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French and British Flags Fly With Old Glory Over the City Hall. For the first time flags of Great Britain and France were flown from the New York City Hall to-day. This ‘was in honor of the commissions from the over-seas nations whose visit to the city begins to-morrow. In order that these foreign ensigns might be unfurled it was necessary for Mayor Mitchel to tssue a special proclamation. The westernmost staff on the roof of the City Hall bore the New York State flag, next came the Union Jack of Great Britain, then, far above, from the cupola, the Stars and Stripes, Besides this, at the roof level came the tri-color of France and last, to the eastward, the flag of the city. A change in the programme, so far as the reception of Marshal Joffre, M. Viviani and the other members of the French Commission to-morrow Is concerned, was announced by the Mayor's Committee this afternoon, It was necessitated by the length of time which will be consumed by the ceremonies at the City Hall, It had been intended that Joffre should proceed immediately after these ceremonies to the tomb of Gen. Grant, where he was to lay & wreath, Instead, however, when the ceremonies at the City Hall are ended, the French General and M. Viviani and their suite will be taken fat once to the Frick house at Sev- enty-third Street and Fifth Avenue, where they will remain In seclusion, as tt were, until the following day, ‘Then will come the ceremonies at Columbia University, the conferring ot degrees and the reception, after which the postponed visit to the Grant Tomb will be made, ADDRESSES OF WELCOME BY MAYOR AND MR. CHOATE. It was said to-day that the French Commission wi: not expected to arrive at the City Hall before 6 o'clock to-morrow afternoon. There will be addresses of welcome by Mayor Mitchel and Joseph H. Choate, chairman of the Reception Commit- tee, and a response by M. Viviant, ‘The latter, it is reported, will occupy about an hour, Brig. Gen, Danie] Appleton, chair- man of the Committee on Escort, aid to-day that Squadron A, In ser- vice uniform of olive drab, and two troopa of mounted police would meet the French Commissioners at the Battery upon their debarkation from the detailed United States de- stroyer, and escort the party up the automobiles bearing completely si Broadway, Just try mixing a little genu- ine “BULL” DURHAM tobac- co with your favorite pipe tobacco—it’s like sugar your coffee. GENUINE pollen The same guard will escort the party to the Frick house, where ~JOFFRE HERE TO-MORROW: THREE DAYS’ FETE PLANNED yanded by cavalrymen and th the squadron will be dismissed, When Marshal Joffre and the others of the Commission go from Columbla University to the Grant| Tomb on Thureday, the escort will be) the Seventh Regiment, which acted) as guard of honor to Lafayette dur-| ing his visit to this country in 1824.) named | “Seventh Regiment, National Guard,” in honor of Lafayette, retaining the} latter part of the name exclusively | until 1862 when President Lincoln | conferred “National Guard,” upon, all the volunteer regiments. When the ceremonies at the Grant Tomb are ended, Marshal Joffre and the others will be escorted statue of Joan third Stre.: where he will also lay a wreath, James Stillman, banker, cabled the Mayor's Commit- tee to-day from Paris offering his Seventy-second to the French Ambassador and Mme. Jusserand and members of The offer was im- Marshal Joffre the The “BULL DURHAM SMOKING TOBACCO Also of “Bull” You can make for yourself, with your own hands, the mildest, most fragrant cig- arette in the world and the most economical. Machines can't imitate it. sent on request. house, Street, organization No, the French euite, mediately accepted, ind M, Vivian! will, remain Frick house with certain members of their entourage. For two years the home of Mr, Stillman tn Paris has been in service as a hospital for French soldiers, All troops of the First Cavalry not now In active service will be detailed to act as escort to Mr. Balfour and the others of the British Commission, HEROES OF THE TRENCHES TO and 9 East of Are the New York to JOIN IN WELCOME. the at Ninety- Riverside Drive, | Among the thousands who will ald THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, MAY 8, 1917. lat the Waldorf-Astoria on Friday night ts to mark the