederick M. Wilson has sold No. fiOfi Kast One-hundred-and-thirty-ninth-et., a five story brickdouble Ratbouse. or. lot i£xloo fee*.

Frederick T. Barry has sold for Maria HerterNo. I,§B Lexfcgton-ave., a three stnry brownstonefront dwelling house on a lot 37x9,"!.9 feet. T!iehousv is between Seventy-third and Seventy-fourth

BtS.Frances G. Kf-llor has sold Nof IK nnd 169 West

Nint-1\ -eighth-st.. two five story tenement houses,to William Arenfred.

The northwest corner of Whitehall and Pearlsts. went to an outside bidder, Paul F. O'Neill, for$85,300. The parcel comprises a five story building,on a lot 28.5x62.1x2,-1.7x60.6 feet. The amount bid wasabout $53 60 a square foot.

The Oilman parcel. No. 261 to 265 West Thirty-third St.. which was bid in by J. O. Scammel lastFebruary for JIOS.OOO. was sold yesterday to Jack-son & Stern for $78,250. a difference of $29,750. It issaid that Mr. Scammel. on the day he bid it in, hadan offer of $115,000 for it, which he declined.

"The Real Estate Record and Guide" in its lastissue says, in part, on the real estate situation:

"We have received a number of inquiries as to theeffect which the readjustment of general businessconditions now taking place is likely to have uponthe local real estate market. Of course, suchquestions cannot very well be answered until Ithasbecome more plainly apparent how far the. read-justment is going, and whether the recent liquida-tion in the stock market has been due to temporaryfinancial conditions or whether it is really an an-ticipation of a period of depression. So far as canbe seen at the present time, however, we shouldsay that the effect of this alteration of. businessconditions would be to change the character ofthe real estate trading without diminishing itsamount.

"Tenements are being erected at a largely in-creasing rate: apartment houses are being plannedIn very considerable numbers: the smaller busi-ness man is Increasing his factory or loft space,and we anticipate that In a year or so there willbe a revival of the building of the small residence,both in Manhattan and The Bronx. At the sametime an immense amount of private business willresult directly from the public improvements nowunder way. Moreover, we believe the strength ofthe local position to be such that a ammunition ingeneral prosperity and activity would Indirectlystimulate building In New-York. A large amountof new construction is undoubtedly being held upuntil the price of buildingmaterials becomes morenormal, and a decrease in the prices of buildingmaterials would be one of the first effects of aslackening of general trade."

Three, of the sales at the auction rooms on Tues-day were of more than ordinary interest. The salecf the former home of the Knickerbocker AthletioClub, "t the southeast corner of Madtson-ave. andForty-fifth-st., was knocked down to Adrian Iselin

the plaintiff, for $410,000. The mortgage which Mr.

I?elin held was for $400,000. It -was announcedabout three months ago that the property had beensold for about $550,000. At that time the foreclosuresuit was pending, and it was supposed that thesuit wouid be dropped. Itis impossible to say howmuch of a loss the sale to Mr. Iselin for $410,000

represents. It is not known how much was paid

on the contract. The defendant In the suit wasJohn Davis Adam?.

Market Not Wholly Slow, Despitethe Usual Summer Didness.

Many persons are so disturbed over the building

trades conditions thai they appear to have over-looked the fact that the hottest days of summerare near at hand, and that at this time of the year

tew large transactions arc expected to be beguncr to be closed. Instead of thinking about work,

the majority of leaders in realty matters are. read-ing pamphlets on summer resorts and preparing

their plans for a vacation in the near future. Usu-ally. under the most favorable normal conditions,

the market at this season of the year Is dull.Dulness ought to be and Is visible inthe market,

r.nd yet the market is not wholly slow. Consider-ing all things that are likely in any way to affect

it. It la a good market. In. fact, it is such an ex-cellent market under existing conditions that thereis sufficient cause to rejoice.

A number of large and important transactions•were reported last week. The principal one, per-haps, was the obtaining of an option on the prop-erties No. 23 to 29 Pine by the Bankers' Cor-poration. It was said that the Bankers' Corpora-

tion would exercise its option in September. It wassaid also that Kusseli Snge had bought, through

Dr. John P. Munti. the well known physician. No.C32 Fifth-aye.. from Mrs. Jeanette P. Goln. On oneday of the week William Wolffs Sons reported alarge number of sales in which they were thebrokers. They sold a five story building:, withstores, at the northeast corner of Sixty-ninth-st.

and First-aye., to Daniel Lowenthal, for $39,500; No.1.066 Lexington-ave.: No. 122 East One-hundred-and-twentieth-st., a five story tenement house, on a lot25x95x100 feet, for $19,250, and No. 334 East Forty-

si",enth-st., a four story tenement house, with store,

on a lot 20x100 feet, to the'

Charles Hammel Com-pany, for $55.09t).

