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THEAITKE CROWD IN A RIOT NE tt nt nrennrnnnnnnnrnnrnnrnnaad __ PRICE ONE CENT. NEW YORK, “SATURDAY, FEBRUARY ry BOMB WRECKS HOUSE. WHERE BODY OF DEAD iil Black Hand Is Blamed for £ plosion in Hall of Stricken Home. THREE INFANTS SICK Scarlet Fever Patients Hurried Out of Tenement After Mysterious Warning. While one child Iay dead and three y il unto death fi acarlet fever in the five-story tene house at No. 35 atreet at 4.00 o'cl agent of the "F through the house and placed a t on the stairway leading from the to the second floor, There was not a whole pane of glass left in the house, and plaster! e was eracked and fell on the suffert Gren and the dead body of diy’ other child. Milas Pauline Brockman, who lives on the fifth floor of the house, returned to her home about 1 o'clock this morn- ing with a young man who saw her to Ber own door, As the couple passed the third floor a man slouche& buck in the corner and drew his hat over his eyes. “Lock that door carefully as you go out," Miss Brockman cautioned the man. "See that the man has gone, toot” she added. Scarlet Fever In House. The entire tenement house had been posted by the Board of Health. Next @oor to the Brockman home lived Salya- tore Trentoft and his family, a 0 on the door was pasted the sign, let other children Ia East Seventy-fifth ck thi Slack Hanc Fever.” Trentoft’s little daughter Lucy died of the fever at 1! o'clock last night, And he and his wife and a few frien were sittting about the body, which was surrounded by candles. On the fourth floor the ‘Scarlet Fever" sign was also posted. On this floor lived Frank Marowitz, whose) daughter Rose, eleven years old, is in @ critical condition from fever. Across the hall another child has scarlet fever, and this door is also posted, On the f floor ves An Zuppa, his wife and five daughters, One of these children, Lucy, five years old, also has scaric fever Miss Drockman’s escort passed into the street He saw the s fever signs, and as he went f¢ out front doors and started to lock t he was asked to keep them open by a man who was then tying er: on the doorbell, “Don't lock the door," “Tam going in now, Saw the .xplosion. Policeman Birmingham, of the East the man ga Bixty-seventh street station, was pass-! ing the house when he saw a sputtering, firey object In the hall. The policeman stopped for a time and then started through the door, The object on fire appeared to him to be a box about a foot square, He was in the hallway when the explosion occurred, and it carried him off his feet. The front doors were hurled to the street, and not a whole pane of glass was left In the} house, to the top story was cracked, and then Mt began to fall. First out of the house came Trentott with the body of his dead child in his arms. The child had been almost burted by falling plaster, Behind Trentoft were the fathers of the three children with scarlet fever, each with a sick child In his arms. Then came the twenty familles, Some| were dressed, they having been sitting up with thelr sick or dead, Others were in thelr night clothes. The police came and tried to preserve order, but were unable to do so, Bo great had been the concussion that the windows of the tenement across the | street had been broken, and the tenants rushed from it screaming, The ten-| ants came from all the houses on the lock. Got “Black Hand” Letters. Vhen quiet was restored the police began an investigation, On the ground floor of the tenement that had been at- tacked to the east is the butcher shop of Maggi & Capanise, and on the oppo- site side is Giuseppi Tavolacct’s grocery. Tavolace! and his family lye in the rear of the store. He senied to the olice that he had been the recipient of lack Hand letters, but it is anid that he has received threatening communica- tions, and that he has refused to pay the blackmaliing « {£8Ng Protection money. mage Plastering trom the first floor! TEN WES ARE ES COFFIN -BATTLESHES I A RACE HOME 10 HAMPTON ROADS Fleet a From Gibraltar on eg of Cruise Around the W SU GIBRALTAR, on board # Feb, 6—With the bands Home Sweet Home, fleet of ups | Rear-Admiral Sperry left Gibraltar at 11 A.M. to-day for Hanipton Bo ing the sixteen batt under ads on the last lap of Its famous around-the-world erutse of 45,000 miles, One hour later the vessels were well clear of the land and steaming westward in double column ‘formation at a speed of ten