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\ I ! Primate SAN thal) Lath a Ae q / qranTREM—Fate to-night an “Genesee bd = } [BASEBALL RACING # SPORTS ' PRICE ONE CENT. ~ WATERBO! WIND THE "SUBURBAN RENEWAL J.B. Haggin’s 5 PouebearOld Watercress Colt, Ridden by Odom, Beats Out Irish Lad and the Hot Favorite Goldsmith After a Hard Race in Fast Time. Time of 2.04 3-5, Within Four-fifths of a Second of the World’s Record for the Mile and a Quarter, Made by Gold Heels Last Summer. DETAILS OF THE SUBURBAN RENEWAL. ‘Fifth Race—One mile and a quarter. —Betting— Starters, weights and Jockeys. Start. Half. Finish. Straight. Place. Water Boy, 112, Odom. 2 3% 42 4 7-5 Irish Lad, 115, Burns..... 3 2% oF 7-2 7-5 Goldsmith, 116, Redfern... Gin 5? 3 2 4-5 Blues, 123, Hoar susan % 42 48 7 5-2 Major Daingerfield, 123, O'Neill... 4 4% S58 15 5 Bonnibert, 115, McCue.. 7 7: e 6 2 Glenwater, 108, Michaels........ 5 6 ef 60 15 Start good. Won cléverly. Time—2,04 3-5. RACE TRACK, SHEPPSHBAD BAY, July 2.—The second running of the Suburban Handicap was won by Haggin’s Waterboy, who was widden by Odom, and was at 4 to 1 in the betting. Whitney & Duryea's ‘Yrish Lad, at 7 to 2, ridden by Burns, was second by a length, and Gold- woith, W. C. Whitney's horse, which was favorite, was third. The horses were called to the post at 4.16 o'clock, and at that time fegged etrings of lightning were streaking the skies and big black clouds were piled up in the. northwest. It looked for a few moments as if the \[Renewal would be run on a heavy track, as was the Suburban. Luckily the clouds seemed to split as they reached the track, and there was no rain up to post time. Goldsmith was a hot favorite in the ring; 8 to 5 was eagerly taken. ("Waterboy was heavily backed at 21-2 to 1 and Irish Lad was well played \at 4 to 1. The extreme outsider was Glenwater, against which as high as 60 to 1 was laid. When the horses were summoned to the post Blues, the fickle one, led the way, followed by Major Daingerfield, then Goldsmith, the favorite, and Irish Lad the only three-year-old starting. Waterboy, black and glossy woated, came next, with Bonnibert and Glenwater bringing up in the rear. The crowd applauded generously, for a more representative lot of thor- oughbreds never passed the starter. They went away with little delay, ‘Blues was the quickest to move, but Burns sent Irish Lad after him, ‘and they ran {p close order to the first turn, where Burns was content to fet Blues go on. Waterboy laid third and Major Daingerfield was fourth. They ran io the backstretch strung out in Indian file, In the run to the far turn Waterboy began to close and Burns not wanting to get into a pocket raced to Blues. Waterboy soon joined him and the pair raced head and head. Goldsmith closed ground op the torn, but it was plain that he was distressed and beaten. Like a team Waterboy and the great three-year-old came on. as they swung into the stretch Odom sent Waterboy to the front. He took hulf a length advantage and the three-year-old hung to him to the last few strides, where Burns, seeing his colt was beaten, eased him and Water Boy wor. by a length in 2.04 3-5, establishing @ new record for the gourse by two-fifths of a second, = Goldsmith was third, badly beaten, pulling up seven lengths away. Four lengths away came Blues, who beat Tho Major eight lengths. Long before the first race the great three-tiered grand stand was choked with a perspiring rush of men and women, ‘The lawns were crowded, The betting ring was hotter than the pit of torment. A trip though It was sufficient to drive one into a dripping perspiration. Yet thousands struggled all the afternoon to wager their money. The weather was insufferably hot, but it was ideal for racing putposes and exactly the opposite of that which prevailed on the day of the running of the origina) Suburban. The track was in superb condition and as fast as lightning ies late eae eae INJUNCTION WON THE As soon SPINDRIFT STAKE case (pecial to The Evening World.) SHEEPSHEAD BAY RACE TRACK, |fioney’ pee’ 102 ei val | Brookiyn, $7, Reinhe|me Suly 2.