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LAST OF HIS LINE End of the Historic Chartley Herd of Wild Cattle. ((-vpvrtr^ l il»in. tay th- Pr*ntwocwi Company.) Everybody who is interested in the pres ervation* of oldtlme features of . English life will experience a certain feeling of sad rP^i- on learning of the death of the only remaining bull of the famous Chartley. herd of wild cattle, and the head of the grand l.niving old beast, the last of an historic line, is row being prepared for preserva tion in the Museum of Natural History, fckwrih Ken^ingrton. The bull belonged to the Duke of Bedford, but the latter, al though he had in IM3 transferred the herd to Wobum Abbey, was moved by a sense of the fitness of things to send back the s\:mß! some months ago to Chartley. to die 1:. the park here it had been calved and nh^re it* ancestors had roamed for so many centuries. Of tin origin of the celebrated Cliartlcy bcrd of wild cattle, which were always of cream color, with black ear? and muzzles, rothins: definite is known, except that they wore driven into (^hartley Park from the r.pishboring forest of Needwood during the rripn of Henry ITT. and contemporary rec ords dealing with th*» sojourn of Mary <jtif>en of Scots i.t Chartley Hall, which Is In Staffordshire, rcf^r to the wild cattje in tli*> park of Chartley as betas; of very Fncien* descent. This herd off cattle may be raid to have j. r .. identified for many hundreds of years •« ith the fortunes of the house of Shirley. ivbo are on record as having been t-^tab !i«=h«»d at Nether Ettington in the reign o< King Edward the Confessor, and the Chris tian ■■■m Sewrllus, betas by the Shirley? *t the court of that monarch, is still borne to-day by the Earl of Ferrer?. Che head of the house. For there has been a legend to the effect that whenever the hue of the herd was sullied by the Introduction of black or colored kine, or whenever any of th« cows of the herd gave birth to calves t! at were, black or colored, misfortune Txould -•-take the Shirley family. The first instance of the kind Is record er! to have taken place in 1322, when the ■birth of I black calf was followed by the ruin of the owner of Chartley Hall of the ray. The. consignment of the fourth Earl ;>rrers to the gallows, in May. 1760. for the cold blooded murder of his steward, and his execution at Tyburn by means of « silken rope, was likewise, according to the anr.als of the family, immediately preceded by the Wrth of 8 black calf in the herd hi Chartley. The present earl, finding that, owing to interbreeding, the herd was ■• «. bad way, scoffed at family tradition, *>nd with the object of strengthening the Treed placed a b!a<-k bull among the herd «nd deliberately bred black calves from the cream colored cattle. The peasantry of the district, some of whose families had Isept their holdincs for hundreds of years, • hook their heads ominously, predicting fresh disasters for the master of Chart ivy HalL Their prognostications were ful fil'pd. lie was overtaken by financial •troubles, which forced him to sell both his ancestral home and the famous" herd <f cattle, which fas purchased by th«» I»uke of Bedford «nd transferred to hi? Wrburn "Abbey estate. Th<9 present "Lord Ferrers Is a childless • <oower. and the next h«*ir is Walte.r Shir ley. a son of the late Bishop of Sodor and Man. who is obliged to go bßck to th*» first earl, from whose- fourth son, Law rence. h° ■- descended, in order to »stab- Ms his relationship. Walter Sh«rl»y Is *> v«ry rich man. thsnks to lii« wife, who Is a- daughter snd heiress of the late. Rob- Vert *'.-,..-. He can boa=t of the same, de wart at the first President of the United State«. for the first Earl Ferrers married niislwrlli Washington, onir «-hild and ■Heiress of Lawrence Washington. La tiirci'si elder brother. Robert Washington. ■^as lord of the manor of Sulgrave, from " .horn George Washington, the first Presl «"*nt of the fnited States, is lineally and In the mele line descended. It is likewise worthy of .note that a con n«ction of the fourth Earl Ferrers, who ■^■es raged for murder, and a namesake ,* the future Earl Fertwrs. namely Wal ter Shirley, was Colonial Governor of ■Massachusetts sad commander in chief of the British forces in America at the tims of the beginning of those troubles between t --c American colonies and the mother *-oimtry which culminated in the Revo lutionary War and in the Declaration of independence. The Ferrers peerage came intO the Shirley +ornii-.- through the marriage of Sir Henry Shirley; of Chartley Park, to Lady Dorothy ry>v«reux. younger daughter of Queen Elizabeth's favorite. Robert Dwuiux. Ear! ct EksKi who was likewise Lord Ferrers. On Un nt.(t'i of Lord Essex his barony of Terrer? fell into abeyanc-?, whence it was recalled by Charles II in favor of Sir Bobert Shirley, of ChaiOsy Park, grandson ot the Lady Dorothy Devereux above mentioned. Subsequently King Charles ad vanced him to the dignities of Viscount Tamworth and Earl Ferrers. It Is unnecessary to recall here the de scription of the crim«« of the fourth earL, •ho after trial by bis peers in the House of Lords ln 1760, and sentence to death, <irove" to the gallows at Tyburn, where the Marble A: h now stands, in London, in his ftete coach-and-six— namely, the carriage, si? gilded sad garlanded, that was other -wise used at court functions, at corona tions and for the opening of Parliament. Jt was at his execution that the drop T'as used for the first time hi England, in the place of the old system of the cart and ladder. The drop, it is reported, did not work very well. It -is on record that "the art's toes touched the ground, and that )e suffered a little, havinsr tlm" to raise the • ap. but the executioner polled it down *ga:n, and then they pulled his legs, so that li«- was . ■• ■:■ out of pain and quite dead in Jour minutes." After he had been left hausring for an hour he was buried in old fit. Panama Churchyard, where twenty >e;irs later his body was disinterred and ixinveyed to the family mausoleum at Harold, near Asliby-de-la-Zouche, t\ n*-re it now reposes. This particular earl was separated lrom his wife, and as she refused to hold any communication with him after his arrest srid trial he cursed her on »he. scaffold 'iri predicted for her a terrible death by r e. After his execution she married '-ord P^ederidi Campbell, brother of the ftuke of Argyll, and lived for nearly fifty T p ars. But she was. alv.