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Zs eresmeatheteen aerseorrestentctemesmae simmer G WORLD,” “FRIDAY, “JULY 12, 1907. ILITES MEN TOLD OF Becta “ROGE CHS of Problems Forth- coming. Apportionment of Traffic W@. cilities to Be Dealt With |i at Once. | Chairman Willcox received a letter to-day. from ‘Bridge Commissioner Btevenson in. which suggestions were made for the regulation of, traffic on the brktges 20 as to minimize. conges- tion. In bis letter the Commissioner pela. } Certain work 1s 1n progress under ‘|the Juriediction of the Department of Bridges which, when completed. which T expect will be hy the latter part of this year, will result in the operation jover the bridge of elevated ralirgad htrains from Brooklyn to and into the @ubsurface rafiroad station In Manhat- tan extending on Delancey street from Clinton street to Essex street. Upon the completion of the terminal and the ether improvements now under way in eonnection therewith, thirty (8) eixht- Far elevated trains per Hou, which can Beliver 2,000 people per hour at the ppbattan terminal, may be operated ectoss the bridge. “This traffic will be entirely in addi- Hon to the present traffic over the Surface trulley cars crossing the bridge, “Dhe transporiation factlittes to and jfrom the Manhattan terminal of the =Stevenson Warns New Board [MUST PROVIDE AHEAD. Fa- Authoress Whose Money Seems to Have Been Fitted with Wings for this bridge I have endeavored to| ascertain the Jntentlons of the trana- portation companies, with regard to! their operation to and over the bridge. | So far as 1 am advised by them it is | not contemplated that use may be made of any of these tracks except one pair LOST A WEEK IK BROOKLYN WILDS GUIDA, STARING WITH HER ODES, GES PENSI | | | | Rescue of Famous Novelist in Old Age. PENNILESS IN STREET. Turned from Hotel, Spends Night on Beach, Where Old Servant Finds Her. To the milljops of renders who tor more than two génerations baye found e.tght in the romances of Oulda (Miss Loulsa De La Ramee) the news to-day that the world-famous novelist was un- til a few days ago reduced to want In her old age came as a complete sur- prise, Uftil the oMcial announcemént tn the London Gazette of the granUng of a pension of $78 a year from the new civil st of pensions for lterary merit circle of her friends in Italy who knew of her plight. The story of her actual condition was first made known to the British Government a few days ago in private letters trom Fiorence. News- paper despatches supplementing these letters give a vivid story of the cir cumstances which Jed her in her sixty- Jsqventh year to dire poverty. Throughout one night, while thousands of people the world over were reading the product of her pen and while liter- ary socteties in one glace or anothe were discussing the value of her ser- British Government Comes to!’ there were few outside the Immediate | HAVE -OUR COPS BEEN TA\ ING BROMIDES? WUXTREE! BOYLAN Cast! ROSEAMUMER | yovery! sTArrecor chee! THOMPSON CASEY Wake up; Mr. Polleeman And gét wise to your job! Just land {in Jail behind the bars These crooka who kill and rab. STOCKS HIGHER, BUT THE TRADING SLOW Reading, Great Northern, St. Paul and Pacifics Among the Leadeys, — 4 | | | | | } } | Stocks opened hixher to-day, the ad- [vances ranging to a large fraction or |more for the more prominent {sques }Reading and Great Northern. preferred jroso 1, and St. Paul, Union Pacific, | orthern Pacific and ~~ Amalgamated Copper 6-8 to 3-4. Great Northern Ore [Certificates fell 1 84. The volume of| transacnons was small. | Gains were extended some in later dealings, but trading continued slow. The total sales of stocks ay were | 242,000 shares “and of bonds $590,000. a for the operation of surface troliey oars [pies for the recat taiare Darl |g i ovougs of ens eee | ee fant, Qua, boelae | re Chantng notation 5 i be Sergy penniless, sat on the beach at Varies- i [levaten rallvay tramic vill he aes | ridge and to) Manbattnn {nto a sub- see Today's highest, lowest, closing prices and i f ko- | surtace