The evening world. Newspaper, July 15, 1911, Page 10

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THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JUL BULL RUN BATTLE FOUGHT 50 YEARS AGO NEXT WEEK — How an Army of Brave but “Green” Troops Was Sacri- ficed to Unthinking Vanity. WON FIGHT, THEN LOST. Confederates Saved When Jackson Won Name “Stone- wall”—First Rebel Yell. BY PHILIP R. DILLON. On next Friday, July 2%, the Aftierh | thought to the pos anniversary of the battle of Pull Run ‘Vil be observed both North and South. | Bull Rup, a tittle river which thirty-five miles west of Washington in Northern Virginia, flows southeaster- ly between steep hanks and empties Into the Potomac twenty miles below Wash- ington. About the middie of its length tt flows near the town of Manassas, where the rises Valley through a gap in the Kine Ridge Mountains joins the line that comes up from Central Virginia and forms the! line which runs northeasterly into Alex- andria and Washington. Fifty years ago these two lines meeting et Manassas were of immense importance in military strategy. A Confederate army of 22,000 men under Gen. Beauregard was en- eamped for six miles along the south- weet bank of Bull Run, holding the railroad junction, threatening Washing ton and keeping in touch with the Con- federate army of 11,000 men under Gen. Joseph E. Johnston over in the Shenan- doah Valley. ‘This latter army was holding in check the Federal army of Gen. Patterson, numbering 14,000 men. ‘The ratlway trains could carry John- ston's army the greater part of the ¢ls- tance to Manassas, Pattoraon's men Would have to march all the way. Nat- urally the Confederate leaders early saw the strategical valus of the vosition at Manassas. But the civilian popular leaders of the North heediessix scorned military strat- egy and tactics, They saw that army Of 65,000 men at Washington under Gen. MeDowell and it looked mighty enough to sweep away all the rebels in eleven States without any ado of organization, atratesy or tactics The rumble of impatience in the North which began the third week in June, “Ti, grew daily in volume. McDowell, an able commander, pleaded for time to organize his army, but at !-st Lincoin yielded, and on July 9 ordered McDow- ell to make preparations for assuming the offensive in eight days. Gen. Scott assured McDowell that Patterson would keep Johnston occupied and prevent the Confederate army in the Shenandoah from Joining Beauregard's army e+ Ma- Nassas. ‘On July 16, the day set for the begin- ning of the campaign, so poor was the organization that nothing wos ready to transport the provisions for the army, In spite of this McDowell had to march. He ordered his soldiers to fill their knap- sacks with three days’ food, and they marched from Alexandria and A: huge ton, 35,000 men, Two days they marched tn the hot un, over dusty roads. They wore the same shoes they had when they marched from their home towns, which were utterly unfit for war marching. Many of the militia officers had on their dainty calfskin boots, that looked so nice in street parades. At the end of and 12,00 Federal soldiers crossed F Run at # A, M. unknown to the Con- | federate commanders, ‘to the eastward, Teiwey thet rune trom the Shenandoah | fo creme ane Atreck Mebowell, Gd not | brigades to face northward to meet the orders from his superiors. #ompanies. | Join McDowell. On that Saturday night each side had about 90,00 effective men. Through the strangest coincident mis- Conceptions, McD. ell planned to whip Heauregard by striking his left before Johnston arrived, and at the aame time J on and Reauresa hemed to strike McDowell's left xhip him b fon came to help him; ap@ propared to attack arly In e. HUNDREDS OF SPECTATORS OUT FOR A HOLIDAY, ‘ont The rates Jesigned (a oross Hull Run and attack McDowell's army At A point about cigat miles from whe McDowell planned to srosa and attack Beaurogard's army Meanwhile hundreds of Washington politicians and ‘angers-on who would Hot fight themselves but wanted to en Joy the tacle of the destruction of the rebel army, Nad come out from Washington in the rear of McDowell's a Senators, Representatives, rich volety men and women, office clerks, [newspaper correspondents — the most amazing