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I I I) Miiiiir IL ON PEG POST: BOTH W LOCKED IN CELLS Abbruzese and Fleming Arouse Neighborhood With Fistcuffs in the Bronx. EACH ACCUSES OTHER. Quarrel Started When Relief Failed to Arrive on Time, Says Fleming. Wearing r..elr uniforms, but with- out their ;!ileld. Pollcsmen lioml-1 Blck Ablvrurrese M4 MIi hoel II. j r mui I" B wem idM-n ... in .Vila in i nv Mth(rt nvenue station to-day and arraigned in the YVost farms Court far having fought with mm Mlier at On Huntrod and KlghMstb street alid Clinton avenue, the Hror.s, at 2 o'clock this morning. Abbruixese's eyes were lilaeksned, hit llpa swollen and lib) face covered with bruise. . Fleming did not have a scratch. Each of the men pre ferrad a counter charge of felonious aaaault ayainat the other. There were no witnesses to the en counter, but both policemen agreed It waa cauaed by Abbruzzese being late In relieving Fleming from "peg post" duty at i in.- Hundred and Eightieth treat and Clinton avenue. According to the atory told by Fleming, who Is twenty-three years old and has been with the department one year, he re buked Abbruzzeae when he appears lata. J j The other policeman, who Is thirty and baa been witfl the department five years, then told him "peg post" men often exchanged courtesies In being late. Fleming said he didn't believe In that sort of buslncaa and then, he save, Abbruzzeae struck him on the shoulder with his club and ran. The younger officer overtook him and began using hla flats. In the en saunter the men made so much noise that they aroused persons living In the neighborhood, and some one tele phoned to the It.ithgate avenue sta tion that a murder waa being com mitted. Just after that message was re calved Fleming overpowered his ad versary, led him to a patrol box and telephoned to the station house that he had a prisoner whom he wanted to charge with aaaault. The patrol wagon waa sent to the box and at the station house the two policemen were taken before Oupt. McDermott. The situation which was presented pussier! oven the veteran captain, who telephoned to Inspector I.ahey Hs, In turn, sent word to Third Deputy Commissioner Qodley, who ordered that the belligerents be tripped of their clubs, pistols and shields anJ locked, up. Both Flemmlng and Abbruzzeae re cently ware transferred to the Hatb- gate avenue precinct from the East One . Huii'lred and Twenty-sixth street sUUon. , E SLEEPS WITH HIS MONEY. That's Why Kate Robbers Uot Voth- lilS Kross Ike turllman. Cracksmen had the surprise of their lives to-day when they got Into a safe la Ike Rpellman's saloon at No. 197 Kaat Third street, after sawing away the Iron bars of a window. The safe con tained half a dozen bottles of extracts used for making whiskey. Pprllman, who was r.iboed three years ago, had all of his money upstairs under his "Why didn't I keep It In the safe?" ha res sated. In response to an Inquiry by detectives. "Well, experience has taught me it's always safe to sleep with your money on the east side when you have any." .SaSrSAaSrSAseSySaSa In In Editorial Section i The Young Mayor of the Greatest American City ; What He Thinks of the Office and Its Opportunities ; Responsibility and Dan ger : Still Favors Free Speech. New York's Up-Town School of Applied Anarchy ; No Religion ; No Patriotism ; No Socialism ; Only Facts ; Instilling in the Young the Spirit of Unrest and Revolt, SEPARATE JOKE BOOK OF WIT AND HUMOR. "Dark Hollow" (Centtooed), hjr Anna Katharine Green, STOPPEO FIRE DRILL; 60ES TO REFORMATORY Magistrate Declares Hoodlums' Ac tions linda tigered School Children, William Ford, a tough oung man of the lltonx, who is known to the police of the Alexander yrnur sta tion as a "i op fighter," will spend at least the next eight months In the lleformatory bemuse he allowed his enthusiasm for creating mischief to lead him o interfere yesterday with the fire drill of the pupils of Pubtk Hchool No. . Hrown place and One Hundred and Thlet -sixth street. One of his companions Is being Snughl by datatttVSa, He i Oiiat.iv Wcnkelman of No. Ml East One Hun died and Tlilrty-elKhlh street. He was arrested yesterday and Jumped the 1500 ball. Ford ltVSf with his patents at