The evening world. Newspaper, July 29, 1903, Page 1

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| \ i \ — | | } ' [“ Circulation Books Open to Al.” | : PRICE ONE CENT. | a DID D of Inciting Bulli ‘ Inspector McCtusky said to-day that Mie office had accumulated a mass of evidence of the most convincing kind to prove that David Lamar, the wealthy] | Wall street operator, had hired “Monk | Bastman and Joseph Brown to commit) @ brutal assault upon James McMahon,| the coachman employed by Lamar at| his summer home in Long Branch, for, which the two rufans are under ar-| rest. Both prisoners have been positively] {@entified by McMahon and James Mc-/ Gill, the bartender of the Long Branch ‘Hotel, who picked them out from al , tlie of eleven men of similar stamp. Evidence Against Lamar, ‘According to McClusky, however, the | Mentification is but one thread in the | mesh of testimony the police have suth- | ered against Mr. Lamar. Police Head- | quarters detectives learned, said Inspec- tor McClueky, that several days before (McMahon was set upon and beaten ‘Lamar drove to Bennett's saloon, at Beventh avenue and Forty-first street, and had an interview with a prize fighter, whom he endeavored to engage + to “do up’ MoMahon. Though the re- ward offered was tempting,—tae prize-| fighter stated that he was not in that line of business. Then, says Inspector McClusky, La- mar was seen to drive away from the} Seventh avenue saloon and make a tour) of the east side haunts of “Monk” East-| man and his gang. ‘The next link in tite police chain of evidence Is found in the testimony of James McGill, the bar- tender of the Long Branch Hotel. McGill says that a few days before the assault Lamar came to him and told him that two men answering the de- goriptioa of Eastman and Brown would @ome to Long Branch, and they were AVID HIRE TWO THUGS? Inspector McClusky Accuses Wall Street Man LAMAR | es to Beat Man Who Whipped Him. that they orderal. The two men a cordingly visited the hotel and feasted and drank without stint, Mr, Lamar paying for It, according to the bartender. A Telephone Conversation. After the assault, says Inspector Mc- Clusky, Eastman came to New York and called up the broker on the telephone, saying he had got safely out of New Jersey and was in New York. The millionaire Is said to have replied, “Al! right, don't fear arrest.” To-day a member of the firm of Stern and Sporberg, lawyers, of No. 69 Wall] street, called at Police Headquarters and announced that he bad been tained to defend Eastman and Brown. Inspector McClusky declares that when the two prisoners were notified of this they both stated positively that they had not employed any one connected with the firm to defend them, ‘The two prisoners deny having as- saulted McMahon, McClusky says, how- ever, that they are waverin, He says that Eastman was overheard to say that if Lamar “four flushes and don’t stick by them," they will do him up as they did MoMahon, The Beginning of the Trouble. ‘The assault on McMahon occurred af- ter a tight be had with Lamar, Me- Mahon had refused to run after Mrs. Lamar's dog who hac escaped from the carriage. MeMahon says Mr, Lamar at- tacked him. Howe: the’ encounter Mtared the broker was badly beaten, oth his cyes were blackened and he fs knocked down several times, ‘Jsrom the evidence I have obtained sald Inspector McClusky in conclusio “eis very clearly shown that Liimar ‘ived ‘Monk’ Eastman and Jo- seph Brown to ‘do up’ James McMahan, It is not at all unlikely that before the day is over Lamar will be under arrest by the New Jersey authorities.” stman and Brown were arraigned by Detective-Sergt. Duggan in the Cen- tre Btreet Court before Magistrate Om to have everything to eat and drink