The evening world. Newspaper, January 21, 1895, Page 2

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1H heal on P be playful. They were akylarking In one on Seventh avenue and five on Vander- of the cars, and several of them were bilt avenue. | smokin, 0 hax been made to run "| Guard’ No, 180, in charge of the car cars on the Fifteenth street line. h Company A was, remonstrated smokers and they resented bis | Interference. In-an instant there was « _— +. MUST TRY TO RUN CARS. (Continued trom First Page) jpitehed battle, withy eallway guard Tyh of | Roe ——!one side and a carload of militiamen on {the oth Leanl Proceedings May Ne Taken gay what roads will be opened up next) Capt, Lyons rushed to the scene of ee : or @! Past experience in that Wirec- | the trouble and reseu 1M, ped | to Compe! hem to Move. ps i yroken $1 eye ant | pe ¢ thon has been a sad one— partial i een Wintuciane: while hia |The failure of the railroad companies with reference to the Fulton avenue uniform was rulhe | to move cars on all the lines this morn foad, We had scarcely announced our| To add to his "worn, the gute way |ing, ae they had promised to do, moved Intention of opening UP that ine een oe ai en tee cae ll the rain | Corporation Counsel MeDonald ta lay the fact was put on the bulletins of reached the Myrtle avenie station, | before Mayor Sehieren a statement of the newspapers. |ehere the muttinnen tuneferred 10 the The situation at that time, ‘The Corpora mr i! hat the crowds had | Fifth avenue lin le the guard was tion Counsel asked if any noth had «Tatil thabe ih Aeld released and the soldiers proceeded gathered before elther our men or the : heen sent to the various rods of the Seh The lust thing I did last evening was xend a notice to the President of each ad that re soldiers were coming m New York, that ample protection To which Mayor Police had put tn an appearance, and we could do nothing. We won't have the fame story to tell again!” JABBED WITH A BAYONET. ing of the militia ren replied MAYOR SCHIEREN HOPEFUL. in Fatt Morrow, fr ALBANY, Jan, th Adjt MoAlpin | woutd be given to the several Ines, and tin an Re in communteation’ with Mayor }that they must run thelr cars to-day, by the Milltin. : ! - “ The crowd in the vicinity of the BRI : GE Mary Hel bt ene Brooklyn Heights Ratiroad Depot at ommmanderot the First Brigade, Ridgewood, became very untuly this af- | ternoon, and several times the militia / were called upon to charge upon them. | About 2,000 persons were In the mob. | Shortly after 1 o'clock a wagon carry ing half a dozen non-union motormen Grove towards the depot. Instantly the mob pressed forward and was about to set upon the wagon, when the order was given and the soldiers charged. One man, who gave his name as George Palon, was stuck in the thigh with the point of a bayonet, but not seriously hurt. He was hustled away by his friends. MILITIA HAD TO CHARGE. Crowd Ren: an Attempt to Start Faltom Street Line. ‘The Brooklyn Heights Company made & determined attempt to start the Ful- ton stfeét, the “most important of its lines, this afternoon, One hundred non-union men were ent to East New York at 1 o'clock to take out cars, About half of the ‘crowd, it was said, had been taken away from ether lines. ‘They were sent to East New York in two parties; one went by way of the Fulton street elevated railway and the other by the Atlantic Avenue “Rapid Transit” route. When the first contingent alighted at the end of the “L" line they were hooted and jeered at by the crowd of hundreds gathered there. The militia charged into the crowd and drove them away, but no one was seriously hurt. . ‘The men made their way into the sta- ) tion under guard, but no further de- monstration was made. —_+—_—_ Fultem Street Depot Guarded from Four Points. In fromt of the East New York depot of the Fultom street line are planted thé ‘four cannon of Wendell's Battery, which was sent from the Halsey street depot this morning. The cannon command four street Herkimer, -Fplipn, avenue, Broadway and Alabanis Aténue. Should a mob at- tempt to attack the depot these cannon an rake the streets for many blocks. = iinmeeonce were net 2 betta es FE WORLD: MONDAY EVENING, ‘JANUARY 21, 1896, SCENES ATTENDING THE GATHERING OF THE REGIMENTS, GEN. FITZGERALD WRITING THE ORDOR * ASSEMBLING THE FIRST BRIGADE MAJOR EDW. DUFFY. (Commander cf the Sixty-ninth, which Is now & battalion.) car was run out from the depot. Others Were started rapidly until seventeen were running on schedule time. ‘Twenty new motormen and conductors arrived “at the depot from East New (The commanding officer of ti came Into collision and seve! were will give ex; It will SOLDIERS REPORTING At re ARMORY, \ ih COL, WILLIAM SEWARD. Ninth Regiment.) 