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SENERAL SPORTING NEWS a ‘ Circulation Books Open to All.’ im (uaa SPORTING N ON PAGE 4. RK, MONDAY, JUN PRICE ONE CENT.’ E32 NEW YO = MOQUEEN, ARRESTED, LAUDS CHIEF GRAUL Flood’s Home Run Scores Two in Third Inning— In the Fourth Superbas Hammer Out Six More Tallies— Good Crowd | Sees Game. "The Anarchists Will Take Care of Him,” Says Leader of the Reds of the Deposed Pater- son Police Official—Use of Dynamite Advo- cated in Organ of the Rioters. BPR er Rerirrirririrricilriririririct £ ANARCHIST LAUDS William McQueen, said to be the Anarchist who posted the incendiary The Batting Order. circular over Mayor Hinchiiffe’s proc- eigen: Brakive lamation in Paterson and who was |‘ CHIEF OF POLICE GRAUL. Brodie. cf. Dolan, cf. —a | Dunn, ‘rf. Keeler, rf. largely instrumental in fomenting oe | Jones, If. Sheckard, Lf. the riots of last week, was arrested Chief of Police Graul, of Lauder, 3». McCreery, 1b. Paterson, is th 1 4 Bowerman, c. Dahlen, Bs. about noon to-day in a resort at De- | Paterson, is the only gentle. Smith, 2. Irwin, 3b. lancy and ldvidge streets by Detec- | man out there, He is the Beamer ted ah” 7 ¥ nest man ever on a police 4) Taylor. p. Kitson, 9. tives Delaney, Sullivan and Barrett, P | Tent aamstie. D force. He will be taken care of by the Anarchists. — William McQueen. of Headquarters. ' McQueen, in Cetnre Street Police Court, this afternoon was held for thirty days to await the arrival of extradition papers from New Jersey. Assistant Prosecuting Attorney Shaw, of Paterson, said; “This man is a particularly da: gerous Anarchist. He bas a rema able gift of gab and great power 9 mobs." Urge Use of Dynamite, Despite the vigilance of the police, Ta Questoine Sociale, the suppressed organ of the Anarchists, has been published and is in circulation through trusted mediums in the red circle. The paper, until recently edited by Petro Diesteve, for whom the police are searching, was put to press in (Special to The Evening Works.) WASHINGTON PARK, BROOKLYN, |June 23—There was no guarantee that |a nineteen-inning game such as that put up by Chicago and Pittsburg yesterday |was to follow this afternoon In the | meeting of the Giants and Superbas, but still folks of Motleyville, basing their jealculations on the event here Inst Fri- lday, felt sure they would ace a real live }tot of Baseball artists play the game as |it should be. And so the ticket-sellers |did a big business, considering that ¢his was the day after which folks spend all their money at Coney Island and other such resorts. The crowd kept coming, jeven after the game began, and it looked Jas though 6,000 would be near to the figures the officials would give out. Giants Were Frisky. Now, as to the Glants. They were frisky and frollcsome as a set'of col turned loose in: pasture, The measure | ments of their upper, franies were some- what increased over those, of Friday. Galliano suggests the doing away with newspapers like the Guardian, and intimates that THE BOMB IS THE MEANS for doing such work effectually. ———_ M’QUEEN DEFENDS ANARCHISTS’ DEEDS. From William MeQueen’s article in La Question Sociale, suppressed by the Paterson police. It was the police—always on the side of the master class—who started the shooting, The men returned the fusillade to such fs ‘ "| ood effect that the police ran like ome place unknown to the author!