-ays haunted by the terrible curse of her flrst husband, and her f'firt Increased with age. si much so that she caused a suite of fireproof rooms to be »--pecJally constructed for her at a consid erable expense it her house, Coombe Hank. Despite these precautions she, was r-JHied , o ,3p alri In her bed, bavins; fall*-*! *::le?r> while me dim; •■ • hangings of her lx~» matching fire from the lamp at her bed *l4e. This took place Just a hundred years How CiemenceaL, Was Fooled. In describing in these letters the other £ay the extraordinary marriage of Queen Natalie of Servia's nephew, «Jeorge Ghika, to the elderly but still comely Parisian <3*-nii-mondaine, Lianc de E*oogy, who. un l^Jie most si her kind, has managed to set aside i very large fortune. I omitted to mention that she Is the original of Bjrl« ' lane in ECmlh Zola's veil known novel ■ titled "Paris." I also neglected to etale Hiat at the wedding ceremony at Paris the isi I id in her hand, in lieu of the. customary flowers, an almost priceless l>reviary, exquisitely illuminated, which Isafl at one time belonged to Duchess Ann«; Of Bretagw for the new niece of ijufn Natalie Is a T:reton by birth and owsa a ";;<rninoe»n cftsHUsMl and park in Brittany, i"»r Roscoff. Curiously enough. ■ devotional books fceern to possess a great fascination for ladies of initecedents such as Ui«/Su of Liane de Pougy, for perhaps the most cel ebrated collection of historic breviaries in modern times was that owned by the in finitely more celebrated queen of the Paris ian half-world. Leonide Leblanc. a very beautiful woman.— wiio played 'an impor tant role in the life of the royal Due d'Aumale. In fact, she owed many of her treasures, and also tho luxury by which she was surrounded, to his generosity. At the same time she was receiving thr attentions of ex-Premier Clemenceau. then a very much younger man, and, as he was very indiscreet and impulsive, she experi enced considerable difficulty in averting a meeting between the duke and this parlia mentarian, who represented in his eye* everything that was politically objection able. Finally. Leonide Leblanc invoked the assistance of the Bfnafe Grevin. •which is the great waxworks show in the French capital. She caused Its managers to manufacture for her at considerable expense a waxwork figure of the Due dAumale seated at a table, as if poring over a book or a map. This she set up in one of the smaller boudoirs of her superb mansion on the Boulevard llaussmann, and when Clemenceau called and Leonide did not wish to see him her clever ser vant used to put her ringer to her lips and on tiptoe lead the politician to the. entrance of the boudoir in question, and then point out to him trie absolutely life like representation of tj Due d'Aumale bent over the table. This was quite suffi cient to send Clemenceau away in hot haste, the trick being played over and over again. > To-day tills waxwork figure of the princes ■who conquered Algeria for France and ■who bequeathed to the nation liia chateau and park of Chantilly iray bo seen among the waxwork repreFcntatlons of other per sonages, st the Musee Grevin, though few who see it are aware of its peculiar origin and history. Sir Albert and the Black Hand. Admiral Sir Albert Markham, ■ who ar rived in this country last Thursday by the Adriatic from England, with l^ady Mark ham and his little, daughter, to stay with Frederick Pearson for some weeks to come at Great Harrington, Mass., came prom inently before the public in England a. few months ago in connection with an unsuc cessful attempt to make him the victim of a full-fledged Black Hand outrage. He is the officer who, some twenty years ago, was the subject of a controversy that at tracted world-wide attention, especially in naval and military circles, the. issue being to what extent the obedience to superior officers should be carried. He was second in command of the Mediterranean squad ron when his flagship, the Camperdown, rammed the Victoria, the flagship of the commander in chief. Admiral Sir George Tryon, sending her to the bottom of the sea, off the. coast of Syria, carrying with her her crew of more than six hundred men and most of her officers, only twenty seven sailors and officers escaping. The. disaster was due to a faulty ma noeuvre ordered by Sir George Tryon. Ad miral Markha.m had to choose between obedience, with almost inevitable disaster, and disobedience, with the probability of a court martial for insubordination, his com manding officer. Sir George Tryon, being 8. strict disciplinarian. decided in favor of the former alternative. He held that the virtue of obedience was superior to every other in the navy; that the responsibility for what would follow would after all remain with ] : ir= chief. He avpu*>d that if every officer on receiving orders wore to hesitate about complying with th<-m until he hud decided in Ha own mind whether they were right or wrong, all discipline would be a' an end In tii<> navy. All this was brought out In the court martial subsequently held at Malta, and before, which he had to appear for ramming and sinking the Victoria. Hw was B<:rjuitted by the court martial, and all the news papers, both in England and abroad, lauded his Spartan i^«a= of discipline. Although Markham was acquitted, the admiralty i? understood to have censured him in a confidential minute, holding that >.<■. ought to have exercised Judgment in obeying an order that was not only mani festly erroneous and clearly issued in mo mentary aberration by his superior officer. but also evidently bound to result in frightful disaster. Yet this censure did not prevent the admiralty from later on ap pointing Markham to the command of the Nore— that !? to say, one of the most im portant of the. home stations. Sir Albert Markham achieved fame as an Arctic explorer, and in I?T6 as the com mander of the Alert succeeded In planting the English flag in. the highest northern latitude reached up to then— namely, the 53d degree. He also has to his credit the suppr*ssior of. "bhtckbbirding"— that is to tay, the slave raiding and trading in the Booth Bee Islands; and served with .Ad miral Sir Bdward Seymour in the China seas fifty year? ago, taking part in the ex pedition which culminated in the capture of Peking and the destruction of the Sum mer Palace. "!ARQI"ISE DE FOXTE' r 'T A WEDDING. In the Church of "he Heavenly Best yes terday at noon Miss Alexandrine Taylor. daughter of the late Alexander Taylor, a prominent New York banker, v .a? married to Dr. Russell H. Kevins, of Water Conn. The ceremony was performed by th<- Rev. Herbert Shipman, assisted by the Rev. Albert Monk. It was followed by a breakfast for about one hundred at Del monico's. The church was decorated with Easter Mile* and palms, and there was full choral mi vice The bride walked up the aisle with her brother-in-law. Joseph Clark Baldwin, jr.. but was given away by her mother. She wore a pink satin rro-.vn, with an overdress of pink chiffon, embroidered and made with a round Dutch neck. Her hat. of brown straw, was trimmed with a long pink plume, and she carried a shower bouquet of sa.r denias and (ilies-of-tbe-valley. Her sister, lire. Joseph Clark Baldwin, jr.. was her only attendant. She wore white lingerie, combined with lace and trimmed with blue ribbons. She had on a white chip hat, fao«d with black velvet and tn:n!