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4 $ e St = | | gion and eastward reported maxtmum temperatures above 9 degrees yester. Aay. The highest wae 9% degrees at Stoneciiffe, Canada. An area of cooler temperature spread over the Upper ‘Misaissipp! Valley and most of the Lake Fegion during the night. “Widely scattered showers ocurred ta Waetern Texas, Oktahoma, Goutheastera Kansas, Missouri, the Lake region, the Bourh Atlantic States and the Cana@ian Northwest, CONDITIONS ALL FAVORABLE FOR A SECOND SPELL. “Barometric conditions are favorable for another warm period. The* mazi- temperature thie afternoon wi!) be above 9% degrees amd about that figure on Tuesday afternoon. Generally fair ‘weather will @outherly winds.” ‘The following temperatures were re- @orded at § A. M., Beventy-fifth merid- fam time: Albany, 4; Atlantic City, 0, jen: Paul, 4; Bait Lake 7; Or. Diego, 0; Ban Francisco, 68; Bkitt Cur- rents. 82; Tampa, 78; Washington, §2.| ‘% at Providence and Beston; i, 3 at Yellowstone Park. ip i i Seturday night ot Fifth end Twenty-sith street. Belle na and died be- i I months ol@, tevday from heat WATER SUPPLY IN WESTCHESTER (Bpecial to The Bracing World.) MOUNT VERNON, N. July 10— ‘The intense heat during the past few @ays has caused the evaporation of a great volume of water from the lakes @nd reservoirs and small streams in this vicinity end a water famine is imminent {a a number of Westchester towns, un- less rain comes soon. At Port Chester, Rye and Greenwich, the qater company has sent out notices urging consumers to be caving of the ter as the reservoirs supplying those towns only contains a supply for eighty days. The pumping of water from the Byram end Mianue rivers has been practically stopped, the streame ere ay jally consumption in the three towns mentioned is about four and half million gallons a day, while the daily evaporation owing to the Diister- ing gun is almost two million gallons. ‘Tho zeservoirs which furnish Mount Vernon with water, are well filled but ‘they ere small and considerable water is mow being pumped from artesian wells to prevent a water famine like the city euffered last year. —»— 120 IN THE SUN IN ALBANY STREETS. ALBANT, July 10.—The official mer @ury hed reached 93 at 11 A. M. to-day and was otill climbing, while street thermometers registered 120 ip the sun. —2>— ANOTHER HOT WAVE MAKES BOSTON WILT BOSTON, July 10—A combination ef heat and abnormal humidity united to-day in making weather conditions fm af ebout Boston almost unbear- able, The rise in temperature during the early hours of to-day equalled the limb ef the mercury on July 4, which was the hottest day ever experienced bere, At 8 A. M. the oMcia) weather The wind—whet there was of it—was from the south- Sweet, but there was hardly enough alr stirring to keep the flag on the Cuy Mall tower trom wrepping about the On the street thermometers regis- tered 100 degrees in the shade at 10 o'clock. Up to 10.80 o'clock twelve cases of heat prostration had been treated at ‘the hoepitals in the city, ———— ee \ Fear in Jail for Desertion, Austin Carey, twenty-six years old, @ Salesman of No. 707 Greenwich streot. Was sentenced by Judge Crain in the Court of General Sensions to-day to a year in the penitentiary after he pleaded guilty of abandoning his wife and baby, Carey left his home several months ago, when bis baby eon was six days old, and went to Chicago, His wife wrote him numerous letters, asking him to return, but he did not answer them. SHIPPING NEWS, ALMAMAO FOR TO-DAY, Thomas Curtis of New York, attended, tracks an expre train was picked up Ous rises ati Se - tieee atta, 8.20 __oaeSt( and the ropiane acted as a sort of ue Waig. ton wag. | RETAIL MILK PRICE pilot ail the way to Stemmers Run| ) Pp MP. jon, ae eh 144s TO BE RAISED AT ONCE.