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> about @ WEATHER— Fa’ FI o-night and Sunday. EDITION. eer Ny Bs Circulation Books Open to All.” | "_PRICE ONE CENT. 3, bv The Prese Publishion ww York World). NEW YORK, “SATURDAY, “JANUARY 25, > Circulation Books Open to All. 19 9 1 3. 12 PAGES PRIOE ONE CENT. ONE _OENT. HOTELS BARRCADED AGAINST STRIKE MOB ON RIOTOUS PARADE: x -——--++ their doors in front of the barricaded entrances, ‘They had already caught the rumor @: preliminary’ rioting ‘which marked the ndvance of the waiters from the! meeting at Bryant Hall, on Sixth a nue, near Fort eet, to the Sau downtown, An advance guard of bols- | teveus aud riuting tries’ had swan downtown from-the nator Sixtht ave-! nie, hunting trouble and creations ft when they did not find it ready 1 | epite the fact shat Inspector 4 Lehay and i police acted under Com- | missioner Wa} orders tha there should under no circumstances be @ repetition of last night's continuous vound of The Ins) missioner W to the 500 was backed by Com- fn giving strict orders} on detailed to im) for strike di that no repetition of | last night's scenes should occur. ' Nov was Inspector Lahey reassured as | tet s of the meeting when an incipient riog marked the progress of} the first Land of scuuts toward Union he effe Square early in the afternvon. ‘the! sitikers had gativere! in Bryant Hall. | on Sixth aven! Fortieth street, | tly after noon, t to march to t Mt out a Oyimg squadron of trouble- a (ne main move- | ment, down to the Square, . skirmtching party, composed of and seventy-five forelgn- who wore red ribbons in their but- tonboles, marched down Sixth avenue “company fromt’ formation, arms They attempted to sweep pe- off the sidewalks in front of els that were passed, and in front of nearly every hostelry paused | to shout curses tn half the tongues of | Lurope. At Twenty-tifih street and Broadway they put tie swinging doors of the Ioft- man House out of commission. A block Welow they wrecked a peddler’s push- cart and plundered it of its fruit, ana! when several policemen of the tray squad attempted to break up the fast! asowing crowd, oranges and apples thumped their sides and they were. unable to stem the torrent of lawless: hese. Back to Twenty-sixth street and Sixth avenue the bund paraded, and at the sight of a cook turning “fap-jacks" the window of a restaurant, hoote ai cutealls preceded a shower of oranges against the window. The glass with- ood tie bombardment, but the cook fied like King Arthur, leaving his cakes to burn, Then the scouts of trouble merged with the crowds of the main body of strikers, walking down from Bryant Mall to Union Square. At the massa meeting in Union Square thousand striking waiters closed about the stand and listened firs: to Patrick Quinlan in an intemperate harangue, wherein he excoriated James B, Regan, proprietor of the Knick- erbocker, and Police Commisstoner Waldo, Elizabeth G, Flynn was the @peaker who caused the most enthusi- asm. The most important gain claimed by the strikers before the meeting was held was the walk-out of some of the |. lacking a pe are, they bad | ®. ce of walters at the Hotel Vanderb! The union claimed 150; the man: said it was ‘a mere handful.” Miss Flynn, at union hea@quariors, red that during the afternoon ths uumion employees in the Hotel Savey, the Hoffman House and in the Fifty Avenuo restaurant had walked out, completely crippling the dining-roo! nervice of each, kitchen and pantry men haying joined the walters. Nhe also sald that only six walters ontinued on | om With Page. Waiters Attack Hoffman House and Sweep Pedestrians from Side- walks During March to Union Square Mass Meeting. Hotel managers on the line of the etriking waiters’ advance toward| comp! Union Square and the mass mecting they held there this afternoon barred! tion compantes and the officials repre- is the crowds were passing and placed guards with nightsticks| senting the aty hi BOUNCING BABY [S SAFEEY MAILED BY PARGELS POST Ten-Pounder in 71-Inch Bundle Cost 15 Cents to Carry to Grandmother, BATAVIA, 0. Jan, mail carrier on r put of this place accept and deliver ~-Vernon 0. ‘al route No, is tne fret man to under parcel post The