daily :— adjournment hiiday reinstated...

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An hour later, irhen :': ' ••••'\u25a0 dark, Captain Hhi rtoon sa.ii two ad lt< lights, ami. believing It was Urn schooner I \u25a0 i ; i' dusk, iHir (> down \u25a0pon her - running, -iv) » gale st Intervals from all points of 1 1 1 pampas* H<* manoeuvred the Volturno and went to the ;h« vetm l and Bhout< d to the the iTi» i gaph"n'? i ptain Delaland< replied In \u25a0'. and no <me •\u25a0; board oould understand v hat he saM. Captain Hj rrison turned to Chief ofti.\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0!• Mrlntosn ~^i -- i u ar "Thai Is a Frenchman The Vottarno, which l«»ft Hamburg and Rot- terdam on her first passage to this port, ran into a terrific hurricane on March 2«. She forged nhe.-id tinder mere steerage way for more than ten hours, and at 6:10 p. m. on March 27 the fourth officer reported to Captain Harrison that lie. saw \u25a0 dismasted sailing vessel "ff the star- board bow. Shortly after the vessel was re- ported sh»- could not be made out again •\u25a0Mid every one on the Volturno though! \u25a0-\u25a0•\u25a0\u25a0 bad ii ii l ' to the bottom. Although <'ar>tain Harrison had orders to pet to New York as soon as he could, so that the Btranier might discharge and take on a cargo before Saturday, the day she Is scheduled to sail for Hamburg, he decided to stand by the little fishing boat until he took off every mem- ber of the unfortunate crew. The rescue tost him a loss cf forty hours In passage time, and In the first attempt to get to the men; on the Champagne lifeboat 4 was smashed into bits and had to be turned adrift. Steamer Stands by Storm-Tossed Schooner for Nearly Two Bays. After standing by for forty hours In a terrific Btonn, during which she drifted eighty miles. the steamer Volturno, of the New York and Continental Line, managed to save twenty-eight fishermen of the dismasted schooner Champagne on March 28 and landed them in this port last night. HEKOK 1 HIXTi:AT SKA SATES 28 FISHERMEN. 11 ** 3 PEOPLi;~OK THE STATE OK.VETS TO*s r '^. J- the sra: c of God tr-*.. and maepectent- Toils?. millan.> F. Sot . Ceiestina ilijargo a* SoteV jSU^KI sow. Maria Sow de Vines. Mar«an:a scto •^r%, tamara. Marco A. fc'oto. Francisco G. Sow. j-jAi"» Sftta and CmJllo V. Soto. a:: of fnU a t . !™??hJ' the widow and heirs aad n-xt of kin « f MarttTV i deceased, septj Greeting: Whereas. Maximl!iaa» r S, " , of The City ,f N>w York, has iateiy ap r .;^ A. *^- roaate-s Court of our County cf New ".-.-«. \lsswT. I certain Instrument in writ:; dated June iSh. ,1 J! : latins to both real and personal property. "A^LlZt ;M the last Wi!l ani T«t*meat of MarY, A. IS u^tJ . the county of New Tork. d^eas^i. «s»rß';r» V^l-i I who! you are cited to appear b»:or<* th- Sur-^tr^i | «ir County of New Tor*. at hts office, m ti, « $ iNew Tor*, on the llth day of Mar. or., ?-dLf: ! hundred and eight, at bait-past tea o'clock in tie*aSL! nocn of that day. then and there to attend tie -~^" ; of th* said last Win and Testament. " ntilt In testimony whereof we have caused Om Seal of »"•« " Surrogate's Court of the said Couatj o* x™ l^ai. ) York to !•* hereunto affixed. Witr.ess J Hca'li! I \u0084. n ? r C - Thotnaa. a surrogate ifo:;r «!1 >««- or New Tort, at Si..; \u25a0\u25a0.:•:!..-. th* 14th day of Ma.-*-* 4 ; the year of our Lori one thousand nL-« h.isd'-d jj3 . eight. DAN .J. DOW-Wet. j A. HENRT MOSLE Attorwy forVetUit™".Vj* SffSLi Street, Borough or Manhattan. New York City. SUBWAY BLOCKED, BUT TICKETS SOLD. A break in the block signal system at the 72rt street Rtation of the subway stopped Urn down- town express service for sixteen minutes In the rush hour yesterday morning. The officials of Ike Interborough company say that a part of the sig- nal system known as the "trip plug" dropped out and caused the clanger signal to show. Trains on their way downtown were stopped in the danger zone by the "trip plug" automatically setting tha brakes. On all of the express station platforms below the block there was much crowding, and the am through the tunnel to Brooklyn was suspended. There were many protests against the action of the ticket agents in selling tickets and not telling those who bought them of the block in the service. I One Laborer Buried and Five Others Near Death. A man v/ttn smothered and crushed to death and the lives of five others wcro imperilled in Kant New York yesterday afternoon by a cave-In In an excavation for a new chimney at the Rldgewool pumping station. Atlantic avenue and Logan street. The dead man was Peter Carupula. of No. 63 El- lery street. Williamsbur?. Heroic measures were taken to save- the man's life. They were useless, however, for he- was cov- ered with tons of earth. Th« foreman of the work. Thomas Olennon, of No. SB State street, Brook- lyn, yelled to the other workmen, three of whom had been caught by falling earth. so that they were buried almost to the waist, to grasp their shovels and pet the burled man out. Patrolman 'VViinam NaaJe, of the Liberty avenue station, was near, and, hearing the cries of the men. leaped down Into tin fifteen-foot excavation and joined in the rescue, work. At last the he/j.i and shoulders of Carupola were uncovered, and he was dragged out. Efforts to revive him wer^ In vain. KILLED BY CAVE-IN. Excursions. STARIN'S EXCURSIONS STEAMBOATS AND BARGES to all PLEASURE RESORTS on LONG ISLAND *Ol>r> and HCDSON RIVER Vasmlflcent Saloon Steamers I!*-' 1 and "Richmond." each 1.200 capacity". •'Sea Gull " 800 capacttj-. Barjres of all sizt-s. SunJav Schools a Specialty. OFFICES: CORTLAXTJT ST PIERS. N. T "Phone. 1209 Cortlandt. Notice to Creditors. TUB PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK. .he grace of Gcd fr»e and fndepw.ien-. ti -aia-L.! H. Dußlot.. Anna Punlop, John Franklla Dur.iop Rot*- \V. Dunk p. Lu-?l!a D. Kimball. formerly tasunan tSm I'unlop. Bessie Di^ton. William DJ^.lcp. Ctarlei iL D-ja! lop, Edward E. Dunlop. Gertrude Dunlop Ha»»» Aass> Dunlop, H»:-n Dunlcp Hutchin.^.n. Marie Lou.s* DI»- lor. Laban S. Major, jr.. Alma Su* Major. -am tl Conrad. Mrs- Bessie Co-rad rict* Harry R r-r:'- Edward I>. Dunlop. George H. Dunlcp. Daa# ~. Duel?" Herbert Frost. Margar-t Frost. EliiaSetn Frcr. 0^ thy Matilda Frost. Samue! Dur'.op Har.nah Par.'ci Anna Uunlop. Jo^ R. Dunlop. Frank H. Jua-. r^Z Trust Company. Johu W. Bartlett. M. D and T tim Oaa- ar.te« .and Tru^t Cbmpw of trte C*r 7 cf Ne» Tc-'s. executors, heirs ani next cf kin of Clark W Doaloa deceased, send greetins: Whereas Eliza C Dur.'.oß. o* the City of New Ycrk. has :a-« appHed to -- . 3^: gate's Court of our County of N«w York to hay» a cet~ ta:n lr.strumerit In writing, and a codtc.l ti:er*">. r»i*Ji!« to both real and personal property, duly tpanQ "ai t^ last Will and Testament cf CUrie W. Du=T— » la-s «? the County or New York, deceased, tfatlte* Wtt asi each cf you are cited to appear befcrs t=e Sr-ia-j cf our County cf New York, at his cflce la tha CoSl New York, on th* 2Sth day of Ma;-, one thousand ='•«, hundred and eisht. at half-past ten o'clock to tie far»- nocn cf that da th«-n anj there to a-r?'"' tbt "r^fcau of the said last Will a.-.d Testacsr.^ And socb Vt« as are hereby cited £j are under tb* age -• twen*v-c-» years are required to appear by your suardUr.. if yo a have on». or if you have noce. ta appear and ajra'y far one to appointed, or in the event cf your r.»s ret or fail-ire I 3 do so. a guardian will be ftpnaiatad by tl"*t 1 "* Surrcgata to represent and act for you ia tha prcoeedisc In testiraony whereof =ay» caused tha Sea: a* tt» Surrogate's Court cr Urn 3a:d County of Ne» [L. S. ] Tori to be hereunto a«3«l Witness. HJr. Ab- r.*r C Thomas, btnxosua of our ia:i Cou=!7 of New Ycrk. at said Cour.:y, the 25th _.. of Jlirch. In « year of our LoriJ ora thousand tuae hur.dr-d tsA e'Stt. DANIEL J. DOWDNET. Clerk cf tr.e aurrosa^ Coin. WELLS * SXEDEKER, Attorsen far Petitioner. Na, 34 Nassau St.. B-srough of Manhattan. New Yorsc C.:y. \u25a0VOTICB TO CREDITORS.— WHEREAS THE UN- Xl dersijrned Intends to apply to the -Surrogate's Court of the County of Washington. State of New York, for let- ters of administration and to have Frank L. Walt* Joined with her ir. such administration upon the Goad? Chattels. Credits and Estate of Edmund C Walte 'i-« ' /• the Town of Cambridge, In said county, deceased unU-^r the provision of Section 2664 of the Cjd<j of Civil Pro- cedure of the State of New York for limiting the penalty of Administrator's bond. Therefore, aotice is hereby given to all Creditor* of said deceased to present t"elr claims t.i rhs Surrogate of said Count* of Waihlngtoa on or before the -.^th day of April ÜbS " Dated. Cambridge. New York. March I4th. 1608 MARTHA E. WAITB. widow of said deceased FRANK L. WAITS son rt said deceased. Instruction. For Both Sexes City. THE BERLITZ SCHOOL OF LANGUAGES Madison Square (1122 Broadway) Harlem Branch. 343 Lenox Aye near XC'th St. Brooklyn *" T.ICourt St SUMMER SCHOOL AT ASBTRT PARK, N I Teachers Bent to ail places within hundred miles. ITALIA?. LESSONS GIVE* BY ITALIAN PROTF«»- J- tant \u25a0•»•\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0.> \u25a0\u25a0- \Vrlt«> A. BEXXnTT. l.V^i E. IfMth "st. Sch ool Agen cies. AMERICAN AND FOREIGN TEACHERS' AGENCY supplies Professors. Teachers. Tutors Governesses .us. to Colleges. School and Famlllen. \pply to Mrs. M J YOr.VO-in-T.TON. 2S Union Square iSurrogatcs' Notices. "\ rONNET. LOUISB.— TKE PEOPL£ OFTHS STATE 0? -JJ- N>w York, by the Grac-s of God Ftm aad Iri»pe^i«= : To Paolo (Paul) Davyt. Giovanna (Jeanj) favat, t^oi:a» tPau:ice) Peliegrln. Catterira (t'atierinei lar:l3ac c»r>- liaa <Caroilnet Uavyt,Pietro Pet-r) ilor.n»t, Daude l^arii Monnet; aiac^m.j t Jamet> Jlor.net. Cattertsa fCattertse) Malar:. Madael^na lilad-'lnei Ricoa, .'.'a . Mi .Jlsil*- lir.et Monnet. tee heirs acd nex-. of kin of Louise yiiizf.. deceased, »cad greeilng; Whereas Charles J. Oaa»U. si The City cf New YorK. has lately app::ea t3 tia d*rro- ga'^'s Court of our County of Now York. tJ fcavs a c?r- tatn Instrument in wriUny, bearing dare April 17:5, is**. relating to both real aci personal propvty, di:y provrt as th-: last Wi'.l and T?itam-nr et Lon-.se ilosr.s^ msef the cour.ry cf New York. <Jee»a«ed. Tnerefore yoi»zi each of you ar<» cued to appear beicre tise .-: .44:4 •* our CbOSty cf Srw York, at h^ oStce la tie County of New York, or; the 3:h da.y o: Jur.e. cr« tho^ftsd c.2» hurdrei aci risnt. at hall-past tea o'clock ia fx»- noon of that day. then zr.d there t^> a:teni zr.e proc«» of the sa!i last Wtl! a=-1 Tfstamerr Ani wodi of J3'J »3 are herety cited, as are unier tbfl ai^ \u25a0' t«aaty-«c» year*, ars required to a^p«ar uy. your guardian. :: jou have ccc. or I? you have nor.?, to a;pr-ar ar.-i ar»'7 8W one to appointed, or in tSa event cf J«ar =?s:ec: er failure to vio so. a suaratan wi!l t>« appo'.r;*i 6y tie Surrojjatti to reprosem azd act to? joa in tMrroceed!rg- In Testimony VVhert'iJ. \V«» have caused t.".e ><ai ot ts* SurrOfeate's court of the sali County ot Xi« York xa be hereunto attixe-i. Uitr^sj. 800. Ciar>» H. [I*S.] Beckett, a surrogate or our =i!i County cf New York. «tt sali Count... tn* 4i3 cUr oi April, la trie year cf our Lori on-j thousir.i ni-4 iinir*i - DANIEL. J. DOWOXn. Cl^rs oi tr.e i^urr^a-.e s «.'Oi^ GEO B. A EDW. <SOUJSCHUIDT. Attorneys for ratt- iloner. 34 r"iae Btreei New York City. (toping that the seas might become smoother, *'aptain Harrison waited until 4 p. m., and then M<-Int<->?h went out again In lifeboat »> and t<ir»k off th» other ... men, including Cap- tain D^lalande and Roberto Rabinon, the mate. Although he was thoroughly tir<-<] out, Mcln- tosh made a complete Job of his task, and Bet fire to the <_'hampagn<\ By the time M<-Intosh and his men got clear of the Volturno the lifeboat -was badly battered. The men on deck shouted to him to come back and g*n another boat, but he kept on until he came down to leeward of the Champagne. A lino xvas thrown to the fishermen, and fourteen m"n jumped into the water, one at a time, and v rre hauled aboard the lifeboat. Mrlntosn explained by signs that he would rome back for the rest of the crew, as the four- teen men he had taken aboard were more than ih»> lifeboat could carry safely. The Frenchmen were bo thankful at being isaved thai they offered to Take the oars and row to the steamer. Meanwhile the Volturn had steamed along slowly, describing a letter "S." Talcing the m«>Ti from the schooner was easy compared with the almost fatal effort of getting th*Mn aboard the steamer. A succession of combers dashed the lifeboat against the steam- er's side? with tremendous force and the fisher- men hivl.. to be hauled up on a line from the deck .lean Soule. a fisherman, slipped as he waf about eight feet ibove the water, but one of the Volturno's crew who was in the lifeboat grjbbod him by th<* collar and made the line fast again under his arms. Mclntosh, thor- oughly exhausted, was the last man hauled aboard the Volturno. and as he dropped on deck the lifeboat was splintortd. "lf that is the raw." said Ifclntosh, "I'llro out '•\u25a0 them In h lifeboat at daylight." At 7:30 a. in. the next morning: the Voltumo bad drifted far away from th* 1 little dismasted \u25a0chooner, but Captain Harrison, who had taken hip hf.