height of the | city’s honoring of the visitors, It has been decided that a simplicity, almost severe, shall characterize the function. | Tho dinner itself will be distinctly American, beginning with Cherry- stone pepper-pot soup, sweet potatoes. This latter dish will | doubtless prove to be @ decided nov- ‘alty to the visitors. In it it i# not difti- Fire Commissioner Robert Adamson, Chairman of the Mayor's dinner com- | mittes, room of the Waldorf-Astoria, where the banquet Is to be held, have been Adbigned by Cass Gilbert, the archi- { tect. The predominating note of the decorations will be navy blue, typi- cal of the freedom of the seas, | Behind the long table reserved for and for its full length there will be ® acreen of this blue almost ceiling { high. top thirteen wreaths symbolic of the thirteen original States, will be sus- pended by gold ribbons, The two fManking wreaths will have streamers jof greenery hanging from them. Be- neath each of these two end wreaths an American flag, kept fluttering by concealed fans, will be set up. In the centre of the wide blue blue screen will arise @ stand of the colors of France and Great Britain and be- neath them a golden tablet bearing in white the insertption: “To Make the World &: Democracy.” Juat under this will hang the Blash- field medallion of Britannia and France, two strong faces in profile, Britannia in her helmet, France in the Liberty cap A novel feature of the decorations will be the arrangement of the electric lights on the tables of the 1,000 diners. ‘Tho lines of tables will be divided ito three sections; on the first the shades will be red, on the second white, and on the third blue, #0 that from above the array will suggest a great tri-color banner. | ELABORATE DECORATIONS THROUGHOUT ENTIRE CITY. | There ts to be a magnificent tlum- inating display throughout the whole city, in addition to the elaborate floral and flag decorations, and the clams and ranging through| © fish, chicken and! |, cult to seo the fine Southern hand of {| The decorations of the great ball-' | i the visitors and the guests of honor \ ' From end to end along its }j STARS AND STRIPES FLY OVER THE HOME OF ENGLISH PREMIER ‘ ' | New York has responded Instantly | N.Y. REGIMENT FIRST ENGINEERS TO G0 10 FRANCE { —— | |Entire Local Reserve List Called —Recruiting Begins Here To-Morrow. | to the President's call for engineers to go to France, It was sald by | military authorities here to-day that | jat least three of the nine regiments i | wanted, can be obtained In this city. | | The entiro reserve list for the first | | reserve engineer regiment created | under the National Defense Act in } |the New York district, and including | lamong its regimental officers many } [prominent engineers of civil life, has | |been called out and presumably that regiment will be the first organized for service In France, | | A recruiting office of one regiment |of engineers will be opened to-mor- | row at No, 190 Sixth Avenue. It | will be known as the First Reserve | Engineer Regiment, Lieut. Col. C, H. || McKinstry commanding, It will con- | sixt of 1,061 enlisted men and thirty- | seven officers. Moro than $00 men ' have already expressed a desire to join, |" TC, Desmond, consulting engineer | at No, 110 West Thirty-fourth Street, , + who organized 3,000 men for the en- gineer regiments of the Roosevelt, | Legion, maid to-day that as soon as on: “IT told him that while we hated the | thought of leaving him and his divi-) sions behind, we wanted to get to France ag soon as possible: He told me that I was not to consider him, and, that if there was a ohance for us to get to the other side to take aia: ee i i tt i 5 GERMAN CRITICISM OF BETHMANN HOLLWEG GROWS SHARPER | MAY WHEAT ATS3;_ “WE MUST FIGHT HIGHEST ON RECORD,| FOR PEACE,” SAYS WINTER CROP SHORT Government Report, However, Shows Good Prospects for All Other Grains. CHICAGO, May 8.—May wheat pola at $3.00 a bushel to-day, the highest price on record. It was an advance of seventeen cents. The close was at REICHSTAG LEADER Vice Chancellor’s Statement as Talk Against Autocracy Grows In Germany. COPENHAGEN, May 8&—"We are unable yet to obtain the peace neces- sary to the German people; we must fight for it,” declared Vice-Chancellor to, Karl Helfferich in a Reichstag speech $2.97, July wheat rose 7 1-20, eed |to-day, scoring the radical peace movement. ‘Tho opening, which ranged from the! ™’, Pens WHC The peace desired by the extreme same as yesterday's finish to 3 cents higher, with May at $2.86 and July at $2.26 to $2.27, was followed by a sharp rise all around, carrying May to $2.90 3-4 and July to $2.80 1-2. Best grades of flour advanved fifty cents a barrel to-day, fancy patents being quoted at $15.50 and first clears at $13.30, WASHINGTON, May 8.