The evening world. Newspaper, June 5, 1903, Page 1

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| ([WWATHER—Cloudy to-night and Saturdsy. NIGHT EDITION Che “ Circulation Books Onen to All.’’ PRICE ONE CEN == EW YORK, FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 1903. PRICE ONE CENT, | JUMPED 10 DEUTSCHLAND DEATH INTIS | FLOATED AND DELIRIUM!) PUTS 10 SEA George L. Kemp, Manager of a Typewriting Com- pany, Dies from Injuries Received at St. Vincent's Hospital, and His Family Will Bring Suit for $50,000. FATHER-IN-LAW SAYS HE WAS NOT WELL GUARDED. \ §He Declares Kemp Pleaded to 4 Be Taken Home, and Was\in a State of Delirium, but Dr. Quinn, of the Hospital, Insists _ that Man Committed Suicide. * Geongee Lindsey Kemp, thirty-five ‘years old, general manager and treasur- rer of the R. & G. Typewhiting Com- _peny, of No. 229 Broadway, died at St. “Wincent Hospital to-day as the result ‘of injuries received by jumping or fall- ing out of the second etory window of ithe hospital while delirious with pneu- mona on Monday afternoon. ‘According to the members of the young man’s family, the fall which re- wulted in his death could have been avoided if the proper care had been jtaken of the patient. They charge the Jnospitel authorities with criminal negii- tggece, and will bring a suit for $50,000 ‘Mr, Kemp went to_the ,pospitel on (ay YA) suffering froom an ‘attack of pneumonia. A private rom was engaged @or him by his father-in-law, Dr. Lewis Leroy, of No. 110 East Tenth street. ‘Acording to Dr. Leroy, last Sunday night Mr. Kemp became delirious, and ‘when his wife, with whome he lived at ‘No. 110 East Pleventh street, called on “him he expressed an earnest desire to igo home. Could Have Reen Taken Home, “In my opinion he could have been ‘taken home,"' said Dr. Leroy, “but Dr. jQuinn, of the hospital, said he had bet- ter remain a few days longer. 1 called von him that same evening and he was etill raving about going home.” “In all probability thes preyed on his mind and he got out of bed in the ab- ence of @ nurse and in wandering about the room fell out of the window to the pavement below. In doing so he frac- tured his right leg In two places. He rweighed 200 pounds. He lay writhing on the pavement some time before he ‘was missed and found by the hospital nurses.” Mr, eKmp fell or jumped out of a win- dow on tne west side of the building. Juet below is a narrow courtyard bounded by an fron spike fence Suicide, Says Dr. Quinn. According to Dr. Quinn Mr. Kemp was ponvalescent and not delirious. He said that the putient deliberately got out of hed, took his watch from his pocket, laid {t on the table and, calmly announc- jog his Intention, walked to the window and jumped out. "Such a statement as that," said Dr. (Leroy to-day, 4s absurd. "Had Mr. Kemp jumped from that window he ‘would have been impaled upon the wpikes of the fence below. The fact of the matter !s, that Mr, Kemp was crim- inally neglected, and while wandering about in his delirium fell out of the window. Why, I understand that he was Jeft alone without a nurse from 8 o'clock at night until 4 o'clock in the morning. We will bring a suit against the hospital for §50,000 damages on the ground of this neglect.” BABY MURDERED AND THROWN IN SEWER, Five-Months-Old Boy Strangled In South Brooklyn—Body Found in Ganey Island Creek, ‘The body of a male child, five months old, was found in Coney Island Creek, mear the intersection of Neptune ave. nue and Twelfth street, this afternoon, by Frank Lingweller, a bridge bullder. and one-sixteenth. s : The body had been in the water for , Fie ater oss whit 5 a burst of speed that smothered the Re. Howard ome time. Marks on the throat indl- 1) Baler Gre He iimacit, 88. Ci 73 field and she simply romped home an|in front of St wate that the child was strangled, Orlof Jog | Carouncle, 118, 8 easy winner by five lengths from | Lingweller notified the police and the | 5™ Hom ee berets? & |Dimple, who beat Contentious two} Five furlongs body was taken to the Coney Island] j Kitt! Rece—Two-vearolde; selling; Ave fur-| Numeral, R liengths for the place. Weasgereretonten Police station. Detectives think week Tos: 94 “Micon! 