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TS 0f the Bupreme Court on a charge of “WMS. B NELSON Wall Telegraphs fis Blessing to the Runaways and Sends His Daughter a Trunk- ful of Clothes. MR. WALL WILL HIMSELF GET MARRIED WEDNESDAY. $o Young Mr. Neilson Says: and Gives That as the Reason _ Why His Father-in-Law Op- ' posed Daughter's Marriage. it to become a bridegroom him- Frank T. Wali, the millionaire manufacturer, has forgiven Blanc Neilson, brother of Mri Reginald C, Vanderbilt, and bis daugn- ter Marguerite for their secret marriage on Jan, 6 4nd thelr clopement Saturday. Mr. Wall, a widower, is to be m: ried, it is announced, to Mies Emily Unckles, of No. 22 DeKalb avenun, lyn, and unless the notoriety at- tached ‘to the elopement of Mr. Wall's Gaughter prevents, the ceremony will be celebrated Wednesday at the bride's home. ‘When Mr. Wall left his home to-day "he Announced that he had forgiven lis @aughter and Nellson, that he had wired them his biessing and had ex- presséd his daughter a trunk of clothes. Sent His Diessing. “What could I do Mr. Wall asked. “It is all over now, Everything is settled and I hope they will be very. very happy. I have sent t “Bless You, my children, and be happy,’ and While it was unfortunate for certain reasons I have forgiven them." ‘The tip that Mr, Wall was soon to be Married came from Mr. Neilson, who. with his bride, is at the Hotel Walto Philadelphia, where they are eagerly awaiting the arrival of Mrs. Neilson’s trunk, When pressed for a reason why ‘his. father-in-law should have so vigor- ously opposed his marriage, Mr. Neil- won said that he probably objected Ww the wedding at this time as it con- Dictéd with his own matrimonial da ‘ Mr. Wall's Bi Miss Unckles, who Is to be the bride of Mr. Wall, has been a member of a select coterie in Brooklyn society for several years. She is twenty-elght yeurs old and Mr. Wall a trifle over fifty. Mr. Wall has a country home at Lenox, ‘Mass., where his daughter and Netlson Met and learned to love, Miss Unckles’s father has a country place near Pitts- field, Mass., and that is where she and Hr. Wall met. ‘The. young Indy's father is a wine im- porter, with offices and a warehouse at No. 4 Cliff street, Manhattan, Miss Unckles, who is tall, with golden au- ‘urn hair, is sald to be one of the pret- teat young women in Brooklyn society. fhe has spent elght months of each year for several years in Burope, being most ‘of the time in schools there, and her {friends know her as exceptionally cul- tured. D.-S. Unckles, her uncle, sald to-day; There has been no secret about the wedding, but of course we were all dis- tressed when we heard that Mr. Wall's daughter had wedded secretly, My niece and Mr. Wall will be married Wednesday at 6 o'clock in the DeKaiv |) tained a supp at Mike Lyons's, and how fvenue house, That is all I care to way. i Philadelphia to-day Mr. Neflson, While waiting for the trunk with his Wife's clothes to arrive, told something ‘of his escape from New Y with her. After young Mr. Nelison hada seen that his bride w ‘tably fixed in Philadelphia he went down to the cor- ridor to see reporters who had trailed them. \ How Mr. Neilson Succeeded, “uw dia you triumph? he was shed. "“\yhat about the stories of a reconciliation {” “well, said Mr. Nellson slowly, “I hadn't quite been able to reacn an! agreement with Mr. Wall, and 1 guess fe aid not really iknow L wan in the house on the occasion of my lust visit.” “Tien you really eluped with your | 1 think it may be called ent,” Jaughed Mr. Neilson think it nay.” # been several stories THE WORLD: MONDAY & WOMAN WHOSE BODY WAS FOUND ON RAILROAD TRACKS AND SOME OF HER CLOTHING; SKETCHED FOR EVENING WORLD, BEAN-BLOWERS PUT Two Bad Boys Break Incandes- cent Giobes. Pelt Actors and, Carry on Generally Till a Po- licetian Puts Them Out. bean- Fitty- night, the Cownstalrs sect! fire 4 brewing and put ene special police man out of « MIKE LYONS WINS. RESTAURANT SUIT Jury Rejects Claim for Damages by Wedding Guest Who, with) Was Arrested at Bowery Delmonico’s. smashed incandesee row that soo this Magistrate Cornell in the Yorkyille Court $3 ch, ands