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oe 7 rat y » ,o aan locked ‘Delayed Many Hours Boats on Rivers and by Floating Ice. or ead y [08 GETTING BACK “10 THEIR SCHEDULE TIME, ‘to-iay traffic conditions provailod on ratircad systems as } CENTRAL AND THE HARLEM ‘DIVISION—Condi- au fhe normal. . Tralos are leaving on time. The ie has heen lifted and the trains from the West are toward\New York. North of Pawling on the Harlem divi- ota continues, ‘K, NOW HAVEN AND HARTFORD—The toad has been OUNIRAL‘Irains are leaving on ‘schedule time, The . its ability to handlo all suburban traMc to-night. Hy ibe ‘aro going out one hour late. It in wald achedule ‘to-night, Trains coming from the West are Mate, / AND LACKAWANNA—The saine conditions that pre- rht exist today. There are no trains going or coming, One \ wk last night has pot yet arrived, ip wypiwits 1s OUI Hed up. ‘The looal inal schedule Trains are running whendyer feasible and AW the 'Weetern tratnia are delayed. “Froin §00 to 700 men Q pitt at work between Port Jervis and Hie’ removing’ the snow =/The loons aré runnitig’ cote to schedtle time, | Philadeiphia are trom ten .to thirty, minutes late, ‘he ) has been west of New Brunswick, Many blocks decur' in ah) Aelaying the trains trom the Wert, kVp boon wont to help tho all clasves, dat Good Growe, Ba: th Century, Empire State and Hod |fuvih of Nova, Beetla. He scene 'at (he depot in Intang |! Hy, ¥ Wis pathetls, Tie elght| Mil contiave fair and cold to-night and | | hundred people thor were made up of fry tn Jaa and South, although Well-to-do. poopie were | emperatures will rise slowly Friday. saught with rittroad tickets home and not and | There ‘were a 4 i ton the And oe was Worse oj in Bld} Lt across the river, would er return’ from then shove her into her Man; in, « of the Certral Rallroad of it Intervals dur- ith a Fd for) stream for pil IO regal en po heay, ro bal eo ir ont of thelr 8 dangerous, many passen; ed on the Jergey nde’ for the turn, bofore venturing aeros About 10 o'clock thie Jaden current forced from her _moorin: Mt the Furniss Btores, on the Brookly: er Columbia Helehts, the bi a if Bd od Dredgin: Vv, @ . with not bie! pboard. was cartied out in'o mi |. John Tavior nut out ani to the dreAger, The tugboa strveale with the toe an: tay River, she ASR $3,280,000 ON LA SAVOIE. Gold Shipped to Burope by Lor Banks, , the’ t home last Hight. today walting Long Ystand it train No, es here, Within an . Was received of e hour from her schedule time of passengers, Part of the ship's c ‘wes $2,050,000 In gold a by local troks, Amcng the passengers wag Lucle Merignac, a French wrestler, and C mille Morahend, that @ train that started Mat night Was stuck in we hours, The train ree to-day, the passen- mh i | Bhinnaccck Sriow. Wh Tett Bouthacnpton tas 4 in snow on tho Bhin- and haen't got out yet, were taken off last of that namo, every Wy, Opera-House Inpt night, was flay neaeenter. Another ws Reno Jap! for the past nine years local super tendent to Panis 40 marume the hi, of recretery of the ne, Other prancnaers wore Jean Becretary cf the Spanish Embaesy Frinee; Ruseoll Mewlett, TMobert Atte bon, Grn, and Mrs, A. L, Lee, M Mrs. Dumas-King, Mr, and Mrs. G, Williams and Ernest Well, — THREE BURNED IN HOME. ooking for You! oe the: articte can find "Moons hy ter finve Mother, COLLEGE POINT, L. 1, Jan. 2%. him: know you, Wetes, er), and her Mamle, Kate and Rose, were seriousl: burned early to-day, trying i thaw, out eon her lothing ca a aa caught fire, wl and wants: ae ela’ fone urn ie, doubttal, ox ‘age had deen and H. enough. taney, to put up a hotel. tug " Cort. Twenty-third n the river being the J a 1 0) schedules, H ¥ that the boats course, me abodrent that the tide me wait tide to) morning the ice. 4 n x G a d= cam, Ferty-hont cantaing who aaw its pileht hie the to hy spar whistles, and soon id. t tld ed the dredger ito Pler i The French ine meamship La Bavole was beld back three-quarters of an of de- parture to-day