1 persons Connelly, Best and Giblin spert, testimony. own that the Grand Jury nok Into the whole trolley system injured. also York and five minutes later six new menj and they will call upon the companies ‘ame to the Bergen street depot from Atlantic avenue and Third avenue, > GATES AVENUE WIRES CUT. tw Said an Attempt Would Ne Made to Run Carn It was said an attempt would be made early this morning to move the Gates avenue ling of cars under, the protection gf five con panies of the Seventh Regiment and a squad of police, to furnish copter o! Fules and and Dept a witness. ury, vould discharges of men schedule time. their time tables as to accidents r not making information uty Coroner Daniel Kelly was also He was before the Grand for some time, and though he 1 not talk when he came out, it is belleved that he was asked to testify as to the number of people killed since the establishment of the trolley system in Brooklyn. trolley has Killed 4 people ‘The records show that the ILL-FED BROOKLYN MILITIA. Only It was found Impossible to start any, as the wires bad been cut at Gates and| Central avenues end a part of the track | ‘Th MESSENGERS LEAVING the 7731 RECT ARMORY and the men were Headquarters to be sworn in porary special officers. Only four respond pected later, The men, after being swo: en special oMcera’ badges to various precincts for duty. —_e— WILL DISMISS OFFENDERS. el Speaks Concerning Charges Againat men, Police Commisstoner Welles held a con- sultation this afternoon with Corpora- tion Counsel McDonald. Afterwards the Commissioner made a statement con- cerning the charges that policemen have been neglectful in protecting property and preserving order, The Commissioner sald that any charge of this kind sustained by proof will be followed by the instant dismissal of the offender. INSPECTING THE DEPOT. Complaints Have Been Made of It Unhealthfal Condition. A corps of Inspectors from the Brook- lyn Health Department is making a rigid investigation of the depot of the Atlantic avenue line at Fifth avenue and Twenty-third street, in which the Non-union motormen eat and sleep. Charges were made to Health Com- missioner Emory a few days ago that the depot was in a very unclean and most unhealthful condition, and that if the new men were allowed to remain in the depot sickness would rurely re- sult, v the to re is a general complaint among Was torn up the Brooklyn militiamen about their Wires were ulso torn down on Fulton| treatment during the present service. street about 7.30 this orning. and) They say that they have been compelled Stalled the whole upper part of the to serve unreasonable long hours, have m from ‘Tompkins avenue to Hast} York, "homas McDonald, one of the strikers, was he! trial In the Gates Avenue Police Court this morning for throwing A-stone at a wagon load of non-union men that were being taken to the East New York depot at 4.00 yesterday, The stone struck a motorman ‘name Schlader in the face and hurt him badly, John Palen, an employee of John Reimers, a soda-water manufac’ on Gates avenue, near the car stable, a tempted to force his way early ‘th morning through the picket line of the Seventeenth Separate Compa: He had some trouble with one of the soldiers, who tried to t him in the arm, Palen's coat eleeve was torn, but he was not Injured, NO BUTLER STREET CARS. Station Ma cel ‘The station-master of the Butler street depot, corner of Butler street and Nos- trand avenue, told an “Evening World” reporter at 1 o'clock that he had re- ceived no orders from President Nor- ton to start the cars on the line, and that no cars would be started until suqh an crder came, and that ¢ was no immediate chance of th Thirty men of ¢ ¢ a The battery arrived shortly before 10 f ‘clock with sixty-five men from the Bixty-ointh