on rd over 8) banker ratro time last night, and they spent for Proctor’s They got choice seats In the ground for a Dennis Higgins, The jury lu the sult of Moss Davis, one of Jack O'Brien's wedding supper party carted off to in a patrol wagon fi bean-blower fustllid Policeman Murp! third street station, he police station Mike Lyons's didn't think the ntitled to damages for the experience, and said so in their verdict this afternoon, Lyons thanked the jury- men who had heen #0 good to him, and shook hands with about forty Bower, in the Court-House ist Fifty- plain regular ae ping would not be hurt, as this 1s a}Misht have been killed, She was uke until the audience they got for that's I don't think they wast- the bulying of Richard Presley, another of the wed- ed a pebble, and pebbles hurt, too ding party, and a witness in behalf of Moss Dayis, also sued 1 ages, and the sult was called to trial ‘at the close of the Davis c : “These boys,” drive a lot of pebbles at the tn cent Hghts and the lamps kept a-br lng one after another wan scared to death, red of breaking lamps they Second Suit Adjourned, Spectal Policeman Steps In. ‘ons for dam gallery has the nanw fruiteul & search he found the centre of the storm. Then he knew he was right, for on xey- Of rubber goods stocks. ‘The buying in ‘Try to Solve Mystery. eral occasions Emil and Dennis had s heatre that the big to bull Southern Railway, being ed to read them the peluted in ¢ his: counsel for both Dayis and Presley, asked for an adjournment, saying that an important granted the adjournment ack O'Brien, a, “bounce mind to eject them summarily Sammone first got his hunds ented interfer i) Lig- jlarge short interest, Shere was a good with his) (0! Marsh |” assistance and was | The mark jRing, who rs bean-blowing or went to his friend soon Joined by a number of small boys | MINS Ol atta the vicinity, ve". habltues of the place. Lyong | the loud conversation gave plac Sammone w got hilarious: 1 then fought and Bldridge street po- finally landed in th lice station, was heard by med 5,000 Moss Liavis con night In a few minutes The Clow to real! po.ua # outclassed andj and net cham aor fro} ded that Mr was so tightly | MAY! he had to make a show was not paid, and that he | $5.00) worth, expecially as red to pay his shave, wedged In th: aching for something at this time in the | Am quict balcony below Kot Into the Ned ip to quell ret and not he, are ested the party for COMES FROM JAPAN keeps | Ainer Sammone | Audience in Alarm, In the orchestra the rumblings of the fleht filled the audience with alarm, the ( « a who made your I get a not to her. Ex alr visited Mr. Wall's house no les thre {mes und been denied a rence with my wife and I was tn a hurry. EDI your wife come out by the front | that she did.” ‘Ss “It doesn't seem to me unswered Mr. Neilson, laughin: had no time to a we her All we have is contained in a sin grip.” “What Is your next mov PUT OH TAIL FOR LING HUSBAND Catherine Dreiser Has Been De-| | | | -slared Cured of Insanity and |°; Must Answer for a Crime of|' Nearly Four Year sAgo. Mrs. Catherine Dreiver, of No, 238 Bast Fitty-second street, who shot and) Killed her husband, Philip, on May 1, | 1900, was placed on trial to-day before ~ Justice Glegerich in the Criminal Branch in the first degree. iver shooting her husband the young went to the Bast Fifty station and told of her ‘gaia they: "I loved him too much. ® aid me a wrong and now I have him.” She declared she drank # rust col, wtun- Austin Fynes was at nd he instructed the What the nate toward the d TO SEK IVORCE Mrs. Marcus S. Hill, Wife of In! , ventor, Accuses Him of Trans- ferring His Pretty Boarder. himsete on audience Many had, however, left the | One sald Tho pther thought the cop- | exaggerated entve of the stage a Affections to! treatre- who looked sad and bed: Armed with aMduvits signed by Irene | said 449 and 45 West Twenty: > you are Domney, © servant ‘Tobler, a boar | breakers of the Roy | Now, if it: ever You will not g ‘irl, and Emil A President of th blowing brigad ING NEWS. FOR TO-DAY pay #0 « week allmony to his wife, who from Japan a Hill, who is ving at No. Hundred ond Thirteenth: 19. 