knots an hour, They will follow the Southern route to Hampton Roads, a distance of 509 miles, and about 1,000 miles off the American coast they will be met and escorted home by the third squadron of the Atlantic fleet under Rear-Admiral | Arnold, arriving on Feb. 22. The weather conditions at the time of | {departure were glorious, The sky without acloud and there was enough breeze to curl the crests of the | mun-flooded was waves. thing could have surpassed the beauty of the marine |pictura as the American armada emerged from the shadow of the tower- ing rock of Gibraltar and moved out Into the straits | British Fire Parting Salute. The difficult operation of getting the sixteen huge battleships out of the nar- row war basin of the port and under |way, was accomplished with a skill and perfection of manouevering and detall which won the admiration of all foreign | naval officers, | At 8.55 a stream of multi-colored signal {fags on the flagship communicated the order to get under way to the orgia, the Nebraska, the Jers the | Rhode Island and the Virginta, lying at the rear of the basin. As the flags came fluttering down five minutes later the designated battleships cast off anchor Hnes and slowly swung. their ‘noses In the direction of the breaches |business and appeared to have money. are surpasses all pix one of four t keel tal in the breakwater, the Georgia leading |Thon he had a nice oily way with him, | ‘eter chine authorized by, Congress (tom ce Keel at trial displacement about the way with Lleut.-Commander George | so with the sodas and ice creams and yin with form am Indo! heres 27 feet. Her coal bunker capactty W. Kline on the bridge eanddes and palaver, I fell tn love with “Meh Will form an indomitable squad- {8 2,500 tons, which 1s aufficlent to | Once outside, Rear-Admiral Wain- | him Fon Uthe oliicraveasele are the NTN faend her, at ial 10:knot speed a dive wright'’s division fell Into formation and| “We were married about the time 7 Dakota, being bullt at Quincy, M tance of 6,720 knots, or twenty-elght waited for the second and third groups. | put my pigtails up on the back of my the Florida, which will be built at days’ steaming. Provision 18 also The second group consisted of the Ver-|head. Shortly after fie came to New NeW York Navy-Yard, aud the Utah, made for the storage of a Inrge, mont, proudly flying the battleship! York, Then he sent for me. I knew (© be built at Camden, No J amount of ofl fuel without in any | eflicioncy trophy at her fore; the Minne-|by that time that he was a gambler, Beats Britain's Biggest. degree reducing the capacity of the |sota, Kentucky, Ohlo and’ Kearsarge, | but I cared for him chovgh to live with The Delaware will have a displaces coal bunkers. She will have triple and the third was composed of the Wis-/him about a year. ‘That's as long as I ment on trial of 20,00) tons, or 2.10 tons expansion reciprocating engines and consin, Kansas, Louisiana, Iiinols. The three groups waited out- side, and at 10.90 the brought up the rear. Although It Is not customary to fire parting salutes, the Devonshire, the} flagship of Rear-Admiral Sir James Goodrich, R. N., Admiral Superintend- ent at Gibraltar, which had taken up a position at the entrance of the harbor, Jhoisted and saluted the American flag }as the Connecticut passed out. The band ‘on the quarter deck of the Connecticut | played the English anthem, while the musicians on the foreign warships |played the ‘Star Spangled Banner” as ithe respective ensigns were dipped. | {Admiral Goodrich and Admiral Litvinof, lot the Russian Navy, signalled “Good- |bye, pleasant voyage.” Admiral Sperry {replied laconically; “Thanks.” When the warships are fairly on their way It will be a race across the ocean, ‘for the great sea fighters are to be put |to their best speed tests, and each will jstrive to be first at the home goal, | | where they are to be recelved by Presi: dent Roosevelt, SS | TAMPA RESULTS. | FIRST RACE.