— ‘Train of Ten Cars Takes of Quigtey to Chicago. R, N. ¥., July 12.—Funerat for Archbishop Quigley of Chi- @ied in this city late Satur- were held to-day in St. tifeal , Cathedral, Fogg BR pon ey ian rat Hoch 's laymen. ‘was to Chicago this xe ‘of ten cara. ith clergy and a special went te & guard for the ot at No. 304 venue, fell to the yard and Ld Discovery gt/ f liquid) keils bed and destroys eens. + sure vent ve. Peter- eo Food Atilantio City EXT WEDNESOAY HW £88 7. Liberty 9.8.00 i.e Bread 8t., LTisem. MO SMOKE. COmPoRT COAL PRODUCTS STOCKS JUMP 20 PONTS T0 $170 Many Other. Securities Also Soar on Stock Exchange To-Day. ‘The Stock Market to-day was a scene of raids and drives of specta- cular character, American Coal Prod- | ucts Company stocy skyrocketed lke Bethlehem Steel a few months ago. It jumped twenty points to $170 per share from Saturday’s closing prices of $150. At the beginning of the year Coal Products was selling at $82. It is @ manufacturing company, making & variety of articles out of coal tar and the scarcity of chemicals from Germany has given it booming busi- i ‘ ness. Jumped forty points Saturday on the Stock Ischange, reaching $290 per share. The price scared out traders to-day and there were n> transactions in it during the morning. General Motors and New York Air Brake stocks, that were runners-up jfor Bethlehem Steel and then fell |back, took @ fresh start. Motors ad- vanced to $168 per share, a rine of 10 points since Saturday. The Air Brake stock jumped up 10 points, to $100, from Saturday's prices, In the late afternoon a general ad- vance started all along the line of se- curities, led by the two great Steel stocks—U. 8, Stoel, the old steady re- Ki ing two measured paces for- ward from 691-2 to 611-2, and Bethiehem Steel, the aky rocket, hy- ing to new record height compared with its former top note! 4, Neither of these stocks pays prospect ‘American Locomotive got can Petroleum and Ameri jumped up 4 points each, and Baldwin Locomotive added 2 points to its price, In fact it was a fine day for non-dividend securities, for they left the steady payers far behied, Nearly every stock on the list par- tleipated in the final rush and added something to its value, although the gains were least in railroads and most ja industrials, _—— Aso FOR INVESTORS. lonives Company's quar- t ny aivianna of 1% per cent. on rred ai oF record Ju Americatr~ Coal Products sold at 170%, up 20% points from Saturday's close, and new high record, New Zork Airbrake stock sold at 100%, 1th points, and high price since 1 Chil} Copper Sompan: tue lant Ta co tly treatin io Pence: ooo tons of ore per day. Results a opie jaced in May if Gonoral Chémical Company stocks aj the West _THE EVENING,WORLD, MONDAY, JULY 12, 1915. ite claimed to be highly New business for U ation for Ia coming in at tate, of ne ly tons a day. In January busin at rate of jens than 2 B, Btee} Corpor. weeks has been ee ssSesuser: eereS Httt+ ++eet Hee 44+ SSLTSSBE SE aSdzsuy SEE PRES TECTPE OF pte eeeee eeivant-sisels are ad Zr2zySex2 meep *e3 Sl eetsez SF 8RES F oon - asus SFR PPE Free sengus settee us BP PESESES ranleh Val ene faxwelt Motor ttt tttere ++ +4+ +b eeeteletteee Int ph. 24 vt iv 2. re~ m paves rable July,26 to stock | °! Wheat was strong at opening, ‘The weather in various wheat countries induced short covering. Harvosting will receive a further setback. Whoat sagged off from the high opening, but toward the close prices were close to the level of Saturday. rn was firm on excessive rains in nd part of the Eas turned w: on later business on light demand, roadway at Ninth, New York Wanamaker Suits Reduced Tomorrow—the ONCE-A-YEAR Let-Go of ALL Spring and Summer Fancy Sack-Coat Suits in Our Stocks—2,276 Suits in all GANGS WIPED OUT, SWINDLERS JAILED, PERKINS Ri REPORTS Organized Tt t of Autos Also Checked ; “Wiretappers” Curbed. The District Attorney's Office, with | the co-operation of the Police De-! partment, has practically wiped out New York's organized gangs by mak- ing prisoners or fugitives of the lwad- ers, according to the semi-annual re- port of Chief Clerk Breckinridge of the District Attorney's office, made public to-day. The organized theft of automobiles | has also been estopped, according to the report; the best known wiretap- pers have been arrested or driven to cover; the Judges of General 5 sions work longer hours and have shorter vacations. The total uumber of cases that Dis- trict Attorney Perkins has disposed of is 10,368, un Increase of some 2,000 cases over the corresponding period of last yeur, The Homicide Bureau