5.00/Moon sote A.M. riod in’ Sydni TUM alleges that she found that Husband's belay overnor's slat PORT OF NE sion Was reserved $$$ FIRE IN CHICAGO THEATRE. | Second Play-House Blaze Causes a| Scare, but Little Damage. Auguste Victoria Richmond Castie, Garrick Theatre, floor of the Schiller Bullding. considerable excite- ng the tenants to-day. was In the theatre and the which ts on 'EAMSHIPS, DUF TO-DAY Tennyaon,Pernambuco Marquette, London elon Havana GE ATrex. a commission was i Mguire ino ner sanity. gnounced insune and sent sent back to the ‘Tombs ‘} defended bv the imiliion- nervousness of the people in the build. who were easily SAILED TO-DAY. susceptible to Iroquois disaster Hospital for}and the panic in the Masonic Temple she was declared to} Saturday, ——— d Care for Plies, lind, Asieeuing PAZO OINTMEN' days, WU, was quickly allayed. ——————_- TOMATO BOULLLON ts a 4 Protrudiny ene iy @ to i falls to cure you VENING, JANUARY 95, S> | CAST ON RAILS i ( Detectives Believe the Victim | Was Murdered with a Hatehet or Axe Before She Was | Thrown on Railroad Tracks. eainnaeS /HELD BY THE HAIR AND SLAIN ON CANAL-BOAT. 'No Weapon Near Body When It | Was Picked Up After Train Passed—lIdentity Not Yet Es- tablished. |_ Chief Detective’Eaward Beattle, of the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western | Railroad, to-day was convinced that the fwoman found dead last night in the compuny's yards In Hoboken was mur- | dered, and not killed by a train, as ; - potas | Was ut first thought. His theory js that the woman was murdered on a canal-boat lying in the Delaware slip adjacent to the yard: many circumstances about re & wound on the top of her head that extends from the forehead hulf way |The Bears Were Active All Day) back on the head. it ts a jagged cut i) and looks as if {t might have been done and the Prices See-Sawed! with an axe. she has a bruise on the | right leg that might have been caused and Then Fell Away on Profit |v, 1 kick, and her left arm 1s broken. F | ‘The railroad detectives argue that had Taking. ‘the woman been hit by a train her head aoe ; would have been crushed. mo , “My theory,’ sald Chief Beattie to- The: fexture of the stock market to-l4ay. “ig that ‘the murdorer held’ the day was its irregularity and the com | oman by the hair while he killed her allies and declines. The general! with an axo or a hatchet. ‘Then | y though was upward und near] carried her body from one of the c Hae es ‘na sharp decline carried /ioats and threw it on the track, That the Ist down, losses being shown att] part of the yards is a lonely spot. H (around. © were no news develop- ments to decount for the decline, whien Another Murder Argument. wus generally believed to be due to] ‘The finding of the clothing near the profit tuking and bear pressure. ‘The|body 4s also an argument in favor of raiiread news was of the best, while} the murder theory. money was easy. The woman's body !s now in the Jer- <a sey City Morgue. When found she Why fear of war should cause any de-| was but partt: dressed, having on clines is a mystery, An international/only an underwaist, underskirt, shoes who has just recetved payment}and stockings. The underskirt was from Japan for several millions of war| thrown over her head. supplies estimates that Japan has pur-| About fifty feet from the body was chased within the last few weeks in|found the woman's dress, shawl and the United States $20,000,000 worth of/hat. The clothing would indicate that goods. Russia has also been a heavy|she had been in poor circumstances, it purchaser, her supplies having cost|was of such cheap material. probably almost as much as Japan’ ‘The mystery will not be solved until In case of war additional orders would|the woman is Identified, a careful be placed by both, which would help}search of the raliroad yards failed to the business of this country, Our ship-]reveal any weapon with which Red ut thirty-five years old, 6 feet 2 inches in height. She welghed about 180 pounds, When the body was found by Con- ductor Ringleld he summoned Assist- ant Despatcher Lyons, and they ox- of the trading