twelve. james mccreery h j e a zr^i r · 23rd street 34th street james mccreery & co,...

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34th Street 23rd Street James McCreery & Co, AITOMOBTLE APPAREL, lv Both Stores. On Sale Friday and Saturday, November the 29th and 30tlt. Ladies' Calfskin Coats 02.."50 Men's Calfskin Coats 28.00 Men's Dogskin Gloves 5.50 Men's Lamb lined Hoots 6.75 THE GOLD DRAIN. HEN A MAN is out with J a hammer his liver is doing the knocking. Recommend T2T 2 Glass BBsya4i Jiaos Witer ne 1 •" Breakfast. Kn rURAL LAXATIVE WATER Bottled at the Springs. Avoid substitutes. CLARK'S CRUISE OF THE "ARABIC." Tie.'*-- tons. fine, lurse. c Tr i unusually uttady. J I (y) 11 Hull lyllraijl&ilKi U KHUI'.rARY 6 TO APKIL 17. 1008. Peve-.ty days, »'.liig only JioO.OO AND UP Including shore excursion*. SPECIAL FEATI'UKS. liaiclra. Cadiz. Sevlllo. At- »\e:" Malta. VJ DAYS IN EGYPT AND TUB HOLY LAND. Constantinople. Athens, r.tine. the lUviera, etc. TOURS ROUND •1 iIL. WOULD. 40 TOURS TO EUROPE. rr.ost eomprehenstva and »tua> tive e\rr offered. i. *-'. CLARK. Tlmaa Uliit-. n^y VorK. Low (Bates ts Euiok BY IKE FM3 FWESS3 and v?. FIRST 01-ASS BY THE i iteamer. FOIXOWINGJUINES AKEOTi'^r.T'IKC From Pier 13. tit. FJ^YMOfTH CHERB'O— SoIITHAMI TON New York Nov. 30iPhlIade:pbU..D li Kt. Tx>u!s De.'. 7 .^t. Paul Dec. 2i ?.'37>, CTI «> \u25a0 "V - From Pior NEW YORK —AN I r . PAitlS. Merlon '• \u25a0. 4|Kroonlaod ...Dae 21 Vaderland..v.r*ec. 111/.Mind lan. 1- V/FSTS "~A ;r VWE yrom Plor , muis^iaKU tH N X , NKW YORK B'NSTOWN LIVERPOOI* •tvdrle. .Dec. 5. 10 A.M. I Arahlc .Dec \u25a0Celtic. IX 12, 11:30 AM I>e.^ 27 PLYMOUTH- CHERB'G •tAdriatic. Dec. 4. »AM I •Oceanic... Dec 17 •Teutonic. D>C 11.10 AM|*Maje«tlc. V<r 24 tNew. 25.0*> tor.a; has Elevator. I Gymnasium. Turkish Paths an.^ *l^n»?. ! »NK\V YORK 4: IT-i LV &• -p ' STS T BOSTON TO iiii-i-* «Z CU.i i ) Via Asores, Mad'ira. \u25a0lbraltar. Alricrs. j •HKPI'IU.IC Nov. SO. Jan. 2S. Murci: 7 •ROMANIC !><-. 5. Ffh. 1. \u25a0' >• -h It •CHEn*IC ...Dho. 11. Mai 28. V.-iv 0 •rAVOPTC (..Jan. 11. Feb. 22. April 4 *C3:^ ; C:y:^ tons. J JAN. 4. FLU. 15 PASSENGER >OFFICE, 0 BROADWAY i FrelKht Ofhto. Whitehall Bide.. P.attery I'l. : or tub North German Lloyd Kaiser Wilhelm dor Grossa Kronprinz Wilhelm Kronprinzessin Cecilia and Kaiser Wilhelm 11. KEW \u25a0IEAB£^ GBHTRAI. TV.o II'M. i: train to Philadelphia evepy HOI H on THJS li-.'("IL FOIt PHILADELPHIA. 1... W. COD ST. :— C.50. 7.50. 8.20. B.st>. ».?0. 10.50. 11.2 W. 11.50 v. rr... 12.M. \2". 1.50. 2- 50, S.SO, 4.20. 4.50. 6.50, G.fiO. 7.C". :\u25a0 it. 11. oO i>. m. oua- <iiy«, 7.50, >.;\u25a0). U.iiO. 10.50; 11.. a. m.. 1i.50. 1.00. 2.50, 360. 4.5 U. i.SO. so. 7.60. 6.M, 10.20, 11.50 p. m. 1... LIBERT? 5T.;— 1.30. 8.30. 7.00. 9.00. c to 6.00, 10.< W. 11.00. 11.30. moo a. m.. I 00. l.ao. 2.00. S.OO. 4,00, 4.30. .*'\u25a0"». 6.U0. '.I') ski, t.OO p. m.. i- 1 IS midnight. Su:.- ta}a, 1.30. is. "JO. «•»•. 10.00 U.iiO a. m.. ; YZ.iyj . on, 1.00. 2.W). 3 •- . 4.W>, 6.00. 6.00. 7.00. 8.00. l».O0. lo.ao i.. m.. !.,.•\u25a0 tnlght. FOR BALTIMORE AND WASHINGTON. Lv W. S3D ST.'— 7.9o. ».CO. 11. Jo a. ax.. I.Be. 3.>>. 650. t0.60 >. m. dally. 'L.v. LIBERTY ST.:—I.BO. 8.00. 10.00 a. m.. 12.00 cooa. S.OO. 4.00, 6.f0. 7.C« p. m. dully. FOR ATLANTIC CITY.— I*. V 7. £'.D tl'. 5».."»o a. m. (12.50 Sals. only). H.XD p. m. Sundays. 9.M a. .... -.0 p. in. Lv. I.IBEKTY ST.: ifliOO a. in. <1.00 e-\t'. only). 5.40 \u25a0„. v*. tju&daya. ly.uu a. in . 2.80 p. m. FOR LAKKWOOD AND LAREH Lv. W. 23D ST.:— 0.50 a. in. (12.3P <jats. enly). 1.20. 3.--"0. 8.50, 4.50 (C.20 tat». or.iy) p. :n. Hunlay*. a.'M. 'j.. r a. D. 2-«0 p. m. Lv LIBERTY ST.: -4 00. 10.00 a. in. (1<»' Bata only). 1.30. 3.40. 4 10, S 08 (6.i<j hats, only) a. ni. bundays. aoj, 10000. m.. 2."'J p. m. FOX LONO BRANCH, ASBURY PARK AND OCEAN GROVE. I.v. W. 23D ST.:— t.20. 11. 30 a. m.. 12.50. 4.30 6.20. 0.20. 8.20. II"•) p. m. ti.:..lays. too a. m.. ...T.O. b.-u p. n:. LIBERTY 5T.:— 4.00. B.SO. 11.30 Lv. mtEUTY ST.:— 4.OS, f 30. J1.30 a. m.1.10. 4.45. ' .".". •\u25a0 \u25a0". - '.' i. m.. 12.U1 itiio: ial.:. Sundays. 4.u>. b.ou a. in.. 4.00. 8.30 p. in. r::-.» tables may obtaln?<! at following offices: Liberty St. «West 234 St. TeL 3144 Chelsea). C A»;or llouie. 2+5. 44. i::*" 1 . 1554 liroadway. I*J Fifth Ay.. -M Pitta Ay.. 25 Union square West. 2"t»» Tiilrd A... lUI Wui 125 th St.. 243 Columbus Ay.. New York; 4 Court St.. 343. 344 Fultcn St.. 47» Nostrand Ay.. Brooklyn; S9<j Broadway. WllUarnabqiß. New York Transfer Co. calls (or and chutes bs^gaga (o » . \u25a0; jjr.itlo-i. W. O. BKSLER. W. C HOPE. Vlc*-I"rea. &Oen. :f *-. Gen. fasa'r Agaat. 10-28-07 BALTIMORE k OHIO R. R. ROYAL BLUE I.FNE TRAINS. "Every other hour on tne even hour." TO BALTIMORE AND WASHINGTON*. 1.-.v New York P;i!ly. 23.' ?t. Llb'v .^t. %VASHINOTON. Sl'pers, ll.r.ftprn 1.30 am WASHINGTON. Dln»r. 7..'.0 .-mi S.W am WASHINGTON. Diner. 9.3o>an) lttOOam WASHINGTON. Diner. ll.ro am 12.t*> r/n WASHINGTON. Buffet. l-Bftpm 2.00pm ••ROTAI* itTD." Diner, 3.80pm 4.00 ym WASHINGTON. I>lner, B.SOpna \u2666'.."o WASHINGTON. Buffet, «i 50 pin 7.00 ytu Through Dally Trains to the West. CHICAGO. PIT! -1.1 RO. 7.80 am .H.dO am niii-A(:o. rou'linus. 11 BO am 12.ft»n - n n rrsßi \u25a0 'i.:-. el d. S.f.O pm 4.00 pm "PIT rSBURO LIMITI D." «SO pm 7.''o pm rrN..sT.Loins.torisv.. 11..T0 pm 1.20am CIN..ST.LOUIS.LOUISV.. B.Wara lo.uoaru CIN..BT.LOUIS.LOUISV., .'\u25a0:\u25a0- rra tJ.f(»im ALL TRAIN ENTER NEW UNION STATION. WASHINGTON, D. 0. Offices: 24.".. 434. 1300 Broadway. 6 Astor Hi ..'• IC* ireenwlc St , a I'l m Square W.. SOI Grand Bt* N. V.; S-J3 Fulton tt.. Brooklyn: West 23d St. and Liberty St. After 6 p. vt. Sleepir.s tar Kea«rratJor.s anJ full informatiOD r<-4ardlnc trains, etc.. ..an be obtained :.t 15ur«au of Information. I?. &. O. H. R.. SJ. icrmli.^l. 'I'lione Nui.iber. Cheliea— AH. N. V. X. H. A HARTFORD R. Tl. Ttslr.s depart from Grand Central Statloo. I2iJ st.^uri 4th Ait., as fallows far li«fton "la New London i Prov.—tt 'lO:N>. |||10:00, •\u25a0t|lt |1i. 02 A. M.. tt 1 :•-'<*. •* ;l:"3. •i S:00 tl s:t>o. •' 3:02. ••12:ih> P. M.. via Wtlllmentlo t^bili."; A. M.. '- \u25a0•; P. M.. via Bpfd.— t»J3 ...:.•.-•-.• •Il:<»> p. M. Wor"itet & Fitch., vis Putnam. TS:BO P. M. Lak»Tlll« & Norf.— tiOKK) A. M., t3:2«i P.M. «t. Barrtnaton. Storkbrtdga Ler.oi. Pitts- ne;d-t4:54. i\'J:(K> A. M.. t3:26 P. 11. Ticket offices at c<".i. Cent. St'n and cli'Jh St.. als>) at .:»:. 12i«>. c1354 B*waj 29 In.on So, d»2 .">:ii Ay»., v \u25a0 >' Col. Ay«., r.^(« fith Ay».; c»M:» Mjil. A-.*.. rlO5 W. Tilth Ft.. :\u25a0:\u25a0'•> \u25a0" . Aye. in F.klyn. c4 Court St.. 4?ri Nostrand Aye.. ZW H"nay. •Dairy. TEx.vj.t Sundays. IStops at 125th Ft. x.stors at 12.'.th St. Sundays only. (Parlor car Limited, ISunday parlor car trail. llKas dining oar. cParlor and Sjlecptnc Car tickets also lEH B Jli:T»loKTpre!« ;*..... iuii*i;.Miia l;-iffiI.-Ctif<-»iC<»Kxprr>». .. 'M.WAM 'iI:».MA X 1H v X I»l.\M»>N!> EXP..j*tLSS « H[»l2.COs p a Ctilraei>- - Vo-on'tiK«WV»fc..i»n?l.4t) P a'*xS.4O X KB rJT A t.O TIIVIN ..! *7 53 Pm ; *^,IX>!• it I" Tl<~k''f "< iffift'-'n : "jsSHiiiljTso f.rj-t.!»'yr. Us w iii) A&> IKH LL & fS 1 11 1-i* mm Cairo to Luxor and tha First Cataract. Hateeaea l»ec. iMllUiiiebea Ja-i. 1* i:sypt Dec. iil [Egypt ..Jan. -'l ldmeso* the Gt.Jan.?|Rameaea r ti*» '.: ,lar'.'« and »\u25a0•:.. thereafter, cuiiiifcttiit; with sei-- \ \ra fur the tjocunil Cauir.tct, Kliartoon 1 . Uganda, Ac In addition Cxuk's L'xpreia Steaxnera «;<ll every ilunduy and t'ri!aj\ Luxurious clahal'i alis und apecia] ateamem tor charter ti> riiiiilifs and prl\ate parties. ANXIIAL SKKIKS *->V TOI'KS Ti» Till: ORIENT 1-avo Jj-i •». 1«. 1?. 20 ftb. l. l- a \u25a0 p,C r- 243. i.auo Braadrrar. BJ'J SladUon -••'\u25a0.. Grto Fifth aye. (Windsor Arcade), New \-<r<<. "RED "D" i : si. **• For Ia C;uayi*. IMerto «.'at'Ho. Curacao Ri"l Mancaibo. via Curacito. call- Inic fc.fo m tan Juan. I*. II.: S.H. CAIIAi MS fa-.urilny. I"c.I "c. T. n"t>n s.s. riiiUM'Ki.rui \..sa!.. I si Mon •For lj tJu.iiru, Curaia.>. Mnra<-aibo: F.F. SI VKA<*Ali :<-> .Vamr-J.iy. N..\. :d<. i^.ti fci.-V >'! 1.1 '. KatunJajr. Dec 14. noon Thexe (teanerß haTe eupeflQf »tcvniai»" <lail«r.» for f»»«vn«rr» ltfH*l-Tf'N IllJ**' i I«\t,!.r.lT. Oan<i UanaV. 1 Wall St. (F®a° [Pct/^Gd . ; . 3D Stcamshlpa of tt.« Jit:i> Tf' LINK will •all from rl<r 11. tifar Wall St. i"e.-ry, Krocklyn. fcr S tr. Juan direct «» roilow»: K.S. i'X»:At*A- t-'.»tun!ay. D«:c. 7. noon to.ti. rHILAPELPHIA.-.bat.. !*\u25a0• 21. noon Vor frclnlil cr |«<sdK^ a; i.ty to COULTON. BLISS a I-AI.LFVTT. Ueneiul Mena^ers. S2 Wall St. FVI frltcrmHlon ccm-enlr; tfies^ r"om» n-«y bo bad. tret uf charjjp, v* the Uj,town Office of Th» New-York Tribune. 1354 Broadway, between 3oth and 37th ats. UO.\m> AND ROOMS* Eicsla lN£ert!cn» 5 cents p»r line. :i** teen wor!s. »')vea Uxnea consecutively. H. ivtiloh er.uti*a a^vertUer to bava r>^rri» entered tor a r«rlt>J vl fourteen Jays la The Trtt>ui;e"B Directory of L>«sira!ji6 Kuoaa. Wnta fcr circular. «'T A Vi:f.OCF/ "— Fast itaH:m Lice. *~* Fut'.ln* toon Plat C 4. North Rlv»r. ft. of 34th 6t.. for Naplca and r.enoa. Hsrtrwld. gol«rl i, Co. IP IVitll Si. KTKAMIJOATS A ! A .' .\J \u25a0 . \u25a0• f - s >.. \u25a0 The ethers of the party arrested were M!ss Rice's brother, Thomas Rice; Karlo Ovlnston, of No. MM West 8«h street; l avid Walker, of No. lOi West *Bth street; Albert Harris, of No. BO West S6th street, and Benjamin Bear, of No. 7 East S7th street Each was fined $10. They had only $S amoni* them, and It was a long time before a friend lent the men enough money to pay th'i fines. Miss Rice was paroled on a promise to pay her fine this morning. MRS. RICES DAUGHTER ARRESTED. Mi-: Dorothy Rice, of N'-->. Mti Wi I \u25a0\u25a0 daughter of Mr.. W'.;l. Rice, bead < t tba E for the Suppression of Unnec -. iry Noises, wj i Sued JiO for i^j).-t.-'lin^' by Uagiatrat* Harrman, the Wesi - Murt, y«-sterday moriiiiig. Mi.'.-. }{'\u25a0\u25a0<\u25a0 vlus on-; of a party of si* motor cyclists ar- ufter a long chase tn Broadway, on their way to the meet of the N>:W York Motor Cycle at Pelbam Manor, wher* they were to par- ticipate In the race?. Beflor Bolafloa .-^U'. In explanation of the ship- ment of the war material while the peace con- ference was going on, that the order f<>r it was pi i in Europe by bis govi rnmeni a---". "Perhaps they an.