NEW YORK DAY BY BUY. Some of the Things Done Daily in the Metropolis. "Ilewlilskered lVIc" Dead. Pete, a bewhlsckered goat, known ito nearly everybody In the district around Sixty-fourth Street and Am sterdam Avenue, died Thursday of over-exertion while acting as part Of the Juvenile Fire Department, .an organization composed of volun teer children, one unwilling goat and a cart. The report had It that he was close to 22 years of age. He be longed to George Forns. In his youth Pete worked In Central Park, where he was born. He was one of the goats whose duty It was to draw a fancy cart up and down the Mall at a nickel a draw. Eventually Pete was sold and taken over to the neigh borhood where most of the patrons of his park days lived. There they made Pete the official fire horse He was harnessed up to a cart and driven madly to imaginary flres. Thursday Pete was tuckered out after an es pecially stubborn morning blaze which required four alarms, and was hardly able to work when another alarm was rung In from the most | thickly populated part of the district, j But he was hustled out at n tori illc i rate. On Sixty-third Street, near West End Vvenue, he fell gasping I and soon died. Took A Patriotic Swim. There was a lot of excitement on the new Russian steamer Petersburg I when she arrived at Quarantine. As I the Staten Island shore drew near | Harry Resfallen, a stowaway from Rotterdam, rushed up on deck, yelled. Hurrah! America!" Jumped over the ship's side, and tried to swim ashore. The chief officer or dered a boat in pursuit, but before It reached Besfallen he was over hauled and captured by the Quaran tine boat. When hauled on deck and ques tioned by the custom officers, the stowaway, who says he Is an Ameri can, said that the sight of the land was too much for Ills nerves after a long sojourn In Europe, and he felt he must go ashore at once or go crazy. Kouglit With Mirrors. The poolroom signal men. perched In their high tower outside the Aque duck race track, retaliated Thursday on the race track police, who for several days have been flashing sun light reflected from a mirror In the eyes of those In the tower to hamper them In their work of collecting news of the races. The poolroom men used mirrors to throw light Into the faces of the police, and eurly In the afternoon there was a lively ex change of flashes and much annoy ance on both sides. The poolroom men had little the better of the con flict. The policemen gave up their scheme of flashing light after the second race, as it suggested that the results might be dangerous to the horses in the races. When the police mirrors went out of action the pool (room men promptly retired their light flashing apparatus. To Widen Fifth Avenue. Justice O'Gorman. sitting in the Special Term of the Supreme Court, handed down a decision Friday de ciding that the Knickerbocker Trust Company must cut off the entire j front of its building at Fifth Avenue and Thirty-fourth Street, because that portion of the structure en croaches over the stoop line. As soon as the decision was handed down Corporation Counsel Kllisnn announ ced that he would at once serve no tice on all property owners between Twenty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Streets whose property encroaches on or over tin stoop line. The city has a plan to widen the a'enue from Twenty-third Street to Central Park, and needs every inch It is en titled to. Pencils Are Higher Now. Lead pencils are among the iHtest articles to be advanced In price. The wholesale rate on all pencils costing $3.60 or less a gross has gone up, according to announcements now being sent to stationers by do mestic manufacturers, from 5 to 35 cents a gross. New price lists on j some lines of foreign pencils are also being sent to dealers The reason advanced is the higher cost of labor and material. It Is supposed that the retail prices of some grades of pencils will soon go up, for dealers have declared for some time that the profit is too small. Gunners Destroy Property. Nearly 1,000 hunters participated in the opening day's deer shooting on Long Island. About 40 deer Were killed. Several persons sus tained shot wounds through the reck less firing on the grounds beyond the Oakdale district, many of the hunters being posted only a few feet apart. The destruction of property was constdeia'ule. and public senti ment may result in a permanent, close season for the game being en forced. Deer Swim* Across Sound. Driven from Dong Island by hunt ers and dogs, a large deer swam across Long Island Sound and landed on the Connecticut shore at Wilson Point. It had a swim of from eight to fifteen miles. There have been reports of rdmilar feats, but this is of these rumors has been vertlfleJ. This deer was seen as he was ap proaching the Connecticut shore by the crew of the oyster steamer Row land. 