baby, a weighing ten and three-quarters pounds, just within the eleven-pound Weight limit, is the child of Mr, and Mrs. Jesse Beagle of near Glen Este. The “package” was well wrapped and ready for “mailing” when the carrier to-day. Its measurements Seventy-one Inches, also in the law, which makes seventy- conditions a live baby ‘two inches the limit, sytle delivered the “parcel” fely to the address on the cant at- tached, that of its Frandsnothar, | Mrs. Louis Beagle, who Ives about «mile from its home, he postage was fifteen cente and “parcel” was insured for $50, | the ——_ |00G GUARDS DEAD BOY FOUND IN ND IN WOOD POND. Missing Three-Year ear-Ol William Thorne Found by Searchers, Face Down, in Three-Inch Puddle. OXFORD, N. J., Jan, 2%.—With the faithful family dog standing guard over his dead body, three ar-old William horne, son of Mr, nd Mrs. Lewis Thorne, was found early to-day face down in a pool of rain water tn the woods a mile trom his home. A search party, organized by Justice of the Peace E, W. Sharps, while scour ing the woods, heard the dog barking aud found the anim guarding the body of lis little master, The chil was lying on the edge of a puddle, three inches deep, with ls face pressed down in the mud, Ther were no marks on the body He strayed from home Thursday after- noon while his mother was on an upper floor. MAGA EEE SS NEW LINER BROKE RECORD. Clyde 0 Steamer Lei pe Made Fant Time Along the Coast. Arthur W, Pye, passenger traMc manager of the Clyde Line, who went with the new steamship Lenape on her first trip to Charleston and Jackson- ville, announced to-day that the vessel | had broken the Atlantic coastwise rec- ord and made a difference between New York and Charleston of five and one-half hours, Between and Savannah the saving of time by the Len was made uré—from vhirts minutes vine fours and from dock ta dock. und Kemble, commodore of t yde Ling Geet, i» in command of the Lenape, New York| ‘SUBWAY CONFABS END; NOW THEY'LL JAN DEAL THROUGH Announcement Made That Agreements Have Been Reached on All Points. ARRANGED LAST NIGHT. | Only Thing Now Necessary Is to Formally Execute Con- tracts With Monopolists. Tire subway conferences are over. A lete agreement between the trac- { been reached. There does not remain a single disputed point. This definite declaration was made to- day by one who hes taken part in the confabs. If true it means that every- on fe cut and dried to jam the sub- y Grab through by Feb. 1. viabere {9 nov further necesalty for | more conferences, and there will ve | none,” sald the oficial “There does not now remain a single | point that has not Veen settled. All that remains to be done is the physical act of counsel of redrafting the con- tracts in accordance with the amend- ments agreed upon, and the further physical act of printing the revised documents. Just how long that will take I cannot predict. ‘The conference at which the final agreement was reached took piace at | the home of Chairman Willcox last night and continued until early to-day, but a few minor details in regard to the B. R. T. were disposed of finally this afternoon at a tuncheon attended by Chairman Wrilcox, Borough Presi- dent McAneny and President Williams of the Brooklyn company. “There will be no undue haste in matter,” said the Chairman to: “Of that you may be cet not attempting to through, made, and these are importa not important enough to rei the root of the matter. down to We are work- ing as rapidly as we can, without undue delay, because we have worked without undue bE right along.” WITH FLOOD SMASHING LEVEE, 75 CONVICTS FIGHT TO ESCAPE Gang Us Guns Against Guards at Beulah, Miss.