-| 7.15 godging behind every available | They earned the. change, ‘too, for had ties at a late hour Saturday night. | cneiter they not walloped Hanlon’s pets good? Unen the head of the authorities les | And they expected'to do it again to-day a fresh crime against the people—A | to show that the previous event was not CRIME THAT JUSTIFIES AGAIN | 4 lucky strike. THE POSITION WE ANARCHISTS! If practice was going to count for any- A copy of La Questione Sociale Was secured to-day and translated in the office of Prosecutor Emiey. Printed in English is an article signed by McQueen, Another article, which bears the exists only for the protection of the in-| were going to have, a look in at the teresis of the bosses, and that in a/ finish anyway, They were oyt an hour decent and reasonable society GOV-|and a halt before it time for the signature of Lulg! Galliano, who! paNweNT WOULD CEASE ‘0 / game to, begin and all the time, were at headed ‘the mob on Wednesday,| Exist. i | work with bat and ball. They had the CALLS FOR THE-USE OF DYNA-]| What right had they to shoot peace- job of unloosening those muscles which MITE th carrying out anarchistic| le citizens? Have not men a perfect might have become stiffened during thelr = right, according to the ematitiftion” of | two days of rest, doctrines, and devotes special atten- tion to the local newspaper, the Guardian, which has been outspoken in its dew .d upon the authorities for the stumping out.of anarchy in Paterson. the United States, to demand better; Bowerman and Luther Taylor aid not eerditions and to use every method, confine their exercises to ball playtng. apart from violence, to attain that end? They wrestled a bout now and then and If citizens are to de shot down like kept the early arrivals interested. wild beasts by uniformed rufMans then | Finally the practice ball’ sounded and HAVE THEY NOT THE RIGHT ao (Continued on Fourth Page.) NO ARBITRATION, — DEFEND THEMSELV bs? PROSECUTOR SAYS NURSE TOPPAN ADMITTED MURDER. ee | | i | | | Attorney-General in Outlining Case Declares Woman Confessed She Poisoned Mrs. Gibbs. Declare President Mitchell's Statement Full of Inaccur- acies—They Will Not Con- sider His Proposal. (Special to The Evening Work.) M-: annie E. G LOSER er aye CHeee an jordon, daughter, | Attorney-General Parker in his speech to-day outlining the case of the State against Jane Toppan, the trained nurse accused of murdering, with poison, Mrs. Mary Gibbs, de-] tm padition to these the anthorities clared that Miss Toppan had made! suspect that Jane Toppan was respon. 6 full confession to him sible for three deaths in the family of He said she was perfectly con-| 0: A\ Brigham, of Lowwit, Mass 4 a y Immediately upon the completion of scious of what she was doing andjino jury the clerk read the Indictment, knew what the consequences|charging tn four counta the murder of would be. Mary D. Gibbs with ten grains of mor- ‘The Attorney-General told the jury phine and ten grains of atropine by Miss ¥ | Toppan. | ‘that Miss Toppan had admitted that) Witness Tells of Woman's Death, morphine and atropine had been ad-) Mrs. Beulah A. Jacobs was the first ministered by her to Mrs, Gibbs, but Gikneae she Saw Miss Toppan give Mra, G vi g she claimed she could not restrain} cane yiolentiy WM ashore time atten s, herself from doing so. Miss Toppan is accused of having polsoned Mrs, Mary Gibbs at Catau- Alden P, Davis, father, Cataumet, Mass, | Mary E, Gibbs, daughter, Catau- met, Mass, Among such of the large operators |as could be found in this olty to-day there were those who declared that they had not even taken the trouble to read | the statement issued py President Mit- chell, in reply to an earler statement by the operators, 7 President R. M. Olyphant, of the Deli ware and Hudson Comi Company, was found at his office early to-day. “Mitchell's statement |s misleading If Mitchell proposes to call out the bituminous miners and paralyse the en- tire Industries of the country he will find that he has taken upon his shoul. {ders a job bigger th dere heh Diag wan he ts able to “There will be no arbitration, that is certain Others who would not be = curred in’ thin view, cussed ‘con: is vi Herbert, of the firm of Her- Miss Toppan remained u pationt. ‘The witness saw her give Mae Glbbs_an injection the following mc ing. Shortly afterward Mrs, Gi unconscious. She