No. US Rh1 One Hundred and Thirty, ninth Htieel. He and Weukleman were arrested In fiont of the public school at 4 o'clo. k esterda nftor noon after fighting Policeman Fer guson of the Alexander avenue sta tion. Ferguson heard the children screaming and came up In time to see Ford ami his gang attacking El liot Noska. u teurher In charge of the playground, where their were 100 ter rified children. Noska suid the gang had congre gated outside the fence, shouting ribald remarks at the children. He warned them away and they attacked him. Magistrate Herbert had sen tenced Ford to five davs in the Wnrk. house when John T. Morgsn, another leax-ner, loia now rorrt and the name gang Interfered with the fire drill. i ne children are gu ded bv blast on a whistle, and the gang provided themselves with whistles yesterday and sounded false blasts, which mis led me youngsters. Magistrate Herbert, declaring this was a serious matter, since only their own expertness might some time save the lives of the children, sent Ford away for at least eight months und perhaps thirteen. GIRL'S HAIR GUT OFF; SHE ACCUSES A NE6R0. Child, Thirteen, Says Braid Was Snipped From Head on Way From School. Detectives in Jamaica, I. I., are searching to-day for a negro and In vestigating at the same time the story of thirteen-year-old Jennie lioccadoro or No. 13 Smith street, a pretty girl, large for her age, who ac cuses the negro of having cut off her hair which hung In a thick braid to her waist. The child reached her home from school at the lunch hour yesterday with her long braid held In her hand and blood running from a wound on Uie buck of her head. She told her parents that at South street and licnton avenue., on her way home, she had passed the negro and presently realized that he waa following her. She turned and hej ran up the steps of a house as though anxious to avoid her. Hho noticed, she says, that be held a razor In his hand. She continued on her way, but turned again and saw the negro com ing toward her on tip-toe. Then she ran. She felt blood trickling down her shoulders and claped her hand to the back of her head, bringing away the braid, which, although cut on, had ben held In place by her heavy woollen cup. I'ntll then she had not known that she hud beon cut. Her purentMllevo that the negro snipped the braid and failed to get 11 because of the hat. GIRL GOES INSANE AT MASS. Minuts Prayers sad Klaihia Meston Who Tries In Unlet Her. 8opble Bardy, nineteen years old, of No. 66 North Sixth street, Brooklyn. went Insane this morning during an ear- ly mass In the Church of Our I.a J or j Consolation, Metropolitan avenue, near Berry street. The girl had long been a devout i a t none Al the mass to-day she began to shout her prayers aloud. When the sexton tried to remove her she fought him, and when a policeman was called In she fought him also. She waa finally re. moved In s strattjacket to the Kings County Hospital. the Big Sunday rjsSsVs JILTED GIRL KILLS MAN WITH PISTOL THAT HEGAVE HER "If I Don't Marry You, Shoo' Me With This," He Said. And She Did. Three days before : he date set for her marriage to Joseph Anlllno, tw n-ly-four years old. Henrietta Halpern, twenty-seven years of age. ahot the man through the heart at 11.06 o'clock ! thla morning In a little candy store which she owns st No. 264 Elleiy street, Williamsburg. "He had Jilted me." the yoiinx woman quietly said to policemen who found her standlnc over the body of Anlllno. "When he made love to mo snd asked me to become his wife he gave me this pistol and told me to kill him If he broke his promise. "Well, 1 did It. Now the law ca.i kill me If It wants to. 1 shot him when he wrote me a letter saying be could not marry me because 1 was a Jewess and he a christian and the his people objected." She showed no emotion when taken to the Vernon avenue police station and put In a cell. This morning she was arraigned In the Oates Avenue Police Court. The candy store owned by Miss Ilali i ii is on the first floor of a tene ment bouse. On the second floor Anl llno lived with his parents. He was a moving picture operator employed in the New Star Theatre, One Hundred and Ulxth atreet, near Fifth avenue, Manhattan. A stockily