'The boat passed close to the deer. For A Mono-ltail Road. A high-speed elevated mono-rail rapid-transit road may be built In this city in a comparatively short time. At a hearing held by the com mittee on plans of tbe Rapid Transit Commission advocates of the liehr mcllo-rall system made n strong ehowing. and the members of the committee not only displayed in terest In the proposal, but gave evi e*nee of being inclined to favor the building of the road Should the plan be adopted. New York will have tbe first mono-rail to be built and operated ip tbe United States. I COMMERCIAL COLUMN. Weekly Review of Trade and Latestj Market Reports. New York. -R. G. I)un & Co.'* Weekly Review of Trade says: Business experienced the custom ary Interruption during election week, but a more permanent re tarding Influence was the inadequate supply of freight cars and labor. Many Industries are severely handi capped by traffic delays. In other cases there Is idle machinery because hands cannot be Becured despite the high wages offered. This difficulty threatens to reduce the lumber cut materially. Several strikes are threatened, and one railway system alone has advanced wages to the ex tent of a million dollars monthly. Retail trade is well maintained by lower temperature in some section! of the country, and the full employ ment of labor at all points, while wholesale business In holiday goods ?a very heavy. Less Interest is shown in the pri mary market for cotton goods, al though there Is a fair volume of business in progress. The persis tent reaction in raw material has had Influence at last, buyers now I believing that concessions must fol low a period of Indifference on their part. Interrupted movement of grain to primary markets and the consequent restriction of foreign business as well as activity of Northwestern flour mills checked the upward tendency of quotations and caused some re notion. Liabilities of commercial failures thus far reported for November amounted to $1,221,132, of which $537,780 was In manufacturing. $672,537 In trading and $10,815 in ' other commercial lines. Wholesale Markets. Baltimore.?Flour?Quiet and un changed; receipts, 9,350 barrels; ex ports, 327 barrels. Wheat - Steady; spot, contract, 75% @75%; spot No. red Western. 79% @ 79%; November, 75% @ 75% ; December, 77 ?77%; steamer No. 2 red. 69% @69%. Corn?Firm; spot, 52 @52%; No vember. 51% @52; year, 48% @49; January, 48% @ 48%; February, 48%; steamer mixed, 50@50%. Oats Firm; No. 2 white, 38% @ 39; No. 3 white, 37 @38; No. 2 mixed, 37 @37%. Hay?Firmer; No. 1 timothy, 18.50 @19.00; No. 1 clover mixed, 17.00. Butter ? Steady and unchanged; fancy Imitation, 21 @ 22; fancy creamery, 27@28; fancy ladle, 18@ 20; store-packed, 17@18. Eggs?Firm; 27. Cheese ? Active and unchanged. Large, 13%; medium, 13%; small. 14%. Sugar ? Steady and unchanged; coarse granulated, 5.00; tine, 5.00. New York.?Wheat?Spot firmer; No. 2 red, 72% elevator und 84% f. o. b. afloat; No. 1 Northern Duluth, 39% f. o. b. afloat; No. 2 bard win ter, 84% f. o. b. afloat. Corn?Spot firm; No. 2, 56% ele vator and 55% f. o. b. afloat; No. 2 ! yellow, 55% nominal; No. 2 white, 56. Oats ? Receipts, 69,000 bushels; exports, 1,885 bushels; spot firm; mixed oats, 26 to 32 pounds, 38; natural white, 30 to 33 pounds, 39 @40%; clipped white, .18 to 40 pounds, 39 @4 0. Feed?Firm; spring bran, 22.00 prompt shipment; middlings, 22.00 j prompt shipment. Lard?Firm: Western prime, 9.60 j @9.70 nominal; refined firm. Pork - Steady; family, 19 00 @ 19.50; short, clear, 17.00 @ 18.50; mess, 18.00@18.75. Cottonseed Oil ? Steady; prime crude, f. o. b. mills, 29% @30; do., yellow, 45@47. Turpentine?Firm, 69% @70%. Coffee?Spot Rio unlet; No. 7, In voice, 7%; mild steady. Eggs?Firm; receipts, 6,206; State Pennsylvania, and near by. fancy se lected, white, 35; do., choice. 