—Besides the Suburban Renewal |Gnerne Fianer, 101, Beane Bymphy 4, there were six other races. The fourth, cal rant fh We the race immediately preceding the Swb- Kings N4, Rloe urban Renewal’ was the Spindrift: Tuvenaita’ 99" nedtera: Btakes, for three-year-olds, at a milo Start falr Won ériving. tes orgy <qushed to, the front and gpajen eighth, The results were as fol-| ,, tes the a ch apread. the eld out fan-like SSontna him_ heads apact. ¥IRST RACK Honey Bee, Sandhurat, Lady "Rosen Bix furtongs, and. Charlie Fisher were tbe ost ‘ominent of t nm the stretan ee ee ety ig 4 | panduurat closed, < Steeimaker and then shot ae) the bunch with Tus, but ele could not get u jn time to beat Sandhurst, who won by half a jength, Origin was third. three lengths THIRD RACE. ae Pi Unmasked, a 12-to-1 chance, broke in Midst 1-3 mt and opened up a gap ot four| 4 $ cele before ve A parter 00, ; eo uellat raced throug the bun Into gecond place and with In~ ieeroe aes Uh en fe, Slave and Royal Summons ran Me close order to he stretch, ‘There | “17, S08 Wen handity, Time—1.99 2-6. on rai] and| Ajdios, a 20 to 1 ohance, out out the but the outsider | tunning, followed by Ithan and Ada own and won easily by a a latter “gradually closed Govind, nnd an'econ al tie eeice eed Feached cut loose and won ‘handily "by fasted lone enough te tase iihens nee for the place,» run, @ half from Ol, tt neck for the place.” D Wive anda half furlooge oe Mattie and’ nadie mare 7 ay and ‘Elliott, close up. 78 | 3oined the leagers. Se dnd) Het mr Che “ Circulation Books Open to All.”* Lisi Qa ere Seg ak AEA LTT’ evisunke Br orld, | “ Circulation Books Open to A } NIGHT EDITION . NEW YORK, THURSDAY; JULY 2, 1903 WATERBOY, HAGGIN'S FLEET RACER, THAT WON THE SUBURBAN RENEWAL RACE. THE WINNERS. NB OATS mn FIRST RACE—Unmasked (12 to 1) 1, Olympla (6 to 5) 2, Slave 3. Time—1.13 4-5. SECOND RACE—Sandhurst (6 to 1) 1, The Lady Rohesia (4 to 1) 2, Origin 3. Time—t1.08, THIRD RACE—Ada Nay (11 to 10) 1, Adlow (20 to 1) 2, Ithan 3. Time— 1,39 2-5, FOURTH RACE—injunction (7 to 2) 1, Eugenia Birch (5 to 1) 2, Merry Acrobat 3, Time—1.52 4-5. "FIFTH RACE (Suburban Renewal) —One Mile and a Quarter—Water boy (4 to 1) 1, Irish Lad (7 to 2) 2, Goldsmith 3. Time—2.04 3-5. SIXTH RACE—Damon (12 to 1) 1, Courtenay (10 to 1) 2, Bellarlo 3. Time—1.40 15. ge coe st Stent Bugenia Burch get the pace to the turn, but was outrun by the light- weighted Allan and Merry Acrovat, ‘This pair raced head and head to the far turn, with Hugenia Burch, Injunction On the turn Gans with Injunction and Juat before ¢urnii nia Burch mov. non moved up into the stretch up and also soli leaders. Fin heme:the race berrowed, down, hard delve between Injunction and the fily, Injunction winning by a head. Eugenla Burch was two length in front of eMrry Acrobat. The race was ve fast, delng only twofitihes of & eecen behind the track Por other races ste columns 4 and 6 of this page, CUBAN COALING TREATY SIGNED, isle of Pines Agreement with United States Also Closed In Havana. Salad HAVANA, July 2—The treaty cover- ing the naval and‘coaling station bases and the ¢reaty placing the Isle of Pineg wholly under Cuban sovereignty were signed to-day. The occupation of the naval and coal- ing stations will be perpetual, the hental Price being purely nominal and based on the cost of acquiring the stations and altes by the Cuban Government, the United. States ‘advancing igi money dpnds:et a for the purchase of Brat. RESCUE 7 CAPSIZED During the heavy squall off Sandy Hook, about 5.10 this! afternocn, a large cat-boat was dismasted and capsized near, “ihe the Lipion fleet. Launches from the Erin put out imarediately| ** and rescued seven men and women, but it is feared that some just were drowned. BROOKLYN--PITTSBURG PITTSBURG -901005010 BROOKLYN ...... -.....0100000 At Philadelphia—Philadelphia, 7; Chicago,.2. At Boston—Cincinnati, 2; Boston, 0. ot ____—_ INVADERS VS. I. Our UIs INVADERS 000 ST. LOUIS 000 00 At Cleveland—End of Fourth: Philadelphia, 4; Cleveland, 4. At Detroit—End of Sixth: Washington, 0; Detroit, 0. At Chicago—End of Sixth: Boston, 0; Chicago, 5. i A dh. Ae LAT® RESULTS AT SHEEPSHEAD BAY. Seventh ed Ae Bev (4 to 1) 1, Dr. Saylor (4 to 1) 2, Articulate 3. Time—1.49 AT WASHINGTON PARK, Fourth Race—Bragg 1, Schwalbe 2, Toah 3. T ST. LOUIS. Fourth Race—Orris 1, Helen Print 2, Pettijohn 3. —_ + $-e- MINISTER’S DAUGHTER MARRIES FARMHAND. STAMFORD, Conn,, July 2.