-re.i with blue ribbon and feathers. She carried pink roses. Henry Kevins was best man ai.d Runaoil H. Weviiin. jr., an<i Efidwin U Btrange were \i\t- ushers NEW YORK FROM THE SUBURBS. Bandits hold up h passenger train stand ing in a Kew 'b \>rk t'-rtninal station. And they have horse cars In New York. t'.o. H is .-i good thing to !.t "provincial."- Cleve land Plain 1 '• .tlti The authorities In New York have been in vestigating the report that the horse cars then exceed tin; speed limit. Evidently some of the animals have been backing by mistake.— Charleston News and Courier. ' A new highball which costs H3O is being sold in New York. Borne of the sons of 1 Hteburg millionaires must be spending the summer In New York.— Chicago ttecord- Herald New York i* to have foni» newer nnd more luxurious taylcithn. consisting for the most part of plate glass. The common peo ple have developed a habit of riding in tn<_ ordinary taxicab and the plate glass affair is for the real swell eel.— Rochester Herald To the provincial mind J o'clock in the morning is a rather late hour for feastins and drinking, but in New York, with its many thousands of residents and visiting revellers, the evening does not really begin until near midnight, .■.';•! ) o'clock la t>.« morning i* considered a respectable hoar for retiring Mayor Utiynor probably will find that ho has a large contract on his hands if bo undertaken to reform this cus tom. — Springfield Union: nn"ort.< to turn the signiil rf,.«.- of an In vestigation of « certain >- in N'-w York Into a trial of Chief Crok< r. leedlnK to >. » dismissal fro;:i tin department; are flatly met by Mayor Gaynn:. t..-- I. w. ,!,«■-.■ int. • .... I;.)., tlif assurance of Croker .- stabil ity in office «•■ an agreeabl< certainty. The siirna of friction iii the department, how ever must i>« admitted to he menacing to the interest of the public l-< Adver tls« NEW- YORK Et\ILY TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, JULY 27, 1010. HE FTBT AT SIMIHU A Notable Production of Miss Peabody's Prize Play. AUDIENCE WELL PLEASE American Woman's Reward — Mr. Benson May X - '•}'■ Drama on Stage fTi: fable to The Tribune.] Stratford, England. July Josephine Preston Pea body, the American author of the prize play for the Shakespeare festival, had a genuine triumph to-night when her work was produced at the Me morial Theatre. It was a romantic play, entitled. "The Piper." which won a re ward of $1,500 after a brisk competition with rival playwright? of England and America. It was enacted by the Ben son company with discretion and taste, and was admitted on all sides to be a drama of unusual merit, constructed with workmanlike skill and enlivened with a pretty play of fancy. The principal part, that of Voronika. w4.s taken by an 'experienced actress, Marion Terry, with sympathy and intel ligence, and the audience was delighted with her charm and distinction. The special scenery had been painted for "The riper" by the two Markers, and there was music expressly composed for It by Christopher Wilson. Altogether, it was a delightful even ing, and Miss Pea body, after waiting since May for the deferred production of the play, earned not only a handsome money award, but the hearty congratu lations of the audience. The play will be repeated five times during Mr. Benson's special season of three weeks at Stratford, and he may keep the play in his permanent reper tory, for the title, role, as he enacted it to-night, suits him. His Piper, is the Pied Piper of Hamelln. humanized with pathos and humor, yet idealized also, a supernatural myth being converted into a thoughtful parable. PAULINE CHASE BACK AS 'STAR' Returns from Europe to Play the Title Part in "Our Miss Gibbs." Pauline Chase, who. first danced into no toriety as a chorus girl in pink pajamas, and then refused to grow up as "Peter Fan." arrived on the steamship Kaiser Wilhelm 11, of the North German Lloyd Line, yesterday. Miss Chase does not like references to the pink period of her brief, successful life. She thinks her recent work in "Peter Pan" should put that among the forgotten things, especially as she now expects to have a singing-while acting part in "Our Miss Gibbs" next month at the Knickerbocker. v ie English musical piece has been run ning for two years in London, but New York will be first to see Miss Chase in it, and it will be her first pub]!.- singing effort. She has made numerous efforts in private since Charles Frohman gave her the part. but only §he and her tutor know the pos sibilities of her voice. The tutor bos not spoken, but Miss Chase charmingly haz ards the hope that she is "something worth while* as a soprano. LITTLE GIRL BADLY BURNED Set-Fire to Dress While Fighting Mos quitoes with Funk. Catharine Graball. six years old, bought a package of punk last night, and sat. down on the stoop in front of her home, No. 391 Avenue A. and lighted it, meaning to drive away th* mosquitoes. Instead, she set fire to the thin lift!? slip she wore, and, screaming with fright and pain, ran into the hallway. Her mother ricked up a mat and wrapped it about Catharine's body, and men from the street peeled off their coat? and wrapped them about the child, extinguishing the flames. She was so severely burned about the face, limbs and body that Dr. E*aker, who removed her to BeUevtte Hospital, pro nounced her condition peric-us. SONS OF ST. GEORGE CONVENTION Boston, July 56.