- to bo used to facilitate the i"-a'- mid union plan." was t ... .- ment of one of the doubters. For many >rur<i President Zelaya regarded as the chief disturber or thn peace ol C ntra] America, but with the convening in \v.i iiii d of the Centra] American peace con- ft \u25a0 ted by President Roosevelt General U .' pp< ••\u25a0• \u25a0 :n'-- n leader li* the movemi at I i permanently end \i\'. mittent wars In that purt of the. v,"r.i. H ]> not only readily fell In with the suggestion for th-- conference, but after appointing delegates to it called a peace conference of his own at ! pala, which the doubting ones regarded as nn effort to counteract the work <~ r the Washing- ton conference. He also Informed one of his diplomatic representatives that In the further- ance of tho peace plan, and If it wo<-g neces- sary to the formation of a union r.f the five Centra] American republics, Jib would resign his offlceand the people could ele.it whom: \u25a0 I as his successor. experts, however, were dubious, and now they J>r>.- boasting of their jln-; Judgment, for jti-i about the time that the Wanhington con- fen i. \u25a0': opened the cargo of cartridges and gun mountings was being transshipped to Nica- ragua. This shipl ' rted of sixteen >\ises of mountings for m hii \u25a0• kau and t \u25a0\u25a0 ammunition 1? caina to t!,i 3 pert from Lon- amshlp Minneapolis, consigned to Plo Bolanos, consul genera] of Nicaragua tn this c!^. .• tii«>t was transshipped to Managua. President Zelaya Imports Cargo of War Material. Those experts on Central American politics who cast their doubts on the motives of Presi- dei I v. lays of Nicaragua when he appeared re- cently aw the most ardent of peace advocates are now Justifying their disbelief in General Zelaya's good Intentions by circulating the story of a large warlike shipment made from Europe by way of Now York by the Nlcaragriian government. ARMS. TALKS PEACE. Old time Theories and New one- tary Situation*. London, November 20. The gold drain from America subjects estab- lished methods of English banking and Euro- pean finance to unprecedented strain. It has v>?-n met in the traditional way by successive advances of the bank rate, but there has been .k -wider area of monetary disturbance than has b»~n known during the. present generation. The oldtimfl theory of tho operation of Sir Ilobert PeePs banking act was a simple application of the general law of demand and supply. The Is- \u25ba :\u25a0 of paper money was regulated automatically ro that the banknote circulation shrank when The bullion was drawn cut. This process in- volved a decrease in the money current in the kingdom, and consequently an augmentation of Its value. The Inevitable effects wen a tem- porary rise In the rate of interest and remit- tances of money from the Continent and all parts ft the world to London, where it became more valuable than any merchandise. It was the ihepry of Lord Overstone. the ablest defender of the banking act, that the rectification of in- ternational exchanges would be effected more speedily by the reduction of current money and ro increase of its value in relation to commodi- ties than by an expansion of paper Issues. This has been the accepted practice in previous mone- tary crises and it has been repeated in the pres- ent instance. The cautionary measures have been promptly taken and there have been abrupt advances of the bank rate. Instead of waiting for dear money to produce the natural effect of attracting gold and rectifying exchanges, the bank directors have brought pressure to bear upon Continental capitals for increasing the Imports of bullion. They wore so successful last week that the reserve was enlarged to £21,- 113,000 in spite of the exports of gold to Amer- ica, Yet international exchanges have been com- .letely upset and the financial tension through- out the world is so great that a continuance of ihese drastic gold hunting operations may meet with widespread resistance. Conservative financiers are constrained to ad- rait that the stock of cold in the Bank of Eng- land Is not large enough for supreme emergen- cies. While the banking act offers adequate protection against overissues of paper money «nd supplies a stable currency system, it has not operated either to increase the reserves of gold in the issue department or to enlarge the banknote circulation available for the require- ments* of commerce. In ordinary conditions these disadvantages are inconsiderable in com- parison with the benefits of a sound currency, which regulates itself mechanically in accord- ance with demand and supply, but when a Monetary crisis arises abroad and London, as the free market for gold, is subjected to an «x- l:austive drain the necessity for a larger reserve J- ; apparent. It may be an open question whether the kingdom would or would not be in better condition for competing with foreign industries and handling the business of the empire If the note issues of the bank were doubled or trebled. It cannot be doubted, how- ver, that London as the monetary centre of •he world would have largely increased re- sources for steadying exchanges and minimizing disturbances like the American crisla If there were In the Issue department of the bank a Ftock of bullion two or three times as great as It has been. The gold reserves of the bank available for the conversion of the note circu- lation have remained virtuallystationary during ti-e last thirty or forty years. This result has *<itisn>d bankers and theorists alike because iVy accepted the dictum of Sir Robert Peel that as much currency as business interests would require could invariably be supplied auto- matically under the banking act without inter- i-rence from the board of directors or from i reasury officials. It is not until a foreign crisis names on that the truth is appreciated that the risks of gold exports, of violent fluctuations of Interest and of high tension In all international \u25a0 changes are materially increased by a gold re- >'-\e much 6inaller than it ought to be. When this emergency arose the gold i tech available in the Bank of England was £17.685,- f-y*. The bullion reserves of the Bank of Prance were over six times as great; those of the Imperial Bank of St. Petersburg were over Jive and a half times as large, and those of th-i Jiational banks of Berlin and Austria-Hungary combined were nearly five times as great. Of ?he total gold stocks carried by the chief na- tional treasuries and banks about one-fortieth tvu in the Bank of England. While foreign countries had adopted practical measures for enlarging their gold reserves it had not been considered either expedient or necessary to fos- ter a more general use of paper money and to provide an increased etock of gold for its re- demption. The bank act of 1844 had been ac- < «;pted as pacrosanct and unalterable, and the "re.: market for gold exports and Imports was even more of a fetich than free trade itself. "Whenever there was a gold drain the bank rate could go up by leaps and bounds, and the bul- lion merchants could be depended upon to •Krite to their correspondents abroad and to toy, in Lord Overstone's phrase: "Money, in re- lation to all other things, has become more val- '::ibl« in this country than it was; therefore, in A Telephone Right at Hand is a great convenience. With a telephone in the library or in the sleeping- room you can telephone withcomfort day or night. Extension telephones on message rate lines are only 50c. per Month MEW YORK TELEPHONE CO., 1 5 Dmy Strmmt F^ILQ. lKD\yEiiß ILDK!IE BESw, RQBTOII 52.66 Newport and Kail Rl«er. $2 Provideuce. J2.SC- Low Fare* to All i>otou Kd»t. Leave Pier 1». North River, foot \\ arrea 61 week .'...* and Sundays. 5:00 P. M. bleamers PI.YMOI TH (new) end TROVI-. NCB Orche»tra on each. NCRWIOH LINE, for ?Cev» London an! East l.v Tier 40. North River, ft. lark- (cn St.. week <says only. 5 i. in.: pi r 70. r R ft B. S*ti St.. 0:30 p. m. Stra. . Chaatar W. Charln ar.d City of V>well. ! NEW HAVKN LINE, for New Haven anS North Leave Pier 20. E. R. week days j only. 3:00 p. m. Btearaar Richard Peck. REMOVAIi NOTICE Winter Beh»aola. i BSEFDDIHEILDiaE Tim .118T01, St M Vail Rlvar M.OO Providence 51-20 Newport »1.251 New ttedford... .sl.^o CorreaponOlug Iteduotions to All Polntn. j 6trd. RHODB ISLAND and TENNE>SKB ! tutety Convenience CJomfort. 1 I.v. X. Y. Dully (except Sunday). New Pier ! I*. East River, i.i'i i atoarlße St.. 5:30 P.M. Slain Ticket Office. Itruneh iitliot, t?jo Broadway. "1 West 30th St. Tel. S4l» Worth. Tel 8432 Mad. So. AM' ON BTIiAMERS A UTTER 3:30 P. M. FARES REDUCED Peoples Line N. V. to Albany. *1.60; Excur.. J2.T.0. Baparb Btra. C W. lion and Adiron- Sack. L.v. Pier '.12. N. It., w'k Jays C p. ra. LOW RATES—CITIZENS L!l*s K. Y. TO TROT. $I.'J5; EXCURSION. (2. Steamcn leave Pier 4i5, N. i: , evrry iii»y., except Saturday!, at 5 p. in. 1 ST. ALBANS, 7 FAST 31ST ST. D«>#'.rat:e anltaa: parlor <i;nln« room: e*- cell«i;t taLl.v reasonable pricey i;?TH ST.. id.S WEST. Lars" rooms: good toaru; references. V>2 WEST ICOTH ST.— To r«=t, with beard. a desirable single rocm. Brooklyn. 118. 11« uermrrs PLACE. Newly furnished :ir.ii decorau-d dftacbsd r analon extensive grounds: can accommo- date a tsw *;uc3ts; rutinit;b^st r?r»r»nc«e required. Owner, telephone 2137— a Ito«- t»ct. FtKMMitD ainmT TO LET. f--'.r.K> Insertions B cents par !ir.^. si». teen wordf levaa times consecutively. $1. which cni •»!.-.•» alvertiiser to tWV« rocms *ii:- r. ! for a porio-i or fourteen days In T.ic- Ttibusa'a Directory •-- Desirauii Ircoa;*. Writ* tor circular. Ku!l lnf:rn~.at!on concerning these room* mas l\u25a0• ...»]\u25a0 '"\u25a0\u25a0•\u25a0 '' i \u25a0•'\u25a0-\u25a0. >* th« V^town Office of Th- N-w-V. rk Trlbum\ 13C4 1 r .Hv iv bttwee^ SCth and 37th sts. 123 WES? 2SD Large Mid small j-ooirs. in •> is renovated; southern ex- msupj: transients accommodated. In.juira Mrs. iV.lller. CAHPKT CI . \nm. CATSDL HUJ&SGN AND COXSACSIB BOATS 1.-.-rf. Pier 43. N. R.. week days, 0 P. U. N.Y.Carpet Cleaning vv'crks Oldest. Larsest. S! >st Mcdera. 4 7 AND «3» WEST 4. .TH ST. Tel 46112-4^". Kryalit. Estal.liahrd 1^37. \V. H. JORDAN. EI»WI>. LUXTZ. CAREFUL CARfET CLEASISO CO.— Cleans by coßinrwaed air. sti'am, in: or en titci. 