— Many Families in Peril. Tenn., %, MEMPHIS, Jan The levee st Beulah, Miss. broke eart a Water poured through a gap of 1,900 feet wide. Families in the district tod for their lives. When the levee broke seventy-five Buvle convicts working on it made a ash for liberty. Several secured guns | and returned the fire of the guards who pursued them. [in which four convicts and two guard rig Wounded, the prisoners gave in he flood situation is hourly After a short Ag isi grow: point w the disastrou year started its most destruct) feared that several miles would be Inundated onyiot n jundred state i other men w J scene. and an be made direct t ppeal for help Presid VKAVE Puller (Word) Building, 5 Renna Oe, Ads, ne how N's, e menttonad, | ing worse about Beulah, All trai n| the Yazoo and Mississippi River is about to be abandoned, ‘Tals will leave many to toeir fate df reseue boats do not reach them, ‘The bi in the levee ix wt ti PINK TEA POKER PARTY HOSTESS HELD FOR TRIAL Miss Alice Merrill, Arrested After Detectives Had Played, Gives $500 Bail. ONE REPORTS WINNI Woman Caught in Raid at Ivy Court at No. 210 West 107th Street. Magistrate Corrigan was #0 surprised to-day by the testimony of Detective Sutter at the hearing of Miss Alice Merrill of No. s10 West One Hundred and Seventh street on charges of ke ing a gambling house, that he nearly fell from his chair. Detective Sutter 1d that, aftr sitting in the game for half an hour, he had quit a winner, Never having heard @ policeman make auch an admission, the Magistrat gasped. “How much?" he asked. ‘Thirty-five cents, your Honor,” sata | | Sutter. “But, added hastily, my | | partner, Detective Armstrong, lost $10.” Miss Merrill and the man who was deucribed as her manager, Robert 8. Roberts, were held in $500 bail for an @xammnation next week. Cash bail was furnished by E. M. Engleman of No. 1| Madison avenue. SEQUEL OF RAID MADE EARLIER IN WEEK. The raid of the detectives on rd Merrill's place was the sequel of their | raid on the home of Mrs. Gubner tn | ‘Went Ninety-second street earlier in the | week, Mrs, Yaeger and Mrs. Byer, the} woman whom they met in Rector’s re taurant at Columbus avenue and Stxty- sixth street, had introduced them by | telephone to Miss Il before taking | them to Mrs, Gubner's. ‘The detectives visited Mise Merrill and | reported to Inspeotor Dwyer. They said it was no place for “pikers,"" the play being high at times. They said two/ games went in full blast, one for man tn the dining room and another women in the front parlor. Roberts, the detectives said, seemed to be in charge of the games, By order of the inspector they swore out warrants and, led by Inspector Dwyer himself, the detectives: and eight men went around to Ivy Court last night. ALL THE PLA‘E DRES ‘The detectives had been posing us men from the Wes:, and the negro butler admitted them. Inwide were eigit or nine men and an equal nuntber cf women, all in evening dress, Aa woon as the detectives had entered the policemen behind them pushed their way in, The negro turned a stokly gray N EVENING finally gasped, pinched!"’ When Miss Merrill saw the detectives in the van of the invaders her indig- nation and scorn buyst @ounds, “so this {» the return for my hospl- tality,” she snes “Grateful crea- detective! ‘Then spoke up Miss Dorothy Jane, she called herself, of No. 2% East On Hundred and Fi rd street. Cud- she sald: “Any- this Ittle dear, He Another who called herself Miss Mary | jagn't done anything.” j Martin was heartbrok the wailed {for a month, and 1 turned.” “You an’ pb f the ™ arrest D e 1 pleaded one o because e to t Miss Jane home, you | know, ‘The greatest surprise, however, came when the detectives bean to gather vieged parapherna! of cards « 1 six al ‘There Was a $1,000 mai . woken up to ge ant reacued @ ’ steward was told oy Miss Merr ge rome eas asdins ‘ or my $uents wud these ine t Some of those in the room sald ¢ (Cenunued on decom Copy, - A A ‘| his friends or his family dhenecoeoenenennenceooaoncooonenes PAPOROREEEOEO ERED Gen. Sickles, Whose Arrest Is Ordered, as He Looks To-Day (Copyright by Powers Engraving Company.) Order of Arrest Issued by Court in Albany But Ser- vice Is Delayed. IT’S HIS LAST CHANCE, Deposed From Monument Commission Because He Helped Himself to Funds. Sickles or raise 476 by Monday morning and have the money in readiness to be turned over to rep ssentatives of the State of New York he will be placed under Unless Gen, Dantel E, | arrest. Gen, Sickles is charged with mis- appropriating $23,476 of funds col- lected by the State Monument Com- mission, of which he was chairman up to last month, and Attorney-Gen- eral Carmody, after waiting in vain for the money, secured to-day an or- der for the argest of the General The order