built, good looking chap, with fair hair, he was a general favorite among the young women In the neighborhood where he lived. It waa on Dec. 2S last that Miss Halpern opened her little candy store. Anlllno struck up an acquaintance with her. The young woman aays that early In January he asked her to marry him. She demurred because of the dif ference in their religious beliefs and then, she says, her suitor handed her a pistol and told her that If he did not become her husband In splta of all religion she could kill him. She tested the weapon, found that It was useless and returned It to Anlllno, who, she says, gave her another pistol. "This will not fall to work," she says he told her. In her living room at the rear of the store she tested that pistol, too. and found It effective. Notwith standing her precaution, she says she did not suspect that Anlllno would fall to keep Ms promise. In the evenings she worked at her troua aeau. According to the story she told the police, every detail for their wedding had been mapped out. The marriage was to bo a civil one, and they were to have a little wedding Journey over to Jersey. Then she waa to continue running the randy store and Anlllno was to attend to his moving Icture business. All of those, sir castles fell flat, she says, when yesterday she recolved a letter from Anlllno telling her the wedding could not take place. Hrlefly, he explained that his parents I objected because of h T race i.nd that he would have to Iw.w to their wishes. With the note In her hand, she waited In the store last evening, for Anlllno to return to his home When lie appealed, shortly after midnight, she called him Into the store und de manded an explanation. She says he replied that the letter explained Itself. Then she drew the pistol and re minded him of what he had told her. Anlllno grabbed at It, she says, but : she avoided him and fired four shore. One bullet crashed through a window, , another through a glass pane in tho ! front door, another Went wild and 'ho last struck Anlllno in the in east and he fell dead at her feet. Almost before the last shot rang out Policemen Drlnkwnter, O'Malley and I Srhaeffer and Detective James Owens ' rushed Into the store. The uirl hand 1 eel the weapon to them and told her story. At the pi. lice station she sal I she came to this country from Aus tria eighteen years ugo, that le ' parents were dead and that she has I a brother living at No. 171 Delancey : street. Workman Killed In Tunnel. Tony I'anetlzla, a laborer employed I in the new subway, was Instantly killed thla morning In the tunnel underneath ! Lexington avenue at One Hundred and ' Twenty-second street, when a falling rock fell on him. His body wss re moved to his home st No. 117 IBnst One I Hundred nnd Fourteenth street. TBI IVElfllfCr WORLD, SATURDAY, APRIL GIRL WHO KILLED MAN WITH REVOLVER HE HAD GIVEN HER. HENRIETTA HAO-PERN BOSS MURPHY'S NEPHEW SUES FOR BACK SALARY Comptroller Refused to Pay Alter Justice Gerard Resigned From Court. "I.lttlo" Johnny Murphy, nephew of Charles F. Murphy, the Tammany chleftuin. to-day applied to Supreme Court Justice Davis for a writ of man damus to compel tho Comptroller to pay him his back salary for three months as secretary to Justice Weeks Murphy was selected by former Jus tice Jaines W. (Scrnrd as his secretary, and when dotard became Ambassador to Germany Murphy continued la hold his position us a secretary, al though Geralds successor, Justice Weeks, was not appointed until Feb. 2 of this yaar. The Comptroller, in re fusing to pay Murphy s salary, took tha position that Murphy's Job lasted as long u-s Uarard was Justice and no longsr, WUefl Justice Oerard resigned In the summer of 1913 "Utile" Johnny's face did not disappear from the courthouse, but he continued lo re port for duty every week duy, al though he had no Justice for whom he COUld work. fioWSVsr, the Comp troller continued to pay his salary until .lnnuay of this year, since when his warrant has ban held up. Justice Weeks reappointed Murphy iih his secretary In Februury, but the Comp troller refused to pay Murphy even for his work for Justice Weeks. Murphy's salary Is xed ut MtsOO a yaar, The writ Of mandamus l re turnable on Monduy. ut