waiting for the baggage of the French auto, mobile firm which makes the motor car! He sald thet his visit) Hore had been eminently successful in| Hemel Knote, who concluded his sea-| aon's engagemnt with the Metropailtnn | a t for the Trench line, who goes er position | Mt fitters Riano, to t ‘hree Daughters Injured Trying to Mrs. Mary Wetes, the wife of Charles Uhree daughters, iy ‘The mother was frozen water pipes Her ers went to her asalytance and Were badly burned about the frce clothing was Her recovery ‘The kitchen caught fire but the Names Were exunguished before much dam- WHOLE LAND IN THE GRASP Even Cuba Is Affected ‘by Storm Sweeping ‘ This Country. WASIIINGTON, Jan, %~The At- Iuntle Coast etorm, ageording to reports fo the Weather Burm, is now central The tempera tina 1s still bolow the average enst of The weather he. Rocky Moyotatoy, A severe norther ls in progress over (haba PHILADELPHIA, Jan, %.—Bitter cold weather to-day followed the ‘storm or cerday, the thermometer regietering % degrees above sero, During the night the wind reached. a velocity of torty miles afd the temperatiire was at sero, Railroad traiie ty, badly erippled by the driteing Fived irom New York ot from the West and South, and suburban trains are run- lng Uphipd their schedules, ‘Neither sehding any trains out of Camden, Reports from the Delaware Break water, are that the yeesets which sought satety in the harbor from the storm ave not yet ventured out. Hard Time in Boston, BOSTON, Jan. %-—Boston ts slowly ©! recovering to-day from the effects of the atorm, ‘Train service js still badly hampered; Thousands of suburban rest- denfy were obliged to spend the mght tn the olty, and hotels were over-crowd- ed, while restaurants had to resort wo many devices 19 upiain sutnelent food 40 Supply the extra demand. ‘Mere was much suffering from exposure, which 4 Lhe wirec. cuuse of two deaths, EW HAVEN, Conn, Jan, 26.~Two passenger tudes on vie Naugatuck division of the New Haven road were stalea all night at Bancrofe’s siding, a ie south or Winstead, and to-diy wangs of men were sent to dig them cut’ On the New slarttord branch of lie Northampton division «passenger tran tecame stalled «yesterday at Butan'e Kingdom, a fow smiles sour of Pine Meauow, and was not released uuitil 10 o'clock to-day, when $t puiled into New Hartford, Litchfield County {a completely buried in gnow, and it ikely that highwayy can be for several days. In Norfolk are filled with drifts twenty feet sleep. degrees: below zero. Maile Delayed in Buffalo, BULFALO, Jan, 26—No mails hay od from New York since mid aes althog the New York Central, igh Valley or Delaware, Lacka- ial and Western rouds, Matis trom the Weot cafe the Lake Bhore arrived three hourg late, UTICA, Jan, 26,—Trains from the West are delayea irom two to four hours and those from the Hast are elthur abandoned or very late, A ircin dune from New York at 7 o'clock last even- Ing arrived about noon to-day, Other trains from’ the East are behind (his one, and it is uncertain when they will alyive, ALBANY, Jan, 26,—Although snow atoppetl falling ners carly last evening, thik morning found traln service budly: crippled, ‘rains from ail directions aro go ore ehind thair sched hipped 0 Kurupe| Wo of more hours behind their soheds| y, ules, ‘he high winds, which were re- naible for much of the trouble, have ised, Dut tre weather remains cold, The thermometer to-day registered five dogrees below zero, Held Up by Drifte. WILMINGTON, Dei., Jan, 26,—Not traln wae moving on whe Pijladelphi; divis.on of the Baltimor Ohio ti morning, Hoyal Blue line train, i B! by doifts below this atuck . fai trains wore rent. nlaces alone the Mne, AA, Jan. he mercury went | to 10 below sero here Iaat night. It ta var, torday, . LITLE FALLS, Jan. 26,—Last night waa ihe coldest of the season In Hi mor County, the thermometor register. ing 12 to 18 degrees below zero, Only trains carrying perishable freight are being rin on the Mohawk division of the New York