1354 •Broadway, 421 Hast 4Sth wl. Bii.Li.\i:n \M» root. I)IIIE>. MANUFACTTKaitS of billiard «rd pool ta- bles: his* 1 t~nde boTlius allay ballAsrs: low««t irlc*« MtiT l^ret . ?* Vnlon i>i«ra. CKNTOAL HUPSON T.1N1".. rOTTCIIKKKI'dIE ar.d KINGHrrOM. from Pl»r 24. N. 11.. welt days 4 1- M. SEW- ISLKr.H. nee!i days & IJ.1 J . M.: yund3>«. A. M. : West 12S»th St. »:3B A. M. LOST—BAXRIKiOW Ext rao rdi nary Offerings In C atlon of Opening of First Floor and Basenient of Our New Buildings* WOMEN'S TAILORED SI"ITS Btrlptd and Plain SraaUcloUisV .. - _ anU Che-rtot Rj-Smi, -^' U y'B wort:i *2i.'X> : WOMEN'S DRESS SKIRTS Ulac't. Paaaira— ailk or s*U "1 loK!»— all lrastbi 3Tid lvm.!« - -^.VO U£-jV.;y $~>.ss \u25a0> WOMEN'S CARACUL CLOTH COATS, Medfcm ar.'i hio length—velvet i _ \u25a0 wad l.rcif; or Persian trim - ~O, *»"O all al;es— worth 512.0t* j WOMEN'S SQUIRREL FUR SETS Ijirse PUtow Muff UTisi t-xtra "1 _ I.^ri^ Tfcrcw Snrfa wlti >>ro«d '"O.VO er.da— tatm lined— war» ?U.W. .J GERMAN FLANNEL KIMONOS | Full leostb— A)Hbl« roke Kick ) 1 O>l j a::d front— r»». ?1.9S S *»*•*>. WOMEN'S MESSALINE WAISTS j \u25a0U-hlte. blark. Mai. pink—trim i \ of Val. and Filet t.T'* an>} ]tjC,~*J', tuclis— ixg. JI.WJ J WOMEN'S DRESSING BACQUES Rlppla Eiderdown and German ) QQ ' Flannel, catln Launa— re«. $1.43 ; •"«» GIRLS' SCHOOL DRESSES RouriJ Noveitv MLx«ur-« an-1 \u25a0) ; EorrlceaMa P!a!.J*— neatly rJ . y o made 6 to 14 :••<:. 18.M..J CHILDREN'S WALKING COATS Serzes la Brown. Navy. Alice 1 ..' antf Ti'-S—black Aitrakh.in rj.VO cloth trim— 2 to « yrs.— n»s- $S.P^> BABIES' BEARSKIN CAPS Flaln cr r.iottied white and ~) irv eoloreS— wlta fur heaia. ribbon. {• ,_^y etc—stzea to 4 yrs.— r-s- .4i>... j CHILDREN'S BEARSKIN COATS ; Full box styles double braaa 1 JQ sizes to 3 yrs.— r?s. fTSO 5 J «^ y ; BOYS' WOOL SWEATERS Cblors, W"hlt» and BlacJ: ' SZQ 4 to 10 yn.— rc«. $1.25 \ BOYS' OVERCOATS— a to 16 jrs. E'.ark ani Oxford rrtraa ana "I —m _ : Jlrlton. .licrrln^bone BnxniPM 2,50 anJ strip* Cheviot*—rej. J WOMEN'S LINGERIE WAISTS Fine Batis!» and Persian i lawn-emb'a medallions an-1 ! 1.4f lace or Mexican draimwwk-r- J ! worth $2.5!> j TAFFETA SILK PETTICOATS j Biack. colors and »liaa«d— > i KQ rvg-jlarly $7.93 S *.^^ WOMEN'S COUTIL CORSETS j High Suit nitvilum or lon* "1 mm back—four elastics— ,L, L ,V 5 \u25a0taua IS (a W—TCX- $2-00 J WOMEN'S NIGHT DRESSES Nainsook ar.d Muslin— Msh or ] \u25a0 low neck—Val Inn a=d rIM.--n V .50 trim all sizes rr£. .93 J CHILDREN'S LAWN APRONS Hubbard style wi.> bort'i* or "• __ > h. ». biir;jE— Ito It yrs.— - m 2$J Ti£. .4'J \u25a0> WOMEN'S KM I BLOUSES Cardinal. Oxford. Waits, Ulaek/ QC V or Ugn Deck—re*. $1.7i>..i ****] WOMEN'S VELVET DRESS HATS r.!ai-k Kiid Colon Sailors. "j _ j Mushrooms a.r..l Tilted ;hJi-«s r # Qo ' —regularly $1.58 -J ; TRIMMED DRESS HATS Kelt it Vflvet— l.a.liiisr styles, "i •tuartly trlia'd with taff^ia, 2. vis eat!n. velvut. ic. re?. $s°o , FANCY FEATHERS Largo Wiuss, Coquea an* " _ I Breasts full wired— hlax-k. ; - .*[&' white, colon— reg. .M» - •I WOMEN'S RIB VESTS Pora Bleach— Ankle tengtn * I '"•\u25a0 to matcl.— all sl~a— » .29 ! rtgularly .40 i WOMEN'S BL'K COTTON HOSE Full regular i. v.U double "| j »oles. t.. i ...Tl high avlh-cl \- \u25a0J 616 1 htcla— all »:.£.=»— r^s. .S9 J WOMEN'S KID CLOVES Bltck, White. Colors—2 clas;v-) ,«n ; inibd bucks— all siz?s-icg. ."9i •** [MEN'S NEGLIGEE SHIRTS Nout Sfrtpea arul Checks; also "I \u25a0om? YTnlt» StiffBoaom Dreaa ! «^f> Fhlrt: »llxhtly Imperfect. f* •*• v therefore, $I.3<> ehlrts ........ J WOMEN'S HANDKERCHIEFS Kn:b'J. v.ith h, p. or scalloped) O i •.Igts usually .13 > -I MEN'S INITIAL HANDS l-iirs Ltoeo ! ; ir.^h hemstitch < (V —fancy letter usually .la \ * i 1.. to 12 IN. EMBROIDERIES Cambric. Nainsook, Swls? '| , lius' op»n and" clcao designs !- .12.; reg. .X to .21 J Jii s| 17-IN. SWISS FLOUNCINGS ' Eyelet ar.l «)tl;er tiesigns for "j Corsat Coverings snd Floune- - 21' toga—re<. .r-i J •\u25a0—\u25a0>-\ . " | CHOICE SILK RIBBONS Plain and Ha Taffeta*, (•hecks. Plaids. PresJcns— ror '- 17 i JUllinery. E^sher. etc.—res. .Kj * J TAFFETA RIBBONS Bla--k ana Colon f >r largo hit } or ! bows and sa^hrs 103. .31 > •49 EMB'D LINEN COLLARS Imported choice designs slaea / 12 to 14—rex. .S> to .49 S *~% ' EMBD LINEN COAT SETS In srrciit for miMes* ' . ar> wear— *.atu« Z'J id 75 c .-.::-.. .. v •\u25a0*- : UNDRESSED DOLLS 14 iri.-h— < nosinjr Eye*— » Upper ») 1Q aud stockings re^. .33 s »* y . LARGE BEAUT! DOLLS han.l se-vocT ;>art.'d i>iz >•! - mvo Cowing curls rr«. SLOo 18-INCn JOINTED DOLLS Oiosln^r aye*— long cnrls—sll?- ( p^rd ar.a ttocklag^reg. -!»... J .-r CORAL BEAD KIA« l.s u^o Pearl and Jet i-lain or Kruduated Invisible »nap f 18 rug. a to .*» J .. ". S PIECE TOILET SETS- Comb. -Bruah. Mirror— triilc | plated—satin Hnisii cr frtach i,\ 4f\ Ulid i'ollsh CcHr.biaatia:. - . ~. .-/V were *&.ie> » _ ' -; WO3IKVS GOLF LOVES Merc's'd wool Un«u-\VhIU-. 1 'JQ iaacJv; CuUts—all tires—rcjf. ,4t«> .— V AU'.N'S FINK SUSPENDERS WelMng an-J Ll«:> - g<:\ -, I.ui-kl>-s « xrh [,aii- i»i Jtan.l -• c puij.iwi.-r sIWVJ JurniHSK ' •°' 1 -. t».-— worth .TO ....I NO MAIL OU TF.I -TIXCH TOKIO SILKS I3ack. whif . ~r»a<n and even- «r>^ f^;«.!»«, trlfh »»Ir ovilor--? L *?Q ritin flyjr*»- worth J \u25a0 \u25a0 . BLACK TAFFETA SILKS Si' Inrti »lje \u25a0w»«r guaranteed} SO vali!« .1^ I •*?" BLACK TAFFETA SILKS Sort or rust!o finis*. Inches > a \u25a0% •<v:i» fi-mranteed— 7 .*» { •**\u25a0».» PLAID PRESS GOODS N«w eff«crs in li«hr. tnedtusi \u25a0> ar.a dark combinations-- would V I*s be a ipecinl a* .2»— Frt<Jar.... J " ALL WOOL TAILOR CLOTHS CO inch—brown. r- 1. b'.ua, I "IQ gie^n. gray, alao black It*. .©$ mm *^ ENGLISH WORSTED SUITING H»rrir!glxin9 and wide Strlpea •» !n beautiful color blendlnga V t^O clko dark plaids r«sr. ?1.2>. ... J DOTTED SILK MULLS Black. f=tr««t Shads* ana Hckt? * ff fancy tints— Usually .2* ... ! Mir VELVET DOT VOILES Yard vrldf Er"»n. Gam«t. \u25a0> --j Flu.\ Ci i \u25a0\u25a0. &c with TMac* V jX djta usually .13 J * ALL LINEN H. S. SETS Full t>T*at:li*>J— s-U> \u25a0 dOMHiI "5 Of) Iar 535 3 M^Mss t^ |MI (''•^ FRINGED TABLE CLOTHS ATI Lir.-n— HS !r;ches wMt»> 70 »• " cold bcrd*r»— reg. |1.5« .. J ••*» ALL LINEN DAMASKS fitt Ir.ol \u25a0—»«!» h»avv J Afi new patterns— Ttg. .SI .......< »^v TURKISH TOWELS Clos». absorbent wnv« 7 (j \u25a0y \u2666 red borders 20xU:— - i. .17. .. i*l FULLBL'CHED HICKTOWELS \u25a0MS Inch Cnn. clos<» w«ar« ) 1 C fancy tonlsrs uauall; .2* \ ".. MEDICATED COT- TON DIAPKRIMI Best made 10 jd. j»c. T>i lr»<;h^ <Q —regularly .»S .. > •"\u25a0 ALL LINEN TOWELLINGS Beached— lT^a lr.ch— also la ) <J.t Inch CTiock G!ass-r?s- .M \ *** WHITE MEROZD MADRAS Prft'r ri»ttpri!^ for Children* -j 1 Wrer and VTom»n"s Waiyt<» - I 1 2 V r-suiarly .24 J '* riNK WTIITE CAMBRICS Sf> Urtib— Bleached and flnished f Q| by Lonsdale CO.—oscally .14... , y-Jy -J WHITE SILK DIB'D FLANNELS Extra heavy h. ». and »-alk>r>> -^r% i?9igms— uaually .TO ] •"* FINE WOOL BLANKETS 11 « s!x3 for .1-u"ol« fln* \u25a0» white iiiiiMn wool inri ts; ip blndlr.s— valu* 5*68 J * 11-1 SIZE CM* BLANKETS Ptri.-Uy all wool—attraction "70 liial J comtlrjittcins— ns- 5*09. . «- ' " MERC'ZD LINING SATEENS Inch—black. SUM mr Icad-< |A 1:.5 shades— re* .31 \u25a0> •'* MOIRE PERCALtNES—yd. wide Fine anj sUky for drop skirts > i A and linings—usually .21 $ .3 ~ HOT WATER BOTTLES r«r« Guni true*quart r.« - \ A{\ C«rftct —ao uecj-ads Ttg. .5». .. $ •"»' r SCARFS AND SHAMS £'x"4 an-! ::°.'.t::2 —^T^mbour anfl t Swiss AppUque ::...-. I all- V SO over centr»s resr. J*S J Other* :>x34j at.l Cl"i32 Ttg. .K>. .17 FRIDAY NOTION VALUES Fad Host Supporters 4 strap* ) I*7 JL —regularly -™ i •*\u25a0*!! Fancy Xeeu".«s Cases > . II rerii'ar'.y .1" $ V 7 Kast Black Pamins •ton ) -| "y 45->--. epoo's— re*. .IS a CoseaS •*• \Vh!t* Roll Tap-— !i-«nch— > sr I 2v-yard pieces reg. I S •'T Mu«Jin skirt Yokes— WKta. } "7 Biack. Gray res. .12. \ •* Fancy Hat Pins— ColorM "| ar.-! Blaci—r«s- 3 mv.'l 3 eacV- * % 8 *cr J Pin or Hosb Supporters A and bisk.-* 3 usually 7..J \u25a0 " N SOk >"^l!*^ J:iast'-— \u25a0-, V.Tiitd and Colors— 3 stjlai ,- j 2 res- .10 yd J mmm Universal Hooks and Ey»s— i "J 4 circs—black, whit? -13-- i CUSHION RUFFLING iV s yd pc 5 Inches wlds attractive enlor- 1 *}A lns» draw •tn.-iea— re<. .4» i •-* ' POUND PKGE WRITING PAPER I 84 to 132 shoots Emplrs Vellum "> S slsfcs fchio and wttta \u25a0 p f\ T-S- .14 i llnre;-?;es to match— per loo— .19 .It PARISIAN CAMBRIC STATNEBT White. Bin-, Oray—Regent atM> I^l ?••» sheets— valud .71 <•*-*•\u25a0! Envelopes jer ICO—value* .23 -I* •'• COLONIAL CURTAIN MADRAS j Q-.talnt \u25a0Quara rattems i j> - S*J Sim iasi<sill •• J TAPESTRY COUCH COVESS 60 Inches -artie— Ilia iirtpes— ) 1> J tassel txluas—7*s. «2.29 f *•*'* REVERSIBLE SMYRNA RUGS 2x3 yds.— ?reen and r»-l i *5 C "i gTivsdi— ur-jaily f4.M ...J «» JAPANESE MATTING RirGS ' ! Finest weaver pai:st»d or 1 liacl euib'vl centres for wall decorations, others in unless I 7C I dt ?:srs far floor coverlnjcs " « «-* tto j-ufis lons jiirii wide None worth less than $1.2.... J BATH ROOM FIXTURES lt«!«t Nickel on Brass— T'->*-«>! Bar- ?•.«? Ui»h for Tub. ««.a£s H"!d-.T.Tootli Brush HuMer. ! 'ZA t t-'jmr.?.- itiaket. Faj.cr noUer. f •»- I^' . \\lV!h>\v SKAI»ES ! l^rj.la T .e Holland—Htst f.pts -j ' s^: ii.— stidthtly ma^r'ect. L .39 ' thirtfora Z'J ct. \aiue J , STAMPED SCARFS & SQUARES I<s3t>— 30x20— fnion Ur.eu > >? Q row ... work rag. .39 $ '-» " . YL». WIDE BLEACHED MUSLINS ){ I'tr.e quality co dressing St\ regularly .12 i O FINE MUSLIN SHEETS Kill'alzj i?lxaO>— laiOOUS Mo- -v I ha«fc mi iWill Waah Heavier [, . ,'\u25a0* J SILKOLINK CO.MFORT.\BLKS Kul! 'i^-t*:^.: ti- plain bci-S» 1 CQ 1 n ftU'.ur!;" *?.'l* v J«' V FKATira; UKI» TICKS .33 i \u25a0'< 'T r• . i v iji -;;;!\u25a0 | ..»>!