The evening world. Newspaper, July 8, 1901, Page 1

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‘ WEATHER—COOL TO-NIGHT AND TUESDAY. | NIGHT EDITION | PRICE ONE CENT. WSN TT eee e eS che [ “ Circulation Books Open to All.”” | _ ‘NEW YORK, MONDAY, JULY & ¢ IN DEPENDENCE 9 CONSTITUT | MATT Davis's Men Tackle the Cincimnati Heinies in Second Game _ To- Day. ‘The Batting Or ew York, Cineinnatl, in Haltren, ef. z f r. (postal trom ¢ dent with Team.) LEAGUE PARK, CINCINNATI, July, R—" Matt sald Manager Davis, “now is your pltehime wing to-day?” “Pretty good,” replied the college boy, an he atretched his six feet of athletie | young manhood and yawned after the | fashion of a strenuous son who Is never ; happy when he !# not tn action. | “Well,” replied Davis, “limber up your) Ship end xet out onthe rabber, We've] kot to head off this toboggan act before | i. it gete too serlous, It's up to you tol start the boys off on another winning stroak, There are only thirty-six polats betwocn us and Boston. [f we continue (Continued on Fourth Page.) ~FORAIS LF Young Farmer Accused of Murder of T. F. Applegate. | The trial of Samuel Shinn, Indicted for the munier of Thomis F. Apple- gate. a farmer, was begun to-lay in the Mercer County Court, at Trenton, N. J. County Prosecutor Crosley conducted for the State, and Lawyers nd Walker appe: he Sainnn iy H were Intl; Mate friends, up to a short time before Applegate met his deazh 1h ts old Applegate quarretled on account of] domestic troubles which Applegute had with bis wife. It ta uileged that In January last Applegate was warned by “whitecaps’ chat Ihe did not etop Ihe treating his wife he would be subjected to a cout of tar and feathers and cow- pelled to leave the town, Some time after this Applegate and Bhinn had a row in a barroom, and Shinn was arrested on complaint of Applegate, From that time on bad feel- to have existed between tac Appiegate was found dead in a stall of ins burn, Mix body lay atose ‘to the heeis of us horse ani it was general) @ipposed he had been kicked to deal by ‘the horse. The County prosecutor, however, refused to accept this theory and. presented the case to the Grand Jury and had Shinn indicted, Shinn's jawyers claimed that there was no evident that a crime had been commit to prove that) ad been way. responsible ‘ourt stated that he had rufficient gate had m t with foul play, ‘i Low rates (o Buffalo by the West Shore RR. Dee's mise srelng. the Fan-American Espeaition, ‘Fichet oMces, 1216 Broadway N. ¥. %° > Y AGAIN TS’ HOPE. starting line and wae a Giant—Uncle Hel je mny not be ao easy on hin home let. 0: Chicann, O SHINN ON TRAL |BRUTALLY BEATEN — BY SPATE'S MEN. Tired-Out Man Tells a Story of Assault in Madison Square. 3 Ry Bpate's chairs were the cause of anj and the reserves of the W WASHINGTON PARK. assault upon Joseph Krause, of No. Ise inofint he Rivington street, this morning. Krause, who Ix in Hudson Street How tells a stratght: forward atory of the mix-up. olning farms | he was looking for pnville, and Samuel Shinn, the de-| 9] street station were called out to pree | serve order. Ty that time there 1.00 persons in the purk. ‘Tho crowd had occupled nearly atl the was not until 11 o'clock t decided to collect his 2, Sevoy'3. that the attenda SULTS AT DELMAR, Idlers that had him loudly. The wandered {nto Madison Square Park to rest. benches beneath the trees, but he saw a chair in an inviting chimed that Samuel Shian and | spot and he pre-empted It. wan grabbed from ind!" suid Kraure, “and down I went tt Hogan 2, Vice Yanen < CIRL WITNESS (CONTRACT FOR [5 FOUND DEAD. She Had TestifiedJohn Pierce Will Fur- Against Stepfather in Murder Case. few polleemen keep the crowd moving, and the excite- ment finaliy great that the Feserven were sent for. ‘Three arrests Commissioner Murphy hud Capt. Flood, ‘enderloin, before him to-day, Riving him Instructions on the Bpate While the Commis: show hin antipathy. to told the Captain to be rtorm po.tce duty in the park kround the gray-sulted attendant kicked me tn the back, on the