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TES HARD HIT ‘Tremendous Losses Sustained byWestern _ (Crowd and Vander. __bilt-Gould Syndicate. _ MILLIONSLOST IN FLURRY Speculators Have Dropped from $7,000,000 to $10,- 000.000 Since Money Stringency Began. Speculators in Wall street have lost from $7,000,000 to $10,000,000 in the last three days, and the limit of their losses does not appear to be reached. The bulk of these heavy losses— caused by the enforced liquidation and the money stringency—has been sustained by the big speculative pools, but many individuals have been severely handled in the slump ané in many instances their entire holdings have been swept away. Thus far the heaviest losers, ac- vopfling to the accredited Wall street gossips, have been the Gates-Lam- bert-Harris-Drake contingent, gene: ally known as the “Western crowd,” and the Gould-Rockefeller-Vanderbilt ~ syndicate, composed of the younger members of the three families. It is positively asserted that a group of prominent Wali street banks agreed to call a halt on the Gates-Harrin erowd, ‘They were said to be carrying & total of loans on high-priced stoc SeRroRAting from $90,000,000 to £40,000, 000, and they persisted in booming stocks When money was tight. Banks Called Loans, As @ result the banks began calling foely Joans right and left, and the Hquidating sales of the Chicago group thin three days is estimated at nearly ‘sic shares of long stock, on which Ry ‘are estimated to have Jost at least junior Gould-Rockefeller-Vander- bit pool was handled almost an se- Yerely, except in a different way. It had ‘its wecurities pounded and ham- mered until jt had lost more than the $1 it revently made in its coup Ba! svourl Pacific, Gee dn the slump Missour! Pacite went from 125 to 1117-8, and to-day was around the 114 mark. at which point the younger scions of the three enor- mously wealthy families were giving It 00d support. inks continued balling loans to-day “and were following thelr outlined course of refusing accommodations to the plungera and speculators who tried to Put Up prices at this juncture, Call Money Up Again, Money opened at 15 per cent, went Quickly to 2) and reached 2 per cent. tn tho forenoon. This rise was due not s0 much to any extraordinary demand, a9 to the avowed policy of the banks in compelling Wall street to hold prices down. ‘At ‘noon roved by Washington . the. United the the situation greatly im- announcement from urer Roberts of ad authorized the payment. jn New York of $1,000,000 in which arrived at San drancisco ay consigned to Goldman, Sachs & Company, This, with: the gold on the Majestic, will give the banks over $2,000,000 extra for this week. All thia will show in the bank etate- tient this werk. Individuals with large private fortunes and trust companies were the heaviest fenders In the stock market to-day. stringency payment. of $11,000,000 on account United tSates Realty Company. This money will be immediately put ational City Bank .000,000 to the amount to be loaned, making $15,000,000 in one sum, os MORE TROOPS OUT IN MINE REGION. out again, and the VA will addo#, ey {Special to The Evening W. WILKESBARRE, Pa., Sept. 25.—The Eighth Regiment’ reached here at z \ o'clock this afternoon accompanied by ; Gen, Gobin and his staff, ond was at once sent to Duryea, a half way point _ between the Thirteenth Regiment, now at Olyphant, and the Ninth to this city, Gen. Gobin sald: “I shal! order out the remaining eight companies Fourth Regiment and will pla at Shenandoah. 1 shall send Of horse to. this region. ‘Thi rioting must stop. and if the present force Is hot enough more men will be ordered out.” 1.) op. ——— STRIKERS CLUB A MAN TO DEATH. SCRANTO: Pa., Sept. Wenzel was clubbed to death near the Grassy Island coltery, w Jess than a mile of where the ‘Thir- teenth Reigment !s in camp. Wenzel was formerly secretary of the Grassy Islieid local union of the. United Mine Workers. He returned to work a few weeks ago and theredy gained the enmity of the other members the union, No arrests have been made. —_—_——_. — HAMMERSTEIN’S CHANGES. But Not the Ones Mr, Anked for, |. Plans have been filed with the Bulld- ) tng Department for alterations to tho Victoria Theatre in the shape of a temporary 12-inch brick fireproof wall bp) Wetween tt and the Theatre Republic, 1 cost $200, This alteration is not the one ca [Sig the trouble between Comminslon =) ef Tulldings Stewart und Oscar Ham- LA'S tein, the theatre's lessee. SL FOUR KILLED IN WRECK. jmmen Crushed in Collision in * Pennsylvania. ILLE, Pa., Sept, 2%5.