men. Upon the deective's request bo men were remanded back to Police Headquarters. MAN IN RIVER MAY HAVE BEEN SLAIN Body of a Well-Dressed lem Bearing Marks of Violence and with the Pockets Turned Inside Out. The body of an elderly man who was) apparently in good circumstances In life was found in the Harlem River to-day, | and the belief of the police is that he) qountediy caused came to his death through foul play. | py r Although well d-essed, no money was found upon the corpse and the pockets of the coat were turned inside ou Capt, John Meehan, of the bi who found the body of the m Adolphe Oppenhym, saw a body floatin dn the river off Que Hundred and Fifty- seventh streot, He called Policeman) Carberry, of the One Hundred Fifty-second strect station, and together e corpse 10.1 ng man look nd about sixty-five years of zh ing 140 pounds. He tall and had gray Nh tache. He wore a gray tw trousers, an outhas underwear was of 091 qv and and | found drowned. y mus: | Man Found in the Har- to his identity. The body had been In the water less than three days. amination of the body disclosed ts on the head and neck that we'e un- by violence at the is of another, The wounds are of uch a nature that they could mot have been caused by any boat navigating tne Harlem River. Besi the hands were clenched across the chest as though the man had been thrown Into the river at the end of a desperate struggle. No description of missing men In the hands of the police fits that of the man The body of George Placa, five years old, of Spuyten Duyvil, was found floating in Spuyten Duyvil Creek to-day near W float. The boy |s supposed to have fallen in the water early last evening A tughoat captain who looked at the |body while It was In the water awal- on from the Morgue, sald he In a pocket of his Ife and |thought it was that of a man named a white handkerchief with bive dots on| Re ily, He didn't know much about the border were found, In his cuffs he | Reilly save that the man had a daughter wore gold buttons marked with the in- PLL babs rooklyn. This. was Bol nly attempt at td - {Jal “J,” which furnishes the only clue | ing the day. Seaerebe ge A = pols HAS TWO Joseph Pelsocze Arre the First, but Cou Him for Joneph Peisocze, twenty-three years old, a wire worker, of No. 537 Hast One Hundrod and Eighth street, was ar- Taigned in the Harlem Court to-day on the complaint of his wife, Suste, who !s thirty-three years old, who accused him of non-support. The woman also accused her husband of being married to her sister Katie, who 1s ten years younger than she. and produced a letter in court which read in part: ‘Da not destroy our happiness. Let me live in peace with my husband. I Hl pay for the divorce if you want to wet one. As the woman could not bring uny further proof that her husband had married her sister, and the prisoner said he was only living with the woman and wax not married to her, Magistrate Zel- Yer said he could not entertain the big- emy complaint that Mrs, Pelsocse want- ed to make. ‘Mhe woman sald she had been married to the prisoner a little over three years ago in Hungary. He came to this coun- * try and she had not heard from him since. The man said that his mother m4 es +2 SISTERS: a AS HIS WIVES. sted on the Charge of rt Refuses to Hold Bigamy. dead, so he thought he was free to do as he liked, but he could not produce the letter from his mother, jhas a child two years old by him, while her sister Katle has one that la one year old and of which Pelsocze is satd to be the father. The prisoner was ordered to pay his wife $ a week. —<———__— BEER “EXHIBIT A” IN COURT. CHOICES LOSE AT JAMAICA; L CROWDS SMAL THE TALENT GUT OF LUCK AT JANA Favorites Fall by the Wayside at Tim Sullivan’s Track—M. Theo a Winner in the Third on Account of Haack’s Bad Ride on Black Socks, DUELIST WINS FIRST RACE, FAVORITE RUNS FOURTH. Ella Snyder Turned the Trick in the Second, Beating Out Sambo, the First Choice, in a Terrific Drive, with Ethics Third After a Hard Battle. 