The brokers in another important sale were 1... J.Phillips & Co. and L. Solomon. They sold for Fan-nie M. Crowley to James Hunter McHeffery No.202 West One-hwndred-and-nineteenth-st., a fivestory double apartment house, on a lot 25x100.11

feet.George C. BoWt figured prominently In the news

of the week. He bought from the Peter Marie es-tate the house No. 6 East Thirty-seventh-st.. where

Mr. Marie lived. It adjoins the Holler house. No. 8

East Thirty-scventh-st.. which Mr. Boldt has

owned for some months. He now has a plot with

a frontage of about fifty feet and a depth of onehundred feet. He is thinking of making the twohouses into one for his own occupancy.- ;

it was learned also that Mr.Boldt was the buyer

of the northeast corner of Forty-flrst-st. and Fifth-

ave.. which was recently sold by Zelah Van Loanto Richard M. Montgomery. Mr. Montgomery rep-

resented Mr.Boldt. In the last two months Mr,

Boldt has figured in four important realty transac-tions.

THE WEEK IX REALTY.j">lf encourasred the proportion l.* to be sot right:Canada willbe given a much fuller representationthan the niggard eight scholarships outlined inthe will. Bui Mr. Parkin ban done much moreby hi* Influence than give their effect to the in-structions of the will. Ho has helped to inspireoven Oxford with pride in her imperial prospects.There are plenty of ardent imperialists in .Eng-land and InOxford. On occasions they have beenunpleasantly noisy and agressivc; but it is rareto find in England a man who cares to proselytizeand who will proclaim himself, what he Is con-tinuously and with pride. We are. as a rule, alittle ashamed of our virtues, unless we are ac-cused of lacking them. In Canada and Austra-lasia, where personal feelings toward Imperialpolitics are more commonly argued and proclaimed.there is none of that odd shame or affectation ofreticence which is one mark of what i3called,for want of a better name, the Oxford manner.Every one has heard the term colonial used (thoughonly, of course, in relation to manner) as c sortof equivalent to provincial, with just such a touchof scorn. But even if now and then in the pastman had reason to notice crudity hi this colonialmanner, it is well for us to know that one aid*of this Oxford manner Is obnoxious, even repellentto a Canadian, In the present context Mr. Parkinhas Mr. Rhode-- enthusiasm tor Oxford and itstraditions. He has lived there for a while; he ha?met Oxonians, and communicates regularly withOxfordmen. whom he considers among the greatestoflivingEnglishmen; but what sort of a chillmusthe have received when a month ago he went downfull of seal to arrange for the reception of the newscholars? Quite frankly, the whole place, butmostly the undergraduates, looked on the privi-lege as either a nuisance or a danger. Years ago

Mr. Parkin, after inspiring Lord Rosebery withzial for the cause, wont round England lecturingon the federation of the empire. He was almostthe first popular spokesman of the sentiment: andth" ardor which marked those early speeches hasbeen greatly stimulated by late events, and mostlyby Mr. Rhodes'*? will, In his vision a time mightcome when the Hen of Oxonian fellowship mightknit the controllers of the empire's destiny allround the world and consolidate the friendship ofthe English speaking nations. It was a chance offurthering such a hope as this that the Oxfordundergraduate, and in a less degree the don. lookedupon as merely a nuisance. The scholars werecallers Intentiptra* study—some would say a doze,

outsiders breaking the meditation proper to anantique foundation, like the troops Invading thequietude of the Grand Chartreuse in MatthewArnold's poem. The feeling of Oxford to theAmerican strangers was that cf the monks to the•ntarae v.'>rid.

We admire with oweThe exultlna thundor of your rac« :You jrtve the universe your \?.v.-.You triumph over time and space!Your pride of life, your tireless powers.We laud them, but they are not ours.

The phrases tit well the American spirit, forwhich they were not meant, and the colonial. Mr.Parkin's tireless powers are as indisputable as theexulting thunder of his rhetoric: and the contrastof these with the timid, tentative groping, the

academic weighing of advantages in junior anase-ior common rooms at Oxford was as marKed as"the pennon plume and flashing lance" in thecloistral shade. ... \u0084,.