Battalion, under command of Major Duffy, and Companies 8 and 7 I of the Seventh Regiment, under com- mand of Capt. Rhodes and Lieuts. Harry Duval and Harper. These sol- lers, were algo detailed from the Halsey Feet depot by Col. Appleton. | ; . ‘The soldiers have been acattered along | COL. APPLETON ress the atreeté for a distance of several (ia commaid of the Seventh Regiment.) MEUT Col, KING, OF 2D RE va! blocks, and no one ts allowed to ap-| —— * preach the depot unless he has busine Se] a 3 ‘There would be no excuse, I told them, to attend to. Schieren, of Brooklyn, about noon by tt During the night two of the trolley | telephone for failure to operate all the lines. wires been cut, and considerable) ‘rhe Mayor stated that everything was| “Are you aware that the roads are not ; debris had been piled on the tracks 7 5 ; sing | rund # on all thelr Jin Mr. i Foreman Hart, of the Fulton street | quiet, that additional cars were being | Sunnin ware of r line, antounced this morning that three | manned hourly and that probably al of | MePonald asked % more strikers had returned to work. | the lines would be In operation by t Lam not aware of It. 1 will see about Car 18 was aftucked by a mob of S00} morrow. iw at the corner of Rockaway avenue and put eS ears tilgalalthe Goroore: Fulton street this afternoon. y errand to you.”” gal The car had left the depot shortly at-| MAY WITHDRAW TROOPS, | tte" Counsel, “is to ask instructions ax ter 2 o'clock, and was on its way to the to whether IT shall take any action in bridge. When it reached Rockaway “ae the matter. Avenue the crowd made the assaul Goy Receives Re: iz Ree ¥ ! 2 The motorman and conductor fled in Not yet, replied Mayor Schieren, 4 terror, the two policemen failing to offer nia from) Be ‘I suppose that the delay in sending out 4 SEER PECtOUCD a incor, chaned: tre al Ing World » curs is only temporary, and due to if the car the mob removed it from the |)! Heports from | the impossibility (o be in several places a tracks and tried to throw it over. Brooklyn receive! by the Governor and] at one j aah iad oF once Served. Retire they Adjt.-Gen, McAlpin this afternoon were Mr. MeDonald declined to discuss the gang of workmen from ‘the Almbana | 82 Teassuring that Gen, MeAlpin said he | interview, but this account was obtained ; Avenue station were sent for and placed | thought the troops from New York | fam the Mayors vltlee far upon the tracks again could be withdrawn by to-night PANS Weir eniars abet cuner ered res q placed in eharee end the a er wate | He said, however, that orders with. |i “opening the lines, Mayor Mehler : on its way drawing the troops would not be issued | Peplied . . ‘The art! at the Alabama depot | as long as their pres is nected aL donot care Socdlscias Chat Questian, Row have 3) wannons, One is placed = bows anole. a ; praaity “Arise, We at the corner Fulton and Alabama ue Shir NN ater ada fe a paiten: one alte renin an inquiry on foot as to the situation. Broatwaye neat ten, tvenue. ant) HAVE NOT MEN ENOUGH. Wf hun (to-day “Police Commisaloner j 4 Georgia avenues a eliew wa king everything Into consideration, é 2 3 a f ia All the. lin at were running last UNDER THE SEVENTH’S GUAR nth and Ning Avewme: Week are being erated to-day, and the DD] presitent Lewis, of the trooklyn railroad companies expect to ‘start, up Care Start Early from the Halsey f the men eng: 1 to take the Ve have pliced two men on many car s ™ of the strikers, to the several} and one “ e seork Breet this morn nd by 8 ‘Haye you any opinion to express in Under the protection of the detach-[ titre had Nn and (by § || fegard to the action of the Mayor in ¢ foent. of tha, Seventh Regiment he al gathered many motormen ant] calling out the Hrinnde? y i toned at the Halsey street depot fuctors at eaeh station, in readi T have no 1 tu express. ‘That iH first car was run out shortly afte hess to lake out the car action was take the Mayor. ; 2 i M TG WAR eNINCKR Gia te Chore wkees aoe yu ‘prove of the Mayor's ac- peloek. Other care) followed on Hearly so uhiny of the men ax had been ) UY F i f minutes’ headway, each being guarded} boasted. f ent Lewls had said that am in accord with the administra~ q by two policemen Neha say men all rendy: to goon the | which 1 am an omicer. When