4 |Glenvartoch, 88, 3. jones @ 7 150 4 FOURTH RACE. dim Kells, 2. docue child was murdered in the lower sect pies Sistiagins 3 Start poor, Won Ariving, ‘Time—t.53 3-5. Mile and « sixteenth, sane Brennan. 117 pe Brooklyn) ene thrown into &. per ; | The lightly-weighted Himself jumped Mi Lie O89e) 0 y + Jocks. J 04 Won Peecheniwes ise fasted to. Coney 1ais to the front and set a clipping puce, |X Michaels Rae ane ——=__—— followed by Numeral and Sambo. Hun- stecamterty the start, and on the turn J ter Raine was off badly and so was mK, Lamia Ram Repiracednintels WEATHER FORECAST. Forecast for the ty hours ending at 8 I. M. Satur- day for New York City asd vi- elulfy: Partly cloudy and hasy weather to-night aad Saturday; Big Liner Which Went Aground in the Shoals of Gedney’s Channel Was Pulled Off Late This Af- ternoon. TUGS HAD TO WORK HARD. Whole Fleet of Them Took Hold of Hamburg-American Liner at 4 o’Clock to Yank Her Nose Out of the Mud—A Banner Passenger List. ‘The big Hamburg-American liner) Deutschland, which went ashore in Gedney’s Channel last night, was floated this afternoon at 4.37, and she Immediately put to ‘The tugs had a hard time of It, The release of the liner was report- ed by the De Forest Wireless Tele- graph Company. Four tugs and the big wrecking ship Merritt, of the Merritt-Chapman Com- pany, tugged unsuccessfully for hours to-day at the big Hamburg-American ner Deutschland, trying to pull her nose out of the mudbank into which she poked it last evenine when off “Buoy 8," at the jupotion of the main and Gedney channels, below Sandy Hook. Ne The tugs got busy at ¢.A>M. when “the tide was at its crest, but fully one~ fourth of the Deutschland’s length had gone'into tht muck and the Dot dislodge her. On the Deutschland aré Mrs. J. Ogden Armour, mother of little Lolita Armour, who was oured- by Dr. Lorenz; Prof. Felix Adler, Charles T.. Yerkes, Arturo de Brigard, the Consul-General of Co- lombia; Rafael Montoro, Cuban: Minis- ter to Great Britain and Germany; Col. Nicholas Perez-Stable, Secretary of Legation; Juan Fernandes de Castro, attache; Commodore A. Case Canfield, Mre. Hugo Carstens, Miss Mary De Puyster Carey, Lee Harrison, Janoslav Koclan, the violinist: Edouard de Reszke, Charles Ruppert. Mme. Schu- mann-Heink, Mr. and Mrs, Frederick T. Steinway, Dr. Joseph Jan Svatek, of Prague; William Lawrence Saunders, jr., Lieut, E. H. Shackleton, the South Pole explorer; Mr. and Mrs. W. H. ‘Theob: F.' Diodati! Thompson and Mrs, Henry Villard. In the strong room of the Deutschland 1s $4,000,000 in god shipped to Europe by New York bankers. CHILDREN SOLD BY STARVING CHINESE. HONG KONG, June 5.—The estimate of Gov. Wong of Kwang-S! Provin | that over-cne million natives are starv- ing in the territory in his jurisdiction, {s pronounced here to be approximately correct. The distress in certain dis- tricts Js most acute. Children and women are freely offered for sale. ‘The tice harvest procises weil, but it will not be available for from four to six weeks. Exteasive relief operations will be diffi- cult without foret supervision, which will be hard to obtain in Kwang-Si. —<——=—$_— GRAVESEND ENTRIES. (Special to The Evening World.) GRAVESEND, N. Y., June 5.—The en- LATEST NEWS IN RACING - AND BASEBALL HMGGIN WINS SPECIAL EXTRA. STAKE RACEIsRIDGE CAR Hamburg Belle, Run in Sid- JUMPS TRACK ney Paget's Name, but Owned by Veteran Mile} The last car of a bridge train coming from Brooklyn jumped teh about 6 o'clock this evening and ran upon the plat- lionaire _Turfman, Cap- the Manhattan ead. For a moment there was a panic tures Criterion Stakes—} and repor!s spread that many persons were injured, but no one : i was really hurt. Bridge tra‘fic was greatly demoralized, anu a oe Dimpie thousands of Brooklynites had io walk across the structure. 