was| amined every inch of ground near by own this buying was partieulorly| Yon "they moued the Jersey Clty — authorities instead of calling up Head- ‘The specialties held better during the] quarters at Hoboken, As a result the than the active stocks. The old| body was taken to the Jerscy City pool In Virginia-Carolina Chemteal was | yo, active again, Mr Keene was t& buyer | Morgue. neutral power, and the United States would be called upon to supply th many ships that Itussla and Japan have withdrawn from trade. One good feat | smelters was also considered good. ‘Lhe Gates contingent abandoned ats efforts} ‘The Jersey City police notified the S4P-| Hoboken Detective Bureau and work Morgin suppo Th (he tinal dealings the bullish feeling |on the mystery was begun immediately, Was sul general, but there wab a behec! A policeman in plain clothes was sent [that there was an effort te create to Jersey City Morgue to wait for a (ual of this Kind of selling during the | possible identification of the body. Coroner George Brackner, of Jersey closed weak, The totat| City, does not agree with the murder ks were 778,800 shares and | theory. “Of course,” he sald to-day, “it 1s not impossible that the woman mur- Quotations, dered, although 1 think she was hit by we oj | train, In support of the murder the- at, Jowent, and coming Prine | ory ts the fact that her dress was found Irded anie-are as tor | fifty yards cast of the track and her shaw! and hat iifty feet to the west, On the other land, I don't see how t murderer could have carried the bod to the spot without attracting atten on, It was only 6.20 o'clock last even- ing when the body was found. I think the woman was the wife of a night railroad employee who had delivered Isnles of ste Ligh. Low, Clos, 0k Ne 5 supper to her husband when she met Hatt. & Ohio... with death.” Halt & Ohio pe.. Chief of Police Hayes, of Hoboken, i and Chief Murphy, of Jersey a dozen men and women itt Morgue to-day to Identify the woman, but none of them Knew her, Chief Murphy Ix Inclined to the murder theory. He and his detectives were searching among the canal-boats to-day in the hope of finding some clue ‘het will clear up the mystery. PASTOR'S SHOULDER City, had } I ve Pacitic Rall Peculiar Accident to Rev. A. tl. Kaylor, Who Made Vigoro::s Gestures While Tatking wit! a Fellow-Evangelist. Union Pacific i Union Pacific pf 09% 1 Leather i Leather pt Steel Steel pt hy us Wabas ‘The Rey. Dr. A. H. Kaylor, a Pitts- burg evangelist, was the victim of a peculiar accident to-day while making @ call at the Presbyterian Building, at No. 166 Fifth avenue, in the office of the Ryangelistic Committee of the Genoral ‘The local market opened 1-2 of a cont | Assembly of the Presbyterian Chureh, hirher to-day and t cent In Chicago, due} He chanced to raise bis arm in ges- to the freezing ther In the West ang] ture: while engaged in an onimated Southwest and the less favorable news [conversation and put hin shoulder out ling the situation In the Far Kast {0 Joint. Not long ago, while conduct- In both markets the prices were the |!9® meetings at New Haven his shoulder dislocated, In fact, he has long high AL years, ‘The markets in the | Were Partictiarly [been subsect to simflar accidents, He stronk, souls failed to} yaa usually been able to right matters exhibit that the. trad t a xhibit ch followed Hews ier | Himectf, butt he could not do so, ought. shy owed news re- | and after Auffering intensely for and ac itn | ime, a call was Sent out to the wae tive with | york 1 ulunce, surgeons shape and NeW York's. opening prices were eo ape and Wheat, HL2; July, § fay | Drs Ka e fow Jer~ S bid, May 8 bid. opentn, Mo ie New M34 bids July, nominal; May, 8 bid; July, ‘onductin tings. sf nother affair Was reported by LD ‘Arthur N, Thompson, of Marsa i); [Clty thie, Becretaty. and: Treanurer of “price Hcp til ns = He tepol 16 Comn—Jnn- | the AMENeW oxercont, which hid heer presented to him last Christmas, "Fa , rina ‘ fared after tho meetin Chicago's closing, prices, were: Wheat ciseppar the clerygymen Dissent vould } september, 714. Corn: on Phompeon admitted that. he had Ha May, ibs