Which time the Corporation Counsel will resist tho application. ROWDY SENT TO PRISON. Hall or uollier of Mssz Who Abused Teachers l-'orff lletl. William Ford, of No. IU6 Fast One Hundred and Blghty-nlnth street, was sent to the reformatory when he wu arraigned to-day before Magistrate UsT be;l In the Morrlslanla Court on two charges of disorderly ..induct growing I out or annoyance ny mm ana a i:anK or hoodlum put uK)n the teachers of PUS- lie School No 4 3, BfOWn place and One Hundred and Thirty-sixth street, Kord and the Kang broke up a fire I drill at the school yesterday, blew a whistle that sent the children buck to I the school before the teaohers gave the signal, and then directed verbal abuse , at the teachers Ford was arrested with Ouatav 1 Winckelnian, of No. U22 Fast One Hun dred and Thlrty-nfth street, but Wlnck i elm, in failed 10 appear In court, and his In. ml was declared forfeited Navy to Carry Helnrulnar Consuls. WASHINGTON, April 26. -Secretary Daniels, at the request of Secretary Bryan, to-day ordered Hoar Admiral Howard, commanding the American naval forces on the Pacific coast, to give either asylum or passage on his vessel to any American Consul dsslrlnv I to leave Mexico by way of the west coast. i. is.- orovrs nsve nnen given Hear Admiral Badger concerning Con suls who msy leave through Mexican Oulf ports IN THE I Hoi nxanxnWA nB ft im&tm : I I Tragic Pilgrimage of a Beautiful Woman Who Visits the Grave of the American Husband Who Died for Love of Her. Plan that ft.SO a We for Pood Makes Body and Brain Active .Successfully Tried Out at Carnegie Institute of Technology. "Coxey und His Army" Now on a Long daunt 10 Washington to "Save the United States." American Glrl'i Convent Danee That Shocked, Then Inspired, Russians, "A Religious Song Without Wordi," How te See In One Hour the J, Pierpont Morgan Art Treasure, Valued ut 150,000,000, D A. R. TOLD WHY MORGAN STILL HAS WASHINGTON WILL His Two Plans tor Delivery of Disputed Document to Vir ginia Were Rejected. WASHINGTON. April i Corre spondence between Gov. Htuart of ; Virginia and J. P. Morgan concern -j ing the will of Martha Washington. ; which la In Mr. Morgan's possession. I waa read to the Daughters of the , American Revolution to-day by Mrs William Cummingn Storey Tha letters show that tha matter waa opened by Governor Stuart through W la McC'orklr, president of the New York Southern Society, In March last. In reply. Mr. Morgan said his only desire waa that the doc -umeni. should be placed where It could be best preserved snd of most use to the poo pie of the United States. Not considering the court house building of Fairfax County, Virginia, to which Governor Stuart desired the document returned, and Where the will of George Washing ton now Is, as fireproof, or accessible to any large number of people, Mr. Morgan made two propositions. One was that the State of Virginia or Fairfax County should place the original will of George Washington on exhibition at Mount Vernon for an In definite period and that If this were done he would present the will of Martha Washington to ths Mount Verno Association for permanent ex hibition there. The other was ths.t should the Virginia authorities not be willing to do this, the will of 'ieorgn Washington should be presented to the Library of Congress nnd that he would In turn present the will of Martha Washington to tha nation for the same disposition. Neither of these proposals met with the aproval of Gov. Stuart, who stated the people of Virginia held that Mar tha Washington's will was a mrt if the legitimate records of Fairfax Coun ty. Gov. Stuart then renewed his re miest that some agreement -wild be arrived nt, and there apparently tha matter rests so far as disclosed by cor rcsiHindence given out by Mrs Storey. Mrs. Storey alao read the last letter of Mr Morgan to Gov. Stuart, dated April 17, which was as follows: "I am In receipt of your letter Of April snd regret to hsarn from M that neither of my suggestions meets with your approval. The dispositions which I proposed, reached In deniz ation, still Impress me as the lHst that could be made of those historic documents, and their declination leaves me at loss for additional sug gestion. In