-iiine- when abeam the Champagne, soon picked her up and circled around to leeward. Tho were, running as hi?h as the bridge of flip Volturno. and th«». position of the Cham- ras r could be made nut only at intervals as she rojw» on the rrept of h cornier. When about five lmndrM yards away MclntOFh, the chief ofner, lowered lifeboat No. 4 and with four men \u25a0farted for the dismasted schooner. It took him ever twenty minutes in c ' clear of the steam which all th«» while had been pouring out oil on th^ terrific sea. in a bad fix and I'm EOing tp stand by until h t . " STJBWAY GTIAPLS MOKF PHLTTF, IN PURSUANCE OF \.N ORDER OF HON. AENTP C X Thomas, a Surrogate of the County of New-Tork notice la hereby given to all persons hay iTSE: asalnst Matilda a. Elder, late of the County* j{^* York, deceased, to present the same, with vouched thereof, to the subscribers, at their place of tra"=^ s Ing business, at th--- office of Du.r. Strong 4 ffM>K No. 50 Wall Street. In the Borough of Maphatttn ?' me City of New York, on or before the V-£~ Jay of August n«st. a * y or Dated New York, the Sfttß. day of January l<Vi« AX.ME E. MINX. ADALINK M. E PETERS. DUER. STRONG & WHITEHEAD. AttorlVy^Vo'r^Ex ec^trices. No. 50 Wall Street. Borough of Md atan. New York City. aiannat- IN PURSUANCE OF AN ORDER OF 1 HON A R\TB C. Thomas. * Surrofiate of i; i 8 County of' New YoTk notice Is hereby given to all persona haw »*» * J.^l against William BUbbta*. jr.. Lite of t?e c* c :? m *. New York, deceased, to present the same with v \u0084 m .?, thereof to th« subscriber, M his p""' V'? ' " r * business at the off., of Carter * Haskell A Wall Street In the Borough of Manhattan and The Cl'^o* New York, on or before the Ist day of May 19OS y °* Dated New York, the 23d day of October 1907 EDWARD M. TRA.VKLJN. CARTER * HASKEtU Atty s for Executor Executor - IS Wall Street. Borough of Manhattan. NeW York City Int«-rborough Company Says It Is Getting Fewer Complaints Against Employes. \u25a0-''\u25a0' Rapid ' tating 'i.-:' i \u25a0 number of coi . - . . \u25a0 . . \u0084 1 . 1 \u25a0 - r \u25a0 m \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 Of -oi!,. \u25a0 . THB PEOPLE OF THE STATS OF NSW YORK. BT J_ th» ,*!ii« or God rr-?e and taccjenoinc, to taar-t» May, ari U«otK« V. N. Baiilwin, Jr.. fcietutw*, M*n V. "Coivocores^s. Kate li'is.inei! Lee. Edith MciC. b'X'«- ham. Ltiy t>. iialdwin. r lorence T. B-il4*in. ilarsaret biiawin. Henrj K. BaMwin. George V. N. fc^id*:-. »^. EUzaoetll Baiawln. UiatS* Eds*.. Marg-ire- WWft ? Wiilett Van Nesr. Ryr.ier Van -N**t. kUtzatetb V. *-\u0084«• Ealjwm. Mary B. K. Uaiiwm. tis tein aj:i :?«\u25a0?» « Of Cieo.-ic V. N. BalGW'.n. .ieceajetl seni s:eet:=«: »M» as. lieors-'' V. N. Ualiwin. Jr.. n^iued ta me .i. i " 3 ; r -J 3 t? hereiuafter described as &j: Executor, ci H:gr..ar... \u25a0 New inswicu -N»w je:s<-y. has .a:-»ly a;;j.:rd « Surrogates Court of our couatv uf .Ne* \o*s to t*-»» certain ip.strumeut 1 = writln*. bearsni rfa-s Uw '.er.:2 w et tobruary, lw^. relating to botta r-al and r^rsoc*! property, uuly proved aa tue last Will and iesraaieni « Geo-.se. V. N baldwtn. late et t^e Ced&qr cf My lor*, deceased. Therefvre >oa ana each of you are CiMd to ay- pear befor.j tne turrcsate cf our County of New l^ I**1 ** at his ock« vc the County of New Ycrk. oa tea -.— <-y of April. Ore tHousaiM rune hundred ar.d cii"'- M -»^r past ten oVio-k In th-* forenoon Of tr.a: day. ton »•» there to attend trie r/foate of i>.« sAid l*a r *•-' * 3 * Testament. Aai such ».\u25a0: you as ar« hereby cited as a^» under th« as?» cf twenty-ona years ar- re<ju:red (0 afP**- by your guardta: . It you ?a\« oc*. or If you iave siJ* to appear and apply tor one to arroi-:ici. or »- J- event of ycur r.tfclect or r.Viure to do wa. * \u25a0"SiS will be appomtM tv the Surrogate to re;:e*«2i asa *^» tor you ta toe proceeding. , . . , \u2666•\u0084 In teatlmcny whereof have caused «al O' "J Surrosare'a Court of tie Mil C««Bty or >" York to be hereunto a.T.xtd. Wirr.fss. b»- ISeaL] ABXER C THOMAS, a Surrogate of \u25a0»\u25a0 County of Naw Tork. at saii Ccur.ty -• -~* :ay o: March, in Urn year of our -^^- «\u25a0\u25a0 thousand nine hundred ar.a -gg^ ± WWDS?T . 11. \. Clerk of li-.9 Surr.^at? » Court IN PL-I.SUANCK OP AN ORDER OF BOX VBNFR r" Thomas, a Surrogate of the County of" New Tort notice 1* hereby given to all persons havh« dVlm. against Richard "Mansrteld. late of the County* of v"' York, deceased, to present the same, with vouAer» th»r«_ of. to the subscriber, at her place of trans^-tlni busT cess, at the ofnc« of Dittenhoefer. Gerber & Jaruea, No M Broadway. Borough of Manhattan, tn the Cltv . f : i— York on or before the SOth day of April next. Dated New York, the 14th day of October 1907 SUSA.V H. MANSFIELD' ExecutrlT CrTTENHOinFER GERBBR 4 JAMES. Attorneys fti. Executrix. 06 Broadway. New York City JOHNSON. WILMOT— IN PURSUANCE OP 7^; U order of lion Abncr C. Thomas, a Surronta of »s County of New York, notice Is hereby elven to all mLV^ having <-lalraa against Wllmot John»«»n. late of the Count? of New York, deceased, to present the same with vou.-htr* thereof to th« .übsctiber. at her place of ' transact in- business, at the office of Spelr & Bartlett No 52 Wall •treet. Borough of Manhattan, in laa city of .V«w York on or before the first <.ay o' June. lOrtS next •<*••. Dated New York, the 21>th day of October 1907 HELHS a JOHNSON Executrix BPEIR ft BARTLETT. Attorney, for ExecutrS M I Wall \u25a0treat. Borough of Manhattan. New York city Notice of Summons. House Passes Senate Bill Hillery Law Changed to Limit Rate at $2 05. April The House to-day pas bill provid the capital and surplus I and -\u25a0 "' )\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:: k invested In non-taxable .-' .•. \u25a0 -i11e«li 1 1 e«l from the aggregate of \u25a0 Ital and surplus of those banks i;i ascertain aJuation of the stock. The effect will !.» greatly to <l«vreaß<\ a-nl In some in- \u25a0 relj vlpe out, the taxation of bank TO TAX BANKS AS TRUST COMPANIES . \u25a0 ommipslon inert hunts. The growers « in th« best ri'!' ••? tiiiy"-ati by Individual aui Uon salt would itablish a \u25a0 kei under tho control of growers i MAHOGANY FURNITURE SUITES' SOLD. \u25a0 \u25a0 - , ' paid UN \u25a0 . \u25a0 \u0084 \u25a0 \\u25a0 \u25a0 . '\u25a0 U Ray \u25a0 tounted Tb< »-il'" V. : \u25a0 ' im. Art Exhibition* and Sales. VEff TORK SCPUEME COURT. xmv yorkt J County— Rosa B. Grotta, PUlnUft. against John l*Hart and Chattle DeHart. his wtf«. Bronx r«,," Company. Mary F. Gray ar. 1 John II Wocibury Derma- toloKlcal Institute, defendants —Trial ilfsfej | n w York County Summons. To th* above earned ileri-n !- aiitu and each ol them: You are hereby summoned to answer th« complaint In this action, and to serve a cow of your answer on the Plaintiff « Attorney within twenty day« after the uervlce of thla \u25a0 mots, exclusive of tha day of nervte*. an.l tn east of your failure to appear or answer, judgment will lx> taken against you by default for th« relief demanded in the complaint. Dated. New York. February 4th. iw>m MAX J. BKRNHKIM. Plaintiffs Attorney Post OHce address and Otllce. No. 37 Wall Street Manhattan Borough. New York City To the Defendant. Mary V. ilia, The foregoing aua- moni Is served upon you by publication, pursuant to an order of Boa. James A. OrGorman, Justin- of the Su- premo Court of the State of New York, dated the Ist day of April. l*' I *. as>d tiled tltii the complaint in the Office of the Clerk of the County of New York at th« County Court House, Borouan of Manhattan. County of N*w York, on the Ist day •' April. 1!X>», Dated New York. April Int. lix*. MAX J. URKNUFJM. I'latntlfTd Attorney. Office and Post Ortlce address. Wo 37 Wall str«at, Manhattan Uorough. New York City. Philadelphia, April B.— The Helios cleared from this port for Blaye on March -3 with a cargo of 831,764 j.-allo!is of petroleum. The cargo v.-is valued 10, snd was owned by th>- Standard OH Company. She waa formerly th« British steamer Prince, and eat rted \u25a0• t about t-.\<-tit> five ttien MAJESTIC RESCUES CREW. Twenty-five Men of Tank Steamer Helios Saved in Midocean. Plymouth, April B.—The steamer Majestic, from Nev York, reported i.y wireless telegraphy to-day the r scue on Vpril 5 of the .-rev ot the Norwegiai tank Bteamer Helios. The vssel was abandoned in latitude -»4 north, longitude 39 west She en- ntered a storm that last- d three da>s 11.-r bunkers w i•> broken and the vessel listed badly. Her cargo of oil Invaded the stokehole, and its ; compi lied the <-rew to abandon the \u0084 The accident to the Helios occurred on Saturday lust. There was great apprehension that oil would \u25a0 - One hundred :<rd fifty tons of oil were ; n the bunkers, but the taok of \u25a0 . ainder waa beyond the efforts of the crew Th< hei \u25a0 endered 1> impossible to allow the ; un ea to escape. \u25a0 sel the m \ eo.-ks and hatches were opened, to facilitate her sinking, as she w;!s In the direct :m<k of Users ! "Woman Passenger Cuts Wrists and Jumps I Into Sea. | The\Hamburg-Amerlca.i liner Pretoria, which left | Hamburg eighteen days ago and had to put into Halifax for coal three, days ago. arrived here yes- i terday after the severest passage she has ever encountered on the Atlantic. Three days out from Hamburg Miss Dora Gillar, a second cabin pas- senger, Jumped into the sea after having cut her wrists. Sha was bringing to this country two chil- dren belonging to her sister-in-law, Mrs. Henry Gillar, of No. 312 Bloomfleld street, Hoboken. The terrific head seas and a steady gale from the northwest told heavily on the Pretoria's coal sup- ' ply, and at times she was able to log only two knots an hour. The day's run ended on Thursday i at noon wad only 143 knots. As the Pretoria pitched and rolled there was a great medley of voices from 'tween decks, where five thousand canaries warbled amid the hissing of a dozen pythons, the howls of ten hyenas, the chattering of ; several hundred monkeys ami the almost continual j roaring of a big lion. PRETORIA HERE AFTER STORMY TRIP. Amount to Reduce School Tax Only $100,000 This Year. Trenton. N. •' . April B.— The joint committee on appropriation of the houses completed its work to-day and will present to the Senate to-morrow the annual and supplemental bills. The feature of the annual appropriation bill will be that the usual appropriation of about $1,000,000 0 reduce the t-.tate school tax haa been cut to $100,000. Tho total amount of the annual appropria- tion bill, exclusive of the $100,000 is ?4.05.C7;» Last year's annual appropriation bill, exclusive of $1,012.84012. to reduce the p'at-5 school tax, was $3,818,407 17. Th( supplemental bill for this year is •>:«\u25a0""*\u25a0> C Jjast year the amount was $»;i:2.'"'> f>>. Most Serious Epidemic on Record- There \u25a0 Milk Supply Blamed. [By Telegraph to The Tribune ) BoEton, April S.—Typhoid fever is raging in Bos- ton, the epidemic being the most serious on record, according to the officials of the Health Board. More than four hundred cases have been reported during the last four weeks, and there are more than three hundred cases of the disease reported in the various city hospitals. The chief centre of the dis- ease is In Jamaica Plain, where 1«9 cases have 1 en reported in the last week. The authorities have taken strenuous action there to check the disease, and the supply of milk, which the authorities be- lieve is responsible, has been completely rut off and about ten thousand families which have been get- ting milk from Worcester County dairies will re- ceive none for the next week unless they find other sources of supply. A NATIONAL WOOL MARKET. Philadelphia May Be Chosen as the Place for Great Auction Sales. Philadelphia. Apr!. 8 (Special).