—A sensation has been caused | *. in North Stamford by the secret marriage of Miss Winifred L. Swinnerton, daughter of Rev. William F. Swinnorton, a retired Congregationalist minister, to John F. Caswell, a farmhand em- ployed on the Swinrierton’ place. years old and attractive. Caswell is forty-five: The bride is twenty-four Re: ee CONSTITUTION IN ACCIDENT AND MAN LOST Qld Cup Yacht Had Mishap to Her Gaff and Sailor on Board the Columbia Is Swept Over- board in Trial Contests Off Newport. DAY OF CASUALTIES TO TWO OLDER BOATS. Wes a Time of Trial for the Craft Striving for Place as Contender with the Challenger —Old Columbia, However, Putting Up a Stiff Fight. BATEMAN'S POINT, R. I., July 2.— Soon after the start of the yacht races to-day the Congtitution met with an ac- cident. It appeared that her gaff had broken in two. The yachts had scarcely sailed half a mile when the gaff of the Constitution suddenly came down. She at once with- drew from the race and ran two or three miles down to leeward while the crew gathered in the big moinsall. Her ten- der then picked her up and sho etarted beck for Newport. Meantime the Co- Junta and Relanoe kept on, the Co- lumbia maintaining her lead over tho new boat In a wondenful manner, and twenty-five minutes after the start was still in nm commanding postition, It looked from shore as if the old cup de- fender had gained a trifie-in the stiff thresh to windward on the Rellance. Anticipating something more than am ordinary breege, all three of the de- fender racers sent up thelr smallest club topsails before leaving for the start. The Regatta Committee started out for the lightship shortly before 11 o‘clock, but before leaving It was announced that the committee would endeavor to send the yachts on a triangular course. On getting outside, the Regatta Com- mittee found that the wind was about southwest by west and blowing fully fifteen miles, while some of the puffs probably ran up to almost twenty. The committee discovered that ten miles to windward woul 4 bring the yachts too close to Point Judith, so the starting-point was again changed to the eastward, the committee anchoring at about the same plane as yesterday. Tho Reliance and Columbia were the first to come out of the harbor, and, as the Constitution wac late, the committee did not fire the preparatory gun until after 12 o'clock. After the yachts had been out about a halt hour their skippers discovered that the wind was jucreasing every minute, 80 clubtopeaila were all hauled down and all three prepared for the race under three lower sails. 1 als ‘west-southwest, followed by a broad reach about southeast by east and an- Diner reach about north to the finieh, a distance of thirty miles around the tr- m shore ng times as seen omar Le Ae soe: eliance, Sotutlon, 00. ‘colmmbla lost @ man overdoara before reachin the windward His body was not recovered. The oat thereupon joned the race, gee SHAMROCKS TO-MORROW WILL HAVE REAL RACE. m0; ‘The ‘The two Shamrocks were towed down the bay to-day, and after being joined by the Erin, which had arrived trom Newport, all proceeded to the Horseshoe {nside Bandy Hook, where they ap- chored. Sir Thomas Lipton said he would not take the yachts out for » sail to-day. ‘ ‘“Bhameock IIT. ts tn good shape now, al aid St Thomas, °T never expeset that accident when her traveller (as you call it here) mapped. We call that hor on the other sido. e's all right wore there is 60 Touch to do aboard tat we com, not go out until to-mor- rw morn The ie! a held twelve mes an hour off shore, due west, Sir Thomas wanted ut ty the grew a chance to ut decks.’ iter Ths, Pel with The Evening World reporter Sir Thomas went over to tue new boat. The baronet di not have any Getinguished psrsons call on him to-day, WIRES START BLAZE IN A TROLLEY SLOT. Cars Were Stalled from Park Place! to the Battery as Result of an Aceldent cn Broadway Line. Two electric condult wires crossed in the trolley slot at Broadway and Perk | place this afternoon and set « quantity of waste ablaze. Cars were stalled from Park placé to | the Battery for nearly twenty minutes defore the wires wore straightened out. | —_——<—_—_ Csar Abandons Trip to Rome, 8T. PETERSBURG, July 2.