— Representing twenty nine states, officers and members of the Grand Lodge of the Sons of St. George opened their twenty-second annual conven tion In Faneuil Hall to-day. After a. short business meeting; the delegates went en a harbor excursion / THE WEATHER REPORT. Offlria! Record and —Washington, July 2.6. — Temperatures continue above the nor mal in all parts of the country, except in tli* 1 Southeast prates, the lower Ohio Valley and on the Pacific Coast. Warm weather continued during: Tuesday la the middle Atlantic' state* arid throughout the plain? states and the Rocky Mountain region. Temperatures c( 100 degrees were recorded in Kansas, Northwest Missouri, Oklahoma, West Arkansas, Northern Texas and Eastern Colorado. The temperatures were some- hat lower than at the same hour Monday In the lower lake, region. Northern New England. Eastern New York. Tennessee, the lower Ohio Valley and the extreme Northwest. There have been scattered Ehowers within th« last twenty-four hours in the middle Mississippi and lower Ohio valleys, the south Atlantic and east Gulf states and the upper lake regions. In practically all other districts the weather re mained fair. There will be scattered showers Wednesday in the south Atlantic states. Tennessee and th» lower Ohio Valley, followed by g»iierali> fair Thursday. In all other parts of the country the indications are that tnc weather will be g-n- i er^lly fair Wednesday and Thursday. High temperatures ill continue throughout i the Middle West, and somewhat warmer* weather ' is prut.able Wednesday in Tennessee, the Ohio. Valley and the lower lake region. Temperature*' will not chang-- materially In the Atlantic and Gulf states and the plateau and Rocky Maun ] tain region during the next forty-eight hours. The winds along tho New England coast will ■ be light w.-st am! southwest; middle and south Atlantic coast and east Gulf roast, light to m d erate variable; west Gulf coast, moderate south; on ''.' lower lakes, light to moderate variable, | mostly southwest; upper lakes, light to moderate variable. Steamer!" departing Wednesday for Kurr>pean ports will have moderate variable wind." and generally fair weather to the Grand Bank*. Forecast for Special I/ocaJlU*». — For Western Pemujrlvanla and Western New York, fair. warmer Wednesday; Thursday fair; light to inoderats vmriaale winds Kor New Knslanc. Kastem New Tork. Eastern Pennsylvania, Htm Jersey and Delaware, gen frally '"If Wednesday and Thursday: not much change In ti-n.p'Xature; light variable winds. Kor tilts I»intrict of Columbia and Maryland, partly rt'J'Jdy Wednesday; Tkuradanr fair, not rn'.u-h chain In temperature; light variable • Ind > PfirMal observations it the United State* Thither ■cam, taken m 9 o'clock last night. folio* : T«>in?«r*ture. Weather. Albany " t! Cloudy Atlantic City •••- *2 near Boston " s ♦ no-jdv Buffau . *** '.notidy Chicago ■■■ °'- ; Clear Novr Orleans • • "- Clear St. U -I- f* Clear Washington BO < lear \nr'\ ti •■<<■• Uf.' r*-j— f »if following official record fro tttb Vtaitw TJjrtau shuns th« crtangei in Uw •i.v.i^r;.'!.-' : r UM last twei.ty four hours lii •.'.'iii..:i:'.«3i. wit! the correspond :, „ dale of i ■-■ J'^ " • ISIW .Jl > , 1808 IMB :: . in . '■'> i»\ c - P. m, ... ™ 84 H a. m <'"• '" '«'•>• '■• "i* «1 s. a. m. ..,...- .'- ;-• '• ;■ ? n n th JS m.-.l :""' Wltp. m .. 7L- — 4. it. *in '■• *■" ji^jhtSi it;n>i"''«>.;u:v >'.«>:• in.;. . >.ij degr«res (at S:3O >. v-'i. urn<h*U 17; average, S'J; HVfiagu for correspocd!r.* -i.it.. of last year. IS; average for corresponding date of lust thins three years, 74. 1...;, 1 forfcaal I'ali to-day and to-morrow; not iru'-h €-hanc<" i, temperature; light, variable »i"ds YACHTS IN CLOSE RACE The Windward Shows Her Heels to Challenging Boats. WINS BY NARROW MARGIN Ch&ife&gera for Manhasset Bay Cup Make a Good Fight. The ; first of the match races between thirty-foot, sloop yachts for the possession of the. Manhaf-set Bay Challenge. Cup wm sailed on I/one Island Sound yesterday, in a good breeze. from the northwest. It result en in a victory for the defender of the cup— the sioop yacht ; ;■ Windward, of the Indian Harbor, Yacht Club. 1 owned by Richard A. Monks. ■ • Four yacht? entered, and the three that started Onisbed in this order: The Wind ward, the Cara M!"i. owned by Stuyvesant Wainwrigriit. and Jie Mavuurneen. the challenger, owned by George L,ee, of Bos ton. The Windward won by 1 minute fi seconds from the Cara Mia and by 'J min utes 19 seconds from the Mavourneen. The course was four miles to leeward and return, sailed twice over, or sixteen miles in all. The yacht that entered but did not start was the Mimosa. 111. owned by Kdmund Rppks. representing tho Larch: mont Yacht Club. All thre boats went to the starting line, off Great Captain's Island, in the finest kind of racing fettle, with ."alls that fitted per fectly and with hulls without a blemish above or below the waterlhie. The crew of thf> Mavourneen which represented the Corinthian Yacht. Club of Marblehead, were George I/*>e. tho owner, who sailed her: Krnest Hendrie, Frank P. Monroe and Henry Griffith. The American Yacht Club's representntive, the Cara Mia, had S. C. Hopkins for her skipper, assisted by Harry Johnson. G. V. Granbery and "Butts' Whiting. The, "Windward was palled by Jerome Monks, and he was ably assisted by his brothers. Richard A and Robert Monks; P. R Mallory and a paid hand, Jim Nelson. "William Butler Duncan, jr.. represented the Corinthian Yacht Club of Marblehe.ad. and 'harles t/anc Poor the Indian Harbor Yacht Club, the defenders of the cup. James D. Pparkman was the referee. These, ivlth E. Burton Hart, of the regatta, com mittee, assisted by Frank Bowne Jones and '""harles K. Simnis. managed the ra^e from .1. M. Macdonoush> power yacht, the Jes sica TT, anchored a mile south of the light house. No prettier race has been seen on the Sound for many a season than the contest between these three boats. Although the product of different designs— the Windward by Gardner, the Mavourneen by George Owen and the . Cara Mia by Herreshoff— they, showed that they are quite evenly matched in such a breeze as that of yester day. . Out of a clear, sunlit sky the fresh north wester was blowing when the starting sig nal sounded, and the sparkling waters of the Sound were fringed with whitecaps here md there as the three racers came for the line. The . Windward, with her boom swung, broad off to starboard, had the best of the start. She led the Mavour neen by fifteen seconds, and that boat was about the same distance m f.me ahead of the Cara Mia. These two crossed the line with booms to port. Five minutes after the start tht Wind ward gybed to port, and twenty-3vc min utes later the Cara Mia and Mavourneen engaged in a luffing match, which soon forced them to gybe to 'starboard and to set spinnakers to reach the lee mark. In this four mile run down the wind the run ning of 811 three boats was remarkably even. When close to the mark the Cara Mia, then lapping the Mavourneen. for some reason luffed to windward of the mark boat — which was "William Butler Duncan'? blgr launch, the Waneche — as if to leave it to port, when the rules said to starboard. ' Before she got back and rounded it the right way the others had flattened sheets and begun the windward work. And a right merry battle it was, with the last of a flood tide netting them to the -westward. Down the wind the second time they travelled fast and even. Despite the fact that the two lioms boats tried their best to blanket the Boston .boat, all three reached the- lee mark almost beam and beam, and rounded it in this way: The Windward. 