•>. Frklav-, as Usual, .Bargain Day. C-~a.73.v" 7ALU2? T* : r~ST GCC3S POSSI3LS 7Z .QBTiUW;?: 1 your transactions with us remit money in prcf- j eretice to other things." These means have been ! employed in the existing emergency and have j been supplemented by unwonted exertions on the part of the governor and directors of the bank to Increase imports of gold ana to rein- j force the reserves. There is no evidence that a ; high bank rate has lost its efficiency In attract- ing gold, but there la cumulative proof that when the reserves arc small in comparison with j the stocks of foreign treasuries and banks the processes of protecting them against deple- tion are more artificial and coercive and the dl*- turbing effects on Internationa] exchange and home Industries are Immeasurably increased. "While supplies of bullion have been obtained ; for making up the shrinkage caused by exports | to America the Bank of England has well nigh exhausted its resources under tho 7 per cent rate. It has secured as much assistance from Paris and Berlin as is available, and has even negotiated with Russia an arrangement fur in- creasing its gold reserves. Possibly some ad- ditional help can come from India and Egypt, but not much bullion can be squeezed out of the Continental countries which ere bent upon guarding their own reserves bo laboriously ac- cumulated. The disturbance of International credit relations Is already so serious that an advance of the bank, rate to 8 or 0 per cent will cause something like consternation, espe- cially to the masters of British Industries, who need to have large enterprises and operations economically financed; yet there will be hardly any alternative if the outflow of gold to Amer- ica continues. Happily optimism in Increasing this week in consequence of the relief measures adopted by President and the Secretary of the Treasury, and the speedy cessation of the gold drain is now confidently anticipated. Yet the crisis has* lasted long enough to convince many conservative financiers that the Bank of England ordinarily carries too email a reserve for the present requirements of commerce and International exchange. Tho tribute exacted from all industries in grave emergencies for the sake of keeping meagre reserves of bullion un- impaired is heavier than it would be if there were a larger and more elastic currency in the kingdom -with more gold behind it. This subject is not a new one, since it has been a mock controversy from Mr. Ba«ehofs time, and one Chancellor of the Exchequer after an- other has been drawn Into the discussion. A considerable proportion of the banknote circu- lation has been based upon consols, and it has often been suggested that gold should be sub- stituted for it by government purchase. Mini ters have too many legislative schemes to finance to undertake a burden of this sort, and there Is also a strong prejudice against the association of the Treasury officials with the management of the bank. The Issue department of the bank operates already as a branch of the state ser- vice in the regulation of currency; but the Treasury officials have no responsibility and the bank directors no discretion in the administra- tion of a self-acting law. The Issue of one- pound notes has also been urged as a popular expedient for bring::.? more paper money into use and increasing the stock of gold reserved for its conversion. Mr. Bagehot'a own remedy was a readjustment of the relations between the joint stock banks and the Bank of Eng- land." by which the reserves of gold actually In the kingdom but never In plain sight might be massed through co-operation in grave emer- gencies when the rate of interest had to be put up to check Imports. This will probably be the line on which reforms of the banking system are ultimately adopted. The disturbance caused by tho present monetary crisis may Impart a fresh impulse to the movement. What used to be described as the "bankers* bank." because in the last resort it is the keeper of the cash re- serves of all institutions in tho country, has become in the most comprehensive sense the custodian of the credit of all nations and the regulator of international exchange*. It needs either a larger reserve of bullion in the Issue department or facilities for massing in an emer- gency the gold resources of the kingdom. \u25a0 I. X. F. % \u25a0 COMMITS SUICIDE TO MUSIC. Engineer's Wife Starts Phonograph ..d Then Tunis on the Gas. Mrs. Georgia Tittle committed suicide at her home. No. Gil Tenth avenue, yesterday morning Mrs Grace Milgie, who lives In the same house, \u25a0melted gas in the hall. She called her husband and they broke open the door of Mrs. Tittle's apart- ment and found her with a tub« from the gas jet In her mouth. She had been dead several hours. Shortly after Mrs. Tittle was seen for the last, time tha neighbors heard her phonograph playing "In the Wild Woods Where Bluebells Grow." and the condition of the machine, the cylinder not having been stopped, showed that she bad started th« music Just before turning on toe gi\f. Mrs. Tittle had threatened to commit euickle owing to 111 health, Her husband. Charles TJttl*. Is an •ngln»«r. •Sedentary occupation. Improper food and dally resort to drugs, coffee or liquors to "smother', 1 the disease h:is put many a good man away. , "For many years my labors have been en- tirely imlnurs," writes a N. V- man. "Naturally, want of exercise, coupled with hasty eatlog of luuru with more or leva greasy fuod and pastry told on my digestion^ "Tor :i long i>eriod I tried scores of rem- edies without avail, and anally 1 was m- pelled to resign my position ats secretary of an Important I iwiness association. My weight had. run down from 145 to 118 pounds. 1 was unable to sleep naturally, rose unfleshed and without ambition, simply dragged about, feel- Ing more dead than alive. "About a year ago, at a meeting of the Royal Arcanum, of which I am Orator, I was advised by a fellow member to try Grape-Nats. But 1 had no faith in treating. the matter with such a method, and paid so. "lie finally won my promise to give it, a fair trial. I began the following day, and, to make a long story short, in less than a year I have revolutionized i,:y physical and mental condi- tion, now weigh dose to 150 poundsi and can digest all my food, which' is eaten with relish, This change is due to Grape-Nuts/ Name given by Postuiu Cereal Co., Ltd., Bat- do Creek, Mich, ltead .the famous bookie. "The Road to Wellvillo,' in packages. "Thorns n Renson." Many level headed business men pay too little attention n> wbat they oat uuiii sickness attacks SHORT STORY Food That Changed His life. BANKBOOK No. 4'«,1::2 t.r th<? L'lUon Dime. Savings Institution H mi.«sirs. \i:y p«r~ «..H Ir.inc a claim to It is hereby called upon to Luapmt th-i attaw within t^n dayp r . .\u0084-\u0084 .„ . \u0084t - .- .„(,! pauatKK* •\u25a0 -i\-.\ •n M I Ml» l»«aed. SILK DEPARTMENTS. In Both Stores. "McCreery Silk." Silks suitable for holiday gifts. Dress or waist patterns of plain or novelty weaves. Packed in boxes for presents*? tion. On Friday and Saturday, November the 29th and 30th. Sale of one thousand Dress Patterns containing 15 yards of Imported Black Silk. 11.50 to 15.00 per pattern r»lu«. 15.00 to 50.00 23rd Street 34-th Street James McCreery & Co, 23rd Street 34-th Street NEW-YORK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1907, PAGES MNK TO TWELVE. OCEAN STEAMBK^. •\u25a0< .' «.s vif\mt::> ?>itv r.uuuv H E A R iM J Li o=3 Zr^i vi 11 \1 i3s fc*U t^T^-rwE faC fcA W8 W* *J ** li RT CiOOP*. hy ft I* ifj bitLHi s3i wiKi luLy i' y F:ist Express Service. PLYMOUTH-^-CHKRBOURG— BIIEMEN. Krr.;-.|.rir.z.Dec. 3. V. AM K. Vm. 11-.Feb. 4 Ocilie(nw)rwc.Jo,JoAMiCepUle(new)T - eb. IS KrcnprlntJan. 17.1» AM1K.Wm.11. . M-ir. 3 CeclUe(sw)Jan.2l.lo AMI \u25a0Twin-Screw Passenger Service. PLYMOUTH—CHERBOURG BREMEN. tßaj-b"r*Ba..Nov.2B.lOAM I 'Main. - . Dec. -•'• \u2666Kurfuerst ..Dee.s.li>AM ; f P.arbar'ssa. '\u25a0•-'• " •nhci:j...L>6c. 12. lOAMttßooa Jan. 10 •Go;ben Dec. lft | •L'remf-r. direct. TCherlivmr* nr.d Cremen. Mediterranean Service. GIITLTAR— NAPLES— GENOA, at 11 AM. CbnnecliSff ai <;ibraltar tor Algiers. K. Albert Nor. 2'l P. Irer>» Jan. It •X«?k:«r De.:. 4 'Friedrloh Ta-.u 2.1 Frledri.-h J \u25a0•• . 7K. Albert... .^eb. S K. Lulse Jan. «,*Neckar.. Feb. IS •Ornltß Genoa. From Breraen PIeTS. 3d A- < h '-•• . IT^h^k'sn. AROUND THE WORLD TOUKS. East anil West. N*. < i TXOYD EXPRESS IJNf. MARSEILLES— NAPLES—ALEXANDRIA- German UedltctTtinean Levant Lln». Marseilles Of noa via Na;>les to the levant. ROYAL ROUMANIAN MAILSTEAMERS. C :.. tanxa Conatantln< Sin; mt Alexandria. rJorth German Lloyd Travellers' Checks Good All Over the World. OEURICHd A CO.. No .*. Broadway, S. T. Louis IT. Meyer, 1016 Walnut .St., Phi.a. ©01 [ DH3(ESa Froru Piers' 7,i -62. NortiiKlver. to uvrv.pool. via iiii:h:N.~vo\VN. PASSENGERS BOOKtSD THKOUCiH TO LONDON AND PARIS. St>»c;a! Lew Si on Kates '\u25a0' Europe. is© liyjreMi MAT'FirrAVIA NOV. SO. NOON CARMANIA - .... DEC X. 7A. M. LI7SITANIA Tic:. 14IMACRETANIA r< c.9 LLTANIA.-Doc. 21 UPANIA... J-n. * Itluuretania, Nov. SO. \u25a0:£ $72.50. L-usiifiniri. I.W. 14. a $72.00. Largest, fastest. Finest in the AVcrli HUNGAHI A N- A MEi: ICAN SERVICE. TO FIUME VIA GIBRALTAR NAPLEtJ AND TRIESTE. BLAVONIA..DCC 10. noon; Mar. 12, Apr. 30 PANNONIA . Mar. 38, May I*. -'' l! >' - CARPATHIA Apr. !'. May 2*. JaJy lo SPECIAL MHDITERRANBAN CItL'ISKS. CALXJLXG AT 11ADEIKA. Caron'.a 1 •*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.. *\u25a0 mm . ».0W ..< j"* : ' a* at CarmaHia \ ••?»"• 16. f Alexandria. Su.ooo M J •»«'- J VERNON 11. BROWN. General Agent. 21-24 S'ute St.. oi>w>slto the Battery. 00 BOUJa LWEi DAILY SERVICE. For Jamestown Exposition, Old Point Comfort, Norfolk. Portsmouth. I'irner s Feint ar. 1 Newport Newa, Vs., connecting for Petersburg. Kichni..nJ. Virginia Beach. Washington, i-i. C. and entire . cut.i and \Ve»t. Freight nii'l \msstng~r steamers sail from Pier 2K. N. P... toot of Bea^ St.. every week day at 3 P. W. \V. 1.. WOODROW. Traffic Manager. RAII.KOAO*. [HI ARW rail nraft a /5\ M^ro^ « m (0$ I Ei I ?}] *t-p IST CLASS ACCORDING TO Qj^Q/iy) STEAMER AND .DESTINATION, by tnoet modern anil luxurious leviathans. London ] K^:^^ 2^r Paris 1- Am<>rik;i<new>Dec.l2.llam Hamburg I j. tj'niufnajeoS.lO-SOam trails to Hamburg direct. Gibraltar 1 P. Lincoln fnew)...l>e. ft Nnr.l,*'- LHambunrr.Jao. 4. Feb. 15 lNapieo I r^tavia.Jan. 1!. March 7 Genoa J M<.»ltk« Jan. 2P, Apr. 22 A luvonrlwnSpecial trips t.y S.S Hair- Via Gi'j. & Italy. West Indies <fk Orient Special cmlseg by superb ataamera, lasting from \'< 78 days Coal from sv. ! > tsuoandup. SUPERB NILE SERVICB. By Net Steamers. Tourist 1 pt. - Genera! Information. Travellers' Checks r,. < all over tie World. Company's Office. SS-37 Broadway. N. Y.

