AEROPLANE BUILT ESPECIALLY TO CARRY WOMEN R. • • it m« . 4 •!. iv i.'tun. « harie., i. ivlng fins invented and buUt an it-* *• i .. ’i.tn-re ■ f •' fin x iij> tn tlie clouds. LagbAii-ss, roominess and *► i* <"■ *ttd it liTei' .'tuple accommodation for one or two feminine pan M'ngucs ^ _ _ _ _ __ _ V_ PIG ENJOYS ITS RIDE Drested at Baby It Taken From Hew ark to Near York. ' >* Car»«oa LHft* In Har Arm* •»< barconafatir Or-rlya* U*fp*«»—tt'tUfJ •at.»r* lartt K»» T‘>r* If It hadn't bran for a a»»«ad atfwnal »nd • *arj |»f*11bo wrl* d>» tba •»*!-ab del. or t*ot*r bar. k*t*ran that aaa of Ma fto* • art * t ataaa ia fa<1. tba l«l«* tor* b d n>ada tba aa ma mistake Tbof ♦•I bn*m eras sow that tba bundle Mra Katana 'arrtod an tondorly lb b*o trm aaa not a babf at all. In at .<« t«a babp rap aad ft.iffr Itttla naai *ad tba milk bottlo wfclrfa Mra V. at mm pnrdsrod oeopy »n* and than j •a bat ttda I man K**trt Maa H ••mm aa alaa'Wt ovary vattdo ttlb- prrfortarr kuna*, ta lb* a I fa of j Ham Katana a bn baa a barnyard «Ir j • aa '>••• a« «»r* ton* bar np ir* **•*• | -ar aa* .ir*'d- of Nraark T»*r t r • «»art a«|.*d to call fra. «a b- »d aa Nraark. bat aoi Manhat taa Mr* n*ao and her t-aaband *mt •ft afnr»mm kn. a abat aho «a* talk -* •bos' •ro«» M to ma - *bo repeated, and Mr Vtiaa did ao Katana mad* tba trip to Now *rb btn* alao than a top* <|nlrt »t d n»llb*t*»ed bai t tl»t Mra Wat aoa a a* •-arf-rio* la Nor tin t bt leraar Off Mra U ataon and hor 'large proceeded to the Hudson Tun nel station While waiting for a tun nrl train an elderly man suggested to Mm Wataon that ahe had belter atand w«ll ba* k from the edge of the plat form. ■"Ton know these drafts are very bad for babies." said the elderly gen ’l»tntn Mm Watson smiled and • hanked the solicitous old man Never note during the trip to Manhattan did the pig betray himself At Thirty third street Mrs Wataon hailed a taxicab. and In thla the last lap of the Journey was made At the theater Mm Watson alighted and pnld her fare The movement of get. ting Into her purse must have dis turbed the pig. for there was a sudden st|iieal and a very vigorous wriggle Tl e baby cep slipped back, displaying a very plgllke face It was then that the chauffeur begnn rubbing hla eyes and pinching hlms*lf. In a few days the little pig will lake «h« place of »he elderly porker In the barnyard scene He is now tin dertaklng the necessary preliminary training. CARING FOR “ONLY” CHILD Vienna Profetter Flrtdt Only Thirteen Out of One Hundred Are Fully Normal. Vienna \fter a study of the prob lem ,,f the only child extending over seve.al years. I*r. f J Frledjung of the ■toclely of Interi . I Medicine and I’edl attl. i has made public the result of bis observations He had under ex ateMention ion "only" children, of • horn 445 were boys and lio girls i lw range In ag< from two to ten v»ars Ka< h had ttecn raised In a family whet-- there were no other children. SEE SAHARA Doctor Slegert Hopes to Provs That King Solomon's Wines'' Are Not Entirely Legendary. TWIn lx* tor Slegert Is actively ngaged in preliminary preparations to crops the groat d< sert of Sahara In a .1- tt>ie balloon Prominent geog raphes and meteorologists are help ing I mi In his scientific calculations m.I Ms • twice of an airship. Count 'e it Vanlx. the famous French i.'.ir.aul. had the Fstno purpose a " 'cats ago. hut gave It up because 'tshljia had not sufficient protection rgalnst the sun's rays Doctor Slegert ■ .'r.tMently expects to make the trip ! e has laid out i-Ignit 950 miles -in t heirs His at rial vessel's engines nltl glie the craft a speed of 1SU ml'es an h. ir; besides. Doctor S gert Is counting on 12 miles an hour more by the wind To tl n unimaginative the Sahara Is on ' an inimitable, and waste, but r "in It have come legends of buried tile* of incalculable antiquity and tale" of immense. hidden hordes l»,u ,.t s- g.tt wishes to clear up the t.istorv surrounding the expedition of Front, the t'ng’ish explorer of a and therefore had been subjected to the kind of domestic Isolation that ac companies those conditions. Of the 100 children 18 were severely neuropathic and 09 manifested less marked symptoms of nervous Instabil ity Only 13 of the youngsters, accord ing to Dr Frledjung, were fully nor mal. He set off these observations against another set of studies msde among families consisting of several offspring Of these only 31 showed neuropathic symptoms Fear waa the strongest symptom In 75 of the 87 neuropathic "only chil dren." They were hysterical In their nature. Forty nine bad restless sleep and 8 were subject to more marked symptoms. I'nusua! mental ability and way wardness. the professor reports, seem to go hand In hand In the case of chil dren. Of the neurasthenics. 