After three weeks' contest the conviction, theexalting thunder, won. Within that time Mr.Parkin had dined at every hieh table, had pouredout his breezy hopes in every common room, hadthundered in the union. Before he left the ngnt

was ovc-, the battle won. and. what is more, the

business completed. The new scholars, so many o.

then as in their condescension will accept the gilt,

will come into residence in the autumn or iiM>i.

The term will mark a stage in the history of Ox-ford, in one way the advent of the cosmopolitanswill recall Oxford a little to its older constitutionof the fourteenth century when genuine scholarsfthough some of them had tendencies to poach in

the king's forest at Shotover and not Infrequently

used ahna mater as a pawnbroker) were morenumerous than now. more keen, and gathered frommany corners of the world. Partly it is a fear ofthis "very keenness, ifit come, of which pxiora isafraid, lest it break out in pleas for technical in-struction, schools of agriculture, colleges of hy-giene But if one may judge from foreigners—

Americans and remote Britons whom we haveknown in the past at Oxford—the newcomers maybe expected to acquire an affection, even an exaK-

cerate-d affection, for that inOxford which has root

In the remotest antiquity, as one naturally turns to

a republican democrat for the most unblushing

affection for court titles. Also, if the inferencefrom experience is justified, there is not likely to beany close allegiance amonK the visitors AnAmerican from Xew-Tork will feel no irresistibleprompting to link arms with the Bostonmn. muchless- with the Nebraskan: the Britons will comefrom regions as far from each, other as fromOxford: more than this, there will be *S*"e™desire among those who po to Oxford to do asOxford does. and. ifonly for «pertence. to plunge

into th* life of the place. We have Known anAmerican who indulged in every sport (especially

those he could not afford), joined all the clubswhich would admit him. and would have put downhis name for every school in the statute book, sole-

v"f™™no sake of drinking the cup of ntMnM

Sst^S^-is^exSe". SBSgg ggIfwe suppose, though the estimate is o\er^ theJf we suppose, though the estimate is over the"1that in 1907 there willbe three hundred schol-

ars' in Oxford they willbe distributed over twenty

coile'ges! they will*be separated by the topographi-

cal barriers, and no one who has not beer, f\°£ford knows how hard to cross Is St. Ajdate. or\u0084„_ hiirh the wall between Balliol and lnnitj.

congeries the atoms repelled and kept asunder by

of their tutelage willbe established at any rate a

Wliiilip^kJ^e^vel was perhaps gj^J^Scommonplaces of grammar and the

s«£^> a con-Xenophon and Csesar. Indeed. "- sufft;?>

T)<tint \u0084f

envy•rt»°- w*f,lfi^ifhe '-nad not the idiom."

mmmmmmß

thorities in 2^* "wo'in Voronto set out to visit

In the different r^ions. Th« £»»£e \u0084 grades of ln-Chamberlain and M larkIn^n^tn in the knittingfluence. have Ina sens* co.mut

Rhodes's dream.

line of his >ur^L^e among the yet unfeder-ln the balance °U°3ut"c

aBB

of Rood omen to theated colonies, wl>'^h_js a,it ls unpleasant in the

jealous of old preroßati^s™

onJy n

the whole "g**JJ|_O5r|nbVhlocked and the trattuless often \h;\Vr p,rkn is successful taMjW*

litiiiflilittle dishonorable to ncr " • .. n her. if she

the larger franchise.\u0084 vffafcfa the founder

sFMWsmmM

moamj, \u0084,,.r to be held ta ""y nmPn should be estab-

'mmmmmd*Kre^ of !

Oxford's Great Opportunity and

Great Honor.A- English view or the scholarship? at Oxford.

founded by th" trill of Cecil Rhodes, la presented

la "Macxnil'an's Magazine." by W. Beach Thomas,

H? says:

TVhen the gush of pride railed forth by Mr.Ehofies'e \u25a0c.-ill was over, \u25a0when even possible par-allel -with Csr-sar's testament had been workedcut. Oxford began to ask itself whether thi? greatbequest had not. like other charities (as Maryle-

fcone said to Mr. Carnegie) conferred more obliga-

tion than privilege. The misgivings increased, and

ftI\u25a0<! \u25a0\u25a0!<\u25a0. even more than heads of col-leges, came to look on the prospective scholars asr nuisance if r.ot a menace In spite of Young

