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Admit the Failure of Attempt to Drive the Independent Manufact- “urers Out of Business. ects A HALF A MILLION. a ikers Got Genuine Havanas at a “Low Price While thé War ‘Lasted, but Now the Rates Will “What the “Tobacco Trust” has been f dn its fight against 102 Inde- S it clyar manufacturers of Havana " admitted to-day by subordinate of the American Tobacco No. 611 Fifth avenue. It has the Trust just $600,000 to discover dmpregnable position of the inde jendents. ‘While the fight has been waged In the ited States, the seat of the trouble Havana, There the trust turns out Cent. of ithe 800,000,000 cigars manu- and in an attempt to drive out ‘the rest of tho trade five weeks ago be- an an attack upon them through their “@ustomers in the United States and ty | “Bweeping reductions were made in @enuine Havana made cigars. Twenty- pent cigars sold for nine and one-half and dearer goods at a corre- @ponding ratio with the purpose in view @f attracting users of the independent Brands away from thelr favorite weed. ‘Of course the trust did not sell below oat and the half a million figure repfe- @ents a negative loss, Their govods “Mrere vended through the medium of ‘the United Cigar Stores Company, and Acker, Merril! & Condit and other re- falling creatures of the trust. The ef- feot of the reduction was anything but what was expected. Gmokers of domestic brands began to ‘Bay the real Havana weed, }xperts es- mate that tho demand for the im- Ported article at the trust stores in- anywhere from 2% tu per cent. _petieg the minions of the trust wore @miles and fancied that i was the trade of the independent deal- @f8 which poured in upon thom. Quite ‘the contrary. This was discovered when ‘@belr own regular trade began to buy Pothing but'the real thing from Havana. Bo far as can be estimated the inde- manufacturers of Havana have more than 10 per cent. of their fe, if that, The Independents, save ‘| tew rare exceptions, did not find It to meet the bottom figures set truat, but the American makers: clears, at Key West, Tampa New York who are not controlled ‘the did meet the figures and ive pl @ still further reduction. 4 Y ust’ will raise the of ite Havana goods next. week geek to recover lost ground in the SHOT O0C, BUT BULLET BOUNDED ‘Flew Across Street, Smashed , Store Window and Wife of Proprietor Was Frightened and Cut by Flying Glass, _ ‘There was more excitement to-day in 4Bg streets than the whole borough of | Brooklyn has seen in a month. It was @il over the shooting of a dollar and a ghalt biack and tan dog. s dog belonged to Miss Helen Howe, WE No. 26 Lefferts place. She took it (put for’n walk on her way to market. (While crossing Fulton street the dog mixed up with the business part of flying troliey car and was all but kien was @ loud report, ‘The dog Ry) ped, and as Ife passed out of his there was a crash and scream | trom @cross the street. The bullet had| Pounded from the pavement and shi the plate-glass window in Gus-| #@ Rosenawig's store at No, 1021 Ful- ton street, ipa sting glasa hit Mrs. Rosenzwig rushed into the street, her nec! Fed with blood, crying that wie was | | AB ainbulance was called and the fire ‘eng! Would have followed had not aliceman prevented an excited cltl- om turning in an a Rosenzwig was no * rm. much hurt, GAING TO SEE CIRCUS. Benuice Lady Bountiful is to be ¥ evening Jn the crowded en- Madison Square Garden, gather ragged boys of the pleading of these bo; tbe well-cr: m waitin, fckets, while her mother a the? box party wait in protest piven Way to the plea of one Lis kurrounded by half a # for funds from mother, with Gy “the poor Mule kde the tent, you know.”’ dropped to the ground dead. A second threw up his hands in surrender. The TUNNEL DISASTER CHIEF ONE of the Supreme Court promises to be EROWDS AND EXCITEMENT. z t the neighborhood of " {of seventeen lives and the maiming of ual e! 92 Pulton and Downe | oo. of persons ment. 4 A crowd gathered to condole with Miss| Wisker was in court, looking very owe. A policeman Tushed into the mid-| pale and emaciated. He was evidently Of the gathering. There was a gen-|@ sick man, He 1s eald to have wor- feral goattering when he “pulled forth|ried so about the accident that he is Alp trusty revolver" and took alm (some DEAS chasers} Ha near in indictment for manslaughter in the sec. Peay with both eyes closed) at the dying | ea . the Maximum, penalty for nt nd the | pu ROBGER KILLED HCHTING POSSE. With Two Others He Escaped on Train After Hold-Up, and Trio, Intercepted, Faced Pistols of Armed Force. FOUGHT WHILE RUNNING. In Fusillade of Shots One of the Thieves Fell Dead, While An- other Was Wounded and Cap- tured—None of Pursuers Hurt. CLEVELAND, March 28.