—There la a possi- bility that Philadelphia' may become the greatest wool market In the world. Th* Wool Auction Sales company of America, which Is now being organ- ized, has for its object the establishment of a na- tional woo! .auction market in the United St iti «, similar to the one in London, England. The choice lies 'tween Philadelphia, .New York and Boston F. J. Primrose, of No. 134 Chestnut street, Phila- delphia, is \u25a0• th»» head of the organization Already a membership of wool growers has been obtained, representing a production of 2,500,900 pounds of wool annually. The proposition is receiving cordial support among the textile trades generally, and it is hoped that the first sales under the new plan will be made within the next six months Wim such an enterprise will mean to the <\u25a0!»>• which is selected ma be --•\u25a0> by a glance at tho statistics of the London auction sales, which will eventually i- eclipsed by the American sales if the plan proves successful. These sales are hold Fixteen times a year—in January, March, May, .July, September and November. Bach sale lasts two weeks, and on an average between 4,000,000 and 5,000,000 pounds of wool an disposed of dally! At American prices this means sales of about $1,000,000 a day. The year's sales total about $75,000,000. Wool growers and textile manufacturers from all parts of th< country would attend the sale?. The project was unanimously Indorsed by the [Rational Wool Growers' Association at a re cent meeting In Helena, Mont. "The question of location is a vital one, said Mr. Primrose, discussing i;r pubjen. "The sales niriet be held in a place convenient to the buyers, and where shipping and hof>l accommodations hi \u25a0\u25a0 ample. i uav< lv»«»n inclined to favor New York a^ the most practical plaoe. but 1 you Id be very glF><] lo ste Philadelphia chosen. It is a matter that business and trade associations ought to look into.'.' text i hat use v . , tes. 861 a wil - few hours' rid< At pr< si i t m uiufactun ra are to malnt a buj rs In \\t-st»rn markets TYPHOID FEVER RAGING AT BOSTON. Possessed Counterfeit Money, Says Circuit Court Jury. Joseph M Giordan!, nt; nt in this city of the Fir- mil! Insurrection, was found guilty yesterday by a jury in tl." United Stares Circuit Court of having; in his possession counterfeit Haytlan money to the amount of $700,000 Giordan!, who la ii t lean, was arrested about \u25a0 lonths ago by Captain Flynn, of the Secret Service, on a charge of counterfeiting Haytlan lie was convicted on only one of several charges— that of having the spurious money in his possession. Tho jury disregarded the charge that Giordan! had been a party to the counterfeiting. Chatfleld remanded the convicted man until next Tuesd^j for sent< Thi arrest of Giordan! was regarded as of con- siderable importance because of the political con- ditions In Hayti, and the work of the Secret Ser- vice agents was In great measure responsible for Llapse of : \u25a0 Insurrection. Giordan!, \u25a0 at of the revolutionists, bought several thou- sand rifles and cartridges, which lie attempted t.. ship from here for the Flrmin followers. These were seized by the Secret Service men. There is still pending against Giordan! a charge of attempt- ing to ship the war supplies to Hayti from New York without marking them as explosives, as re- quired by law al for having in his possession the. counterfeit money the defence tried to prove that It wa? not spurious It maintained that there was no constitutional government, but that there were r^vo governments de fa^to, one of which author- ized Giordan! to have the money made here. It did not resemble t; 1 * money now in us* in the re- pul He, It vat testified. JERSEYS EXPENSES. $4,428,274 90. HAYTIAX AGENT GUILTY. Brought Back from San Francisco by Central Office Mm. f'entral Office detectives returned last mcM fr..m San Francisco with J. Edward Boeck and F. ireyer, cnaraed with obtaining 172,000 fraudulent \y. Geyer w; Indicted f"> the larceny of 17,001 •\u25a0>" March 31 1906, 'us Indictment being obtained through the efforts- of ti^ Fidelity and I I'nmpsnv. on April I, lso6. That company had been on hia bond, when \v was acting aa I ; ler for the Mercantile Finance Company, of \.. |j Park How, and when Geyer cashed a «iie,-i< f or J7.000 made out In favor of the \u25a0 and then disappeared, the bonding com- tiar\- hail Mm Indicted .; is accused of the theft of pearls valued at 165.000 iron, Edward J. Dayton, a dealer in pearls, ..' No. 1 YV.>t S9tii street. He disappeared during May. 1997, and ha a since that time, it is a t'jrticl all Trie pearis Into money through pawn and other pearl dealers. When fae was arrested In San Fran<-icr-o Boeck (old the police there that he had just returned from riiina, anil as $l-:\<vv> \u0084f the loot was still missing:, believed he hypothecated that portion of bis plunder In the i\, r g^t pcpca j-ls wort!, $36,000 .\u25a0 , recovered by the police since the alleged larceny, tmong the jewels still missing are three of the finest. Dayton told the police that the pris- oner was formerly a ,1, :si«r: s i«r In antiques <:id hich < lass jewelrj . I n.v T">Krn;.!i to Th* THbaaa.] Trenton, April I— The Assembly to-night voted to adjourn sine die Friday afternoon. A more ex- citing diy has seldom been seen at Trenton. The excitement began when Assemblyman Qlbbs offered a resolution this afternoon that the FTou.se adjourn nt 3 o'clock Friday afternoon. Robert l>avis, the Democratic bosn of Hudson County, had prom- ts-.i to deliver to David Bsird the votes ol eight Democrats for the resolution, but there was a mis- undcrstandlng and the Democrats voted for Mr. Martin's motion to table. The Republican bosses who were In the lobby when the vote was taken became frantic with rage. General Murray and David Baird sent Mr. Prince to the Democrats witii the information that unless they voted to adjourn the House the upper police court bill, legis- lating: many Democrats out of office, would bo i issed. This frifjliteiieii them and they caucused It was then agreed to give in to the demands of th* !bosses, Mr. Martin made sn Impassioned pl<*a to the ; member;, not to adjourn until they had carried out their pledges to the people. He sa-id both parties were on record la favor of reform measures, and 'he demanded th House stay In session until these j measures were passed. He said be intended to !pkire the responsibility where 11 belonged. Mr. Martin regrett< i that what Mr. Tumulty SBid true, and warned the Republicans that the same speech would bo made In the next campaign i from Ca,pe Maj to Suraex When the vote on the resolution to adjourn was taken three Democrats and eleven Republicans voted against it, The ' Republicans were Braun, Colgate. Devine, Fake, Mines. U>wrey, Martin, Morgan. Pierce, Whitehead an.l Crosby,' the Demo- era Ho! com be. Morris and Van Cleef. Mr. Martin's bill, authorising the State Tax Board, on complaint in writing, to increase or re- duce tax assessments made by the State Board «f Assessors on property of any kind, was passed by i tie House to-night. McCold, of Passaic, was ill, but would have voted with New Idea men. Sergeant Who Wounded Fclloxc Of- ficer Released on $10,000 Bail. Patrotaaa lota nrssnshsn. of the West iTi!i Ktreot station, who was shot on Prlday ;it Ninth avenue n:-.J Hth street by Serjeant James C. Nei- ney, of Inspector Swetviey's staiT, In The Bronx. died early yesterday morn'.nsr in Roosevelt Hospital. Nerney. who was arraigned before Coroner Ha;- burger. and, despite tho plr.is of Inspectors Walsh and Titus, committed to the Tombs prison without bail t.» await the inquest, was admitted to JIO.'VO ball when taken before Justin Hendrick, of the Supreme Court, on a wit of habens corpus, the bond being si^nr.,] by Klias Johnson, an iron manu- facturer a 1 spuyten DuyviL Deputy Police Com- missionei Hansffn argued for the prisoner's re- lease Aaeistant 1»I«t rl< t Attorney Johnstons thai the District Attorney's office had oonsented to the fixir.K of the bail. Bresnahan was In pursuit of a boy who had be« come impudent, w l.en Sergeant. Nerney rode past on his motorcycle. Roth men were In .-itlzen'p NVrn.y raught up with Bresnahan, snd in tiir wrangle that ensued, neither knowing the other to l.c a policeman. Bresnalian bit Nerney on tiif iiAa.i witii a blackjack Ne^ney thereupon tired two shots, one of vhlch hit Bresnahan. This Thursday and To-morrow iFriday ) Evenings at 3:30 o'Clock Fishel, Adler & Schwartz 313 Fifth Avenue OFK' ' FOll ABSOLUTE BALK AT THEIR ABOVE PKEMISE3 THUIR ENTIRE STOCK OP HIGH CLASS MODERN PAINTINGS AND WATER COLORS owiajr to the recent d^ath of LAST WEEK OF PURE FOOD SHOW. There is only "ii« week more of the. Pure Food Exposition at the I^-nox Lyceum. Mrs. LilyHax- worth Wallucu will continue, her cocking lectures every, afternoon anu evening, and 'the 7lh Regiment Jiand will be beard in dally' concert...'. . \ ;.; . CAB DRIVERS' TEST CASE UP. After two adjournments, Thomas F. Duffy, a cab driver ami owner, appeared yesterday before Jus- tice rlendrick on a writ of habeas corpus to test the leguiity of the right of the cab drivers to stand their vehicles in public places. The motion to dis- miss th* writ was adjourned by consent of Walter I, Rathbone. counsel for Duffy, and Assistant Dis- trict Attorney Johnstone until to-day. Duffy hroug.it a suit against the Hotel Btlmont, holding thai Independent cabmen had the right to stand and solicit fares in fi;ont of hotels, despite the ordinance giving to stablemen the exclusive privilege. Duffy said that he would bring the mat- ter of granting licenses to independent cab driver* IS) Uic null/.* at Uxj LJnh«r tout is. V<^ILL ALTER HOTEL EARLE. Th \u25a0 Hotel Earie, in Waveriey Place, Is to be ;ii tered. so t'.at there win be more living rooms top \u25a0^\u25a0ry, the Improvements being made fin X: deride !' Frleke. v owner, an<l for roi>alr- cUunaga ?a ihe tix story warehouse \u25a0 . o 3-5 Pearl st., for O. J. Muign<\ as owner. '.i nry A KoelbU ;.rn) iioii^': A Morrison 4ie tiie h;:ve also been filed for altering the old carshops ol the Third Avenue Railroad Obi aye . from nth t-. gstli n .. and strengthen- «•<••! framework. Pan of the building i* in be resitted for offices. AxM s Uedman is th« \u25a0 Ltea of the bill Insist that this il ! .»;.ks In the wnii position ;ih trust . . ihe mat ter of taxa4 i in •\u25a0 to-day passed the Senate bill tnodlfy- Hlllery maximum tax rate law. That law \u25a0\ rati to $17.'. <>n each $H«» for county i l local purposes. The bill just pmsod permits ' f26G with tho consent of th<' count) I ication. APPRAISER'S NEW SECRETARY. George W. Wanmaker. Appraiser of th© Port, yesterday announced the appointment of William S. Borchers as private secretary, with compensation at »2.600 a year, in the place of Dell A. Baker, re- cently transferred to the Collector's office as pri- vate secretary to the Collector. Mr. Borchers is nfty-Beven years old and has been a. resident of th« llth Assembly District for more than thirty fears. ' NOT GUILTY, SAYS INDICTED BROKER Joseph H. Bulsbacher, a broker, who was indicted on charges of forgery in the third degree, grand larceny in the second degreo and attempting to re- nvive a witness from the Jurisdiction of th« court. pleaded not guilty to all of th<« charges in the Court of '"\u25a0eneraf Sessions yesterday. Tho plea waa entered with leave to alter it wlthia a week. The i!rm with which Sulzbacher was connected wan Investigated and the Indictments were found. He was charged with the larceny of 100 shares of st..