5 ee pause GIANTS WIN. NEW YORK <s-ceuc-5--. 0 0710 2750500 0 CHICAGO ....-. -- 90100010 At Piitsburg—Boston, 0; Pittsburg, 9v ——$—$—$_$—+$-0—_____— INVADERS WIN CLEVELANU.. .. -- - 3011000C 2-7 NEW YORK ..-- « 30112000 i1—8 Fifth Inning—Hickman and MeoCarthy flied out. Flick was MINOTAUR TAKES THE FIRST. Sambo Beats Himself and Car- bunole in the Second Event at Gravesend—Northbrook First in the Fourth. 0 3— 0 o— ‘Fi! THE WINNERS. FIRST RACE—Minotaur (3 to 1) 1, John A, Scott (8 to 5) 2, Osgood 3. Time—1.10 4-5, SECOND RACE—Sambo (13 to 5) 1, Himself (8 to 1) 2, Carbuncle 3. safz on Ganzei’s fume. Cov sii cer ed ol, No rine i iriest ee c=) Jick now pitzhing ior Cleveland. Williams walked. So THIRD RACE—Hamburg Bete} “id foFeriand. Ganzel sacrificed. Courtney was hit. O’Con« nor’s double soored Williams and McFarland; but Courtney was (7 to 10) 1, Dimple (15 to 1 Moetoo 28. "| nailed at third. Griffith flied cut. Two runs. tantious 8. Time—1.00 25. , FOURTH RACE-North Brook (8 to-4)-4y Ben Howard (8 to 1) 2; St. | Sever 3. Time, 1.48 1-5. FIFTH RACE—Jim Kelly (even) ae 1, Agnes Brennan (18 to 5) 2, Julla} At Besion—-Chisa M. third. Time—1.01 1-5. oit, 3} Philadelphia, 4, At Phiiadelphia-—Det Nt Washington—End of ciath: St. Louis, 3; Washington, 1, LATE RESULTS AT LATONIA. SIXTH RACE—Thorneycroft (7 to 1) 1, Dekaber (8 to 1) 2, Leipsic 3,| Time—1.46. (Bpecial to The Evening Werld.) RACE TRACK, GRAVESEND, June —There was @ grayness and a damp- ness in the air at Gravesend this after- noon that made the crowd uncomforta- ble. There was moisture in the a mosphere and a chill in the dank east wind, the novelists say. However, race-goers don't much attention to weather. Rain or snow or sunshine, the sight of the ponies racing around the cliipse {s all that fills their minds. “Get a bet down," is the slogan. It ts hustle to the track and hustle away again, To-day's card had nothing out of the ordinary except the Criterion Stakes, which brought about a meeting between Millionaire Whitney's Mimosa, Million- aire Thomas's Dimple and Millionaire Haggin's Hamburg Belle, which runs in the name of his agent, Sydney Paget. This promised an interesting event. Hamburg Belle showed a surprising amount of speed last time out, but she beat nothing, and Mimosa was expected to thoroughly test her. The other events included an excellent handicap at a mile and a furlong and several other god races. The track was fast. The attendance was fairly good, The defeat of favorites has quite a hole in the attendance, FIRST RACE. Adout alx furlongs. Thirs Race—Fair Lacy 1. 8< Fourth Race—L ffled 2, North Wind 2. ne Oaker 2, Welsh Girl 3. +: WTHORNE. Modiscum 2, Jet 3. Praiie Bog 2, Compass 3. Convincing Comparisons In March, April and May of 1903 THE EVENING WORLD Gained 1,243 1-4 Columns over the corresponding three months of 1902, while its next nearest competitor gained only 48334 columns— made ensington Steeplechase Handi- +154 Rising Sun 159 abt 115 | ip 115 Fourth Race—Broadway; thre x! rth 123 |Scott beet Osgood a head for the 5 Starters, whts., Jocks St. Hit. Fin. tries for to-morrow's races are as fol- | 311; 106, Pulle: 10 48 yb I esbaek [done scot, aH He Or Less Than Half the Gain about atx furlo: Never 2 Daraeao Stor eres 102 Sie. as otk 5 i bs i 2 Made by The Evening World. 193 | Mayor Gratam, 08, “O'Ne i A 0 i puvartg 2 98, Bei ; i H H THE EVENING WORLD is New York's iMidnignt chimes: on montis B Bland ko 3 greatest daily commercial advertising medium. ving. ime-—1.10 4-5. 5, 5 Darncdlananariotl tacediineaaliana lt goes home with the homegoers. It is clean. head to the turn, when Minotaur raced up on the outside and joined them. On the turn Orloff stopped and John A. ok third place. In the stretch Soott took the lead, but Osgood and Itis sane. It has all the news all the time. Minotaur hung on well. It a red-| Dimple, 114, 4 North Brook raced through the bunch hot drive tothe end, Minotaur winning! sqmen! out qi and Joined Ren Howard. Those two by a nose in the last jump. Jonn A.