2:11:20; the Mavourneen, 2"11:25: the Cara Mia, 2:11:40. Their elaDsed times -were. The Windward. 34:25; the Cara Mia, 34:25; the Mavourneen. 35:10. It was anybody's race for the first fifteen minutes of the last leg to -windward. The Mavouri:e«»r> and the Windward stood to the westward en the starboard tack after rounding the lee mark, while the Cara Mia "split tacks" with them and made ? long board to the northward. The Windward went about first, and both she and the Cira Mia crossed the bow of the Bostoy boat when they came together on opposite tacks, but she was then close up in their wakes. It took several more, tacks to reach the finish, and the Windward held the weather gauge just long enough to win by 1:06 from the Cara Mia. The second race will be sailed to-day over a tringular course. Each winning yacht receives 4 points, the second boat 3 points and the third 2 points, there being four entries. Even though the fourth boat did not start, the points am based on the number entered. HELD FOR REQUISITION PAPERS. Raymond K. Higgins and his wife. Mat tie, were remanded until to-day by Magis trate Butts in the Yorkvlile court yesterday to await requisition papers from Pennsyl vania. Higgins was arrekAed on Monday niKht by Central Office detectives on a tele graphic dispatch from Chief of Police Da vks of Pottsvllle. Perm., where he is said to be wanted for larceny and breaking Jail. His wife is said to have assisted him In escaping from the jail. DR. L. H. BAILEY INJURED. Ithaca, N. V., July 26.-Dr. I* H. Bailey, director of the Cornell College of Agri culture and chairman of the Colonel Roose velt country I-if«- Commission, was badly injured by a runaway horse here to-night. He was knocked down and rendered un conscious and severely bruised about the neck and body. NAMES SUCCESSOR TO HOLLAND. George C. Miller, of No. 9SB Bush wick avenue, Brooklyn, has been appointed a member of the Hoard !of Education by Mayor Gaynor to succeed James P. Hol land, who resigned last week. Mr. MUW has been president of the Ridgewood Board of Trade and head of the local school board thcr« for a number of years. DR. FERRIS'S TRIP ABROAD. Albany. July 26.— Dr Albert Warren Fer ris, president of the, State Lunacy Commis sion, will nail on Saturday for a two weeks' visit In Scotland for the purpose of getting information regarding the construction by the state commission of a hosplt&l In Vurk town, on Mohansic lAk**. MINISTER CARPENTER AT POST. Tangier. July »">.-- F. W. Carpenter who rellnquiahed his duties as private secretary to President Taft to succeed EX. P. Dodge an American Minister to Morocco, arrived here to-day. WHAT IS GOING ON TO-DAY. Kr> «• admission '•• the Metropolitan Museum of n the \nifrii-nn Museum of Natural History and the Zoological Garden. Me. 'In;: of ih« H..^-u of education, No &oo lo.lv »V< n'i>- 4 i 1i 1 i»j. WRING WITH OLD SOL 802 Children Have Been Sent to the Country in Two Days. MORE HOMES A NECESSITY Special Provisions Made for Special Cases— How the Railroad Helped. During the last two days 802 children have .been *ent to the country by the Tribune Fresh. .Air Fund. Of this number 550 w-nt to • different Tribune homes, the remainder, to kind hosts among the people of. the country ■ They were for .the most part children whom' the hot weather drives to the parks, the roofs and even the pave ments, to sleep. . " . : . It is a hard fight. th<? Tribune Fund, is waging with Old .Sol ..these days, with a tremendous handicap °' to overcome. '-, LJke all good thins*, there is not enough of Frerh Air hospitality to go round. Owin« to the generosity of the contributors to the fund the showing is" not a bad one. But ! tin need of the children Is still pressing, ! so pressing, indeed, that It. T>evins. tho '■ manager, of the fund., is sending out this week a circular letter to - clergymen and editors throughout the region east. of Buf falo, urging their. co-operation in securing homes for the youngsters who want to go out. An instance which shows how the little "Fresh Airs" win- the 'hearts. of their enter tainers was reported In a letter recently received at headquarter?. Wants Child All Summer. A little girl who was being entertained in a home in Northern New York met with an accident toward. the" end of her stay. It was a rather painful mishap, and resulted in the little one's being laid up for some .lays. So attached to the youngster had the hostess become that she wrote, asking that the child be permitted to remain with her until the fall. Even the heartless corporations seem to find hearts to be touched where the girls and boys of the Fresh. Air parties are con cerned. The other day a party was sent out whose members were to be distributed in twos and threes among small towns in the northern part of the state. When the suggestion was made that the | distribution of the party could be facili tated, and many of the inexperienced trav ellers ?aved a three-hour wait after an all day Journey by the making of an exception and the special stopping of a train on one of its branches, the officials of the New York Central Railroad sent out general orders In which the suggestions were car- j ried out. To Regain Their Health. A group Of tots — they were undersized even for their years— who were doubly to be pitied were sent to the home at De posit. N. V., yesterday morning-. Some of them .-were, pinched and. worn from illnesses they had just passed through, some were lame, some had other troubles, but all were special cases. They were those whose health and physical condition would not admit of their being taken into the other Fresh Air homes. Their iac«>B were already beginning to take on a look of restfclness as they boarded the train, in anticipation of the good time before them. Theirs were special cases, but not the only special esses that have been met with this summer. The condition of an Italian woman and her little daughter which was brought to the notice of Dr. Devins the other day was !