< k. the property of i ainille J, Ludman. For the alleged alteration of the books of the company to conceal the theft he was charged with forgery Henry J. Wyatt. a clerk employed by the firm, testified that Sulzbacher had offered him mouey to leave the jurisdiction of Urn court, and this resulted in th* third charge. Sulzbacher was arrested on January 10. but be- cause of a press of business in th«! lilatrtct Attor- ifßce the ease was not called until yeatarday. Janus \\ Osborne, counsel for the prisoner, asked for a reduction of the bond to lIo.OOD, on which kiulzbacrn-r is held. The application was denied. Chauffeur Tells Magistrate They Made Him Exceed the Limit According to Sergeant Casey, chief of the motor and r-v vie police, llva patrolmen were ia an auto- mobile when Its chauffaw was arrested at S6th fxyp t >>n Tuesday night for speeding. Norman H. \u25a0holle, the driver, of No. a Kast 76th street, when arraigned In the West Side court yesterday told Magistrate Wahle that he exceeded the speed limit because the patrolmen told him to. The accused pa- trolmen are bicycle men and had their machines \u25a0with them, according to the ser^e;ip.t Sdiolle was held in $100 bail for trial. The cr-so was brought to the attention of Deputy Police < 'ommissioncr Hanson. He, said that an in- vestigation would be nmde. POLICE IN SPEEDING AUTOMOBILE. rians have also been filed for remodelling the synagogue at Nos. 310 and 312 lOast 72d st Orto Bpannbake is the architect. MORE FIRE EXITS FOR PUBLIC SCHOOLS. ' B, .T Snyder, chief architect of the Depart- ;\u25a0 Education, ha* filed plans for increasing the number ot exits by remodelling windows into In th'^ kindergarten Of School 106. in L,a- fu\ette. St., and on the top story of School mo, at St. Nicholas a% ». and 117th pt. According to tine polire. there was no foundation for th< rumor that an attempt to blow up th* school would be made. Attlllio Ciccone, eleven years old, of No. 7 Gax- slde street, was bruised, bolng trampled upon. Several other children and one of the women were slightly injured, but were able to return to their bom< s The gates of the school were broken down by the excited mothers, most of whom were Italians, and the principal of the school called for police assist- ance. When the reserves arrived they found men and women rushing througti the halls of the school calling In English and in Italian the names of their children. The teachers stood by powerless to con- trol the jmob J. C. McLaury. the principal, ordered tlie classes dismissed a few minutes before the gates were smashed" in., and when the crowd of women swarmed up the main stairs and were in danger of trampling upon one another he ordered the other doors of «he building opened. Antoinette Ruglio. thirteen years old. of No. <0 Garside street, was knocked down and trampled upon. She was attended by Dr. Caruso and tak-n to her home. Rumors That Building Would Be Dynamited Cause Wild Panic. Rumors that the Seventh Avenue Public School in Newark was to bo blown up by dynamiters, in revenge for not fiaving received money demanded from tho parents of Italian pupils, caused a riot of mothers and relatives in the school yesterday, and a number of children were injured in the wild stampede m the halls and on the stairs of the building;. MOTHERS STORM SCHOOL. Carlin fled, but was captured by Harrison and George Ponyies, another neigtibor. after a "chase of two blocks, and turned over to the police. Youth Comes Straight from Prison to Shoot Worn an in Her Home. Bernard Carlln, who lias fipent sixteen of tho twenty-one years of his lif> in truant schools and reformatories, hastened to Brooklyn after being re- leasf-d from Xapanoch Prison. Ulster County, and killod his mother yesterday. The only reason he gavf for his act was, "Because stM was making me do "bits' all my lif°," meaning by "bits" short terms in prison. Ca rlin was released from Urn prison on Tuesday, and reached Brooklyn that afternoon. He pur- chased a revolver with which to kill his moOher, Mrs Susan Carlin, who lived at No. 557 Qulncy street, but vaited until yesterday to do the shoot- ing. He v to his mother's flat, and when she came to th» door sent five bullets into her head before she foil to the floor. Then he ran Into tihe apartment and began snapping the pistol at his Fister Mary and his infant brother. R. T. Har- rison, who lives in the flat above the Carlins, heard th» shots and ran downstairs. JAILBIRD KILLS MOTHER. Hugo Kanzlfr said a. fine amounting to twenty days' pay would he more than enough. R. B. Ald- croftt, jr., counsel for the building committee, was not present, but remarks were made by A. Leo Everett and George Freifeld. the tenor of which was for dismissal. Thf argument, continued an hour and a half, and then the board formally adopted the committee"* report, reinstating Mr. Cameron. "I have purposely kept away from each commis- sioner since the charges were made." said Mr. Cameron, laier. \u25a0\u25a0( wanted to be tried on the facts. The suspense has been very trying." George S. Davis, associate «:ity superintendent of schools, was appointed president of the Normal College. The post has b*en vacant since Septem- ber. UOft The salary Is 58,250. Board of Education Accepts Build- ing Committee Report. Aflrr a long debate the Board of Education ac- rrptcd yesterday the report of the building com- mittee in the case of Caleb W. Cameron. Inspector of masonry, charged with approving second-hand pianos for the public schools which were paid for at prices char-Red for new instruments. Tim debate revolved around the motion offered by Rupert B. Thomas", who said the report of the buildingcommittee should be modified. "Instead of fining Cameron forty days' pay an-J charging him with neglect of duty and misconduct, while stating definitely that he had been found not guilty of incompetence, the . report," said Mr. Thomas, "should contain merely a mild reproach to tho effect that Cameron has been guilty of in error of Judgment." He was opposed to any fine. "No man Is successful who does not make mis- takes." Mr. Thomas added. Abraham Stern favored the adoption of the re- port, and spoke in complimentary terms of the ser- vice, which, he said, Mr. Cameron had rendered to the. board for ten years. "I have been carefully over all the testimony in this case." continued Mr. Stem, "and so has Frederic R. Coudert. Mr. Coudert is not here to-day, but he told me that. in view of the evidence, there was nothing for us to do except dismiss the charges unproved." "Mr. Cameron has had to bear the brunt of all this", but when the testimony Is looked at any one can see that tho culprits are the piano mak- er*. '" said George W. Wingate. CAMEROX REINSTATED SUPREME COURT. NEW YORK COUNTY.— MATHIIr O da Tlll>. l*U;ntlf.against John A Tilly. Defendant. Action for absolute di\orre. —To the above twined De- fendant: You are hereby summoned to anawer the com- plaint in this action, and to serve a copy of your answer on th* oUtntltT's attorney within twenty days after '.hi service of this summons, exclusive of the day of s*rvice: and In case of ) >ur fall' re to appear or answer Judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief do- manded In the complaint. l>.ii..1 New York. October loth. 1007. ACtil I. J. OISHEI. Plaintiff* Attorney. Office and Post Office. Adiir.as. -V> Broadway. Borouxh of Man- hattan. N. Y. City. To the above named Defendant: The foregoing summons Is berved upon you without the StutA of New York, pur- suant to an ord*r of th lion. James PllaMraldi one of the Justice? of the Supreme Court of the State of New York. County of New Tork. Bald Orde* being dated th* 6th d.iv of Matca, I(K>>. and filed with th« complaint In the office of th* Cler'c of th* County of New York, on the llth day of March 1008. ruted New York. March 11. ACHII.L.E J. OISHKI. PlatnufTs Attorney. Offlos and Post OflU* Addn as. 200 Broadway. Bitrougb M*a- ' battaa. K. Y. Clt j. TUF> PEOPLE OK THE STATE OF NEW \u25a0' *'J2L the sra.e i>f Ood free and independent. H- 1^ C. £and». Arthur B. Saml«. UvinK H. Sap-is ar.d fc^Vf' Mosely J?a::da. his wife; Emma S. Montchyk and r.J£ eace Sands, the h*!rs ar.tl r.-?xt of kin of t-r:::s* *- Sands, deceased, send cretins: . -..,•, Whereas. Louise !j. Red* of the City of New / i ' } as lately applied to tne Surroca:es Court o«. "^ County of New York to have certain Instrument •» writing, dated the seventh day of November. 19» •-* the secoaJ day of Jun.-. 11W reiatlns «o P<" rsa: * property, duly proved th* laat will and te»J.iss*.-« and COOtet] of Emnu C. Sar..ia. iat« o( tba * ounty '\u25a0• New York, deceased, therefor* you »:id e^.-h •! s^* ara cited u> appear b. f.ir" the Surrogate of MB *-^.u-^. u-^ , of New York, at his office in in* County of New T»r^ on the 2«th Jay of May. liKtS. at half-past t?n oc.se* In thrt forenoon of thar day. then ar.J th*T« 10 » t:t ;, the probate of the said last will artvl tesraraes; a" codicil. ... And such of you as are hereby cited, as ar- u=a«r . the ace of twenty-one »e«irs. are required M arP^ar sj your guardian, if you hay* one. or. tf you h.iv« twb* to appear an.l apply for on* to be appointed, or !=,{"* event of your neglect or failure to do so. a juarJ" »iii be appointed by the Surrogate tt> repres«:-.t sa>» act for >ou In the prooeedlns . In testimony whereof, we have caused t>* »'*| °' the Surrogates Court of the said OVutkv of >•• JJJ to be hereunto aflixed. Witness. Hot.. .U>m» [L. S] i". THOMAS, ,i :si:-oci'- of our said t'auatr of New York, at said county, the 31st •'••? « March. IMS. -^ OA^ lKh \u0084 poWPNET. Clerk of th.- Surrogate's Court. people ok Tim state or new torjc. bt J. the grace of God tree and Independent, to *.••*» A*«el an executor named In aaid will;Mathlld* o** l *" iriv.ii il>- <r*<- A. Sellgmann. Arthur K. sw» ignvann. «• heirs and next of kin of Maurice Seiljmana. vl*- ceased, s«nd greeting : . fc%J Whereas. Albert Btum, of the City of Tors. B*» lately «rrlle«l to the Surrocatea' Court of our «-« i -/ of New York to have a certain Instrument in wrn bearing date June U. IUO:>. relating to both rjjaJ **, personal property, duly proved M th» last ,*' 1 »°JJ testament or Maurice Selt«mana. late of ,h« i 2"V«i New York, deceased, therefore you and eaca v J™» are cited to appear before the - -«*:•» •* our I ".^ of New York, at his olßoe in the County of New TJ". on th. 20U» day of April, one thousand nine huctfr*^ and eight. at half-past ten o'clock Is th» * i>f * } B 1 w; that day. then and there to atlsnj the proh-.ts of " •aid last will and teatatnant. And »uch of you 4* «• hereby cited as are under the age of i««nty-05« r»*J are required to appear by your «uardi*n. If you . -\u25a0 one. or. If you have none, to appear «nd apply tor as , to l.» apaolnted. or la the event of your «.««'; failure to* do m a cuarjian willappointad by «-» Surrogate to represent aad act for you \u25a0 t,£v» F^ I C "n testimony whereof, we have caused , th es,»t^ | th. SurroiaU.- Court of the »aW County of >•« "JJ to be hereunto aiflteJ. Witness. Hon. «-_!«•«• , ISeal.J H. Beckett, a Surrogate of our "£T<g"S of New York, at said county, the -Jth aay « I February in the year of our Lord one thousand »«»• hundred and eight ptS , KL j. coWDXET. Clerk of tao tuirofin* Own* >.«« York City- : >v^ 4 \EW-YiMiK DAILY TRTBI :— :, THUBSDAY, APRIL 9. IMS. SHOT POLICEMAN DIES. Sales by Auction. ADJOURNMENT HI I DAY Bosses Swing Big Stick and Jersey Lawmakers Bon to Orders. NO PARTY PLEDGES KEPT. R. FULTON CUTTING. Pres. APPEALING FIGURES. Families hcln& aided by the AstnciaUon for Improving the Condition of the Poor: January 1 2.475 February I 2.9+9 March I >- +52 April I _ \u25a0 .4.066 These figures mean for many thousands no work to be had. savins* pone, health Impair*! by want and despair, homes broken up- Will you. help by prompt and |UHMI aid to relieve present suffering of women and children and to prevent demoralization that years cannot undo? Gifts largo and small may be sent to R. S. Minturn. Treas., BOO*J 212, No. 103 East 22d St., Now York. 7'IJO FUGITIVES C.trailT. Fifth Auction Avenue Rooms HENRY HARTMAN. Auctions. Incorporated. -No.. 3.13-3-11 4th Ay. . S. E. corner 23th SI. To-day at 2 Clock and continuing following days at mm* hour ua«n •_*> locluJlnc April 13. "" * a * Extraordinary Sal* By order of th« AIMONE MANUFACTURING CO. w]i» \u25a0*%» decided to close out t&elr tmporatiM. v ordor to <t»rot« more «pac» th<«ir Jlasnfac--... Department*. ?7~*v'i A Grand Collection of Carrara and D'lstrian Marbles Suitable for GarJen an-t Household «\u25a0-«\u25a0—,.,- 'TT-!u<iinE Replica* of th« Vatlcaa m4-.,m 4- ., , -riv *" Benches. Lions and Column*. Fonts. >»'*;• -r,'^' etc. also * *•»*•. Antiques and Furniture, Oomprlslr.* Choice Example* of th» Per!o.«a- »--. XIII.. XIV.. XV. XVI.. Empire. Ad*-£ Ch'OT.-V?' Sheraton. French an.l Italian R*r<».laMnca. < iZIS*- Pompelan. and Dutch. including " Koa ** Ricn Aubusson Tapestry Suits We.ldlnr Ch»st». Roman Tabl»s. a L»r*. Cor>»*..«. . Antique Mirrors. Paintings. L»a?her St-^b-^.- 0 * <* An Fr.« Vt«w till hour of sal*. Citations.