Central, Beventeen paseongar trains from Now York scheduled to pass here during the laat fifteen hours not been heard from up to 9 A, M, Among them iy the Twenteth Century Limited, was. up and wis still morning, Other PERISH AS THEY FIGHT WITH STORM. Police Suceor Many Before Last Sleep Overtakes Thom—Cas. malty List Is Large. All through the night and the early morning policemen, thelr heads mut- fied, burvowed through the drifts UR REREUPTEE "Re ws tt icy < SAA EN Aad acne HOW THE SNOW PILED UP IN C1TY HALL PARK, OF GOLD WAVE ‘he temperature is sixteen | his | terian Tosnital southbound, Bae here at 6,90 last even- | ‘* anow looking or unfortunates whe ¢el om ity WORTD: might have been overcome by the snow who had fallen freeging on the streets. More than one life was saved bv them. The casualties reported up 10 this time are; THE DEAD. GRAY. WILLIAM, aged thirty-five, of ‘No. 26) Twentieth street, Brooklyn, fell | {in the snow in Forty-third street, | Brooklyn. HARRISON, PETOR, aged fifty-five, | lcollapscd In a stofe at Twenty-third | street and Seventh avenue from heart | |faliure superinduced by exposure to the | eather, ) MoLOUGHLIN, ALEXANDER, aged} fifty-five, of No, Bridge street, Brooklyn, a watohman, from heart fall- | ure while walking through snowdrifts | oppdsite No, 10) Front btreet, Brooklyn, | MATALIZO, RAINO, aged fifty-three, of No. (1 Warren street, Brooklyn, fell! while strusgling through the anowdrifts | at the foot of Joralemon street, Brook- O'HARE, JOHN, aged sixty-five, a Park Denartment laborer, stationed on the Washington Bridge. 'e'refused to leave Ils post in spite of the constant | xposure: fell and died hefore an am- | bulance arrived. i YOUNGER, AUGUST, a driver, of No. | 48 Central avenue, Broollyn, overcome | crossing Nostrand avenue and ‘dled in| @ few minutes, ' | Unidestified man fell dead while shov- | elling snow (rom the sidewalk in front of No, 822 West Twenty-seoond street, Unidentified man found covered. with four feot of snow in ‘tho ecllor at No, ‘ite Thitd avenue, “Ho was five tect six trousers, black cont and at. Thomas Wiley, sixty-nine years. oid, brown derby: at one time the owner of valuable real estate, found dead int tI Mrs, Cuslok, No. 204 Fourteenth een lersey Chiy, Ho Yas ftoxan to dean, the death of the members of | ly Wiley steadily drifted down dll (or months Was without a home, THE INJURED, ALBRECHT. WILLIAM, aged , ae ap from @ car at Bronx pan racturing a rib, and way iake: tance Hospital, bag oanas ELL. HERBERT, aged térty, jan; at No. 3 West Beventy-firat py found Jn a snowdrift In West Seven. Heth street and taken to Roosevelt Hos. pital with both feet frozen, ELFDRS, ALBERT, aged thirty-one, No. #09 Flushing avenue, Brooklyn, fell while crossing ‘Twenty-third street and | Broadway and received @ lacerating | Wound over his left eye; taken to Belle. | vue Hospital. VRISKi, JAMES, aged twenty-five, ot | No. 1/2 Columbia street, Bronklyn; tet} uncmscious from cold in Sedgwick |atreet, Mound by @ policem, | en to Long Inland College Hompitat, ik: | condition ls oritical, ' aged thirty-eght, | yPOLEY, DELIA, 0, odison street, fet! 4 Cortlanat suroet,. tocelving. A oN: itn ad ftraeture of Patt leg; * taken to Hudson Street Hospital, LBB, JOHN, aesd thirtyeseven, No, lahty-sixeh gLrect, slipped on sidewalk near ‘pis home and fractured paght ‘eg: laiten to Presbyterian Hospt- KAMMERER, FRANK, fire: [Hook ind Ladder Company "Ne of } found _ungon| in the snow ‘at’ oho Hundred and Jfty-seventh ¢, reek and Broadway: taken to J. Hood Writht Hospitnl: condition tepgrtel serioun, | OLAUGHIIN, JOSEPH, aged thirty, jot No, 108 Garden street, Jersey. city; e\'ced on the deck of a float, at Piet and had tie fate leg udson fa and 131, North River, | #everely lacerated; taken to the Street Hosniial, PAPI, JOHN, aged twenty-elght, of | No. Gu t One Hundred and Bixtw- | Anet street. 