|""n,." yester- PORT pL YORK, the wholesale price ot mille went into! aay, nearly resulted fatully for boin a effect yesterday tp this city and almost | jen, ‘Thelr machine was emashed to prevail with moderete % be AS LS ri ala] SOUND STEAMER HERE CRIPPLED BY GRASH IN NIGHT Commonwealth’s Passengers Quiet When James S. Gif- ford Hits the Liner. PROVIDENCE TO RESCUE Ran Alongside Fishing Craft in Response to a Cry i of Distress, ‘The Fall River tine cteamer Com- Monwealth was run into shortly after Midnight this morning by the fishing Steamer James 8. Gifford, which col ded with her in the thick fog over the mouth of the Bound. ‘The Common- ‘wealth was just entering the Bound at | ® point about ten miles east of Race |Rock Point, near New London, when the fishing steamer crashed into her. The dow of the Gifford ran squarely into the port side gangway entrance of the Commonwealth, just forward of |the paddie-wheel, and, jamming there jfor @ moment, Gropped back, carrying Jaway! with ft the side-planking of the steamer, making a hole twenty fect long and twelve high. ‘The Commonwealth was crowded ‘with passengers, most of whom were undisturved by the collision, ‘The crew, in response to the orders of Capt. William Appleby, rushed to quarters prepared to man the life-boats, Dut @ hasty examination showed that al of her injuries were above wa:or, was no occasion for rousing the sleeping passengers. About half &@ dozen of the passengers, asleep in nearby staterooms, who had heard the crash of the collision came out of their rooms in neglige, but finding that there wae no cause for alarm, quickly returned to bed. PROVIDENCE GO:3 TO RE OF FISHING BOAT. ‘The Gifford, after fending hereeif free frem the ealth dropped astern, croasing the bow of the Providence, which just before the colliston occurred had been about @ boat's length behind the Commonwealth, so close, in fact that Capt. 0. C. Groffin was able to sve her saloon Ughts, ATHOOD' FUG TO WASHINGTON HALTED EAT With Aviator Hamilton He Is} Forced to Descend at Balti- more on Hard Trip. CUE (ipectal to The Evening Wordy, BALTIMORE, July 1%.—Intense heat to-@ay forced Harry N. Atwood end Charles K. Hamilton to temporarily abandon their flight from Atlantic City to Washington after theit machine had wilted at Stemmer's Run, @ point eight miles from this city on the Pennsyl- vanis Railroad. The two men had made @ game attempt, in @ broken and patch- @d-up machine, to complete the last leg of Atwood's announced tour from Bos- ton to the capital, After landing the two men came to Baltimore by train. The aviators left | Atlantic City at 6.06.4. M. and reached | Stemmer's Run at 9.45. They had trav- Noank for repaire, Her damage was) 0164 approximately 1¢ mile with but | alight The Commonwealth, whove engines | O"? st0P- that at Farnhurst, Dol, for | gasoline, This distance was thirteen piel peed sevgar a atill hovering aterg| miles greater than Atwood carried his fa the Blatibesetos, pre to go| Mechunician In th flight from Boston | to the assistance of the fishing steamer, | t® New London, Conn, Capt. GriMn of the Providence flashed | Both men were in excellent spirits & wireless message to Capt. Appleby | Wren they appeared at @ hotel here, al- of the Commonwealth that all wee wei | tough tired and hungry, After » bath with the fishing boat, and the Com-| "4 breakfast, Atwood announced thelr monwealth resumed her journey. to| itention of resuming thelr flight later Maw York. tn the day if the weather conditions ‘The point of greatest damage on the | Permit, with the expectation of reaching Commonwealth was among the horse | Waslington tn time for dinner this eve- stalls, all of which happened to be | Ming. empty. ‘The tale of the aerial journey, as told Pilot Daboll of the Providence said |>Y Atwood, was one of @ fight bitterly when ‘he arrived at the Fall River line | Contested against heavy odds. Pier this morning that the Providence} “We worked over the machine until was nosing her way through the f {after 12 o'clock last night,” said At- half-speed, and just before approaching | Wood, “and it was nearly 1 o'clock when Race Rock Point had sheered off across |We retired. We had a few hours’ sleep the bow of the Commonwealth, and had but little trouble in starting, FISHING BOAT CALLS TO PROVI. leaving the beach promptly at 6.04 DENCE FOR HELP. o'clock. The first part of the flight was Just as the Commonwealth was adoat |delixhttul. The morning air was not #0 four points acrors the Providence's bow, |Warm, but the humidity was high and the fishing steamer, which he had not |¢ven at