The evening world. Newspaper, February 9, 1895, Page 1

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PRICE ONE (¢ NT. NIGHT EDITION TEUTONIC AT HER PIER. oo Hove to for 62 Hours, with Her Boats .at the Davits Ready for Lowering. STORM-TOSSED FOR MANY DAYS. The Teutonic Rescued the Crew of, the Sinking Fishing Smack Josie Reeves. NOT SEEN OR REPORTED Rhynland Is Also Overdue May Be Assisting the French Liner. LA GASCOGNE The and The White Star liner Teutonte came) hung tn the davits and was ready for lowerin; up the bay a mass of ice this morn-| ae bes ang, and waa moored to her pier arter| Resened a Schoomer's Crew. a oxper.| Although his own ship was in the one of the toughest trins ever eXPer sroates: peril Capt. Cameron was not enced on t ntte Ovea: forgetful of other mariners In distress. 59 gis: s hove to! At 2 »'clock yeaterday afternoon the fe teeth of & howling gale, with) ‘Kouc on tke Teutonic sighted a small ady for lower Lal esse! -b. wing signals of distress. On her boats ai the davits approaching nearer to the disabled craft ing at & moment's notice. [st> proved to be the fishing schooner ‘The Teutonic arrived off the Sandy |Josle Rover, of New York. Hook sightship at 5.35 o'clock Thursday | At 240 P.M. the Teutonic's engines but the gale so Increased In Were slowed down and a boat was senonn SBOE Tae ee hout ana) Weed. which was manned by an| fury that Capt Cameron put atiou! ufMicer ana four men. With much diffi- run off shore seventy miles. where! culty the steamer’s boat approached the she remained iletreaed Saning smacie but! owing to| he visier.re o1 the seas and the heavy ‘njured and all on hours. She was un‘njur | vale olowing, the ship's boat was unable board are reported well. ‘This Is the sixth day since the French ;to reach nent enough to the craft to hoard her, whereapon the boat returned liner La Gascogne was due at this port from Havre. No vessel sailing over the to the Teutonic The steamst.p then bore down on the fame course has seen the missing steam- ship. Hope %ntred in the Teutonic, out wreck, standing to the northward and not a word of comfort was received. laying to to windward of her, thus mak- ‘The steamship Rhyniand, also over- ing @ lee The crew of the fisherman then launched two of their dories and Que, it I» hoped, may have fallen in wita La Gascogne. and either has the dis- managed, with great difficulty, to reach the ladde, thrown over the Teutonic’s labled vessel in tow or has her passengers and c.ew on board. for nearly twenty-four side, The crew ot the smack, which was abandoned, consisted of eight men and the captain. ‘The Captain ts John Er- ickren, and the men with him are C. H. Godfrey, C, H. Thompson, Nels elson, Oscar Kelly, 8, Petersen, F. J, | |Carlsen, Fred Anderson and Harry Lar- sen. The smack belonged to George | T. Moon, of Fulton Fish Market, and her capacity was forty-three tons, | The rescued crew presented a pitiable| sight an they half climbed and were half) {dragged over the elde of the Teutonic. | They had suffered very keeniy while on/ their craft, and in addition to the cold had been tor many hours without food, TEUTONIC IN PORT. She Dropped Anchor Of Quarantine Early This Morning. The steamahip Teutonic arrived at Quarantine at #30 o'clock this morning, and was at once boarded by the health eee capstan reports having encoun-! tered terrific weather, including great gales and a blizzard, with heavy snow, lasting ter several days. She struck the blizzard while in longi- officers of the Teutonic and supplied with food and ary clothing. tude 61 w and was obliged to heave) Charlie Thompson, one of the fisher- to for 62 hours in consequence. men, eald Capt. Cameron considers It the worst | “We ulton! Wie Marker Cor ‘experience he has ever gone through. Block Island fourteen days ago. We No one on board the vessel had the slightest idea that La Gascogne was overdue. It was generally believed that the French liner had got In several Gays ago. The first intimation they had to the contrary was when "The Evening World” tug Vosbucg spoke them In the