corps of sight-rreing followers that ever came after an army, were quipped to view the show, ax it were they crowded the country roads and the atreets of the town of Centreville | with their ventoles h had come tn Yuxurtous care rt whteh were stocked with food and drink, and they drank eharnp and ¥ toasted the trlamphal t to destroy the Con the morrow. No one seemed to lity of defeat unday morning, July 2, 1861, da «mall irs the divisions of Hunter and Heint-| clear, In the darkness of the an had taken the road northward, At the same tim Jones's brigade of Confederate cr Rul! Run eteht miles further down stream and advan to attack McDowell's left Johnston and Reauregard, thetr eyes here they expected that they were themeelver at- tacked on their left flank til startled | by the booming of cannon to the north- ward and in thelr rear. Instantly they changed thelr plans, ordered thelr enemy and Jackson to hurry to the stone bridge, fearing that McDowell was forcing a crossing there, HOW JACKSON WON HIE TITLE AND SAVED ARMY. On came the 12,00 Federals under Hunter, Like chaff they swept away the € felerate left. The batteries of Griffin and Ricketts were pouring de- struction on the Confederate brigades of Boe and Evans. The Federals seamed likely to crumble up the whole Con- federate Ine, whose Intrenchments were useless, since the flower of the Unton | army waa in their rear, And then @ man rose up among the Confederates to turn aside the impending defeat—Gen, Thomas J, Jackson, Jackson's brigade of five regiments, 8,000 men, was the finest in the Con- ‘ate army. ‘They came from the| doah Valley and the mountains | most of them of Scotch-| Irish ancestry, of steady, fighting blood. | Their commander was thirty-eight years | old and perhaps the most perfect soldter | who aver graduated from West Point. Jackson and his Virginians were hur- rying to the stone bridge. Sounds of battle came to him from the left. He, turned his men toward the new battle. | In a minute Jackson's brigade was) pressing up the slope of a hill—the fa. mous Henry Hill. Beyond the hill, and coming, was the Federal advance. ‘The top of that hill was a plateau, and here Jackson formed his men in Ine of battle just in the nick of time. The Position was the strongest of the entire strategic battlefeld of Bull Run, and he had selzed it on the Instant without His men nettled down low and silent to await the Federal charge. Gen. Ree watched that Ine of 3,000 men in admiration, Then he turned and galloped back Into the midst of the throng of his own broken. He pointed his sword toward the Virginia regiments deployed in per- fect order, and shouted: “Look! There {x Jackson standing Ike a stone wall! Rally behind the Virginians!” From that hour the stern, silent com- mander was “Stonewall” Jackson, Adown the opposite slope and tn the valley below the Henry Hill came the triumphant Federals Nut the long march and the morning's fighting had worn them out. And now, facing them from the top cf that hill, wan a long, gray line that fired no shot, but waited Immovably. The Federals hesitated, Their officers decided to rest. The ad- vance was stopped. The firing ceased. The men lay from noon until 2.90 o'clock, And the news was sent out by the spectators on Chea down on the battlefleld—| { ‘Diagram of Two Babies’ Falls, | JAMES + MULDOON Each Strangely Ae there was no braver man, nor perhaps better general just then, finally ordered @ general retreat. He got together straggling companies, organized a strong rear guard and slowly they moved back, ready to turn at bay If the victorious enemy pursued them, The Confederates did not pursue—perhaps dared not, They (00 were »xhausted by the strug: gle. Back to the Intrenchments at Arling- ton and Alexandria went the remnants of that army, which had been sent to destruction by unthinking vanity, The Union loss was 481 men killed, 1,011 men wounded and 1,460 taken pris- oners, The Confederates reported a loss of 387 Killed and 1,58 wounded, Gen, Sherman tn his memotra writes: “It was one of the best planned battl of the war. and one of the worst fought." Gen, Johnston wrote: “If the tactics of the Federals had been equal to t strategy we should have been beater For fifty years military men of all Nations