29. 190% NEW YORK. WEDNESDAY, JULY SEE { ef Circulation Books Open to All.’’ } GAMES GIANTS = BOSTON- - {WW YORK OSTON sec --"- 5 a. 1 —5 1 BROOKLYN--PHILADELPHIA PHILADELPHIA .... .... 150200 BROOKLYN ...... -.... 3.100120)! At Pittsburg—End of third inning: Cincinnati, 1; Pittsburg, 5. At Chicago—End of fifth inning: St. Louis, 1; Chicago, 1. eg een ye AMERICAN LEAGUE. INVADERS WIN INVADERS ....-. -.---- 33001340 1—15 1 300 4—14 BOSTONG2eresen ae cercnl Online At Detroit—End of fourth: St. Louis, 1; Detroit, 4. At Philadelphia—End of eighth: Washington, 4; Phila., 4 pw. LATE DETAILS GIANTS-BOSTON GAME. i B 1 3 THE WINNERS. FIRST RACE—Duelist (5 to 2) 1, Wealth (6 to 1) 2, Invincible 3. Time 1.14, SECOND RACE—Ella Snyder (7 to 1) 1, Sambo (5 to 2) 2, Ethics 3, Time—1.46 4-5. THIRD RACE—M. Theo (5 to 1) 1, Black Socks (3 to 1) 2, Flower, 3. Time—1.08 3-5. FOURTH RACE—Rosetint (5 to 2) 1, Duke of Kendall (even) 2, Sheriff Bell 3. Time—1.4/ 3-5. FIFTH RACE—Sallor Knot (6 to 5) 1, Ned Moore (8 to 1) 2, Donnelly 3. Time—1.15, SIXTH RACE—Courtmaid (8 to 1) 1, Lord Badge (3 to 1) 2, Florham Queen 3. Time—1.46 3-5, (Special to The Evening World.) JAMAICA RACE TRACK, July 2.— The players had another hard day at Jamaica. The talent started off well by making Duelist an 8-to-5 favorite for the first. Duelist won, but by the short- est of heads, after Fuller had given his backers heart disease by overconfidence, fambo was the pubiie choice in the second, his colors were lowered by Ella Snyder, a 10-to-1 chance. ‘The third race furnished several good things, including Clear the Arena, which was played from 100 down to 8 to.1. Black Socks was the favorite. M. Theo, an overdue good thing, was returned the winner, thanks toa clever ride by Odom, Who outfinished Haack on the favorite. Duke of Kendal was made an even money favorite for the Dunton Stakes, with Rosetint second choice at 5 to 2, ‘The Duke lost through a very bad ride, the worst exhibition Odom has made on an Eastern track, Roxetint was accord- ingly returned an easy winner, and the talent went down again. FIRST RACE, Stx furlongs St.Hit. Fin. 1 105. 2 gi Muyineible, 107, 44 Sra fever, 06 no 8 58 ¢ 677 +1 2N8 Start good. Won easlly, Time—1.14. ‘The field wes away to a poor start with Roue showing In front. Duetet soon raced to the front and led the ied by two lengths to the stretoh, with Roue and Wealth heading the others, Fuller was over confident at the eighth pole and eased Duelist up. Wealth cosed with a rush and nearly nipped him-on the post. Invingible waa third, @ length away. SECOND RACE. Mile and seventy yards, His wite | 8a Cops Ci In « Halaf Barrel to Convict Driver of Theft. Lawyers, clerks and the Magistrate in the Lee Avenue Court, Witliamsburg, to-day were surprised to see two big po- Lcemen carry In a half barrel of beer. ‘The beer was an exhfbit of evidence against John Bastian, a driver for the Scharman Brewery, ‘whose employers accused him of stealing. Bapect More Dynamite Outragen, SALONICA, European Turkey, July 29, —Despatohes sey that elghteen Bulgari- ans have left Sofia for Balonica to renew the dynamite outrages. Several of them upposed to have alveady arrived “The rumor he caused great anx- McGann singled. Mertes popped short. Babb got to second on Batty’s wild throw to first. McGann reaching third. Dunn fanned. Batty handled Gilbert's grounder. No runs. Sixth Inning—McGinnity threw Aubrey out. Malarkey was hit. He got third on Cooley’s single