32 showed malnutrition to a remarkable degree. The "only" child, says Frledjung, g^ts Its morbid manifestations from the excess of lender care lavished up on it. Its parents spoil It, they take away Its sentiments of self-reliance, and In this way they unconsciously encourage the child never to develop unduly. A certain amount of knock- | ing about and hardships Bud necessity for self-reliance Is Imperatively de- ! mand°d, this Investigator says, other wise a child will grow Into a namby- ! pamby. a nervous molly-coddle. On this account, as well as because j of the menace to the race through the limitation of population to 1 "only” , children. Frledjung urges that every family should possess several children. Taboo Girl Shoe Shiner. Kansas City, Mo.—Contending that shoe shining Is a work morally unfit for women, tke city officials have re fused to grant a license to a shoe shin ing parlor which advertises on a sign that "pretty girls will shine your shoes." A city ordinance Is being pre pared to prohibit women from shining shoes. IN DIRIGIBLE I hundred years ago, and to Investigate I he romantic story of Rholfs, who found traces of a great road running out In the desert until the sand ob tilerated them. What lies beyond that lost track? Whither did that great highway lead, and of what char acter were the people who construct od It? These questions, which have been ; tmt so often, are supposed to have In spired the plot of Rider Haggard’s romance, "King Solomon’s Mines;" at any rate, they appear to Doctor 1 Siegert to be well worth answering. The headquarters of this expedition ' will he in the Nile valley. From it the airship will sail about 310 miles tc the oasis district In the desert. In an oasis a depot wilt have been pro i rar°d with cylinders of gas. spare screws and other fittings—everything needed to repair any damage that may have been or may he done to the j From the depot the dirigible j "HI start on her real flight of more ; than r»nn miles over the "undiscovered ; country.” Having traversed it. Doctor j Siegert will attempt either to reach 1 :he coast or to return to the I-yhlan i 1 \asis The expedition's cost is estl- ■ mated at 1,50,000. TWINKLING STAR MEANS LIFEi P-t* «f* *f N-'»l Ob"-rvatory at Vl'f I*) / Taik* to Aroortcan I**. *oc‘otv t* i'aP> Iphia —That plains ary «?»• imp* t)*ti i to mt o»a r»rnl>* about I .11 ik* fta< •< iim mm) Hut tVi* plan «m ar* ImMUM* ’n4 Inhabit *4 Itfc* mm mmn pUtMS. *hl*h r.tilt*i a boat iIm an* «** «h* 4**taratiAn of Prof X J i Pm *****■»»*•« natrc«w*w*r In <**nx* * th* aa**t rWraatrry at War* l*lar4 <3ht, b*a4* tit* otfcvr day *»*.■-'* ffc* kWtVM Phi’ow.-ofcb'al MV rt*ai nt It* aamtnl n>**rt‘»* M* «aid •Ha m« a p*ff**«t» pomor%\ phmom mr— |a <•* «•»> Ml* 4l«***rlM In « **• mimmo. th* •*!*•<* «* ™* r Proloootr Poo aa**rt*d a nr -H th* r* .-*tt* ant onarod »a. a 1,0 «a th* thaia ot roottmi** **,*''# I* v*’ f ffe# MWm «f tk# <>f u, a '.'aa. •ho’tlh* that th* I , !»: t* originally were entail bodies ■•'•run* at a gtcr.t distance front the : in. md that their ma**r* hare been j In. : ■ • . d fcj gathering up all manner f ' «*< i lodlea from meteorites to «at 'little* Pr >*ee«or Sec outlined the process | ’■ » wntrh the planets had Veen built '.p cut of matter or.ee circulating in ! ■ ,ir nebula a« comet*, and said the dc- i ■ ro tion of the comets was still caus hr bower* of coswical dust to fall upon the planet*, as witnessed in the celebrated alar showers of 1799. 1833 and ••Our system wa* once literally filled with comet*, and Kepler was right." he said, when he declared there was a* many comets In the heavens as -here wa* fish In the sea. And just as the planets have keen captured and added to our sun from without, so also the satellites have been captured and added on to their several planets. Keen onr moon ts a planet which came to u* from the heavenly space, and wa* never thrown out of the Pa i!V ocean, as was formerly taught hv 1-ord Kelvin. Sir George Darwin, Roin care and their followers.” Rare Disease Kitis. Philadelphia —After three years- 111 ress from a disease so rare that it is said to have been the nineteenth case in the history of medicine, James M. I bodes, Jr., widely known socially and ■' former guard on the Princeton foot ball team, died the other day at Villa Nova, near here. The disease is known to physicians \s blastomyeetes, and is manifested by a malignant vegetable growth, which attaches to the Intestines. Farm for Social Work. FUhkill, N. Y.