have been discussing the battle of Bull Run, and, nobody is now blamed for the defeat, except the trresponsible Public which compelled McDowell to fight when he was in no condition to attack such an enemy. sotteaieéel >: <A nen WALL STREET. The lowing were the highest, Law oy bay 10% High, ts “ Obie» okiyn Kap h Pacific ed * a M & St & Mo G.. & Rio G. Ww ie years old, capes from injury yesterday when they LUCKY TUMBLERS, BUT BABIES QUIT FIRE ESCAPE NAPS Pair Who Tumbled at Same Time Never Showed Even Scratches. Two of the happlest youngsters in New York to-day are Jimmio Muldoon, four years old, and Eddie Prosel, three who had remarkable es- tumbled off the fire-escapes in their homes on West Twenty-sixth street Jimmie and Eddie were at play to-day when an Evening World reporter saw them, “I didn't sleep on the fire-escape last night,” ‘immie, “an¢ netther did Eddie.” Each had some taffy-on-the-stick, and it was disappearing with remarkable rapidity, Jimmie, who fell about twenty feet and landed on a cement pavement, didn’t seem to be any the worse for his experience. Eddie showed @ slight scar over his left eye, but otherwise was free from marks. Mrs. Muldoon still belleves that the horseshoe which hangs over a doorway in her home, No. 500 West Twenty-sixth street, had something to do with her litte son's escape. Mrs. Prosel is equally sure it was Eddie's lucky Fri- day, for he was born on that day, Escaping Injury CONVENT SHAKEN BY BOMB FIRED Explosion That They’re Out of Prison Again. ONE ARREST IS MADE. ¢ Wreck Shop of Man They Once Tried to Kill, but He Escapes Unhurt. Vincenzo Paloza, @ young man from Clearfleld, Ja, was arrested to-day by Detective Drum of the Stagg street station and charged with having some. thing to do with bomb at No, 142 Johnson street, Will- famsburg, last night. ‘The explosion rocked the neighborhood and started a panic in the Holy ‘Trinity Convent around the corner, where fifty nuns and @ hundred children ran into the street in terror. Paloza was found loitering around the place early today, He ran when Drum approached him When it was found he was from out of town the poitco took heed of the Black Hand practice of drafting out of town members for deeds of viol and had him heid in Manhattan Avenue Court until he could be lockea up. The building attacked 1s a three-story double tenement, housing seven fam- ilies, The ground floor ts occupied by stores, Ignazio Brucia, forty-one, a barber, and the supposed object of the explo- ston, has his shop on one side. In the rear he lives with his wife and four children, James Westello has a shoe store on the other side and lives there with hie wife and two children, Jacob Apt, ninety-one years old, # blind man and owner of the building, liver over the shoe store. BUILDING DAMAGED BUT AiL ESCAPE UNHURT. Policeman Koch of the Stagg street ation was about 150 feet from the store when the bomb exploded and saw no one run away from the building. By the time he got there men, women and children were piling down the stairs and fire escapes in their night clothes. Scores In adjoining houses followed in the same panicky haste in a few min- utes. Brucia was outside his door with & big revolver, trying to find the bomb thrower. He and his family had been hurled from bed, but were unhurt. The wooden shutters had been blown off the windows, all the glass in the front part of the house had been shat- tered, the frame work blown out, the cellar door caved in, the hall floor de- molished and part of the celling cf one side of the lower floor wrecked. Not a fragment of the bomb was left. ‘The fact that no one was seen runnieg away Indicates it had a time fus The neighborhood was thrown ints great excitement, and the police reserves had to be called out. Doz = of p---on8 were thrown out of thelr beds vhen the explosion shook the house. The nuns and every child in the convent were awakened, but there was no z~nlo, ‘The risters succeedec In reassuring all their charges, The police learned that Bructa is a wealthy man, and has been in the butld- ing for sixteen years. He owns prop- erty at Coney Island and holds mort- gages on a number of Brooklyn houses, TRIED TO KILL HIM WHEN RE. FUSED BLACKMAIL, Y_ 18, AT BARBER DOOR | Blackhanders Serve Notice