=o pitiful that arrangements were made to take care of the child during the entire Bummer. The mother earns $4 a week picking nuts, and this is their sole source of support. The big party of 250 who went to Bing hamton. N. V.. two weeks ago got ba-ck to New. York last night, .tired but happy. They were all glad to set back so they might sex their mothers again, but that was the only respect in which the city waa more attractive than the country. AH agreed that Kinghan-'ton was the b'-st cour>v try in the world. ACKNOWLEOO-MENTS. Mrs. Harrlman •' • ■ • • J* 0 "" 0 ■"■ln memory of Edward S. T. Kennedy, July 27, IPOS" .. . 30 ° A P.' Templeton and M. P. T«mplet<>r. Sound Beach. Conn ... "*> ACT • ' 2! m c r.. ii * >o ° "In lovtas memory of P. P. T.". 5 5!5 1 "In memory of Marion and Louise .. _£xx : "In memory of E. P. A." - 20 00 A c. •s. . ...... • ■• ■ 10 00 $ Alexander ... 10 U0 "Without the donor' § name. please (C. R. E.) ?°° "Without th« donor's name, p'aas* (Mrs. C. I. H • v .. • 50 -^0 H'vwe * Davis. Orang*. N J... 1"° "In memory of M. E. E." 500 "In memory of H. W. E" 6 00 "In memory of A. C." f> 00 Ea*t Hampton Circle of Kin? Daugh ter*, through Mrs. E. H. Payton. sec retary and treasurer 10 0O Gift of the Congregational Sunday school. Thompson, Conn . 10 00 "In Memory of M. R U" 10 00 Mrs J Wilson Hart, Glen Ridge. N. J. 500 AUand Bros. & Co 10 00 "No name'" rw. B. C. & Co.) 10 00 •A frl'-nrr* (Mr*. R. B. D.) 10 00 G. C. Kobr.4 100 "Virginia and Victor" 6 0o "Fricml" <T. H.i '• lt« E. P. Re!chhe4m A Co -. ... 5 00 11. O*good Carleton 2 00 M. G. Gannett - 5 <** Blanche M. Cloash, Little Compton. R. I. 10 00 H. P. Koeyer. jr . 1 00 John B. Murphy '2 00 In iMiifinsß f» appeal. Montclair, N. J. 1 Of* In response to appeal IN In response to appeal 100 Previously acknowledged 20.76125 Total. July 26. 1910 $21,378 25 Contributions, preferably by check, money or express order, should be made payable to the order of the Tribune Fresh Air Fund and mailed to The Tribune, New York. THEATRICAL NOTES. Miss Man McKid, a younj? Canadian girl, has been selected by Charles Frohman to sin* the role .of Chrysea in "The Arca dians," which reopens at the Knicker bocker Theatre for four weeks beginning nest Monday. 'Seven Days" will play Its three hun dredth performance at the Astor Theatre this afternoon- Henry B. Karris lias selected Jane Mar bury for Agr ; e« Killston, the leading female character in "Bobby Burnit." Wine.hell Smith";- new comedy, which opens at tho Republic Theatre on Monday. August 22. Miss Cirace. Van St'iddiford will appear in 3 new oj^-ra nt the Casino Theatre nfxt winter, under the direction of L>antel V. Arthur, with whom has signed con tracts for :i term of years. The opera will bt adapted by Avery Hop wood from a pres ent European sncCQSW. The music will be by Silvio Hem. James O'Neill, of "Monte Cristo fame, is to be the chief player in "A Prince of the Church." which I>iebler & Co. will present next January. From the opening of the coining season until that time he will support Miss Viola Allen •in "The White Sister." Charles <Trar*ewin. Anna Chance and Vcra Mi«-helena will have prominent parts in "The Girl and the Drummer." which is to be on«v of the early season productions of the M'^rF. Shubert and William A Brady. The play is a musical version of "What Happened to Jones," with J>ook ami lyric* 1"' George Broadhurst. author of the original, and music by Augustus Barrett , Mlfb Bessie Clayton, the dancer, who ap peared in 'The Follies of 1903," has ac cepted nn engagement at the Olympia The atre, Paris, beginning in October. alter Jones, the comedian. • who ap peared last season in "Going Some." under thi management Of the Meson. Shubert. has been added to the company which is to prWHtnl "Tho Simple Life" at the llacketr Theatre, about the middle of August. This is the play that bas been announced as :*Hlj?h« l.lit in Jail." It was written by Walter Hackett. with lyrics by K. Shields ana music by J. 11.I 1 .- Coster, . fj OBITUARY. JAMES ROSS CURRAN. James Ross Curran. vice-president of the Carnegie Trust Company, died yestenUy at his home. No. <| Kast :>7th street, afrer a long illness from ursemlc poisoning. Mr. Curran was fifty-eight years old. Mr. Oirran was born In this city and en tered a brokerage office at the age of six teen. In four years he had advanced him .self to the place of cashier. When the firm went out of business he became con nected with the Brooklyn Truat Company, soon rising to the secretaryship. Mr. < *ur ran was with ti>e Brooklyn Trust Company for twenty-five years, after which he be came assistant cashier of the National City Bank of New York. In 1899 he was elected president of the City Trust Company. In 19U5 he resigned and joined the late C. C Dickinson in forming the Carnegie Trust Company, of which he became vice-presi dent. Mr. Curran and Mr. Dickinson were close friends until the lattcr's sudden death some weeks ago. Mr. Curran had been a,n athlete for years, but about two years ago he became ill and went abroad for his* health. He leaves a wife and three rnns. WILLIAM GILBERT DAVIES. William Gilbert Davies, a well known lawyer, whose offices were at No. 22 Nassau street, died yesterday from bronchial pneu monia after fix week Illness' at his home Ar-y-Bryn, Tuxedo Park. He -was sixty eight years old, the son of Henry E. Davic?. who was a justice of the Supreme Court and a judge of the Court of Appeals in this state. William G. Davies was graduated from Trinity College in 1860. He then well abroad and entered the University of Lelp : sic. After a year's study he returned, en tering the law office of Slos»son, Hutchins *c Platt. In 1863 he was admitted to the bar, and three yean« later became a member of the law department of th» Mutual Life In surance Company. He was made head of the department in 1885. He was one of the most earnest pro moters of the Medico- Legal Society, an-i wrote many papers on life insurance law. A few years ago he left the Mutual Life and resumed private practice. He was a member of the New York State Bar Association, the New York City Bar Association, the New York Historical So ciety, the New York Biographical and GeneaiocleaJ Society, the Son? of the Re-vo lution, the Society of Colonial Wars, PM Beta Kappa, the Virgiua Historical Society and the New England Historical Society. Ill;- clubs included the Union. Manhattan. St. Nicholas, National Art?. Century. Uni versity, Groller. Lawyers 1 , National Demo cratic and the Tuxedo.! Mr. Davies married Miss L-ucie C. Rice, a "daughter of Alexander Hamilton Rice, who was Governor of Massachusetts from 187S to 1878. He. was a brother of Julien T. Davies. of the aw firm of Davies, Stone .