Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Y E ing Monday More and Longer Trains Will be Run on 4 Sixth, Ninth and Second Ave- Lines. \ Earlier and Kept On Later in an Effort to Relieve the Intolerable the Manhattan Railway Com- will inaugurate its new tn- d ‘service schedule, as ordered State Railroad Commission, on Of its lines. ‘The new schedule will Into effect on the Third avenue funti] a week later, because until hen the new Bronx terminal will not be 6 The additional delay for that fas been granted by the State ith the new schedule on the four | Uines the company will increase the num- Wer of train trips by 277. ‘This will add a cars with a capacity for seating twenty-four hours 175,536 more ple than there are seats for under the Mt echedule, , increase in the service, as filed a, ©) with the Railroad Commissioners, 1s as i ¢olowa: Ine, tn Inc. of Ins, of Seating Trips capaeit “ Ae 3 175,636 ‘Phis will make the total and complete ge.for twenty-four hours: Much diticulty w “Rompany in complet! etion for the Bronx F the end of the Third avenue Mine, but it () is promised to be ready by the following ane may. explaining the schedule which it pts, the Railroad Commission writes “The mish hour trains are vot ron ad Shorter headway, the additios a being all pipvided for the n o longer trains wait continue te r th Riek Neues As the aewt uit ‘fre rocelved each n they will | Anto service, and still ¢ te pacity. will the peompany advise ence of 1! onx Park jot he pos to put venue Une schedule into ound grain s reported by the g the terminal con- vk st z ot that in ompletion af station and ly result it in accident. ————= The Boston Herald Sayn: pusy man of whnt- y time a leader arrived there a rise in the ude, which almost engulf the bar. Great muxses of humanity would surge to- {ward the tonsil varnish line, and the artenders would get apoplectic from pulling covks NO ONE ORY AT Bl FLORRY'S. All the East Side Push Bought: It, and What Was More They) Drank It at the Great Sullivan’ ‘ Ball. SUCH A NIGHT FOR LEVYS! The Cohens Too, as Well as All the Big and Little Tims and the Lead- ers of Every Tammany District In Town, Were There. Cohen and Porges, Moritz Tolk and) 4694006064026060009630000000% Horowitz; Solomon and Lazarus, Max Levine and Zinkowltz; Maher, Marooney, Corcoran and Hen- nessy Were all mixed In the bunch until your head would swim, you There was Issy Cohen, who'd tax the man who would not wed, And there was Philip Benjamin, who shone in style with hie bald head; There was Jakey Levy and Shulman, who was never slow, And right side up with care w “Fire Sale” Shapeerio, ‘Ang just as soon as the band played they, or most of them, got out on the floor to watch the grand march of the “Big Flory” Sullivan Association ball in Bverett Hall, on Hast Fourth street, near the Bowery, last night, It was an “Inyitation ball,” but they were all there—and such a bunch! Think of Isaac Hopp coming down from Har- lem, of ‘The McManus taking two cars from Tenth avenue, of John Con- sidine leaving hia bar exposed to the mercles of Capt. Miles O'Reilly in the Tenderloin and of Edgar Murphy with a new crop ‘of old jJokes—all on the Bowery and not a dry throat tn the lot No Chance to Go Dry. 28 impossible to be “dry” in that dd unless you went down cellar and by the furnace. Wine was an as lidates' silps on Election I body bought. ‘The Suill- O'Shaughness: vt imagine a ans and Caseys and ‘id it because they better way of spending thelr money, and the ¢ it because ‘ohens, Levys and Finkelsteins did they Hked the taste of the stuff and considered it a good political inv: tment, When the glasses were filled all ‘round Ue leat wonld become very Impres- sive and the bunch 14 put on solemn face. The leader would clear his throat, then a guttural “Here's how!” would followel with a hospitable “T'row it into yer" ‘Then there would be a eplashing as of the roar of the waves and everybody would say “Ah—h—h," Dinmonds There to Burn, There was a regular aurora borealis in the quarter where the ladt Avsuaged thelr (uirst’ They fairly shone and shimmered and dazzled with diamonds. | ‘There Are Many Reasons Why You Should Not Miss To-Morrow’s Sunday World. We Mention Only Twelve of the Principal Ones. G —_— o bed Hoe aaa! IN EH BA cners) on ACTUALY & ‘ seen On THe