by} the explosion of a 1911, BARY, DENOTED TREE DAYS AD, —CHTMES BURGLAR Prisoner Probably the Man Who Has Been Robbing Sterling Place, Brooklyn. | THREE OTHER ARRESTS. One Man Caught Trying to Break Open a Telephone Slot-Machine David Barry, now piain policeman, but up to three days ago a detective-Her:- tenant in charge of the Flatbush bu- reau, was radiant this morning when he arraigned before Magistrate Maguire @ “sporty” looking young man, wearing clothes of extreme fashion, a large gold antler flashing from his watch fob, on @ charge of unlawful entry. When Barry was demoted he was signed to the Bergen street station and sent to patrol Sterling place, whose row of private dwellings have been broken into @ number of times during the Past few weeks. Burry yesterday after- noon saw the young man dart into the basement of Broker Willfam Bancroft's home at No. 168 Sterling place. The house ts boarded up and the family is away. Giving the young man a few Minutes start Barry crept softly after him. He found his man crawling into the dumb-waiter. “What on earth are you doing that for?" asked Barry, disingenuously. “I'm Mr. Willlam Bancroft,” the young man replied, without a tremor. “I find It necessary to get some papers I locked away {n my desk upstairs, and as the house ts boarded up I thought this would be the best way to wet upstairs.” “That won't do," sald Barry, draw- ing the young man out of the dumb- walter, “Let'e see if the watchman knows you." COULDN'T GET THE WATCHMAN TO VOUCH FOR HIM. Barry hailed the watchman, a shrewd Uttle Irishman, and as he came up Barry's prisoner whispered to him: “I'm one of the Bancroft fam!ly— don't forget.” “Divi take you for a murderin’ thafe," exclaimed the watchman, “Yez can’t git me fer to shtand for anythin loike thot. Shure, it's minny tolmes I've seen you prowlin’ round here, hav- in’ no honest business in the netghbor- hood.”* That was enough for Barry, He took his man around to the Bergen street station, where, with Capt. Hayes to help, he had made him admit that his name was Henry J. Houck, 1d that he lived in a furnished room at No. 438 Tenth street, in the Park Slope sec- tion, Mrs. Kelly, the landlady, was up- $$ 0\.. her boarder‘s plight. She had believed him > be -ominent In Y, M. C, A, circles, as he had told her. In his room Barry found nineteen pawn- tickets, forty purses, a boxful of st pins, cuff-buttons and other gold trink- ets, besides a heap of broken and bent silverware, all ready for melting. Houck was questioned about the bene and broken silver, and he maintained that he had be the stuff and was woing to have it melted. The antler on his watch-fob, he said had been made for him out of some : gold that he had bought. To Magistrate Maguire the young man sald that he came from a prom!- nent California family, On his plea of not guilty he vas fo'd in $1,000 for ex- amination next ~~-nday. PANIC AT CONEY AS FIRE DESTROYS TUNNELS OF LOVE High Pressure Checks Flames | While Police Fight With Excited Mob. Coney Island wan the scene other exciting fire early to-day, when flames swept the “Tunnels of Love” and the cry was raised that Coney was burning. Battalion Chief Willlam Rog- ers, remembering the Dreamland fire, took no chances and almost immediately turned in @ second and thiré alarms. An hour of thrills for several thousand Persons followed the rush of ten en- gines, half @ dozen trucks, a water tower, several battalion and two deputy chiefs to Coney from Bay Ridge and/ Flatbush, The streets were soon packed | with a mob and the police reserves had | all they could de. For a time it looked as if the bulld- ings between Dreamland site and Steeplechase Park might burn. ‘The fire was discovered at 3.20 o'clock | in the “Tunnels of Love," at the cor- ner of Thompson's Walk, the the Bowery. John Kavakes of surf avenue and West Twenty-third street ts the owner of the place. “Old Mill" order, with boat through a long dark tunnel, which is made up for the most part of tarred | paper. The police think some patron ri og through the tunnel may have tossed a cigarette butt into a crevice of the tar paper and that it smouldered there for an hour or more, The proprietor be- Heves it started in a barrel of rubbish outside the building, PANIC AMONG THE LODGERS