<• Auerbach, No. 34 Nassau street. 0 PROFESSOR SAMUEL R. WINANS. After an illness of three weeks Professor Samuel Ross Winans, who had been con nected with Princeton University since 1373 and was dean from 1893 to 1903, dted #>n Monday night at his home at Princeton. For many years Professor Winans taught Greek at Princeto.i, and only his death end ed his career as a teacher. Upon the death of Dr. James it, Murray he was chosen to succeed him. and the election met with th* warm approval of the alumni. Born at Lyons Farms. N. J.. in 1555. Pro fessor Wlnans received his early education In the public schools of his native town- He was graduated from Princeton in 15 74. that class being renowned for its high schol arship. The tln*t honor man was the Rer. Dr. Simon J. MacPherson. wKo for many years was head master of Lawrencevillo School. Professor Winans shared the sec ond honor with Professor Allan Marquand. of Princeton, and -»-f»s*the Greek salutator ian at commencement- Professor Winans was regarded as one of Princeton's brightest intellectual light*. Hp enjoyed vide popularity among alum.ii and undergraduates. Two years after Ui graduation the university conferred on him the degree of doctor of philosophy. In hi? liter} ry work Professor Winans had contributed a number of articles to magazines, chlafly r°view3 of classical work?. He Mir-d an edition, of Xenophon' 0 "Memorabilia" in 1590. He also pr"par?d an edition of Socrates In 1956 Professor Winans mail led Miss Sarah E. Macdonald, of Sherbroek*. N. R ■JOHN WARING PARKS, Jchrs Warinai Parks, a lawyer, -with of fices at No. 2 Rector street, died yesterday at Saranac Lake. N. Y. Mr Parks, -who was a son of the Rev. Dr. J. Lewis Park§. was born in this city thirty-three years ago. After receiving his early education here, he entered the University of Pennsylvania, from which he was graduated In IS3S. Later he took up the practice of law, and had been actively engaged In his profession in this city for nearly ten years. Mr. Park? body will be brought to hi 3 home. No. IX East 27th street, some time to-day. The funeral will be held at Trinity Chapel. 25th street, near Broadway, to-mor row, at 10:30 o'clock. The burial will be in the family plot at Mount Auburn Cemetery. Boston. He leaves* a wife, who was Miss Evelyn Arkley Kings. His father, the Rev. Dr. Parks, recently resigned the rectorship of Calvary Episcopal Church, where he had served for more than fourteen years. He is a brother of the Rev. Dr. Leishton Parks. MRS. ROSANNA D. REVERE. • [By Telegraph to The Tribune.] Morristown, ML J.. July 2t>. — Mrs. Revera, widow of General Joseph Warren Revere, died at the old Revere homestead to night. Mrs. Revere had bt-en bed-ridden for several years. She was ninety-one years old. She was one si the earlier mem bers of the Daughters of the American Revolution, and before her marriage to General Revere she was Miss Rosanna Duncan Lamb, of Boston. Her two sons, Paul Rever«» and Augustus 1^ Revere, axe dead. General Revere command*-.! the Second N .v Jersey Brigade during the Civil War, utd when the army was re organized by General Hooker was placed In comman 1 of the New York BaesMsS Brigade. He had also aerved In tho Seml nole and Mexican wars. EX-JUDGE CRAIG BIDOLE. Philadelphia. July 26. — Craig Biddle. . ■%- Judge of the Common Pleas Court of Phila delphia, died at his summer home at An dalusia, near here, to-day, after a week's Illness. He was eighty-seven years old. Judge BUMS was a son of Nicholas Bid die. He w:is elected to the state Legislat ure on the Whig ticket in 1349. and served on the Union side in the Civil War. In 1575 lie w*»£ elected to the Common Plt-i- Court and continued on the bench until a few years »K n . when he retired because of advancing years, and was appointed pr> thonotary of the courts of Philadelphia. REAR ADMIRAL HAWKE, U. S. N. Washington. July 26.- Rear Admiral James Albert Hawk* (retired), of Bristol. Perm., formerly medical director of the navy, died at the Naval Medical School Hospital, in Washington, late y^terday. at the age of sixty-nine. His las.t active duty was at the naval hospital at Mare Island. California. During the Spanish-American War he served at the New York Navy Yard. He entered the navy in 1867. was made a rear admiral in 1*99 and was placed on the re tired list in 1903. WILLIAM C F. BOYER. William C. K. Boyer. a brass founder of White Plains, and one of the most active citizens there, died yesterday. He was forty-nine years old. Mr Boyer was in jured In ■ crush during IkS Hudson-Fulton celebration in New fork, Ccinpllcatluns set In. and recently hie leg had to be ampu tated. His wife and one daughter surviv him. OBITUARY NOTE. MRS. ELIZABETH R. SNOWDEN, wif# of Colonel Archibald Loudon Snowden. of Philadelphia and mother of C. B. Snowden. the polo player, died in the hospital in York. Me.', aged starty-e 4 ' The body will be taken to Haverford. Perm.. to-night- Colonel Snowden *h.« formerly Minister to Spain and Postmaster of Philadelphia. PRINCETON BEQUEST IN COURTS Trustees Want to Know if They Can Legally Use $320,000 Gift. Attorneys acting for the trustees of Princeton University have tiled a bill la the Newark courts to determine whether the bequest of Mrs Josephine A. Thomson Swarm. who left about $320,000 to the univer sity, can be used to defray part of the cost of a graduate school on the present gul£ links. Mrs. wwasssfl will provided that tn» building should be erected "upon the grounds of the said university." Since then, however, two large gifts have been received by the university for the same purpose— the Wyman and Procter gifts. If has been arranged to use these latter gifts for the erection of the graduate school on the golf links, which tract, however, was ac quired subsequent to the death of Mra Swarm. PROF. PECK ASKS PARTICULARS. There was on the calendar of the Supreme Court yesterday a motion by Professor Harry Thurston Peck, of Columbia Univer sity, for a bill of particulars from Miss Esther Quinn. who Is suing; him for $50,000 for alleged breach of promise. Professor Peck wants the plaintiff to tell where the alleged promise of marriage was mad« and whether it was an oral promise or In writ ing. By consent of counsel th« argument on the motion wan adjourned to August 1 DINNER FOR MAYOR GAYNOR. Mayor Gaynor will be the gue«t at a din ner to be given by Felix "Warburg at th«» City Club to-morrow night, at which th« probation problem of the courts will be dis cussed. Mr. Warburg, although a banker, has devoted much time to the probation question and was formerly a member of the State Probation Board. PRESIDENT MONTT AT COLON. Colon. July 36.