SINATOR, WHATDO LER TAI OF THE in oF ECIPROCIT q Hn) “Feorriz" was ‘> ‘BUT-AAD A GOODxTIME 08 S0nD> 38: it O4.994669400O$9O9OH 6966600066469OO6 WERE NOT AT “BIG FLORRY” SULLIVAN'S BALL YOU : CAN GUESS WHAT HAPPENED BY 2OOOnO4 STUDYING T. Many a man’s eyesight was seriously af- fected by the blinding brilliancy of the display. ‘The grand maroh was a ainuous, scin- ARSON CHARGED tilating snake. set with precious gems. All the Levys and Coheng and Ikesteins | were In it with both feet, and while ' they tried to keep step with the music the Sullivans and Murphys were lined up at the bar laying the foundation for &@ pleasant evening. Several gents of distingue alr proved to be policemen in plain clothes. Not) such pinin clothes, elther, Bedad, they| | | | were dress sults, no less. Big “coppers” wore small, narrow-waisted sults, while! the lttle, wizened chaps who have be- come warned by staying out in all| kinds of weather kept looking for them- selves in about the size of sult John Le Sullivan rents when he appears tn polite} Vaudeville, ‘The original Cohen wie) rented these sults evidently had it in| for the police. Bartenders Took the Cake. The real Chesterflelds were the bartend- ers, who had taken a night off In such numbers as to give convincing color to the stories of the enforcement of the 1 o'¢lock closing law. They kept hard looks at erk of the District- 'y was the nly. re, ntative of Jerome in the place, He stood in nd had a dry, dismal, flme, Every once in a while xome ‘Tammany man would steer up near him was hard id make faces. It on Henneberry, Idfogie and Shober had onty car fare many leaders were Hed by the Tom" Foley from the Pat until st toda: Welens sit drifted in la Divver wak; time to got There were thirt thirty-three Aldermen, sixteen Congressmeri and two tons of diamonds at. the ball, according to. the estimate of Gent's Murnisher Moe Lavy, who wore a four-pound spark himsel?, AUSTRIAN CHARITY ‘BALL. Old Country Village to Be Repro- duced at Grand Central Palace, A bauern or peasant ball in aid of the Austrian poor of New York will be given by the Austrian Singing Soclety at the Grand Central Palace, Saturday, Feb, stayed funeral Ageemblymen, A representation of a genuine Austrian village carnival or country fair will be presented with the gay costumes of the peasants, m@ town hall, jail, inn and church ahd force of burlesaue police to correct violators ut the many humerous floor rules, or village laws, A priest’ wil marry couples, the bur- Komaster will grant divorces and kisses May be had for the asking, a refusal heing @ violation of one of tha floor Ws. Violators of these laws are taken the village Jail, arralgned before the burgomaster and fined from five to ten cents Brooklyn Physician Arrested in Connection with a Fire Apartment. Dr, Thomas J. Edwards, forty old, of No, 67 Bergen street, B was held in Court to-day under $2,000 bail fo: ination on Feb. 4 on a change attempted to sect fire to his apart the Butler Street in His years rooklyn, Polite r exam- having ments Dr, Edwards was arrested on the com- Plaint of Deputy Fire Marshal William L, Beers, based upon Information alleged to have been recetved from the tenents of the Bergen street house to the effect that some time ago there was a n explo- sion in the doctor's apartment followed by a fire, A mattress was ¢ covered burning Ina manner to excite suspicion. The accused physician declares that his arrest is an outrage and simply the result of spite. ‘He says the fire was caused by explosion of chemicals while he was experimenting with forma- lin, He si days ago Dr 8. det against him by his landlord. has not been decided. that he used the mattress in an attempt to smother the fire \ was the Jant in a dispossess action brought ‘The suit CAUGHT FEW SPITTERS. an Shirk Thelr Da Health Commissioner Lederle satisfied with ‘ny the 12 clothes yesterday spitters, Fifty to Brooklyn and tailed at the various ferry-hou the railroad Mnes in Man During the entire day only three arrests were made. to r Lederle Thinks Po- ty. ts dis- the poor showing made policemen sent out {n plain make arrests of of the men were sent the others wer sand nhattan, twenty- In speaking of the crustde against the spitters the Health Commissioner sald “Any one of these m n could have gone to any ferry-house und made more than were made by Why. only lest Hoard Inspect nearly as many I shail make tly. but hefe will be full and will t arrests force. Health made, day. Week, arrests anot men Taw rosts when the law ts expecte 3 went out the entire fifteen and in one FORMALIN. CURES ANOTHER PATIENT, Woman Almost Dead from Blood-Poisoning, Restored by the New Treatment. SPRINGFIELD, Mass., Jan, 31.