—In a freight traina on the Pitts- er and Lake Erle Raliroad to-day, four trainmen we @ fatally Injured. bite Stewart iad a ~~ ~ NIC IN COLLISION, te Mayo in River Mer. Eh wn Not Damaged, | y wi WALL STREET Jor lald down there drunk. DEAD, A WOUND Police Find Reason to Think that Schattino May Have Been Mur- dered. Refused to Tell Who Did It, and He Was Found, Dying on the Street Before Mystery Could Be Solved. Cireumstan¢ surrounding movements of Nicola Schattino, an Italian harness-maker of No, 107 Worth street, who died this morning in Gouverneur Hospital from in- juries received Saturday night indi- cate that he may have been mur- dered. The police of the Madison street station incline to this theory mystery. Schattino was found at 2.45 Satur- day morning lying on the sidewalic in front of No. 87 Division street. He was unconscious and blood was flowing from his left ear. The right bruised, and the mark of a heavy blow showed behind his right ear. He Staggered and Bled, Shortly before midnight Schattino ap- peared at his boarding place, No, 19 Worth street, jn an intoxlcated condi- tion. He talked with Antonto Santoro, son of the proprietor of the place, and complained of Injuries he had recetved enriler in the evening. His face was Dleeding and he staggered. “When I asked Schattino what had happened he wald that he had been hit by @ strange Itallan in a quarrel," sald Santoro to an Evening World reporter to-day. “He had been pald $12, his week's wages, Friday, and he showed the effects of a spree." ‘Who hit you?’ I asked. “'T will not tell his nome, met him,’ he sald, ‘I'll fix him.” Then Schattino was seen to stagger down Worth sirvet to Chatham Square and dsappcar around the corner. Three hours later he wns dlacovered on the sidewalk in front of the Division street house and awas taken to the hospital. Convinced It In Marder, I Just "If the post-mortem examination whowe that the man dled from the ef- ets of the Injuries which showed on his foco at the thne he visited his boarding place, I am vonvinced that Bchattino was murdered," dectared Capt. J. J. Cottrell, of the Madison street station, to-day. ‘It Je possible that he fell and struck his head on the stone flagging near where he waa found. { have had my men on the case ever since Sunday, and his movements are covered from the time he was eeen at the boarding-house up to the finding of the body on the sidewalk." After turning down Chatham Square Schattino entered several saloons tn the neighborhood. He mat over an hour on a bread-box at Division street and the Bquare. He entered the restaurant of David Hersenson, No. 67 Division street, avout 2 o'clock, and the proprietor noticing the bruises on his face ejected him from the place, “I saw that he was both weak from the loss of blood and drunk,” sald the restaurant man. “When he came in he was barely able to keep on his fect. In. one of his pockets he had a bottle of medicine, the contents of which he was rubbing on his face. His words were In- coherent, He made no resistance when I put him out.” ‘ Do Not Suspect Hersenaon. Hersenson bears an excellent repu- tation with the police as anything DUt a violent person, and he has witnesses to prove that he did not forcibly eject Schattino from his place, Jacod Kilne, clothing dealer, of No, $8 Division street, reached his home at 2.15 A. M., and after inspecting his store he fit in'an upper window for thirty min: utes. He said: “The street below was well Nghted from the power-house at Division and Allen streets. I saw every, body that passed, and Iam sure thad there was no fight near where Schattino was found. He must either have fallen I did not know he was there until the ambulance arrived.” Behattino was thirty-two years old and unmarried. He has an uncle In Yonk- ers, N.Y. For two yeara he has board- ed ‘at the Worth street houseyand al- ways was a heavy drinker. Where he spent the evening has not been learned and the police are endeavoring to trace his movements from his employer's har- ness shop, at Sixth avenue and Thirty- fourth street, where he knocked off work at 6 o'clock, ————___ TRAMPS SHOOT A DEPUTY. Phelps In Likely to Die—Po: After Hin Assailant HORNELL8SVILLE, N . Sept, B.