8 bani clerk, fell on the me Hurired und Sixtvefirst street I"L" pailroad stairs, fracutring several riby and posstbly also tals skull; taken NCCO ROBIE, axed. eet 0, Ee , Oe elehieen, of No, 68) ‘Bost One Hundred and Thirty- sh t street. run over by a train in the Wills avenue New Haven” Railroad jvarda, not having been able to see. the jiain on account of the storm: both legs Zoveved at the knee: will probably die SCHUMACHER, JOHN. axed twenty. one, No Ml Hast Pitty-fitth ‘str } severe sealn wounds by slipping on ¢! ne ier on A gen step! taken to Presby- | 1, | STEMNER HENRY, aged forty-five, | of No. 148) Elehth avenue, thrown from | la milk waon at Ninety-second street, land Certral Park West; received severe feulp sound, GILLESPIE, PATRICK. aged. tortv- tro, ‘Loxingjon avenue and One Hun- drod and Twenty-olehth streat, over- come at One Hundred and Thirty-fourth ‘sireot and Willis avenue: taken to the| Vinooin Hosnital. MAVOY JOHN, aged fiftv caretaker of the Ordon estate. Washinrton Bridge and Waathorbed Tane; taken’ to the Tordham Mornitnl In a frozen condition, THRIAN PAT, aged twenty-two No, 14 West One Mundecd and Twenty fourth pirest® tale Pollevue Hoent- | tal from Thirty-fourth street and Third Avenue. suffering from exposure, — BANK IN TEXAS CLOSED. Nailonal of Nederland Shnt by Washington Order, WASHINGTON, Jan, (6-—-The First National aBuk of Nederland, Tox., has been cloned by the Comptroller of the Currency upon the receipt of tolcwnam from National Bank Wxaminer Wile liama that the bank is insolvent and Npon Information from other sou that ts draft has been protestod, Hirst DAY EVE |hotel to oly: ING, J 4, Di ean sous A Wisin’ NCCUSE WOMAN OF BEATING GIRL Mrs, Johanna Pollard Arrested on the Charge of Mistreating Her Little Niece and Held in $300 Bail. Charged with inhuman treatment of Nor niece, Mary Abbott, nine yeags old, Mrs, Johanna Pollan, of No, 223 ast One Hundred and ‘Thirteenth street, was arraigned before Magistrate Mayo {n the Harlem Court to-day and held in $300 ball for trial. The woman, who fy janitor of the apartment-house where she iives, was arrested by Agent Bareley, of the Gorry Society, Dr. Gibbs, of the Society, testified that the child's body was marked with at least seventy-five contusions and bruises, vald to have been inflicted by Mra, Pollard. ai Little Mary: was ‘found by Charles Thoraten Monday night sitting deject- edly on the stoop of his house, No, East One Hundred amd Seventeenth street, Thornton took herein, and to him'#he told @ pitiful story of cruel = jow. No trains have ar-jinvhes in height and wore striped :tteatment by her aunt, with whom phe hail vad. sinee the death of\her pa- rents three years’ ago, The obfld sata she was forced ‘to sweep the basemont the Pennsylvania hor the ‘Heading ta} former politician of Jersey City ang | 9%: light tho furnace fire and shovel in coml, and when there were not done to her aunt's sutisfaction she sald that Mra. Pollard beat her with the buvklo! end of a strap, Friday night, she said, | she attempted to run away, but losing | her courngo returned at 9 o'clook and was beaten by heg aunt, who knocked out two of her teeth, Monday night the child ran away again and stopped on the ‘Thornton stoop to rest, Mr, Thornton notified the Gerry So- elety, and Agent Barcley after invest!- gating arrested Mrs, Pollard to-day, In| court the woman told the Magistrate that the child was unruly, and if she Gd punish her the punishment was de-| served, Bhe professed jgnoronce of any bruises on Mary, Magistrate Mayo told. her that such treatment was not-to be tclorated in Harlem and held her in ball, She wis locked up and the ehid put/in care of the Gerry Society ease INCIDENTS IN WHICH THE STORM FIGURES. Mra Goldberg Objected to Snow ns a Dinnket—The Feathery stuf Went to Walsh's Hend. Charles Goldberg, of No, 63 Hender- gon atrect, Jersey City, was arraigned | to-day on a charge of assault preferred by his wife, “He opened the window last night and allowed two inches of snow to pile WP on me, Judge,” sald Mrs, Goldberg, “I didn't know that was an assault,’ gafd