—A desperate battle was fought early to-day betwee! three robbers on one side and officers and citizene on the other at Bedford, a suburb of this city, resulting in the death of one of the robbers and the wounding and capture of another, ‘Many shots were exchanged before the fleeing men were finally brought down, ‘Three masked men entered the town of Garrettsyille, twenty-five miles east of Cleveland, seized the night policeman and bound and gagged him. ‘The officer was then marched to the post-office, where he was compelled to witness an attempt to blow open the safe by the marauders. They finally, after working somo time, gave up the job without securing any- thing of value, They then entered tho store of F. E. George, where they se- cured a small sum of money. Later they stole a horse and buggy and drove to Ravenna, where they boarded a Cleveland and Pittsburg freight train for Cleveland. Meantime the authortties had been roused at both Ravenna and Gar- rettsville. ‘Telegrams were sent to Bed- ford and when the train arrived there a number of deputy aheriffs and a posse of oltizens were on hand, armed with guns and revolvers. The three burg- lars jumped from the train as it drew up to the station. They immediately drew their revol- vers and a running fight . The robbers fired rapidly as they ran to- ward an open field, while the officers and posse poured in volley after volley upon them. Finally one the of pursued men wounded that he left a in ‘his footsteps and soon wax so bad): trail of blood Us man escaped, thi, "men "have ‘not teen identified None of the offcers or citizena were in- jured. THE WORLD: SATURDAY WULLAGH TOBE KEPT IW HS 18 Gov. Odell and Senator Platt Agree at Conference Upon a Rappointment for State Su- perintendent of Elections. “CRUISER” CABMA TO MODIFY MORTGAGE BILL. Opposition of Republicans In This Clty to Proposed Measure An- moys the Governor, but He Agrees to Yield. In epite of the part he played in the allege? attempt to bribe Congressman Lessler to vote for the Holland torpedo boat, John McCullagh is to be reap- pointed State Superintendent of Elec- tions, This was decided upon to-day, together with other matters of tmport- ance at a conference between Senator Platt and Gov. Odell at the Fifth Ave- nue Hotel, The Governor was in bad humor be- fore and after the conference. He is ‘having lots of trouble putting through deais that he considers necessary, and he does not like the newspaper criticism that these deals have aroused. The firat question discussed by the Senator and the Govertior was the Mort- gage Tax Bill, one of the Governor's pet Y MVENING, MARCH 28, 1908, FIND A NEW FOE N, WHO WILL IN CAPT. PIPER. PIPER NOW AFTER CRUSER CABMEN Having Squelched the Truckmen He Is About to Proceed to Whip the Irresponsible Jehs Into Line. AN OBSTACLE TO TRAFFIC. Vehicles Are Hired by Drivera Who Have to Hustle to Make Expenses Somehow, and Smother Their Scruples. Having vanquished the truckmen by establishing the English system of regulating traMc at four of the most congested corners of the city streets, Capt. Piper has turned his attention to cruiser cabmen, and has declared war on the rambling jJehus that roam the streets at all hours of the day and night in search of fares, “In London the crulser cabman {is one of the greatest evils the authorities have to deal with, and the system of handling them here is far from per- | fect, he said in an Interview yester- day, “I am now considering measures to be taken which will greatly relieve this obstacle to traffic, and I am as- sured of the city's co-operation.” In this utterance of the Deputy Police measures. In view of the fact that sev- eral Republican organizations {n Brook- lyn and Manhattan haye met and passed resolutions condemning the bill, Gov, Odell agreed to have 1t modified consid- erably before presenting it again. There was a long talk about the osed three-platoon police system. hi jovernor {8 opposed to it, Senator Plat professes to favor It. Senator Platt dictated the reappoint- ment of John McCullagh as we:l as that of State Railroad Commissioner Baker. Tt was agreed that former Congressinan Harry A. Hanbury will be appointed to succéed Joseph A. Dickey as Shipping Commissioner of this port. After the conference Senator