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Page 1: TWELVE. James McCreery H J E A Zr^i R · 23rd Street 34th Street James McCreery & Co, AITOMOBTLE APPAREL, lvBoth Stores. On Sale Friday and Saturday, November the 29th and 30tlt

34th Street23rd Street

James McCreery & Co,

AITOMOBTLE APPAREL, lv Both Stores.

On Sale Friday and Saturday,November the 29th and 30tlt.

Ladies' Calfskin Coats 02.."50Men's Calfskin Coats 28.00Men's Dogskin Gloves 5.50Men's Lamb lined Hoots 6.75

THE GOLD DRAIN.

HEN AMANis out withJ a hammer his liver is

doing the knocking.Recommend T2T

2 Glass

BBsya4i Jiaos Witerne1 •" Breakfast.

KnrURALLAXATIVE WATER

Bottledat the Springs.

Avoid substitutes.

CLARK'S CRUISE OF THE "ARABIC."

Tie.'*--tons. fine, lurse. cTriunusually uttady. JI

(y) 11 Hull lyllraijl&ilKi UKHUI'.rARY 6 TO APKIL 17. 1008.

Peve-.ty days, »'.liig only JioO.OO ANDUP Including shore excursion*. SPECIALFEATI'UKS. liaiclra. Cadiz. Sevlllo. At-»\e:" Malta. VJ DAYS IN EGYPT ANDTUBHOLY LAND. Constantinople. Athens,r.tine. the lUviera, etc. TOURS ROUND•1 iIL. WOULD.

40 TOURS TO EUROPE.rr.ost eomprehenstva and »tua> tive e\rroffered. i.*-'. CLARK. Tlmaa Uliit-. n^y

VorK.

Low (Bates ts EuiokBY IKE FM3 FWESS3

and v?. FIRST 01-ASS BYTHE i

iteamer. FOIXOWINGJUINESAKEOTi'^r.T'IKCFrom Pier 13. tit.FJ^YMOfTH

—CHERB'O—SoIITHAMI TON

New York Nov. 30iPhlIade:pbU..D liKt. Tx>u!s De.'. 7 .^t. Paul Dec. 2i?.'37>, CTI«> \u25a0 "V

- From Pior

NEW YORK —AN I r . PAitlS.Merlon '•

\u25a0. 4|Kroonlaod ...Dae 21Vaderland..v.r*ec. 111/.Mind lan. 1-

V/FSTS "~A;r VWE yrom Plor ,muis^iaKU

—tH N X ,

NKW YORK B'NSTOWN—

LIVERPOOI* ••tvdrle. .Dec. 5. 10 A.M.I

•Arahlc .Dec 1»

\u25a0Celtic. IX 12, 11:30 AM I>e.^ 27PLYMOUTH- CHERB'G•tAdriatic.Dec. 4. »AMI•Oceanic... Dec 17•Teutonic.D>C 11.10 AM|*Maje«tlc. V<r 24

tNew. 25.0*> tor.a; has Elevator. IGymnasium. Turkish Paths an.^ *l^n»?. !»NK\V YORK 4: IT-i LV &• -p '

STSTBOSTON TO iiii-i-*«Z CU.ii )Via Asores, Mad'ira. \u25a0lbraltar. Alricrs. j

•HKPI'IU.IC Nov. SO. Jan. 2S. Murci:7•ROMANIC !><-. 5. Ffh. 1. \u25a0' >• -h It•CHEn*IC ...Dho. 11. Mai 28. V.-iv 0•rAVOPTC (..Jan. 11. Feb. 22. April 4

*C3:^;C:y:^ tons. J JAN. 4. FLU. 15PASSENGER >OFFICE, 0 BROADWAY i

FrelKht Ofhto. Whitehall Bide.. P.attery I'l.:

or tub

North German LloydKaiser Wilhelm dor GrossaKronprinz WilhelmKronprinzessin Ceciliaand Kaiser Wilhelm 11.

KEW \u25a0IEAB£^ GBHTRAI.TV.o II'M. i: train to Philadelphia

evepy HOIH on THJS li-.'("IL

FOIt PHILADELPHIA. 1... W. CODST. :—C.50. 7.50. 8.20. B.st>. ».?0. 10.50. 11.2 W.11.50 v. rr... 12.M. \2". 1.50. 2- 50, S.SO, 4.20.4.50. 6.50, G.fiO. 7.C". :\u25a0 it. 11.oO i>. m. oua-<iiy«, 7.50, >.;\u25a0). U.iiO. 10.50; 11.. a. m..1i.50. 1.00. 2.50, 360. 4.5U. i.SO. so. 7.60.6.M, 10.20, 11.50 p. m.

1... LIBERT? 5T.;—1.30. 8.30. 7.00. 9.00.c to 6.00, 10.< W. 11.00. 11.30. moo a. m..I00. l.ao. 2.00. S.OO. 4,00, 4.30. .*'\u25a0"». 6.U0.'.I') ski, t.OO p. m.. i-1 IS midnight. Su:.-ta}a, 1.30. is."JO. «•»•. 10.00 U.iiO a. m..;YZ.iyj. on, 1.00. 2.W). 3 •-. 4.W>, 6.00. 6.00.7.00. 8.00. l».O0. lo.ao i.. m.. !.,.•\u25a0 tnlght.

FOR BALTIMORE AND WASHINGTON.—Lv W. S3D ST.'—7.9o. ».CO. 11. Jo a. ax..

I.Be. 3.>>. 650. t0.60 >. m. dally.'L.v. LIBERTY ST.:—I.BO. 8.00. 10.00

a. m.. 12.00 cooa. S.OO. 4.00, 6.f0. 7.C«p. m. dully.

FOR ATLANTIC CITY.—I*. V7. £'.Dtl'. 5».."»o a. m. (12.50 Sals. only). H.XDp. m. Sundays. 9.M a. .... -.0 p. in.

Lv. I.IBEKTY ST.:—

ifliOO a. in. <1.00e-\t'. only). 5.40 \u25a0„. v*. tju&daya. ly.uu

a. in. 2.80 p. m.FOR LAKKWOOD AND LAREH—Lv. W. 23D ST.:—0.50 a. in. (12.3P <jats.

enly). 1.20. 3.--"0. 8.50, 4.50 (C.20 tat». or.iy)p. :n. Hunlay*. a.'M. 'j..ri» a. D. 2-«0 p. m.

Lv LIBERTY ST.: -4 00. 10.00 a. in.(1<»' Bata only). 1.30. 3.40. 4 10, S 08 (6.i<jhats, only) a. ni. bundays. aoj,10000. m..2."'J p. m.

FOX LONO BRANCH, ASBURY PARKAND OCEAN GROVE. I.v. W. 23D ST.:—t.20. 11.30 a. m.. 12.50. 4.30 6.20. 0.20. 8.20.II"•) p. m. ti.:..lays. too a. m.. ...T.O. b.-up. n:.

LIBERTY 5T.:—4.00. B.SO. 11.30Lv. mtEUTY ST.:—4.OS, f 30. J1.30a. m.1.10. 4.45.

'.".". •\u25a0 \u25a0".

-'.' i. m.. 12.U1

itiio: ial.:. Sundays. 4.u>. b.ou a. in.. 4.00.8.30 p. in.r::-.» tables may b» obtaln?<! at followingoffices: Liberty St. «West 234 St. TeL 3144Chelsea). C A»;or llouie. 2+5. 44. i::*"1.1554liroadway. I*JFifth Ay.. -M Pitta Ay.. 25Union square West. 2"t»» Tiilrd A... lUIWui 125 th St.. 243 Columbus Ay.. NewYork; 4 Court St.. 343. 344 Fultcn St.. 47»Nostrand Ay.. Brooklyn; S9<j Broadway.WllUarnabqiß. New York Transfer Co. calls(or and chutes bs^gaga (o ». \u25a0; jjr.itlo-i.

W. O. BKSLER. W. C HOPE.Vlc*-I"rea. &Oen. :f*-. Gen. fasa'r Agaat.

10-28-07

BALTIMORE k OHIO R. R.ROYAL BLUE I.FNE TRAINS.

"Every other hour on tne even hour."TO BALTIMORE AND WASHINGTON*.

1.-.v New York P;i!ly. 23.' ?t. Llb'v .^t.%VASHINOTON. Sl'pers, ll.r.ftprn 1.30 amWASHINGTON. Dln»r. 7..'.0 .-mi S.W amWASHINGTON. Diner. 9.3o>an) lttOOamWASHINGTON. Diner. ll.roam 12.t*> r/nWASHINGTON. Buffet. l-Bftpm 2.00pm••ROTAI*itTD."Diner, 3.80pm 4.00 ymWASHINGTON.I>lner, B.SOpna \u2666'.."oWASHINGTON. Buffet, «i50 pin 7.00 ytu

Through Dally Trains to the West.CHICAGO. PIT! -1.1 RO. 7.80 am .H.dO amniii-A(:o.rou'linus. 11 BO am 12.ft»n

-n

n rrsßi \u25a0 'i.:-. el d. S.f.O pm 4.00 pm"PITrSBURO LIMITID." «SO pm 7.''o pmrrN..sT.Loins.torisv.. 11..T0 pm 1.20amCIN..ST.LOUIS.LOUISV.. B.Wara lo.uoaruCIN..BT.LOUIS.LOUISV., .'\u25a0:\u25a0- rra tJ.f(»imALL TRAIN ENTER NEW UNION

STATION. WASHINGTON, D. 0.Offices: 24.".. 434. 1300 Broadway. 6 Astor

Hi ..'• IC* ireenwlc St ,a I'l m SquareW.. SOI Grand Bt* N. V.; S-J3 Fulton tt..Brooklyn: West 23d St. and Liberty St.

After 6 p. vt. Sleepir.s tar Kea«rratJor.sanJ full informatiOD r<-4ardlnc trains, etc....an be obtained :.t 15ur«au of Information.I?. &. O. H. R.. SJ. icrmli.^l. 'I'lioneNui.iber. Cheliea— AH.

N. V. X. H. A HARTFORD R. Tl.Ttslr.s depart from Grand Central Statloo.

I2iJ st.^uri 4th Ait., as fallows farli«fton "la New London iProv.— tt 'lO:N>.|||10:00, •\u25a0t|lt |1i. 02 A. M.. tt 1:•-'<*. •*;l:"3.•i S:00 tl s:t>o. •' 3:02. ••12:ih> P. M..via Wtlllmentlo

—t^bili.";A. M.. '- \u25a0•; P. M..

via Bpfd.—t»J3 ...:.•.-•-.••Il:<»> p. M.Wor"itet & Fitch., vis Putnam. TS:BO P. M.Lak»Tlll« & Norf.—tiOKK) A. M., t3:2«i P.M.«t. Barrtnaton. Storkbrtdga Ler.oi. Pitts-ne;d-t4:54. i\'J:(K> A. M.. t3:26 P. 11.

Ticket offices at c<".i. Cent. St'n and cli'JhSt.. als>) at .:»:. 12i«>. c1354 B*waj 29In.on So, d»2 .">:ii Ay»., v \u25a0

>' Col. Ay«.,r.^(« fith Ay».; c»M:» Mjil.A-.*.. rlO5 W.TilthFt.. :\u25a0:\u25a0'•> \u25a0". Aye. in F.klyn. c4CourtSt.. 4?ri Nostrand Aye.. ZW H"nay.

•Dairy. TEx.vj.t Sundays. IStops at 125thFt. x.stors at 12.'.th St. Sundays only.(Parlor car Limited, ISunday parlor cartrail. llKas dining oar. cParlor andSjlecptnc Car tickets also

lEHB

Jli:T»loKTpre!« ;*..... • iuii*i;.Miial;-iffiI.-Ctif<-»iC<»Kxprr>»... 'M.WAM 'iI:».MAX1H v X I»l.\M»>N!>EXP..j*tLSS « H[»l2.COs paCtilraei>-

-Vo-on'tiK«WV»fc..i»n?l.4t) P a'*xS.4O X

KBrJTA t.O TIIVIN..! *7 53 Pm ;*^,IX>!• itI"Tl<~k''f "<iffift'-'n:"jsSHiiiljTso f.rj-t.!»'yr.

Us wiii)A&> IKHLL& fS1 11 1-i* mmCairo to Luxor and tha First Cataract.

Hateeaea l»ec. iMllUiiiebea Ja-i. 1*i:sypt Dec. iil[Egypt ..Jan. -'lldmeso* the Gt.Jan.?|Rameaea r ti*» '.: ,lar'.'«

and »\u25a0•:.. thereafter, cuiiiifcttiit; with sei--\ \ra fur the tjocunil Cauir.tct, Kliartoon1.Uganda, Ac In addition Cxuk's L'xpreiaSteaxnera «;<ll every ilunduy and t'ri!aj\Luxurious clahal'i alis und apecia] ateamemtor charter ti> riiiiilifsand prl\ate parties.

ANXIIALSKKIKS *->V TOI'KS Ti» Till:ORIENT 1-avo Jj-i •». 1«. 1?. 20 ftb. l.l- a i» \u25a0

p,C r-243. i.auo Braadrrar. BJ'J SladUon -••'\u25a0..

Grto Fifth aye. (Windsor Arcade), New \-<r<<.

"RED "D" i:si.**•

For Ia C;uayi*. IMerto «.'at'Ho.Curacao Ri"l Mancaibo. via Curacito. call-Inic fc.fo m tan Juan. I*.II.:S.H. CAIIAiMS fa-.urilny. I"c.I "c. T. n"t>ns.s. riiiUM'Ki.rui\..sa!.. I si Mon

•For ljtJu.iiru, Curaia.>. Mnra<-aibo:F.F. SI VKA<*Ali:<-> .Vamr-J.iy. N..\. :d<. i^.tifci.-V >'! 1.1 '. KatunJajr. Dec 14. noon

Thexe (teanerß haTe eupeflQf »tcvniai»"<lail«r.» for f»»«vn«rr»

ltfH*l-Tf'N IllJ**'iI«\t,!.r.lT.Oan<i UanaV. 1Wall St.

(F®a° [Pct/^Gd .;. 3DStcamshlpa of tt.« Jit:i> Tf' LINK will

•all from rl<r 11. tifar Wall St. i"e.-ry,Krocklyn. fcr S tr. Juan direct «» roilow»:K.S. i'X»:At*A- t-'.»tun!ay. D«:c. 7. noonto.ti. rHILAPELPHIA.-.bat.. !*\u25a0• 21. noon

Vor frclnlilcr |«<sdK^ a; i.ty toCOULTON. BLISS a I-AI.LFVTT.

Ueneiul Mena^ers. S2 Wall St.