first we had a great deal of |#een until then, suddenly became visible | trouble in getting any speed or eleva- about 100 feet away. Even then he aid |ton. At no time during the fight did not know that any collision had oc. |W® Feach ap elevation of more than 250 curred, and {t was not until the voice | fee from the fishing steamer cried out for| HEAT #REVENTED AEROPLANE the Ife-boat that he knew that any- ASCENDING HIGH, ar Pose g(a The first and only intermediate stop Das) was made at 645 o'clock, at Farnhuret, aboard the Commonwealth, ana) ” Del,, thirty-five miles from Philadelphi it was not until they were leaving this! tor fuel. After a rest of three minutes |morning that any except the f they were in the alr again, eee eae e tine unew that thelr) watriking out along tho line of the i sacl Pennsylvania Railroad, 14 Atwood, Sere eee. ™ yw eX eo cke al four to GIVES EMPLOYEES A DANCE, | <0’ cievstse on "ey ation enough to clear the tele- Young Matron, W: out: “Kor hi Doat.” Capt. Grifin responded with lacrity, and when his crew had made ready got into the boat himself. He ordered his men to row close up to the steamer, and then he hailed her. For some minutes ther then @ voice cried out ‘e're all right, I guess.” The Gifford then put off in the Girection of New London, later gving to wires, Sometimes we were obliged to leave the railroad tracks be- cause of the fact that we were danger- ously near the ground, We were racing trains, too, and we could not get on the track for that reason, “We landed at Stemmers Run just simply because the machine was going to fall and would not go any further under the hot weather conditions.” The crowds along the line of fight STAMFORD, Con! Frank Danforth, th July 10.—Mrs jaughter of t million and @ halt doll "s estate, having reached her twenty-first year. Instead of a big affair for her so- clety friends she gave a barn dance lust night for the employees of her|{ncreased as the hours grew, and at mother's Mr. and Mrs, Dan-| Havre de Grace practically the entire forth and a party of house guests, in-| population turned out to greet the air- cluding Miss Cornelia Hoyt, Mr, and|men as they passed over the town, Mrs, Gordon Willard and Alr. and Mra.| Soon after reaching the Pennsylvania Two accidents had marked the two former attempts to get away from At+ lantic City, and the last one, An increase of half @ cent a quart tn all ite subur' This will mean probably that to-day dite when It fell, but the determination of the two flyers was pot shaken ro asiero | or to-morrow the retail price of Luli a Giaras For aniouls | milk will go up at least a cent a quart - hi Hed milk . one ‘good and that bottled milk pricea will also 4 COMING STEAMSHIPS, 1 " (Special to The Exening World.) Pvc sooke SFO § See Oe Dove 8 Suse. MIDDLETOWN, 'N. ¥.. July 10.—Ray- roline, Palermo, milan mond Holly, a chauffeur, was drowned "We Mietan s Maanel ‘Galea, Gea, “Gruett, who |i! & deep hole in a treacherous brick- 5 Featare ao ie served with distinction under Gen, | Yard pond near this city last nine, 2 gre, Griese” |Dantei 22 Sickles during “civil war, | oY Was a good swimmer, but sank pay tigre Galveston, died shortly before Satuntay midnight |{f7om some unknown cause, lis dinner omine at his home, No. 130 Prospect stree:, | brother-in-law, Edward Dodd, made cellent ‘GOING STEAMBHIPS, futtle attempts to bi him up by oS “BAILED TO-DA)-, | eighth year diving. ‘The body was recovered by Wenell, Princess Anne, Moctol, | @rai Gegling, a ntalisiaiia heal. TER RLM ESCM a a a A a aS —_- ___ RE EVENING Worty, MowDay, sULy~ fo," i911. FROZEN MILK IN BLOCKS TO MEET SUMMER FAMINE. New Haven Experimenting on Plan to Freeze and Store the Lacteal Fluid. NEW "WAVEN, Conn., July 10—As a result of the present ‘olty of milk, experiments in freezing the lacteal fluid are being tried in this city, with a view to providing a supply against possible recurrences of the situation now mena ing the city. The plan is to freese the milk tnto blocks of 250 and 300 pounds, which may be used as found necessary. At the present time milk dealers must depend solely on the daily output from dairy farms and are unable to allow for any sudden increase in demand or falling off tn supply. The new plan, if ly worked out, will make the de practically independent of elther condition, as they will have @ reserve supply on hand. ——s——— POLICE SEEK RICH MAN. Last Seen Sitting on Bank of Creek. James Holten of Elmhurst, L. 1, hi 3 asked the police of Newtown to search for his father, Anthony, seventy years old, & Wealthy retired merchant, who On June disappeared on Friday night. 