and scored on Tenney’s safety. Warner caught Tenney sleeping. Stanley flied to short. One run. Warner was out to Tenney. MoGinnity fanned. Batty Browne out. ‘No runs. threw, Seventh Inning—Carney died, Babb to McGann. Babb caught Moran. Batty singled..,Greminger died to McGinnity. No runs. Bres singled and was out on McGann’s pop to pitcher, via double play. Mertes flied to centre. No runs. Eighth Inning—Aubrey tripled and scored on Malarkey’s sin- gle to Gilbert. Cooley flied. Babb caught Tenney’s liner and doubled at first. One run. LATE RESULTS AT ST. LOUIS. Fourth Race—Kindred 1, Bas d’Or 2, Hilee 3. ee ea en, AT HAWTHORNE. < re yg Fourth Race—Sidney C. Love 1, Warte Nicht 2, Talpa 3. re aren) Vf) | | Miss Shylock, 112, Gannon, 13! Clear if eee * % +2 SUNSTROKES TO-DAY; bien iio 3 §| COOLER TO-MORROW. h 313. i | Btart good. Won driving. Time—I,08 3-6 | Black Socks was favorite for the third jTace and was defeated by a bungling, ride by Haack. Glad Smile had the early speed, as usual, and tin-canned up the! Kstretch four lengths jn the lead, with the favorite second, followed by M.| Moses Sachs, forty-four years old, of Theo and Flower. At the head of the s r 1 j stteteh "Ging: Smile ‘began toe die “away No, 64 East One Hundred amt Tenth ‘New York Is Not the Hottest Place 'y America by a Good Deal and Will Have Relief. and Black Socks and M. ‘Theo drew | treet, was overcome by the heat at clear of the field. In a hard drive 11 One Hundred and Tenth sircet and 6 wire Odom clearly outrode Haack| ‘Third avenue to-day. H take and landed M. ‘Theo a winner by © head.| to Harlem Hospital. ‘The mereur ane Black Socks was three lengths before : sreury. Flower. {gan climbing with the sun, but there FOURTH RACE. | will be showers and thunderstorms to Mile and a sixteenth, | Right and to-morrow, If the Weather Betting. | Bureau has read the dope book vor- Starters, 1 eye. it 7 ee ite Goce ee ae P| rectly, The sharps in this business sa Duke of’ Kendal, i 2 ‘that an area of disturbance now central Berle Be, 15, ui 4 a over Lake Superfor is moving east and at 108, 7 6 thunders! have occurred from 1 ber, 98, 6 6 ™ ennessee, nile fi Ur esate RUDE RO ney Morlda to Tennessee, while (ie teins Start good. Wo neaslly. Time—147 i has risen from M na to Rosetint Jumped away a length in the} lead and, “with Sheriff Bell posketing | Danis dostest Duke of ‘Kendal on the rail, Rosetnt | increased her lead up tae dackatretch,! Place in the country to p mere Odom could not get through with the, cury recording 48 at £ A. ) be tem- Buse sri oad te. taht eng ay aroun rature has fallen in the West and pletely out of the running. Odom! Northwest, Temperatures at's A, df: got him golng a again the Duke was |New York, 70; Boston, Albany, 68, nearly ten lengths behind tae Jeader.| Buffalo, 70; Philadelphia, 74; Weshing- ton, 74; Charieston, 82; Jacksonville, 78; New Orleans. #0; Galveston, 82; Cincin- nat, 78; St. Lous, Kansas Ut Chicago, 70° Omen Paul. 6i. three lengths, ve: dal was the same distance before Sheriff Sell, third. FIFTH RACE. are ga od Six furlongs, ms WEATHER FORECAST. 2 § | ey a 8 3] § wo sof Moreenst for the thirty-six Gold & 3) 10) | hours ending at 8 P. M. ‘Thars- Eclectie, ‘107,’ Coohi 7 60 | s , | Fiande ‘Up, 100. Ha i a day, for New York City and ‘The B, Monarch, 102, 0b) | vieinity: Showers and thunder- the cone He ter Me Hit 10) {olf Storms to-night avd Thursday; crowe a rin, Es : Snyder and Lelpsic jumped away 1 FH 3 HW tr uth to southwes? winds, front to make a runaway race of It, toon 97, $14 150 60 At the home turn Ella Snyder was two | olaement, 5) B18 i 00 $0) lengths before the Meld and going very | Star. good. Won eeaaliy. Time~1.16 | ————— | easily, with Leipsic in second plac 4 