FVI frltcrmHlon ccm-enlr; tfies^ r"om»n-«y bo bad. tret uf charjjp, v* the Uj,townOffice of Th» New-York Tribune. 1354Broadway, between 3oth and 37th ats.

UO.\m> AND ROOMS*

Eicsla lN£ert!cn» 5 cents p»r line. :i**teen wor!s. »')vea Uxnea consecutively. H.ivtiloh er.uti*a a^vertUer to bava r>^rri»

entered tor a r«rlt>J vl fourteen Jays laThe Trtt>ui;e"B Directory of L>«sira!ji6 Kuoaa.Wnta fcr circular.

«'T A Vi:f.OCF/"—Fast itaH:m Lice.*~*Fut'.ln* toon Plat C4. North Rlv»r.

ft. of 34th 6t.. for Naplca and r.enoa.Hsrtrwld. gol«rl i, Co. IP IVitllSi.

KTKAMIJOATS

A!A.' .\J

\u25a0. \u25a0• f-

s>..

\u25a0

The ethers of the party arrested were M!ssRice's brother, Thomas Rice; Karlo Ovlnston, ofNo. MM West 8«h street; lavid Walker, of No. lOiWest *Bth street; Albert Harris, of No. BO WestS6th street, and Benjamin Bear, of No. 7 East S7thstreet Each was fined $10. They had only $Samoni* them, and It was a long time before afriend lent the men enough money to pay th'i fines.Miss Rice was paroled on a promise to pay her finethis morning.

MRS. RICES DAUGHTER ARRESTED.Mi-: Dorothy Rice, of N'-->. Mti Wi I \u25a0\u25a0

daughter of Mr.. W'.;l. Rice, bead < t tba Efor the Suppression of Unnec -. iry Noises, wj i

Sued JiO for i^j).-t.-'lin^' by Uagiatrat* Harrman, h»the Wesi

-Murt, y«-sterday moriiiiig. Mi.'.-.

}{'\u25a0\u25a0<\u25a0 vlus on-; of a party of si* motor cyclists ar-ufter a long chase tn Broadway, on their

way to the meet of the N>:W York Motor Cycleat Pelbam Manor, wher* they were to par-

ticipate In the race?.

Beflor Bolafloa .-^U'. In explanation of the ship-

ment of the war material while the peace con-ference was going on, that the order f<>r it waspi i in Europe by bis govi rnmenia---".

"Perhaps they an.- to bo used to facilitate thei"-a'- mid union plan." was t ... .-ment of one of the doubters.

For many >rur<i President Zelayaregarded as the chief disturber or thn peace olC ntra] America, but with the convening in\v.i iiii

•d of the Centra] American peace con-

ft \u25a0 ted by President Roosevelt GeneralU .'pp< ••\u25a0• \u25a0 :n'-- n leader li*

the movemi at Ii permanently end \i\'.mittent wars In that purt of the. v,"r.i. H]> notonly readily fell In with the suggestion for th--conference, but after appointing delegates to itcalled a peace conference of his own at !pala, which the doubting ones regarded as nneffort to counteract the work <~r the Washing-ton conference. He also Informed one of hisdiplomatic representatives that In the further-ance of tho peace plan, and If it wo<-g neces-sary to the formation of a union r.f the fiveCentra] American republics, Jib would resignhis offlceand the people could ele.it whom:

\u25a0Ias his successor.experts, however, were dubious, and now

they J>r>.- boasting of their jln-; Judgment, forjti-iabout the time that the Wanhington con-fen i. \u25a0': opened the cargo of cartridges and gunmountings was being transshipped to Nica-ragua.

This shipl 'rted of sixteen >\ises of

mountings for m hii \u25a0• kau and t \u25a0\u25a0

ammunition 1? caina to t!,i3 pert from Lon-amshlp Minneapolis, consigned

to Plo Bolanos, consul genera] of Nicaraguatn this c!^. .• tii«>t was transshipped toManagua.

President Zelaya Imports Cargo ofWar Material.

Those experts on Central American politicswho cast their doubts on the motives of Presi-dei I v. lays of Nicaragua when he appeared re-cently aw the most ardent of peace advocatesare now Justifying their disbelief in GeneralZelaya's good Intentions by circulating thestory of a large warlike shipment made fromEurope by way of Now York by the Nlcaragriiangovernment.

ARMS. TALKS PEACE.

Oldtime Theories and New one-

tary Situation*.London, November 20.

The gold drain from America subjects estab-lished methods of English banking and Euro-pean finance to unprecedented strain. It has

v>?-n met in the traditional way by successiveadvances of the bank rate, but there has been.k -wider area of monetary disturbance than has

b»~n known during the. present generation. Theoldtimfl theory of tho operation of Sir IlobertPeePs banking act was a simple application ofthe general law of demand and supply. The Is-

\u25ba :\u25a0 of paper money was regulated automatically

ro that the banknote circulation shrank whenThe bullion was drawn cut. This process in-

volved a decrease in the money current in thekingdom, and consequently an augmentation

of Its value. The Inevitable effects wen a tem-

porary rise In the rate of interest and remit-

tances of money from the Continent and all parts

ft the world to London, where it became morevaluable than any merchandise. It was theihepry of Lord Overstone. the ablest defenderof the banking act, that the rectification of in-

ternational exchanges would be effected more

speedily by the reduction of current money andro increase of its value in relation to commodi-

ties than by an expansion of paper Issues. This

has been the accepted practice in previous mone-tary crises and ithas been repeated in the pres-

ent instance. The cautionary measures have

been promptly taken and there have been abrupt

advances of the bank rate. Instead of waiting

for dear money to produce the natural effect ofattracting gold and rectifying exchanges, the

bank directors have brought pressure to bear

upon Continental capitals for increasing the

Imports of bullion. They wore so successful last

week that the reserve was enlarged to £21,-

113,000 inspite of the exports of gold to Amer-ica, Yet international exchanges have been com-

.letely upset and the financial tension through-

out the world is so great that a continuance ofihese drastic gold hunting operations may meet

with widespread resistance.Conservative financiers are constrained to ad-

rait that the stock of cold in the Bank of Eng-

land Is not large enough for supreme emergen-

cies. While the banking act offers adequate

protection against overissues of paper money

«nd supplies a stable currency system, it has

not operated either to increase the reserves of

gold in the issue department or to enlarge thebanknote circulation available for the require-

ments* of commerce. In ordinary conditions

these disadvantages are inconsiderable in com-

parison with the benefits of a sound currency,

which regulates itself mechanically in accord-

ance with demand and supply, but when a

Monetary crisis arises abroad and London, as

the free market for gold, is subjected to an «x-

l:austive drain the necessity for a larger reserveJ-;apparent. It may be an open question

whether the kingdom would or would not be in• better condition for competing with foreign

industries and handling the business of the

empire If the note issues of the bank were

doubled or trebled. Itcannot be doubted, how-• ver, that London as the monetary centre of•he world would have largely increased re-

sources for steadying exchanges and minimizing

disturbances like the American crisla If there

were In the Issue department of the bank a

Ftock of bullion two or three times as great as

It has been. The gold reserves of the bankavailable for the conversion of the note circu-lation have remained virtuallystationary during

ti-e last thirty or forty years. This result has*<itisn>d bankers and theorists alike becauseiVy accepted the dictum of Sir Robert Peel

that as much currency as business interestswould require could invariably be supplied auto-matically under the banking act without inter-

i-rence from the board of directors or from

ireasury officials. Itis not until a foreign crisisnames on that the truth is appreciated that therisks of gold exports, of violent fluctuations ofInterest and of high tension Inall international

\u25a0 changes are materially increased by a goldre->'-\e much 6inaller than it ought to be.

When this emergency arose the gold itechavailable in the Bank of England was £17.685,-f-y*. The bullion reserves of the Bank ofPrance were over six times as great; those ofthe Imperial Bank of St. Petersburg were overJive and a half times as large, and those of th-i

Jiational banks of Berlin and Austria-Hungary

combined were nearly five times as great. Of?he total gold stocks carried by the chief na-tional treasuries and banks about one-fortiethtvu in the Bank of England. While foreign

countries had adopted practical measures forenlarging their gold reserves it had not been

considered either expedient or necessary to fos-ter a more general use of paper money and toprovide an increased etock of gold for its re-demption. The bank act of 1844 had been ac-< «;pted as pacrosanct and unalterable, and the"re.: market for gold exports and Imports waseven more of a fetich than free trade itself."Whenever there was a gold drain the bank rate

could go up by leaps and bounds, and the bul-lion merchants could be depended upon to

•Krite to their correspondents abroad and totoy, in Lord Overstone's phrase: "Money, in re-

lation to all other things, has become more val-

'::ibl« in this country than it was; therefore, in

A TelephoneRight atHand

is a great convenience.With a telephone in thelibrary or in the sleeping-room you can telephonewithcomfort day ornight.

Extension telephones onmessage rate lines areonly

50c. per Month

MEW YORK TELEPHONE CO.,15 Dmy Strmmt

F^ILQ. lKD\yEiiß ILDK!IEBESw, RQBTOII 52.66

Newport and Kail Rl«er. $2 Provideuce.

J2.SC- Low Fare* to All i>otou Kd»t.

Leave Pier 1». North River, foot \\arrea61 week .'...* and Sundays. 5:00 P. M.bleamers PI.YMOI TH (new) end TROVI-.P£ NCB Orche»tra on each.NCRWIOH LINE, for ?Cev» London an!East l.v Tier 40. North River, ft. lark-(cn St.. week <says only. 5 i. in.: pi r 70.r R ft B. S*ti St.. 0:30 p. m. Stra. .Chaatar W. Charln ar.d City of V>well. !NEW HAVKN LINE,for New Haven anS

North Leave Pier 20. E. R. week days jonly. 3:00 p. m. Btearaar Richard Peck.

REMOVAIiNOTICE Winter Beh»aola. i

BSEFDDIHEILDiaETim .118T01, St MVailRlvar M.OO Providence 51-20Newport »1.251New ttedford... .sl.^o

CorreaponOlug Iteduotions to AllPolntn. j6trd. RHODB ISLAND and TENNE>SKB !

tutety—

Convenience—

CJomfort. 1

I.v. X. Y.Dully (except Sunday). New Pier !I*.East River, i.i'iiatoarlße St.. 5:30 P.M.Slain Ticket Office. Itruneh iitliot,

t?jo Broadway. "1 West 30th St.Tel. S4l» Worth. Tel 8432 Mad. So.

AM' ON BTIiAMERS AUTTER 3:30 P. M.

FARES REDUCED Peoples LineN. V. to Albany. *1.60; Excur.. J2.T.0.

Baparb Btra. C W. lion and Adiron-Sack. L.v. Pier '.12. N. It., w'k Jays Cp. ra.

LOW RATES—CITIZENS L!l*sK. Y. TO TROT. $I.'J5; EXCURSION. (2.Steamcn leave Pier 4i5, N. i:,evrry iii»y.,except Saturday!, at 5 p. in. 1

ST. ALBANS, 7 FAST 31ST ST.D«>#'.rat:e anltaa: parlor <i;nln« room: e*-

cell«i;t taLl.v reasonable priceyi;?TH ST.. id.S WEST.

—Lars" rooms: good

toaru; references.

V>2 WEST ICOTH ST.—To r«=t, with beard.a desirable single rocm.

Brooklyn.

118. 11« uermrrs PLACE.Newly furnished :ir.iidecorau-d dftacbsd

r analon extensive grounds: can accommo-date a tsw *;uc3ts; rutinit;b^st r?r»r»nc«erequired. Owner, telephone 2137— a Ito«-t»ct.

FtKMMitD ainmT TO LET.

f--'.r.K> Insertions B cents par !ir.^. si».teen wordf levaa times consecutively. $1.which cni •»!.-.•» alvertiiser to tWV« rocms*ii:-r. ! for a porio-i or fourteen days InT.ic- Ttibusa'a Directory •-- Desirauii Ircoa;*.Writ* tor circular.

Ku!l lnf:rn~.at!on concerning these room*mas l\u25a0• ...»]\u25a0 '"\u25a0\u25a0•\u25a0

''i\u25a0•'\u25a0-\u25a0. >* th« V^town

Office of Th- N-w-V.rk Trlbum\ 13C41r .Hv iv bttwee^ SCth and 37th sts.

123 WES? 2SD Large Mid smallj-ooirs. in

•> is renovated; southern ex-msupj: transients accommodated. In.juiraMrs. iV.lller.

CAHPKT CI. \nm.CATSDL HUJ&SGN ANDCOXSACSIB BOATS

1.-.-rf. Pier 43. N. R.. week days, 0 P. U. N.Y.Carpet Cleaning vv'crksOldest. Larsest. S! >st Mcdera.

4 7 AND «3» WEST 4..TH ST.Tel 46112-4^". Kryalit. Estal.liahrd 1^37.

\V. H. JORDAN. EI»WI>. LUXTZ.

CAREFUL CARfET CLEASISO CO.—Cleans by coßinrwaed air. sti'am, in: or

en titci. 1354 •Broadway, 421 Hast 4Sth wl.

Bii.Li.\i:n \M» root. I)IIIE>.

MANUFACTTKaitS of billiard«rd pool ta-bles: his*1 t~nde boTlius allay ballAsrs:

low««t irlc*« MtiTl^ret.?* Vnlon i>i«ra.

CKNTOAL HUPSON T.1N1"..rOTTCIIKKKI'dIE ar.d KINGHrrOM. from

Pl»r 24. N. 11.. welt days 4 1- M. SEW-ISLKr.H. nee!i days & IJ.1 J.M.: yund3>«. S»A. M.:West 12S»th St. »:3B A. M.