July, 4 Be Rea oA esac RAE te ad s 1904. WILD WEST WAY Eight Youngsters, None of Them Over Fourteen Years Old, Rob a Showcase in Third Ave- nue, LEADER HAD A PISTOL AS LONG AS HIS ARM. Threatened to Blow the Head Off a Man Who Sought to Captyre Companion—Cursed Police Captain. A gang of eight boys, none over fourteen years of age, broke open and robbed a sho. nishing gvods store of Zetta Borchart, No, 72 Third avenue, ut noon to-day. John Borchart run out of the store and grabbed two of the ooys, whereupon one of them, John Irosnar, of No. 128 Firet avenue, drew a revolver as long =," said the Infantile if you don't jet go of me 1’ vlow your —— head orf)" Borchart let go, but Krosnar and his companion, John Broha, of No, 319 East Sixty-tirst street, ran into the arms of Policemen Burry and Baumgarten, of the East Fifty-iirst street station, no took them to the station-house. When seurehed another revolver was found Broha's pocket, but it was broken, boys had a hatful of cartridge: and cigareties, and two bottles for ing inl murks. In pockets were found several Lette: to bits, indicating tyat he had been rop- bing lette The} taken to. Yorkyilie Court and held for examination. They are members of the “Battle Row Gang,” nich has headquarters at Sixty-first street and First avenue. Each_ has served a term In the Roman Cath olic, Protectory, Their mastery of pr y was ‘a revelation to Capt. 1. whom they cursed roundly when hes tried, to, compel them to give the names of their companions In the show- case raid. BLIND OLD MOTHER PLEADS FOR SON Implores Magistrate Naumer to Pardon Youth Sentenced to Jail for Fighting on Elevated Railroad Platform. The tears and entreaties of an aged and blind mother to-day moved Magi trate Naumer in the Gates Avenue Pt Mce Court, Brooklyn, to pardon William Wilson, twenty-one years old, of No. 6% Gates avenue, who had just been com- mitted for five days for fighting on the platform of an “L” station. The boy, with John Carman, eighteen years old, of No, 85 Park avenuc, was arrested last night, for fighting and cre- ating a panic among a number of wom- \en on the “L" station at Alabama ave- ‘nue and Fulton street, The Court had lectured them severely and fined them each $4. A few minutes after they had been taken to the pen an aged woman was led Into the court-room by a young girl. As soon as she reached the bench she sank down on her knees and turned her sightless eyes to the Magis- trate. “I am a poor, blind old woman, dying of consumption,” she said in a feeble voice, quavering with emotion, “and you have just sent to prison my boy. who 1s all I have in the world to rely on. “He is a good boy. judge,” cried the hapless woman, “and has never given me a moment's pain before. For God's sake, Your Honor, don't send him to Jail.” As she uttered the last word she fell forward In a dead faint and was carried to an ante-room, Magistrate Naumer and even the time- hardened court attendants were visibly moved by the unfortunate woman's ap- peal, A number of women who had con hurried away sobbing. Judge could speak. ‘Then he sent a rt officer to the prison pen to release two young men, Young Wilson when he saw his mother and her sad condition wept and swore again or do anything to ciuse her pain. When she recovered the boy half si ported and half carried her to her home. FIRE BURNS 300 BALES OF HAY Flames Destroy Stables in Will- iamsburg, Entailing Loss of $25,000—100 Horses Res- cued from Blazing Structure. ein front of the fur-} to court to state their grievances | Tt was soveral minutes before the | | to the Judge that he never would drink | WOMAN'S BODY BOY HOLD-UP IN (YOUNG TIFFANY SUES BROTHER He Declares that Louis Pur- chased Their Father’s House in Fifth Avenue for Too Low a Price. THE ESTATE RECEIVED $655,000 FOR MANSION. Louis Tiffany’s Lawyer Asserts that His Client Wishes to Be Fair and Wil Agree to An- other Appraisal. Burnett Young Tiffany, who ts trying to relieve himself of the stigma put upon him by his father in his will and secufo more nearly an equal share in the ‘estate with his brother Louis ‘Tif- fany and his sister, Mrs, Annie 0. Mitchell, applied