died that afterno {Miss Toppan told th met, Maas, ia August, 1001. Indl |My tomenn {a the, inde e re ee rectly she is accused of having|fatner-iniaw lof Airm. Ulipn aad. the ip QaUHNMEAODIY A very amall quantity | death. wa ci of anthracite tar ! . wiped out of existence an entire) shania he percracy® 884 An autopay tan allway Company to-day. ed family, of which Mrs, Gibbs was the} 10" } ran Hw cod. of the Harvagd a ere tcrviving member, They were: On Mra Gibar a aymete| TO STOP SUPPLY h and fiver he found a iarge Mrs. Mary E. Davis, the mother, Cataumet, Mass. TARRANT ORUG | BUSINESS SOLD, Old Firm, Which Suffered on! Account of an Explosion of | ‘Chemicals, Closed Qut by Receiver. OF ANTHRACITE. (3pecial to The Evening World.) WILKESBARRE, Pa, June 23.~The E; ve Committee of the striking miners in this district this morning sent men out to discover what team- sters ‘are hauling coal from the. eleven washerles which are belng operated, and when their reports are made, ef: forte will begin to stop this distribution of the coal washed and prepared for | ante i bout six th nis is now about six thousand ¢ }a day. a quantity large enough to sur. ly much of the domestic demand, and | It would be aloes to the strikers 1f they | allowed It to be mid |The operators seelng, It te. sald, tha | they cannot prevent @ national strike | will try to break the anthracite strike | before the meeting of the convenuon, land Ina week or ten days it is believed | measures will be taken to operate some | of the eines | FIR | large crystals of 0 stomach, OF morehine’ tom the | inued until it, reached $51,150, roperty was knocked down to ban Breitenbach, President of a pate Medicine company at No. ba sireot. He will take i business on June a. DoMMeseion oO} — TO-NIGHT’S EVENTS, Cittnens! City Commit. tee, No. Union 4% Retail Butchers, den. epublican Union eighth Assembly District, 165 Bast Bighty-o) Dinner for J Twenty nine ST ANTHRACITE FOR TIDEWATER HAZLETON, Pa. June 2.—Two Dela ware, Susquehanna and Schuylkill tri By an order of the Supreme Court| Ne Recelver William E. Curtis, at No, 21| Jay street, to-day sold at fon the drug business of Tarrant & Co., which; wa: eatad ol in 184 and went into jon after the explosion of chemi- cale and fatal fre at its factory on Wi Ten street, aouth OF pare, any bound for Pert® which was conducted bj Agnment of ite’ coal sent rem Avsaas! Aa Ase tad Beata udewateralncs che witke wat m yrighis, labels, recipes and|, Mew York—®0 Houre-Chicege, — |'"Goae Bra Opened wt 1,00 and wee! te myttopula in wus boars tem thas’ « aay hg ih ase Mihi RAs as SAY OPERATORS, and unreliable as to facts and figures, | BROOKLYN GIANTS’ PITCHER. —— POUND NURSE TOPPAN NOT GUILTY, BARNSTABLE. Mass.. June 23.—Nurse Jane Toppan, charged with poisooing Mrs. Gibbs, was found not guilty by; reason of insanity and orderea committed to the Tauston in- sane Asylum for life. NEW YORK LOSES. HAVE TAKEN—that the government) thing, then the fellows from Manhattan | ** | aD \ | 1 | ear \t lege, held here to-day $500,000 fund started by John D. Rockefeller, who offered $200,000 provided NEW YORK BICOXL’ (Sonthued, from Fourth Page.) Seventh Inning—Smith fanned. O'Hagan sini Bean. Blewitt fanned. Brodie’s safety scored 0 lan got Dunn’s fly. One run. McCreery and Dahlen flied out.