— President Pedro Mont t of Chili and party arrival here from Panazn& this evening. They were* welcomed by th» local officials and consular representatives. President Montt will be a passenger on th« Royal Mail steamer Tain* sailing for, New York to-morrow morning by way . of Jamaica. MARRIED. N~EVIXS— TAYLOR— <>i July 2*. •' the Clfjse| of th» Heavenly Rest. by th* r»rtor. the &»»-. Herbert Sblpman. Ruf»*;i H N>-«-tns. m D-. and >I»xan4rln"\ Tavlor. si No. 73 East 91 st »t.. daughter of th* lat<» Alexander T%y!or. J". Xorlces «f marriages and deaths most b* accompanied by foil name and *ddr*4*. DIED. Brook?. FMala Kb?*, Bsml Oowiesi. Helen T. Farka. John W. ■ ("urran, Jam*s R. Tear^all. Sarah E. Davi«s, William G. Fever*. Rosacna D. Dawson. Ichabcd W. Ri'icer. Gilbert K. r»unn». D*stnon.J. Jr. Smith. Cecelia G. Ficken. Maruarotha K. Swwnri'. P»t»r Gill. Mrs. Frank J. Z«r«£3 <51 Z-r»ga L.H.-H (>unn, Annie. BROOKS — July 2V Fi<>l<* Brook*. *J["fl 7*. ?»r ' ices Tie Funeral Church, No. 241 "West CM st. 'Frank K. Campbell Building). Friends cordially Invited. COWLES-On July 28, 1810. at Her '»'- resi dence. No 2S Ee*t .134 St.. Helen Thomson, youngest daughter of the at* Walter Smith and Mary Thomson. Funeral private. CLRRAN On Tu»««dar. .Tuiv 2«. »t his '.a* residence. No. 42 Ea3i s"th ■».. James R3»». husband of M. Bmily .Ambler. Funeral pn vate. European papers pl»as«s copy. DAVTES— On Tuesday. July 26. Ml at hi» residence. Tuxedo Park. V T . •William Gllb*rt Darles. beloved husband of Lucle Rtc«i Da visa. Funeral private. DAWSOX-At Newark. N. J.. en Tuesday. JeT: 26. . 1910. Ichabod Williams Damson, in. hl» 7** 1 - 1 year. Funeral s-rvicss win be he!-J it h!j »■ home. No. 55 south •' Wasajasi N. J., « Thursday. July 23. at 3:30 p. m. DUNNE— Desmond, Jr.. suddenly. Jnly 25. V*i>\ at West Hampton Beach- FICKEN— On TliasllftT. July 26, 1910. Sfsrgarania X.. beloved wife of Henry J. Flcken. la her M year. Relative* and friends ar» invited to a' tend funeral 'r~m her '.at» residence. No CO Atlantic are., Brooklyn. Thursday. 2 p. to. GILL— Mrs. Frank J. •*!!'.. wife of F*an«i J. GU». Ko *>: De«ra-» it.. Brooklyn, d'9d a' isorr;*. Sunday «v*nlng. July 24. 1810 GITNN — On July 23, ISIO. Annie Gnnr>. b»!(r."*l wife of Prank Gunc. at her res!d«n?«. No. 2?" St. Mark's iv*., Brooklyn. FTinsral Wedrss* day. July J?. »'. 9 a m KING— July 24. He!»r> KiEf. !r.fa=t 28B«it'-*r of tCHlbuc Kins Services The Fasersl Church. »-->""" 241 VTest 253 st. {Frank E. Crap!?*' l BtUl4!nr> PARKS— O= Tuesday, July 26. 1910. at Saran»c T. 3 if« N. V . John Waring Park*, hasbaai -♦ Evelyn Arlcley Kins Paries. ar.s Son o» th« Key. I. T_etri S Paries. D. D.. and Tails TarlTiy Parks, in the 33d year cf sis a**- Fas«ra> service* at Trinity Ciapal. 3Bt>s «t.. r.aa- Broadway, N>« Tcrk City, os Thcrwiay. fair 2S 1910. at 10 Was ls T «rrr!«nt at jfoaw: Auburn Cemetery. Boston. Mass.. <n Friday, July 29. 1910, at 11 o'clock. PEABSALL. — At Tacgl*-«BTX)d. "^"i'ltar=sbnd«K N<=w York City, on Sunday. July **> 1910. Sarah Elizabeth, wtf« of th» lat« Georgw H- FearsaU. Relatives and !r.t!afi*t» friend* ar» r<-sp#c:fulli Inrltsd to attend the fnsorml wsr vice* or. Wednesday. July 27. at 3:30 > in.. from her r?sld*nc». Taja«l*wood. Carriages will be waltlnsr at 'W'!lltair>!*r'dgw ataxies on the arrlra! of the 2:25 p. m. traia. from Grand Central Den*. . • ! REVERE— On July 26. 1810. at Morrlst«w^ ! N. J.. In her &2d year. Rcsanaa Dmsc*» ! <Lamb) Revere-, widow of General Joseph War ! ren Revere Funeral »«rrtce at her '.at* re»t dence. In Morristown. on Thursdar, July 28. ax 8:30 p. m. Boston and Canton (Haas.) paper* please" copy. EJKER -M Stamford. Conn., on Sunday. Jarr 24. l»10. Gilbert K. Riker. ton of tS« lat» Gilbert K. and Martha M. RlVer. fun«™i services will be held at St. talks' Cha©«l on Wednesday. July 27. at 3 p. m. SMITH— On Sunday. July 24. l»10. at her home. No. 112 St. Mark* ay«., Brooklyn. C*c«lU d. emlth. widow of Georg* R. Smith. R««<suJ«ni mass *; St. Augustine' » Cnurch. Sixth »"•_ and Stirling Place. Brooklyn, at 30 a, m.. Wednesday. July 27. Interment Calvary Cemetery. SWEENEY— JuIy 23. Peter Sweeney, Lytn« la state Th« Funeral Church. Nos. 241 and 3«S West 2*l st. (Frank E. Campbell BuiMin«.) ZEREGA PI ZEREGA — After a long; (Knew. at. his late residence. No. 640 Madison a»e-. New York City. Louis Herman Augustus Z«r«ga dl Zere»a. son of the late Augustus Z«reg& dl Zerega. and Ms wife, r.f-a Baxociess E'.tia too Bretton. Funeral private. CEMETERH3. J THE W<»ODl<\W>- CEMETERT j* li readl!y accessible by Harlem train* from Grand i>ntral Station. Webster and J«rom« avenue trolley* and by carriage. T^t» «150 up. T<jcphoo« 1^:.:, ■ ;rarr.er«-y for Book of Vl»w« or representative. Office. 20 East 23d >r . New Tork City. r.NDERTAhERS. FRANK t. < \MPRCI.L. 241-.". Waal ".Id *t Chapels. ■■-...-• Rooms. -ate Ambulancea. Tel.. 13-4 Chelsea. Re». Stephen MerHtt. the wor!d-wl(3e-know« undertaker. Only one place of business. Sth ive. 1-: I ■•■ - st. Largest in the worlij Te 1 ■?» 1- ,1 1°". PI Ma • SPECIAL NOTICES. TO nn EMPLOYER. l>o you want desirable help quickly? . SAVE TIME AND EXPENSE by con sulting the file of applications of selected aspirants for positions of various kind* . which ha-, just been installed at th • Up town Office of THE NEW-YORK TRIBUNE. No. 1304 Broadway. Between Sslli and .".7th Streets. Office hours: 9 a. m. to G p. m . ■ NEW- YORK TRIBt AT, SUBSCRIPTION RATES Dally Edition. On«» Cent ra City of >•»• York. Jersey City and flobokea. * " El»ewh»r«. Two Cent*. ••nn.!«> Edition, including Sunday Mi». line. Fire Outs. -»«■— In >«•«» York City mall subscriber* will b* (-barged I i-fnt per ropy extra postage. KIPTION BY MAIL POSTPAID Dally, per month -.. ■• «n Sl> Dally, |>rr year . . [[[ «(v "••in.l.i» . per year.. I. 1 1** •oa T>*lly ••'•! Mimlay. ivrr year ** •0# Dally and ■».... .i.i, per month '.' •[» Foreign 1..., .<- Kstra T