— Four and one-halt fur- longs; three-year-olds and up, Ward purse, $1—Ray Thompson, 115 (D, Murphy), 4 to 5, to & and out, first by length; Niolessa, 114 (T. Burns), 2 to 3 cu out, second; Fresh, 112 (Obert), 20 to 1, 8 to 1 and 4 to 1, third, |Time——059. Ramble, Katie Gleason, Carrie Elder, Expect to See and Dew of Dawn also ran. fo ey New Tarkish Bathe tzer Buliding. Ont: abilanuent ihn i | Three Known Widows Just | thelr | 3 to 2) a) LINER DEUTSCHLAND NOW CREDITED 10. STICKS FAST IN MUDDY GAMBLER at Bier, but There Are Rumors of Others. ONE First Was Married Tel Other Weddings. Woman to Whom KING Mourn OF THEM IS DEAD. Is of Three | BOTTOM OF NORTH RIVER Captains of Fleet of Tugs Trying to Pull Steamship Free to Resume Voyage Fear She Will Have Wait for High Tide. to The! North-German Lloyd liner, hardest trying to back ber off the shoal Dentschland, bound for Madeira and | Scores of free-lance tugboat eaptalns I the Mediterranean, jgnominiousiy stuck ) the river aad upper that a in the mud about 3) yards off the Jer- | big liner was in come Bart of predic sey City terminal of the Pennsy! Ratlroad late this afternoon. She went | aground at low tide and there was a jot of apprehension among the tughoat | captains engaged in trying to drag her | off that she would remain there high tide at 9.14 to-night \ gulls. No lines were He aceapted from outside tugs, but the N German-Lioyd gent additional ¢ugs de from Hoboken Tug and strain as they would, however with the aid ¢ 5 f the screws of the ste —_ The Deutschland was to have left her (nin, the huge hull reniained perched jer at Hoboken at 3 o'clock. She y . Although Willlam 8. King, a taro Pler at Hobo envi’ tnaishea! eh fag delayed tn departure anil there At& o'clock {t appeared from the shore EU) k WFrom to be some diliculty in gett that the ander of the Deutsehland P.B, MeDonnet’s undertaking rooms at|headed down the river when she Was | wouid wait for high tide thix evening No. Seventh avenue, died penniless, clear of the Hoboken docks | ‘he tugs stood by and warned off fer- he left a wealth of widows, Three of | A fleet of tugs hovered around her and |ry.poats and small craft. Crowds of ushed and snorted at her port side, | passengers who had expected to see the them with marriage certificates met in : , but she remained to the Y sunset over Sandy Hook lined the ralls frigid conclave at the dead man’s bier | shore, some distance to the westward of and watched the sun set behind a big this morning; then there appeared the the course of ocea S passing OP sign advertising a soap factory cousin of another wife who did not {and down the North At the offices of the North German vhen opposite the Pennsylvania fer oy s dented that the Deutsel- live to join the widowed group. ‘Then | When opposit th nsyivanta erry: Lloyd It was dented that the Deutse! ; 5 ; hor Rouse she came to a North and was stuck in the mud, ‘The official there were t morereported) rat Serman-Licyd tugs in » made lin charge said she was waiting for pas vaguely; that {s, none of the three sur- | fast to haw astern and pulled thelr | sengers, vivil a believed that the three | » wives were wive: As the morning wore leollection In ‘Todd's | ninth street and s ue, to pay the funeral expenses, grew ger, lative rumors of record. saloon, enth ave there were cu In the course of his brief career, Will: | himselt | egular | \ jlam S, King had taken unto [ten wives—some of them b: processes of solemnization The gambler was to have |today had a Juted tows been bi (his funeral exp: they all refused te | pealed to, and it is expected that a suf- ee ie FSET PELaSRaR oe up to assure | SEWPORT NEWS, Va. Feb. @—The jaction, The arrangement of her main , battleship Delaware, the largest and, battery guns ts such as to permit a} Her, Claims as First Wife. rk pRRCTML Con GHien Gin GU broadside fire of 26 per cent. greater Wife No. 1 described herself as Mrs than that of the broadside fire of any | yaar Ward King. she is a genteele Was launched here to-day from the battleship now bullt or, ao far as looking little woman with bright red yards of her builders, the Newport | known, under construction hair and snappy brown eyes: had) Nowe Ship Building and Dry Dock Com-| Her defensive qualities other than not lived with King for many years, ev via ay Canal, of Bridge. tho8e dependent tipon armor protection she said, but she iutended to assert her | Pans 4 au fre such as to give the maximum de. priority as widow by riding in the first ville, Del, chris! the glint Ves grew of protection to all the vital por- carriage behind the hearse and “let any ‘sel as it moved down the ways tions by means of unusually effective jot those other widows butt In if they ana took the water, Hundreds of compartmenta: subdivistor, so that ta alee : ‘ ; Peillinvitedieueataltromilielnameraiatorae conjunction with her armor protection eee rt King's ma blr habit) wa se Eeuieaipintinalid