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ee A a ca Y ii BASEBALL] i) SPORTING # RACES} — H ‘ orld, l “ Cizculation Books Open to All.” ] ie EDITION PRICE ONE CENT. SUBWAY STRIKERS SEAT THEIR BANKS, Many of the Italian Rockmen and Ex- cavators Are Reported to Be Return- ing to Work in the Tunnel Despite the Stand Taken by Their Union to Hold Out for Demands. Prospect of an immediate settlement of the subway tie-up was compli- Seated to-day when the striking Italians, members of the newly or- @anized Excavators’ Union, met and decided not to go back to work, They were ordered back to work pending an arbitration of their demand for $2 a day and eight hours, and their leaders appealed to them to return to work and avert the importation of outside working men, but the strikers sul- Jenly refused when they learned that they would have to give up part of their wages to the support of striking brethren. _ ‘The men were warned that unless they went back to work the local fabor organizations would refuse to support them. They declared they fwanted no support, and would withdraw from the American Federation of Labor, to which they have been so lately affiliated. ¢ At noon the sub-contractors reported to Contractor McDonal of their Italian employees had returned to work in spite of the stand adopted “by their union. The order issued to the striking Italians was that they should go back to work on the subway at their old wages until June 4, and that excavators and rockmen employed on outside contracts should remain on strike. The Proposition would have been accepted, but a rider was added. The subway men were told they would have to contribute 50 cents a day out of their (wages to support the strikers on: outside contracts. - 2 y Both sides set up a howl at this, the subway men declaring they could not give up 50 cents of their $1.50 a day, and the other excavators declar- ing that if the subway men went to work they would follow sult, as they ould not live on 50 cents a day out of their colleagues’ wages, .REFUSALS ALL ALONG THE LINE. There are 20,000 members in the Excavators’ Union, and ‘only 5,000 of them are employed in the subway. The same ‘proposition was made to the steiking rockmen, and met with the same refusal. tos “This dotion was taken at the following meetings: Loca] Union No. 7, 2,700 men, at No. 265 Elizabeth street. Local’ Union No, 2, 2,600 men, at No. 291 Mott street. Local Union No, 3, 1,000-men, Local Union No 4, 800 men, at N 5 Local Union No. —, 1,200 men, at No, 4429 First avenue. The Italians, now deserted by thelr leaders, are thoroughly disorgan-| RACH TRACK, MORRIS PARK, {zed. Many of them, thinking tho order to go back to work, would be gen- May erally obeyed, returned to.work this morning. Word’ was brought to them thrown by Seminole, in the frst by the strikers later in the day to quit. but the order was not generally Face, nt Morris Park, to-day. obeyed. The largest meeting of excavators was held at No. 2229 First avenue, tte head and was taken to the where President Pitto Pascelli and Walking Delegate Casilio addressed the FOf@ham Hospital. Strikers. Five thousand Italians were in the hall and thé street without. | 'The men were willing to go back to work until they. learned they would atternoon. have to pay a sirike assessment for other members of the Excavators’ Union number of crack two-year-olds, not employed on the subWway and who will not go back to work. The meet-|!nS Boxwood, a son of Watercress, who | fag broke up in a row. Trouble was anticipated in the section between Sixtieth and One Hun-/ing the winter. red and Third stracts, controlled by Contractor: William Bradley, where non-union men have been working since the strikers quit. A clash between |%/5° Well thought of, and the meeting strikers’ pickets and the non-union men occurred late yesterday at One Hundred and First street. guard to-day, as requested by Contractor John B. McDonald, along this Section. tory.” 74 will fly on our harness all along the subway to-morrow i token of yic-| 6 cia } we 5 “President Holland, of the Central [Fr Vitae fi He resident lolland, o} ie Central [Federated Union, was disgusted | fis, 130, McCreety. 