| { raced together around the turn, with q 14 | Kingraine, St. Sever and Ociawana ¢ ace ‘ 1} |in a close bunea, In the run home b Howard tired and North Brook won in Hamburg Belle went to the front with! a drive by three-quarters of a lengi SEOOND RACE. Mile and @ furlong. to the streteh, with Jim K behind. The leaders swung at the head of the stretcn, Gienvarloch, They raced with little change in order until they reached the 7 stretch, There Himself began to tire a bit e and Jind 91| and Sambo, well ridden by Fuller, grad~ ra 10 Kelly coming through won eastiy by t +96) wally wore him down and won vy a Carroll D.. 108, Welsh ‘ lenging tron) Agnes Brennan, Wao w pee SHE! JUIRCSSIE, who was @ isomtn in | SUNMetal” Seen erring. Piee—aes tek | SOneED in tront of Julle 9 te | front of Carbuncle, Ben Howard jumped to the front ead SRS AS THIRD RACB. made pace, with Kingraine, §t.| Rapid Service to St. eee Five furlongs. Sever and Oclawaha racing heads apart “Bt, Louls Limited" via the Pens mythd 9 sca ‘Chicago hope ‘Botting ‘a couple of lengths away. They held |B! Railroad. to 9 tastidiously sppoin: this order -to the backstreteh, where tea. o8 cS eoee panes een ,o barts aN ssn Seneca ieee a! ly lyin In| GAMES. MW CINNITY IN THE BOX Jack Taylor Occupies a Like Position for the Chicago Team in Second Game of the Serizs Against Mc- Graw’s New Yorkers, GEO. BROWNE DIDN'T PLAY. Old George Van Haltren Took Giants’ Regular Fielder’s Po- sition in Right and Crowd Cheered for Cubs to Win. BATTING ORDER. w York: Chicago: Van Haltren, rf. Harley, rf. Bresnahan, cf. SI WEST SIDE BALL PARK, Chicago, June 5.—The Windy City realizes now that she Is up against a real ball team. Part of her great record has been made off the Colonels from St. Louls, who were 90 weak in the early season that Frank Gsiee's speedy team had no trouble in taking eleven games, thus getting a strangle hold on the pennant. Brooklyn, too, was just ple for Chi- eago and when Pittsburg drubbed the | Gltents so completely the present series here looked like cheering after the re- turns were all in. How differently the crowd acted tn- @ay! Ancient fans who attended the first game in Pop Anson's old grounds years ago, whon many a victorious rag dangled from the flagpole, held onto their seats this afternoon like a Rub: ehcoting the chutes. They eyed McGraw and his team like @ plumber sizing up a surburban favor- te. The mystery was how the Glunts could be shut out twice in Carnegie town and then play such rattling ball here. But mysteries are rife in the na- tional sport. Lather Taylor looked as though he hed a mystery concealed about hin somewhere, for he got away up in a far corner of the fleid where no one could rubber and threw curves at the fence with a small boy acting as caddy. Frank Bowerman chased over quick- jy for fear that the Silent Man had gone daffy, But Luther only grinned and snapped his fingtre. 1 just learned how to make that drop break in the right angle." he whispered to Bowerman with his little finger. “Well, if you try any new siynts to- day on them,” sald the pugnacious catcher, “I'l) burn your hands off, You ought to pitch for everything that’s in you, don't forget that.” Victory this afternoon was more doubtful than yestertay, with Matty in the box and McGraw Is up stump for the rest of the series, Tne last’ game here is on Sunday and Christie will not work on the seventh day, Joe McGinnity fs slated to pitch to-morrow, though maybe he will wait for Sunday, whea the management ex- vastly 25,000 rooters, if the weataer is rable. Cronin is in bad shape, so one game will probably fall to ler, Chances are, therefore, that y New York and Chicago will break even One thing is a