—Dr. J. H. Carmichael, of this city, formal announced to-day the wonderfull suc- ces: of the use of the new formalin treatment for blood-poisoning on a case operated upon five days ago, and this forenoon pronounced out of danger. Dr, Carmichael's patient was in a desperate condition with septie pert- tonitis, and on Jan, 26 was almost in extremis, The pulse was 100 and the patient was in a comatose condition A solution of formalin 1 In 6,000 was used and before the end of the opera- tlon the pulse had dropped to 12 ana Was firm and strong. In twelve hours the pulse was almost norma! and to-day the patient took nourtshment. HLL OF TARA UNDER HAMMER, Seat of the Ancient Kings of Ireland Will Be Sold at Auc- tion in Dublin. LONDON, Jan, M—Tho Hill of ‘Tara, #0 rich {n historic memories, will shortly bo sold at auction in Dublin. Until the rixth century Tara was the chief seat of tho Irish kings, and a pillar six fovt lig is still pointed out as the Corana- tion Stone Then {t also was a universit Druids’ headquarters and the alte King Cormack's splendid court ‘The lust {mportant gathering on the Hill of Tara was in 1843, when a gigantic meeting was held there under the auspices of Daniel O'Connell, who urged the repeal of the Union. the of LYNCH PROPERTY TO SIX CHILDREN, “Diamond Queen’s” Real Estate Placed at $75,000, but Said to Be Greater. Dhe will of Mrs, "Theresa Lynch, the Union Square diamofd queen, was filed to-day. It leaves her estate in equa} shares to her six children, after be- quests of $1,000 each to her two sisters and enough to produce $4 a month for John Patrick O'Reilly, of No. 47 Spring street. The estate !s left in trust to the ex- ecutors, Herman A. Perkins and Peter ‘Mayer, who are to conduct the business for a year before settling up the state. The petition says Mrs. Lynch left “about $75,000 real estate and about $5,000 personal estate,’ but Mrs. Lynch's. for- tune was much greater probably. RUNAWAY ON BOULEVARD. Charles Walpole Thrown Out of Buggy, But Not Injured. There wes an exciting runaway or the Hudson Boulevard, near Communt- paw ayenue, Jersey City, when a horse hitched to a buggy, owned and driven by Charles Walpole, of Bayonne, took ight at a passing automobile and dashed down the Boulevard toward Lex- ington avenue. ‘The carriage was thrown against « telegraph pole and smashed. Mr, Wal- pole was thrown from the vehicle, .but escaped injury. ‘The horse was caught, SS GAMBLERS SCARED AWAY. sed Tuckahoe Pool-Room When Clergymen Got After Them, (Special to The Evening World.) WHITE PLAINS Jan, 31,—Frightened by the efforts of clergymen of ‘Tuckahoe, the gamblers who have been running a pool-room near the Tuckahoe station on the Harlem Rallroad during the past few days have fled to New York They fowid that a certain prt gained information about tne pool-room and intended to appear before the Grand Jury unless the room was closed. HANDED TEAGHERIOTHER HEADS BIC BLACK EYE) MAY BE BANGED, Naughty Boy of Ten Struck Her When She Marched Him Out of Line for Whistling ih School. HE-WOULDN’T TELL A LIE. In the that of Almost the first case called Morsisania Court to-day was ten-year-old Vincent —_Lykes, — who struck his pretty teacher in Public Sqhool No, 178 in the eye, Miss Jo- hanna Gottlieb, her face heavily bdan- daged, appeared against the Uttle fel- low. who xot into trouble oecause he told the truth. His case was at once transferred to the Children's Court, where he was found guilty and remand- ed until Monday, when he will be sen- tenced, = “Who Is whistling in that line?” de- manded Miss Gottlieb, who is In her first year's experience as a teacher. There was complete silence. ‘There had been a dozen lads whistling. Some more were making cat calls and others were producing sounds known only to the schoolboy. The teacher's voice silenced every noise. 