the huspand, “Will you ever do it again?” asked the Magistrate, , Goldberg said he wouldn't and the Magistrate discharged him, John Walsh, of No, 190 Washington street, New York, was delivering kegs of beer yesterday in Jersey City, Bome- thing. In the beautiful snow made him feel abnormally happy and he fell off hig wagon into a snow pile. The own: ers of the brewery wagon sent out and rescued the wagon, Walsh was rescued by a policoman. He lost his Jon, John Cadills, who keeps a hotel at! Queens, L, f, tolephoned the Jamaica Dolloe to-day "to send him ald at once ag his guests had been Imprigoned. ia the hotel by snowdrifts since yesterday afiernoon and had eaten every bit- of food In the place, “'Phora are twenty-five of us here, telephoned Mr. Cadiils, sinlled trains, mud they ate everything in the jiouse. There wasn't any brow fast when they got up this morn and they'll starve to death if foot doesn't soon arrive, We cannot get cut because the dr are twenty feet | high.” ‘Dho police avked th nd me promised to send help und Highy Department to 1a path from the t ah | llzation, \s from thelr pre Your engines 11 | twenty-four hours, but he y gtvat diecanfort, { food, and tha engine Ke warn | Four of the #lx passengers who were j stalled all aight on the Naugatuck Aly = |slon of the New Haven road walked from e stalled cars at Baneroft's siding | to Winsted to-day. It took them two hours to cover the mile th had to go, and they got Into. Winsted completely exhausted, Both men were frostbitten, TO CURR A COLD IN OND DAY, Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets, All aminer Williams has becn appointed x veer, druggivts refund mey if it fatin to eure, 1p, W. Grove's signature On nth Dox. Sig, "#ed | Weed to tear up the foe on the tracks | “mostly trom] | the | Queens Borough Ma 1905, se TROLLEY CARS. TIED UP EXCEPT ONB.R.T.LINES Subway and “L” Meet Great Emergency - "in Manhattan, BROOKLYN AMAZED B.R, T.-Keeps Surface Cars Moving Except in the Suburbs, The Subway, the Wlevated roads of Manhattan and the’ Brooklyn Rapid ‘Transit ere the reapers of the Iil-wind which tled upajivother local transit, The Subway never carried greater crowds than it ald yesterday and. to- day, the’ Mlevated ronds never behaved better under strained conditions and the Brooklyn Rapid Transit, spurred by the critletams of |ts recent methods, met the situation in a way that amazed all Brodklynites, UP AND ITY HAS NO MILK Commodities of All Kinds Scarce as a Result of Storm. RELIEF UNCERTAIN. Mlk Trains Stalled All Along the Railroads at Subur- ban Points. ‘The coal situation on the east side Is not exactly that of a famine, but there is a shortage that hits the very poor hard, ‘The small dealers raised the prices from one to three cents @ bucket, They claim the big dealers have set them an example of grasping sordid- ness, but the big dealers deny thts, €nd some declare they are doing busl- ness upon the moat altruistic basis, Something new in the scheme of things ‘wag introduced by the B, R, TT, When its management ‘notified shop: Keoers of the gonditions existent and advised them to jwarn thelr employees that the crowds \could not be handled én the rush hours, The Metropolitan. Oren Root, General Manager of the Metropoliian Street Raliway ayatem, who has deen up all night trying to get order owt of chaos in street traffo con- porter to-day; the lines will be in operation, ven then the schedule will not be regular. We will run the cans In trains of two to get sufficient power to grind a way through the frozen streets, I have hundreds of men out with sorapors w clear the channels, ‘Then brush cara Will be sent against the Jlooened ce and snow. | In the Washington Heights and the Kingsbridge districts hundreds of horses have been pressed into ser view to haul the cars over the frozen roads," Optimistic Mr. Root, Mr. Root views the situation op- timintleally and technfoaliy ha Says: "The following lines are running that Is, once in a while cars are