curious sort of stage frignt to which the microbes are sub- fect every time New York Is, pitted against them. jody can exp'ain this, but it tsa fact r team they would devour but invariably Ccevelop rattles at's star team Jumps onto the d the Giants this af- | than anything else was | they would any supper, The team Is ping at the Victoria Hotel, one of the best hosteiries tn Chi- ed on the lake front, and it starting fo when the nut in the lobb that, the whole 5 and demanded o? ‘© and more _ with the alternative of instant grounds ants Ww i Firemen. pantry boys, cooks. liet boys. engineers and every’ blessed menial in tre house to the number of 95 up the par ared formidadl e proprietor wa: and they certainly | mace dazed for a mo- Iment, and finally begged two hours in which to make up his mind. If he re- 1 ditions the Glants will n this evening and cook town supper. Frank Bowerman Led Roscoe Miller are both pretty capa- with the skillet, while Charley Babb 1 fry ham and eggs to the taste. fe pirdlis here is worried b an of the 7, ante! r the Fates pear the} as thouga they had n breakfast fonds | Y 4 Jo the regula ona field sop- wag's ran. Ta and M warm the ant V old ey R ‘and he ran too slow oa his ip to Ghanee. Bresnahan smashed for oH ve way to a it i at th * hen ae of Casey out in the right Shortstop Elberfield for 5 erman caaent fee a , : ort Eevrs's bas. his feex tying i. "hee.| New York Team’s Pair. - «. Jond. Babb dropping the ball, but it not matter as Gilbert retired Kling. No | RELIANCE RETURNS BIG HOTELS AND ~AROTAURANTS MAY BE TIED UP ———_——_+4 + —__—____ Employes Organize to Band Together and Then Demand Higher Wages and Better Conditions, Which if Refused Will Cause a General Strike to Be Ordered Throughout This City. Frederick Baumann, Who Was Successful in Organizing the Hotel and Retaurant Employees of Chicago, Who Have Tied Up the Business in that City, ls Here on Same Plan. The man who organized the hotel and, The president is Robert A. Callaham restaurant employees of Chicago and |and the secretary Jere A. Sullivan. The made possible the paralyzing strike pre- | headquarters are in Cincinnati and the vailing in that city Is in New York. It| Union ts nine years old, fs his intention e build up a powerful Chicago Is Unton-Bound, organtzation of hotel employees here, aud make demands for increased wages | oe aa aot be had the suey that may result in a big strike such cities of the West well organized he has already put twelve big restaurants | starteq in on Chicago, which, at this and two Chicago hotels out of business. |time, is the strongest from a union The Chicago condition is, serious. |gtandpoint of any large city in the Every employee of the Grand Pacific! tnited States. The’ hotel employees tm and Chicago Beach hotels except clerks) the Windy City haye the backing of all belfboys and engineers walked out last) the organized labor organizations. Eves night just at the dinner hour. Kohl-|the clerks are organized out there and’ saet’s eight restaurants, with accom-| are patronizing the co-operative restaue modations for 100,000 patrons a day. 8nd rants started by the union since the four otber restaurants—the largest in| strike was declared. the business section of the city—are UN-| with the Chicago strike well under able to serve meals because they have /way Baumann was ordered to this city, no cooks or waiters, The union threat-|#e makes his headquarters at No. 12 St ens to oxtend the strike gradually until | Mark's place and thus far his campaign every hotel and restaurant not recog-|has been of the whirlwind order, Im nized by the unlon is closed. getting the hotel and restaurant eme To Join Forces To-Night. ployees into line he has been assisted by. A r ) Pr Fred Baumann ils the maniwho rowen- [2208 Frankel President of the Amale gamated Walters’ Union No. 1, leh {zed the Chicago hotel-workers, and he| sa. a membership of 30 and is the is the