Cleve Bennewill the defensive qualities of this vessel are | any news to me,” sald Mrs, King @ battleship, Including Gov. Pennewill yetieved to be distinctly superior to to-day, “nor did it bother me and other notat we thoee of any battleship hitherto de- | after I hawt quit tying thousands from cities near signed. reba EY LS SS Hires nested the big event Great Battery of Guns. aarti HEAL ae Compared wth the battle-ships, com: | The Delaware is 519 feet In length on | an} pleted or under construction, of the |load water-line, 8 feet 2 Inches In jgolng to school fissourl and | could stand the people he went around Myreater than the British Dreadnought with, so as soon as I got a job I Connecticut | him, His Other Marriages. “Bince then I haven't bothered him. the street and chat with him, and him about his marriages. |dldn't approve of it it “The first real marriage of his th heard of after I left him happened in He met a little shopgirl named in the j 1897, Jennie DuMeld and married her City Hall, Three years later she |when her baby was born, Then, | he married a girl named Carrie > She worked In a laundry and had halr, ‘They were married in a Lutheran Church. {tt I went and looked up the record "But they didn't live together long. They didn’t get along well was no divorce. They just separ The next marriage I saw the rece occurred on March 31, 1908, Lizzie Grogan and they jby the Rev. Father Lane in Michael's Church on Thirty-third st Heard of Other Wives. "Before this I'd he but T couldn't get any records I knew there were other rd of other w wom ing was killing him. “What do you keep on marry this for?’ 1 asked him. it's illegal?” He only laughed at Continued on Second Page.) along and the Twenty- taken any of his widows contrib- give a dollar, the had a soda water Now and then I'd meet him on Of cour: his marrying other | women, but I didn’t worry ellow When I heard about This wite were married 9 ‘Don't you know and said that if the women wanted to DELAWARE, GIANT BATTLESHIP — OF THE WORLD, IS LAUNCHED : 1 SS irled lars that | New American Sea Fighter More Powerful Than Great Brit- eat and Vanguard Has Wonderful But ugh ain’s they all expressed the desire of being Li ie | Present lot We: Funeral Gun Batteries — Miss Anna Cahall Sponsor. jterment. Ills friends had to be ap- navy of any foreign country the Dela- breadth, and her mean draught to bot- will reauire over 900 men to man her, and 750 tons greater than Great Britain's | latest vessel of that type, the Van- guard. The new battle-ship is to carry as heavy armor and as powerful armament left [rifles and her secondary battery will be fourtoon 5-Inch rapid-fire guns, four 3- pounder saluting guna, four 1-pounder any known vessel of its class, will) semi-automatic guns, two 3-Inch fleld @ a speed of 21 knots, which Is be- | pleces and two machine guna of 3) lieved to be the highest practicable for | calibre. She has two submerged torpedo a vessel of this type and class, and will| tubes, The contract price for building have the bighest practicable radius of schist 1s $8,987,000. FELL DEAD ON WAY TO SHIP THAT WAS TO CARRY HIM HOME ———++-______. with | ask se 1 at 1 died 1903, tt. | man vel here ated 4 of was Cerra, Who Had Long Planned Trip to Italy, Stricken by Apoplexy as He Starts for the Deutschland—Friend’s Wife and Baby, in His Care, Catch Boat. St reet i p on his way to take a steamship Charles street atation 0 lire we tes, | tc n Italy found and $820 In change, There were em. thirty-two years old, of Braddock, Pa., post-office receipts showing he had sent died suddenly this afternoon at Morton about $8,000 to Italy. The man had with round saying they were Mrs. King, but and West atreets of apoplexy BURY ENEYTGRETATAN GL GLERSRSTONGZC7 187 |\ERYrAR a acenits Feta Gen When T For montha Cerra had planned the| Mrs. Lingl, and these Were tumed over heard ety ae et WeuBh. cep. With him were Mrs, Marie Linal| to her @9 she could take the ateamulp vad aaked him about It. He was a (And her six months’ old oy. Mra > pretty sick man then—wasting away Linal's husband had asked Cerra to) MRS, EVER8Z ASKS DIVORCE with consumption. The life he was lead- 100K after the passage, and the man’ Gicago, Feb. &6—Ruth May E and the woman arrived In this city this morning, to sail on the Deutschland. While on their way to the ferry to go to Hoboken, Cerra complained of being daughter of Gustavus Switt, millto: 6 packer, filed sult for divor: against Ernest D, Eversz In the Circuit Court here to-day. Desertion {1 that Pictht (i valk, charme specified in the bill, whic nd suddenly he fell to the stdawalk, | Charme specitied tn the fil, dying. @ jthe son of ithoran — miniater | When the body wae searched at the| Evanston, @ Chicago subarb, Her armament will consist of a main| battery of ten 12%tnch breech-loading | o | pene eonvenienee, ia 1909. ~FANMERSTEN "IN PRESS SUITS ASKS $700 000 Charging Libel He enn | $100,000 Each From | Paper and Editor. PLANS MORE ACTIONS, | a) ment, s arted for her like a fock of sea) ;May Ask to Have “Battery | Dan” Finn Removed From Office. | Oscar Hammerstein has, attorneys, Delmas, man, begun suit for $100,000 against the New York Press, and another sult against the New York Press Company, Limited, for the same amount, alleging | Mbel in connection with the recent Press-Hammerstein embroglio. He says that these are not the only proceed- ings he contemplates In a war of re- tallation, He will also, he says, sult for conspiracy inal libel “My other sults will come up just as soon ax the case of Hall,and Doyle, the two reporters held for their attack upon me In the Hotel Knickerbocker, has been disposed of in the Court of Spectal Sessions and one for erlm- , And Oscar will not stop here. He con- | templates bringing a sult against no less a person than Magistrate “Battery Dan" | Finn, The impressario grieved at certain remarks made by the | Magistrate when he was handing down his decision in the case against the re- | porters. | “L will have that man driven from the ‘bench if I can," he sputtered. “He caters to the lowest elements of society. He has played to the galleries, but he | will find out that he has exceeded his authority in so dotng. “I mean to charge him with conduct unbecoming his official position and with uttering a malicious falseliood and also | with an attempt to screen offenders and | | prejudice the higher courts | “In stating that the men who at- | tacked me were warranted In so doing he stated an untruth, becauso the men who called on me at my to the press were not the same men who attacked me in the bocker.” FIND QUALTROUGH “GUILTY, SUSPEND HIM 6 MONTHS Also Loses Ten Numbers | for Intoxication. GIBRALTAR, Feb. 6—After land mysterious deliberation, following secret which numerous contradictory reports the Edward [of the sentence became current, | court-martial which tried Capt F, Qualtrough, of the battleship | Georgia, on charges of Intoxication, | found him guilty and suspended him tor ("6 ere with a toss of ten numbers. jalthrough was charged with "eae ae at a reception given officers jot the fleet at Tangier by the American |Conaul, Samuel A, Gummere. ‘The losa |of ten numbers means that ton officers, | now below him In rank, will be ellaible for promotion to a rear-admiralship be- | fore Capt. Qualtrough. Rear-Admiral Sperry, Commander-in- Chief of the battleship fleet, has ap- proved the Anding# of the court-martlal, put the Seoretary of the Navy must take offolal action on the recommenda- fon for lowe of number Capt, Qualtrough be from the fleet vey detached rei. Kline, of the nd on in come Georgia, wlll continue in the homeward Journey, —————— TAFT AT CULEBRA CUT. PANAMA, Fob, 6-Willlam HL Tate and the engineers who accompanied him to the Tathmus apent to-day at the ‘ulebra Cut, Mra, Taft made an ex- ursion to the twlands In Panama Bay, We Hooth, S information, othe sy rea he Se oa ani hooking. A how path of travel. te through his | Towne and Spell-| bring | | side and the Street Is Blocked Until is much ag- | opera-house | | and whore conduct prompted my letter | Captain of Puttleship Georgia | WHATHER—Fale BOMB SCATTERS MOURNERS | and colder to-night and Sunday, orld, |FINAL | RESULTS EDITION J PRICE ONE CENT. —= ROT IN AT KN HEATR NZD CROWD DEMANDS 11S MONEY Announcement in | | | + the Grand Street Playhouse of the Illness of Miss Bea- ton and Her Inability to Appear Puts Audience in an Uproar. | iin Atmos, manotee sates CRIES OF “FAKE” START WILD RUSH TO BOX OFFICE | Excitement Is Communi | cated to the Crowd Qut- | Police Reserves Arrive — All | Money P |was too ill to aid Back. There was tremendous excitement in and around the Grand Street Theatre this afternoon when Manager Katz announced that Lou‘se appear in “Rachel Galdstein.” They had to call the reserves ° Beaton ‘out, the Grand street cars were blocked, and A, H. Woods, manager and husband of