hus secured forty- convictions, five of which were for murder to the first degree and ten for murder in the second degree, This record ts nearly dou- ble that of any preceding aix month The report states that since March 1, 1915, 110 stolen automobiles have been recovered and a number of re- eelvers and thieves arrested and prosecuted. It then states in regard to wiretapping frauds that good re- sults have been obtained by putting complaining witnesses in the House of Detention and adds: “The following men have been con- victed or are fugitives from justice: James M. Dawsing, Charles Gondorf, Fred Gondorf, James Fitzgerald, John H. Brady, James Liddy and George Hayden.” Another series of prosecutions that 4s mentioned as among the most im- portant Was that which resulted in the conviction of L. W. Schwenk, Adolf Mandel and Meyer Jarmu- lowsky of receiving deposits in their Mandel and Schwenk terms in State's were insolvent. are now serving prison. The Appeal Bureau has handled 110 appeals, of which only seven resulted in reversal. In the last six months the Bail Bu- reau has accepted bail in the amount of $1,833,650, of which $172,148 has been forfeited. Of this $8: cash has been collected, and all the other cases, except one involving 00, the principal has surrendered or been rearrested. STAHL OPENS FIGHT ON PERJURY INDICTMENTS): Pun| Sets Up Three Grounds for What He Claims Were Improper Proceedings. Gustav Stahl, a German reservist, under indictment for perjury alleged to have been committed when he tes- tifled before the Federal Grand Jury that he saw four guns on the Lusi- tania before she sailed to be sunk by a German submarine, to-day appeared In the United States District Court before Judge Hunt and through his counsel, Harold 8. Deming, withdrew his plea of not guilty and presented three pleas in abatement of the in- dictment, The first plea declares a stenog- rapher was improperly present in the Grand Jury room during the examina- tion of witnesses. The second plea sets forth that the interpreter «ed by the Government was not sworn as an interpreter, but witness only. The third plea questions the property qualifications of one of the Federal Grand Jurors. No date was set for the hearing of argument on the pleas. pile TRIED SUICIDE, SORRY. John Slashed Throat Thea Ap- pealed to Police to Save Him, Policeman O'Shay was at Fifty-fitth Street and Becond Avenue early to-day when & man staggered toward him with his throat cut. Unable to talk, the man motioned for pencil and paper. When O'Shay gave them to him he wrote: “My name is Peter Johnson. I am forty-four, My wife and family live in Chicago, I am a machinist and have been out of work. I beecame despon- deent and cut my throat with a razor in banking houses after they know they | Nw SHOW FIGHTS AWARD OF ($8,000 TO FORM FORMER WIFE | exceptions Fi Weidion * on the Ground That Children Will Be Spoiled With So Much Money. Martin W. Littleton, counsel for Fi- bridge Gerry Snow jr. has filed excep- tions to the order of Supreme Court Jua- tice Goff giving Mra, Fannie De Boat, formerly Mra, Snow, the custody of her | two children and $8,000 a year for their | Support. He thinks they wiil be spoiled |if #0 much money {a spent annually on them, Justice Goff acted on a report by Jacob Cantor, referee, who sald $8,000 & year was not too much. “Mrs, De Bost asked for said Mr. Cantor in his roport, counsel proposed $9,000. I realize that | these children should not be spoiled by extravagance or injured by induigence, |I believe that if they were brought up on the luxuries which $15,000 a year |would permit, it would be a diMfcult ‘thing for them should they later be de- prived of this income and be compelled to adopt a different aud more economi- i mode of living.” _—_—— SUBWAY TRAINS STOP, Just after 9 o'clock last night every train in the Interborough subway stopped dead, all the way from the Bronx .and Van Cortlandt Park to Brooklyn. Not a wheel turned for seven minutes, when traina started up again as If nothing had delayed them, ‘The cause was the defect of the in- sulator in the East River tube. Power on the entire system had to be shut off while it was being repaired, There were no traina in the tube at the time, and thero was fittle excite- ment In any of tho trains, as passengers were warned there would bo a alight delay for repairs, NEW YORK COTTON EXCHANGE. Cotton opened off 4 to 8 points. Market very irregular with near months lower and advancing and the Jater months, which have been under heavy pressure of late, opening high- er and selling off. German sebling was said to be in evidence and also spot house confined to shorts, noon short cov ortant. factor. Wall siverpool bought a little. Street sold. Closing Bila, BAN 9.0 low, 548 8.80 9.07 9.16 | Open. High, August R48 BAN Cctober December January . March 8.80 91 9.35 ~ ou 0 ‘ot 4 up to it pe ee ho" jeago Strike, CHICAGO, ly 12.