—In the face of a threatened world-food shortage, the American winter wheat crop shows the lowest condition recorded since 1888, and promised a smaller yield than any other since 1904. Agriculture conditions otherwise are good, the Department announced, and it recalled that although the win- ter wheat crop of 1912 showed an equally discouraging outlook, the total production of crops that year | was the greatest on record In announcing its figure survey as of May 1, the Deps on a ‘tment “The condition of winter wheat on | May 1 this year, 73.2, was the lowest |that tt has been on that date since | 1888. The apandonment of acreage planted is the heaviest ever recorded, hearly. 81 per cent. of the acreage planted. Tho forecast of production | based upon the condition and the! acreage remaining for harvest, 366,- 000,000 bushels, is the smallest pro- duction of winter whoat since 1904, It liberals would not mean bread—but hunger; not ‘liberty—but suppres- sion,” he declared, according to Ber- lin despatches, The German Government started | peace, talk for its own ends, but now it is confronted with a decidedly growing movement among Its people for peace which it is taking measures to repress, - Private advices received from Ger- many to-day showed this new de- velopment in the German Govern- ment’s peace “plotting.” They de- | tailed an empire-wide hunt for| “peace spies.” The hunt has been | transferred from the civil authori.) tles and placed in the hands of the} military Government, with rewards offered for arrests of peace propa-| gandists, The German Government appears | determined if there 1s any peace talk it must be the government and not ie nee clas Pap ted ag Agriculture issued this statement: |the German people who do the talk- A touch with Col. Roosevelt, He went) ing. In the meanwhile the people of the German provinces especially are puzzled to understand why if Eng- land 1s as nearly broken and defeated | jas the Government clatms she is | stint making war and not hearkening | to peace feelers, The result has been, according to jadvices here, that a formidable wave ‘$1,000,000,000FORFOOD AND DRAFT OF ALIENS’ Mayor Curley of Boston Tells the President How tp Benefit U. S. and Allies. BOSTON, May 8.—Mayor Curley, in a letter sent to President Wilson last night says that he “can conceive of nothing that would be of greater ben~ efit to America and her Allies than the appropriation of $1,000,000,000 by Congress to be expended under the direction of the Department of Agri- culture for tho raising of food prod ucts and for the conscription of all aliens between the ages of twenty-one and forty who are without depend- ents and who have resided In the United States for five years or longer to carry on this farm work.” SHOOTS ACTOR ON STAGE. Player Chita fn Arms W in Paris Theatre, ay 8—As a performance of “The Merchant of Venice" was nearing its close In the Theatre Antoine last night, a woman carrying « child sprang to the stage, revolver in hand, and fired three shots at one of the principal \ctors. The audience was thrown Into confusion. The actors playing the parts of Shylock and others gathered around n player, AN the shots took afte and one of them caused a throat wound which probably will prove fatal. ‘The woman was arrested. She told the police that she was a deserted wife who was seeking to punish her recreant husband. ostinato LEXINGTON ENTRIES. FIRST RACK —Clai three-year-olds and up; Dawn, 93: Ji Reach Blow Krutee, “109: | ; r Sb TAOE-Parme: maiten, two-searalte tie futags." Se jaune, 100, Ato tH 74) dae Povear, 33 Wl, THIRD HACE Claiming: three-year ape-izcownth mules Hise mt Pur. are Fre amyeon, “Doraiass, For Je, Hour Stake: inp bit 118; \a) Korbly ) ous "as: Yrasols, 118; Compute. 