Louise Beaton, lost formance, RIGCED GUN TO “ALL HIMSELF, BUT ~ DODGED BULLETS ‘Mitza Pulled Times, but Jumped Away Each Time. Knicker- | String Three | Giusoppt Mitaa, a young man who was | marrted four menths ago, promptly lost his job and hasn't been able to get one aince, decided to Kill htmael? In his home at No, 400 Weat Twenty-sixth street to- ay in an original way After his wife bad gone downstalrs to vialt a neighbor he fastened a loaded revolver to & shelf in such a way that the muzzle pointed outward. Then he tled a atriig to the trigger, ran It |through a sorew-eye In the wall and | stood off about ten feet from the re- | yotver with the end of the string In his | hand. To try how It worked, he pulled the Netring “and dodged, — ‘The bullet” Just shaved hia ear, Thon he braced him: f and cried out In Itallan, “Now I Ki myaelf,”) He pulled the mele awain, He wlao dodyed again, Then he swore a little and once | more —tnformed nelghbora that he was Killing himself, and pulled the string @ (hird tm ‘Phowe who looked on In horror from weross an wlrehaft awear that the third time the revolver belched flame Glue seppl dodged more nimbly than ever. Before ne could make a fourth try at tt, however, his wife and three men frienda burst inthe door of the flat and leaped upen him, Ho was taken to the West sireet station and locked up LONGBOAT DOES A TAXICAB MARATHON. Indian Who Defeated Shrubb Will Be at the Irlsh-American Gantes, Indian Longboa! beat Ahrubb In the Marathon at Madison Square Gar- fen last nigtt, turned ot of bed: this afternoon, after doing almost a Mar then th deep, Longioat was a ite t wtiit in mba, after hls traine foreat, allowed him an ey tira haw had wines he tralr sat night's race—le and started out to gee J e allowed to shed & little steam after 4 race, Since his ar ival New York As taken tie walcab fever and a few miles in one the red or green DugMies warm him up better of frewat wifs, together w a nds, will atte he Yrisii-American Club's athlete t jat the Garden to-night. all the money taken in for the per "Rachel Goldstein’ 1s a play of the east sido and has been drawing crowded houses all week, This being the Yiddish Sabbath, there was a bargain matinee and fully 1,00 persons—a majority of them women and children—were Jammed into the theatre half an hour before tho tlme for tho curtain to rise, Actress Is Ill, Manager Katz was called to the tele phone about that time and informed } that Miss Beaton had been taken ill ag her Home on Riverside Drive and would be unable to glve the performances, She has no understudy and ft was up to Kata to dismiss the audience. Ho haan't been In the theatrical bust |ness on the east side very long, so he | Just walked out on tho stage and casue Jally announced that on acgount of the (ness of tho star there would be no | performanc Had he known his audl- ence better he would haye prefaced this announcement with another, to the ef | fect that money paid for tickets would {be returned at the box office, As it was, before he had a chance to gay anything about the return of the | money, the » audi had artven Jand was erying “FY sh equty- alents for ilve us our mone: arose from all vides. ve closest to the doora made a rush for the box office, Within a minute there was a hystert- eal near-riot such as only the east sida jean produce, Kats telephoned to Police Headquarters and twenty men and Capt, O'Connor went around from the Eld+ ridge street atation to the Grand Street ‘Theatre on the run. Crowd Blocks Street. ‘The police found the atreet blocked, An impression had gone around out. Jalde the theatre that something mo- mentous had happened inside. The }lobby was full of people Aghting to Ket Jin against people fighting to get out, Hundreds of frantio women, dragging |children, were shrieking as loud as they could. TYhe ekilled policemen managed to get jinto the theatre and get things halt stralghtened out, Then Manager Kata ‘got a chance to make a speech from the #tage and tell the audience that all Jwho had purchased tlekets could get (heir money back—tho orehestra patrons first, the balcony next 1 last of all the | wallery, Phia news sifted out into the Wise small boys, learning that the lery occupants were to be recompensed, hustled into the lobby and took up t plaovs near the box loudly. pro- olaiming that they 1 just come dow stairs, It took to Be et claim at t The work of amie Heaton W nny gunday, A TM it fe ‘ | tor