—The Czar has abandoned his proposed visit to! Rome, Drovislonally | autumn. Cuar epend the autumn in ‘the Crimea: ——{—= PRICE ONE CENT Fence of Manhattan Field Torn Down in Gale. and a Thousand Spectators Are Driven to Seek Shelter from Sudden Hurricane Which Came Down Upon Them. Hail as Big as Walnuts Accompanied. the Wind and Rain, and Thunder and Lightning Crashed and Flashed While the Storm’ Swept Over Upper New York. | After a day of terrific heat, which was added to by the hue midity in theyatmosphere, this afternoon a storm swept over New. It started in the north+ west of the ciy, crossing from New Jersey and striking the Polo Grounds at 2.3 o’clock. One hundred and fifty feet of the fence Manhattan Field were blown down and the thousand persons wl hud gone to the grounds were forced to seek shelter wherever as could, The storm was accompanied by hall, which fell to the size of ae in Harlem, breaking windows and covering the streets. Great forl tongues of lightning played about the buildings in Upper New York the storm swept southeast over the city. The sky was darkened and were necessary in all the office buildings in Lower New York long the rain fell in torrents, i The coming of the storm was heralded by a heavy blue-black cloua that hung over the city to the northwest, and the puffs of wind hats and all things blowable and sent them sky high. Panama hats were witisked off the heads of persons in and sent to the height of skyscrapers. A panama hat in its flight from come plece unknown in the preliminary stage of the storm went sailing past the eleventh floor of the World Building on its filght toward Brooklym, along with pieces of newspaper and bits of wood. The storm, which began with what the Weather Bureau termed @ thunder shower, was followed by a downpour of rain that was a cloudburst, It fell as though the skies had opened, and the water, driven by the wind, prevented person seeing more than @ block. It was a gray cloud of rain that obscured everything more than one hundred yards away, In Brooklyn the downpour of rain was as great as in Manhattan, while Jersey, too, was storm-swept. : At the Polo Grounds the storm was at its worst. Half an hour before time to call the game a cloudburst and tornado struck upper New York with a terrible force. The Giants had just cantered on the field and about 1,000 people were inside when forked lightning as: clear across the heavens, followed by a deafening crash. Aimost instantly a huge volume of water descended, filling the ee closure with three inches of water in a moment of time. The first stroke : | of Hglitning burned out all the telephones in the neighborhood and caused — ‘@ panic, not only in the Polo Grounds but all over the locality. There was no chance to seek shelter, as every seat on the grandstand and bleachers was soaked, at the same time the wooden structures were shaken to their foundations. A bansom containing Louis Mann and his wife, Clara Lippman, cap sized in front of the gate, but Capt. Halpin pulled both of them out unin- jured. At the height of the storm in Harlem the lightning struck the Lan- caster apartment-house, West End avenue and One Hundred and Sixth street. It ran down a three-foot chimney, giving the tenants a scare and stunning the janitor, Robert Fleishauer, and his wife and child. There were pone injured and the place was not set on fire. The tenants were ‘talon down in the elevators and when quict wes restored returned to their rooms. Lightning struck the corner of the roof of the huge apartment-house at No. 1987 Seventh avenue this afernoon. A shower of bricks and mortar was poured Into the street; but no one was injured. The flagpole on the building at Greene street and Washington place was struck by lightning and shattered. For a few minutes there was ® panic among the several hunpdred girls emloyed there. The building opposite the Central Bank was struck by lightning and @ York which at imes resembled a tornado. (Continued on Second Page.) All June Records Beaten. Last month was the greatest June in the history of The Evening World’s comparisons of advertising. During the month The Evening World carried 1,012%4 columns of paid display advertising—400 columns more than in June last year, and 35434 columns more than the highest record for any June in the history of the paper. Every newspaper counting-room keeps a record of the ad- vertising done in all the papers of the city as well as its own, The following is the record of The Evening World for each June during the past five years: No. of Cols. of “2 Year. Advertising, June. 1899 . 1 1900.05 #1 1902i.. 612% nc pitts aha a “Get the Habits? Got eae Ss other paper in New York,