Platt said that his meeting with the Governor had been most harmonious. DWARF KNOCKS CANT RIAL OUT Charles Gilmore, Two Feet High, STOCKS ie t That Tremendous Su realized. The losses infilcted on the dollars, $657,200,000. This tremendous depre tabulation: FAMOUS CASES ON CALENDAR, April Term of Supreme Court’s Criminal Branch Will Be Re- markable for Number of Trials of Universal Interest. ‘The April term of the Criminal Branch unusually busy and important. Dates for a number of much-talked-of cases were set for trial to-day by Justice Ver- non M. Davis, ‘The most important ts that of Enj er John M, Wisker, who was at the rottle of the New York Central en- ine which crashed into the New York, New Haven and Hartford train in the tunnel Jan. 8 1902, and caused the loss ne thi On motion of Assistant District-4Attor- ney Rand, Justice Davis set the trial for Apr! 15, A motion was also made for a special jury, Mr, Rand explaining that there had been a great deal of com- ment about the case. “Not so much about Wi as about the New York Central,” remarked Prank Moss, counsel for Wisker. This motion was taken under advise in prison, of Al J, Adams, y King.” was set for At the last trial the jury dis- 1 jury Was also asked vase, Adains 1s OU o1 4 was fixed for the trl Rosle Quinn, indicted for murder” for drowning her baby in the Central Park Lake, und of Charles. Fitzpatrick, Ine dict for selling questions of the Cty! 8 examining Board to candidate: s in the Police and Fire De. partments, Justice Francis M these cases, ALMOST KILLED CHILDREN. Boot will try all Koom with Three Children, Mrs. Ida August, thirty years old, of No, 94 Flushing avenue, $s dying in at. Catherine's Hospital, Williamsburg, from drinking carbolic acid and inhaling ivminating gas. Her three children, aged seven, five and four respectively narrowly escaped asphyxiation, When she drank the acid and turned on tho gus they were In bed in an adjoining the door was oj ugust was dincove machinist, wi to get som he children rying, but ons to “his “knock, In the door he found dying on the floor, At the aid the woman cannot He hosp! recover ae James Collins 0 ited euicide yes i honet's saloon vod ing egscailny Sy Her sulcide was the result of aad consequent melanoholia, fil health Bill for B ALBANY, March f of Rush, ‘A bill in the ine BILLION DOLLAR preciation in Price of Securities on the Mar- ket Within the Last Six Months. The extent to which the stock market has been punished js only dimly liquidation beginning six months ago amounts to more than a Dillion of In twenty-one active stocks there has been an actual shrinkage of| Commissioner the cruiser cabmen read a presage of war. And they know that in his crusade Capt. Piper will have the sympathy and co-operation of liverymen and hotel cab stands throughout the elty, * After Cruiser Cabmen. There are in New York at the present time between three and four thousand of these wandering jehtfs who, with up- lifted hand and persuasive ‘ sir?" lure the belated fare from his orderly course toward a public stand or livery stable. The supply, indeed, Is very much In excess of the demand, and the struggle to make a living is correspond- ingly keen. The ‘Tenderloin, especially at night, ts fairly alive with them. They haunt the railway stations and ferries, where out-of-town fares, igno- rant of the regular tariff, and therefore most profitable of all, may be picked up. They can be seen in greatest ac- cumulated numbers at the “line balls," such as the Arion or the French, for at these functions when the first cabby in line is hailed and, after consultation with his prospective dare, falls to secure him by reason of exorbitant d mands, he is obliged to go back to t rear and give the next man a chan If the first hailed at two in the mor: ing ofers ty go up to Seventy-second HRINKAGE m Represents the De- entire list during the long period of elation is set forth In the following| ts Pr treet fi 33 id d id 4, = Lands a Solar Plexus Blow on decine’, Toss. | abciines, ross, | skierea Excessive une next i Hine has a At, Top. & 8. Fe. 14 $14,600,000) New York Central 37 40,000,000) “fiance ,t uiverbid him, and so it goes John Montgomery, Six Feet Baltimore & Ohio. 26 48,000,000| Northwestern -... 89 60,500,000 odin malt animber of erulger cabmen Tall. Brooklyn R. ‘Tran, 15 6,700,000| Norfolk & Western 12 12,000,000) pruwi ‘ihe streets, Dut the great mex- Canadian Pacific... 