—A gift of $100,000 to the University settlement of New York city from the widow of General How iar.d, U. S. A., is announced here. The gift includes the entire Howland es tate at Flshkill-on-the-Hudson. The property consists of about 250 acres, and it is understood that the settle ment will establish a model farm and summer camp there as a part of ita work. WHERE FESSENDEN WAS BORN Patriotic Citizen* Set Up Huge Bowl der In %emory of Great Statesman. Foscawen. Jf H - Foscawen. aa In teresting little poet village in Merrf mac county, N. H.. and on the Merrl mac, is the birthplace at WiUJam Pttt Fessenden who. early in life, engaged in the political affairs of Maine. The house where he was born was taken down many years ago and a more modern one erected on the site, which was in the main street of the vil lage. Notwithstanding that Mr. Fessen den's entire public life was spent in Maine the patriotic citizens of Bos A ^ Of IA /rBfW u»-u j«m W"^ IOX&\ * M(- -w* '0* •**’*!*r***' *'■ \ ur ’ | I 9~* *->• * 1 The Fessenden Tablet. cawen set up a huge granite bowlder near the place of the old house In memory of tbe great statesman. On one of the sides of this big bowlder Is a bronze tablet which makes known that William Pitt Fessenden was born October 6. 1806; that be was United States senator from Maine for 13 years and secretary of the United Stales treasury from 1864 to 1866. William Pitt Fessenden was gradu ated from Ilowdoin college In 1823. He was admitted to the bar In 1827, ind was a member of the Maine legis lature two terms. He was elected to congress In 1841. and from 1854 un 11 the time of his death. September S. 1869, he was United States senator, sxoept when secretary of the treaa jry, 1864 1865. He was one of the founders of the Republican party In 1856 and throughout the Civil war ie did eminent service as chairman of the finance committee of the senate. HOUSES BUILT OF BOULDERS ?arts of Oklahoma Have a Model Building Material—Found In Large Quantities. Cache. Okla.—In the Wichita moun tain region, notably In the Wichita Na tional forest reserve, the ground Is covered with untold numbers of smooth boulders, both spherical and elliptical In form, ranging In size from a few Inches to more than a foot In diameter. In many places these boul ders are so close together as to form a substantial pavement, giving a strange and unusual appearance to tbe landscape. Their form and their eroded surfaces suggest that they may have dropped from melting glaciers in prehistoric times—If the glacial drift reached tills far south. The deposit seems to reach only a short distance below the surface of the ground. These stones lend themselves fn many ways to ornamental uses In building and have been employed by residents of Lawton in the construc tion of summer homes in the Wichttas An Oklahoma Cottage Built of Boulders. They are reddish in color and contrast prettily with the green vines that clamber over them. Occasionally, similar formations of qtuch greater sise are found. One of the most unique lies in the Wichita reserve north of this place. The diameter of this boulder is far greater than the height of a man. Its peculiar ity is its smooth, spherical form and the fact that through-the formation of sandstone projects a core of the hard est granite, from which wind and weather have worn away the softer sandstone. It could have served as the warclub of some monstrous giant in the stone age. FIND RUINS OF OLD CITIES Excavations in Guatemala Bare Hiero glyphics That None of Searchers Has Been Able to Read. New York.—Edgar L. Hewitt, direc tor of the School of American Arch relotrv, has just returned to Ne - York from Quirigua, Guatemala, with a glowing report of the American re searches there. The diggings at bc.l'. Quirigua and Copan. he says, have laid bare ancient cities of surpassing splon dor. which flourished long before the Christian era. The American archaeologists are in complete possession of the ruins at Quirigua. There they have found sculpture as beautiful as any that Egypt or Assyria ewer boasted, and hieroglyphics even more interesting, but these can scarcely be read. Only ! the system of reckoning time has been deciphered, and the real history is carved on blocks which no man has yet been able to translate. Close study of the masterpieces of antique genius thus far unearthed seems to show a close cultural re semblance between this civilisation and that of the races farther north, but there is