ON UPPER FLOORS. The upper part of t bul a leased by Joseph Loewer and his wife Margaret, who rent furnished They have twenty lodge: and th was a panic among them. The Loewers also have the restaurant on the ground floor. Loewer carried out his two children, Conrad, fourteen, and Lloyd, elev and then went back to the roof, where he stood on guard with # bucket of water for stray sparks. His wife ran hysteric: y through the halls, Fireman Richard Jacobs of En- gine Company No. «6 heard her cries. He went upstairs and, despite her pro- tests, caried her down, Rose Strauss and her niece, Rose, sixteen years old, who occupy a room in the building, were at a window ready to jump when Robert Rosen, an- other lodger, seized the girl and car- red “her out, and then rescued her aunt. Rosen went bravely back to get anybody else in danger. The smoke in the hall shut off his escape and, half choked by the fumes, he climbed down ‘a wire cable on the outside of the build- ing. Before the firemen got their tines in action hose from Jackman’s and Ward's Baths did effective service and to them|; the firemen give credit for holding the fire in check until they got their streams flowing. After that It was easy as far as the blaze w concerned, but out in Surf avenue a wildly excited crowd of several thousand surged back and forth fighting the police lines, POLICE ATHLETE CLINGS TO HORSE of an-| almost at) tern end cnd on the seo. side of | qwenty-fifth at It is on she} rides | rooms. | pocToRcRAWIS. UNDER ROLEY TO A YING BO Women Faint When Youngs ster Stealing Ride Falls Under the Wheels Several women fainted and an ime mense crow? collected at Ninth aves nue and One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street to-day when a northbound trole ley car crushed both legs of Benjamin Coon, seven yeare of age, of No, 2896 Fighth avenue. Dr. Cole, who came from Harlem Hospital, found that he had to walt until « wrecking crew could be sent from the barn of the Metropolitan Street Railway Company before the boy could be taken from une der the car. In the meantime the doctor crawled under the car and worked to save the child's Ife, The right leg had been cut off and the left was hanging meres ly by a shred. The street was packed with persons whe crowded to see what had happened. The Httle boy w s stealing a ride on the left hand stde of the car, which is next to the svuthbound tracks. Whem the car came toward One Hundred and et ho saw another car approac one southbound traci and attompted to jump from his perchy fearing that the advancing southbound cai we weep him from the northe bound trolley. The child f .nder the rear truck of ar. s,omen in the car . card him scream and looked out of the windows to se what was wrong. When they reali: the trouble a numvor of them fainted. Policeman Davis saw the accident and called an ambulance from the Harlem | Hospital. The policeman had to make A passageway for the ambulance when it arrived, and an excited crowd Watched the doctor at work under the ar. When the wrecking crew finally arrived and “jacked up" the car, Drs Cole took the boy to hospital. Phe boy dled @ short time after reaching the hospital ——. SHOT DEAD AS HE GAVE BLACK HAND SIGNAL, Agent of Blackmailers es Himself a Target as He Lights Cigar. JEANNETTE, Pa., July signal of the “Black Hand to turn money over to its agent, George La- barto, a wholesale fruit merchant, shot ul killed Venet Ceciliano, a barber, here Reputed Ma Jpon the to-day, and immediately thereafter eight letters from the “Black Hand’ demand- ing money of Labarto upon pain of death, turned over to the police by Mrs. Labarto. , to-day iano entered Las barto’s store and stood lighting @ stogie, when Labarto opened fire with an autos matic revolver from the rear of the establishment. The lighting of the sienal for Labarto to This signal was arto In a I he ree urns Were burned down and se destroyed, ‘The first shot struck Ce the face and he fell to the floor, Three more shots struck him {n the breast and legs. The fifth shot carried away a little finger on a hand of Labarto’s daughter, who stood Iine of the firing. Ceciliano was to a hospital where he (ed and PRIVILEGE TO PAY Our new ten year mortgoge is the most liberal mortgage ever offered to