32@ 34;; do., mixed, extra, 30; Western i firsts, 26 @27 (official price, 25? j 261; seconds, 23 @24. Poultry ? Alive quiet; Western | chickens, 10%; fowls, 10%; turkeys, | 14 Dressed unsettled; Western j chickens, 9% @14; spring turkeys, 15@ 16; fowls, 8% @11. I I Live Stock. New York?Beeves Dressed Deet steady; native sides, 6 >4 to 9V4c. j per pound; fancy beef, 9% to 10^4 c.; Texan beef, 514 to 7c. Calves ? Good veals firm; others steady; grassers nominal; veals, 5.50 to 9.00; choice do., 9.25 to 9.50; dressed calves Ann; city-dressed veals, 8 to 13l,4e. per pound; conn- | try-dressed. 6 to 12c. Sheep and Lambs?Sheep quiet; good sheep steady; lambs, 25 to 50c. low??r; sheep, 3.00 to 5.50; culls. 2.00; lambs, 6.75 to 7.75; one deck, 8.00: culls. 4.50. Hogs?Market weak; State hogs, j 6.50 to 6.70; pigs, 6.75. Chicago.?Cattle- Market steady; ' common to prime steers, 4.00? 7.30; cows, 2.65 ? 4.75; heifers, 2.60 ? 5.35; bulls. 2.40 ? 4.50; calves, 3.00 (fi>7.50; stockers and feeders, 2.40? ; 4.50. Hogs?Market strong to 5c. high er; choice to prime heavy, 6.35? 6.40; medium to good heavy, 6.20? 6.30; butchers' weights. 6.30 ?6.40t good to choice mixed, 6.10? 6.25, parking, 5.80?6.05; pigs, 5.50? j 6.20. Sheep?Market strong to 10? 15c. higher; sheep, 4.00? 5.65; yearlings, 5.50 @ 6.85 ; lambs. 6.00?7.75. WORTH KKMKMBKK1NG More than two million sheep ara eaten in Paris in a year. The late Premier Seddon, of New . Zealand, left an estate of about $50, 000. Slates are no longer used In Lon don schools. The exercises are wrVten on washable paper with lead pencils. i Through the munificence of the widow of a New Y see our boy in the Legislature?" said the old man. "Nobody," said the old lady, "but?the Lord's will be done!" ?Atlanta Constitution. New Office Boy?You wife wants you at the 'phone, sir. Mr. Mormondub? Boy, how many times must I tell you to get the name and number of the person who calls up??Puck. "De man dat makes de mos' noise in dis wort'," said Uncle Eben, "some times gits de credit foh what other people manage to do in spite of his disturbance."?Washington Star. "My wife was arrested yesterday." "You surprise me. What was the trouble?" "She got off a trolley car the right way and a policeman thought she was a man in disguise."?Puck. He?Tomorrow is my birthday. She ?I suppose you will take a day off. "I shall." "And how do you think I celebrate whir" I have a birthday?" "Oh, I presume you take a year off." ?Life. "You haven't any confidence in eith er candidate?" "On the contrary, I have confidence in both. I believe all the bad things they say about each other are absolutely true."?Washing ton Star. Fisherman (beginner)?Don't you think, Peter, I've improve^ a good deal since I began? Peter (anxious to pay a compliment)?You have, sorr. But sure it was aisy for you to improve, sorr!"?Punch. "By the way, sir," asked the waiter, "how would you like to have your steak?" "Very much, indeed," re plied the mild man, who had been pa tiently waiting for twenty minutes.? Philadelphia Press. "Your friend Bardlet left some verses with me today that were quite amusing," said the editor. "Indeed!" replied Dudley; "I didn't think he was a humorous poet." "Neither does he."?Philadelphia Press. A tourist who returned this week from Colorado was asked if the out ing was expensive. The tourist re plied, "I have lost everything but honor, and I bel^fve even that i?s plugged."?Kansas City Star. "I think," said the prison visitor, "It would be helpful to you if you would take some good motto and try to live up to it." "Yes," said the convict, "Now, I'd like to select, for instance. 'We are here today and gone tomor row.' "?Philadelphia Press. "What are college yells good for, anyway?" asked the pessimistic per son. "Oh," answered the self-made cynic, "they are useful in training the voice for pleading with Texas steers on a Western ranch after the gradua tion act."?Chicago Daily News. Nicolai Looks Backward. Nicolai has been very much im pressed with his Sunday school les sons. especially those telling of the creation of the world. He asks his mother numerous questions concern ing the original state of things, and does not seem quite satisfied with the replies, as is evident from a recent prayer he made, which included a pe tition asking the Lord,to "please tell me what there was way. way back, in the years before there was any backs to the years."?Harper's Week