Starter Mitchell said there were | (47) SOT) HR RERLORHE I AH n had many callers to- ough men to handle all the cars, a Che same thing was said by the Atan indignant as Gen hat the tine would be In full operation | le Avene Wh hich Benjamin Nor ve Rais Hemaneaiinee all day and muht, but the strikers say |‘), Ley Ure Nit Kround that he was in that the Company is as badly cripr ee! . mil nite th strike. “The ane ! i about the corridor bu fs at any time sast week f f © lite | 1 to see His Honor. These non-union men ar hungry ani |jimormen. nid. coadnes y reconsidered his de are sleeping in cars in the depot at Vb . vnath “nl after waiting 80 min. night i atari thew: he w 4y in disgust. A mo- r 1 N We nt later t Mayor's office door he cars now run the bine are abe |)" avenue | rd and Rrooklyn's Chief Maxiatrate soiutely unfit to be occupied by the tray The po were a in driving away for neril, He seeme f elling public, used as they ‘now are for! the crowd oy OO Hud ent used that Jatter” was not on lodging-house purposes ollie, deat the srw started eA There is some disagreement already |enth ay non i ‘te. BERGEN ST. CARS ON TIME. existing between the nand the nj t a is hi littered ow ders, puny as to the ware questi What | Suber She ‘ " a that ia cannot yet be ascertained. If al pany of Pushing arhvel netic statin | Tee Ferat Gne Our Met with Ob- man is caugit talking to one of these! Ninth ave aid ‘Twentieth tree ae fons, fellows either a militiaman or @ police- te Cheat thes pata car, No 162, to leave the Rer- mans at once “Appears and orders the noon the members of the I gen street depot led out at 7.60 this stranger away. seventh Regiment stations Horning Shortly before 3 o'clock this afternoon | the Atlantic avenue stables © o'clock eight cars had been run Col. Appleton and two compante: the street and cooked thelt dinner, | ushadule tae: wie Ae Seventh Regiment left the Halse h consisted of teang, coffee and | Ue u a ne first car, depot to Ko to the car depots At the head of cach street de, which was started at 7.50, found wood. along Ninth avenue to the Park Plaga, jat Classon avenue a joad of rabbish on the plekets bulit fires to keep themselves | the track and obstructions In the ahape BEAT AN “L” ROAD GUARD. | He Objected to Soldier Boys Smok- Thirteenth |Of 4st-carts and push-carts placed across awn too the | the track t Park These fhe detachment Kliment Wa: ehtield im: haven fr moved sion, in Pros nd Fifth street the u were removed by the policemen ‘am the ‘The milidamen complained bitterly. be ¢ motorman and the car went on cause they are obliged to remain away sted and made the trip from An elevated railway guard who under. | from their work to help President Nur- | 1 street to South Ferry and back eo }ton carry out what they call his blutt A took: te enforce the rules of his road) feats the Naat (hey call hls plug ne hour and ten minutes, schedule against some Brooklyn soldier boys got | very much the worst of it. He got a 004 pounding, had his uniform torn off and was a military prisoner for a time, time A wire ult Sumner protection necessary [his cars breause he At 2 o'clock the and he cannot run hasn't the men. were seventeen cars ed Lee Ralph avenue and 4nd this stopped all of the avenue cars, It was soon. re- street Greene's Free Mlusten QUIET IN FLATBUSH. Abont i if the Regular Number of Care Are Running, At 10 o'clock this morning the tlon in Flatbush was quiet. ‘Th companies of the Twenty-third Bro: Regiment, Capt. Blackman, on duty since Friday, were relieved by Companies 1, H, andk, of the Fourteenth Brooklyn, under Lieut. Crane, and went to Fifth nd Twenty-third street ty-SIX curs are running on the Flatbush, which is about half the usual quota for that line. The cars and the men make their trips unmolested. ONE OFFICER FAINTS. The si situa- two klyn in of 1 re on the Men Too Heavy to Stu The members of the Were a tired looking lc morning, and vigorous made to the have been k. Brigade rs this objections were eth of time the soldiers t continuously on duty on and fare “Ww. this been wiches made of canned corn slopp; subjected to unnecessary exposure have been expected to thrive on not fit to feed to hogs. ‘© have had served to us only cold said an officer, indignantly, morning. “Where my company hi stationed we have had only sand- beef and y coftee has been the only warm thing we have had to protect us from the c! ‘The sleeping accommodations been an open field. hilly moisture of the atmosphere, have no bettr than would be found in We have been compelled THIRD BRIGADE NOT NEEDED. ton Does Not Anticipate Further Violence. ALBANY, Jan, 21.