kept’ moving over them. The Second avenue ag faras One Hundred and Twenty fifth atreet, the Third avenue, from City Hall to One Hundred and ‘twenty-fitth street; the Lexington avenue, from ‘Twenty-third street, north; the Sixth avenue, between Fifty-ninth and Fourth streets; the “Highth savenue, between Fifty-ninth , stréet and Fourtepnth atrects; the Ninth avenue between One Hundred and Ninth and Christopher atroets, “No cars are in operation on the! Boulovard, The cross town lines, tha Fourteenth streey the Mighth street, the Fifty-ninth street, the Onc Mune dred and Sixteenth and One Hundred and Twenty-Atth styect care are mov, {ng slowly, On Broadway cars aro running only from Fitty-ninth street to Thirty-third, The'Thirty-fourth and Twenty-third street Mnes are out of commingion,’” As far ag locomotion on city streste went In the early hours this morning, tho city wws practically Hed up. Nota Wheel turned in Harlem except on cars until 11 o'clock, Trains of cars were | mulled all nigtt andthe motormen re- Heved in shifts, In the outlying dis- tricts cans were snow-bound during the night, Sweepers Useless, On the One Hundred and Sixteenth, One Hundred and Twenty-fifth and One Hundred and Thinty-fifth street Hnes the tracks were sheathed In ice, The Lenox avenue tracks, on which the Len- ox and Columbus avenue cans run, were piled with enow, , The Bighth avenue, the Amsterdam and the Broadway tracks were in a similar condition, On Lenox avenue sweepers proved useless and the brush cars had to wait until men scraped the ice out of the ctian- nels, Tn the Bronx a few cars were able to creep along on the Mount Vernon, Third avenue, West Farms and One Hundred and Thirty-elghth street and Willis ave- nue lines, But on the Jerome avenue, Kingsbridge, Tremont avenue, Sedgwick avenue and One Hundred and Sixty-firet street, Southern Boulevard, Westchest- | et, Fort Slocum and Williamsbridge not | ® car was running, Richmond Tied Up. Blaten Island {s tled up, ‘The trol ley service, put out of commiasion yes- terday, will continue to be. stationary day, ew of the trains of the Rapid system are running, Owing to | 3 of traffic the County. Clerk's the Sheriff's and the Surrogate's mokinevitie closed for the day, Phousands of commuters were held tn New York last night, and those who loft the city early yesterday for thelr homes in Staten Tsland find themselves Twactically marooned to-day, Only at the shore towns are there faclilttes for egress from the Island, No train that lett Tompkinaville Jast nicht renehed Its destination, One that Rot out of Tottenville, crowded with yomen, Jumped the track a ghort dis- nee from that place and caused great deal of excitement, -but no one was hurt, [t waa stalled’ many hours. | On the Bridges, All nes running cars over the Brook-| lyn bridge are In operation to-day ex-| cept the Park avenue and Maspeth lines, which have been ted up since | yesterday afternoon, of the ordinary number of cars were in use On ‘the wos no tr swept cl drifts Williamsburg uble, as the of snow by the om ines in Kroc otused trout 1d street cars stopped early last) Land had nol resumed up to noon, | At dri In the Jowslytng portions the route, throush the meadows bridge structure was of about Newiown ereck, block the Ine. SR $2,500 JOB, BOYS. Deputy Commissioner Barrell ans nounced this afternoon that he had ace cepted the resignation of his accretary, Daniel Carroll, No reason was given, The job Je worth $2,500 a year, It 18 already gossip in pollee circles that An- drow O'Grady has his eye out for it, Dooley. , About two-thirds} ©! there He |e an intimate friend of Magistrate Many of the small dealers, not dar Ing to raise prices through fear of losing their regular customers, are using smaller pails than before the storm, and other dealers, while not advancing the price to olf patrons, exact advance. prices from strangers, Old Customers ‘First. AN the large dealers, on being asked about the inereaged charge to cover the expense of