uddltlon to this she read a state ment given out by J. P, Morgan In New York explaining how the will of Martha Washington csme Into the possession of his fathar. At the same UnM he mails public his reply to Gov. Stuart's letter of April M. The history of the acquisition of the will follows: "The will of Martha Washington was taken from Fairfax Court House In 11162 by a colonel of the I'nlon army who rescued It from destruction by his men. This officer retained It 'In his possession for thirty ytjan, and suiirii i" i"." f- - It to his daughter, who. thirteen years lato. In r.HIE., sold It to the late J, V. Mitrffan. MRS. SIEQEL SUES AGAIN Demands Properly She Says Her Husband Is II. .1.11. is Marie Vaughn Slegel, wife of Henry Slegel. to-day filed a third replevin suit against her husband In ths Supreme Court In an attempt to get possession of 127.000 worth of persons I property now In the country home of the Megele at Driftwood and In their dty home at No. 24 East Eighty-second street. Among the valuable articles sued for Is a glided carved bedroom set ore's the property of Queen Isabella of Spain ; a punch bowl And pitcher presented to Edwin Booth py admiring friends: a green marble candlestick presented to Mrs. Slegel by Princess de Cray and the flag that flew over Morro fastis In Hav ana when ths Maine was sunk. World To-Morrow! MAGAZINE Weird Vision of a Los Angeles Woman Who le lleves She Visited the Spirit World and Returned, Remarkable Troupe of Cats That Act In Masque rade to the Hxtent that Spectators "Stand Up and Take Notice." The l .VS-Carat Diamond lliat Brought Woe to All Concerned Since Once Pried from the Mouth ol a Dying Negro, "How Nor to Dance." An Interesting and In structive Article by Anna Pavlowa. "Almost Confessfions,'1 by Marguerite Clark, the Little Actress Who Has Studied "Stage John nies" In a Thousand Different Poses. IB, Itl. EMMY OESTINN SINGS HER FAREWELL OR SHIP Passengers Get a Treat Just Before the Upland Sails for Rorope. Bmmy Destlnn. tba MetropolMaa Opera soprano, sailed am tha Laplaosl of the Rod Star iiaa to-day. Before the ship sailed tha singer treated rha passengers aboard and their friends on the pier to a few high notes Tha Uaptend possesses a brass band that Plays farewell music Bmmy waa passing along tha promenade deck and She waa recognised by the band leader. Suddenly the band struck op the Miserere from "II Trovatora " The singer stopped and eralled and than burst forth Into the beaatlful aria. Every one aboard the eMp rushed toward the singer snd stood silent The hand did Its utmost It showed Its appreciation by trying to outdistance ICmmy'a notes. The umpah horn waa a trifle off Its feed, but Kmmv sang on Then she stopped suddenly, and with a terrtflu blare the band erased and the Impmcrptu concert was over. A number of singers were down o see Km in v Destlnn off. The delega tlon wei lead by Dingh Gllly. NEW QUEENS COMMISSIONER. trter Parks. John K Weler. who has been a re porter at City Hall for years, wss named to-day by Mayor Mltehel to suc ceed Dr. Wslter O Klllott as Park Con rplsaloner of Queens. Ths post pays a salary nf li.Ono. Mayisr Mltehel announced at the sane time the appointment of George H. Pol well to succeed Magistrate John P. Hy lan of Brooklyn, who was recently ap pointed by OeV. Olynn a County Judge Mr. Weler la s Prbgrestlve and Mr. Polwell an Independent Democrat The latter was piitste secretary to Justice Jenlcs for seven venm. nrlval rr...,. to St. Clslr McKelwsy. owner of the Brooklyn Kagle. for years, and for five yenrs an Assisinut corporation Counsel Itecently he has been an Assistant Dis trict-Attorney In Brooklyn His new inisi carnen a s, ,111111 nslary ROBBER HAD ONE ARM. Postmistress laeanlgee Man a. Heaths Wake trreat. After Miss Husan Sleight, postmistress of Maywood, N. J.. had been held up and robbed of l.r, In stamps and tVS cash on March Hi nt last year, she told the police thai the robber had white hair and only one arm. The description fitted Thomas Conway, who, though only thirty-one years old. haa white hair and who. the police say. had his tsft arm blown olf when he was operating on a ssre. Brooklyn detectives located him at No fill! Atlantic avenue. They sent for Miss