5, tay 3| We'did the bert | stoi Was dite: ‘rine 1 when he heard of the conduct of the Italian excavators, ‘we could for them and so did their leaders,” he said, “but they seem to ‘want to run things to suit themselves,” President McDonald, when told that the Italians had voted not to re- turn to work, said: “Votes or no votes, the subway tie-up will be ended, ‘The men have until noon to return or their places will be filled.” “fn front of Gould, Arian crowded every- Police Captain Tighe, of the East Fifty-first street station, on to suppress a fight betweon Italian subway strikers and about thirty"St DRIVERS ORDERED BACK TO WORK, ‘The 200 ‘members of the Team Drivers’ International Union, who were employed in the subway and struck when the lockout of the material men |ciuded a haepdicap at a mile and a fur- fwas declared, have been ordered back to work. i t President Denis Quinlan, of the Team Drivers’ Union; John Pallas, of the Arbitration Commitiee of the Central Federated Union, and President | Games Holland, of that organization, called at Contractor John B. McDon- @ld's office to-day to inform him that the teamsters had been ordered back to work on the subway, pending arbitration of their demand for $2.25 for @ ten-hour day and time and a half for overtime. President Quinlan said: “We have every assurance that our demand will be granted and the men were ordered back to expedite the subway work. The American flag PRICE ONE CENT,. NEW YORK. WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 1903. BOXWOOD'S LAUREATE. Green B. Morris’s Water- cress Colt Beats Masedo and Green Crest in Two- Year-Old Stake Event at Morris Park Track. TWO LONG SHOTS WINNERS. Jockey Barry Is Thrown by Seminole in Knickerbocker Hurdle Handicap and Taken to Hospital Badly Hurt. that many THE WINNERS. FIRST RACE—Arian (2 to 1) 1 Ohnet (5 te 2) 2, Gould 3. Time—3.16 SECOND RACE—Tim D., Jr. (10 to 1) 1, King Pepper (8 to 5) 2 Parisienne 3, Time—1.08, “THIRD RACE—Maglistrate (15 to 1) 1, Grenada (6 to 1) 2, Pulsius 3, Time—0.54, FOURTH RACE—Boxwood (2 to f) 1, Masedo (7 to 5) 2, Green Crest 3. Time—0.59 3-4, FIFTH RACE.—Rene (6 to 5) 4 Janes to 4) 2.The Talleman 3, 1 to The Evening World.) i No. 2 Oliver street. jaxter street. (Bper 13.—Lawrence Barry was severe injuries about | He recety The for two-year-olds, 8 the stake featuré at the course this In ‘this’ race there were a includ- | Laureate, earned a reputation by beating the| lcrack Bear Catcher at California dur- High Ball, by Ben Strome, and Masedo, by Maxio, were | between these three was really the fea- ture of the afternoon. The Knickerbocker Hurdle Handicap was also a stake. It furnished a red- |hot gocd thing from J. W. Colt's string. This was Arian. He opened at something lke 20 to 1, but in less than five min- | lutes was off the board. The remainder | jof the card was Interesting, as it in- Commissioner Greene concentrated the Police long over tte Withers course, In which Herbert, Merry Acrobat and other good jhorses were engaged. he weather was ideal and the track ve y ‘The ‘cate of Jockey Shaw was widely discussed, the general opinion belng that an Injustice had been done. FIRST RACE. Katekerbocker Hurdle; one mile and three- quarters ‘over peven fi Batting. Str. Pl. JH en Gould and Cigar raced in close order for halt a mile. Then Ohnet went to the front followed by Arian and Mc- | Grathiana Prince. In the yun home | Arian jolned Ohnet in a hot‘drive and | {won by a head, Obnet was four lengths , taing in the race In the last furlong, Was called! bit there was no claim-of foul, SECOND RACE. Five and one-half furlongs. NEW CINCINNATI ..... .....- NEW YORK Sariao BROOKLYN LOSES ‘CHICAGO .... BROOKLYN .. At Boston—Boston, 9; St. Louis, 5, At Philadelphia—End of fifth: Philadelphia, 8; Pittsburg, 6. At Princeton—Princeton, 6; Brown, 1. NEW YORK .. .. DETROIT . At Cleveland— arrested on Broadway this afternoon pushing and insulting women whom he encountered on the sidewalk. The ar- rest was made after the young man had fought a policeman and a private detective all over the street in the pres- ence of a great crowd. Agnew turned into Broadway from the ood Wright Hospital. TALLY-HO RUNS INTO CAR; 2 PERSONS HURT Two persons were injured this afternoon in a collision be- tween a four-in-hand coach and an electric car at Amsterdam avenue and One Hundred and Eighty-first sireet. John Witherton, who was tooling the coach, sustained in- juries to the head and back. Mrs. Le Wood, twenty-eight years old, a widow, living at Pittsburg, Pa.. fell from the coach and sustained a serious cut over the left eye. She was taken to the BIG CROWD AT BALL GAME; | ACCIDENT AT THE RACES. GIANTS TAKE. | ALY LEAD New Yorkers, Anxious to! —$—_$—$<$<$§_+ po __ ORK WINS 0000002002 20000030 —5 Redeem Themseives, Bat! Harper's Curves for Two Every Available Man on the Force ls On the Runs ‘in the First Inning at the Polo