wa Issued by the Supreme rt In Albany on the personal appit- nof the Attorn of t ‘ARREST DELAYED UNTIL MON: |! DAY TO GIVE HIM & CHANCE, if as the General ts elghty- old it nt 1 in poor healt! re ry pows (Wonunued on Secone base) ‘ 1 Menda ob a“ Ld dada dactadadadhe hhdcatdacehchctacaatadadadchetadachchcacathtatichtheadadatadatied DAN SICKLES GOES T0 JAIL IF HE DOESN'T PAY $23,476 TO THE STATE BY MONDAY /SLENT FIFTEEN” SAIL AWAY, PLEDGED NOT TO TALK TO MEN Party of Girls Off for Tour of West Indies Have Unique Ideas of Propriety. The ton, pany. and the ler of Brooklyn. their own automobiles and intend to sec all of the nearer Tt was feneral, Brank.|man puts this trip. “silent Fifteen” satled for Kingn- Jamatea, to-day on the new steam ship Pastores of the United Frutt Com The by a committee of four, the Misses Ruth and Marian Elvin of No. ee them off that th the! eetitrigpeer ’ My and never aay | In preparation for the early afternoon rush from uptown, trains were (e word: Behe AB at joes absolutely | running close together southbound at the time of the collision, The wreck “Phey uve agreed,” sald Miss Elvin, (necessitaied the shutting off of power so the firemen could work and the eee eRe aeetvaaae it jentire hint avenue line was tied up for the rest of the afternoon, Rea Peeper emg pare sincere Some ot the trucks of the cars of the trains in the collision were de- jacolding. If he ts try! be railed, the rear end of the last car of the first train and the forward car of hoe yet re vine ce : ‘the second train were overhanging the structure and the police refused to It atiow notn. )allow Third avenue cars to pass under the scene of the wreck. 4 A eilh shaw ih Eee The crash of the collision was heard two blocks away. Almost im- mM PANICIN CRASH ON THIRD AVENUE “L” AT THIRTY-THRD ST. Cars Catch Fire and Add tothe Peril After Crowded Train Bound for South Ferry Smashes Into One Bound for City Hall i q SCORE OF WOMEN FAINT AS THEY ARE RESCUED. Trucks of Twoof the Cars Overhang the “L” Structure and Police Stop Traffic on Surface Line. THE DEAD Policeman J. M. Gleason, of Wo. 341 Bast One Mundred and Thirty-chira street. ; : 4 $ ; : » ; 3 ; 3 ; : : THE INJURED. FELLOWS, KENNETH, Mo, 461 KUPLER, BBGINA, Mo. 004 Fatr- mont avenue, Bronz. BEILLY, DAWIBL, Wo. 168 Railroad avenue, Broaz, cute on head and lege Bast One Mundrea and Thirty-fourth street, the Bronx. HIRSOR, MISS ROSE, Ho. Washington avenue, the Broaz. MIRGOM, SAMUBL, Mo. 1804 Wash- ington avenue, the Bronx. SEUTTLEWORTH, ALBERT, Wo. 32 One Hundred and Thirty-cighth street, the Bronx. Lee STORODY, MES. B., Mo. 130 West Firet street, Mt. Vernon. LYNOM, MRS. MABY, No. 396 Wesh- iagtom avenue, suffering from shosk. The most disastrous wreck on the “L” system since a train ran off the structure at Fifty-third street and Ninth avenue nearly ten years ago occurred on the Third Avenue line, between Thirty-third and Thirty-second streets, at 3.45 o'clock this afternoon, when a heavily laden south-bound South ferry train crashed into a crowded City Hall train. A passenger is known to have been killed, scores were injured and two cars caught fire. . At five o'clock this afternoon he was identified as Policeman J. M. Gleason of No, 341 East One Hundred and Thirty-third street. He was identitied by the number on his revolver which was found underneath his boldy. Motorman Hearms was placed under arrest on his cot in Bellevue Hospital. He is charged with criminal negligence. No exrianation of tne accident has been obtained. In the bright afternoon sunlight Motorman Michael Hearms of the colliding train crowded on nis power after leaving the Thirty-fourth street station, gath- ered momentum for his train on a down grade and went smash into a ight ahead of him. — It is believed he applied the brakes. The forward train in the collision had come “Silent Fifteen’ are headed 2 Broadway Misses Emina and Marian Wel- ‘They are taking along | train ia plain si but they refused to work. to a sudden stop | THIRD AVENUE “L” TIED UP FOR HOURS. West Indies. explained by friends who went rms mediiicly the forward end of the first car caught fire, the wires from "' which the insulation nad been tom igniting the gorse. The \