118: Post Pore; maiden three. “tT iri tac \ T 11 | 21 SIXTH Fathor Knickerbocker in his welcome | visitors will have a chance to see as every means within our power to ac- | compared with a production of 482,- | of Simaseenee against ree Ger fusion to Marshal Joffre and the members| part of It Miss Liberty in her new complish it, Then I wired Secretary bed 38 Fe Mel pa) 16, te man autocracy is sweeping over Ger- |» 104 ng an 5, e many. of the French and British Commis-| incandescent frock, Full detalls of Baker and am awaiting oe reply. | Dreceding five years. RTETERDAG, wae b Gere sions will be mensof the French and|the illumination will not be an- Our men can go Into camp at @ M01 P'rrne heavy abandonment and low) en Ce toe to Geer Rieu ceenian ce hace sasrea ht | wouahed: unill tootmarcow. rents notions condition ‘of the plant. was caused |/mperial Chancellor von Dethmann the f have been The decorative programme takes | ‘The organization of the First Re-! primarily by the dry late fall, un-| Hollweg has postponed his adver- e front, have m decorated for prog akes tn serve Engineer Regiment, recruiting | favorable for seeding, and a result-|tised peace address “in anticipation gallantry and are now in this coun-|the Battery, City Hall, where thero Mt ing feeble plant to enter the winter il : st ae alk try discharged or on furlough for] Will be an imposing Court of Honor; ; ~/@™@Te cauvmas meme, for which begins to-morrow: was) join of events soon which will facilitate | dieabiuity, Plaga, at Fifty-ninth Street and Fifth undertaken by the Military Engineer- Fhe task,” according to an explana. am a A ieredet ‘There will be a dozen or more of | Avenue; Columbus Circle, Washin, The American fing now files |ing Committee of New York, of tion printed to-day in the Berlin) (1 hor s3 tae ace Move v-tive peas t Unie dd Mad ve N which J. Waldo Smith ts Chairman, | Lokal Anzeiger, The newspaper in ? 4 : ed these men, who have been through | tom Unien an adison Square; above Nos, 9 and 10 Downing || HNN oh sdicaba' Wave AiGeA This bohuestlo ta ; Bronx, was accidently asphyxiated by the Inferno of trench warfare. One| Grant's Tomb, Columbla University,' street, London, the residence of pA itachi se ele! hop oe | ote nnection reports “rumors of an! gay while he slept. Neighbors deteat~ nan dt Ate) Atatie: lac Riv t te ugreed lea s being| {ng the odor of gan to-day amashe oF tsar eath & tiedal Bhim Gel T 8 vil : : been assigned to duty with it: Cap: able political event as bel the odor of tord hed Joffre hinaelf pinned to his tunto for| Drive, Lafayette Statue in Prospect | David Lioyd George, Pre- . H. Price, U. 8. A.; Majors William imminent which it 4s hoped will not| the 400r Hef a his apartment, . eit pinned Drive, 1 Barclay Parsons and Arthur 3 miscarry.” ached to a ame t heaveby’ unaer Gis; Pork, Williamsburg and Manhattan ___—. | Dwight and Capta. George H. Gitturd, | COLA AGEN x tached to a small-heater, sa This leat is Lieut, Barnic C, Price] tides, and the Public Library, John P Hogan, H. W. Hudson and | a N, May 8 (via) == a dee Condon @GniIGK Ramtnent where there wil! be another Court of GLOSE GUARD ARRANGED | John D. Irving, all of the Engineer | |London). — The Conservatives and me ois Lanier Be leximent, now | Fronor, \ Officers” Reserve Corps. | A (0 | | Pan-Germans have now brought up 6 al wine cE Pane 88 8 aig tak wads ct en FOR FRENCH COMMISSION | —— |their heavy artillery in the battle eg which the Germans gave him.| staces. flags of the three nations will| } CLOSING QUOTATIONS. | against von Bethmann Hollweg and He Is small of stature, aulet of voice, : EU lad ne: Mikal for j sarcely the man, one would think. fly. The Mayor has issued a procla- aay ——, boldly lay the blame for the long} Lsvpaaeied : sing Int: | mation ordering the French and Brit-| (J, S, Marshal and Secret Service oe moe Net (Continued from First Page.) {duration of the war at his door. The} an ea Tiny at, the | ith colors on all public butldings dur. | ' setae . oe : |conservative Deutsche Tages Zeitung days of Verdun, the Battle of the! ing the stay of the city’s guests, and Chiefs Take Extraordinary Pre- % r a jexplains that three or four days’ delay Marne, the struggle at the Yser Canal ; *; lg} and to compel farm labor, of asking all citizens to display the cautions About City Hall, To guarantee producers a falr price in German mobilization at the outset and the fighting on the Somme. But} tyion Jack and the Tricolor. He of-| . ate a = sraCasthe eat ba es thelr