to Justice Leventritt, through Benjamin Tusca to-day, to have set aside the decd by which the execu- tors of his father's will sold the Tiffany mansion at Seventy-eecond street and Madison avenue to his brother Loul on the ground that Louis is one of the executors. Another ground was the price, $865,000, was inadequate, and an- other that he, as an helr at law and @ legatee under the will, had not been notified of the sale. ‘The house 1s conspicuous for its aerial or balcony garden, and because It {s so large that it towers far above the Epts- copal church adjoining It in the north, Sale Ordered by Court. In behalf of Louis Tiffany and Annie O. Mitchell, David B. Ogden, for the es- tate, said that the sale was made in 192, pursuant to a judgment of the Su- preme Court, and after appraisal of Its value by several experts the highest Value set being $600,000, and Louls Tir- fany voluntarily paid $55,000 more for it. Mr. Ogden sald Louis Tiffany had spent $90,000 on the house since he bought It, und that ‘under the pecullar provisions made by Charles Tiffany in his will for Burnett Young Tiffany the latter was to get but $3,000 a year; the executors and brothers, of which Louls Tiffany 1s ene, were given discretion to increase it, but never’ to a sum greater than the income of one-eighth of the estate. As a matter of fact, the brothers had in- creased Burnett's income, and he ts now receiving $18,000 a year. This house was built by Mr. Tiffany expressly for Louis and his sister Annie, and they have lived there f they do now. Suggests New Apprai Robert W. De Forrest, saying he rep- resented Louis Tiffany more closely than us a mere attorney, assured the Court that he was as anxious as his brother that he should pay a fair price for the house, and assuming that this proceed- ing was in good faith and that Burnett ‘Viffany's only desire was to secure as large a share in his father’s estate as he was entitled to, Louls Tiffany was entirely willing to submit to a new ap- praigal nnd add any Increment to the n_ the estate. Mr. Treska said that the very first appraisal of the property was by White- house and. Porter, who sald it was worth $150,000. At tris point Justice Leventritt broke in to say that he though his qeustion might be left to ex-Justice Abraham R. Lawrence, who is acting as referee and taking testimony in a previous ac- tion brought by Bennett Young Tiffany for an accounting. Justoce Leventritt asked the lawyers to ugree upon some method o freaching this appraisal. He rad said that ff he found that the law gave him any discretion in the matter he would dismiss the motion. ROWS BARK WIL BE HUSHED BY LAW Indignant Neighbors Annoyed by Tiny Dog Convince the Court that It Should Be Declared to Be a Nuisance. r years, as The Court of Special Sessions to-day enjoined Rowdy's bark, Rowdy is a three-year-old Skye ter- rier, the property of Henry P. Copp, of No, 499 West Ono Hundred and Fiftieth street, a dealer in sporting goods, Mr. Copp was arraigned to-day in Special Sessions charged by Harton A. Plerce, editor of the Journal of Com- merce and back-yard neighbor of the BY AN EMINENT AUTHORITY. The eminent source from which the prescription for Father John’s Medicine originated is a sufficient guarantee of its value. In the fifty years since it was prescribed for the late Rev. Father John O’Brien, of Lowell, Mass., by whom it was rec- ommended and from whom it de rived its name, this old family rem- edy has never failed to do all that is claimed for it. It cures colds, grip and all throat and lung troubles; ‘builds up the body, prevents pneu- monia and constmption. It is not a patent medicine, and we again call your attention to its freedom from poisonous stimulants, upon which the majority of patent medicines and so-called “cough cures’ and “bal- seams” depend for their effect, and which are dangerous—we warn you against them The more people whose Photographs we take, the more, we know, are satistied. Imperial Folder Platinum Pho- tographs, $5.00 per dozen. This is the most up-to-date style and finish. No better photos can be had anywhere at any price. STUDIOS: New York: Brooklyn: 