— Conductor Curtis, of an Erle fretght train on the Buffalo division, put two. tramps off his train to-day, They fred two shote at him, but missed him, Cur- tis ntopped his train at Canaseraga to inform the authorities Deputy Sheriff Phelps followed the tramps and caught up to them near Arkport. They shot him tn the mouth and assaulted him with the butts of thelr pistols. Phelps is believed to be dying. A posse has surrounded the tramps In the woods between thia city and Arkport, ——— |TWO FORTUNES LEFT HIM. | Only When the Second Came Did Laborer Dunbar Give Up Work, TORRINGTON, Conn., Bevt. —From the ranks of a common laborer to one of the wealthiest residents of this has been the fortune of Solon Dunba who is sixty-five years old. Dunbar worked for $2 a day \n a factory here, By the death of a wealthy relative six years ago he fell het to $20,0w. He remained at his work despite the protests of members of his family until & few days him, He has reluctantly gi tthe factory, and anys of" e would live a day luage his loyment he wil ON HIS HEAD HE SAID HE WAS BEATEN. | the] and are endeavoring to clear up the side of his face was battered and/ Ince, When $25,000 was lett BRADY, THE NEW PHILOSOPHER, SAYS NEW YORK LADS ARE BEHIND. He Takes a “Bunch of Kids" toa Third Avenue Drama and Compares Them with the Wild and Woolly St. Louis Brand of Gamin. JOHN THOMAS BRADY AND THE NEW YORK “KIDS” AT THE “SOBBER.” “Say, remarked John = Thoma Brady, the former resident of St. Louis, who came to New York to live because he was disgusted at the re: crookedness among the Aldermen o ations of his home town, the kids of New Y are Willie boys alongetc the kids St. Louis, judging from my experience when I used to run away from school out there, “T shuMed up a bunch of New York kids Monday night and studied ‘em close to the eye over at the Third Avenue ‘Theatre, where they are running @ sob- ber called ‘A Mother's Heart.’ And I want to way right here that {t's a great show. You could put out a fire with the tears from the gallery when it gets to cases and the hero Is figuring on what Is coming out of the box next. I've seen rottener shows on Broadway at two pieces of soft money a seat. “On my way across town I picked up two New York kids. They as suspicious as a farmer when he sees a lightning-rod wagon, but I took ‘em along and the three of us went Into the gallery. “Out in St. Loule, when I was a kid, we used to chew: tobacco and shoot craps In the gallery. ‘They had @ tin floor on {t so the people below wouldn't get drowned from tobacco juice. Every kid had a vegetable or a rock with him, and when the show didn't go oar way we'd bom ‘d the stage. think of A Oandy Stand! “The gallery at the Third Avenue was ke @ Sunday-school, I hope I may never bleach another face if there wasn't a guy up there with a candy stand! Why, say, when I was a kid in St. Louls a candy stand In the gallery would have been considered an insult. The kids would have picked It up and thrown It at the orchestra. “Me and the kids got front seats, and then I got busy with the candy man. The candy waa a penny a stick, and I hed more fun with $0 cents than I could have had with %0 in a Broadway cafe opening wine for a lot of shines. ‘Them kids were et the candy like an automo. bile for a cripple, and when the curtain went up you could hear ‘em chewing It all over the galler: “In this show there's a dame married yof ‘Dummy Taylor, the ball pitcher. ¢o @ guy that plays Wall atreet for a] When the music began to play