not enough resemblance to prove that there ever was any sc teal connection between North and South America before the fall of Rome. Won at Last By CARL JENKINS (Coprricht. no. by Asa Mr. James Skeen was a widower of fifty. He had the reputation of be ing a persistent man. As he had had a lawsuit that lasted twenty-two years, his persistency had been proved. It was also known that he had courted his wife for six years and then car ried her off by main force. Mrs. Faber was a widow. She was pretty well fixed financially, and she didn't care to marry again. She had been put to the test and had refused. She was buxom and good-natured, and Widower Skeen had no moral or legal right to come bothering. But he did. , He made up bis mind one day to ask her to be his wife. He expected to be refused, but that didn’t worry him. . The widower was hoeing corn In a lot next to the widow's house. He was barefooted and had on a torn shirt, a pair of overalls and an old straw hat. Five minutes after making up his mind be dropped bis hoe, climbed the fence and appeared at the widow's back door. She was Rcour tng a milk pan. She had polished her nose as well as the pan. “Look-a-here. widow," said Mr. Skeen, “what's the matter of me and you getting married?" “Lord save us!” gasped the widow as she polished her hand instead of the pan. “Jars you. eh? Well it shouldn’t! A widow ought to be ready for a pro posal any minute." “And a widower ought to have his ears cuffed for making one! Marry you, Jim Skeen? Why. I wouldn't think of It for a minute!" "Oh, yes, you will. You'll think of It a great many minutes. Widow Faber, you are going to be my second wife as sure as corn grows and strlng beans climb!” "I never will, and you get out of here and back to your corn!” Mr. Skeen went back to his work whistling. The widow was as good as his. He let a week elapse and The Widower Wu Hoeing Corn. then he met her on the street as she was gqjng to the postoffice and stopped her to say: •‘Been thinking that thing over, of course? When will you be ready!" "Never in all my born days!" she replied. "Oh. yes. you will. Widow, I'm a determined man. We are going to be married. I as just wondering why I didn't marry you two years ago." "You pester me and I'll have the law on you!" she almost shouted. "You can't make It pestering to ask a woman to marry you. Jog along, widow—I’ll come for you when work slacks ofT a little. Two weeks later the widow saw Mr. Skeen approaching the house and she shut and locked all the doors. He was in nowise put out. He stopped at an open window, and with his head inside and his body out he cheerfully inquired: “Shall we go before the squar'. widow, or to a preacher. I'm willing you should have your way about it." “Neither squar' nor preacher, and you get out of that window!" was called to him. “Oh. it's got to be one or the other, you know. Think it over." “1 won't do it!” "But you'll have to. Widow. I'm sot, and when I'm sot that's the end of it. You are going-to-be Mrs. Skeen No. 2. You can tell all your friends." "i'll have you arrested before sun down! I’ll go right off now and see the constable!” She was as good as her word. She DcUicd Lierur Pn*.) entered the presence of that oScial with 'ears in her eyes to say: "Zeke Parsons, you are a con stable.” ‘ Yes, widow, I have reached that high pinnacle." "Ain’t there a law against pestering a body?” • There sure is.” “Then I want Jim Skeen arrested and jailed.” “Whew: Why, Jim Skeen wouldn't pester a fly." "But I tell you he Is pestering me!” “So: How?” “Asking me to marry him when I don't want to. He's asked me three times!” "But that ain’t pestering." said the constable, as a smile crossed his face. "That is. it ain't within the meaning cf the law. That's courting. No low to stop a man courting as I knows of.” "But ain't it threats when he says he's bound to have me?" "No. That’s Just saying that he loves you better than any other worn an, and is willing to swim the mill pond to get you. Why don't you marry him?” "Because I don't want to marry any one. I don't and I won't, and I call upon the law to protect me!" "Lots o' laws on the statute books, Widow Faber, but I don't know—1 don't know about this. If Jem Skeen was throwing stones at your bens oi breaking your windows the law would grab him In a minute, but as long as he's only asking you to marry him, what are we going to do? If my old woman was dead I reckon I'd ask you myself.” me widow aidnt go come wicn tears in her eyes. She was too mad for that. She hunted around for a stout club and*stood it in