0 the elder Holten was decla: potent to manage his Queens County Court appointed his son @ committee In charge of his person, James Holten told the police that his father had with him his bank book of the Williamsburg Savings Bank, in which he has $2,600 deposited. He alsq had $1,600 in cash. A neighbor told the younger Holten that he had seen his t North Beach Friday afternoon, wittting on the banks of Creek, near the beach, The police are dragging the oreek. plvrtena tenn Mania WHERE IS SOLOMON KATZ? Family Hasn't Hen: for a Week. Solomon Katz, aged twenty, teft his home at No. 69 Boerum street, Brookly: last Monday to go to work in a new job. He neglected to tell his mother where he was going, and Mrs, Kats fears now that some dent has happened to the boy because she has not heard from him wince he went away. Young Katz 18 @ bookkeeper, but had been out of work for some time, He secured a position in @ hotel out of the city through an employment agency, and it Was to take this po: away last Monday, know the name of the agency and can- not learn where he went. Mra. Kats appealed to the police to-day et her in locating the missing From Hi to youth. KING’S LEVEE 1N DUBLIN, American Consul Adams Am, Th Presented to George V, DUBLIN, July 10.—Keeping holiday in honor of King George, most of the shops remained closed to-day and the man ining the street left his politics at home, heartily participating in the wel- come, Receiving and replying to addresses occupied both King George and Queen Mary during the early morning. The King subsequently held a levee in the throne room of the castle, among those Presented being American Consul Ed- ward L, Adains, Later Their Majesties went to the races at Leopardstown, where @ majority of the population of the Irish capital Beemed to have congre- gated. seianciieaitsinats FIREBUG AND OIL CAN START WEST SIDE BLAZE, rways soaked tn kerosene and @ small fire early to-day in the furnished room house for negroes at No. 207 Weat Thirty-third street gave the police an- other puzzle much like the incendiary | fre ® week ago in the same neighbor. | hood, when pickpockets robbed many | im the crowd. ‘The fire to-day was extinguished with small dam crowd was attracted ad a diMoult Job fighting @ way for the firemen, Many refused to fo back to bed after Ting Of the ofl-soaked stairs and i —.. | 81,000 Retura te Work, BOLTON, July 10—More operatives, employed in tex Steamer Commonwealth, Showing Hole Received in Collision in Midnight Fog JEN LEADING JUDY IN RACE TO WHITEHOUSE. Elephant and Donkey, After Sun- day Rest, Resume Their Dash From Luna to Washington. They are still at it. Down a dusty pike somewhere beyond New Bruns- wick, N. J., Judy and Jen resumed their race from Luna Park to the White House to-day. Who's Judy and who's Jen? Don't you know? Well, Judy is the big elephant picked to carry the standard of “The White House or Bust—1912," standing of |course—when she's not racing—for the G. O. P. Jen is the jenny or donkey picked to carry @ like legend for the Democratic party. The racing duo with the Abernethy family, Pop, Temple and his brother in charge, reached Perth Amboy S: urday night. @ they stayed over Sunday, doing considerable damage +o a blacksmith shop where the animals were housed over night. Frederic Thompson had to fix !t up with the chief in the he last report. The odds now —_——e— i 1,000 EDISON MEN r FIGHT LABORATORY FIRE. Blaze at West Orange Plant Ex- tinguished by Well-Drilled Electrical Employees, A fire, the cause of which known, was discovered in the Laboratories at West Orange t6-day. The employees formed into a fire brigade and a hurry call was sent in for tl firemen, The combined force succeeded in extinguishing the flam At the discovery of the flames the engineer blew