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An hour later, irhen :':'

••••'\u25a0 dark, Captain Hhi

rtoon sa.ii two ad lt< lights, ami. believing It wasUrn schooner I\u25a0 i ;i' dusk, iHir(> down\u25a0pon her

- running, -iv) » gale

st Intervals from all points of 111• • pampas*

H<* manoeuvred the Volturno and went to the;h« vetm land Bhout< d to the

the iTi»igaph"n'? i ptain Delaland< replied In\u25a0'. and no <me •\u25a0; board oould understand

v hat he saM. Captain Hj rrison turned to Chiefofti.\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0!• Mrlntosn ~^i

--iuar "Thai Is a Frenchman

The Vottarno, which l«»ft Hamburg and Rot-terdam on her first passage to this port, ran into

a terrific hurricane on March 2«. She forged

nhe.-id tinder mere steerage way for more than

ten hours, and at 6:10 p. m. on March 27 the

fourth officer reported to Captain Harrison that

lie. saw \u25a0 dismasted sailing vessel "ff the star-

board bow. Shortly after the vessel was re-ported sh»- could not be made out again •\u25a0Midevery one on the Volturno though! \u25a0-\u25a0•\u25a0\u25a0 bad iiiil

'

to the bottom.

Although <'ar>tain Harrison had orders to

pet to New York as soon as he could, so that the

Btranier might discharge and take on a cargo

before Saturday, the day she Is scheduled to

sail for Hamburg, he decided to stand by thelittle fishing boat until he took off every mem-ber of the unfortunate crew. The rescue tost

him a loss cf forty hours In passage time, andIn the first attempt to get to the men;on theChampagne lifeboat 4 was smashed into bitsand had to be turned adrift.

Steamer Stands by Storm-TossedSchooner for Nearly Two Bays.

After standing by for forty hours In a terrificBtonn, during which she drifted eighty miles.the steamer Volturno, of the New York andContinental Line, managed to save twenty-eight

fishermen of the dismasted schooner Champagne

on March 28 and landed them in this port last

night.

HEKOK1 HIXTi:AT SKA

SATES 28 FISHERMEN.

11**3 PEOPLi;~OK THE STATE OK.VETS TO*sr'^.J- the sra:c of God tr-*.. and maepectent- Toils?.millan.> F. Sot. Ceiestina ilijargo a* SoteV jSU^KIsow. Maria Sow de Vines. Mar«an:a scto •^r%,tamara. Marco A. fc'oto. Francisco G. Sow. j-jAi"»Sftta and CmJllo V. Soto. a:: of fnU at. !™??hJ'the widow and heirs aad n-xt of kin « f MarttTV

i deceased, septj Greeting: Whereas. Maximl!iaa» r S, ", of The City ,f N>w York, has iateiy ap r.;^A.*^-roaate-s Court of our County cf New ".-.-«. \lsswT.Icertain Instrument in writ:; dated June iSh. ,1 J!: latins to both real and personal property. "A^LlZt;Mthe last Wi!l ani T«t*meat of MarY, A. IS u^tJ. the county of New Tork. d^eas^i. «s»rß';r» V^l-i

Iwho! you are cited to appear b»:or<* th- Sur-^tr^i| «ir County of New Tor*. at hts office, m ti,«$iNew Tor*, on the llth day of Mar. or., ?-dLf:! hundred and eight, at bait-past tea o'clock in tie*aSL!nocn of that day. then and there to attend tie

-~^"; of th* said last Win and Testament.

"ntilt

In testimony whereof we have caused Om Seal of »"•«" Surrogate's Court of the said Couatj o* x™l^ai. ) York to !•* hereunto affixed. Witr.ess

J Hca'li!I \u0084.

n?r C- Thotnaa. a surrogate ifo:;r«!1 >««-or New Tort, at Si..; \u25a0\u25a0.:•:!..-. th*14th day of Ma.-*-* 4; the year of our Lori one thousand nL-« h.isd'-d jj3.eight. DAN .J. DOW-Wet.j A. HENRT MOSLE Attorwy forVetUit™".Vj*SffSLiStreet, Borough or Manhattan. New York City.

SUBWAY BLOCKED, BUT TICKETS SOLD.A break in the block signal system at the 72rt

street Rtation of the subway stopped Urn down-town express service for sixteen minutes In therush hour yesterday morning. The officials of IkeInterborough company say that a part of the sig-nal system known as the "tripplug" dropped outand caused the clanger signal to show. Trains ontheir way downtown were stopped in the dangerzone by the "trip plug" automatically setting thabrakes.

On all of the express station platforms below theblock there was much crowding, and the amthrough the tunnel to Brooklyn was suspended.There were many protests against the action of theticket agents in selling tickets and not telling thosewho bought them of the block in the service. I

One Laborer Buried and Five OthersNear Death.

A man v/ttn smothered and crushed to death andthe lives of five others wcro imperilled in KantNew York yesterday afternoon by a cave-In In anexcavation for a new chimney at the Rldgewoolpumping station. Atlantic avenue and Logan street.The dead man was Peter Carupula. of No. 63 El-lery street. Williamsbur?.

Heroic measures were taken to save- the man'slife. They were useless, however, for he- was cov-ered with tons of earth. Th« foreman of the work.Thomas Olennon, of No. SB State street, Brook-lyn, yelled to the other workmen, three of whomhad been caught by falling earth. so that theywere buried almost to the waist, to grasp theirshovels and pet the burled man out.

Patrolman 'VViinam NaaJe, of the Liberty avenuestation, was near, and, hearing the cries of themen. leaped down Into tin fifteen-foot excavationand joined in the rescue, work. At last the he/j.i

and shoulders of Carupola were uncovered, andhe was dragged out. Efforts to revive him wer^In vain.

KILLED BY CAVE-IN.

Excursions.

STARIN'SEXCURSIONS

STEAMBOATS AND BARGESto all PLEASURE RESORTS on

LONG ISLAND *Ol>r>and HCDSON RIVER

Vasmlflcent Saloon Steamers I!*-'1 and"Richmond." each 1.200 capacity". •'Sea Gull

"800 capacttj-. Barjres of all sizt-s.

SunJav Schools a Specialty.OFFICES: CORTLAXTJT ST PIERS. N. T

"Phone. 1209 Cortlandt.

Notice to Creditors.

TUBPEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK..he grace of Gcd fr»e and fndepw.ien-. ti -aia-L.!H. Dußlot.. Anna Punlop, John Franklla Dur.iop Rot*-\V. Dunkp. Lu-?l!a D. Kimball. formerly tasunan tSmI'unlop. Bessie Di^ton. William DJ^.lcp. Ctarlei iLD-ja!lop, Edward E. Dunlop. Gertrude Dunlop Ha»»» Aass>Dunlop, H»:-n Dunlcp Hutchin.^.n. Marie Lou.s* DI»-lor. Laban S. Major, jr.. Alma Su* Major. -am tlConrad. Mrs-Bessie Co-rad •

rict* Harry R r-r:'-Edward I>. Dunlop. George H. Dunlcp. Daa# ~. Duel?"Herbert Frost. Margar-t Frost. EliiaSetn Frcr. 0^thy Matilda Frost. Samue! Dur'.op Har.nah Par.'ciAnna Uunlop. Jo^ R. Dunlop. Frank H. Jua-. r^ZTrust Company. Johu W. Bartlett. M. D and T tim Oaa-ar.te« .and Tru^t Cbmpw of trte C*r7 cf Ne» Tc-'s. f«executors, heirs ani next cf kin of Clark W Doaloadeceased, send greetins: Whereas Eliza C Dur.'.oß. o*the City of New Ycrk. has :a-« appHed to--. 3^:gate's Court of our County of N«w York to hay» a cet~ta:n lr.strumerit In writing,and a codtc.l ti:er*">. r»i*Ji!«to both real and personal property, duly tpanQ "ai t^

last Will and Testament cf CUrie W. Du=T—» la-s «?the County or New York, deceased, tfatlte* Wtt asieach cf you are cited to appear befcrs t=e Sr-ia-j cfour County cf New York, at his cflce la tha CoSl o»New York, on th* 2Sth day of Ma;-, one thousand ='•«,hundred and eisht. at half-past ten o'clock to tie far»-nocn cf that da th«-n anj there to a-r?'"' tbt "r^fcauof the said last Will a.-.d Testacsr.^ And socb Vt«as are hereby cited £j are under tb* age

-•twen*v-c-»years are required to appear by your suardUr.. if yoa

have on». or if you have noce. ta appear and ajra'y farone to b« appointed, or in the event cf your r.»s ret orfail-ire I3 do so. a guardian will be ftpnaiatad by tl"*t1"*Surrcgata to represent and act for you ia tha prcoeedisc

In testiraony whereof w» =ay» caused tha Sea: a* tt»Surrogate's Court cr Urn 3a:d County of Ne»[L. S. ] Tori to be hereunto a«3«l Witness. HJr. Ab-r.*r C Thomas, btnxosua of our ia:i Cou=!7of New Ycrk. at said Cour.:y, the 25th _.. of Jlirch.

In • « year of our LoriJ ora thousand tuae hur.dr-d tsAe'Stt. DANIEL J. DOWDNET.Clerk cf tr.e aurrosa^ • Coin.

WELLS * SXEDEKER, Attorsen far Petitioner. Na,34 Nassau St.. B-srough of Manhattan. New Yorsc C.:y.

\u25a0VOTICB TO CREDITORS.— WHEREAS THE UN-Xl dersijrned Intends to apply to the -Surrogate's Court ofthe County of Washington. State of New York, for let-ters of administration and to have Frank L. Walt*Joined with her ir. such administration upon the Goad?Chattels. Credits and Estate of Edmund C Walte 'i-«'/•the Town of Cambridge, In said county, deceased unU-^rthe provision of Section 2664 of the Cjd<j of Civil Pro-

cedure of the State of New York for limitingthe penaltyof Administrator's bond. Therefore, aotice is herebygiven to all Creditor* of said deceased to present t"elrclaims t.i rhs Surrogate of said Count* of Waihlngtoaon or before the -.^th day of April ÜbS

"

Dated. Cambridge. New York. March I4th. 1608MARTHA E. WAITB. widow of said deceasedFRANK L. WAITS son rt said deceased.

Instruction.For Both Sexes

—City.

THE BERLITZ SCHOOL OF LANGUAGESMadison Square (1122 Broadway)

Harlem Branch. 343 Lenox Aye near XC'th St.Brooklyn *"T.ICourt St

SUMMER SCHOOL AT ASBTRT PARK, N ITeachers Bent to ail places withinhundred miles.

ITALIA?. LESSONS GIVE* BY ITALIANPROTF«»-J- tant \u25a0•»•\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0.> \u25a0\u25a0- \Vrlt«> A. BEXXnTT. l.V^iE. IfMth"st.

School Agen cies.AMERICAN AND FOREIGN TEACHERS' AGENCYsupplies Professors. Teachers. Tutors Governesses .us.

to Colleges. School and Famlllen. \pply toMrs. M J YOr.VO-in-T.TON. 2S Union Square

iSurrogatcs' Notices.

"\ rONNET.LOUISB.—TKE PEOPL£ OFTHS STATE 0?-JJ- N>w York, by the Grac-s of God Ftm aad Iri»pe^i«=:—To Paolo (Paul) Davyt. Giovanna (Jeanj) favat, t^oi:a»tPau:ice) Peliegrln. Catterira (t'atierinei lar:l3ac c»r>-liaa <Caroilnet Uavyt,Pietro Pet-r) ilor.n»t,Daude l^ariiMonnet; aiac^m.j tJamet> Jlor.net. Cattertsa fCattertse)

Malar:. Madael^na lilad-'lnei Ricoa, .'.'a •. Mi.Jlsil*-lir.et Monnet. tee heirs acd nex-. of kin of Louise yiiizf..deceased, »cad greeilng; Whereas Charles J. Oaa»U. siThe City cf New YorK. has lately app::ea t3 tia d*rro-ga'^'s Court of our County of Now York. tJ fcavs a c?r-tatn Instrument in wriUny, bearing dare April 17:5, is**.relating to both real aci personal propvty, di:y provrtas th-: last Wi'.l and T?itam-nr et Lon-.se ilosr.s^ msefthe cour.ry cf New York. <Jee»a«ed. Tnerefore yoi»zieach of you ar<» cued to appear beicre tise .-: .44:4 •*our CbOSty cf Srw York, at h^ oStce la tie County ofNew York, or; the 3:h da.y o: Jur.e. cr« tho^ftsd c.2»hurdrei aci risnt. at hall-past tea o'clock ia Q» fx»-noon of that day. then zr.d there t^> a:teni zr.e proc«»of the sa!i last Wtl! a=-1 Tfstamerr Ani wodi of J3'J»3 are herety cited, as are unier tbflai^ \u25a0' t«aaty-«c»

year*, ars required to a^p«ar uy. your guardian. :: jouhave ccc. or I? you have nor.?, to a;pr-ar ar.-i ar»'7 8Wone to b« appointed, or in tSa event cf J«ar =?s:ec: erfailure to vio so. a suaratan wi!l t>« appo'.r;*i 6y tieSurrojjatti to reprosem azd act to? joa in tMrroceed!rg-

In Testimony VVhert'iJ. \V«» have caused t.".e ><ai ot ts*SurrOfeate's court of the sali County ot Xi« York xa be

hereunto attixe-i. Uitr^sj. 800. Ciar>» H.[I*S.] Beckett, a surrogate or our =i!i County cf

New York. «tt sali Count... tn* 4i3 cUr oiApril, la trie year cf our Lori on-j thousir.i ni-4 iinir*i-

DANIEL. J. DOWOXn.Cl^rs oi tr.e i^urr^a-.es «.'Oi^

GEO B. A EDW. <SOUJSCHUIDT. Attorneys for ratt-iloner. 34 r"iae Btreei New York City.

(toping that the seas might become smoother,*'aptain Harrison waited until 4 p. m., and thenM<-Int<->?h went out again In lifeboat »> and

t<ir»k off th» other ... men, including Cap-

tain D^lalande and Roberto Rabinon, the mate.Although he was thoroughly tir<-<] out, Mcln-tosh made a complete Job of his task, and Betfire to the <_'hampagn<\

By the time M<-Intosh and his men got clear

of the Volturno the lifeboat -was badly battered.