Oxford movements and secret gatherings in music

•hops to listen to Inefficient politicians, the under-graduates, as a rule, Is a conservative of the«?n«st typ». There -was deep indignation among;, few senior men at the suggested abolition ofGrek in Responsions. In the case of the scholarsthe jealousy cf change went with a certain per-

sonal jealousy. A first class scholarship at Ox-ford if worth £SO. a few of the scholarships atHertford College as much as £100 a year. Why

BboaM this Mandard be debased by the grantingof £.W a year to all manner of aborigines to

whom probably Greek was Greek, who if they hada nodding acquaintance with theology wouldnever have beard "'the doctrine of the enclitic

I>"? Ti.e pro^jactive scholars were the butt ofevery RMCtihMMm Backwoodsmen were depicted

s* arriving with sisters and cousins and aunts.

all of whom rat to sabsist on the £3CO. Th*r.eiir^Ft successor to verify drew with delight-

ful \u25a0or \u25a0 picture cf "a distant prospect of

Oriei." of the Thames flooded by the Murrutn-t.idp'-*. while the harassed don prayed for re-Urcm^rt to some sequestered spot on the banks

cf the Cam. This flippant view of Oxford's newpllvHege alternated with pessimism. It is said by

those who were mo«t keen to be- rid of compulsory

Grerk in Responsior.s that they would certainly

have succeeded. »f it had riot been for the genera]

fear of innovation, fostered by the prospect of the_\:neriran scholars. The panic was much in-

crt>s«><2 by many small, adventitious causes. Care-

ful mothers wrote to -'The Times" complaining oflh«; abs-ence of bathrooms ana want of ventila-

tion in college rooms. A few ludicrous articleswere pcbUsbed in the- half penny Press in whicha method was sketched enabling poor Oxford to

tirir.g its• •-.-.. a institutions up to the mark

of modern <-omn»<*rce. Air. Rhodes's own allusion

to the chilUishnes at dons in it-thods of financepave a lead to thote writers who regard them as

a lesitirnaif hutt for the slings as Iarrows i.f

Isrrorar.t criticism; ai:d naturally enough the feel-ings of men. at least as busy minded and progres-eive as the re t of the world, were not a little

ruffled. Thus it came about that enthusiasm.which as \u25a0 frame of mind hi not regarded with

taacb favor at the public schools or nt the uni-

versitie* . m damped to the point of extinction.H«r<lly arybody looked forward to the fulfilmentof that scheme about which Mr. Rhodos's hopes

of continuous lnnuence centered. A similar de-

cltne In fervor had eea experienced among The

Americans. Are not Harvard and Yale, univer-

sities of America, more ctr.-.ient than all the lect-

area of Oxford? Shall the fon of Bostonian in-

teUigeac« be lumped with the Nebraskan rough

lider or the Australian backwoodsman? II is the

commonest of all cements that Mr. Rhodes wouldI;avt done much \u25a0.••: to -•• : his Englisnman to

ti.« Slates, where is the van or progress, than

tcmjA the young American to temper his hustling

Vigor "with the barren classicism of the home of

lost ca-Jfcos. Now the German students, withth*fir thirst for education and without exec-ss of

Ct'.d, fcave temporarily resolved, in some excess ofji^rron- Pan-Gerraaiiism or anti-British hostility,

lv refuse the oCt-r. to organize a sort of posthum-

ocs boycott of i..' jr.mi who defeated a German

inth« rac- for Rhodesia. Et tv, Oecßuahi no re-ci.r to the parallel of Csewir) might have been the

lint n&cke of Mr. Khodes's valiant spirit.

•I^^p:i7 this perverted view is not unlversa.'.n^c- eraUtude of a man has left no cause torv-eepins ia th« Colonies (if the word must be

utetlj Kbcr* the reEpeci, almost one might ejv

th<j r*v«;rcnce, or the testamentary thoughts oi

Zlr. Rhodes s'tiU pre\-alls; arid by some odd prin-

ciple cf contradiction, or perhaps compensation.

liio tutbusias-m U much greater In Canada thanar.vTsrbei-..: else. Certainly Canada was the coun-try about which Mr. Rhodes had least knowledge.