—With the return to work to- of thousands of union carpenters, who have been on a atrike since May 1, Chicago launched a boom in the building industry, which, it was estimated, will give work to 150,000 men. The strike was settled last Sats urday, and by Thursday it is belleved that nearly all of the carpenters and mill men will have returned to work. es atket’cicaed firm, points. Boo Accuned of Recruiting British Here LOS ANGELES, July 12.—Kenneth Croft, who claims to be a Ileutenant in the British mounted infantry, was un- ler arrest here to-day on a charge C4 reerulting soldiers for the British Arm He will be taken to San Francisco <6 lead to an indictment returned against fim there last Thursda; IS noble founder of While buying was} ¢ —the document which IN TTANC, LUSITANIA AND EMPRESS WRECKS, TUORY STICKS TO SEA “Man -Born Never to Be Drowned” Gets a New Ocean Job After Each Tragedy. Francis Tuohy of Hydo Park, Mass., Cubbed the “man who was born never to be drowned,” because be survived the Titanic, the Empress of Ireland and the Lusitania horrors, is for t present voyage a fireman on the White Star liner Baltic, which arrived here yesterday from Liverpool. For twelve years Tuoby was an en- listed man in the United States navy. He was with Admiral Dewey on the Olympia at Manila Bay and before that a member of the crew of the U. S. 8, Baltimore, under Rear Admiral Schley, when she carried back to his native Sweden the body of Ericsson, the inventor of the Monitor. The man with the charmod life ts fifty-two years old. When the Ti- tanic went down he was in the water twenty minutes, clinging to wreckage, before he was picked up. When the Empress of Ireland was sunk by the Storstad in the St, Law- rence he first helped lower a boat and then jumped overboagd. All the boats were swamped, and he was two and a half hours on wreckage in the fox. “Something hit me over the head,” said Tuohy. “It was an overturned boat. up. I was just dozing off into my last sleep when I was saved. “When the Lusitania was torpe- @oed I was on duty in the stokehole. I heard the torpedo strike, and I beat it for the ladder leading to the fidley back. I bad bad gome little experi- “Hand over hand [ climbod a smoke stack stay. There was no back draft; there was no blow-up. The water was | little bit bot as she sank. I was | now right on top of the funnel. There was no drawing in and no suction. “Again in a total wreck, a ahip baving sunk beneath me, I picked up another piece of wreckage and floated three and one-half hours before I was found and taken into a boat. ‘Next I shipped on the Mauretania double wages for a trip to the Dardanelt with 7,000 British sol- diers. After I came back I Chey on the Baltic, and I guess I am safe Tho first pleasure excursion train to be operated out of the Hudson Ter- minal will be run Wednesday afternoon to accommodate a thousand Knights of Pythias members and their friends who will depart at 1,30 o'clock for Asbury Park where they will take part in the night parade of the Knights now in nation! conven- tion at that resort. Over $1,000 in cash rizes will be awarded the paraders. Beiegatlons from all parts of the United Btates will take part, many with bands. ‘They will be operated by the Universal Tourist Bureau of this city. the Democratic I clung to it until I was picked | immortalized Independence — the foundations of Free beloved land, bur foc ell the world, Fils cougirysen wice elected him Tyesident en will always e his etaerpon Was Sie som eaten acvecete of Universal Freedom ight which brought about the Louisiana Purchase. Eve: irginia blood loved tse and because he wanted Americans to be assured ~ [6 RESCUED CRIMINALS SEATED IN PULPIT Derelicts With Wnom He Stayed in Jail Aid the Rev. W. P. Coon’s Sermon on Crime. Ffanked by six derelicts, whom he had rescued from the Passaic county Jail at Paterson, N. J., when he spent a night there as a prisoner recently, the Rev, Warren P. Coon, pastor of the Grace Methodist Episcope Church, Arlington, N, J,, delivered a sermon last night on “Crime and Criminals, To obtain first hand information Coon induced the sheriff to lock him up for one night as an ordinary pris- oner. He was in disguise and quickly gained the friendship of other pris- oners. He