2: ‘The boys had just been marshalled in- to line ‘from the playgrouns, and thetr spirits were by no means suodued. There were 40 of them in ali, but Miss Gottlieb had charge of only forty in Class 4A, “Who @4 that whistling?” ‘The demand was made the second time. There was @ pause of awful sus- pense and then Vincent Lykes's little hand went up. “I did It,” he said. Miss Gottlieb felt that the discipline of the school was at stake and she took Vincent by the collar and marched him out°of the Hine. It was not long before the Ittle fellow wished he had told a silent He, as some of his mates had done. As Miss GottUeb pulied him out into the yard he Wwrigglod and twisted until he was tree. His little hand shot out like a flash and caught his teacher squarely in the eve. The force of the ilow was surprising and Miss Gottlieb's face began to swell immediately, in a few minutes a great black and blue ring surrounded her eye. Vincent went to his seat and a few minutes later the children caught their Fbreath at the sight of a big mounted policeman, He strode into the room and carried Vincent away to the rooms of the Sovlety for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children. EASOP CI RUSHED TO DEATH. ‘Telegrapher, Returning from Work Willed by Brighton Car, ‘The body of Thomas A. Easop, a tele- grapher, of No. 97 Dean street, Brook- lyn, was found to-day between the tracks of the Brighton Beach road near the Prospect place station. The man had been struck by a train and killed. His wife, who is the mother of six children, told the pollce that her hus- band was in the habit of returning home late from work, but she could not account for his being in the neighbor- hood where he was killed After midnight onty one train—a shut- tle train—runs between the bridge and Brighton Beach, This train was in charge of Motorman Edward F. Lang- staff. He euid, when questioned, that he did not remember striking anybody, but when he examined his motor car hé found traces of blood on the shoe that connects with the third rail, Doctor of Schoolboy Alleged to Have Been Mistreated by’ Teacher Says Latter’s Lawe yer Misstated Fact. THE CASE IS POSTPONED. The case of Florence L. Murray, @ Brooklyn echool teacher, charged with hitting a wall with the head of Philip Smith, one of ‘her pupils, causing con cussion of the brain, was called to-day in the Gates Avenue Police Court. Miss Murray was not in court, but her laws yer was, His name is Jonas—Ralph M, Jonas, and In moving for a postpone- ment he made the following statement: “We can show by the testimony of Dr. Amos Rich, the family physician of the Smiths, that the boy is not sufs fering from concussion of the breim but from a bilious attack." An Evening World reporter went ta see Dr. Rich, who Is attending the boy, “If the lawyer made any such state- ment as that,” said Dr. Rich, “he hag misstated the facts. The boy Is suffers ing from concussion of the brain ang ho has been very ill, If possible I shalt have him in court next Saturday.” “In the police court Charles Smith, the father of the boy, agreed to & postponement for one week. He said that his son 1s confined to bed and un- able to bear the strain of making @n extended statement to strangers. "3 awyer Jonas made a long speech behalf of hig absent client. He deni thal the Smith boy at all ¢. t Miss Murray had laid hands on ‘According to ithe story upon which @ Py acher was obtained, fn school on Jan. enraged, bumps a against the wall Lattte Smith fter reaching the street became weak that two of his boy frienis had to help him home. MAMMOTH CEDRIC * ON HER TRIAL TRIP White Star Liner, the Largest He Steamship in the World, Leaves Belfast for Liverpool » summons for the the boy was unruly an Miss Murray, héad RELPAST, Ireland, Jan, &1.—The White Star line steamer Cedric, the largest merchant vessel in the world, left here to-day for Liverpool on her trial trip. i Pa) Mr. Arnold4Forster, Parliamentary f° Secretary of the British Admiralty, will be among the passengers of the Cedrio when she sails on her maiden voyage to New York Feb. 11, MONEY SHIRT THROWN AWAY. Sterrage Passenger Discarded Gate ment Containing #102. ‘An old shirt with $102 In it, American money, was thrown overboard by @ steerage passenger from the steamer’ Amsterdam to-day, The steamer had ar rived in quarantine from Amsterdam and the steerage passefhger was packing his effects,