terminal, which the Department | Strange Adventures of British} so wits no’ shelter trom the cold |:net changes of stocks from yesterday's final er inadequate. Until the comple- of Bridy 1 September winds. There it was the | quotations te ‘ hof the ssbway now —undercon~ | mms een come ucting: Ship's D: Sent O her_of {her old serv: al UE anundoon oe friction in Manhattan wien te ey | TBE rapa development ofthe Bor-| Ship's Doctor, Sent Out migehstzo(con8:ol nec old-ser rants found | ERE TE si t with the Williamesure Brides, [CUED of Queens will certainly requ ~ her in: the) dawn of the morning and Tee OS Le (pome additional taciiticg wrens Dr ok*: | tn the immediate future more adequate on the Fourth. took her to jthex village “Of! Mabsarosa, | Mis tre ei iyidea Hotaciny passsuners ts?can eee facilities over this bridge than the i whoere,.in a milicman’s hut, she has 8 43 ao} x ie atation. a ranersrts iva Souperiles contemplate Mved as best abe could. 4% 99% M% — : shing,-and~1 would suggest that} The good ship Terrence, a British | —— : ark FSS | ay Eight Tracks on New Bridge. , | thie matter receive the earnest con tramp freighter, will safl with colors! 4, Seat: Sar for sonia os 4% 4% th + RY] itn the case of the Manhattan | *iderstion of your honohable Commis-| fying bright and early to-morrow, un-| .congitures, to her indulgence In nee Peet: BEd 7 » which it ta expected will be | 0%" . leas Dr. Willlam O'Bhaughnesry, heel Centric tade, and lastly to unwise in-| imu uke ue ‘gompleted by Dec. 31, 190, provision Discovered the Bridge Crush, surgeon, gets lost again in the wilds of| vestments fostered by financial sharks, a - Tk 1% Th + &% oa ie mado on the structure for elgtit rall-| mnree members otathe new & Pubs darkest Brooklyn; and that isn't|her reduction to penury is mainly due, | Am. Tob. Co. pf... 83 BM me May trecks tn all, four on the tower | Service Commission have been looking ;y\%%" ‘OF the skipper, Capt. Wiliam Upto within—three_years_ego—Miss;Am- Woollen Co. 25% 254 254 ee Sr are and eae fiel hoper | atitheltBrideerernehitioA icahreorwere Hy Gantthy is keeping a watchful eye on|De La Ramee occupied a handsome Apkcond” tin me ha te By oy Navel. ese tracks the four on the|men who had crossed the Bronklyn | him. villa at Lucca, Her abnormal lowe of | fialt iol. wh OTe OI TD [pwer level can be used interchange-|Bridge many tmes, even during the| Dr. O'Shaughnessy was “lost” in| dogs, indicated in many of her works, | Can Pauds. 02:0 Shy 180% Sly ‘ese i@bly for subway, ejevated or surface |rush Nours, but they had never befcro Brooklyn for a whole week. He found|led her to keep about thirty in ner |b My OHMS # ear tramc, “The four on the upper| stopped to lock. The aight-sceing v.rit {himself to-day in an Irrigation resort| home, and it is reoorded that on one | we Het $ s¥evel may be used interchangeably for| was one proposed by Bridge Commis-/ Just three blocks crom Robertws Stores, {occasion she provided a banquet of | (.A0* SP TR at “@lbvated and surface cars, It will be|sloner Stevenson, who wanted the|Wwhere the Terrence is borthed and tug.| bread and milk for every tramp dog in| Col. Fuel & Iron. “31 a6 Tsk + 1% Amecessary to know in ample time be-| members of the Commission to know/ ging at her cables to get off for South | the city: CY [Role Boutbern ices $5, Ss Bt Fe Here the bridge is completed just how | Just what the problem ts that has got] American ports, It was about this time, in the ab- | Consol Gea 2.111 ine Wx ie o18 fracks over the bridge are to be|t# bs. wolved and hich te _setting} True tothe tenets of the marine af. | **Ro* of any_income from her old! Gorm Prvcs pt!) dae He HY yy (Vaiiotted to the differant tranaportation |More unsolvable every day. ciptine tavwhich ‘the surgeon has lived | MOTRH the copyright of whieh had | ity ig Ue + 8 5 tex | Manse Bennett, _MoCarrof!