LOST—BAXRIKiOW

Extrao rdinary Offerings

In C atlon of Opening ofFirst Floor and Basenient of Our New Buildings*

WOMEN'S TAILORED SI"ITSBtrlptd and Plain SraaUcloUisV .. - _anU Che-rtot Rj-Smi, -^'U y'B—

wort:i *2i.'X> :

WOMEN'S DRESS SKIRTSUlac't. Paaaira— ailk or s*U "1loK!»—all lrastbi 3Tid lvm.!«

--^.VO

U£-jV.;y $~>.ss \u25a0>

WOMEN'S CARACULCLOTH COATS,

Medfcm ar.'i hio length—velvet i_

\u25a0

wad l.rcif; or Persian trim-

~O, *»"Oall al;es— worth 512.0t* j

WOMEN'S SQUIRREL FUR SETSIjirse PUtow Muff UTisi t-xtra "1 _I.^ri^ Tfcrcw Snrfa wlti>>ro«d '"O.VOer.da— tatm lined—war» ?U.W. .J

GERMAN FLANNEL KIMONOS |Full leostb— A)Hbl« roke Kick ) 1 O>l ja::d front—r»». ?1.9S S *»*•*>.

WOMEN'S MESSALINE WAISTS j\u25a0U-hlte. blark. Mai. pink—trim i \of Val. and Filet t.T'*an>} ]tjC,~*J',tuclis— ixg. JI.WJ J

WOMEN'S DRESSING BACQUESRlppla Eiderdown and German ) QQ

'Flannel, catln Launa—re«. $1.43 ; •"«»

GIRLS' SCHOOL DRESSESRouriJ Noveitv MLx«ur-« an-1 \u25a0) ;EorrlceaMa P!a!.J*— neatly rJ.yomade

—6 to 14

—:••<:. 18.M..J

CHILDREN'S WALKING COATSSerzes la Brown. Navy. Alice 1 ..'antf Ti'-S—black Aitrakh.in rj.VOcloth trim—2 to« yrs.—n»s- $S.P^>

BABIES' BEARSKIN CAPSFlaln cr r.iottied

—white and ~) irv

eoloreS— wlta fur heaia. ribbon. {• ,_^yetc— stzea to 4 yrs.—r-s- .4i>... j

CHILDREN'S BEARSKIN COATS ;Full box styles

—double braaa 1 JQ

sizes to 3 yrs.—r?s. fTSO 5 J «^y;

BOYS' WOOL SWEATERSCblors, W"hlt» and BlacJ:

— 'SZQ

4 to 10 yn.—rc«. $1.25 \•

BOYS' OVERCOATS—a to16 jrs.

E'.ark ani Oxford rrtraa ana "I —m_ :

Jlrlton. .licrrln^bone BnxniPM 2,50anJ strip* Cheviot*—rej. J

WOMEN'S LINGERIE WAISTSFine Batis!» and Persian i

lawn-emb'a medallions an-1 !1.4flace or Mexican draimwwk-r- J !worth $2.5!> j

TAFFETA SILK PETTICOATS jBiack. colors and »liaa«d— > iKQrvg-jlarly $7.93 S *.^^

WOMEN'S COUTIL CORSETS jHigh Suit

—nitvilumor lon* "1 mmback—four elastics— ,L,

L ,V5\u25a0taua IS (a W—TCX- $2-00 J

WOMEN'S NIGHT DRESSESNainsook ar.d Muslin—Msh or ] \u25a0

low neck—Val Inn a=d rIM.--n V .50trim

—all sizes

—rr£. .93 J

CHILDREN'S LAWN APRONSHubbard style

—wi.> bort'i* or "• __

>

h. ». biir;jE—ItoIt yrs.—-

m2$JTi£. .4'J \u25a0>

WOMEN'S KM I BLOUSESCardinal. Oxford. Waits, Ulaek/ QC—

V or Ugn Deck—re*. $1.7i>..i ****]

WOMEN'S VELVET DRESS HATSr.!ai-k KiidColon

—Sailors. "j

_ jMushrooms a.r..lTilted ;hJi-«s r #Qo

'—regularly $1.58 -J ;

TRIMMED DRESS HATSKelt it Vflvet—l.a.liiisr styles, "i•tuartly trlia'd with taff^ia, 2. viseat!n. velvut. ic.

—re?. $s°o ,

FANCY FEATHERSLargo Wiuss, Coquea an* " _

IBreasts

—fullwired—hlax-k. ;

- .*[&'white, colon— reg. .M» -

•IWOMEN'S RIB VESTS

Pora Bleach— Ankle tengtn * I'"•\u25a0 to matcl.—allsl~a— » .29 !rtgularly .40 i

WOMEN'S BL'K COTTON HOSEFull regular i.v.U

—double "| j

»oles. t..i...Tl high avlh-cl \- \u25a0J 616 1

htcla—all »:.£.=»— r^s. .S9 J

WOMEN'S KID CLOVESBltck, White. Colors—2 clas;v-) ,«n

; inibd bucks— all siz?s-icg. ."9i •**

[MEN'S NEGLIGEE SHIRTSNout Sfrtpea arul Checks; also "I\u25a0om? YTnlt»StiffBoaom Dreaa ! «^f>Fhlrt:

—»llxhtlyImperfect. f* •*• v

therefore, $I.3<> ehlrts ........ J

WOMEN'S HANDKERCHIEFSKn:b'J. v.ith h, p. or scalloped) O i•.Igts

—usually .13 > -I

MEN'S INITIAL HANDSl-iirs Ltoeo

—!;ir.^h hemstitch < (V

—fancy letter—

usually .la \*i

1.. to 12 IN. EMBROIDERIESCambric. Nainsook, Swls?

—'| ,

lius' op»n and" clcao designs—

!-.12.;reg. .X to .21 J

•Jiis|17-IN. SWISS FLOUNCINGS

'Eyelet ar.l «)tl;er tiesigns for "jCorsat Coverings snd Floune-

-21'toga—re<. .r-i J •\u25a0—\u25a0>-\. " |

CHOICE SILK RIBBONSPlain and Ha Taffeta*,(•hecks. Plaids. PresJcns— ror '- 17 iJUllinery. E^sher. etc.— res. .Kj

*J

TAFFETA RIBBONSBla--k ana Colon

—f >r largo hit } or !

bows and sa^hrs—

103. .31 > •49

EMB'D LINEN COLLARSImported choice designs slaea /12 to 14—rex. .S> to .49 S *~%'

EMBD LINEN COAT SETSIn srrciit for miMes*

' . ar>wear— *.atu« Z'J id 75 c.-.::-....v •\u25a0*- :

UNDRESSED DOLLS14 iri.-h—< nosinjr Eye*—»Upper ») 1Qaud stockings

—re^. .33 s »*y.

LARGE BEAUT! DOLLShan.l se-vocT

—;>art.'d i>iz >•!

-mvoCowing curls

—rr«. SLOo

18-INCn JOINTED DOLLSOiosln^r aye*—long cnrls—sll?- (p^rd ar.a ttocklag^reg. -!»...J .-r

CORAL BEAD KIA« l.su^o Pearl and Jet

—i-lain or

Kruduated—

Invisible »nap—

f •18rug. a to .*» J .. ".

S PIECE TOILET SETS-Comb. -Bruah. Mirror—triilc |plated—satin Hnisii cr frtach i,\ 4f\Ulid i'ollsh CcHr.biaatia:.

- .~. .-/Vwere *&.ie>

— » _'-;WO3IKVS GOLF LOVES

Merc's'd wool Un«u-\VhIU-. 1 'JQiaacJv; CuUts—all tires—rcjf. ,4t«> .— V

AU'.N'S FINK SUSPENDERSWelMng an-J Ll«:>

-g<:\ -,

I.ui-kl>-s—

« xrh [,aii-i»i Jtan.l -• cpuij.iwi.-r sIWVJ JurniHSK

' •°'1-.t».-— worth .TO ....I

NO MAIL OU TF.I

-TIXCH TOKIO SILKSI3ack. whif.~r»a<n and even-«r>^ f^;«.!»«, trlfh »»Ir ovilor--? L *?Qritin flyjr*»-worth .« J \u25a0 \u25a0 .

BLACK TAFFETA SILKSSi' Inrti »lje

—\u25a0w»«r guaranteed} SO—

vali!« .1^ I •*?"

BLACK TAFFETA SILKSSort or rust!o finis*.

—Inches > a \u25a0%

•<v:i» fi-mranteed— 7 .*» { •**\u25a0».»

PLAID PRESS GOODS•

N«w eff«crs in li«hr. tnedtusi \u25a0>ar.a dark combinations-- would V I*sbe a ipecinl a* .2»—Frt<Jar.... J

"

ALL WOOL TAILOR CLOTHSCO inch—brown. r- 1. b'.ua, I "IQgie^n. gray, alao black

—It*..©$ mm*^

ENGLISH WORSTED SUITINGH»rrir!glxin9 and wide Strlpea •»!n beautiful color blendlnga

—V t^O

clko dark plaids—

r«sr. ?1.2>.... J

DOTTED SILK MULLSBlack. f=tr««t Shads* ana Hckt?

*ff

fancy tints—Usually .2*... !•Mir

VELVET DOT VOILESYard vrldf

—Er"»n. Gam«t. \u25a0> --j

Flu.\ Cii\u25a0\u25a0. &c withTMac* V jXdjta

—usually .13 J

*

ALL LINEN H. S. SETSFull t>T*at:li*>J—s-U> \u25a0 0»

—dOMHiI "5 Of)

Iar 5353 M^Mss t^ |MI (''•^

FRINGED TABLE CLOTHSATILir.-n—HS !r;ches wMt»> 70»• "

cold bcrd*r»— reg. |1.5« .. J ••*»

ALL LINEN DAMASKSfittIr.ol\u25a0—»«!» h»avv

—J Afinew patterns— Ttg. .SI .......< »^v

TURKISH TOWELSClos». absorbent wnv«

—7 (j\u25a0y \u2666

red borders—

20xU:—-i..17. . .

—i*l

FULLBL'CHED HICKTOWELS\u25a0MS Inch

—Cnn. clos<» w«ar«

—) 1C

fancy tonlsrs—

uauall; .2* \ "..

MEDICATED COT-TON DIAPKRIMI

Best made—

10 jd. j»c.—

T>i lr»<;h^ <Q—regularly .»S . . > •"\u25a0

ALL LINEN TOWELLINGSBeached— lT^a lr.ch—also la ) <J.tInch CTiock G!ass-r?s- .M \

***WHITE MEROZD MADRAS

Prft'r ri»ttpri!^ for Children* -j 1Wrer and VTom»n"s Waiyt<»

- I12 Vr-suiarly .24 J

'*riNK WTIITE CAMBRICS

Sf> Urtib—Bleached and flnished f Q|by Lonsdale CO.—oscally .14... , y-Jy -J

WHITE SILK DIB'DFLANNELSExtra heavy

—h. ». and »-alk>r>> -^r%

i?9igms— uaually .TO ] •"*

FINE WOOL BLANKETS11 « s!x3 for .1-u"ol«

—fln* \u25a0»

—white iiiiiMnwool

—inri ts; ipblndlr.s— valu* 5*68 J

*

11-1 SIZE CM* BLANKETSPtri.-Uy all wool—attraction "70liialJ comtlrjittcins—ns- 5*09..• «- •'"

MERC'ZD LINING SATEENSn« Inch—black. SUM mr Icad-< |A1:.5 shades— re* .31 \u25a0>

•'*

MOIRE PERCALtNES—yd. wideFine anj sUky for drop skirts > iAand linings—usually .21 $ .3

~

HOT WATER BOTTLESr«r« Guni

—true*quart r.«

-\ A{\

C«rftct —ao uecj-ads—

Ttg. .5». .. $ •"»'r

SCARFS AND SHAMS£'x"4 an-! ::°.'.t::2—^T^mbour anfl tSwiss AppUque

—::...-. • Iall- V SOover centr»s

—resr. J*S J

Other*—

:>x34j at.l Cl"i32—

Ttg. .K>. .17

FRIDAY NOTION VALUESFad Host Supporters

—4 strap* ) I*7JL

—regularly -™ i•*\u25a0*!!Fancy Xeeu".«s Cases

— > . IIrerii'ar'.y .1" $ V 7Kast Black Pamins •ton

—) -| "y

45->--. epoo's— re*. .IS a CoseaS• •*•

\Vh!t* Roll Tap-— !i-«nch— > sr I2v-yard pieces

—reg. I S •'T

Mu«Jin skirt Yokes— WKta. } "7Biack. Gray

—res. .12. \ •*

Fancy Hat Pins— ColorM "|ar.-! Blaci—r«s- 3 mv.'l 3 eacV- * %8 *cr JPin or Hosb Supporters

—A

and bisk.-*—

3—

usually 7..J \u25a0

"

N SOk >"^l!* J:iast'-— \u25a0-,

V.Tiitd and Colors— 3 stjlai— ,- j2

res- .10 yd J mmmUniversal Hooks and Ey»s— i "J4 circs— black, whit?

—-13--i

•CUSHION RUFFLING

—iVs yd pc

5 Inches wlds—

attractive enlor- 1 *}Alns»

—draw •tn.-iea—re<. .4» i •-*'

POUND PKGE WRITING PAPER I84 to 132 shoots

—Emplrs Vellum ">—

S slsfcs—

fchio and wttta—

\u25a0 p f\T-S- .14 illnre;-?;es to match— per loo— .19 .It

PARISIAN CAMBRIC STATNEBTWhite. Bin-, Oray—Regent atM> I^l

?••» sheets— valud .71 <•*-*•\u25a0!Envelopes

—jer ICO—value* .23 -I*•'•

COLONIAL CURTAIN MADRAS jQ-.talnt \u25a0Quara rattems

—i j>

-S*J Sim iasi<sill

•• J

TAPESTRY COUCH COVESS60 Inches -artie— Ilia iirtpes— ) 1> -» Jtassel txluas—7*s. «2.29 f *•*'*

REVERSIBLE SMYRNA RUGS2x3 yds.— ?reen and r»-l i*5 C "igTivsdi— ur-jaily f4.M ...J *« «»

JAPANESE MATTING RirGS'!