the fire whistle and im- mediately the thousand or more m; workers attacked the biaze with weil tral disciplin ry wer sounded fifteen minutes —_—_—_——_—_— PRIEST HURT LEAVING CAR. fs un- Edison ck later, The Rev. Jean the Baptist Church, No. 153 East Hghtt from @ northbound Lexington avenui ‘open car at the corner of Seventy street, to-day, when he made a misstep and fell heavily to the roadway. S eral passengers jumped from the car and ran to the unconscious priest's side. With the ald of Policeman Manning, they carried him to the chur Dr, Devan, who wi the Presbyterian Hospital, found Fathe: Heindricks suffering from a severe lac eration of the scalp. He took him to the hospital for treatment. > Oce: Crash, GLASGOW, July 10.—The British jeamer Atbara, outward bound for Syd- , C, B, has returned to port in a damaged condition, 1g been in colll- sion with the British steamer Clan Mac- Intyre, Damage to the Clan MacIntyre ing her cargo. s ym the Bench, Henry Steinert, for six years a City Sessions bench to-day, sitting with Justices Forker and Mayo. The bench was piled high with floral pleces and Connecticut Fat Men's Association, paths act LATONIA ENTRIES. TRACK, LATONIA, 4 for tomorrow's Tac A wre; Maiden 10 104 RACE Suny areas follows Mules; ti Hike three-yearolls WO; Quartermaster Royal Captive 168; Ocean 10: word, Via." othe Tens, Eitis “Beau, aiabealen iO ‘ HPIN RACE. "Phreerearolte and upward Jovcad. on ciuine ston not tly Minigg various parts of New England resumed work to-day, after ahi jowns of vary. ing lengths, In accordance with the pol. of curtailing production adopted py I she ou AIOE Salling; ‘fonryvonrotte a Iateenth, hg | Wass Father Heindricks of St. | summoned from | not yet known, The Atbara is discharg- | Magistrate, took his seat on the Special! other tokens from the new Justice's friends, NEW LONDON uly 10.— Horace H. Dabol, fifty-six years old, a well known druggist, died jate yesterday from Bright's disease, For many years he was a member of the! : Dp i) and 1a ‘ASHCART WORK _ ATNIGHT PROVES Drivers Can’t Rest in Daylight —Others Have Same Trou- ble After Dark. MANY COMPLAINTS MADE | |Commissioner Edwards De- fends Plan, but Admits It Needs Improvement. ; With 1,600 ashcart drivers threaten- ing to go on strike against night work and light sleepers all over the city | writing noise knocks to The Evening World and Mayor Gaynor, the system | of night collections of ashes and gar- bage installed two months ago by Gireet Commissioner Edwards {s under Attack. London, Paris and Bertin agree ‘with “Big Bil after dark clean- up, but New York has not gone into raptures over the Innovation. Drivers tick—Might work Snt; ash cans hard to locate an: Ge by sletric light; no tips for olal service, as the public slnmbers; | $2.64 small pay for eight hours’ night work, and cannot sleep by day. Citizen's complaint—Dinner spoiled plene- ban- sundown; rattle of cans carts all night prevent | filled with empty ca: waste long after sun up. “We cannot please everybody, but we | are certainly trying to please the most number of people, and as for the kick ers, if they will only give us @ litte time, perhaps we can please them,” said Commissioner Edwards to-day. ROOM FOR IMPROVEMENT, BUT LIKE GENERAL PLAN. “Of course there ts room for tmprove- ment in the way we are running the Street Department. What I want is bet- | terment tips. Iam no Czar. If @ sug- gestion made to me looks good, I am Boing to give it a tryout. “There is justice in the claim of the drivere that night work is unpleasant. But I do insist that it would seem much if they were put back and garbage in the hot, broiling sun, “As for their working without asstst- ance, Iam now urging the Budget Com- Mittee of the Board of Estimate to let me have the money for 1,000 helpers to to purchase rubber-tired noiseless trucks to take the place of the present nervee racking carts, The trucks I am after will hold forty cans, while the carts we | now use barely hold twenty-four can| of ashes, “No one can change from day work to night work suddenly and expect to | wet the full quota of sleep. But in a | month or so our 00 drivers changed to | night work can get all the sleep they | want. In, regard to their low wages, I only wish they got double thelr pay, | but they are working for the city, elght | hours and no more, and all things con- j sidered thelr lot is not so hard. “Very readily I can see the point made in the complaint of the pubitc about garbage cans brought out early | in the afternoon and left on the side- | Walk, also the standing of empty cans in the streets until late in the afters | noon, This ls a matter for the co-opera- | tion of the Health and Police Depart jments, To lessen the noise I am now endeavoring to get the leading stores of the city to put before the public ash | cans which have rubber bottoms, with rubber cleats on the sides. These, with | the new trucks, would make our nights far less hideous, and heip the days, too, ing to pi@k up the street rubbish piled by the 3,000 sweepers, or waite wings, working for the city. ; HAS TO HANDLE 4,000 LOADS EVERY 24 HOURS. “I honestly believe the night collece tlons produce better sanitary condition: |The sun's rays new rarely strike th garbage. Under the old system the | garbage cooked through the hottest part Jot the day, and the most obnoxious odors resulted, Then poth men and horses have been spared from working in the intense heat of tne day, This haa meant an equine improvement of 2% per cent., while the men are fur better off, ‘our thousand loads of ashes and garbage are taken every twenty-four hours from the boroughs of Manhattan, the Bronx and Brooklyn. The boroughs |AEROPLANE ‘DUMPLINGS That's Haj ne for D&C Dumplings y can almost fy they're so light.’ Mrs, Hebig, 1465 St. Nicholas Ave., > &e SELF-RAISING FLOUR Darby & Co. Now York ind that we are work und ally you will come week unly. Now . Gere & loen & i iN witty samples apholstering Co, iMod acts -—— SLEEP WRECKER odors of garbage put out before, 4 clatter of | Bo out with the drivers, and also money | for 700 of the carts go out in the morne | 4| A satisfying relish for cold or hot meats or fish, At Grocery and Delicatessen Stores 10¢c PER BOTTLE jot Queens and Richmond, with thelr sparsely settled sections, are under the supervision of their respective local govern I have my night ehifts out at . My and the can is Jemptled before 6 A. M., as it was the Mayor's Wea that people going to work In the morning should not have their eves filled with flying ashes. In the lower section of Manhattan ne garbage ie taken first, th es. This |s not necessary in the aithter sections of the city, where the | people use deodorized Unfortu. | nately, we have no control over the time the cans go out. A singular fea- ture of the removal of waste jsummer the quantity of garb | times greater than in winter, winter the quantity of ash: times greater than in summer, the whole problem ts equalized and the number of loads going to the dumps is the same Winter and summer, sh cart averages six trips In Mans | hattan and five trips tn Brooklyn, which s being improved upon because of the small amount of traffe out at night. Properly supported by the public and faithfully w ed out by my men, the tion idea fas every advan- ver the old way, New York an- spends $1,000,000 tn the removal of its waste. What I want to do is to get the most for the money, and I am sutistied that the present plan, with the r 1 have aamed in cans, @ men, will eventually n ail around success.” rs ago the night coll {dea was tried out in New York and it failed completely. During the past week the hot weather | has been very hard upon the Depart- ment of Street Cleaning Sweepe eral deaths have been reported, and many men are in the hospital suffering from the effects of the heat. The | divers are at present in good physical fon and none have suffered from ‘e have All been no deaths among horses working in the been equipped with hats Commissioner Edwards received thi morning @ letter calling his attention the sad condition of James Me! lin, No, 283 West Sixty-eighth street. | This man had been in the employ of the Street Cleaning Department since 1902, and while sweeping the streets on July 6 he was overcome by the intense heat and died a few hours jater in Flower Hospital. He leaves a widow and five children entirely unprovided ‘or. He carried