hauling, deny the story of the sinall dealers. At the office of the dittons, said to an: ivening World re-| Hudson Goal Comoany it was stated that all of thelr regular customers were “We hope by nighttull that moat of | belng supplied at the prices charged before the storm, but that new cus- tomers were required to.fwait until the old ones were supplied. It was said nothing extra was being charged, be- cause of the diMculty In hauling loaded carts through the snow-filled streets, ‘At the office of the Hayes’ Coal Com: pany it wes said all the coal in the Mott street yard of the concern was being held for the poor people of the nelghborhood, ‘ “Wo are not delivering ton orders,’ ald Manager Kamisky, ‘Nearly all of the coal is being retailed at 10 cents a bucket to tie poor, ‘ During the storm yesterday we wore short of Meg ie be it Us $3 or Ha ton far at hon ‘our pockets for it de, If we were to s pice d gues there would be a slot, No Milk In Town. hed the city this morn te Wet mnie remained from yestet- [SA at i) seats fe were not lucky enc Shute filed''up on ‘condensed. mille oF en without. ithe Janke trans that usually ean into thé chy early every) morning. were stalled along the ralroads somewhere and even df they had been able to get in they would have been short of thelr Usual freight, because the farmers who live at any Metance from the rajl- roads were unable to drive through the dvep snow to the stations, As for exe, cheese and butter, not a pound of any han been received to-d: although manifests at the M. tubs a oxes somewhero around i country waiting to be dug out of drifte, There fs a week's supply of egga in storage, however, both fresh and “held,” nd no probability of a fanmdne, The prices Aid not change to-day. the three cents advance of yesterday being all, An for butter, 90,000 packages are on the freezers in. the storager-—more than enough to withstand a famine, ‘Prade te dull in all Hnes of perishable commodities, a9 the streets are blocked and no trucks can be moved to get the goods delivered, —— TROUBLE OVER; NO STRIKE IN SUBWAY, Company Agrees to Retnatate Mo-~ torman Pound® and Men Are Satisfied, The grievances of the employees of the Interborough Rawld Transit Com- pany were amieubly settled at a con- ference between a committee of ten acting for the men and ©, P. Bryan, Vice-President of the corporation, this wftornoon, Tho committee was headed by Willam 1, Jencks, of the Brother- hood of Locomtive Fngincers; Harry B, Pinney, of the Brotherhood of Lo- comotive Firemen, and Gerge Bi. Pep- per,of the Amalgamated Argoelation, Mr, bryan, on behalf of the company, agreed to reinstate Motorman Pounds, whose traln ran intd at the Worth street station a short time ogo, The demand of the men that Motorman Crewes and ‘I'rackman Hibbert, who were discharged as responsible for the Gansevoort collision on the Ninth ave- nue “1'" severar weeks ago was not Inyisted upon. ‘The company agrees to arrange a new schedule for the Subway that will allow ofthe motormen getiing the fit- teen minutes’ reat betweon trips that they were guaranteed when the road | was opened, 'Thero will also be a ro- ment of sahedules on the Sixth d avenue “L' tines to do away ut the men consider unnecos- sary overtime, $50,000,000 FOR ROARS, Legislative Bills Authorise Iuaue for Lmprovementa, ALBANY, Jan. 24.—Concurrent resolu tlona were Introduced in the Leglelatuye | mening the constitution ao AB a Dond Inve of $0,000,000 | pvement and providing Tor sitton to g to the desire ot Bound for now thousands of, rata Exchange show thousands of crat xe a < ‘3 bal 4 Gi wont ciny's NAT. EARING Delay, Forcing Many +e Qe Contractors Ticket Plan Means a Tab on Shovel. lers Each Hour, The sow contractors have troubles | of thelr own, The weather was @, severe that by 8 o'clock more than halt. the men at work ‘had to lve up: and seek ghelier, Later many ofthese te- turned, however, and the contractors ” promised @ epeedy clearing of the main. avenues ‘and cross