Finest weaver—

pai:st»d or 1liacl euib'vl centres for walldecorations, others inunless I 7C Idt?:srs far floor coverlnjcs

— " •« «-*

tto j-ufis lons—

jiiriiwide—

None worth less than $1.2.... J

BATH ROOM FIXTURESlt«!«t Nickel on Brass—T'->*-«>! Bar-?•.«? Ui»h for Tub. "»««.a£s H"!d-.T.TootliBrush HuMer.! 'ZA tt-'jmr.?.- itiaket. Faj.cr noUer. f •»-I^'.

\\lV!h>\v SKAI»ES !l^rj.laT.e Holland—Htst f.pts

—-j

's^: ii.—stidthtly ma^r'ect. L .39 'thirtfora Z'J ct. \aiue J ,

STAMPED SCARFS & SQUARESI<s3t>— 30x20— fnion Ur.eu

— > >? Qrow ... work rag. .39 $ '-»".

YL». WIDE BLEACHED MUSLINS){I'tr.e quality

—co dressing

— • St\regularly .12 i O

FINE MUSLIN SHEETSKill'alzj i?lxaO>— laiOOUS Mo- -v Iha«fc miiWill Waah Heavier [, .,'\u25a0* J

SILKOLINK CO.MFORT.\BLKSKul!'i^-t*:^.:ti- plain bci-S» 1 CQ 1

n ftU'.ur!;" *?.'l* v J«' V

FKATira; UKI» TICKS.33

i\u25a0'< 'T r•. i v iji -;;;!\u25a0 | ..»>!•>.

Frklav-, as Usual, .Bargain Day.C-~a.73.v" 7ALU2? T*: r~ST GCC3S

POSSI3LS 7Z .QBTiUW;?:

1

your transactions with us remit money in prcf- jeretice to other things." These means have been !employed in the existing emergency and have jbeen supplemented by unwonted exertions on

the part of the governor and directors of the

bank to Increase imports of gold ana to rein- jforce the reserves. There is no evidence that a ;

high bank rate has lost its efficiency Inattract-ing gold, but there la cumulative proof thatwhen the reserves arc small in comparison with jthe stocks of foreign treasuries and banks the

processes of protecting them against deple-

tion are more artificial and coercive and the dl*-

turbing effects on Internationa] exchange andhome Industries are Immeasurably increased.

"While supplies of bullion have been obtained ;

for making up the shrinkage caused by exports |to America the Bank of England has well nigh

exhausted its resources under tho 7 per cent

rate. Ithas secured as much assistance fromParis and Berlin as is available, and has even

negotiated with Russia an arrangement fur in-creasing its gold reserves. Possibly some ad-ditional help can come from India and Egypt,

but not much bullion can be squeezed out of

the Continental countries which ere bent upon

guarding their own reserves bo laboriously ac-

cumulated. The disturbance of Internationalcredit relations Is already so serious that an

advance of the bank, rate to 8 or 0 per cent

will cause something like consternation, espe-

cially to the masters of British Industries, whoneed to have large enterprises and operationseconomically financed; yet there will be hardly

any alternative if the outflow of gold to Amer-ica continues. Happily optimism in Increasing

this week in consequence of the relief measuresadopted by President and the Secretary of

the Treasury, and the speedy cessation of thegold drain is now confidently anticipated. Yetthe crisis has* lasted long enough to convincemany conservative financiers that the Bank ofEngland ordinarily carries too email a reservefor the present requirements of commerce andInternational exchange. Tho tribute exactedfrom all industries in grave emergencies for thesake of keeping meagre reserves of bullion un-

impaired is heavier than it would be if there

were a larger and more elastic currency in the

kingdom -with more gold behind it.

This subject is not a new one, since ithas been

a mock controversy from Mr. Ba«ehofs time,

and one Chancellor of the Exchequer after an-

other has been drawn Into the discussion. A

considerable proportion of the banknote circu-

lation has been based upon consols, and it has

often been suggested that gold should be sub-stituted for it by government purchase. Miniters have too many legislative schemes to financeto undertake a burden of this sort, and there Isalso a strong prejudice against the associationof the Treasury officials with the management

of the bank. The Issue department of the bankoperates already as a branch of the state ser-vice in the regulation of currency; but theTreasury officials have no responsibility and the

bank directors no discretion in the administra-

tion of a self-acting law. The Issue of one-pound notes has also been urged as a popular

expedient for bring::.? more paper money intouse and increasing the stock of gold reservedfor its conversion. Mr. Bagehot'a own remedy

was a readjustment of the relations betweenthe joint stock banks and the Bank of Eng-

land." by which the reserves of gold actually Inthe kingdom but never In plain sight might

be massed through co-operation in grave emer-

gencies when the rate of interest had to be put

up to check Imports. This willprobably be theline on which reforms of the banking system

are ultimately adopted. The disturbance causedby tho present monetary crisis may Impart a

fresh impulse to the movement. What used to

be described as the "bankers* bank." because in

the last resort it is the keeper of the cash re-serves of all institutions in tho country, has

become in the most comprehensive sense the

custodian of the credit of all nations and theregulator of international exchange*. It needseither a larger reserve of bullion in the Issuedepartment or facilities for massing in an emer-gency the gold resources of the kingdom.

\u25a0

I.X. F.% •

\u25a0

COMMITS SUICIDE TO MUSIC.

Engineer's Wife Starts Phonograph ..d

Then Tunis on the Gas.Mrs. Georgia Tittle committed suicide at her

home. No. Gil Tenth avenue, yesterday morning

Mrs Grace Milgie, who lives In the same house,

\u25a0melted gas in the hall. She called her husband andthey broke open the door of Mrs. Tittle's apart-

ment and found her with a tub« from the gas jet

In her mouth. She had been dead several hours.Shortly after Mrs. Tittle was seen for the last,

time tha neighbors heard her phonograph playing"In the Wild Woods Where Bluebells Grow."and the condition of the machine, the cylinder nothaving been stopped, showed that she bad startedth« music Just before turning on toe gi\f. Mrs.Tittle had threatened to commit euickle owing to

111 health, Her husband. Charles TJttl*. Is an•ngln»«r.

•Sedentary occupation. Improper food anddally resort to drugs, coffee or liquors to"smother', 1 the disease h:is put many a good manaway. ,

"For many years my labors have been en-tirely imlnurs," writes a N. V- man.

"Naturally, want of exercise, coupled withhasty eatlog of luuru with more or leva greasyfuod and pastry told on my digestion^

"Tor :i long i>eriod Itried scores of rem-edies without avail, and anally 1 was m-pelled to resign my position ats secretary of anImportant Iiwiness association. My weighthad. run down from 145 to 118 pounds. 1 wasunable to sleep naturally, rose unfleshed andwithout ambition, simply dragged about, feel-Ing more dead than alive.

"About a year ago, at a meeting of the RoyalArcanum, of which Iam Orator, Iwas advisedby a fellow member to try Grape-Nats. But 1had no faith in treating. the matter with sucha method, and paid so.

"lie finally won my promise to give it,a fairtrial. Ibegan the following day, and, to makea long story short, in less than a year Ihaverevolutionized i,:y physical and mental condi-tion, now weigh dose to 150 poundsi and candigest all my food, which' is eaten with relish,This change is due to Grape-Nuts/

Name given by Postuiu Cereal Co., Ltd., Bat-do Creek, Mich, ltead .the famous bookie."The Road to Wellvillo,' in packages.

"Thorns n Renson."

Many level headed business men pay too littleattention n> wbat they oat uuiii sickness attacks

SHORT STORYFood That Changed His life.

BANKBOOK No. 4'«,1::2 t.r th<? L'lUon Dime.Savings Institution H mi.«sirs. \i:y p«r~

«..H Ir.inc a claim to It is hereby calledupon to Luapmt th-i attaw within t^n daypr. .\u0084-\u0084

.„.\u0084t

-.- .„(,!pauatKK* •\u25a0 • -i\-.\

•n • MIMl» l»«aed.

SILK DEPARTMENTS. InBoth Stores.

"McCreery Silk."Silks suitable for holiday gifts. Dress

or waist patterns of plain or noveltyweaves. Packed in boxes for presents*?tion.

On Friday and Saturday,November the 29th and 30th.

Sale of one thousand Dress Patternscontaining 15 yards of Imported BlackSilk. 11.50 to 15.00 per pattern

r»lu«. 15.00 to 50.00

23rd Street 34-th Street

James McCreery & Co,23rd Street 34-th Street

NEW-YORK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1907, PAGES MNK TO TWELVE.OCEAN STEAMBK^. •\u25a0< .' «.s vif\mt::> ?>itv r.uuuv

HE AR iMJ Li o=3 Zr^i vi11 \1i3s fc*U t^T^-rwE faC fcA W8 W* *J**

liRT CiOOP*.

hyftI* ifj bitLHi s3i wiKi luLyi'y•F:ist Express Service.

PLYMOUTH-^-CHKRBOURG—BIIEMEN.Krr.;-.|.rir.z.Dec. 3. V.AM K. Vm. 11-.Feb. 4Ocilie(nw)rwc.Jo,JoAMiCepUle(new)T

-eb. IS

KrcnprlntJan. 17.1» AM1K.Wm.11.. M-ir. 3

CeclUe(sw)Jan.2l.lo AMI\u25a0Twin-Screw Passenger Service.

PLYMOUTH—CHERBOURG—

BREMEN.tßaj-b"r*Ba..Nov.2B.lOAM I'Main.

-. Dec. -•'•\u2666Kurfuerst ..Dee.s.li>AM ;fP.arbar'ssa. '\u25a0•-'•

"•nhci:j...L>6c. 12. lOAMttßooa Jan. 10•Go;ben Dec. lft|

•L'remf-r. direct. TCherlivmr*nr.d Cremen.

Mediterranean Service.GIITLTAR—NAPLES—GENOA, at 11 AM.

CbnnecliSff ai <;ibraltar tor Algiers.K.Albert Nor.2'l P. Irer>» Jan. It•X«?k:«r De.:. 4 'Friedrloh Ta-.u 2.1Frledri.-h J •

\u25a0•• . 7K. Albert... .^eb. SK.Lulse Jan. «,*Neckar.. Feb. IS

•Ornltß Genoa.From Breraen PIeTS. 3d A- < h '-••.IT^h^k'sn.

AROUND THE WORLD TOUKS.East anil West.

N*. <i TXOYD EXPRESS IJNf.MARSEILLES—NAPLES—ALEXANDRIA-

German—

UedltctTtinean—

Levant Lln».Marseilles

—Of noa via Na;>les to the levant.

ROYAL ROUMANIAN MAILSTEAMERS.C :.. tanxa

—Conatantln<

—Sin;mt

—Alexandria.

rJorth German Lloyd Travellers' ChecksGood All Over the World.

OEURICHd A CO..No .*. Broadway, S. T.Louis IT. Meyer, 1016 Walnut .St., Phi.a.

©01 [ DH3(ESaFroru Piers' 7,i -62. NortiiKlver.

to uvrv.pool. via iiii:h:N.~vo\VN.PASSENGERS BOOKtSD THKOUCiH TO

LONDON AND PARIS.

St>»c;a! Lew Si •on Kates '\u25a0' Europe.

is© liyjreMiMAT'FirrAVIA NOV. SO. NOONCARMANIA - .... DEC X. 7A. M.LI7SITANIA Tic:. 14IMACRETANIAr< c.9LLTANIA.-Doc. 21 UPANIA... J-n. *

Itluuretania, Nov. SO. \u25a0:£ $72.50.L-usiifiniri. I.W. 14. a $72.00.

Largest, fastest. Finest in the AVcrli

HUNGAHIAN-AMEi:ICAN SERVICE.TO FIUME VIA

GIBRALTAR NAPLEtJ AND TRIESTE.BLAVONIA..DCC 10. noon; Mar.12, Apr. 30PANNONIA . Mar. 38, May I*. -''l!>' -CARPATHIA Apr. !'. May2*. JaJy loSPECIAL MHDITERRANBAN CItL'ISKS.

CALXJLXG AT 11ADEIKA.Caron'.a 1 •*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.. *\u25a0 mm.».0W ..< j"*:

' •a* at

CarmaHia \ ••?»"• 16. f Alexandria.Su.ooo M J •»«'- J

VERNON 11. BROWN. General Agent.21-24 S'ute St.. oi>w>slto the Battery.

00 BOUJa LWEiDAILY SERVICE.

For Jamestown Exposition, Old PointComfort, Norfolk. Portsmouth. I'irnersFeint ar.1 Newport Newa, Vs., connectingfor Petersburg. Kichni..nJ. Virginia Beach.Washington, i-i. C. and entire . cut.i and\Ve»t.

Freight nii'l \msstng~r steamers sail fromPier 2K. N. P... toot of Bea^ St.. everyweek day at 3 P. W.

\V. 1.. WOODROW. Traffic Manager.

RAII.KOAO*.

[HIARW railnrafta /5\ M^ro^«m

(0$IEiI?}]*t-pIST CLASS ACCORDINGTO

Qj^Q/iy) STEAMER AND .DESTINATION,by tnoet modern anil luxurious leviathans.London ]K^:^ 2^rParis 1- Am<>rik;i<new>Dec.l2.llam

Hamburg Ij.tj'niufnajeoS.lO-SOamtrails to Hamburg direct.

Gibraltar 1P. Lincoln fnew)...l>e. ft

Nnr.l,*'- LHambunrr.Jao. 4. Feb. 15lNapieo Ir^tavia.Jan. 1!. March 7Genoa J M<.»ltk« Jan. 2P, Apr. 22A luvonrlwnSpecial trips t.y S.S Hair-

Via Gi'j. & Italy.

West Indies <fk OrientSpecial cmlseg by superb ataamera, lasting

from \'< 78 days Coal from sv.!> tsuoandup.SUPERB NILE SERVICB. By Net

Steamers.Tourist 1 pt. •

-Genera! Information.

Travellers' Checks r,. <all over tie World.Company's Office. SS-37 Broadway. N. Y.