commodities, of the war, due to the Chancellor's he was in ail these engagements in| ojaiiy announces that the dis-| United States Marshal MeCarthy + 181 °Viotation of the orders and rules of | es!tant, polley, caused the lose of his two years and 161 days of service | 41, cay ‘ announced to-day that poau- 18! Violation of the orders a . J : a Heuisned envoys Gre to be the guests +R] tne Commission is made puntehadle| the battle of the Marne, tn the London regiment, of the cfty, which announcement is| ‘ons taken to protect Freagh | & + wlte a ane of from $100 to $1,000 and| The paper holds that the troops Four times he was shot, the 1st] necessary before the flag of a forelmn | War Commission during cere '4 Ag ED Ranrisaninane Up Wo One Veal that were detached to stem the Rus- time while acting as despatch rider! nation may be raised on @ public| monies in City Hall Park to-morrow = 34 [by imp Mee the Commission | #48 Invasion of Eagt Prussia would for Gen, Sir Dourlas Halg, Com- | »yuyaing. afternoon were the most elaborate + 1%| 2¢ ts provided that th lh tha ped. | ave been sufficient to change the mander in Chief of the British forces. | p,q oficial programme tndicates| ever made for the safety of visitors to — jp, 18 to act in conjunction with the Feds) sefent of Gen. von Kluck’s army into He lives at No, 233 West Twenty-/inat the hour for the reception at}this city. = § {eral authorities, a victory and that in that case the ; | S| ‘Lhe jurisdiction of the members ex | second Street. City Hall bas been advanced forty-| “Tho Federal Building,” Mr. ~ 49] @ juriedic SR end’ ok |war would have ended tn a speedy} On his breast he wears the Med-!fve minutes. Instead of 5 o'clock to-|MeCarthy, “will be closed as far as $8 | tenda to the produ ao 8 and sale of} 114 decisive German triumph, | allle de ia Guerre, which ts the one} morrow evening, the time now set Is}the upper floors are concerned, to + M} fuel, including gasolen ‘War Commit-{ ,.18® Tages Zeitung goes on to de- | Gen, Joffre pinned there, and the|415, It is expected that the French|ali persons not showing have = 14) membera Hy ee ies nmtt- | clare that the Chancellor threw away Medallle d’Honneur, presented to him | party will arrive at the Battery from| urgent business, Deputy Marshals [tee worked over the ac tee everal/ a second chance of terminating the : by President Poincare. Also, after| the railroad terminal in Jersey at 4|will guard every elevator and stair- [hopes after the Senate adjourned laat| war py opposing ruthless submarine || OFFICERS, ATTENTION his name are aslgned the letters, D. | o'clock. way and seo that all persons leave q | night. ee paar warfare, It cites Field Marshal Con- KL 8. ©, the Distinguished Service Or-| yygy WHAT WILL BE DONE, | the building when the courts adjourn, | ‘There will be an emergency mes) raq von Hoetzendorf, Austrian Com- der of the British Army. The programme runs: ‘All windows overlooking City Hall |eage from the Governor, probably| mander-in-Chtef, as saying recent! hy “READY TO GO BACK WHENEVER TO-MORROW. Park will be guarded.” be = 1 later to-day, certifying to the neces-| “The war we ould have been over long THEY WANT ME.” 445 PB. M.—Officlal recepcion at} William M. Offley of Depurt | sity for ite imme diate passage, ervey campaign had And Full Line of | “ym ready to go back whenever | gity re Ti {ment of Justice has requisitioned 160 | parmrteerensiprerrerres egun a year earlter JCity Hal, Speakers: The Mayor,| i =e | 8 uy E uIP they want me," he satd to-day, “My | Joyeph H. Choate, M. Viviani and | Ox'ra obenalives fe Weed & sonalane ‘ A PIMLICO WINN WINNERS. | The agitation for the downtal of two brothers were killed in action | yarsnal Joffre. ned to create trouble because of vy * 7 fl 1 ake eh P pe i Special Outfitters for n > ian’ y : - - 7 *| PIRST RACE—Selling maiden two-| cealed in press and parliament and ls and my life isn't worth any more to THURSDAY. athies. 'Se- Be 3] SIBaE RAGP cha shalt furiongs.— p MEDICAL me than thelr lives were to them." | 9.45 A, M.—Tho World's presenta-|cret Service has called in fifty extra By | Atrican ‘Arrow, U2 (7; MoTaxurt), Loc eo pa g eo Mag re ey and Other 0 7 is toe federal guards were vo $13 RO, place $4.00, show. $2.50, | ganized y in E a nd A reach nciien, With ‘ores weunés | ten of tanerty a Agure in gold te in ee ole Hall’ ton aweway Est $ stralght $6.00" spun tia iJ. MeTaggart).