Grounds. TEN THOUSAND FANS THERE.) Mute Taylor Is Put in the Box and in Early Innings Proves) an Enigma to the Cincinnatis, as Matty Did Yesterday. THE BATTING ORDER. New York. Cincinnati, At Cambridge—End of sixth: Harvard ,12; Cornell, 3. At New Haven—End of fifth: West Virginia, 0; Yale, 5. Hee eee anaes AMERICAN LEAGUE. NEW YORK--DETROIT 100000 ws Ol OT 13) 2 At St. Louis—End of seventh: Washington, 2; St. Louis, 0. At Chicago—End of fifth: Philacelphia, 1; Chicago, 0. End of fifth: Boston, 1; Cleveland, 1. LATE RESULTS AT MORRIS PARK. Sixth Race—Shorthose 1, Herbert 2, Gold Van 3. AT WORTH. Fourth Race—Bondage 1, Flying Torpedo 2, Moor 3. AT LOUISVILLE. Fourth Race—Harry New _1, Red Comyn 2, John McGurk 3, MES AGNEW UNDER ARREST. His Father Was Gen. Grant’s Physician, and Charge Against Young Man Is Insulting Wom- on Broadway. 8 Gen. Grant's phy t iInegs at Mount McGregor, w thelr countrymen, laying asphalt at Forty-third street and Second avenue. | Betting, | C#t side of Thirty-eighth street Just The subway s:rikers, headed by Walking Delegates Steno Gaetaro and| 7}! aay Aye i)R eboubathe sims) several) theatres) were: Cigano Congarello, tried to make the asphalt men stop work. Foremati Cor-| K'"é Epa G8 |Ance Mabing Upietntcetatie cine is =| Parl 2 . f ews nellus Murphy, of the asphalt gang, sent for the police and Capt. Tighe and a|*", 41, ,8 18) As he neared the Marlborough Hotel squad of bluecoats arrived just as the workingmen had put down their tools! Petra a’ GE Mle tegan to jostle women right and for a physical argument with the strikers, The latter were driven off and or i % 8 Jeff esnding, Peversiitsipptas, into! the the walking delegates arrested. In Yorkville Court they were held 1 a aed ese pail in $209 "4 5 : gach for good betaviok $300 19 4 3 ‘Cries of ‘shame’ came from all sides Fy 2H | way Squad, pushed his way’ throug! 40 15 the crowd and eeized the young man J GB 10 9, by , Thenery y the anm. Agnew shook him off and CARPENTERS’ WAR GROWS; HL ESE I gteace a0 tre uacoet with boinc nfo by + v6 18 18. 80 151A lively flight ensued, in which the 160,000 MEN INVOLVED, ‘With bullding at @ standstill in Man- hattan_and the Bronx, millions of cap- tal idle and 160,000 artisans out of work either through a strike or the indirect a x Brooklyn, and the number of unemployed will be in- res by at least 35,000, RAS = ®-congervative astimate of the number of men Who will ys get of. work in the five: boroughs of the city and the sur- oundin r cities ts more, than Tim Jr., ‘raced to the fro at! flagfail, made’all the running and won) (Continued on Twelfth Page.) The Icng trouble that has existed be- young howev. tween the brotherhood and the bos: was seliled to-day by the representa. tives of the brotherhood and the Assos clation of Interior Decorators and Cabi- net Makers. The members of the As elation of Decorators and Cabinet Makers and the carpenters have signea @ contract. wherein it. ts agreed that the decorators and cabinet makers are to employ none but brotherhood men. ‘This means a lockout of the Amal. \@amated carpenters by the decorators Foreea: the thirty-stx tonrs ei at 8 P.M. Thars- fay for Sew York City and vi- pinity: Generally fair to-night end Tharadayi Nght to fresh situation Diniag-Car Serv! Seeders aes eae man, officer and i street A t the police station would not suomit to a search until he was stretched out on the floor and while another his pockets and discovered sever went through his id cell charged with disord: The man was knocked down, er, and with a well-directed blow sent O'Brien to #he pavement. proceeded to kick and beat the polic when Private Detective Havila ‘interfered, and with bis assistance tae managed to secure Agnew's artis lead him to the West hirtieth station. the prisoner 1 patrolmen held down entity, He was locked Up in a ly conduct. man's mother is a wealthy youn le has been in er Are you reading the story on the magazine page? hi € iolmes Agnew, the son of Dr. Agnew, | clan during facial PolisemanvOl Brian. of ther Broad: | will bring two pairs of twins and Thom: hn 88 Heaphy will have charge of ele He managed to scramble to his feet,’ number OF * a99 stow |There are | who, TWINS FEATURE | OF MAY PARTY. i | ‘No Indications of Race Suicide on the Upper West Side and 7,000 Children Are Expected to Join in Outing. | Under the auspices of the Amsterdam | Democratic Club, whore headquarters | are at Sixtieth street and Amsterdam | venue, 7,000 children, under the age of fifteen years, will hold | @ big May party on the lawn known as! the baseball