The men on deck shouted to him to come back

and g*n another boat, but he kept on until hecame down to leeward of the Champagne. A

lino xvas thrown to the fishermen, and fourteen

m"n jumped into the water, one at a time, and

v rre hauled aboard the lifeboat.Mrlntosn explained by signs that he would

rome back for the rest of the crew, as the four-

teen men he had taken aboard were more than

ih»> lifeboat could carry safely.

The Frenchmen were bo thankful at being

isaved thai they offered to Take the oars and row

to the steamer. Meanwhile the Volturn hadsteamed along slowly, describing a letter "S."Talcing the m«>Ti from the schooner was easy

compared with the almost fatal effort of getting

th*Mn aboard the steamer. A succession of

combers dashed the lifeboat against the steam-er's side? with tremendous force and the fisher-men hivl.. to be hauled up on a line from the

deck .lean Soule. a fisherman, slipped as hewaf about eight feet ibove the water, but oneof the Volturno's crew who was in the lifeboatgrjbbod him by th<* collar and made the linefast again under his arms. Mclntosh, thor-oughly exhausted, was the last man hauledaboard the Volturno. and as he dropped on deckthe lifeboat was splintortd.

"lf that is the raw." said Ifclntosh, "I'llroout '•\u25a0 them In h lifeboat at daylight."

At 7:30 a. in. the next morning: the Voltumobad drifted far away from th*1 little dismasted\u25a0chooner, but Captain Harrison, who had takenhip hf.-iiine- when abeam the Champagne, soonpicked her up and circled around to leeward.

Tho were, running as hi?h as the bridge

of flip Volturno. and th«». position of the Cham-ras r could be made nut only at intervals as sherojw» on the rrept of h cornier. When about five

lmndrM yards away MclntOFh, the chief ofner,

lowered lifeboat No. 4 and with four men\u25a0farted for the dismasted schooner. It took himever twenty minutes inc

'clear of the steam

which all th«» while had been pouring out oil onth^ terrific sea.

in a bad fix and I'm EOing tp stand by untilht."

STJBWAY GTIAPLS MOKF PHLTTF,

INPURSUANCE OF \.N ORDER OF HON. AENTP CX Thomas, a Surrogate of the County of New-Torknotice la hereby given to all persons hay iTSE:asalnst Matilda a. Elder, late of the County* j{^*York, deceased, to present the same, with vouchedthereof, to the subscribers, at their place of tra"=^ sIng business, at th--- office of Du.r. Strong 4 ffM>KNo. 50 Wall Street. In the Borough of Maphatttn ?'me City of New York, on or before the V-£~ Jay ofAugust n«st. a *y or

Dated New York, the Sfttß. day of January l<Vi«AX.ME E. MINX. ADALINK M. E PETERS.DUER. STRONG & WHITEHEAD. AttorlVy^Vo'r^Ex

ec^trices. No. 50 Wall Street. Borough of Mdah«tan. New York City. aiannat-

IN PURSUANCE OF AN ORDER OF1 HON A R\TBC. Thomas. * Surrofiate of i;i8County of' New YoTknotice Is hereby given to all persona haw »*»

*J.^lagainst William BUbbta*. jr.. Lite of t?e c* c:?m*.

New York, deceased, to present the same with v \u0084 m .?,thereof to th« subscriber, M his p""' V'?

' "r*

business at the off., of Carter *Haskell A WallStreet In the Borough of Manhattan and The Cl'^o*New York, on or before the Ist day of May 19OS

y °*Dated New York, the 23d day of October 1907

EDWARD M. TRA.VKLJN.CARTER *HASKEtU Atty s for Executor Executor

-IS Wall Street. Borough of Manhattan. NeW York City

Int«-rborough Company Says It Is GettingFewer Complaints Against Employes.

\u25a0-''\u25a0' • Rapid '

tating 'i.-:'i \u25a0 number of coi

.-. . \u25a0 . . \u0084

1.1 \u25a0 -

r\u25a0

m\u25a0

\u25a0

\u25a0\u25a0

\u25a0

• Of -oi!,.

\u25a0 .

THB PEOPLE OF THE STATS OF NSW YORK.BTJ_ th» ,*!ii« or God rr-?e and taccjenoinc, to taar-t»

May, ari U«otK« V. N. Baiilwin, Jr.. a» fcietutw*, M*nV."Coivocores^s. Kate li'is.inei! Lee. Edith MciC. b'X'«-ham. Ltiy t>. iialdwin. r lorence T. B-il4*in. ilarsaretbiiawin. Henrj K. BaMwin. George V. N. fc^id*:-. »^.EUzaoetll Baiawln. UiatS* Eds*.. Marg-ire- WWft ?Wiilett Van Nesr. Ryr.ier Van -N**t. kUtzatetb V. *-\u0084«•Ealjwm. Mary B. K. Uaiiwm. tis tein aj:i :?«\u25a0?» «Of Cieo.-ic V.N. BalGW'.n. .ieceajetl seni s:eet:=«: »M»

as. lieors-'' V. N. Ualiwin. Jr.. n^iued ta me.i.i"3;r-J3t?

hereiuafter described as &j: Executor, ci H:gr..ar... \u25a0

New inswicu -N»w je:s<-y. has .a:-»ly a;;j.:rd « -»Surrogates Court of our couatv uf .Ne* \o*s to t*-»»certain ip.strumeut 1= writln*.bearsni rfa-s Uw '.er.:2 wet tobruary, lw^. relating to botta r-al and r^rsoc*!property, uuly proved aa tue last Will and iesraaieni «Geo-.se. V. N baldwtn. late et t^e Ced&qr cf My lor*,

deceased. Therefvre >oa ana each of you are CiMd to ay-pear befor.j tne turrcsate cf our County of New l^I**1**at his ock« vc the County of New Ycrk. oa tea -.— <-yof April. Ore tHousaiM rune hundred ar.d cii"'- M -»^rpast ten oVio-k In th-* forenoon Of tr.a: day. ton »•»there to attend trie r/foate of i>.« sAid l*ar *•-' *

3*

Testament. Aai such ».\u25a0: you as ar« hereby cited as a^»under th« as?» cf twenty-ona years ar- re<ju:red (0 afP**-by your guardta: . It you ?a\« oc*. or If you iave siJ*

to appear and apply tor one to b« arroi-:ici. or »- J-event of ycur r.tfclect or r.Viure to do wa. *

\u25a0"SiSwill be appomtM tv the Surrogate to re;:e*«2i asa *^»

tor you ta toe proceeding. , . . , \u2666•\u0084In teatlmcny whereof *« have caused l««al O' "JSurrosare'a Court of tie MilC««Bty or >"York to be hereunto a.T.xtd. Wirr.fss. b»-

ISeaL] ABXER C THOMAS, a Surrogate of 0« \u25a0»\u25a0County of Naw Tork. at saii Ccur.ty

-• -~*•:ay o: March, in Urn year of our -^^- «\u25a0\u25a0

thousand nine hundred ar.a -gg^ ± WWDS?T.11.\.Clerk of li-.9 Surr.^at? » Court

INPL-I.SUANCK OP AN ORDER OF BOX VBNFR r"Thomas, a Surrogate of the County of" New Tortnotice 1* hereby given to all persons havh« dVlm.against Richard "Mansrteld. late of the County*of v"'York, deceased, to present the same, with vouAer» th»r«_of. to the subscriber, at her place of trans^-tlni busTcess, at the ofnc« of Dittenhoefer. Gerber & Jaruea, NoM Broadway. Borough of Manhattan, tn the Cltv.f

:i—York on or before the SOth day of April next.

Dated New York, the 14th day of October 1907SUSA.V H. MANSFIELD' ExecutrlTCrTTENHOinFER GERBBR 4 JAMES. Attorneys fti.Executrix. 06 Broadway. New York City

JOHNSON. WILMOT—IN PURSUANCE OP 7^;U order of lion Abncr C. Thomas, a Surronta of »sCounty of New York, notice Is hereby elven to allmLV^having <-lalraa against Wllmot John»«»n. late of the Count?of New York, deceased, to present the same with vou.-htr*thereof to th« .übsctiber. at her place of

'transact in-business, at the office of Spelr & Bartlett No 52 Wall

•treet. Borough of Manhattan, in laa city of .V«w Yorkon or before the first <.ay o' June. lOrtS next •<*••.Dated New York, the 21>th day of October 1907HELHS a JOHNSON Executrix

BPEIR ft BARTLETT. Attorney, for ExecutrS MIWall\u25a0treat. Borough of Manhattan. New York city

Notice of Summons.

House Passes Senate Bill—Hillery LawChanged to Limit Rate at $2 05.

April • The House to-day pasbill provid the capital and surplus

Iand -\u25a0"' )\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:: k invested In non-taxable

.-' •.•.• \u25a0 -i11e«li 1 1e«l from the aggregate of

\u25a0 Ital and surplus of those banks i;iascertain• aJuation of the stock. The effect

will!.» greatly to <l«vreaß<\ a-nl In some in-\u25a0 relj vlpe out, the taxation of bank

TO TAX BANKS AS TRUST COMPANIES

. \u25a0 ommipslon inert hunts. The growers« in th« best ri'!' ••? tiiiy"-ati by Individual

aui Uon salt would • itablish a\u25a0 kei under tho control of •

growersi

MAHOGANY FURNITURE SUITES' SOLD.\u25a0 \u25a0-

, ' paidUN \u25a0 . \u25a0 \u0084

\u25a0

\\u25a0 \u25a0 .

'\u25a0 U Ray

\u25a0

tountedTb<

»-il'" V.: \u25a0'

im.

Art Exhibition* and Sales.

VEff TORK SCPUEME COURT. xmv yorktJ County— Rosa B. Grotta, PUlnUft. against Johnl*Hart and Chattle DeHart. his wtf«. Bronx r«,,"Company. Mary F. Gray ar.1 John II Wocibury Derma-toloKlcal Institute, defendants —Trial ilfsfej |n wYork County

—Summons. To th* above earned ileri-n !-

aiitu and each ol them: You are hereby summoned toanswer th« complaint In this action, and to serve a cowof your answer on the Plaintiff« Attorney within twentyday« after the uervlce of thla \u25a0 mots, exclusive of thaday of nervte*. an.l tn east of your failure to appearor answer, judgment will lx> taken against you by defaultfor th« relief demanded in the complaint.

Dated. New York. February 4th. iw>mMAX J. BKRNHKIM. Plaintiffs Attorney

Post OHce address and Otllce. No. 37 Wall StreetManhattan Borough. New York City

To the Defendant. Mary V. ilia, The foregoing aua-moni Is served upon you by publication, pursuant to anorder of Boa. James A. OrGorman, Justin- of the Su-premo Court of the State of New York, dated the Istday of April. l*'I*. as>d tiled tltiithe complaint in theOffice of the Clerk of the County of New York at th«County Court House, Borouan of Manhattan. County ofN*w York, on the Ist day •' April. 1!X>»,

Dated New York. April Int. lix*.MAX J. URKNUFJM. I'latntlfTd Attorney.

Office and Post Ortlce address. Wo 37 Wall str«at,Manhattan Uorough. New York City.

Philadelphia, April B.—The Helios cleared fromthis port for Blaye on March -3 with a cargo of831,764 j.-allo!is of petroleum. The cargo v.-is valued

10, snd was owned by th>- Standard OHCompany. She waa formerly th« British steamer

Prince, and eat rted \u25a0• t aboutt-.\<-tit> five ttien

MAJESTIC RESCUES CREW.

Twenty-five Men of Tank Steamer HeliosSaved in Midocean.

Plymouth, April B.—The steamer Majestic, fromNev York, reported i.y wireless telegraphy to-daythe r scue on Vpril 5 of the .-rev ot the Norwegiaitank Bteamer Helios. The vssel was abandonedin latitude -»4 north, longitude 39 west She en-

ntered a storm that last- d three da>s 11.-rbunkers w i•> broken and the vessel listed badly.Her cargo of oil Invaded the stokehole, and its; compi lied the <-rew to abandon the \u0084

The accident to the Helios occurred on Saturdaylust. There was great apprehension that oil would

\u25a0

-One hundred :<rd fifty tons of oil

were ; n the bunkers, but the taok of\u25a0 . ainder waa beyond the efforts of

the crew Th< hei \u25a0 endered 1> impossible toallow the ;un ea to escape.

\u25a0 • sel the m \ eo.-ks andhatches were opened, to facilitate her sinking, asshe w;!s In the direct :m<k of Users

!"Woman Passenger Cuts Wrists and JumpsI Into Sea.| The\Hamburg-Amerlca.i liner Pretoria, which left| Hamburg eighteen days ago and had to put into

Halifax for coal three, days ago. arrived here yes-

i terday after the severest passage she has everencountered on the Atlantic. Three days out fromHamburg Miss Dora Gillar, a second cabin pas-senger, Jumped into the sea after having cut herwrists. Sha was bringing to this country two chil-

dren belonging to her sister-in-law, Mrs. HenryGillar, of No. 312 Bloomfleld street, Hoboken.

The terrific head seas and a steady gale from thenorthwest told heavily on the Pretoria's coal sup-'ply, and at times she was able to log only twoknots an hour. The day's run ended on Thursday

i at noon wad only 143 knots. As the Pretoriapitched and rolled there was a great medley ofvoices from 'tween decks, where five thousandcanaries warbled amid the hissing of a dozenpythons, the howls of ten hyenas, the chattering of

; several hundred monkeys ami the almost continualj roaring of a big lion.

PRETORIA HERE AFTER STORMY TRIP.

Amount to Reduce School Tax Only $100,000This Year.

Trenton. N. •'. April B.—The joint committee onappropriation of the houses completed its workto-day and will present to the Senate to-morrowthe annual and supplemental bills.

The feature of the annual appropriation bill willbe that the usual appropriation of about $1,000,000

0 reduce the t-.tate school tax haa been cut to$100,000. Tho total amount of the annual appropria-

tion bill,exclusive of the $100,000 is ?4.05.C7;» Lastyear's annual appropriation bill, exclusive of$1,012.84012. to reduce the p'at-5 school tax, was$3,818,407 17.