__an4| for these last ten years, he marched gy | mosuy expired, that her little stock of Be Re Bhs “ee ia of no small importance to pro- | Eustis, with Oblet Magineer Inxers0ll:| te gangplanke, head erect ant ancy we {money bowen to disappear. A dispute | Be He wee + date facilities upon ihia| sted for halt an hour last night at/ tne front, AHL I aed Oe tte SA | Be EN 1hoy = aaa ae ceteris cee the ex Haht aide of the trolley! Btratent up to the re through the courts for three years, left Hl 130” I ity . roed-| track entrance and saw women tosved| 5000) meet astonished | ner victorious but penniless, aly atin ia & JWAY team, and the Gleposition of the| Lou itke pillows by strong, husky | (ore the wecvice he laid his} iwscending rapidly in the financial |! We OE Ye bway tracks at the Brooklyn and| Th" who jolted and banged each other |CoUmme Ard with much ceremony he| scale, ale found shelter in one or ether iB ate us th mhattan terminals should be de-lin the atruggie for a seat—yes, even a] aed and sald: of the hetela around Varriegio until at oy hn TS 0 a not to seriously inter-| Dace to stand-in the oars they r, Ihave to report that there was | last turned out for non-payment of beard O = Mere with this tramMc. entered the loop. Men did not wait|Pothing In it. It was not a Japanese|she sought refuge on the beach. ‘The ry |. “The contract al: let by the for-|fér the cap to stop but aprang aboard | "eet shelling Brooklyn, but a sort of ht on the beach vrought on # se t 2 mer Board of Rapid Transit Ratlroad {underneath the guard rail on the taner| American’ celebration of something] vere cold, an incurable deafness and Z \Gommtasionera for the subway ‘route|side, swearing, cursing and fighting, | out independence.” blindness in one eye. One or two re- Erte! feontemplates constructing the’ subway|as though thoir lives were in peril. “But that waa a whole ‘week ago,"|mittances from friends in England $7, entrance to the Manhattan Bridge on ‘norted.the amased skipper. ‘‘Where}enabied her te leave Massarosa {or a fend, ithe Manhattan Plaza as far as Chrystio treet, and this entrance 1s wo located isto wertousty—aftect-the-roadway-ep- proach to the bridge. $ Subway Entrance kmportant. “Tt ‘a my conviction that this subway jentrarice in Manhattan should by 50 Hooated sa not to interfere in the least —eny—ot the “uses to which t “Bridge will be put ether than for rail- way trame, “The track construction as contem- |Pisted on this bridge will provide upor - |eompietion ef the bridge for operation ef carw over stx tracks; twa tracks for Sleveted railway trains, two tracks for urtace trolley cars and two tracks ‘which may be-used for etther surface} +trolley cara or for trains operated jieom the mubway to and over the je. In. addition to.these tracks and meet future demands there is sut- ficlent space on the structure for two} ‘eGditional tracks for the operation of elevated railway trains, “Im determining upon the track plans It isn’t what an advertising ,medium USED TO DO nor what it's GOING TO DO ‘that should concern you most. It's WHAT IT AOQTUALLY I8 DOING THAT SHOULD INTEREST your Almost every day in the week) The World 18 PRINTING more separate advertisements than @re published in the Herald, Times and Tribune and Sun GOMBINED, Heed thia great truth and_ send your Sunday » “Want" Ad. to 14 a ol te —Tewoted—the—stetewey,—and were Diegraceful, Hie Verdict. A half hour of this and Mr. Bassett, turning. to his companions, said: “It 1s hard to tell juat what should de—done, but isn't it disgraceful that such a condition should have: been ul- lowed grow up on the Brooklyn Bridge? Although $15,000.a, year commisstoners, they were pushed snd—pulled until aise hal carried by the throng to the top. They kept to the left and escaped from the stream of people, They walked along the north platform to the extreme end. There they Climbed up a narrow tron stairway to the train dispatchers gal- lery, where they retained ffteen’ min- utes, opserving the traina an they en-| tered, discharged their passengers and then switched back to the north side to take on their freight of Brooklyn- Thea. ‘They got a very fine Idea of the exact conditions. as they viewed the tracks frem this point of vantage. There they could see the struggling masses, It was for all the world like a tremendous sheep-whearing pen. air’ KIDDE! pills, Jomt.