they place in the daytime and booze across| hung over the gallery gasping for the board at night. He's a good pro-| breath. ducer all right, but the dame can't] “Well, the Wall street husband stays stand for his habits, so she blows the #even rooms and bath and butlers pan- try and takes her Infant daughter along. “The next acenc has found out where ale ts and come along to separate her from the He's got a devilish him, Just as they're getting away wit the kid the particular friend of in the play. “His finish is awful. case with a clud as big as a baseball ba and he goes down and out. The two guy think he's dead and run away to sea. The Kida Were Dumb. “Say, I tried to get them kids to te me something about what they thought about things in general, but I might a get conversation out well haye tried to hows where the gny kid, accomplice with the mother Lutts In and tries to put a crimp The Wall street husband hands him a Jolt on his brain out and follows the sea for twenty yeurs. Her Knobs thinks he's croaked, marries the particular friend. down to Southern California and roll around in the lap of luxury and eat oranges and raise two boys, The mother with the heart has kept the girl kid all these years, but never told her who her father was, “In the last act they have a chureh scene, and the only bum thing in the show {s a cholr that tries to sing sacred musie. [ think this bunch that sings in ‘At Mother's Heart’ 48 gathered from them tnkle-tunkles in Twenty-elghth street and Twenty-ninth street. But tt gets the crowd. ‘That bunch would have Stood for the ‘Holy City’ on a xylo- phone made of beer bottles. “When I gets to the street them kids are still speechless, A play. like would have started a bunch of St. Louls chaps hurllug cabbages at the ‘villain (Ray garly Jn the game, and by the time Ue last act came around they'd be a few doctors busy. 50 es h t, MORE PAY AND AID FOR BISHOP. Dr. Potter to Have a Coad- jutor and $16,000 a Year —Coming Honors for Dr. Dix. The Diocesan Convention of the Epin- copal Church to-day referred to acom- mittee of eight, headed by the Rev, Dr. J. Lowls Parks, the rector of Calvary Church, the proposition to elect a bls- hop-coadjutor ro assist Bishop Potter. The committee, with the consent of the Bishop and standing committee, 1s authorized to call a special convention to elect a bishop-coadjutor If It shall approve of the plan. The second day's session of the con- vention of the diocese in Holy Trinity Church, tn East Blghty-elghth street, was prefaced by devotional exercises at 1 o'clock, The convention was called to order by Bishop Potter at 11 o'clock. After the reading of the minutes, which were adopted, the Bishop delivered his address consenting to the appointment of a coudjutor, Prominent among the laymen who are delegates are J. Plerpont Morgan, Col, Wiillam Jay and Charles H. Russell, The delegates to the convention stood during the reading of the Ist of tho year's dead at the afternoon session and repeated the Lord's Prayer when the Het was finished. Archdeacon Van Kleeck, of Westches- ter, moved that a Comiffittee of Five, headed by Dr. Huntington, be appointed to arrange a suitable commemorn tion for an “honored priest.” The mo- tion was adop Bishop Potter remarked that perhaps hould be explained that the priest £0 ferred to was the rector of Trinity reh, Twill s he continued, “that Dr, Dix does not belong to ‘Trinity alone, but to us all, T have ned recently thit it is proposed to celebrate the fif- tleth anniversary of his ordination, the fortieth of his rectorate and his seyenty- tt e fifth birthday all on one occasion. Resolutions were adopted fixing the of the Bishop at $15,000 2,500, ——_ MR. PELL AND THE GRIZZLY. He Was Not Hart, but His Norse Was Nearly Killed, BUTTE, Mont., Sept. %,—Reports sent out from the Yellowstone National Park j to the effec prominen that 8. Osgood Pell, a ew Yorker, had been In- jured in encounter with a large grizzly bear while hunting in the Rosky Mountains are untrue, although he had a narrow escape. Mr. Pell wounded the an CIRLS ARRESTED: STOLE6-FOOTER