borrowers. You have no renewal fees to pay for ten years, You can pay it off at any time on thirty days’ notice or you can pay the first day | ’ He told the police that five years A ne day Feb nearly the whole | the safe side of ull Run thsi the) Hs Eddie and Jimmie do not tive in the| agi’he began getting Black Hand tet-(° OTHER LL ean THIEVES $100 or any multiple of $100 on any army went lame because of the r-|"nion army had won a great victory, | 4 same house, but they are playmates. ‘The first demanded that he leave TAKEN IN BROOKLYN, interest day Ise snoee, wu they Went on, and are| SECOND BATTLE ENDS IN DE-| | It was a coincidence that they fell 1,0 in St. John’s Cemetery. He went| When the bell of one of the telephone It tempts one to save money in order near Bull Run, out of reach of FEAT OF FEDERALS. ¥ from fire escapes on the same d , if ¢ lot machines In the Long Island Depot : ' escapes o 1 eo led by his two broth- Bue Contederete cannon acrose the! iu, while the Federals rested, John-| § in almost exactly the same manner, Tho edetirg Sinippeianeers ee on Atlantic avenue, Brooklyn, began be spice amt a to ake regular recnctions of (Ge siream. ston and Beauregard feverishly’ strove | h Hrowels jive in the firat floor, front,| sue ghowed up. The next day came| MA@King a noise like all the chimes of i ' ; mortgage principal. TWO COMMANDERS PLAN THE! 'o eee ee ee, raat ware) © eae wis sie Me the Ah Street. | another letter telling him if he didn't| Brooklyn combined shortly after 1) Eller Is Bruised, His Uniform| Made to house owners in Greater SAME LINE OF BATTLE, Tar eh the 1. ce ee id tumbled elght or ten feet into the| leave the money in Central avenue at stolagk She marning Otte Rymus, thir- i New York in amounts of $10,000 In the mean time Beauregard had sent| wax formed at right angles to the first |S areaway below that leads to the base: | a certain spot designated his family| tY-two years of age, of No. 141 Atlantte Tor, but He Stops the or less, Send to any of our offices word to Johnston, asking him to hurry| battle Ine of the day. Jackson was| = ment, would be killed. Lieut. Tony Vachris 1S WOR-RURRE SEUINE. Ve EEnAA IE for a circular. on bie army. On Juno Is Jonnaton| the. centre, ‘Two and «halt hours the| | In both instances the bars of the fire| worked on the case, but could not| open and stea money white Runaway. Reece Wietesstne ane eee AAU RUN Mearns ana ait tite me -thel fe es vere “horizontal.” They were | catch the blackmallers. accumulated during the day. In Fiat- TILE GUARANTEE 4000 men 10 the raliroad near Manassas | Confederates made strong thelr new | Vian Care, [Fotied of ‘the phosicians who extents | , The, Wtters continued to come at in| bush Avanue Folica, Court Rymus : Gap, where trains were ready for him.| "At halt-past 2 in the afternoon the| Wabi" tel” yeas heray tala, At was the mereat chance | Tor acraid of th extort "sand ase|, Another prisoner who pleaded guilty| Patrolman John J. Eller of the East | and on Saturday, June 2, they arrived! accond bettie began. and no. flercor | Wind Om have virte “UN YJ tnat they were not both killed. Hetierredret to a charge of attempted burglary was|One Hundred and Twenty-sixth strect | Egpitgy at Manasw a Jol ; Wheel AL fiteat nt & * ee ane sumed @ defan’ attitude On Des. %.| sighteen-year-old Join Naples of No. , ¢ heAmerte + + § 4,375,000 a and joine ward, | struggle than this one at the Henry | Whee neem i ine, 08, he was awakened by a knock on| *ihteen-year: in Nap! No. | station, a member of the Irish-American Surplus (all earned The 4,000 remaining Coniederates at| Hill has been recorded In the history of Csi ase; SR BIG FRONT STREET SMOKE. | hic door, When he opened it to anote| Fe ee ee| Athletic Club, an athlete of note and | i ) 10,625,000 Winchester followed a day later. the civil war, _ oJ ‘ rf caught this morning by Detective Dono- 01 sc 176 B'way, N. Y. 175 Remsen 8t., URIS iste, that aioe te Griffin's and Rickett's batteries were SHIPPING NEWS. eebnead Bitho con aa a | were fired at him, \e hittiie him in| var of the Flatbush avenue police while | champion hurdler, had his untform torn | '350 Fulton 4 Jamaica.” ae eas Sohosten i atterson | ordered to ndvance up the hill, and they me a rings Folk to) the vide, Only a few letters cam> ~“ter|he was trying to enter the basement of| to ribbons to-day when he was dragged eee Re ate icin: e with eleven guns, The Confederate ALMANAC FOR TODAY. Skyscraper Tops, that. Two years ago tr- nased en-|the house next door. Only bea week | by a runaway horse from the One Hun- mall y nt 10) 4, picket e . {Bun rises, 4.41 Sup seta, 7.0) Moon rise, .10.18 . 