* the night of of the Tar inissed hile retursntiy to Daw Jon. his surgpo! wit} Brooklyn police. the short front trace of him did they find. r the Fourth. Dung o: ti ce nts Sleuths, hi ‘s Wrath had cooled a bit for him,\ but in Brooklyn have you been all this time, “A _week agot-+.queried the surgeon; leaving the pesition of mulute at his cap visor to scratch a _puzzied head. 1 fancied it wes only yesterday. “You got shore leave, sir, on the night of July 4 te go and see the freworks, [and this ts the frst bally time [slapped eyes on you since,” roared the Goto -your-caDth, alr, and-teke-a-quart-of your own bioomin" Why, I've Dr. O'Shaughnessy was the subject of much anxiety during the week he waa Capt smith and nis-two mated) spent two days in searching out-of-the- way “places in’ Brooklyn for him after Then the ENS dredwed itive a around the ship in the fear that he had ng the gangplank on His shots Teave and gone But the crew got only dry hauls, and then tn great alarm Capt. Smith reported @isappearance Ro the unted all of never a When the he crow prettiest smallest, rece!y +. baby 4 Grand street. id, and only ten | ‘e neem longer. Pat Dunn, of en month Tame M an Pr 2 atthewn, of ninny prize. tie Amy elty prize. Prize-Winner in Happyland Com- petition a Twenty-two Months’ Old East Side Belle. Tt wes announced to-day that the In New York |Marah, twenty-two Gdentha old, of She won first prize— \* SoWing machine—offered for the pret- tlest of the %0 bables who comptted yesterday at Happyland, 8, I. ng a gid clock to make | the baby Jaguar called on his convivial surgeon to lead dum to the spot where he had found “PRETTIEST BABY” |S Rimaelts 31 ; Hee LITTLE IDA-MARSH.|witietns sramuastian “axtanet™* SPEED" | ‘4 the natonished saflor man to a nice little place about two hundrnt fest trom the end of the plier to which the Terrence is tied. “Well, I'm dummed,’ commented the skipper in true sea vernacular, ——— ey M'CREA LEADS FIGHT ON TWO-CENT-FARE LAW. Pennsylvania Road’s Intentions In- dicated by Attitude of the is Ida Katherine and Rosle Lomax, of No. President. oe East Geventy-eixhth street. eighteen! pytLATMeLPHIA, July 12.—The hear- monte. old,. won the prize for twine—Jing in the equity proceedings brought double perambulator by the Pennsylvanta Ratlroad Cothpany | Wiliam Baten, of Stapleton, was the|againat the clty and county of Phila. [fattest baby—it took Maximus, ‘the|}qelphia to restrain the latter from en- strong man, fo lift him—and Eldora | forcing the two-cent rallrgud law passed | Leroy, of Rosebank, thirteen montha|by the last Logisluvure was resumed hes long, was the |to-day before Judges Willson and Au. | Common: F Pr leas Court. Ident MoCrea tn to take the stand in a Instead of designating an- or to do so Is said to be precedent in the history company &nd shows -the Import. Ree empany continyed to-day to pre Its slde of the © celts r which time and return to the hotel at Var-/ tiesto, But the end of June saw her again penniless and back {a the miikman's hut, where she now remainy, With her are the three remaining members of her canine family, Rutt, Goidon! and Nerolno, Is an English Woman. Contrary to te general inipression, Misy be ba Ramee te-nentiar_—rench nor-Haliwn,-bui—was born in England, at Bury 8t, Edmund's, six miles from Newmarket, the headquarters of Eng- lah racing. To this early environment maybe ascribed her love of dogs und horses. She was twenty years old when, in 1861, her first work was published. But ft was not-until_seven yeara later, with the production of “Under Two Flags,” tial ale Ollained «a. wide reputation, and it ts by thls book, in a dramatiza- | tion of which Blanche: Bates made a distinguished sucoess, that Ouida is best known to the vast majority of readers. published in the carly /sev- | enties, stands second in order of pep- Ularty, while “Ghundos Strathino! | “Twe Little Wooden Shoos’ and Marremma"” enjoy a wide vogue. | In many