—At 1 o'clock Gov. Morton sai] he had no intention of or- dering the Third Brigade to Brookly: He understood that ten street railway lines were in opevation, and that there Were 19 peospects of further violence, TROOPS FROM MT. VERNON. Sepa e 4 dito Brooklyn. MoU? The Mou of the N, . ON. ¥., Jan. it Vernon Separate Company tional Guard, about to bunk in the cars or In the cold, damp and cheerless depots, and have been an hour day. on and an hour off duty since Fri- > effort has n made by the au- thoritles or by the railroad companies to rel i b ered and the whole busin plo for thin big city, when It 1s consid- uncomforta- nder our position le: is disreputa- that we are Voluntary servants of the State. "It the cared from pherr is) not | much like the men of the First Brigade for. They have come New York with all the para- nalia of a military camp, so that may enjoy good, substantial hot meats at regular hours, and of the kind that and soldiering on wintry weather like this will put heart into the men, nerve strength into their muscles. ‘This cold lunches In- dismal, is not attrac: tive, to say the least.” STRAIN ON POLICEMEN, Forty-ety Reported Sick ‘Thin Morning--None Has hed, Polite morn| sick I show much credit uy men each precincts, and four each fr P and ‘The policemen tow of en is no uncommon thing for a polics to be on twen the s very had only cold’ bites. whil the t The in Co 1 were Vorty-elght members of the Brooklyn © Department reported sick this ing. There were sixty-seven on the ist a week ugo to-day, and the good ing at this trying time reflects on the faithfulness of the Of the forty-eight, there are from the Eleventh and Sevent m the Tenth. haye beeen subjected tremendous strain, and their powers ve have been sorely tried. It an of the Oo on dur duty twenty-three out ty-four hours, and yet te ond day. Thelr meals have been Irresular, and frequently they have eaten out of hand nm patrol in the streets and among urbulent crowds rves calle yut by the trouble treet yester afternoon had in ‘d less than an hour after a il of many hours, and those who on duty at the Court street depot e res ourt The strat Capt, Krart morning. His re has mn so great that Company D, fainted thts q deh, with that of Com- 2 Capt! Power, is on guard. at Ninth avenue and Tiventiet street, was turned over to the command of Lieut Dennington, Both companies have been getting nothing but corned beef sandwiches and bad coffee for rations. and many of the men have been on duty forty-eight hours without rest. BEFORE THE GRAND JURY. 1 Regarding Cases of Accidents, The Grand Jury of Kings County be- Quick, of the Forty-seventh had received orders to move of 18 men fri the Ful- and inclined to tures, reene, of 35 West Nem Hank, Gly will wiv. Sree t1- # in Uptown} Assem| Third avenue ‘and PP palred, Seventy-first Regiment of New York is doing picket duty on the block above the stable, and they have good commissary arrangement so ere no langer of their being starved, as Ww the ‘hirteenth Resim ee ‘Xe 10.06 to-day the Orst Sumner avenue eee gan to-day an investigation which may have aa important bearing upon the strike. They summoned before them three members of the Executive Board of D. A. 7, Messrs, Connelly, Best and OOater bly the Gi asibly the Grand Ju New Youre night's Pals lia "avenues, by, which two, is only Seok en ve got only ple for the evening meal. Nefuses te Co 1 teent! a ca one t Cap him. Kel his action, had Twe ma from men The active police force of Brooklyn MAN QUITS. ue ana G ® Trolley Car. iceman George Kelly, of the Seven- ‘h Precinct, went out as a guard on r thie merning, but after making rip refused to go out again. Mt Gorman ‘immediately, suspended A POLICE ly (would, give no explanation for His brother officers say he been drinking. CREASED POLICE FORCE. from the Appo! as, nty-four Mei t- ¢ List Sworn In as Sp LY CURED ov Constitutional Scrofuln BY HOOD'S