found oyt more crime, he said, than/he believed isted, Later he had six of his fellow pris- oners transferred to the Rescue Home at Newark and last night he had them on the platform with him jn church, He desired these men to tell the causes that Jed to their imprison- ment, From their statements the clergyman reached the opinion that seventy-five per cent of all crime ts the result of heredity and is not the fault of the criminal. ————— SISTERS JOINED IN DEATH. Mrs, Ward, 72, Dies Soon After Her Sister, ™ A double funeral will be held from the Paterson Avenue Methodist Church, Paterson, N. J., at 2 o'clock to-morrow afternoon, when two sisters, who died within six hours of each other, will re- ceive the last services of the church. Mra, Sarah Innes, eighty-one years old, died at Ocean Grove at 7.10 o'clock Sun- day morning. Her daughter, Mrs. James Bowman, went to Paterson to tell her aunt, M Anna Ward, the dead woman's sister, of the death and found that she had died at 1.30 o'clock that morning. Mrs. Ward was born in 1824 and her sister in 1834 in Middletown, N. Y. The family moved to Paterson in 1843. Mra. Innes lived there forty-eight ears and then moved to Ocean Grove. Mrs. Ward lived there seventy-two years. She leaves a son, six grandchildren and three great-grandchildren, Mrs, Innes js survived by her husband, a ‘retired locomotive mechanic, who ‘worked in Paterson forty-eight years; three sons and three daighters, six grandchildren and one great-grandchild. ex Innes, Aged S1, about |B 12 Sel Ye Eyesight change! you may require d now than by first fitted. It costs N nothing here to be sure—and it’s a duty you owe yourself. Eyes Examined Without istered Eye Physicians. itting Glasses as Low as $2.80 To use “‘Eddys” is to know sauce satisfaction. Just a in soups, stews and gravies, on hot and cold meats and sal ma etc. Grocers au Delica- ce tessen Stores sell it, | 9e Made by E. Pritchard, 331 Spring St., N.Y. \N you go on your vaca- if tion this Summer have your favorite paper mailed te yeu every day: Evening World, Ge per week oa World, 12¢ per week 4, remitiance, to xerke world. Pulitse® aul Fork City. AED ORLICK‘ ast Mite HORLICK’S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK THE FOOD-DRINK FOR ALLAGES TAKE A PACKAGE HOME §@F NO suBSTITUTE Is “JUST As aooD” Hilti ii me Ve (nh Ni! i Hi it i “PRAMRAS OP THE COMSTTTUTION OF THE LRAT HOT himself by writi t,not Thomas Jefferson. "Faher of the Declaration of Independence” FR iting our Declaration of for our own of his time and ot rp une room at No, 314 East Fifty-sixth n I repented and decided 1 $21.50 189 of $32.50 grade 56 of $33.50 grade 53 of $35 grade ance abe hepatic we oe fisuing of thn beard none ne knew better than he that a mild brew of b: yomalt and hops is truly a temperance drink, ak. Flence, ie 1600, he te President Madison:"A. Miller is about to seule in this eprablish 0 brewer bet a balclgppeinae pg asa oe is oo elseon | Lived pase Ris 83rd year and is beverage ian Se Be user x light wines se vee ley brews. It is Puninegivable that were he Pe to-day he would vote otherwise than NO to proposed tyrannous pmpneen laws. For 58 Anheuser-Busch have been as tied ier tae cal hop brews which Jefferson in his day to see the National beverage of Americans. Exactly such a beer is BUDWEISER, its pak iy purity, mi and exquisite flavor have won its way to the top, Lorday 75 7500 09 people are daily required to meet the public demand. Its sales exceed any other beer by millions Visitors 1 St.Louis are courteously invited to inspect ANHEUSER-BUSCH: ST. LOUIS,U.S.A. Gt REN GREED 14 BSR, On Sale Everywhere, Families Supplied by Grocers and Retailers Anheuser-Busch Agency New besie N. Le Si3. 50 | $17.50 | 218 of #18.50 grade 362 of $26 grade 283 of $20 grade 470 of $27.50 grade _ 887 of $22.60 grade 282 of $30 grade 42 of 837.50 grade Choose at $17.50 | Choose at $21.50 ies to 46, men’s regular; 34 to 42, young men’s; 37 to 46, stouts: 35 to 40, New Lots of Soft Summer Shirts Make 2,200 for Tomorrow at 95c Brosdway End, Burlington Arcade floor, New Bldg. ] D---721 Pairs of Men’s Low Shoes | own $6 to $8.50 Shoes for $4.95 Our own $5 Shoes for $3.95 ‘ » ae Pode wo Joy fro a well-known maker. condition bs. ot AQUEDUCT ENTRIES. RACE July 12. }races are as follows: or ree-year ole and. up, el! ef fu Dehello, 100: Raster | Qa eewenlioe a, Martane Helle of "e ai, it cy le of thie Kite nt Rag ‘io: co, or «Sess reer-cldy 1 108; of east | posed pepabit: | == " i Hi season’s desirable shoes which we shall not reorder this season. ii , Burlington Arcade floor, New Bldg, Naat