of these works she displayed ]e-tendency-to-eroticiam whitch by Many critica ts held to be the real secret of her popularity, Of late years Ouida, however, discarding her earlier views af soctil conventionalities, has die. cussed moral questions wi! @ atrait- laced rigidity at would do New England spinster, datos CORRIGAN A MAGISTRATE. [Mayor Urwed to Name Assembly- man Louis Cuvillier, in John &. Corrigan, one of District-At- torney Jerome's young assistants, {5 to be one of the two new Police Magis- trates Mayor MoClellan wil! name as! noun aa Gov, Hughes signa ‘the bill} creating the offices, ‘The second’ man| to be appointed haw not been chosen LE Gar t the request of Lu 7 The new places wer created to supply | made: the nrreslh the mare, MNO enough magistrates to have two sit at | ome (he, werent the gues the Hie might court. Mtr. “Corrigan Is @|eags, toy dlecues >the neghow ‘of Archbishop Corrigam Marshall gave his add a Atemblyman’ Lute’ A. Cuvitiior ty | Weat | Forty-aixth streets ant nuts Members of the Legislature ofthe acy. |Urookion. one & Fieth atreet, | political stdes y oMclals has vorIn behalf of Ase man C Among. the names are those ae mptroll John Ratnes, Patrick , Martin Saxe, Lie r Vadeworth, Rog w ® promihent d to the Ma Her mA I James hanle sidy, James Grady: |nue on compiaint of Florentineo Berga- mo, a tailor, of Newark, who alleged - 1441 South South, Heel +++ + Advance, ALLEGED WIRELESS TIPPEAS ARE HEL Bergamo, Who Says He Was _Swindled Out of $16,000 Makes Charge, Frank Marshall, alias Kelly, . and John White, alias John W, Carroll, who Were arrested {n an alleged pool-room at Forty-firat street and Lexington ave- that they swindled him out -of $16,000 bythe “wire-tapping” gahie, were held by Magistrate Moss in Jefferson Mar- ket Court to-day In $1,000 ball examination Tuesday afternoon.) <P Noipew ond wealent Fed that which was furnished at Pollc Tat night being continu moses ergamo appeared in cour un amdavits against. he tree mean ibut ij CARPET ¢ 5. sr0vy co about fifteen SAW POLICEMAN SHUUT BOY, SAYS Declares Mulvey Is Assailant. Bail, but Efforts to Sup- . press Charge. Akhoush The ‘Evening World found a witness to the wounding of Louis Johnaon, the Brook: in the back without provocation, Policeman John Mulvey, giving @ bond. Ever aince Johneon was shot in the Brownavifle section the police of tt precinct have been loud in thetr decla- rations that no girls accompanted th: party of lads which Johnson. street and thermometer plant on Pacific street. “I wan walking with my chum, Viola flreern They must. haye known Louls started for the “brick the House of the Good scattered. wall around chasing him. Sw Mulvey Return, She Says. The man was gaining. When he go feet awa: Louls to halt and at the same Instant, without giving him a chance to stop. the man drew a revolver and fired twice. At the second shot Loula fell. corner into Ocean place. Loula. Viola and I were standing there, not knowing what to do, when a man came from Ocean place Into the crowd the man who had done the doiph, of No 2 Hopkinson © street were with Johnson. The three witne: Feeney at the time, have positively {dentifed Feeney. mits that he was calling at Feeney’s house on the night of the shooting. In their written statements the boys tell how they. with Johnson, were walking from Rockaway avenue, in East New. York, now and then disdharging a fire- cracker, when two men, one of whom Was Feeney, Fan toward them. Randolph descrided how he ran up the treet and. from a coal bin, man with Feene, bring him down at the second shot. Kenney's story was regarded moat important, as It Included th cartridges from his revolver. Sent Word to Boy's Home: spent an hour there. Mrs. Johnson ways the visitors told her a policeman shot her son, but that the poticeman act, i At the hospital the wounded boy was alto visited on Wednesday by a woman policeman, and asked him 90 many questions that he finally pretended to fall asleep in order to be rid of her. ‘The surgeons have located the bullet jn Johnson's back, and they