The r.i:: would irovitt it. apart from any cor-

rotoraaia of personal knowledge. iiIs a thou-

eind piues that he did not foresee the astonish-ing development of the Dominion: the cultivation,:t>.<- Northwest, the rroat harvests expandingJ-etr by year 'I.- tissue of railways stretchitis*ut T.-ltt. unparalleled rapidity across the conti-ier.t where now the continuous lines of tractsr* iasui'iciiist i*> carry away one year's aarvosi

l--Jc"«~«l:~ -...vl \u25a0 Jr.. The building or a second-to* Ire'™ ~vcu to «ca would have drawn from h.rn«arp cf those ?r*»at rough .hewn Idcu, o. mawfai-j. f y-.-sr«.-i com;>arisoa with M.cha.l ar.uo.};•zsw iff© not «*ea<lily. cot -a hole, bill •\u25a0: II

*«*In prophetic jr:inujse« through «. magnifyin,Slafc- But th<- class w*s never turned on anada.lu^otStJ. I fich^ ih* coal, the asbestos the

foi'2. and. more polden than all the golden roro^Fine nev«r touched his imasinaUon: a"'l,;",?_?• 'i,

SaS^Ja^^?d^^^^in^•laaUdur ia IsterjiretAtioa v.h:ch Air- Kbofie* nun-

NEW- YORK DAILY TRTBFXE. BtJXDAT. -TUNE 14. 1903

/?r«/ Estate.\u25a0ATOI VISiIS PIERS.CHAS. ii KAFTAN RORT. T MrT.'STT.

Charles H. Easton &Cc.ri?e-a/ Estate Agents &Brokers.

estates' managed.

16 West 42d St t.l««>-«_

Country Property for Sale. J

\T~E CAN PRESENT th« most <>!>lr>iMe r«rrtal sad *«,.»

VV property in the "City of Homes." \u25a0—•\u25a0>»< \u25a0!• •«-vie* COOLEY & WEST ilrv Mo-ant Vernon. N. V.

A IT SPECIAIirt to manascmenl a* property: •mmmAL assured gaud results: references guaranteeing •»?»%-

r>. C. REID. UK Nassau st. :.- .\u25a0 >

II^TATB.corporation orapppi, r>2

wishing <J«!rjW»J office at reduced rate*, appply 52 Wllllam-st.. lOtn

flour. __^_____

City Property for Sale.

1O ACRESHigh ground, convenient locality, with Jars*

STONB IWC-A.3NTSIOI>3"In good order, suitable for

Institution. School or Home.Must be sold at one* to

CLOSE IE_S-F__.r_ t:£3.For full particulars apply

J. O. ID-A/VISS c*3 CO.,MOTH AND IB avt;

ROGKAWAYPARK.

Ono Mile of Benrh on the Atlantic «nd <*»«••

Half Mile on Jaraai«-a Bar- . _ft«~CTESS: I*I •~i»r t<» Roeicawty J**r* *

*iC*«SIm|rl •*pr»s» »rain»: -an •,?<<. also. Briir*or ~*r 13. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0*

loV:^1 V, boat™

BUILDING LOIS AND SITESNEW FINE COTTAGES FOR SALE.

TTTLE C.rAJ!AN-TEEt> F.T TTT I~

'AST« **\u25a0TTICST CO.. NEW TOKK.

llichii Improved Restricted Froperty.

LOTS $400 UPWARDSale; cr. Easy Terms, ifl*Disc, fir Wfeoia Cash.

FOR :rAF ANI> PASTICVLAES ADDRE33

THE - ROGUWAY PARK IMP. CO., LTD.,192 Broadway' and IIJohn St., Corbin

i;ui!dinA. Third Floor.w h»-> *-l<«Jt!n:r the P»rk npplr \u25a0« our \u25a0.•••

r«i.it- OJH*>«-. n'-at £>*\u25a0\u25a0>©?.C7T>. - ani bridges -nd electric roa<t «-il! toon crisg

R-M?lui»av park -s-ithir. 4.'. n»nu*«s from Harlem. >*\u25a0>\u25a0 »•tn*- time to buy »r P •-<»«•-*

•• Park.BARGAIN.Two five stor" apart— house* hi M.»th-»t.. near new

underground static n; win tec—a «\u25a0 in value: any one look-ing lor an Investment from which they caniderive a good

Income cannot do better. D. C. KEID. Ho Nassau -m.

FOP SALE.BARftAIX I> .-»IO>TCU^in. J. .

lleu»e \u25a0\u25a0•,\u25a0 11 room* »n ; r--«r?i all improvement: tfnall•table J.--1 pl-nty of SB«sh corner property, on trolley

lint ore iei> fi-^TTirrir». Apply

F. BIRDS Ml SMITH,.-\u25a04-. r^^AT'^AT

How About Your Chicago Beal Estate?reliable trpotfj im4« iftnr.:r*f>ilInvestigation. A_-

pmissl?. thar*** rratonaNe. fiCIROE 2. NXWOOMB.771 W. Mn'i'»' Chicago, m.

T9