grounds in Central Park next Saturday afternoon The feature of the parade will be twins. The upper west nas been ide j noted for many years for tne great, 20u number of familles lving there wo are the proud possessors of twins. | several who can poast of having tripsets, and there is one family, | it is sald, that can point with pride to quadruplets, Michael F. McGee will bring his twins | and three other children. Peter Dooley i} pairs of children bearing a similar lation. These three men are members of the club, and with them will be ex- Warden of the Tombs James J. Hagen, as an advocate of President Roosevelt's sentiments, will bring his seven children. | The parade will start from the clup-| house at 9.30 o clock in the morning. it! Wil pass west through Sixtieth | to Central Park W: Park entrance at Seven. The whole day will be given up to tu and enjoyment, and prizes will be give: to the bovs Ina series of games, Yen thousind 10-cent been ordered for the children, and to prevent confusion among them all dresses printed on the Fra Ale 1 of Acker, Merrall & Condi i Rock & ‘dete $3 Cortlandt Bt, ia Ao ua ives tosdag and reports ; 7 rf ps3 ——— rom ate say all ra: is are.in| Are you reading the story on the| ping id shape from the flooding of tracks. ‘ Are you reading the story on the, At, iiabe ses in the negro section Were pacesian . s p ; magazine page? it 1s eald, an jP® | vere northeast gale, with rz known lunches have! tower portions of three to six feet of be tagged and their names and ad- Station 1s flooded and the tracks are Hi covered. damage is threatened, the w: [washed away, Browne. rf. Kelley, 1f. Bresnahan, cf, Seymour, cf, leGann, 1b, Donlin, rf. Mertes, If. - Beckley, 1b. Dunn, ss. Steinfeldt, 3b. Lauder, 3b. Corcoran,’ #6. Gilbert, 2b. Magoon, 2b, ‘Warner, c, Peitz, c. Taylor, ‘p. Harper, p. Umpire—O'Day. (Special to The Evening Wo.14.) POLO GROUNDS, NEW YORK, May 4%.—Another great crowd, estimated at 10,000, flocked here this afternoon to ece what MeGraw's team would do with the Reds of Cincinnati. The defeat of yes. terday cast a gloom over the entire baseball public of New York. The surg- ing mob to-day were, therefore, not so boisterous as on previous occasions when the Giants appeared cortain of the pennant. ‘But every man that loves baseball for the game's sake concealed enthusiasm beneath a countenance of depression. On agcount of saving McGinnity for Pittsburg, it was decided to put in Lu- ther Taylor, who put up a fine article of ball against Philadelphia. The whole team, a5 well as the spectators, were with the deaf mute and anxiously awaited to see his work with a hard- hitting team. Bowerman, who usually catches Taylor, because he can talk readily in deat and dumb lingo, has a sore finger and Jack Warner was chosen for backstop. Joe Ke.ly had Harper and Peltz warm up for the ‘Reds’ battery. Harper pitched for St. Louis last year and had & good record. First Inning. Reds to the bat. Kelley started off | with a hit over second. Gilbert handed Seymour's hot one beautifully to se Warner niboed Sey Doniin | retiring Kelley. mour on his steal to second. etruck out. No runs. Erowne swatted Harper, who of the big four last year in 8 for a clean one to centre. Browne stole hit to right and got Browne m as one 1. 0; n’s fumble Dunn co! Dunn Bres came home stealing. Two runs Serond Inning. Beckley was out, La Steinfeldt walked. 1 stealing md. Mertes stand cal below nis knees of Corco- ran’s liner. No runs. Stelnfeldt clinched Billy Lauder, Gil- to Corcoran. No runs Third Inning. Magoon strolled. Peltz filod to centre. | Warner, after dropping the ball, nailed Magoon at second. Harper fanned and the Cincinnat! rooters obsei their team did not beat Taylor all last year, No runs. Taylor could not beat his grounder to third. Browne filed to centre made his second hit over se stole the turn. McGann was out, r to Beckley. No runs Foarth Inning. y beat his bunt to ppite of a twenty-foot slide W Nm_ purloining second McGann tossed Seymour's roll Doin walked No! ru bert warm! flied to lef Har- er vot to Tay= Med to ont Laude: first 1 Mertes cps Beckley fouled to Wa iMled to Gilbert. War cor hign foul, > O'Day called Gilbert throw of a bunt. War. Taylor filed to Seymour. No rv ut. HEAVY FLOOD Six Feet of Water in City Streets and Houses in Outlying Sections Washed Away. (Speci JACKSC 3A se. prev West Bridge street the city are under water, The Union ‘The water is rising rapidly and great) PLOT HATCHED IN WASHINGTON He Was Expected to Be Among Those Sailing steamship