1 les had been arrested of i - have Rastened to Join McDowell, but av! n demdly artiiiery, duel Keteral rest TE ROLLE? ee The Weal tobacca warchoure of Leo| vr theory. Ie that. the Siackmaliers |aimiar cherne, HAHA RA acai nee Ated aie Deenlys th ae ae te didn't. ont 5 4 their hatteries, A Con- NAL SESE HM | Tren, on the third and fourth foors| were arrested about that time on some| cause of “his father's pleadings, His Willis avenue bridge at One Hundred McDowell's tired army rested on Sat-. federate ' tru and deliv. H iid ey Sie lok er ae Prone atest fired | charge and sent to prison, andere iuct| (iner wes ia the Fiatush Avenue) UNE Beene i strest day i 5 ; ered a \ oh destroyed the un sts Ly spontaneous combustlor obacca agi Tourt th ‘ning, but this time his|and Twenty- ; an +4 “HH ae ay alee Si muaen| S788 © veliey, whieh aa Ap pe 4 Mani § pg tk ig Sgt pets k vel, | Out again, Brucia ts a cousin of Jo- ord ie we ttite: vauthi Baikal” Whe Hane, a bie aray, waa atisaned 10 ot 8 ig: oftoere They decided to ber! Fins, which had been advanced to the| vorT OF YEW ¥ low smoke caused many persons to take | SPA Glambalvo, the lawyer, who was| held for trial a delivery wagon driven by John Kerri- gim the battle in the morning, before top wt Nw ti ARRIVED, Ee teen aes aie recently recommended to the Mayor by) "Saturday Gluseppe was the name| gan. of No. 319 West. Thirty-seventh | johnston’s army re-enforced Beaure-| Up came Franklin's men to retake tho WHE WAE cine “dingS tO) prominent Italians as a candidate for|of a young man arraigned {n the same street. The animal bolted at One Hun- gard—for they did not know that John-| guns. ay orde Awa RlRRma ce a a | Magistrate to fill a Brooklyn vacancy, |court by the same detective. He had| Geeq ang Fifteenth street and dashed jon had already arrived oa tha oppo-| “Reserv 2 within we alain fant put and the | De ee arrested him Inst night while riding a| Fed and Fifteenth street and duane site bank of Bull fun, fitty yar) and give them the j ARERERRN OR in A fey minuisa, | DUCHESS OF DEVONSHIRE | Dxcle which answered the description any Thi os RED aS ae eee . establishments. o : vi May on the reins, but the horse ha McDowell unfolded his plan of battle, bavonet; and worn you charge, yell Ike nxen; Leo Grosso! teeeuee | Sf one missed by @ Brooklyn druggist. | Wem ° | 4 % a furte . m nger, brewers’ | When searched, Detective Donovan told| gripped the bit in its teeth and all Ker- There was but one road—the Warrenton “rte Pea eAvesene mupplien, and Lambert 4 Co, chemist Ree eet Or eT eae ee eee ee AtuRie Tae al tente Gia Ge sop win were Grune | turmpike, leading across ® bridxe over « ay Pe CI egy ty "GS shall re damaged by water | cold-shisel In hs shirt, On the de> tenn | » There were half a dozen Sy) ‘ ng forward with | As Alveaton, eI Sy y 7) oe | Dow: Collapses at R ing|tective's statement that he would be] “Eiier was on the north side of One | fords in the six miles covered by the payonets. Backward. down the bill) So Yo Vo” Satill, | DIES OF ASIATIC CHOLERA. De WARET lapses ace Moaling able to produce a number of complain-| yingreq and Twenty-fifth street, He Confederate line, and through these went the Federal bilgide. But again in England and Succumbs ante against him, “Saturday” was held | “are omg runaway to cross the {Hil fords soldiers might wade the stream. they stormed up, aga A an aman, | Ontmoing Menmeh | Quarantine Watchman s Some Hours After. for further examination next Tuesday, | Waited for the ronaway ipod for the | ‘CLEVER SON HIT ‘The bridge and each of the fords w And then, when the baile was still tn phic : # Sienrnroeeeras . " 0 Buarded “hy Confederates, Mebowall the balance, the rest of Johnston's army’ | Nl — | Hie Statem Tata LONDON, July 1.