lower bay last night ‘There are 30 odd passengers on board the Teutonic, and as far as can be ascertained ull are in excellent health. The extracrdinary weuther which the Teutonic eaperience’ ‘vads the Quaran- Une officiais to believe that Lu Gas- cogne will yet be neurd from Buch was the experience tt which tue Teutonic pa 4 time the orders were given to get th boats in readiness for launching. and! even as the vessel came up the lower bay and the Narrows this morning the J boat on the starboard side had strong weather from the start, We had caught 1,200 codfish when we began to drift In the blizzard yesterday morn- ing. “We were caught in the ice-floe and had drifted on Romer's Shoals, when we were picked up the Teutonic, We couldn't have floated much longer.” Sallor Andersen's Story, Most of the crew of the Reeves live in |ftrookiyn, und with one or two excep- tons are Swedes, The only one to call 4) the Fulton Screet Market to see Geo, ‘1, Moon the owner of the Reever. rick Andersen, He is about forty oul, and lives ai 2 vuth Firet . Brookiyn was: ne x World" reporter An “Heaven on!y knows what we would (Continued on Second Page.) ing World's” Bug Forcing It; Way Phrou,h the ice to Get at the Teutou-c. “a “The Kveu! TALENT STARTED WELL. |}: Down Third Avenue Car kw Near the Poxt-Ofitee, necial to RAC 9%—The cold we The favorite, the Morris filly a daughter of Hrittanic, won th Tace cleverly, She clos Goanede be les phe style, funked by Runs After quite a delay. Pisa get away in of four front, and opening Up a gap | “Circulation Books Open to All.” | 6 ert lengths, set the pace to the streten, Pee- tival, Dr vork and Ransom following as named. tival then closed and took the le e straight, winning in a driv bal. a iength ‘from Ransom, | who was four lengths before Insomnia, Piet was fourth, a head away. Time 1.06. eH OND IR : su Jim Hentz } man , Mahim ' 2 THE GLAD HOME-COMING OF THE TEUTONIC’S DELAYED PASSENGERS. VAY -=y 7 1 Mp | het Vas: vy) h Ged ay wp ; We wey | cry Wh pd [POW 3} \ | WAVING TO THEIR FRIENDS, fi ba om its Hy Nitw a Weduewo YOR My third Gi, Jas Ketan DAA BF, SATURDAY MADISON RESULTS. RACE TRACK, MADISON, Feb, NGTON, Feb, %—In the ate, this afternoon, the Diplonia wits passed and the Senate began gies or the Stockbrid, | mine 7a am Guard € i th th 7 hay Ten for 10 conta, @ Con- Marcel track to-day resulted IW fur PATCHOGL crew wre near the tation are expressed that they may yet be Is too high to permit ef th Jeunching of a boat shot over the vessel a was in the rie deck and tried to 1 At this writing he ts still workir well ax his exhau condition permit, and if his strength holds i may be saved by the Ihe schooner went ashore ny and eight men y ng to the rikK nk The life-savers tried ty launeh a failing, shot line the Phe men were too benumbed t « men fal: one by one ' «. When dar ft. Th how fF About eight 1 FEBRUARY Ashore at 1 of the Lone still alive was Ww HAPPY Ty be HOME unkn HUM Lifes and hope aul ame it in AGALN, PRICK ONE CEN CITY HALL PARK AT THE HEIGHT OF THE STORM. .| TWO OF THE CREW ALIVE. Healy eads, 1045 idan. t from ne, which went a life tine we high up on of the me ght she can be wn to sit . BRIDGE TRAFFIC INCREASED. rookiyn ridge has nigh out nee Prida “- ROE OG Wake SOTOISE PR ‘i CONSOL tove nels Pa Ne DATED DART TE COW New Vark. NIGHT EDITION WARM WAVE FAR AWAY Weather Prophet Dunn Says the Cold Spell Will Lin- ger for Some Time. FERRYBOATS FROZEN IN SLIPS, Staten Island Vessel Carried Up tc the Bridge by a Big Ice Floe. (MERCURY HIGHER THAN YESTERDAY. | According to One Thermometer Though. It Was One Degree Below Zero at 6 O'Clock, OMmetial Kecord of Temperature. | Tenn,, and in all that territory there has A above zero) been no sign of a break in the oold ow | Wave, 2 8S | ehis includes all the North Atlantic ‘ oy | States and Canada. How long the eeld “fo a | Wave may continue I cannot tell mew, “ae « | for there afe no influences which eam 14% «4 | Operate tmmediately to dispel it.” 14 4 «| The lowest temperature In New York 1G to-day wak | degree below sero, which 1 | was