Umbria, has not left the city, the police say, and every avail able member of the uniformed and detective force is hunting for Each searcher has an accurate description of the man and is assisted several persons who saw him while he was at Mrs. Currie’s boarding-he in West Thirty-first street, ; Umbria be searched upon her arrival in England, on the chance that, § mailing his letter to Commissioner Greene, Rossio might have engaged steerage passage on the very steamship he had plotted to destroy, hoping by this daring move to throw suspicion from himself. ‘ sent it to the pier, it is believed that he was the agent of a band of Anarch+ ists who have sworn to kill a certain person, and that they expected this person to sail on the Umbria. look of his intended victim been on the list he could have bought a stecrage ticket, had the infernal machine stowed in the hold and then walked off \the ship before it sailed, serene in th> confidence that the vessel would Louts. be destroyed in few hours. Not finding tie name among those sailing, Rossio wrote the special delivery letter to the polic. that led to the dis- 1 covery of the machine with its ingenious machinery at work. as" taukit | PL QT HATCHED IN WASHINGTON. to MeGano. ' day, May 5, and all of Wednesday, May 6, in Washi: gton. While there ea etanl-| he made a purchase in a dry goods store. Probably while in Washington he met the others in the plot to blow up the Umbria. On the day. of his Warner | return—last Thursday—he bought 100 pounds of dynamite, packed it im | his machine and completed his plan to hve it put aboard the liner. ‘ Currie, No. 366 West Thirty-first street, is the man who put the police im ed, that | posses: | plot. Bres | night. ? nd. He) carted the infernal machine to the pler opened the gate of publicity. ~ twice, has visited every port of consequence on the globe and was { t. In| merly in the Secret Service. work | since last October. attracted to the new boarder. SUSPECTED HIM FROM THE START, . “He had a furtive manner and sized up everybody at the table within ©* a minute after he had taken his seat. who had some serious scheme on his mind. was a Secret Service agent engaged in working up a case. | asked rfe what I thought of him and I told her my opinion. All the IN JACKSONVILLE, he was in the house I thought he was a Secret Service man until I " | his real business. advance for a room, displaying plenty of money. By ais arrangement | was to take his meals at the house when he was around, paying exiza | eaci, meal. y plexion, bluish gray eyes, small and shifty; black, closely cropped hair, 4 here and the tides are tne highest ever g stubby, sandy mustache, which he kept clipped to a length approa id all the so out a three weeks’ growth. upper lip the puffed appearance that follows the loss of a Heavy mi ater works | other boarders, He dressed plainly, YNAMITER (5 IN TIDING HERE, ThE POLICE oh | Hunt for Rossio, Who Constructed the In= fernal Machine that Was Intended to Blow Up the Cunard Steamship Umbria Whe: Out at Sea. “See AIMED AT DEATH OF ONE MAN, on the Umbria, but When His Name. Not Appear in the Passenger Lists the In- tention of Sinking the Steamer with Hune” dreds of Innocent Persons Was Abandoned, Rossio, the manufacturer of the infernal machine that was sent to the To be on the safe side, cablegrams have been sent ordering that From what has been learned of the man, who made the maching and It is probable that Rossio went to the pier Saturday } and over the list of saloon and steerage passengers. Had the name The Evening World learned to-day that Rossio spent part of Tues- Henry De Belmonte, a yacht steward, boarding at the house of Mrs. sion of the facts that led to the discovery of Rossio’s share in the This information was given to Inspector McClusky on Monday The inopportune arrest yesterday of one of the expressmen. who De Belmonte speaks several languages, has been around the He has been boarding at Mrs, Currie’s io engaged a room at Mrs. Currie’s house on the afternoon of ‘April 27, and appeared that evening at dinner with the other He sat across the table from De Belmonte, whose attention wag “I was suspicious of him from the start,” said De Belmonte to-day. He appeared to me to be a man I believed at the time that ha Mrs. ms gave his name to Mrs. Currie as G. Rossio. He patd wh The stranger He was a man about 5 feet 8 inches tall, well built, with a dark coms It was such a mustache as could be shaved off without De Belmonte noticed that the stranger had very little’ to. his clothing giving the