are now confident that an’ overation will pave dis-iita_ GIRL WITH HIM Companion of Johnson Lad ACCUSED, HE GOES FREE! A LUCKY No Steps Taken. to: Demand has murderous lyn lad who says 2 policeman shot ‘him and pitiough ls eye-witness declares ab- wolutely that the assaflant of the boy ia the accused man jx enjoying freedom on parole and hae not even been put to the trouble of included young To-day an Evening World| reporter got tha following statement founders of the Irish-American Ath- from Jennie McCann, a bright «ixteen- letic Association, } year-old girl, who tives at No, 1954 Dean fia spare Hme to promoting athletics who works at Tagliiabue’s among Kers when & man came around City, | the corner from Ocean place and started made good thelr option, confident that | a latter ¢hem. the man was a policeman, for they all Bhepherd neross-the street-witi-the man he called on Then the man hurried back around the “Pretty -soon-a-erowd-gathered around Instantly both of Us recognized him as hooting and written statements from James Ran- John Keany, of No. % Truxton street, and Mark Lurgo, the three boys who eu agree the man who shot Johnson was with Policeman | 0 1175, and all of them Mulvey, who denies the shooting, ad- saw the fire on Johnson and| a the! state- ment of the return of the two policemen | ty foeney-z—house -eHer the shoolag which woutd-havo-given sufficient op-} pértunity for Mulvey to remove cmpty Yesterday afternoon two women wear ing-the garb of a religious order went to the house of Johnson's mother and was drinking and deeply regretted the} who told him she was the wife of a HAS WEALTH AND NO FURTHER USE FOR POLICE STAR Patrolman Prendergast Resigns From Force and Will Travel in Europe. INVESTMENT. Bought ‘Long. Island Property and Made Half Million in Sale of- It, Having made half a milton doljars in a real eatate deal, William S. Prender- wast, for eleven years a patrolman, at- tached to the Oak street station, turned jn his whield to-day and announced his Intention to spend the remaénder of his Mfe In sleisdro. Prendergast 's just forty years old and an Irishman. In his youth he was @ famous athlett, coming to this coun- try twenty years ago with the Celtic jAtletic League. He never went bac! |-On March 18, 1896, he joined the forc and the greater part of his service has | been at the Oak street station. Hia Lucky Investment. The lucky policeman Js one of the| and devotei ali -of nis fellow-ceintrymen He alag became a shrewd real estate spe ulator, even years ago he and police Arnold, of No, 10% Bergen street. wtien captain, who was at one time in con. i 0: f the: va mand Of the Oak Street Station, ob-| My Toulay Jobnson Bic wiueazeote pore tained an option on a bie tract of land loined us. The bors were shooting \in the Astoria section of Long Island ‘They held on to the land and fn less than a decade the property would increase _in_value enormously. — | It did, and a short while ago they | Jsold it to the Degnon-McLean Con-| cracting Company. which ix dotng the major part of the work for the Penn- sylvanla tunnel” approaches —in~ Lone and City. The new rapid. transit facilities for Long Island City and Astoria are responsible for the tre mendous boom in the value of Prender- | gast's land, While he does_not_ shirk from police duty, Prendergast feels that he owes | It to himrelf to quit, as he haa suffered from rheumatism’ for the past five | jyears. Now he will travel through the Continent. and enjoy his splendid fortune. Aa. he ‘turned In his shield to-day, he sald laushing: | “I can prove. and so can the cap- | tain, that-we did not make-moner out; of building lots in Japan.” | ——__>—__—__. | ROOM TRADERS HEAVY SELLERS OF COTTON. a a i i It was aald by th Vex that. ploz we sald so to each other. When Louts! oom tradera were heavy selicrs of tures of both the Me 4 boys were saw the man in the crowd he accured| cotton to-day and forced revere de- {0 {he ealleny. Tae vx brothers hint too. Later-I heard that this man|cunes. The leading interests bought When the six were urtalzned befor ‘point auliaane t Potten ‘Reavily on the break. Magistrate” Wahlen, Yorke eputy Commissioner of Police | —“mhe- opening prices were; July,_11.e0_tretives admitted that they z : (hat William MrGtnnts had O'Keeffe, af Brooklyn. has ale secured! iq; Auguat. 