Stelght. She watched Conway enter his home and waa positive In her identification Detectives Rroanan and Sullivan went to hla flat and arrested htm as he came out to get some rolls for breakfast WON'T TELL WHO SHOT HIM. Man Mysteriously Wonndeil fln a He'll lief Heiruir. A men who ssid he wss Hugh Hugh bsnks. thirty-two years old. a bartender living at No 11 Concord street. Brook lyn, entered the Brooklyn hospital, early today. and said he had been In jured. Surgeon Brown, who ezamlned him, found a bullet wound In hi chest, but wss unable to locate the bullet. The aurgeon then sonl word to the police of 1 lie Claason avenue station and Detective Dunlin questioned the patient, who refused to say how ths wound was Inflicted. I "I'll get my own revenge; I'm satls- I - U . ...1.1 .U.....I, I lull. went to No. 12 Concord atreet and fonnd It waa an old bank building, un tenanted. FATHER CALLS TO GIRL floae for Pitch Tlane. TIIHe Srhnenkln, sixteen years old, has been missing fom her home at No. 1440 nates avenue. Brooklyn, sines April I j Her dtsappearanee followed a disagree- . ment with her mother aad ether mem bers of her family over htr determina tion to attend a dance after finishing 1 her work In a factory. ' Thla Is the fifth time ths girl has left home. On the first four occasion she returned- of her own accord after three nr four days Usr father has askad newspapers to say thst th girl's mother 1 Is very III, and that she will he wel comed If she will return horns. WALL STREET Oponin These was a considerable votanxe of aattvtty, and prices were tw minute Naw at sTH, up 1. and Canadian Faetfle at 1M waa 1H points Open fag gafees ware not maintained, and prtoaa eoon fell bach to about FrMafa closing level, aad at the end of tha Are half hour traders were I a gam gutta active am tha selling side CoppOT stocks were under pressure, and Mexican OH Issues sold off to a Market Closing There was a con tinuance of selling pressure In second hour and In complete absence of ag bt seive support prtoaa aaoved off fur ther, bat sotna of the large shorts wsre buyers of stock on a considerable was a large amount of foroad liquidation as commission houses In sisted oa liberal margins to carry stooh ever Sunday. Thla factor con centrating an unusual amount of liquidation within the limits of a two hours session afforded opportunity to the bargain hunter, but of course tboae who were accumulating lines showed no Inclination to bid prices up. They took stock only as 11 wss offered I 'tea waa relatively the weakest of me toppers, selling down to M com psred with M l-l st close on Friday; weakness seemed to ha a consequence of that Issue's popularity with .m.n speculators a few weeks ago; a weak uuo wcouni was rormed In Utah at that time and la now Isslnsr ,i -.,! out. Covering of ahorta Imparted some what better tendency to mineral ii.i at the cloee and technical position seemed to be Improved. Prices rallied i point from the low. Total sales, 147,40: shares. The CVasSaar ttaaeatlwae. a I l.-ks , - .1. ... " ts last. Cnanss mlmns1 Dapper Vn u. ... lawawai, "O i. lis.: Sugar. . auu (Si far A Pcia . u . ISS i , 46 tnM-r.-an n an; i , nn.i 1 n x4 as linen fx ..... rsi mi Its MM 1., ,'u 4 4m H A a Ansrvan iaa r M AusrO'-sa Isx-sise-ir l. Asi saner? . a Hef. nau s. j 37, m (narn.n KHgir is. . Anviksa Siafu ts toil'. Am T T Oe IHi. na . n I. Mlfllaf. fl.'S A , T H T ? ttUrele Lies. IIS Italnranr t nhln. ST a. JJsH, , nT so1. HMM.hatn RM, . .TH', fMhMksa steri 1. s ran kirn It. TrinsU Nt', Mrs.lilrn It, lias. . 134 ' allforma I'.-tr.li in. II. v, I'll. I'etnileutt .J ng ' .(:. I Iswt-hrr . . . .t4S Canadian t'a.-ifr use- ' 1 "Sa :'... a 1 Si ... All, "a.a. II Waal l CM, p, wan V, c . m. A at. p. ua nine ivs.:sr .'."' P'iL le.u . I'.sunl Oas IMsi Sar. cin . grle Kne la uf f, m wVuiwuttj.. . IkxlMrb , , in. h uf Ivnersl Lie ti-T' . . , 'Mli.tal Mot. ..a lis, liar.. M.itnra Cn pt 'irsst N r. uf . . . , f l.as-iCBiai f.ryfc. ilrwt Sisr. Ors Intar-llartaafsr. . . . I n, ra:l.n c.smslr Inter. Mat , liner. Met. pf Illinois 1 stifral Inlrr 1'ftis.r, S? Kan I Mt HoiiUwan as 14 1 all-. 