- Irwin out. ‘No runs. Eighth Inning—Irwin threw Jones out. Sheckard took Lau- der’s fly.. Bowerman was helped out by Dahlen. No runs. Ahearn flied out. Flood and Kitson out. No runs. Ninth Inning—Smith out. O’Hagan fllied out. Bean singled. Yeager flied out to Dahlen. No runs. a Sa LATE WINNERS AT WASHINGTON PARK. gled. So did Hagan. Do- Fourth Race—Glenwater 1, Marque 2, Marcos 3. Fifth Race—Nickey D. 1, Elsie L. 2, Scorpio 3, <> AT ST. LOUIS. Fourth Race—Mynheer 1, Kitty Clyde:2, Solve 3. Fifth Race—Lou Ann 1, Verify 2, Louis: Wagner.3. + —_—— GIRL FORETELLS HER SUICIDE-IN NOTE, The body of Miss Lizzie Miller was washed ashame at Sta- Jleton, S. |.. late this afternoon. Last Thursday Mrs. George Seeber, of No. 174 Bay street. Stapleton. says she caught her taking a 50-cent piece from Mr. Seeber’s trousers. Shortly afterwards @ note was found from Lizzie in which she said she was goirig to drown herself. ea ae SHOT IN THE STREET. ~s Amilio Marguilo. forty-seven years old, was taken to the| Presbyterian Hospital this afternoon suffering from a gunshot wound in the right shoulder. He was shot near Eighty-first street and Second avenue. The police of the East Eighty-eighth street station are inves- tigating. +o— REGINALD VANDERBILT NOT WITH HIS CLASS. NEW HAVEN, Conn., June 23.—When the academic seniors of Yate marched through the campus to Battell Chapel for the presentation exer- | ercises to-day, Reginald C, Vanderbilt was not in the ranks, Mr, Vander- (It arrived fiero at noon and went to the office of the law school faculty, It 1 belleve.! that his case and that of other members of the fenior (lias |who have failed on the law course examinations were discussed. that no place hav been reserved for young Mr. varerbilt at the eommence- |ment exercises next Wednesday ————+9e OBERLIN WILL GET ROCKEFELLER’S $200,000. June 23.—At the meeting of the trustees of Oberlin Col+ it was announced that the institution would get the OBERLIN, 0. he trustees would obtain $200,000 from other sources. The Istter has been secured if EON GRACE GALLAWAY HAS APPENDICITIS. Mra. Grace Gallaway, of No. 621 West Forty-sixth street, charged with killing her husband six weeks ago, was to-day removed from the Tombs io Bellevue Hospital }day or ‘wo will be operated upon. Mr Gallaway is suffering from apendicitis and in a ° ACCUSED MAN FOUND DEAD. NEWARK. Juve 28.—R. G, A. Wolff, sixty-five years of age, accused of having stolen $11,500 from his employers, was found dead in his home his afternoon under circumstances which indicate that he may have com- mitted suicide. ote TORONTO STREET CAR STRIKE ENDS. ‘TORONTO, Ont., June 23,—A compromise has been ged and the eement signed iy the executive for the strfilking street-car men and by he representative of the company, The strike ta practically ended —_———1+9— PATTISON OPENS HIS HEADQUARTERS. ERIE, Pa., June 28.—Ex-Goy, Pattison is here, with headquarters at he Reed House, frou: which he will direct his campaign for the nomination | fur Governor by Wednesday's Democratic convention, of anthracite coal left the Roan yards. literally scalped while at work in the wollen mijie of the American Felt Company, at Glen’ to-day. ‘ é 4 : pod blabla A a lias Pe “ a ae GIRL SCALPED BY MACHINERY. PORT CHESTER, N. ¥.,June 2j.—-Mary Affeldt, nineteen years old, was PRICE ONE CENT; © FRANCESCO, “AT2TO 1, WINS | Advance Guard, at 4 to |-> 1, Beats Blues by a Nose in Driving Fin- ish for Handicap. IRISH LAD, 4 TO 1, WINS: 1 |Yoe Cobb and Musidora Take First and. Second Events— Bad Day for Favorites— Track Fast. (Special to The Evening Wort.) SHPEPSHEAD BAY RACE TRACK, N.Y. June 23.—Tt much more | pleagant at Sheepshead this afternoon than on Saturday. The canal through whieh the horses waded on Saturday had disappeared. The pouring rains had iven way to blue skies and a warm lun. Saturday was the only bad da of the racing season thus far and it/ made up for lost time. ay was dry and fast and did card of six races down fér decision. This brought out an unusually large crowd for a Monday ‘There was only one stake down for decision, but that was the Thistle, a | selling affair which only had a fair class of horses. The betting was brisk. Word was received at the track to-day that Fred Taral had ridden the winner of the German.Derby race, valued at 100,000 marks. RST RACE, For maiden two:year-olds, selling, five fur- longs. 5 Bettivg. Starterp, wate. Jocks. MHIE Fin, «Str Place. Joe ‘Conk, . Redfern. & 4% In 6 2 Minotau: Martin. 