{the independent committee for a RESERVE OFFICERS in bis body and the Medaiilo to 10 Marshal Joffre in Central Park, d8y ion and along the tracks under ay My : n°, $2.40, ‘sooond; ro] German peace RUSSELL UNIFORM CO., Guerre on bis breast, 18 Germanoa &.| 31.39 A, M.—Unvelling of statue of|the Court of Honor facing the City ay =a BneN eT! Laudator, George Latgea inearzeke stata, Gee, Be Hunne, who was in the treavhes at} Lafayette in Prospect Park. Hall steps, "s a8 ly jean also ran. - Verdun and a in the worst of the = gnc 1 —Hunt: “RUB ANY, May Judgment 1 P, M—Luncheon with the Mer- ac “lande: t , 3 ITEMS FOR INVESTORS. dicap; two and convicting Elias Jazra of first degree figuting in Flanders, He had thirty-| chants’ Association at Hotel Astor. PMERATERIsat aa minal ae “(Me y) for the. Killing of -Ratoor| LOST, FOUND AND AEWA 8, jthree months’ service with the] 4 p, M.—Reception and conferring Laer le riend of $1.60 on sommon $4.06, how $280,] Khayat in New York in April, 1916, | sy, Wey At sissyed tm Bae a nC r nd is now at No, 34 peek quarterly ¢ ¢ am Of aORiME , vevereaux), phe: he Co} ‘of Appe 3 evening, am row h Army and is now at No. 8111 0¢ gogrees at Columbia University,| stock, payableJune 1 to stock of rece 3 I pt fe Wau HEF ed’ peconas Govin,| tordaye is be uaa $eeiant nigiant rs suoukey, a Kast Fifty-aixth Street, fighting DoW | rouowed by the visit to Grant's Tor amar + a pie (Mr, "amith ‘Jr.), show $3.40 | Pash 8 }to get back bis health and strength > . “f a ; third. ‘ntme, 6.18. Gopul, Yarico also) a eae ung Strong’h | g.a0 P. M—Reception by French) st. Joseph Lend Co—Qu aivi nian | Fei | War Commtasion at Public Library. |dend of 26 cents 4 share, payable June id je ees | | " | hs i — x A victim of the blinding gan with | FRIDAY, by PIMLICO ENTRIES. |which the Germans flooded the| Morning--Marshal Joffre and party < nga County Hlectrio sand fer aes ean French trenches at Verdun and in| Will go to Newburgh for reception by a share, pay June 1 a haprtree je eye m: the Argonne. is G s Duchesne, |Gov. Whitman and will visit West record May 21 ' ft No Kast F n Street He| Point. — was in the Fifteenth Regiment of! 12.80 P. M.—Lawyers’ luncheon 1h] .,)) the Erron Division, and a blinded | honor of M, Vivian! at the Biltmore, | — emma ye is one of the badges of service he| 3 P. M.—Offlcial reception at] {ttt Offering for Tuesday Tho other 18 the Medaille| City Hall for British War Commis-| MIXED CANDY p variety box for thone wh ur sion, Speakers: The Mayor, Mr nineree | es « yeam et wrens iY | ‘ for Mare King, 186; allover Oilver ALY a banquet to the two commissions | Choate and the Right Hon, Arthur] \)) ronda ton Mates gall 1 "an , tad hore on vibe James Balfour, M. P. | revenue decreased | alare 3.30 P, M.—Leave City Hall, Srecial for to-morrow. We “‘Liberty Loan of 1917’’ 31,%—tree from all taxation Subscriptions from $20.00 up will be received by this bank at par until June 15, 1917, Blanks ‘o charge for handling. Gotham National Bank of New York Broadway at Columbus Circle OPEN UNTIL MIDN{GHT DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAYS & HOLIDAYS corted by the Mayor, and go to the} jhome of Vincent Astor, Fifth Avenue Maxwell M terly Oriente Pr es, bu wr quar- ent exident Men on jeommon stock, payable Ju 2 to stock and Sixty-ffth Btr anced guns it , “ 8 P, Mx-OMlcial banquet at the) 34 Pier merican Su fining: Company |waldort Astoria, Speakers: The | eee een ividenda ot 1a Mayor, presiding: Mr. Balfour, M./per cent, on preferred) and) common Viviani and Mr. Choate. Jatock SATURDAY | Bleetion Nunes ts CHICAGO WHEAT AND CORN |i! Reception and luncheon by the Chamver of Commerce, HAVANA, May 8.--Formal ratitica Uti wae ‘a M. Ma 11. The Sante stellarina, 108 Sw iatice allowance,” ‘Track goo: OREAM ows roasted ‘anille present mighty io hard eundy-craft, i 15c POUND BOX 4 BARCLAY STREET Clon 2 CORTLANDT STREET AISKES—The IE ‘Dow ai vy, ih {dey BROADWav, BF The spect klyn, Clos } welwh ARK “Row & NASSAU sT, 266 Wwesr 1 ele ‘ ty vevh otheer 400, BROOME “sTREEY A a West “TH STRE Bat. WO pn D. mss Bat. 10 a EAST 23D STREET a 1a 472, FULTON ST. BKLYN ye aUP 4 A ee me east St Viti and Bie A wranned eked oan ay sanitary” PND ROX 206 BROADWAY Cloned for alteration erations, WiEASt MD otheet™ ses 11.30 P.M. dew the ec