11.68 to 11.98; September, ing az a tunnelman and waa probably IL 6) bid; October, 11.78 te 11.78; Novem-+ 2] ber, 1165 bld; December, 11.71 to 11, January, 11.75 to 11.76; February, 11.77 to 11.78; March, IL85 to 11.88; April, | 11.85 bid; May, 11.90 bid. ) The clocing pric July, 11.70 | ; August, 11. 1.54: Septem- ber, 11.8) to ll.b1; October, 11.78 to 11. 7: | November, 11.70 to 11.72; December, 11.75 | to 1178: January, 118 to 11.86; Febru- ary. 11.8% to 11; March, 11.96 to 11.9%; May, 12.07 to 12.08. fa TRAIN KILLS ENGINEER. DANBURY, Conn., July 12—Ray R. | Howard, of Bridgeport..an engineer on | tthe New York Division of the New) | York, New Haven and Hartford Rail- | Lroad, was killed by a Highland Division | | frelgnt train to-day, | Out of ara the symptoms of sickness. | Ars, something is wrong with baby, but we can’t tell! ie what it is.All mothers recognize the itude, weakness, loss of appetite, inclination to sleep, | heavy breathing, and lack of interest shown by baby. These worms, croup, diphtheria, or scarlatina. Do not lose a minute. Give the child Castoria. “It will start the digestive organs into ; operation, open__the pores_of_.the_skin,-eatry- matter, and drive away the threatened sicknes, ‘Genuine Castoria always bears the signature of QfWba. MEGEEORb ESSA EGASBGAG RRR AR AD DObsL WOMEN CAUGHT IN ALD ELD IN $2,000 BAIL One Man Released on Belief “That He Was Only a Visitor at the Flat. PAWNTICKETS & JIMMIES, : Plenty of Them. Found in Place, as Well as Some Silverware. Three: young: girls. who, the police | say; are consorts of thieves, were ary rafgned with three mere boys In York- ville court to-day! They had been taken in a rald jast night which, the Central Office men predict; WIT clear | up a number of Wegt Slie fiat rob- Dhe berfes and street sluggings called themsclyes * Anaje Margaret King.’ both, of Forty-ninth street, and No_ 31 East Seventy-third street gaye her age as nin n years, ; Detectives, Murphy and MoMulien, of the bureau, for a week have been wat Ing a fat at'No. 341 East Forty-nini wireet, wht. ad been tipped off by the neighbors as wort: watching, Two couples Iived there, and lest night, We.) they were joined by an ath andy irl, the police decided it was time to break in. Reinforced by Detectives Hand, Carrette and James Murphy, Mce nm surrovnded the about ni!d- nig! MeMullen rapped on the door and ore red It openod. Ini thero was heard sounds of receding Uiree” or the det door. As they rushi jumped from a windo bythe dleteotives_w: men and the behind a table and not to approac The detects station; -where—tre—bwe + who Hved in the flat sald they were dwant McGinnts nteon years old, and John McIntyre, nineteen years old. The visiting young man Was Edward McGinnis's brother, Willlam, of No, 1208 Second avenue, z t Hart Nina , Dut was caught ting outside. The girta dodged warned the police in osher two 4 took the crowd to the aig fellows. The detect yed the flat and found * four black= jacks, two revolvers, > "pawn tUcketa, iree watches, a quantity of sllverware ff ] some small st a The six were tak headquarters, ust visiting at the time 0! de He was dinsharged. The othe aIet held In $2,500 each for examination Mone day. Sol NEW HAVEN DIRECTORS MEET ON SOUND STEAMER. 12.~Tho | ors of the New Yor Haven and ‘Hartford Rallroad Company will be held on one of the Sound steamers of the company ~ w York for Fall River ““Fo-morrow tinue on to prope: sider v NEW montht HAY the rec Roston company ious plans. wT over . con- 2k the and. to cone Sorts term _by-the It _may be fever, congestion, |’ off the fetid _ i “y CLEANSING S 1 Under Twelve Years of Age--FREE wi CONEY ISLAND OR ROCKAWAY BEACH, \ \ A Free Ticket for ROCKAWAY BEACH' | A Free Ticket for CONEY ISLAND — 1, for Every Boy and th Next Sunday’s World.