22 2F 10 Barl of Sarwick, 102. Michaels. 6 6 a Bie 1m 49 a 2 9-10 8 10) ® 5 0 3 10 n oa ™ 5 100 40 “0 1 % 14. 104,. Daly. 1 wull-Bark, 102, h a Breet Jane, 99, Cochran 1616 16 2) 8 ‘Mert fair. Won driving. Time—1.0 3-5, Inotaur jumped away in front and wet Benet pace, follawed by" fobb and Ithan In close order. They held this order (o the bend, where (Continued on Fourth Page.) NO CUBAN TREATY AT THIS SESSION, Document Would Have to Go | toHavana Before Being Sub- mitted, and Time Is Too| Short. | WASHINGTON, June 2—It has been determined that no reciprocity treaty with Cuba can be submitted at the pres- ent.sexsion of Congress. It was at firet planned that, in the event of the failure of the adminiatra tion managers in the Senate to secure favorable action on the Cuban Sugar bill a treaty would be drafted at once. This was on the understanding that the Cuban Minister powers and that the that this y draft of go to Havana and be re- tt can be submitted to the . of course, cannot be al- ned in the short space of tim intervening before adjournment ertimates of the leaders that Co} will adjourn by 4 are correct MASTER MECHANICS MEET. American A fon te in ot (épecta) to The F : Wor SARATOGA, N. Y.. June 2%—The thirty-fifth annual convention of the Master Mechanica ‘Asaociation was opened here this morn ing by its President, A, M. Waitt, New York City, who ts superintende of motive power and rolling stock o the New York Central and Hudson Riv Ratiroad. The address of Welcome was made by Village President Alberc P. Knapp. which was reaponded to by Presiden Waitt American Rallw ———— WEATHER FORECAST. the (hirtyontx ending at 8 P.M, Tuesday for New York City and vicinity: fale and warmer fo Heht winds, for It Practioally Sev ‘The sew 20-hour tain of the Ni gat ead aha, "ahore’ soavien "eae odo | ae ‘ork in New York. and be in Chicago nest deorning Toads ta businons.*6* Boose. " on THE THISTLE. quid, Joe} *) slieft in peace in the Hudson Cemetery, PARTRIDGE SHIFTS CAPTAIN GORMAN! Bronx Station Commander, Who Got 1 Trouble with Park Commissioner Eustig, Transferred—Schultz Sent from Union: Merket to Take His Place—Commissioner Issues Statement, Saying His Difficulty wii Transferred Official Didn’t Amount Much. to ride over to them. Just asT Capt. Gorman saw me. He ran me and grabbing the bridle, ordered to stop. i “I looked down at the Captein md asked him {f he knew who he was ; ing to. He looked up and a oo, you are the Commissioner, I I then told him he had better gineses. I then told Captain G that I heard there hed been som® understanding as to who was ino at the park and asked him who really in charge of the police. He pied that he was and that he. posed giving orders, “Several weeks ago I wrote to © missioner Partridge and called this tention to section @l4 of the © which says that the Park Co ers shall ttave absolute control of Hcemen assigned ‘to duty in the p “There has long been a conflict. tween the park superintendents and police. I am waiting patiently for Com missioner Partridge to issue the, that will put a stop to this cosfitet. “I have to do with five police ¢ in the Bronx. In all but one case has been a conflict af authority. I Police Captain Michael Gorman, who held up Park Commissioner Bustis for breaking one of his own park regulations in Bronx Park, was to-day transferred by Police Com- missoner Partridge from the Bronx Park station and Capt. William Schultz brought from Union Market and sent to Bronx Park in his place. In a statement issued In the after- noon the Park Commissioner declared that there was no Important personal difference between himself and the Cap- tain. He declared, however, that there is a difference between himself and the Police Commissioner as to who has charge over the policemen assigned to duty in the parks. ‘At his office, No. 80 Broadway, Com- miasioner