18 $2000000/ People's Gas... 19 8800,000 ite wll be gonnstneretors that, fia Chicago & on... 16.00, lennsylvania ____ 16,000,000 | the, prise pay he must make from 1] td t ight, HIT HIM WITH A CART RUNG. |chee. @ Ohio... 13 7,000,000/ Southern Railway. 10 18,000,000) tiuata't» i oalun Geet Pts Erle - 10 17,000,000) Union Pacific... 23 46,500,000| "4, feed, his horse property. A dwarf two feet high and a giant|!llinols Central .. 36 34,000,000) United States Steel 19 101,000,000) fourth street and, ae es six feet tall were arrested in Chatham & Nashville 42 25,000,000| U. S. Steel pf... 16 81,000,000} daily 34 cabs. 67 loaded hansoms and Square last night by Polloeman Scott, curl Pacific. 17 17,000,000 Sine tagt thes. the number. oF enwty of the Elizabeth street station, for cre- hansoms exceed that of those - Manhattan .. .--- 20% 11,000,000; Total ......._. ceeeeeee $667,200,000 | ree aetna hee! con: ut it evid she sting @ sisturtmnce ‘and attracting «| (oUt Ry. 42 22,000,000 large number of crulser cabmen im the ‘The dwarf, Charles Gilmore, is a ped- der of cough drops, The giant ts John Montgomery, of No. 11 James street, and is known as a sallor. classified as active. There is scarcely Pollceman Goott found the long man| dergone severe shrinkage. and the short man fighting. A bdig) crowd had gathered, and when Scott knock-out blow to the giant, striking/{n dollars is In the stock of the Ste tim in the solar plexus with a cart Fane monusomeny came to auick!y.| §192,000,000. ‘This shrinkage falls on policeman Gilmore would have been an- Mr. Keene is popularly supposed nihilated, trate Pool in the Centre Strest Court There are about two hundred stocks traded in on the Exchange, and many besides those included in the above enumeration might properly be} The biggest loss in points occurred in Chicago & Northwestern, which arrived the dwarf had just delivered a|has always been regarded as one of the choice standards, The greatest loss points stockholders of the common and preferred issues face a Scott arraigned the two before Magis-|ings of securities, thereby securing himself against severe losses. The professionals believe that he still inclines to the short side of the market, elty. Strangers Are Eany Prey. There can be little doubt that in the aggregate they constitute an obstacio to traffic. But they also have their uses, To a _well-gowned caught in a sudden shower issues from shop or reception, the man about town who has dined too well, the appearance of the sh cushions of an empty hansom is table boon, New Yorkers, however, are not the main reliance of the wandering cab- men. Strangers are their choloest prey, for they know noth'ng of city tari and the cabby who has been any length of time on the streets know: New Yorker from his country cousin profta by the latter's Ignorance to anything on the list that has not un- el] Trust. Between the high and low loss of 62,000 stockholders, to have “hedged” his {mmense hold- t rning, Magistrate Pool, after exact a sum which will pay his cab Hearing the poticoman's story, went both although he has refrained from giving any positive indication of hig|Tent for a service which would cost the prisoners to the Tombs Prison for the wise eltizen @ paltry dollar: ten days each, position. The cruiser cabmen, owing to their e; cessive numbers, find life already a MORE CROOKS SENT FROM CITY. Four Men Found Loitering Near the Waldorf Arrested, but Re- leased to Leave Town. BOKKEEPER POSEDAS SWELL David W. Meikelreid Spent Money Freely with Rich Asso- ciates—Now He Is Held for Trial as an Embezzler. There is no let-up in Inspector Mo- Clusky's war on the crooks and con- fidence men who have been allowed to infest Broadway so long that they began to think they owned the thoroughfare, Detective Sergeant Kelly arraigned four of them In Jefferson Market Court to-day, charging them with loitering about the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, where he arrested them. ‘They were released on their promise to leave the city. The very best hotels are none too good for Rhe stamping ground of the high- class confidence man, Because of the David V. Melkelreld, who has Intely been very prominent in the wealthy Ger- man set that patronizes Terrace Garden, was arraigned in Yorkville Police Court to-day charged with embezslement. It 1s sald that within a year he has stolen $18,000, and the examination of his books has not been completed, He worked as bookkeeper for the Shef- field Farms-Slawson-Decker Co,, dea in milk, with headquarters at No. 10 $100.67 on Jan. 2, 1908; of $55.12 on Feb, 