Mrs. Wronsky Charges the Misses Leger with Abducting Her 200.Pound Son. BOTH HELD UNDER BAIL. Two pretty girls of Ridgefleld Park, N. J., were arrested and held In $300 ball by Justice Ewen, of Hackensack, to-day charged with abducting a strapping six- foot boy and keeping him locked up in their home since Aug. 31 ‘The young women are the Misses Mar- garet and Stella Leger, daughters of Dr. Leger, a dentiat of No. 112 West Thirty- eighth street. ‘Their alleged vivtim is Frank Wronsky, seventeen years old and 200 pounds in welght. His mother, Mrs, Margaret Wronsky, of No. 102 West Elghty-ninth street, made all the trouble. They stormed in court when told they would have to give ball, and declared the procesding was a disgrace, but the Justice was obdurate. Mrs, Wronsky made an affidavit in Hackensack that the Mistes Leger were holding Frank a prisoner at thelr home iu Ridgefleld Park, near Hackensack, She satd she made vain attempts to nee him, but had been thwarted each time. Constables started out to find Frank, Frank made a flank movement, re- turning home, and greeted his mother when she got back. Mrs, Wronsky and Frank went bac to New Jersey this afternoon and got the warrant. A nelghbor also says that Frank, who sings in the cholr of the Church of 8t. John the Divine, was in love with M Margaret Leger and had gone over to New Jersey to be near her. ‘1 don't: know that lad," said Dr. Leger, “but I heard he attended a pic- wie on our grounds at Ridgefield Park y, My daughters did not kid- here couldn't have been an ACCUSED MAN RELEASED. Mauistrate Refuses to Hold Pr oner Wanted in San Francisco, A complaint against a prisoner ar- ralgned in Jefferson Market Court this afternoon to which was appended a coo of a warrant sent here from San bear and {t started to attack him, but the shots from his rifle finished th: animal, Mr. Pell's horse was nearly Kdiled by the bear, Mr, Pell and his party are on the r way home. NOTHING FOR WIDOW. nox Library and a Niece Iynnc Myor’a Estate, The will the late Isanc Mf. No. ft East Sixtleth street, was to-day, Get of r, of fed The eatate Is said to ve $5,000, his Work ve snovghe ry remaining 1 tbandon hin acripts qnd brary, goes to his niece, Sarah Myes Horstman, of Philadelphi iy Mbrary and manuscripts are lett Fhe Lenox diaeatye lyer'a low, Mar 5 ‘ton, ts not mentioned in ‘the w ALL, and, with the exception of his manu- of Bos- Francisco, alleged that Albert Pyrot, who had been known also as AlFred Pler, had obtained $00 under false pre- from Annie Mantke, of that a tele yesterday vrot wes here and askin, arrestal, A entra found him ‘on Sey ret. strate Flammer rendered decision had scanned the complaint, ram from stating that that he Mletective lke to be forteous and favor the officlals of other States, but it is proper that the complainant be brought here 2 mate cus pica » M S paniot afford ‘o hold defendants on telegrams. This prisoner is discharged nie hs ewe SEWARD ROACHES MANILA. WASHINGTON, Department ta of Lhe dss ie TATTOOING FOR FAST SIDE BOYS Artist Who Effected Astonish ing Results with His Needle Warned in Court Agalns Choosing Juvenile Patrons. Charles Wagner, twenty-five of 23 1-2 Bowery, appeared ears old, before Magistrate Devel in the Essex Market SCHWAB’S NEW PALACE, Fited for His Riverside Drive Restdence. Plans have been filed at the Bureau jof Bulldings, Manhattan, for Charles M. Schwab's new residence. It will be six stories high, and 90 feet front by 107 deep, situated on the block bounded by Riverside Drive, Seventy-third and Seventy-fourth streets and West End avenue. The front will face Riverside Drive. The building will be of granite Plans t and will cost $900,000. Court this afternoon to answer to a summons obtained by Agent King, of J, the Soclety for the Prevention of Cruelty to Child tatooed east side boys in court in the person twelve, of No. 151 Attorne street, an Michael Desago, fourteen, of the same address. On Slay's chest in varlegated an eagle, star J. 3. and an anchor; on his left arn an eagle carrying a baby, a horseshoe, star and crucifix. On Desago's left leg was