right ankle and The blown made me help- A crowd gathered and the Spate He waa the same one chalr matter, did now fail rented chalra, hi on the arm. man ran away. that was chrsed on Satuniay b “I went to Polleeman asked him for protection. me by the throat and threatened to use his club on me unleas I got out of the tat night, wo that the When seen to- 1e rented chulr Park Commissioner $1,959,000. He grabbed is going to decide thin chance to do s6 Iwill not tb b ronage that Uh they will remain. rontaed they will be taken cut ausen’s letter ton of 320,00) In the different jarks, 6 Boanl of Estimate meeting to-day. The commissioner wild that many of them finished before anuary 1, 1903 and he therefore would appropriation. of “Two mon assisted me to the hosp'tal, my wounds were dressed. “I have the namea of six witnesses te the whole affair, including the assault by the attendant and the choking | re- dat the hands of the policeman, o demand for rental of the chalr The firat I knew of nish and Equip New Hall of Records. asking for an ap: | 5.0) new nette The Roard of Estimate and Apportion- ment at a meeting to-day contract for the fui (GBpecial to The Evening World.) LOUISVILLE, Ky body of Martha V the roadside, was made upon mo. } trouble was when the chair went over attendant shouted, 0 i You're ure the cause of al ce to snow that Apple: | chia trouble about these chairs. Krause {s unable to stand and suffers July &—The dead shing wnd eq 000 ‘The County | backward hext year. The Mayor interrupted. the John Fierce. the Commissioner ought : He should have 0000 More setteen Instead of 5,000. 1 move that the whole appropriation’ uf $20,000 be ap- t him get the settees."” ted the reaolution to jole amount asked for, with » bullet, It Is believed that she was ansassi- nated by friends of her stepfather, H. to the penitentia against whorg she wi the lowest of three bk The three bids caba wieree Louls Wechsler and P, J. Carlin So. Louis Wechsler bid $2.20 and R. J, Carlin $2,673,000, sd Pianeta There was a lot of excitement over tho | PF ado} ‘appropriate th wa Cc Spato chairs in Madison Square to-day Rp @ ascam aitness, MILES ASTERN. New Cup Defender Again in Triangular Race--- | Lawson's Boat lessly Beaten. OMctal Time of 5: tution dependence, an on Saturday, fell 11.55.49 | ben from the start. 15607) BATEMANS POINT, R. 1, July §— 11.50.22 | Fickle breezes, mostly from the south, a clear wky, but the same long roll of the sea nn on Saturday, were conditions Com Columbia .. Independence FIRST MARK. found by the three yachts, Constitution, Columbia and Independence, when they. titntion + 245 came outside for the second contest of . 20.10 | the Newport Yacht Racing Association serien to-day. In fact, at 10 o'clock there Independence .... 2.55.25 | way so little wind off Brenton's Reet SECOND MARK. Mghtship that a lot of ttle fshermen quse.ag | "8d erent difficulty tn reaching the har- ++ 9.54.40) bor, and the coasters far out to soa 24.23.90] scarcely had any headway at all. The three racers and the great fleet of pleasure crat were all under way by 10 o'clock and glided down the har- bor In Just a whiaper of a breeze. When they reached the open sea they found os en ugly lone swell that rolled the fleet MATEMANTAE ROTTS about Hke a lot of tipsy sallore ashore. ‘Ime two graceful Herreshof 9-footers Berney solemder, rome and fell majestically and without proved her superto: much fuss, Old Cohimbla behaved the Old defender Columbia and Thos. best. WwW. Lawson Bhe crossed ¢ Conatitation Columbia . ver Trinngular Course. Independence shoved her homely plate- ciety colored snout Into the waves and threw nine nnd a half mites in front of| Kreat cleaves of epray aside, Her scow model was not adapted to such condl- the Independence. tons. The wind was blowing wbout 3 ‘The jaemular knots from the southwest and gave signs comme. ¢ tution led over the |of freshening, The committee boat May took up a position and fired the warning gun at 11.45, and set signals for a trian gular course, giving a beat of ten nites © was over a ti F en| She gained on every leg. PRICE ONE CENT. Triumphs Hope- to windwanl and two reaches of tes miles each, : The three racers hast very lttle wind and were Just able to move. Constita: tion was behind and close to the Ine al the starting gun, She crossed within I} seconds, Columbia and Independence wore around the way with Columbia tg the weather berth. Columbia crossed @ minute after the gun and Independence “**>—> 1 minute and % seconds after. All were on the starboard tack. Con stitution took a short hiteh to port crossing the other's bow and made fas to the windward berth. As the new boa: swung around on the starboant tact again the three were all close together with Independence under Columbia's lee Columbia and Independence were food ing faster than the new boat because they were given more of a full. ff ar to Leeward. Haff, anxious to get out of his poor position, under Columbia's lee, held In dependence away off and ran by the others, but was soon far down @@ lee- ward. For over an hour after the start the progresa of the three was slow, Constitution held well up to windwarg and was a quarter of a mile ahead of Columbia. Independence was abreast with Conatitution, but fally half a mile to leeward. At 12.35 Columbia came about. | Constl- tution followed almost immediately. Ine (Continued on Second Page.) WALL STREET HAD AN EXCITING DAY. Slump in Railway Shares the Fea- ture of a Bearish Market. Wall street had an oxciting day. Prices! office in consultation with the members were decidedly bearish at the opening, | of kis firm and Clinton Dawkins, of and soon a seml-pante prevailed. Londo Raiway mhares and the Bteel stocks! The bik financial institutions contin- led in « slump that became panicky t-| ued to loan money to support the mar- werd the close, ket throughout the day. Ten miliion The railway freight war in the West] dollars wis loaned at 6 per the was given as the réason for the big] Morton Trust Con drop in railway shares, but the fall in] Resorts of cro Steel stocks could not thus be accounted | wax one of the many for. day's heavy selling moven ‘The entire market sagged @ mopldly Call money loaned as high as 9 > that specula¢ora became apprehensive. cent, but the great bulk was off St. Paul led the list tn declines, falling } 7 to § per cent. One bank, the 1 points im che last hour of trading, Hank of Commerce, offered Prices tumblel throughout th list at # per cent., and this had the effect Missourt Pacific, Union Pactfic, Man-| steadving the market hattan and the United States Steel On f the contributin, stocks were off from 10 ponte, rumor that) President Shafte of the Assoctation, bad broke tor nase While hin pet United States Steel] Amalgamated vas being hammered by the we for y sett 1 J.P. Morgan sat in his private ment of the 1 DIVIDED $600,000. C Panda of the bate!’ ted. oun, duly SA the trusts created | eMeld and exiatine fof Burning was made thie afternoon oa tn ewtate of July ms be divided at his death | teil from a Moor « but hay hters, The crust | thw tire to belt hy thelr companions UML AA Ole ee uth nedling iv lead of tone nidren firat Noor the support Rave Way itt non Were precipitated Into the arlen who share in th j ns runded tarugh H, Van Huren, ‘| ment. Thetr compat alk merchant; Harold Buren, United States Consul at leted their Injured comrades to we ; Joseph @. Van Buren, of Hong- street. rittioute the amoke with ropes and ladders and | NO RACE TODAY FORSHAMROCKS. Flat Calm Prevented Test of Lipton’s Challenger. ROTHESAY, Firth of Clyde, July The Shamrocks (Md not race to-da, were towed his morning by nce of Anding ‘a But the flat calm did not start racing back to Rothesay, © to-morrow close Ke who mas Lipton and Mr. Wateon, ner, that they are both greatly sd shown by nf the lege fresh breeze, jet to winds rock I, de delleve ne cup —— SEVEN SOLDIERS DROWNED, A Moat Capstecs in the River in KIND, Baden, Jul WEATHER FORECAST. 3: ernily tate and compara. weather to-nightsp > Huht to trent

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