2, 1908, and of $83.10 the next day. The oMcers of the milk company heard that Metkelreid was spending a They hold a long, whispered conversa- don and finally walked out and down to Thirty-fourth street, Kelly followed them. When they reached the Waldorf-A. torla two of them stationed themselves at the main entrance, evidently to wait for some one coming out or going in, The others walked to the corner of Fifth avenue, where they stood looking at the moving stream of carriage Kelly concluded that they had ar- ranged to victimize somebody. He ar- rested the two on the corner, turned them over to @ policeman and then paumered down to i] entrance, where seotion and placed a watch on him They found, it is alleged. stealing money given to him to deposit in the Plaza Bank, He was arrested a couple of weeks ago changed with em- bessling @ small amount and released on $2,000 bail, became oo large that it was denied rearrest him, Ball was fixed at flo, to-day, He was unable to furnish it, em Car Climbs on Wagon, be aes e names of Gi terest of Thomas Ri be New York had damissed trom ry Seta pe mpfrmbbed the rest of the quartet, rd ote to vi John Lowls, 7 4 correspond to numb d qumber of atrangors with money con! sigin avenue, Alfred H. Wheat, of No,|corrgpond to numbered lips mrheoh Hnually at the Waldorf that hostelry| sq sagt Iifty-second street, cashier of . el, peddlers bean tials favorite piacetet cece z roel OF] will be allowed to draw a numbere has ‘been thelr place of res the company, was the complaining wit ly saw fou n with thi 5 g slip from the wheel and then they can| | ve Hey nthe aPPear-| ness. ‘The specific offenses named w "4 \ ib ance of crooks assemble in a Bixth| tne thett af $100 on Nov. 24 12s ot | Xe Possession of the sootion thus num- avenue ealoon yesterday afternoon. dered dn the market place. It will be great deal of money in the Yorkville that he was When his books were examined the amount of his peculation to 000 » March 2.—A trol- difficult proposition, and if Capt. carries out his threat they have a hard time In front of them. MASTERSON FOUND GUILTY. Policeman Convicted of Abducting a Fifteen-Year-Old Girl, Pollceman Hugene A. Masterson, on trial before Justice Vernon M. Davia in the criminal! branch of the Supreme Court, for having sent Annie Berkeley, & fifteen-year-old girl, to a disorderly house, was convicted to-day after the uiry had been out all night, ‘The techni- cal charge was abduotion, fi * Masterson was remanded for sentence unl Monday, The extreme penalty is five years. PUSHCART MEN TOBE NUMBERED Street Commissioner Woodbury Will Hand Out Spaces Like a Lottery to Itinerant Venders, Street Commissioner Woodbury wit have a grand distribution of stands for the push cart peddlers of the east side at the new Williamsburg Bridge ap- proach, Delancey and Clinton streets, between 4 and 6 o'clock next Monday afternoon, The distribution wi!l proceed much lke a keno game, All of the stands along the fine asphaltes strips, laid out for the fish peddlers, and the syace adjoining, which e.n be used for ven- ders of other forms of merchandise, have been numbered. These numbers @ case of first come first served, and there will be plenty of police on hand to Bee that every one doesn't try to draw first, Tho plain ts apt to result in some tn- congrulties. For example, the of Dam sandwiches is apt to held until For a limited period, or H mopolitan oly MUST WEAR SHORT SKIRTS. De Wolfe Iaaw That Eftee Mire Blsle De Wolfe to-day had posted at the Madison Square Theatre notice that ai) the young women in the Order to | Stern Brothers Direct Attention to Their Upholstery Department in which the facilities for high-class work- manship and the prompt delivery ofall orders have been greatly increased Work ordered now for Summer homes will be Advance orders for Fall work may also be booked. Wall Hangings, Draperies, and Furniture Re-upholstering at Considerably Below. Regular Rates. For this period prices of upholstery materials have been greatly reduced. ( SHOOTS ANOTHER They Had Been Unfriendly for Months, but Accounts Differ as to What Led to the Shoot- ing. THE WOUND NOT SERIOUS. Both Are Attached to a Brooklyn Precinct and Were Making an Arrest When the Trouble Cul- minated. Policeman Patrick J. McAuliffe, of the Bergen street station, Brooklyn, was shot In the right side early this morning by Policeman Daniel BE, Hesrahan, who is now under arrost, It was thought that McAullffe wan seriously injured, but an examination at the Brooklyn