the represen- tation of a snake; on his left arm a eru- ship, clfx, and on his right) arm a wreath and coat of arms. All was done in the colors and with not a Mttle skill a most Magistrate Deuel warned Wagner that there was trouble In store for him un less ho stopped decorating the boys and | Handsome then told him to go. SOUR BREAD Annoyed the Doctor. tom of your stomach trouble it wrong food, and the way to correct Shoes, solid throughou it is not by drugs but by using the right food. A physician in Barron, Wis., writes an instructive letter on this He says: poin: T am a practising phys! cian, 45 years old and about 6 feet began usin, Grape-Nuts last spring I weighed 14 in height. When I lbs., was thin and poor, had a coa of undigested bread or which were very sour—in short, had acid dyspepsia. “I consulted a brother physician, who advised me to eat about four teaspoonfuls of Grape-Nuts at the and I had been in the habit of drinking coffee for breakfast and tea for dinner and supper. I followed the advice of my brother physician as to diet and ex- commencement of each drink Postum Cereal Coffee. meal perienced relief at once. “Byer since that time I Coffee and attribute my relief my night to turn home eat the usual quantity of soundly all night.” ‘Co, Buttle Creek, to explain why he} xamples of Wagner's handiwork were James Slav, colors was a head of Christ; on his right arm and wreath, the letters brilliant If you get right down to the bot- ing on my tongue and frequently pelched wind or gas and small pteces potatoes have eaten Grape-Nuts with sweet milk or cream each morning for break- fast, and I now weigh 155 Ibs., and am bo more troubled with sour stom- ach, I am very fond of Postum Food h to that as I do to Grape-Nuts, “Often when I am called out in the @ patient and on my re- feel tired and hungry, t Grape- Sept, 2—The war} Nuts before going to bed and then vised of -the arrival Wransuurt Beward at Mantle, P. 1 oy Homeward:-prows are turned—New York the “Mecca’’; we welcome the “home-coming”” with these specials for Friday and Saturday: NEW FALL WAISTS, Designed Right, Cut Right, Made Right. The following exclusive styles on sale to-morrow : High Grade Velveteen, with metallic figures; open seam, or side button style; ree ornamental buttons..;0s2 600 Black and whiteBrilliantine Waists, side pleated; finely tailored 4,00 French corded, all wool striped Waists, button trimmed . $4.00 Black Peau de Soie $5.00 Waists, inverted pleats. . SHOE SPECIALS. Misses’ and Children’s Shoes in Vici Kid, Button, with patent leather tips, white oak soles, sewed and very solid throughout: Sizes 6 to 8, $1.00 pair; 8}; to 11,$1.25 pair; 112; to 2, $1.50 pair. Boys’, Youths’ and “Little Men's” School Sizes 9 to 13, $1.50 pair; 12 to 2, $1.75 pair; 2% to 5%4,$2.00 pair. Nurses’ and Housemaids’ Shoes, ail styles and prices from $1.25 to $2.50 pair. Ladies’ Bedroom or Turkish Slippers, 49c. pair. John G. Williamson & Son Columbus Ave., 82d & 83d Sts. t, 1s 10 te DIED. JOBBITT.—On fept. 24, 1902, at 4.90 P.M. his residence, 214 Cornelis st., Brooklyn, W. L. Jobpirt, Funeral privat Saturday, 27th, 10 A. M. How Many Questions Can You Ask? ‘There.are as miny answets as you can ask questiocs in the 1902 World Almana TOWER 10 GERMANY ASWEW AMBASSADOR American Representative at 3t. Petersburg Transferred to Berlin — Andrew D, White Recalled by President. BERLIN, Bept: 25.—President Roos veit has chosen Charlemagne Tower, Ambassador to Rueala, to succeed Mr. White as Ambagsador to Germany. Notifications of this decision and that Mr. White's letters of recall had been fasued by the State Department have ched the Foreign Office here. The appointment of Mr, Tower had been expected here for several weeks, As he was passing through Berlin six weeks ago he gave a hint to one or two of his friends that he might be transferred to this court. Mr. Tower's sister, Mrs. George J. Wurtz, of Phila- elphia, 1s well remembered in Berlin as an American woman who was pre- sented at Court and whose diamonds and pearls were more splendid than those worn by the Empress. Mr Waite