22 West 23d st., | 489 Fult Bet. sth & 6th aves. uous 1162 Broadway, | Opp. Abraham & Near 27th St. Straus. ny ince you A trial will convince you Howara St; Wage tcor ath Bat 10, Brodaway, vor. S0ch St: ute; 950 Gh Mt BROOKLYN 1367 Broadway, cor. RSEY. STyT—is Newark “Ave. RS Proad St. Shank Step’ Cures Any GOLD Every druggist sells ‘Short Stop." NEW YORK’S BEST FAMILY COUGH MEDICINE, CANDY SPECIAL FOR MONDAY. Chocolate Cream Kisses ib, 100 Chocolate Cream Walnuts. ..1b, 16¢ SPECIAL FOR TUESDAY. Pecan Cream Kinses........1b. 108 Chocolate Cream Butter Chips 1, 156 Lodo ses 29 CORTLANDT SL. COR CHURCH Better let us show you ANDERSON PIANOS, $250 to $350 And let our experience help you in choosing, ANDERSON & CO, 0 FULTON st. PROOKLYN, Lost, Found and Rewards. Mink stole. Lady In H," Lyre ‘Theatre, who found it Saturday after will be suitably rewarded for taking care of {ton returning to Lyric box office. defendant, with maintaining a public nuisance in Rowdy's bark. ‘There were twenty-five witnesses In court, mostly women, Five . testified that Rowdy's bark was more pene- trating than a steam siren and had as many varlatlons of discord as a boller factory in full blast. ‘They also ai serted that {t was no effort for Rowdy to bark, and when he once turned up the music flowed continuously and without hesitation. Rowdy, they dv clared, struck his first bar at 9 P.M. and wound up with a heartrending dimmuendo at cock-crow, ‘On the other hand twenty women, all of whom were gathered in a clacking group about r. Copp, swore that Rowdy's bark Was no harsher than a chilld’s hacking cough, | They nsserted that he was the dearest, fluMest little ball of canine loveliness that ever Wigged an abbreviated tail. They ex- tolied the virtues of Rowdy with re- markable minuteness, dwelling on the A fierce fre which destroyed probably 3,000 bales of hay at the sale and ex change stable of Joseph Vollkommer & €o,, at Nos. % to 29 Johnson ayenuo, Williamsburg, to-day emptied hundreds of dwellings and factories In the neigh- horhood of (heir occupants and threat- ened for a time to spread and do great Y|damage, Three alarms had to be sound- ed before the Fire Department got a} suMfcient foree on the scene to handle! the flames. ‘The blaze started on the second floor of the stable, a two-story brick struc- ture, and soon had the building doomed. wig all ind left the ores ese ‘Thore were a hundred horses on tho premises at the time, and the employees bent all their efforts in rescuing them, which they accomplished without panic or the lossol « Probably $25,000 ma: What caused the fre fascinating pose of his head as he barked ‘lemurely at the moon or his sister orbits. Notwithstanding this preponderance ol evidence, the vustices of tnecial Ses- mia declared that Rowdy's bark must he enjoined, and any failure to obey the injunction would be followed by NeaN ay ia now boarding with a dog fancier at One Hundred and ‘Tenth street and Amsterdam avenue, PARKS’S CHUM CONFESSES. Richard Carvel, Walking Delegate, ‘Admits that He Extorted Money, Richard Carvel, walking delegate of the Derrickmen's Union, indicted for ex- torting $90 from Isaac A, Hopper & led ‘guilty before Justice Gle ' Son, contractors, on Feb. 13 plead- rich In the Criminal Branch of the Supreme Court torday. ‘He was committed to the Tombs to {wanted to Pur- |Total ., pe alas ital leiden Sd ES Lau ndry Wants—Female. ERATOR on body and neckband machine; call at once. Harrison's Laundry, 403) Ate lantle ay., Brooklyn, JOD starchers can. make Kood wages; GOOy th work, Jughardts. Steam Laun Brooklyn. NTED—Experienced foWers, shakers anit Walkers off mangle. Mutuitl Steam Taundry B25 West 24th at THE WEEK'S WANTS BEGIN VERY WELL 1,882 Advts. in this morring’s World Fill a world of wants, situations— Lost and Found., 5 Female 70|Summer Resorts. 3 Situations—Male. 195] Auction Salen 5 Help—Female ... 520] Amusements at Help—Male 438 | Financial 19 Houses, Rooms & | Pianos 42 ‘Apartments... 187] Instruction 20 Boarders. 21] Medical ..... 15 Real Estate 78| Horses and Car- Yor Sale ... 49] ringes 12 Business Ops. .. 45] Migeetlancoun 82 Personals 19 hase aul,