man who has started to organize anization whit alte: this city. He has already made ar- fanisation of white 7a The agro union, called rangements to take in the two existing 150, will go into’ the new union in @ — unions of waiters and the union of bar- ty nas) <omelncels ae ders at meetings to De held this evening. His work in Chicago was ac- complished In a few months. Bauman, who comes trom Omaha, is eneral organizer of the Hotel and Res- urant Employees’ International Alli- body: ‘Poorly Pald Employees, { As to my mission in New York,” said Mr, Baumann to-day, “1 cannot do better than quote the objects of the organiser are banded together to om ance and Bartenders’ International] tion. We League of America. The initials of the|ganize all persons in the aliicd trades’ name of the organization sound like a| for th hetterment of thsie Gpacians ee ; ada | morally, social y. college yell 1 you say them fas: and|i."n9 cixss of working people Who 566 the national organizer says the union 18} 5,5; y for longer hours than the just as formidable as it sounds. hote a emptoyess. e than 50,00) members| “My investigations in the short time ee ee 1 AL BL. Le A. aa| Z,have, been in the city, show, me. that Betne g eae te the waiters and other hotel and restauzs inst 20,000 a year ago. There are|ant employees here are greatly under on in Kansas City and Omaha | paid and that they have only five ors = ni izations, with a total membership of eli as in Chicago. The national | FANZAONS MUN 4 e have 1100 In OME conyention of the union, held two weeks ago in Philadelphia, appropriated $10,000 for the ald of the local unions in both Kansas City and Omaha and there re- Organization. The strongest union here {s that of the bartenders, with 1,200 meme bers. 1 find that, contrary to the eral belief, bartenders here are (Continued on Sixth Page.) in for Slagle and was rewarded by Chance mains more than $30,000 in the treasury. ee the combination was too | 5 for Harley. Sam Mertes sneaked DETR ¥ getting under a Texas Leaguer. Was safe on a pop over second. Mertes id not have to move for Jones's holst, No runs. Second Inning, Mertes slugsed for a homer, but was cut short by Evers, Babb) hit the breeze. Slagie committed theft by run- rt La No runs. to use all his skill and} one from Tink- hard clean LONG AND CONROY Key nu Gilbert had speed in flelding a siow Manager Would Give runs, bends 3 | (Special to The Evening World.) Third Inning. | PHILADELPHIA, Pa., June §.—Mam showed himself one of the top-| ager Barrow, of the Detroit Club, sald making a wonder nis afternoon that he and Clark Grits it ibert's bat. Bower- co Fnker was too easy. ‘Tne, fith had not come to terms on @ pros Ly 09 ud (do. was a feeole posed deal for players. "Grift’ wanted [si Ce ae eee |to exchange Long amd Courtenay for ich ” Taylor and, reach- MeGann pleked up Tayior fiarley! Elberfeld, but Barrow cannot see it im, ing ten feet, steped on the bas kept Glibert busy for a ute. P ed @ safety west of © f Slagle) that light. He will, however, sive Bik benfield for Long and Conroy, but here hi ind hit fh ag el cage ea thely by ‘a stinging three-| 1s where Grimth balks. + gitases fom Chasce against ceotre-field| Manager Barrow saysxthat no n Canoes Sat moor toe \d gave the! tions have been made to trade ig 0 i Julswitt, of the es, Bowerman caught Jones’ foul. One run, /feld for Hulswitt, of the I nes, would do the Quake for the reason that he and ways worked well togother, CONSTITUTION SETS — SAIL IN THE (Continuation of Game in Columns 4 and 5.) TO NEW ROCHELLE. The Cup Yacht das a Smoky Trip Back from Newport To-Day. NEW ROCHELLE, N. Y., June 5— t Reliance reached here short- Drops Anchor in Newport for Then Leaves for New York, | + a what looked like three bases. but. SI Tobbed him by. a pretty catch, McGasn Also hit hard. but it was a liner to Har ley. No rung. ont a.bls

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