SARSAPARILLA Miss Olive S Cart The care of Oll~e Carl ‘y Hood's Saraapariita has few equals in medical history, The testl- monial was drat published two years ago, and a letter lately revelved from her mother says Olive ‘gntinues .n good health and “We are satisfted her remarkal by Hood's Sars, permanent. Drlefy stated, the case wan this: “When Olive war eight years old she had the whooping-cough and measles, followed by Inten: Joint in her body, ithe rheumatism, the disease some form of CONSTITUTIONAL SCROFULA, “When we began to use Hood's Sarseparilia, sho could not be moved without crying out with e compelled to cut her hair, ag At frat very gradual; the pain - 4 we w he could not bear the weight of it. the change for the better wa pains c7eemed to be le: frequent, and the a ing in sume of the joints subsided after using About one bottle. Then improvement was mort rapid, and one night she surpri us that we NEED NOT PROP HER UP IN BED as we had done ior months, and next night she surprised us still more by rolling over across the ped. From that time on the improvement very rapid, and she soon began to creep house and then to walk on crutches, Hood’s *=:. Cures Ing left one leg crooked, and t fear tt will re. main ao, |W we owe our child's life a ORI SS gt twenty- led, but the others were ex- were giv- nd detailed ia was pains In every Phystetans Were puzzied, but after @ consultation, pronounced ed us by telling bout the Now she generally uses but one crutch, her disease hay- feel that to Huod's Sarsaparilia An End to Which Many Are Blindly Rushing. Many Paths Lead Straight to This Terrible End. Are You Hopelessly Struggling Along This Dangerous Road? is ‘The world-renowned poet, Gray, saya: “' The paths of glory lead but to the grave.’ Al paths Tead to the geave, but enpectally do thone danger- ous walks of Ife, overwork, strain on the sy tem, dissipation, Improper attention to the rites of health, involving sleepless nights, tired bodies and weak and shattered nerves, lead toan early death, or a more dreaded and fearful fate, Notice the strength and powerful advice in the following etter, written by Mr J. Wesley Mann, of Northfield, Mass: “About 18 months ago my daughter Jennie went Into m large store as clerk, and was obliged to make long days of about 14 hours, and the work proved too hard for her. She was com- pletely run down, being prostrated by nervous debility. She had terrible restless nights, and was unable to sleep hardly at all. Her head troubled her, being dizzy, and her Ilmbs acbed, and frequently she would sit down and cry, she was in sich pain, MIKK JENNIE MANN, ‘They had Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy In the store where she worked, and the proprietor recommended her to take It, which she ditt ‘she wrote me while nhe was taking the Ner- vura, that it bad done wonders for her. She is tow entirely cured of her nervousness, and nasnot beon so well in years. “he wan so nervous that she could hardly alt at table, and any little noise would startle her like a wild partridge. ‘Khe hus now used three bottles, and we are thankful to say that she in well, thanks to kind Providence a e's Nervura blood and nerve remedy: ‘oud the power of words to tell the wonders that are done every day by that greatest of all medicines, Dr. Greene's Nervare blood and herve remedy. No medicine ever before pos- sessed such wonderful powers to cure. Try tt, ‘and see what it will do for you. Tt will make you strong and well, Itis not a patent medicine, but the preserip- tion of the most successful living specialist in curing nervous and chronicdiseases. Dr, Greene, of 35 West 14th St., New York City, He has the largest practice In the world, and this grand medical discovery Is the result of his vast expe- rience, The great reputation of Dr. Greens la a guarantee that his medicine will cure, and the fact that he can be consulted by any one, at any time, free of charge, personally or by letter, gives solute assurance of the beneficial action of this wonderful medicine. number, have received orders to proceed to Brooklyn to ald in suppressing the riots there, eet POWER-HOUSES GUARDED. One hundred and sixty men under command of Capts. Hamlin and Stoke: of the Twenty-third egiment, were placed on guard this