will probably not have hi wit audience of the his birthday, as had Nov. vision: esty leaves Ha ortt sent his ely to prese Ts Of UNE’ about the middle of November. Charlemagne Tower Js a man of mill- ons, His father was a millionsire ’ railroad m' and manager e © Ambassador ix himself a lawy who added to his wealth by railroad rations In Minnesota atid as an torney in Philadelphia, He was not known in’ politics, or diplomacy, untll President. McKinley appointed) him Minister to Austria. Later Mr. Tower wan transferred to Russia as, American Ambassador, Mr. Tower Is fifty-four years old. He isa graduate of Harvard and has pub- lished several historical works. $$ HEPBURN TO BANKERS. Former Comptroller Compares Our Currency System with Germany, PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 25.—The prin- cipal address at the meeting to-day of the State Bankers’ Association of Pennsylvania was that of A. B. Hep- burn, ex-Comptroller of the Currency. His address was devoted to a com- parison of the currency systems of Ger- many and the United States. James H, Eckels addressed the con- yention on The Government's Relation to the Citizens’ Business Affairs.”” MAD AT MOTHER, SHE LEFT HOME. 4 Doleful Experience Here of a Pennsylvania Girl Because She Could Not Go to a Matinee. a Lillie Pringle, Providence, # sixteen years old, of Scranton, Pa., suburb, was found to-day wet aad shivering at the West Forty-second ‘street ferry, She told Policeman Burns, of the Weet Forty-seventh strest station, that her mother woudn't let her go to a matinee yesterday, and, helping herself to $10, she came to New York last night. She slept in a hotel and awoke with 4.05, and not knowing what to do. Bho sald she wanted to go home, and was sent to the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, Her parenta notified. were Perfect Gas Lighting. 3 times the Light at 14 the cost. Household size, 125 Candle Power, $1.00 $9.00 $12.00 All lamps put up free of charge in New York City Call and see us or drop us a postal and our representative will call. Catalogue D......for the asking. American Incandescent Lamp Co,, 55 Park Place, N. Y. City. 4 Light Clusters, for Stores, &c. Outside Arc Lamps, §nate. fingers could never knead s0 thorourily. you are suphiied. Dough not made by hand, but kneaded entirely by machinery, Ad- ditionally safe-guarded by strict hy- gienic rules requiring workmen to bathe every morning and attire themselves in white uniforms furnished by Company. Every loaf of ts securely wrapped In Parafino paper, so that no future handling can contam. Our bread ix mude by the only perfect Kneading Machine in existence, It knead« the dough exactly ay kneadod by the human flugers—only human. TRY A LOAF TO-DAY. Tf your grocer docs not keep ft, and addreva, also your grocer’s name, ak THE UNITED STATES BREAD COMPANY, 362-364 W. Broadway, near Grand St,, New York. N, Y. ‘ Telephone 4183 Spring i j send us your name ind we Will see that Safe trom Summer Complaints All mammas, and papas'too for that matter, dread the heat of summer with it's danger for the littl caused 1,000. Toploa ‘Tersely ‘Treated In the diarrhoea, summer rash, imer brings with it. Masts tate - TR : pe by a fragrant, sweet little candy tablet, and are safe from colic, gripe prickly heat and all_the mean. troubles.t! le folks, especially the babies. It is simply heart-breaking to read year after year about the great death rate among children by the summer's heat. Yet it is. easy to protect the infants against all sum- mer complaints, because we know that all these fea rful perils have their beginning © in stomach and bowel troubles, and we have a_ perfect famil medicine that will keep the del icate machinery in a child’s bady clean,regular and in healthy work- ing order in the -hottest weather. — CASCARETS Candy Cathat- tic, The plump, bouncing, crow» CARET baby. He feels that way | winter and summer. Nursing mammas take a CASCARET at — bed-time, and it makes their and keeps the baby just right. Older children like to take the ing baby shown here is a CAS: mother’s milk mildly purgative