1. .111a A Sisal... Ha Ufg Mi. In C.sassuil TV Man Marina (ST. . . . tin. raMtua. . . Muum i.r V.. K. AT. i.f ... M. I'aolfir Mont I 'us st in . . .II,mI H,--,,. Is II It H of M 'M 4. Ms. CuaiaailUtataii . NssMi a Waat . Surth Amsrtraa .... .N. Y. iVnirsl. . . . . T. a N. H Valh. I'ararV (Mt. a Wast I'aesfle Mall 1 Pae. r a t I'annarWanla 1'xnss's .las 1'i.asssl Hlsal PuUaaan I'al. Car.. PIKs Coal Co ; Pitta c.sU ".. ff. . ; IU? Ooa. Cat psr. . . 1 H. fUsst Hrstna . . ide-k Island. , , K-.l lalaml pf fral.,ar.l A I. fWatsxtiol A. kff.i K. HaTlsai n S4 44Vf. - I? nsnwar r t. ci.Doar Tklrd yulan tnlon P. w nf. . . at. A l ie Ttiihbar . . . f.anlssr pf Bp si ekaari nf . l ush Canaan Mr -Tat. 'tssm. . Vl.s. Cat Oap. pf. W'aTI, faro tap . . . W'atassh U aim ah pf; Wast F AM ... Waat Pa. Taf . In Metropolitan It Was Certainly Great "Down in the Sub way," Sung by Guard No. 0711 at the Interborough's Minstrel Show. 1.400 Schoolboys ,nd Every One an Actor, That's What They Have at Public School No. 70. Mother Swart.'s Dining Room, First Aid to Ionely New Yorkers, SEPARATE 24-PAGE MAGAZINE, Illustrated in Colors. Another Humorous "Bill" Story VlaMa af leading stocks en preeem sailing prices. nets Tassj Amalgamated Copper S74) 7 American Can, pf lea 3 1 American car Found., pf 4 American Smelters..' 7 American Smelters, pf 10 Canadian I Mr I Mr I Consolidated Gas T Great Northern, pf 7 II M 4 10 Lehigh Valley 1m a New York Central .74 7 Northern Pacific a.S4 Pennsylvania g.M I Heading 5.00 II Southern Pacific 1 1 10 tfnlon I'm if i.- s ag S IT. H. Steel 1 la 7 IT. H. iiteel, pf -,3 ITEMS FOR INVESTORS. Corn Products Hennery CoiniNxny report for quarter ended March II. profits, l,071,0R9; Interest, deprecia tion, lepulra, Ac. fn '..:: preferred dividends, S7ft.0no. Ilslnnce. I.ISo.OtH. Colorado and Southern for third week nf April show a decrease of ISS, 190 From July 1 decrease amounts to $1.i70.;n7 compared with year age. Texas and Pacific earnings July 1 sre HJ.hm above year ago Canadian Purine's third wsek of April gross is t&M.OOO below period last yaar. From July 1 crease totals !4,sfM'l To date twenty-nine railroads atlng In United States only have re ported weekly gross earnings rar sea ond week of April as tM.sOt, P 12-100 per cent below year ago fa same period. Atr'nlnson. Topeka and Santa March grass declined 1177.414. Increased Ill4.0t4. Nine months Hat declined ti.xmrtl. and the net reased t:,4a,511 compared with ago Chesaceake and Ohio Third in April earnings Increaaed tllljeg. July 1 Increase totals li.ns.ese. Twenty rallroade cVoee.1 at a 99 SI. decline 24-100, and twelve It trials average 74.(7, decline M-1M NIW YORK COTTON MAR KIT. aamsftajB B is,-: . H Us m u Cotton opened up a few point an baying by shorts, but t market waa narrow and professions!. CI used Steady t points' decline to I advanaa. CHICAGO WHIAT AND MARKET. airr-AT CONN rTtoay's CI. sst Nat pes. flarh. WH ST 1. ST les clew r i.ni tt3'4 Mar M. t 5l S7'i JIIIT ST Mass ST I. TH J4 STl -f la ST sT4 OOatM, s4 as S4 V i' X 4T. ST an Mar Jnlr Sept. MS N'l C. M4J S4 as s Wheat was steady lush market abroad waa firmer on light offerings. Horns short covering Closed H to x higher. Hank Reeewe. ao.araS.enn. The statement of the actual rnndltjen of Clearing House banks and trust com panies for the week show that tMey held tM.sM.4M reserve In excess of hnsa) requirements. This Is an Increaae of a. (74.000 from last Jrek Baby carriage burneo. Hnro Warn. Allewed te Had a "Spite, ' Arrested. rrrsrms entering the apartment bulM- Ing at No. 71 Eaat On Hundred Fifth street to-day discovered carriage afire In the hall. The lire w extinguished and the police notified. Th nerambulator. It wa learned. I longed to Nalnan nanny, wno in ik. Kulldlaiai l-ater Policeman iiarvey of the Best One Hundred Fourth trtreet station arrested Shrie. a negre, 01 .-so. a n u.indassd and Thirty-fourth charging her with settles the are. nnllest MV th VOniUI hfftd a STV VI rsl or fancied, .gainst a realdeatef the building in which the Kennya Mva. The Empty Vessel Makes the Greatest Sound Tea will notice that we are not say Ins much but w can grave te yea 5 that far Skk Hesdarha, DUbagg and H CajutiMtNM . Veu will Mad a perfect remedy In I RG PIUS GET A BOX TO-NIGHT 1 . 10c AND 25c THE BOX Section: by Paul West. sad ist Oh street. Tha rfin