Th( supplemental bill for this year is •>:«\u25a0""*\u25a0> CJjast year the amount was $»;i:2.'"'> f>>.

Most Serious Epidemic on Record- There—

• \u25a0 MilkSupply Blamed.[By Telegraph to The Tribune )

BoEton, April S.—Typhoid fever is raging in Bos-ton, the epidemic being the most serious on record,according to the officials of the Health Board.More than four hundred cases have been reportedduring the last four weeks, and there are more thanthree hundred cases of the disease reported in thevarious city hospitals. The chief centre of the dis-ease is In Jamaica Plain, where 1«9 cases have 1• enreported in the last week. The authorities havetaken strenuous action there to check the disease,and the supply of milk, which the authorities be-lieve is responsible, has been completely rut off andabout ten thousand families which have been get-ting milk from Worcester County dairies will re-ceive none for the next week unless they find othersources of supply.

A NATIONAL WOOL MARKET.

Philadelphia May Be Chosen as the Placefor Great Auction Sales.

Philadelphia. Apr!. 8 (Special).—There la a possi-bility that Philadelphia' may become the greatestwool market In the world. Th* Wool Auction Salescompany of America, which Is now being organ-ized, has for its object the establishment of a na-tional woo! .auction market in the United St iti «,similar to the one in London, England. The choicelies 'tween Philadelphia, .New York and Boston

F. J. Primrose, of No. 134 Chestnut street, Phila-delphia, is \u25a0• th»» head of the organization Alreadya membership of wool growers has been obtained,representing a production of 2,500,900 pounds ofwool annually. The proposition is receiving cordialsupport among the textile trades generally, and itis hoped that the first sales under the new planwill be made within the next six months

Wim such an enterprise will mean to the <\u25a0!»>•which is selected ma be --•\u25a0> by a glance at thostatistics of the London auction sales, which willeventually i- eclipsed by the American sales ifthe plan proves successful. These sales are holdFixteen times a year—in January, March, May,.July, September and November. Bach sale laststwo weeks, and on an average between 4,000,000and 5,000,000 pounds of wool an disposed of dally!At American prices this means sales of about$1,000,000 a day. The year's sales total about$75,000,000. Wool growers and textile manufacturersfrom all parts of th< country would attend thesale?. The project was unanimously Indorsed bythe [Rational Wool Growers' Association at a recent meeting In Helena, Mont.

"The question of location is a vital one, saidMr. Primrose, discussing i;r pubjen. "The salesniriet be held in a place convenient to the buyers,and where shipping and hof>l accommodations hi\u25a0\u25a0

ample. i uav< lv»«»n inclined to favor New Yorka^ the most practical plaoe. but 1 youId be veryglF><] lo ste Philadelphia chosen. It is a matterthat business and trade associations ought tolook into.'.'

text ihat use v . ,tes. 861 a wil - few hours' rid<

At pr< si i t m uiufactun ra areto malnt a buj rs In \\t-st»rn markets

TYPHOID FEVER RAGING AT BOSTON.

Possessed Counterfeit Money, Says

Circuit Court Jury.Joseph M Giordan!, nt;nt in this city of the Fir-

mil! Insurrection, was found guiltyyesterday by ajury in tl." United Stares Circuit Court of having;

in his possession counterfeit Haytlan money to theamount of $700,000

Giordan!, who la i i t lean, was arrested about\u25a0 lonths ago by Captain Flynn, of the Secret

Service, on a charge of counterfeiting Haytlan

lie was convicted on only one of severalcharges— that of having the spurious money in hispossession. Tho jury disregarded the charge that

Giordan! had been a party to the counterfeiting.

Chatfleld remanded the convicted man untilnext Tuesd^j for sent<

Thi arrest of Giordan! was regarded as of con-siderable importance because of the political con-ditions In Hayti, and the work of the Secret Ser-vice agents was In great measure responsible for

Llapse of : \u25a0 Insurrection. Giordan!,\u25a0 at of the revolutionists, bought several thou-

sand rifles and cartridges, which lie attempted t..

ship from here for the Flrmin followers. Thesewere seized by the Secret Service men. There isstill pending against Giordan! a charge of attempt-

ing to ship the war supplies to Hayti from NewYork without marking them as explosives, as re-quired by law

al for having in his possession the.

counterfeit money the defence tried to prove that

It wa? not spurious It maintained that there wasno constitutional government, but that there werer^vo governments de fa^to, one of which author-

ized Giordan! to have the money made here. It

did not resemble t;1* money now in us* in the re-

pul He, It vat testified.

JERSEYS EXPENSES. $4,428,274 90.

HAYTIAX AGENT GUILTY.

Brought Back from San Franciscoby Central Office Mm.

f'entral Office detectives returned last mcMfr..m San Francisco with J. Edward Boeck and

F. ireyer, cnaraed with obtaining 172,000fraudulent \y.

Geyer w; Indicted f"> the larceny of 17,001 •\u25a0>"

March 31 1906, 'us Indictment being obtainedthrough the efforts- of ti^ Fidelity and II'nmpsnv. on April I, lso6. That company hadbeen on hia bond, when \v was acting aa I ;

ler for the Mercantile FinanceCompany, of \.. |j Park How, and when Geyercashed a «iie,-i< for J7.000 made out In favor of the

\u25a0 and then disappeared, the bonding com-tiar\- hail Mm Indicted

.; is accused of the theft of pearls valued at165.000 iron, Edward J. Dayton, a dealer in pearls,..' No. 1 YV.>t S9tii street. He disappeared duringMay. 1997, and haa since that time, it is at'jrticl all Trie pearis Into money through pawn

and other pearl dealers.When fae was arrested In San Fran<-icr-o Boeck

(old the police there that he had just returned fromriiina, anil as $l-:\<vv> \u0084f the loot was still missing:,

believed he hypothecated that portionof bis plunder In the i\,r g^t pcpcaj-ls wort!, $36,000

.\u25a0 , recovered by the police since the allegedlarceny, tmong the jewels still missing are threeof the finest. Dayton told the police that the pris-oner was formerly a ,1, :si«r:si«r In antiques <:id hich< lass jewelrj.

In.v T">Krn;.!i to Th*THbaaa.]Trenton, April I—The Assembly to-night voted to

adjourn sine die Friday afternoon. A more ex-citing diy has seldom been seen at Trenton. The

excitement began when Assemblyman Qlbbs offereda resolution this afternoon that the FTou.se adjourn

nt 3 o'clock Friday afternoon. Robert l>avis,

the Democratic bosn of Hudson County, had prom-

ts-.i to deliver to David Bsird the votes ol eight

Democrats for the resolution, but there was a mis-undcrstandlng and the Democrats voted for Mr.Martin's motion to table. The Republican bosses

who were In the lobby when the vote was taken

became frantic with rage. General Murray and

David Baird sent Mr. Prince to the Democratswitii the information that unless they voted to

adjourn the House the upper police court bill, legis-

lating: many Democrats out of office, would boi issed. This frifjliteiieiithem and they caucusedIt was then agreed to give in to the demands of th*

!bosses,Mr. Martin made sn Impassioned pl<*a to the

;member;, not to adjourn until they had carried outtheir pledges to the people. He sa-id both parties

were on record la favor of reform measures, and'he demanded th House stay In session until these

jmeasures were passed. He said be intended to

!pkire the responsibility where 11 belonged.

Mr. Martin regrett< ithat what Mr. Tumulty SBidtrue, and warned the Republicans that the

same speech would bo made In the next campaigni from Ca,pe Maj to Suraex

When the vote on the resolution to adjourn wastaken three Democrats and eleven Republicans

voted against it, The'Republicans were Braun,

Colgate. Devine, Fake, Mines. U>wrey, Martin,Morgan. Pierce, Whitehead an.l Crosby,' the Demo-era Ho!com be. Morris and Van Cleef.

Mr. Martin's bill, authorising the State TaxBoard, on complaint in writing, to increase or re-duce tax assessments made by the State Board «fAssessors on property of any kind, was passed by

itie House to-night.McCold, of Passaic, was ill,but would have voted

with New Idea men.

Sergeant Who Wounded Fclloxc Of-ficer Released on $10,000 Bail.

Patrotaaa lota nrssnshsn. of the West iTi!iKtreot station, who was shot on Prlday ;it Ninth

avenue n:-.J Hth street by Serjeant James C. Nei-ney, of Inspector Swetviey's staiT, In The Bronx.died early yesterday morn'.nsr in Roosevelt Hospital.

Nerney. who was arraigned before Coroner Ha;-

burger. and, despite tho plr.is of Inspectors Walsh

and Titus, committed to the Tombs prison without

bail t.» await the inquest, was admitted to JIO.'VOball when taken before Justin Hendrick, of theSupreme Court, on a wit of habens corpus, thebond being si^nr.,] by Klias Johnson, an iron manu-facturer a1spuyten DuyviL Deputy Police Com-missionei Hansffn argued for the prisoner's re-lease Aaeistant 1»I«t rl< t Attorney Johnstonsthai the District Attorney's office had oonsented tothe fixir.K of the bail.

Bresnahan was In pursuit of a boy who had be«come impudent, w l.en Sergeant. Nerney rode paston his motorcycle. Roth men were In .-itlzen'p

NVrn.y raught up with Bresnahan, sndin tiir wrangle that ensued, neither knowing theother to l.c a policeman. Bresnalian bit Nerney ontiif iiAa.i witii a blackjack Ne^ney thereupon tiredtwo shots, one of vhlch hit Bresnahan.

This Thursdayand To-morrow iFriday )

Evenings at 3:30 o'Clock

Fishel, Adler & Schwartz313 Fifth Avenue• OFK' ' FOll ABSOLUTE BALK

AT THEIR ABOVE PKEMISE3

THUIR ENTIRE STOCK OP

HIGH CLASS

MODERN PAINTINGSAND WATER COLORS

owiajr to the recent d^ath of

LAST WEEK OF PURE FOOD SHOW.There is only "ii« week more of the. Pure Food

Exposition at the I^-nox Lyceum. Mrs. LilyHax-worth Wallucu will continue, her cocking lecturesevery, afternoon anu evening, and 'the 7lh Regiment

Jiand willbe beard in dally'concert...'. . \ ;.; .

CAB DRIVERS' TEST CASE UP.After two adjournments, Thomas F. Duffy, a cab

driver ami owner, appeared yesterday before Jus-tice rlendrick on a writ of habeas corpus to testthe leguiityof the right of the cab drivers to standtheir vehicles in public places. The motion to dis-miss th* writ was adjourned by consent of WalterI,Rathbone. counsel for Duffy, and Assistant Dis-trict Attorney Johnstone until to-day.

Duffy hroug.it a suit against the Hotel Btlmont,holding thai Independent cabmen had the right tostand and solicit fares in fi;ont of hotels, despitethe ordinance giving to stablemen the exclusiveprivilege. Duffy said that he would bring the mat-ter of granting licenses to independent cab driver*IS) Uic null/.*at UxjLJnh«r tout is.

V<^ILL ALTER HOTEL EARLE.Th \u25a0 Hotel Earie, in Waveriey Place, Is to be ;ii

tered. so t'.at there win be more living roomstop \u25a0^\u25a0ry, the Improvements being made

fin X: deride !' Frleke. v owner, an<l for roi>alr-cUunaga ?a ihe tix story warehouse

\u25a0 . o 3-5 Pearl st., for O. J. Muign<\ as owner.'.i nry A KoelbU ;.rn) iioii^': A Morrison 4ie tiie

h;:ve also been filed for altering the oldcarshops ol the Third Avenue Railroad Obi

aye . from nth t-. gstli n.. and strengthen-«•<••! framework. Pan of the building

i*in be resitted for offices. AxM s Uedman is th«\u25a0

Ltea of the bill Insist that thisil !.»;.ks In the wnii position ;ih trust. . ihe mat ter of taxa4iin

•\u25a0 to-day passed the Senate bill tnodlfy-Hlllery maximum tax rate law. That law

\u25a0\ rati to $17.'. <>n each $H«» for countyi llocal purposes. The bill just pmsod permits'

f26G with tho consent of th<' count)Iication.

APPRAISER'S NEW SECRETARY.George W. Wanmaker. Appraiser of th© Port,

yesterday announced the appointment of WilliamS. Borchers as private secretary, with compensationat »2.600 a year, in the place of Dell A. Baker, re-cently transferred to the Collector's office as pri-vate secretary to the Collector. Mr. Borchers isnfty-Beven years old and has been a. resident ofth« llth Assembly District for more than thirtyfears.

'

NOT GUILTY, SAYS INDICTED BROKERJoseph H. Bulsbacher, a broker, who was indicted

on charges of forgery in the third degree, grandlarceny in the second degreo and attempting to re-nvive a witness from the Jurisdiction of th« court.pleaded not guilty to all of th<« charges in theCourt of '"\u25a0eneraf Sessions yesterday. Tho plea waaentered with leave to alter it wlthia a week.

The i!rm with which Sulzbacher was connectedwan Investigated and the Indictments were found.He was charged with the larceny of 100 shares ofst..< k. the property of iainille J, Ludman. For thealleged alteration of the books of the company to

conceal the theft he was charged with forgeryHenry J. Wyatt. a clerk employed by the firm,testified that Sulzbacher had offered him mouey toleave the jurisdiction of Urn court, and this resultedin th* third charge.

Sulzbacher was arrested on January 10. but be-cause of a press of business in th«! lilatrtct Attor-

ifßce the ease was not called until yeatarday.Janus \\ Osborne, counsel for the prisoner, askedfor a reduction of the bond to lIo.OOD, on whichkiulzbacrn-r is held. The application was denied.