no insurance, nor did he be to any benevolent lodges or socteties. The five children are all under ten years of age. The Commissioner has authorized the taking up of a collection for Mra. Mc- Laugolin’ tn the district In which husband worked. inn GRAIN CROP REPORT | SHOWS A BIG YIELD. WASHINGTON, July 10,—According te a crop report issued by the Department of Agriculture to-day, the condition of winter wheat on July 1 was 76.8, as com- pared with 8.4 June 1; 85.5 for 1910, and a ten year averago of 814, The acreage for 1911 was 41 000 or 106.6 per cent. of 1910 acreage. Condition of spring wheat, ly 1 was 73.8, as compared with 941.6, Juno 1; 61.6 for 1910 and 87.8 the ten average. Acreage for 1911 was condition of all corn July 1 was ved with 85.4 for 1910, and year average. Acreage for 939,000, or 101.7 per cent. of j1910 acreage. The condition of oats \July 1 w 8, as compared with 85.7 June 1; for 1910, and 86.8 the ten- year erage. The acreage for 1911 was 000, oF 93.9 per cent of 1910 acreage. e amount of wheat remaining on ‘farms July 1 Is estimated at 5.5 per cent of last year's crop, or about 38,288, 000 bushels, as compared with 38,739,000 July 1, 1910, and 1,000 the average amount on farms July 1 for the past five years. For Furniture We Furnish Homes Complete —Cash or Credit | You get at Fennell’s two stores real values; in Furniture, Rugs, Carpets, Linoleum, real, solid, genuine, guaranteed goods that will give you satisfaction as long as you live; you get articles that wear, last, satisfy, please. Rellable Furniture—Low Prices Honest, well made, latest styles |—every piece guaranteed. Ad- vertised prices mean nothing. Quality means everything. You get quality at low prices tom us. GEO. FENNELL & CO. 2209 3d Ave., Bet. 120th & 121st Sts. Bronx Store, 3d Ave. & 149th St. WISSNER PIANOS rely absolutely upon their intrinsic merit, USED UPRIGHT PIANOS in good order, $75—$20—$100—$125 $3 to $5 monthly. Square Pianos $10 Up. Send postal for catalogue, WISSNER WAREROOMS: 96 5th Ave., cor. 15th St., N. ¥. HELP WANTED—MAL' ied thr | m0Y sud wadaaer cal ‘loa and a, NY, eh-| | LITTLE BOY SHOOTS | BROTHER IN A GAME. Playing Overland Stage, He Gets | Father’s Revolver and Sends | Bullet Into Child’s Mouth. the| Alfred Wart, nine years old, while [playing “The Holdup of the Overland | Stage” on the porch of his home at No. 1073 Simpson street, the Bronx, to-day and dangerously wounded hie Arthut Arthur was driver of the stage and |Alfred wae the highwayman. Unknown to hie mother, Alfred got hold of his father's revolver. He brandished it in front of his younger brother and or- |dered him to throw up his hands. As jthe IHttle chap complied the revelver exploded. The bullet struck the boy in the mouth, |Anflicting a bad wound. Just then the mother ran out and when she saw what had happened she ran with the wounded to a nearby drug etore, from whie® he was taker to Lincoln Hospital piel Meel antibod | HINNERS IS HOME AGAIN. | Assemblyman William f, Hinners of | Edwewator, J. who mysteriously rt dnestay evening, June tending @ political dinner { which Gov. Wi ned to his home y has made no statement for fter the dinner’ he suffered from was so overcome he doesn't remember where he waa or aid, Two politicians acciden~ vered him and communicated He js now under a DRY GIN DISTILLED IN AMERICA LIMITED space in railway buffet cars necessitates a very careful seleo- tion of liquors. The leading rail- way systems of America serve Oxford Club Gin, Baird-Daniels Co. Distillers | | | DUPLICATE | YOUR GLASSES | quickly and accurately | without the prescription. We do all repair work in shops on our premises. Best Crystal Lenses, 50c. Special Lenses Proportionately Low. Oculists’ Opticians. 223Siath Av.,15thSt. 217 B'dway, Aster 350 Sixth Av.,22dSt. 101 Nassau — 17 West 422d—Bet. Sth & 6th Aves., Ne 498 Fulton St., Cor. Bond St., Brook! t Ri 400M OUTFIT ......8! We Pay Freisht and R. B, hed Tike he 14TH ST UPHOLSTER 33_W. 14TH, ter tin caer READERS | Of The WORLD Going out of town for the tummer may hi nt to them, and address Morning World, 12¢ per week Ievening World, 6¢ per week SundayWorld, Se per Sunday your remittance to the Cashi: NEW YORK WORLD.