Hospital proved that the bullet had caused a slight wound. The shooting was preceded by a quarrel, What {it was about is not known, but it Is sald that the two police- men have been unfriendly for several months and have frequently threatened each other, McAuliffe was on his beat about four oclock this morning. He met Policeman Gallagher, and they later arrested Thomas Sheridan, who was intoxicated. They called for a patrol wagon, and when {t came Hanrahan was driving, with Policeman Fenton on the seat be side him, The shooting occurred while Fenton and Gallagher were carrying the pris- oner into the patrol wagon. These two policemen say they did not hear the dispute that led up to the shooting and the principals tell stories that diftor greatly. McAuliffe says that no sooner did the wagon reach the corner than Hanrahan called him a “terrier,” with a few un- printable adjective attached. When he asked what he meant, McAuliffe says Hanrahan drew his revolver and fired. Hanrahan says McAuliffe came to the front of the wagon and struck him with his night stick and that he was forced to use his revolver in self-defense. When Fenton and Gallagher heard thf shot they ran around to the front of the wagon. McAuliffe fainted and they ‘helped him into the wagon. Hanrahan, ‘himself, drove to the Bergen Street Station, where an ambulance surgeon was called and the injured man was taken to the hospital. It was found that the bullet had struck a rib on the night side and had been diverted. The wound was dressed and McAuliffe went home, saying that the Gid not feel his injury. Hanrahan made no attempt to get away. He was at once placed under arrest and put in a cell. No charge will be made againat him until the police learn definitely the extent of McAuliffe's injuries. ‘When Hanrahan was arraigned in the Myrtle Avenue Court he pleaded not guilty and was held in $1,000 ball for examination. He made a counter charge against MoAullffe, who, he alleged, had wtruck him with his club, McAuliffe was paroled. QUICK REPARTEE BY AID OF AN AXE Made Lasting Impression on Man Who Said “Fat Head,” for His Skull Is Fractured, ‘This 1s repartee weather. The balmy springtime flavor gets into the blood and people begin to talk to each other. Then things happen. John Flanagan is in Hudson Street Hospital with a fractured sicull. A man brushed against him in Fulton Market yesterday, “Fathead!” paid Flanagun, whereupon the stranger hit him with an axe, making a most decided impression on tis mind. Henry Zimmerman, of Brooklyn, was arraigned in the Tombs Court to-day charged with wielding the axe. Down at Inwood, L. I., Mra. Ella Cragt ts awaiting trial on @ charge of horse- whipping six-year-old Mildred Smith. The aetense of Mrs. Craft ts thet the “old tubber,"* ohild galled her an required. ders will be received for ONE POLICEMAN To-Morrow’s A Boat-Race in by Delving, How It Seems to Be a Tramp. Miss America, Sung Without Ears, MORE FUN IN FOUR PAGES OF THE REALLY FUNNY “FUNNY SIDE” THAN EVER BEFORE, To-Morrow’s - Sunday — Sunday World. A Ball Gown Made in 2 Hours, Fashion's latest move, which will enable wives to dress in entirely new creations and get ready for the theatre before their husbands lose their patience. Can You Wash Your Face? Maybe you think so, but you can learn something useful from Har riet Hubbard Ayer. The Skipper in the Low-Neck Gown, How a woman tried to beat @ trust and succeeded in accomplish ing her object. Interesting. \! ‘Tramp, Tramp, Tramp, The Thieves Are Trekkingl’’ Where Are the Crooks All Going? By JOSIAH FLYNT. Driver out of New York by Inspector Mo» Clusky, the big criminals must . be going somewhere. But where? For the benefit of communities that may have to receive the: the Sunday World will prin photographs and other facts about the most notable. Inspector Me« Clusky’s statement. Leslie Carter’s Revenge. War waged by billboard between - Dureary and her Chicago huse and. Wanted, a Blue Whale. If you find one, please send to the U. S. Government, which is ‘ looking for one. Your Bedroom. The Sunday World’s weekly lege son in its great Physical Culture School. 6,000 Years Unearthed Some very astonishing results of research in the Holy Land, ‘ \ By PROF. MARSH. The Unfe versity of Pennsylvania has estab. _ lished a “Chair,” with a Professor of “HOBO-OLOGY.” Empress of India, How Columbia’s daughters are guiding the destinies of the Brite ish Empire, Heard Grand Opera The most wonderful achievement of its kind in history due to the Sunday World.