Bustis said: “There |s no truth in the report that I shall make a complaint against Capt. Gorman, The trouble is not with him, It is with the head of the department. “Yesterday I accompanied a party of friends through the various parks In the Bronx. When we had finished our trip 1 left them and rode over to Bronx Park. It was the first Sunday that pub- lic park concerts were being given and I was rather anxious to se how the pub- lic was faring. “I watched the proceedings for a short time, when I finally saw the superin- tendent of the park and Capt. Gorman standing near the band-stand, I started Partridge. inclined to be officious. “The trouble between m: Gorman has been ©: not think that the meant to He ehmply did not Commissioner. longer to see whether Purtridge orders as I have SOFT-COAL CASE GOES OVI Postponed Until Wednesday at tie, Request of “L”? Roag. ‘Phe hearing in the summons case j garding the use of soft coal bythe hattan “L" road was again It went over until next Be clos me SENTENCED FOR CONSPIRACY and Sylvan thelmer, of New York, and Sylvan Friediander, of Newatk, N. J., con- vieted of conspiracy to defraud Insur- ce companies out of $63,000 In connec: n with the incendiary fire which de ed the former's shirt-walst fac: in this city, were sentenced hi road, Lederle for the ound that the roi ating the soft-coal ordinance. missioner assented, sa; rthelmer was sent to the Btate ying ¢l id see how things stood on We Ww Penitentiary for eighteen months and Friedlander ‘for fifteen months, ELEVATOR FALLS WITH WIFE OF AUTHOR R. H. SAVAG Accident in Hotel Girard—Occupant of Lift Ni Badly Hurt Husband Witnessed the Misha; bumpers. An elevator in the Hotel Girard, " Mrs. Savage, according to the ho- Forty-fourth street, between Broad- : way and Sixth avenue, fell this af-|tel people, was not ‘badly hurt. ee ternoon. | Mr. Savage, who witnessed the ae — Mrs, Richard Henry Savage, the/| cident, and expected to see his wife wife of the well-known author, was | killed, was greatly excited. the only passenger. He was standing in the hallway The elevator which is supposef to|when he saw the elevator dash © provided with safety|downward, the elevator boy ap- down hard on the| parently having lost control. WOMEN CAUGHT IN RAID ON ALLEGED POOL-ROOM; bee came have clamps, 4 me 2 Police Take Six Prisoners at Place Known as4 — “Herald Square Employment Agency.” 4 | | , “The Herald Square Employment | was chalking race entries om the-beaad Aner Sixth avenue, was| when the rald wag made, In elng valeen ae Aoting | downstatrs sus * t ROOT AY 'n®| number of severe bruises, ( rloin poller shi’ motives Black, Courtney | | Mary ond sire | Lies! . No, 19 West Thirty-sixth y reported that! strea t Lous Gibson, No, § Montague street, Brooklyn \lay Smith, No, 215 West Twenty-stxth treet there in 4 con money “on eA pool-room wae raid |, | was made Catharine Kane, No. 422 Bainbridge Mary Murphy, sixty-four years old, } street, Brooklyn. It was buried there by John ¥, O'Hara, undertaker of tho French @o- clety of Veterans of the Franco-Pruee sian war. DECIDES TOLET Jouls Lemoine, a nephew of the * |cedzad) made # fght againat the burial. | Mr. Lemoine was a tool manufac! and ieft an estate, it is said, worth Ove onan eS ENS WAS IN CONFIRMATION DRESS : Justice Giegerich Rules ON atthe Girt Rone parep ies Home the Burial of Camillo Le- lidny Attire, ‘ moine, the Rich French Tool+| The police of Unis chty hove heen ankeod maker, Who Died June 17, {1° for Mary Brohm, fourteen yeutw old, who ran away from her home | No }4 in ce w “a street, W Inehes in © and Hight When ¢ Bhe | fit, of medium bull’ wn wd tor Acoording to a decision rene day by Justice Glegerich,, the who died on June 1, | plexton and hae b Of | ett : dress and butt Camillo Lemoine, t No.6) West Houston street Just 20 Hours from New tbe cat Peameyivaui Sppalal Onl will be New Jersey,