—The Dowa: DURYEA WILL PROTESTED, | Prisle. The Jolting aver the car tracks From the | proposed to make a feint attack at the the feld—3,000 men. Sud- | Amertiin Pegyey, ae Patrick Bushing, thirty-seven years! Duchess of Devonshire, who was taken * | bounced Kerrigan off, i 4 | Warrenton turnpike bridye, while the arly a Drwade AF Cabkedarates | Tih sel undiand old, of Clifton, Richmond, died tn Quaz- | Muddenly Il at the Sandown Park race The big policeman got 6 one-tignd grip Ziegfeld | Gower of his army, 12,00 men under) Cee aal right, « dire.murpriee te the al ere ue antine Hospital, Hoffman Island, to-day, | Meeting yesterday as A result of the ot the 'DEAIs And. Then ARR. OR: for / one dealt Sy “ba Ne Diimingo, Wer ht cossive heat, dle ly tom of Unsow four blocks, when his weight brought | Gens. Hunter and Meintzclman, would exhausted Union men who had bee sent, 3 tah from Asiatic cholera. ie waa a night | excessive haat died early tovdey, 1 horse to a standstill, Halt |} |[f ! mareb by a circu!tous road fo" vp Bull, marching and fighting nearly all day Tiermida watehman at Swinburn Island, Quaran-| ‘The Duchess was removed tn an un- ilies Che Beacinal arora the «alloping Wi a i 4 Wg | Run, cross the wood, * sweep Instantly panic bes with the ery a. Antwers tine station, His wife and children are| conscious condition from the club en- . July 15.—-Objection to the | the time Bist ig! of hla fant and |} 19 rn P tial Pees ARO 1h the. woods 8 Pen Pee Meme anita Pee i) quarantine but no spread of the dis-| closure to Esher Place, the residence! probate of the will of Walter Duryea cess ee cee Peeters ae aren | may treme hay aT THe nine rae assumed, beaten! With fearful swiftness the cane x expected of Sir Edgar Vincent, near the track,| was filed before Surrogate Graham to- | Kicked truol 4 YARDIN DE FARK | Now, John ¥ ud assum was scraped by passing trucks, but he command of the Confederate army and | Polled through the Union mazasz ee ae eiien {it Wednesday with | where she expired without having re-| day by va Duryea Thelberg of Stock: | fold ‘on grimly until, the horse struck | | ame Saturday night also was Backward “hy fond Ana wood path, Peought to nave: let einmy atiernaon the disskee deveined | ag eerevees who claims, that Duryea was not of) suddenly came down to Its knees, | i Mere tha alts in inn riermee.| a felds ane ‘ditehes: she Federals » do Beenie: : . pee Attacked by Pet Cow, | sound imind? and that the will Is not] ‘The driver had only been slightly ine f 4 He ' r ated over Hull Run, each minuto ede Leon: "Dagh this Florida cl A eg reer ar ven | ROCHESTER, N.Y. July 15.-White | his making, jured by his fall, He relieved Eller of f@ also had called a council of wa and ¢ mats pring « ) /. or ya iem | Surrosato Graham appointed the|the runaway. Then Bller went back which there w a number of br | army that had s rly Sams ri om Whether Tecan! The siatement « ing House feeding chickens in her yard tear | e's Trust Company of Rrooklyn! to the East One Hundred and ‘twenty: | Gers and colon ward by-| Many ran at full speed; others stag-| come back or a banks ror the we shows that the! Ithaca yesterday Mrs. 1%. 8. Sherman, | a, temporary administrator, Under his| sixth street station and convinced the | Tae tow Daneatren: ed d ate all went over Bull; Fernando ¢ ‘ait don't know what| banks hold $9,147,100 reserve in excess | aged cighty-three years, was attacked | wit] Duryea left almost all of his ea: fesenant in charge that he had better ‘and Jackson. a jh un in rout, and all that night thou! fr ts, but it looks ike Gage Park!" of legal requirements, This ts a de- by a pet cow Two of her ribs were| tate to Eleanor Peregrine, who had go home. He was cut and bruised from . (on 4d wupponea | M2298, Kept on retreating in terror,| Diogenes: "What's the crease of $1,710,690 in the proportionate | broken and she was cut and bruised. | heen his nurse eleven years, during | head to foot. None of hie injuries. is ehanson on a, Besurenard apes though no enemy pernind them. pierd Bigin: They're aah reverve ‘ea compared with last) Mra, Sherman would not consent to the which he suffered from @ broken neck | serious and he declined the ministrations Petterson, jad-hear' Dowell, an whom | I'm p) ape ook. | animal being . received while ewimmin, ef @ police surgeon, \

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