etreete, Avbout 10,000, men are now at work, and twice that number will be available tos night. ‘ Thousands of men hunting work on the snow-shoyelling gangs haye been mating the mistake of applying to the foremen of the gangs on the. streets, The plan of employing men on the atrects was tried for a while, but was found impractivable, and now men are wmployed only at the superintendent's offices before 6.30 o'clock in the mortise ing and between 4 and 6.30 P) M., when ‘the day and night gangs, respectively, ‘are sent out, Considerable complaint has been made by men employed shovelling snow that* the pay {is not as represented, The charge has been made. that men.who work ail day expecting to get 20 centa an hour are paid only 40 to 60 cents a) day, we An Byening World reporter to-day, talked. with dozens of men on the street, « gage and with those In charge, ‘The vtory told In many instances was the same. The men are given Uckete ‘when they start to work and ona, gang has a"boss,' who punches all tickets every hour,’ ‘This, the superintendents’ bay, 18 capita to the men when they 60 to work. ‘Dhey say that as many of the men work only an hour, and then. loaf {n saloons or shovel off sidewalks and stobpa along the streot for pay by thyiee fram, maper ty Dh 4 ise scome up for their pay, their e. how oily ond or two hours’ Piha the'job' and they are pald ac. rule corroborated: this matter, though In two instances’ men complained that they had Jost hours by the failure or refusal pf the foreman to punch thelr tickets, In doth Instances the foreman claimed. they were not on hand (unas the time for whieh they were docked, Was. af” » drovi * Youterday, while the gt worst, a Méhly” dressed “wornar ‘dowt 'Fifvi avenue and invited the gang hen at work at Forty-Afth atreet, num: ring sixty men and @ foreman, to adjourn to a restaurant and have coffe at her expense. They accepted, ay the woman waited outside while the: hen the men t a ahd Ria reprikiehe pant & bill Sra’icih tig uld Koop the o ue t the. fore» iy “anid Forty -elgtih ‘atrest ‘ets show ‘thn on ‘condin, n he vol oh ty cow rik in the vicinity of her residence in Fifth avenue, and her example was followed by two other IVfth avenue residents, Whose name could not be learned, Prisoners Shovel Snow. AN unusual sight was that at the pler Ai vie doovot Bast Twenty-sixth street to-day, where the Charities Department has offices, whey fifteen prisoners from the Workhouse were brought over to atovel away the snow. The men were in eonviet garb of dark gray with drab atripes and wore the small prisoners’ When the pler was cleaned ers were taken back to the, They were in charge of two 15 YEARS OF TORTURE Itching and Painful Sores Covered : Head and Body, CURED IN WEEK BY CUTICURA “For fifteen years my scalp and forehead was one mass of scabs, and ey body was covered with sores, ‘ords cannot expresa how I suffered from the itching and pain, I had iven up hope when a friend told me | to get Cuticura, After bathing with Cuticura Soap and applying Cuticura | Ointment for three days, my head | Was ae clear as ever, and to my sure | prise and joy, one cake of soap and one box of ointment made a coms ete cure in one week, (nigned) +B, Franklin, 917 Washington St, Allegheny, Pa,” SPECIAL FOR THURSDAY, Ib, 100, Ib, 150, SPECIAL FOR FRIDAY, Almontiag ose. way Qonvenilon, a giass on’ arising gives prompt relie#, \ DO alone 7,15 Assorted = Frut a Chocolaten eeeeene Ib, Ife, 54 BARCLAY ST /) BARCLA f a? 29 CORTLAM ae TANTS ais eee rf ART.On 20. 1000, THOMAS MENTEGANRT, beloved hus band of Mary A, Mingey, native ‘ot the Vatish of Ardagh, County Meath, Tree! Mand, aged G4 yours Kelatives and, friends ar attend funeral from hy lot ABS Wont kth at, 28, at 9 Heart Chore Invited to realdence, turday, Jan, M.; thence to the Sacrod 1» West Slat et, where & requiem mass will be celebrated forthe otdon “feeder wanted Adarces, 04 yar hone a stating experlenes, STREETS Severe Weather Causes” 8 { ‘ sity 4 a. CHECK TO LOAFING. "?