a convenient spot, and that club was meant for the Widower Skeen In case he pes tered again. It so happened, however, that he was called away for the next two weeks on business, and the club was not brought into use. One day, Just as the two weeks were up, the Widow Faber started out to pay a visit to a woman across the creek that ran through the town. On the path she took this creek was crossed by a foot bridge. It was a shaky affair at best, and few people used it. She had just reached the middle of the structure when she saw Mr. Skeen advancing from the other end. She halted and he came along up and said: “Well, widow, you see I am back. Going somewhere?" “Yes.” “I was in hopes I would find you at home, as I wish to talk about our getting married. Better go back with me.” “Mr. Skeen, I'll never marry you— never!” she replied with vigor. “Oh, yes, you will. You forgot that I am a determined man. I'll call this evening for you to set the date!” “If you pester me again I’ll— She had no time to complete the •ontence. Under their united weight the old bridge went down with a crash. It was a fall of ten feet, and the creek had a depth of six feet and a swift current. The widow screamed and gasped and gurgled, but the widower was cool. He supported her and made a landing a hundred feet below. As she leaned up against a tree, limp and bedraggled, he said: “Widow Faber, may I call this evening and talk the wedding over?” “No. no, no!” she gasped. “All right. We '•"ill make it Sun day evening. Widow, let me call your attention to the fact that we have landed on the shores of Deacon Shine's pasture. The deacon owns a bull, and that bull is coming for us and we must climb this tree. Up you go. That's it. Just in time. He can't reach us. and will go away in time. Now. as to our getting mar ried. We are up a tree, of course, but don't you think—r “I do, I do!” she exclaimed In an swer. “I said I'd never marry you, but I will. You ve pestered, and I've been drowned, and here's a bull roar ing at us. and I can’t hold out no longer! Yes. James, I'm yours! We'll be married tomorrow!" The automobile in the middle, mov ing on in business: shadows like you and me skipping out of its way in front; oil and used-up stuff dropping out behind. There you have society— body, break and bones. Enmeshed were men born, en meshed they die, fighting according to their strength to the end: to fight in the hope of freedom, their joy: to die not knowing they are beaten, theit reward. FAR BEYOND THE MIND’S EYE : From the Sea the Palace cf the Doges Is a Sight Which Exceeds Imagination. A few strokes from the sweeps soon brov-ght me to one of the most mar velous prospects which the human eye can behold—the Placetta, seen from the sea. Standing in the bow of the motionless gondola. I gazed for some time in mute ecstacy upon that unrivaled picture, the only one perhaps that imagination cannot sur pass. Oo the left, looking from seaward, the trees in the royal garden form a green line above the white terraces; nest comes Zecca and the oW library, the work of San Sovina, with ife elegant arches and ita crown of mythological statues. On the right, separated by a space which forms the Plaxetta— the vestibule of the Piazza San Mar co—the Palace of the Doges shows its golden facade with its rose and white marble, its massive pillars supporting a gallery of slender columns, the rib bmg of which contains quarterfoils, with six ogival windows, a monu mental balcony, enriched with brack «?ts and niefces flnials statues and sur mounted by a statue of the Virgin; its aeroter, the acanthus leaves of which alternate against the sky with the spiral fillet, which runs up the : angles and ends in traeeried pinna | cles. At the back of the Piazetta, ! towards the library rises to a prodig ious height the Campanile, a great ; brick tower with high pitched roof, surmounted by a golden angel. Near the Palace of the Doges is seen a corner of the peristyle of San Marco, which faces on the piazza. The pros pect is closed by the Procuratie Vec chie and the clock tower with its bronze Jacks, its lion of St. Mark on a starry blue ground, and Its great azure dial, on which are marked the twenty-four hours.—Tbeophile Gautier, “Travels in Italy." Judge not thy friend until thou standest in his place.—HilleL EXPLORING THE HID Six Nations Interested in Series of Investigations. Wats of Information Corcem-rg Gc'i Citior* in High Attitudes I* Be ing Obtained—Weatrter Bal loons Used for Testa. Omaha.