Chauffeur Tells Magistrate They Made Him

Exceed the LimitAccording to Sergeant Casey, chief of the motor

and r-vvie police, llva patrolmen were ia an auto-

mobile when Its chauffaw was arrested at S6thfxyp t >>n Tuesday night for speeding. Norman H.

\u25a0holle, the driver, of No. a Kast 76th street, whenarraigned In the West Side court yesterday toldMagistrate Wahle that he exceeded the speed limit

because the patrolmen told him to. The accused pa-trolmen are bicycle men and had their machines\u25a0with them, according to the ser^e;ip.t Sdiolle washeld in $100 bail for trial.

The cr-so was brought to the attention of Deputy

Police < 'ommissioncr Hanson. He, said that an in-vestigation would be nmde.

POLICE IN SPEEDING AUTOMOBILE.

rians have also been filed for remodelling thesynagogue at Nos. 310 and 312 lOast 72d st OrtoBpannbake is the architect.

MORE FIRE EXITS FOR PUBLIC SCHOOLS.' B, .T Snyder, chief architect of the Depart-

;\u25a0 Education, ha* filed plans for increasing

the number ot exits by remodelling windows into

In th'^ kindergarten Of School 106. in L,a-

fu\ette. St., and on the top story of School mo, at

St. Nicholas a% ». and 117th pt.

According to tine polire. there was no foundationfor th< rumor that an attempt to blow up th*

school would be made.

Attlllio Ciccone, eleven years old, of No. 7 Gax-slde street, was bruised, bolng trampled upon.

Several other children and one of the women wereslightly injured, but were able to return to theirbom< s

The gates of the school were broken down by theexcited mothers, most of whom were Italians, andthe principal of the school called for police assist-ance. When the reserves arrived they found menand women rushing througti the halls of the schoolcalling In English and in Italian the names of theirchildren. The teachers stood by powerless to con-trol the jmob

J. C. McLaury. the principal, ordered tlie classesdismissed a few minutes before the gates weresmashed" in., and when the crowd of womenswarmed up the main stairs and were in danger oftrampling upon one another he ordered the otherdoors of «he building opened.•

Antoinette Ruglio. thirteen years old. of No. <0

Garside street, was knocked down and trampled

upon. She was attended by Dr. Caruso and tak-nto her home.

Rumors That Building Would Be

Dynamited Cause Wild Panic.Rumors that the Seventh Avenue Public School

in Newark was to bo blown up by dynamiters, inrevenge for not fiaving received money demandedfrom tho parents of Italian pupils, caused a riot ofmothers and relatives in the school yesterday, anda number of children were injured in the wildstampede m the halls and on the stairs of thebuilding;.

MOTHERS STORM SCHOOL.

Carlin fled, but was captured by Harrison andGeorge Ponyies, another neigtibor. after a "chase oftwo blocks, and turned over to the police.

Youth Comes Straight from Prison

to Shoot Wornan inHer Home.Bernard Carlln, who lias fipent sixteen of tho

twenty-one years of his lif>in truant schools andreformatories, hastened to Brooklyn after being re-leasf-d from Xapanoch Prison. Ulster County, andkillod his mother yesterday. The only reason hegavf for his act was, "Because stM was making

me do "bits' all my lif°," meaning by "bits" shortterms in prison.

Ca rlin was released from Urn prison on Tuesday,and reached Brooklyn that afternoon. He pur-chased a revolver with which to kill his moOher,

Mrs Susan Carlin, who lived at No. 557 Qulncystreet, but vaited until yesterday to do the shoot-ing. He v to his mother's flat, and whenshe came to th» door sent five bullets into herhead before she foil to the floor. Then he ran Intotihe apartment and began snapping the pistol athis Fister Mary and his infant brother. R. T. Har-rison, who lives in the flat above the Carlins, heardth» shots and ran downstairs.

JAILBIRD KILLS MOTHER.

Hugo Kanzlfr said a. fine amounting to twenty

days' pay would he more than enough. R. B. Ald-croftt, jr.,counsel for the buildingcommittee, wasnot present, but remarks were made by A. LeoEverett and George Freifeld. the tenor of whichwas for dismissal.

Thf argument, continued an hour and a half, andthen the board formally adopted the committee"*report, reinstating Mr. Cameron."I have purposely kept away from each commis-

sioner since the charges were made." said Mr.Cameron, laier. \u25a0\u25a0( wanted to be tried on the facts.The suspense has been very trying."

George S. Davis, associate «:ity superintendent

of schools, was appointed president of the NormalCollege. The post has b*en vacant since Septem-ber. UOft The salary Is 58,250.

Board of Education Accepts Build-ing Committee Report.

Aflrr a long debate the Board of Education ac-rrptcd yesterday the report of the building com-mittee in the case of Caleb W. Cameron. Inspectorof masonry, charged with approving second-handpianos for the public schools which were paid forat prices char-Red for new instruments.

Tim debate revolved around the motion offered byRupert B. Thomas", who said the report of thebuildingcommittee should be modified.

"Instead of fining Cameron forty days' pay an-Jcharging him with neglect of duty and misconduct,

while stating definitely that he had been found notguilty of incompetence, the . report," said Mr.Thomas, "should contain merely a mild reproachto tho effect that Cameron has been guilty of in

error of Judgment." He was opposed to any fine."No man Is successful who does not make mis-takes." Mr. Thomas added.

Abraham Stern favored the adoption of the re-port, and spoke incomplimentary terms of the ser-vice, which, he said, Mr. Cameron had rendered tothe. board for ten years. "I have been carefullyover all the testimony in this case." continued Mr.Stem, "and so has Frederic R. Coudert. Mr.Coudert is not here to-day, but he told me that. in

view of the evidence, there was nothing for us todo except dismiss the charges unproved."

"Mr. Cameron has had to bear the brunt of allthis", but when the testimony Is looked at any

one can see that tho culprits are the piano mak-er*.

'"said George W. Wingate.

CAMEROX REINSTATED

SUPREME COURT. NEW YORK COUNTY.—MATHIIrO da Tlll>. l*U;ntlf.against John A Tilly. Defendant.Action for absolute di\orre. —To the above twined De-fendant: You are hereby summoned to anawer the com-plaint in this action, and to serve a copy of your answeron th* oUtntltT's attorney within twenty days after '.hiservice of this summons, exclusive of the day of s*rvice:and In case of ) >ur fall' re to appear or answer Judgmentwill be taken against you by default for the relief do-manded In the complaint.

l>.ii..1 New York. October loth. 1007.ACtilI. J. OISHEI. Plaintiff* Attorney. Office and

Post Office. Adiir.as. -V> Broadway. Borouxh of Man-hattan. N. Y. City.

To the above named Defendant: The foregoing summonsIs berved upon you without the StutA of New York, pur-suant to an ord*r of th lion. James PllaMraldi one ofthe Justice? of the Supreme Court of the State of NewYork. County of New Tork. Bald Orde* being dated th*6th d.iv of Matca, I(K>>. and filed with th« complaint Inthe office of th* Cler'c of th* County of New York, onthe llthday of March 1008. ruted New York. March 11.ACHII.L.E J. OISHKI. PlatnufTs Attorney. Offlos and

Post OflU* Addn as. 200 Broadway. Bitrougb e£ M*a-' battaa. K. Y. Clt j.

TUF> PEOPLE OK THE STATE OF NEW \u25a0' *'J2Lthe sra.e i>f Ood free and independent. t» H-1^

C. £and». Arthur B. Saml«. UvinK H. Sap-is ar.d fc^Vf'Mosely J?a::da. his wife; Emma S. Montchyk and r.J£eace Sands, the h*!rs ar.tl r.-?xt of kin of t-r:::s**-

Sands, deceased, send cretins: . -..,•,Whereas. Louise !j. Red* of the City of New /i' }as lately applied to tne Surroca:es Court o«. "^

County of New York to have certain Instrument •»writing,dated the seventh day of November. 19» •-*

the secoaJ day of Jun.-. 11W reiatlns «o P<"rsa:*property, duly proved a» th* laat willand te»J.iss*.-«and COOtet] of Emnu C. Sar..ia. iat« o( tba

*ounty '\u25a0•

New York, deceased, therefor* you »:id e^.-h •! s^*ara cited u> appear b. f.ir" the Surrogate of MB *-^.u-^.u-^,of New York, at his office in in*County of New T»r^

on the 2«th Jay of May. liKtS. at half-past t?n oc.se*In thrt forenoon of thar day. then ar.J th*T« 10 »t:t;,the probate of the said last will artvl tesraraes; a"

codicil. ...And such of you as are hereby cited, as ar- u=a«r. the ace of twenty-one »e«irs. are required MarP^ar sj

your guardian, if you hay* one. or. tf you h.iv« twb*

to appear an.l apply for on* to be appointed, or !=,{"*event of your neglect or failure to do so. a juarJ"»iii be appointed by the Surrogate tt> repres«:-.t sa>»act for >ou In the prooeedlns .

In testimony whereof, we have caused t>* »'*|°'

the Surrogates Court of the said OVutkv of >•• JJJto be hereunto aflixed. Witness. Hot.. .U>m»

[L. S] i". THOMAS, ,i :si:-oci'- of our said t'auatrof New York, at said county, the 31st •'••? «

March. IMS. -^ OA l̂Kh \u0084 poWPNET.Clerk of th.- Surrogate's Court.

people ok Tim state or new torjc. btJ. the grace of God tree and Independent, to *.••*»

A*«el an executor named In aaid will;Mathlld* o**l*"

iriv.ii il>-<r*<- A. Sellgmann. Arthur K. sw» ignvann. «•heirs and next of kin of Maurice Seiljmana. vl*-ceased, s«nd greeting : „ . fc%J

Whereas. Albert Btum, of the City of *» Tors. B*»lately «rrlle«l to the Surrocatea' Court of our «-«i-/of New York to have a certain Instrument in wrnbearing date June U. IUO:>. relating to both rjjaJ **,personal property, duly proved M th» last ,*'1 »°JJtestament or Maurice Selt«mana. late of ,h«i 2"V«iNew York, deceased, therefore you and eaca v J™»

are cited to appear before the-

-«*:•» •*our I".^of New York, at his olßoe in the County of New TJ".

on th. 20U» day of April, one thousand nine huctfr*^and eight. at half-past ten o'clock Is th» *

i>f* }B1

w;that day. then and there to atlsnj the proh-.ts of

"•aid last will and teatatnant. And »uch of you 4* «•hereby cited as are under the age of i««nty-05« r»*Jare required to appear by your «uardi*n. If you. -\u25a0

one. or. If you have none, to appear «nd apply tor as, to l.» apaolnted. or la the event of your «.««';

failure to*do m a cuarjian willb« appointad by «-»Surrogate to represent aad act for you \u25a0 t,£v» F^

I C"n testimony whereof, we have caused ,thes,»t^| th. SurroiaU.- Court of the »aW County of >•« "JJ

to be hereunto aiflteJ. Witness. Hon. «-_!«•«•, ISeal.J H. Beckett, a Surrogate of our "£T<g"S

of New York, at said county, the -Jth aay «

IFebruary in the year of our Lord one thousand »«»•hundred and eight ptS

,KLj. coWDXET.

Clerk of tao tuirofin* Own*

>.«« York City- :•>v^

4 \EW-YiMiK DAILY TRTBI :—:, THUBSDAY, APRIL 9. IMS.

SHOT POLICEMAN DIES.Sales by Auction.

ADJOURNMENT HIIDAY

Bosses Swing Big Stick and Jersey

Lawmakers Bon to Orders.

NO PARTY PLEDGES KEPT.

R. FULTON CUTTING. Pres.

APPEALING FIGURES.Families hcln& aided by the AstnciaUon for

Improving the Condition of the Poor:

January 1 2.475February I • • 2.9+9

March I • >-+52

April I _ \u25a0 .4.066These figures mean for many thousands no

work to be had. savins* pone, health Impair*!by want and despair, homes broken up-

Will you.help by prompt and |UHMI aid torelieve present suffering of women and childrenand to prevent demoralization that years cannotundo?

Gifts largo and small may be sent to R. S.

Minturn. Treas., BOO*J 212, No. 103 East 22dSt., Now York.

7'IJO FUGITIVES C.trailT.

Fifth AuctionAvenue Rooms

HENRY HARTMAN. Auctions.Incorporated.

-No.. 3.13-3-11 4th Ay.. S. E. corner 23th SI.To-day at 2 Clock

and continuing following days at mm* hour ua«n •_*>

locluJlnc April 13. •""*a*

Extraordinary Sal*By order of th«

AIMONEMANUFACTURING CO.

w]i» \u25a0*%» decided to close out t&elr tmporatiM. vordor to <t»rot« more «pac» t» th<«ir Jlasnfac--...Department*. ?7~*v'iA Grand Collection of

Carrara andD'lstrian Marbles

Suitable for GarJen an-t Household «\u25a0-«\u25a0—,.,-'TT-!u<iinE Replica* of th« Vatlcaa m4-.,m4-

.,, -riv*"

Benches. Lions and Column*. Fonts. >»'*;• -r,'^'etc. also

**•»*•.

Antiques and Furniture,Oomprlslr.* Choice Example* of th» Per!o.«a- »--.XIII..XIV.. XV. XVI.. Empire. Ad*-£ Ch'OT.-V?'Sheraton. French an.l Italian R*r<».laMnca.

<iZIS*-Pompelan. and Dutch. including" Koa **

Ricn Aubusson Tapestry SuitsWe.ldlnr Ch»st». Roman Tabl»s. a L»r*. Cor>»*..«. .Antique Mirrors. Paintings. L»a?her St-^b-^.- 0*<*An Fr.« Vt«w tillhour of sal*.

Citations.