registered by the official ihe + " jeter In the Manhattan Building @t 6 Weather Forecast-r Dunn etated this| o'clock thix morning, but the thermom- # that while he could not make eter in the Equitable Bullding at the | Any certain predictions as to the dura-| some hotr registered 2 abové. |tion of the present cold wave, an area| There may be a few snow flurries later of higher temperature had been formed in the day, bus perfectly clear weather > Missiauippl, which was slow- 18 predicted for to-morrow. atward. mperature Elsewhere, For other cities the reports for 8 o'cleck ths morn ng showed the following tem- ly extendirg | In other respects the situation through- lout the country was alr xactly the . and for this city and | peratures: Huston, 2 degrees above; Porte will he tor to-day and jand, —4; Nortnport, —12; Buffale, %; to-morrow very slight changes In tem-| Pittsburg, 0, Cincinnath —4; Louluvilte, 0: perature and 4 continuance of high|Chicago, —6: St. Paul, —1k and More. northwesterly gules head, Minn., which was th ead, Mi ‘ he coldest “1 do not think the temperature will in the country, —23 Lig! y 9 degrees in the next thirty-six | ar New Urleans it was 22 degrees, sald Mr Dunn in sight to cause in the present situation y or two of genuine, oned Winter weather.” ye Still aging. The storm centre this morning was ated over Nova Scotia, and the north. “for there 18 jacksuuvill, 20 and Key West 50 Gale any material veston, where che mevcury stuod at We are ang Key West were the only spots tp the country cast of the Rocky Mountains renorting a temperature above freesing this morning, It war expected yesterday that New York s lowest record for zero weather pales of yesterlay were still prev- alent over othe Middle Atlantic States the New England coast apd the lake reg T highest velocity | i ; a of the wind in this elty to-day was enek agrapr ciation. te ceca Ao observed put 1 o'clock this morning, i UE OE M when th emonieter in the Equitable | evtertlY nuiding recorded ‘hirty-six miles an to card OC nour and the instrument in the Man- ¢ to Fritz hattan Life Building forty-eight miles an hour. At Sandy Hook the force of the gale was felt most severely all night long and at 8 o'clock this morning it was wing at the rate of fifty-six miles an hour, and the same in Boston har- bor, while all through the lake region it varied from thirty-two to forty-eight being highest at Buffalo and miles, Cleveland. The weather tn sev storm Is not gaining in force or the y. A thirty or forty all day probably. elocity was from forty miles an hour It was snowing this morning tn the throughout Canada and in oatinue fe regions. the New England States. E'sewhere over the country it was fair, Zero Wenther tn the § It ts rally above zero now south | of Karsas and to the west," added Mr. Donn. “Hast of the Miscissipp! the zero line extends as far south as Knoxville. might be smashed to-day, but that bas not uappened, although there te still time. The record ts six degrees below zero, but since midnight the mercury has rhown a tendency to rise, and at 8 o'clock this morning the thermometer registered four degrees above zero. Few Ferry-toats Rani Very few of the ferry lines are in operation, and there is small prospect that they will be able to run at all to- day Heople who live in Brooklyn and de- pended upon the East River beats were compelled this morning to remain at home or cross by way of the bridge, The Hudson River ever, in better shape. in lines were, how: In fact, all were ration, though none of them ran jule time, The Chambers Street Ferry ran its outs under twenty minutes’ headway, Usually they run under half that time, No accidents were reported. Sound Steamboat Late. The Plymouth steamboat, of the Fall River Une, had not arrived at her plier, foot of Warren street, up to 9 A, M. She was d at 8 o'clock, The officials have no fe they sa. ‘The Cortlandt Street Ferry ts running boats under forty minutes headway, the ordinary schedule being ten minutes, (Continued on Third Page.)

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