afternoon at the power-houses of the Brook:yn Heights Railroad Company, at the foot of Sev- enty-second street. Wagons were engaged this morning to carry coal from the power-houses to the depot at Fifty-eighth street and Third avenu ch” wagon was guard- ed_on its way by eleven soldiers, The troops at this point were loud in their comp.aints because of the lack of field equipments which had been brought out for them. ‘The table service for eighty men consisted of seventy tin plates, two forks and two knives, Capt. Hamlin said this afternoon that he would keep a large force of sentries on guard during the nigh around the power-houses, hi afraid an attempt might strikers or their sympathizers to to the timber and coal pockets on the water front, TOLD TO USE THE BAYONET. Major Cochrane Will Keep Order at All Hasards, Five companies of the Thirteenth Reg- iment, composing the first battalion, in charge of Major Cochrane, arrived at the Fifth avenue depot of the Atlantic avenue tine at 9.30 this morning and re- lieved the two companies of the Twenty- third Regiment, which were on guard last night. Major Cochrane's command came up. on the “L" road and left the cars at the Twentletn street station, The soldiers went to work at once clearing the avenue, and the battalion then marched to the depot, The Major called his staff together and sald: lace pickets on the corner: blocks each side of the depot structions not to allow any suspictous persons to pass the line. Keep ‘eve ody moving, and if any one offers res! ance, Instruct the privates not to tate to run a bayonet through him, While Major Cochrane was giving his orders, “a “number of tne” strikers gathered about their headquarters, op- Roslte, the depot and watched the sol- ters in silence, Major Cochrane sent a ee ANOTHER BIG. STRIKE! three with in- ime by the sensible people who 3 * pre Une for Rigas, where gents on every dollar spent DRL i MEDICINES, pays ORS PRESC TIONS, HOT WATER BOT- TLES, CHEST PROTECTORS and every earthly thing needed for the SICK ROOM, or for SURGICAL Us! ‘hese “strikers don't stop either, to matters with guch danger- ous enemies ax GRIPPE, BRONC or any COUGH or COLD. ‘They uae! welled to-day by the acquisition of ty-four new men, They were drawn pit eervic listi d_ were a ne iments to QemNNgSO thirty-five names, inclose the photograph of my daughter I think it 1s @ plotare of perfect health, I think bow near tbe was to death's door I can. Rot feel ttamkful enough for her recovery.” family ‘When | Mra. iA CARL, noldevilie, Pa. Hood's Pills p2.o0e, ner rea id VHOL, HROAT and LUNG troubles RREORE THER aR ene EE ANT, TAIN SPU atti ae PAS + ao right at ‘em—with PECTORANT, THE BRINK OF MADNESS. | BAltmadedo , Closing Week of Linen Sale. OFFER TO-MORROW, . A SPECIAL LOT OF TABLE CLOTHS, and NAPKINS, at % off REGULAR PRICES. 18th St., 19th8St. and Sixth Ave. B.AltmansGs Upholstery Dept. 3d floor. o Pair of Figured and Dotted MUSLIN, rufiededge,CURTAINS at $ gO pair. 200 Pair SASHCURTAINS, at "L.25 18th St.,19th St.and Sixth Ave, STANDARD AS GOLD, FOR EVERY MAN, ONLY $1. : é < 7 4. p 4 Bal Mtreet, Wt tat el IN in 1860, ‘Consulting phyal- Seabed eniee iretiae ledjcal’ Associaton for the Sep Mce ‘aged end old. "Consultation tn pers Pave, “istce took? The Selene at Lites or, Seif-Preservat prize ' aa Bp. 126 invaluable presériptiens for scui sale full gilt, only $1.00, double ‘ “= Lectures. FREE LECTURES. MONDAY, JAN, #1, AT 8 P. M, Grammar School No, 3, Gro Miss Mary Proctor. Subject; is Family.” Ti), Grammar School No. 15, 728 Fitth st, Dr. HA. Plympton | Subléct: “Firat Al the Injured,” Grammar School No, 24, Mulbes Dr. F. A. Lyons. Subject ive Tu,! mar School No. 2 Subject’ Gram: Mr. W. M, Frisble. ‘Grammar Sohool Mr. Charles H. Gov: ay OP i No. 3. a = ren. bed Grammar School No, 64, pr We rolman. subject? SR he A irammar Rehool Nor a, 70th, tea Majo. Subse GW: uitdings. mmMar schoo! No, 86, B6th at, & Le: Williams Hallock ‘The Eve and hool No. Von Ni ‘ebater ave, Histery of 1 5 Aw Jeet: it Wandering Naturali Madis Hall, 125th sae eR EER a aad Sa Mn Ed ‘Newapaper. SATURDAY, JAN, 26, at 8 P.M, . ‘Cooper Uuton, Sth st. Miss Kates, Chittend So) 908 at. ene op HEADACHES Be you ese the aiforence?

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