—Six cations are Inter'-?.:.si I m a series of Investigations now be l ing carried on in Omaha by the Ur-it* . States government and collaborate-: la by the governments of Er.gpar.d. Ger many. France, Italy and Beiz -m. ; These investigations have for their c u ject the thorough exploration of '■ itmoaphere at a height of more than :en miles above Use earth's surface, and so successfully are they being car tied out that a mass of informa". n concerning conditions existing as high as eighteen miles up in the air has been secured. Similar exploratiors are being conducted in the cosntrids named above and when these are completed all information gathered | by each country Is to be exchanged ; with all other countries engaged in ;he investigations. The research is being prosecuted with the assistance of ‘‘weather bal toon3," which are sent aloft bearing in attached baskets a number of deliqate ; contrivance* for measuring whatever rondiUons are met on the trip from j earth through the clouds and back ; again to earth. The experiments con : Jnue for two weeks, a weather bal oon being sent up each afternoon ; luring that period by each of the six ; governments. When the information Uius gained is properly arranged the j meteorological bureaus In each of the ! countries taking part will receive tab | ilated copies. The little balloons, which are six eet in diameter, are so arranged that iat they will explode somewhere far ibove the ten-mile level, the explosive 'orce being the hydrogen with which :he bag is filled. One of these balloons recently •eached a height of 18 miles before PursUng and at that altitude the tem perature was only 35 degrees below tero, although at a point between nine ind ten miles high the records showed '1 A Weather Balloon at Omaha. I ' ;hat a temperature of 94 degrees ba low zero had been gone through. Or ‘his particular date the temperatur* at Omaha, the starting point of th« balloon, was 47 degrees above zero. Another balloon registered an aii current traveling at a rate of more than 100 miles an hour. The instruments used are so deli cate that one of them—that for meas uring the humidity—depends for itt record upon the distance that a humai hair will lengthen on passing througt a stratum of air which contains slight ly more moisture than did the stratuu Immediately below it. The records are made upon a soot covered cylinder by a stylus point, op erated by a level, which in turn li controlled by the instruments. Thii cylinder is slowly turned by a clock work arrangement, and when the boj j is returned to the weather station i \ glance at the sooty covering will give j the atmospheric pressure, the humid j ity. and the wind velocity at anj height traversed by the balloon. The strand of hair used in the in | strument for determining the humid ity is chemically dried before it is placed in position. Thereafter, upon | passing through a moist stratum, the hair absorbs a portion of ihe moisture, i the hair lengthens and the stylus I point records the change oh the cyl j inder. If the next stratum is dry some of the moisture in the hair is : »vaporated. the hair becomes shorter, and the cylinder makes the record accordingly. The air prlssure is determined, oi recorded by the aid of a small cjjl Inder. from which most of the air has been drawn. A small plunger, to which is attached a stylus point, makes the necessary scratches on the soot-covered cylinder. Drapery on Poster Women. New York.—There was joy In Ja j cnaiea. especially among the members of the citizens' committee, over the re ceipt of a letter from a bill posting I company which has to do with the ■ • immoral posters” which have deco ! rated the fences for some time. The letter was sent by F. L. Hanr, jf Brooklyn and was to the effect that a i great reform will' he worked in the j matter of the displaying of burlesque house posters. Mr. Hann informs the | committee that hereafter when a bur lesque poster shows a woman ii tights, “something will be placed ovet these tights hiding from view any ol ; the woman's bare limbs." His Game Is Freeze out. Xew York.—Fourth Depuyr Police Commissioner Reynolds of Brooklyn ; and 15 men went raiding and were j starting off with four prisoners from ; an alleged gambling place in a bowl ing alley under the saloon at 382 Fifth avenue, when they heard a groan They hunted for its source and in ar ice box, between two big cakes ol Ice, they found Albert Speilman oi 398 Eighth avenue. "What are you doing here?” de m&nded Reynolds. “Freezing to death.” was the reply Speilman was so cold he had to b* thawed out before he could be takes to police headquarters.