ne bixtesnth pole Bemnoo mot out] pAent, Water raced away in the lead: Trotting Match Postponed. ‘the bunch from nowhere and with great leaps and bounds overtook Ella Snyder with every stride and had there been ten feet more to go Sambo would have won, Four lengths away there was a great fight for third money, Bthica by a head froin etting the decision Polat, who was a head vefore Home- stead. THIRD RACE. 4 a halt furlongs, ee, 2 65 iy St to 1 shot, and followed by Tithonle, a 20) Pe Sailor Knot, the favorite, This, was the ALBANY, N.Y. July 2 order to the far turn, where Donnelly | id Park track to-d Absuined command, with Silent Water) s¢ lund Pa Miser I second and the ‘favorite third. Hi et eet area Of squeoxed through on the rail at the hy PISA ELISE SA Oe dealt the stretch and, riding gilt edge fin-| poned on account © Ish, landed Sailor Knot a winner by | morow: ——=———- Ned Moore struggled up four lengtis. nd] on the rail and Just beat Donnelly ah. sVaterhoy at Naratnga for the place. After the race Fuller, who bad the moun was BARATOGA, Y., July @—Roth i S:nathe Mocheeney aul Haggin’s Paar teat ne | Water’ razost, toe Late Be NA etree ye getan gue | aby wiatt ty ing Baraigga Mandicep, to [Fuher wa 'aécoriously, rous rider, be run -on Monday. next, . ,| succeeded in beating the Quakers by a ,| For some reason or other, Mac, hows the fastest teams in the Hable to come back with | day." MV CINNITY UH THE BOX FOR THE CANTS McGraw Puts the “Iron Man”, on the Slab to Hold Down’ Hard-Hitting Beaneaters and to Turn Run of til Luck that Has Followed New Yorkers. GIANTS GET FIRST RUN | SCORED IN THE SECOND. | | Three Thousand Fans Faithful’ to Home Team and Root as Hard as They Did at the First} of the Season, When Even the, Pirates Were Pie for McGraw | THE BATTING ORDER. New York. Browne, rf. Bresnahan, MeGann, 1b. Mertes, If. 4, cf. ¢ Dunn, Gilbert Warner, c. MeGinnity, p. Malar Umpire—Johnstone. (Special to The Evening World.) POLO GROUNDS, N. ¥., July 29.— Hope has nearly fled from the hearts of New York fans, so long have they waited to see the Glants begin to start to get ready to win. But the fever took such @ strong hold {n the early season, when even Pittsburg was ple for MeGraw's men, that? 3,000 turned the atile this just one park of faith left in the home team, MoGraw had tried every combination Possible since the panit ber:1 9.4 none was successful except tat one with Ros.oe Miller in the rectangle. Miller rattling displty of judgment in curves, Gialding and ‘batting. The crowd cheered him to-day as he warmet co and requested McGraw to give the for- mer Detroit wonder another chance. ever, does not have entire confidence in Roscoe, and after watching him sweat a while turned away and argued innity or Miller. this game,’ Capt. John. “To let Boston run away with three straight is more than I can stand. I'm not discouraged, mind you, put I hate to see my pitchers working | themselves to death with no results. 1 ‘think we will come round in time, but | our hitting is certainly rank and there | seems to be no way of working the men to a brace up. I have hopes for the want to win WEATHER-Showern to-night and Thors@ay, GHT EDITION PRICE ONE CE MANY VICTIMS OF EXPLOSION ARE CHILDREN Little Ones Playing Near Scene of the Lowell Horror or Sheitered in Neighboring Houses Lose Their Lives When the Cartridge Com- pany’s Dynamite Magazine Blows Up. DEATH LIST NOW MODIFIED TO 15, WITH 9 UNACCOUNTED FOR, Harrowing Scenes When Carriages Laden with Mutilated Wounded Are Hurried to the Hospitals—Mothers Carry Bleeding Children from Their Wrecked Homes and! Run Hysterically Through the Streets. THE IDENTIFIED KILLED. FLYNN, WILLIAM, twelve years. M'DERMOTT, WILLIAM, ten years. GALLOWAY, JAMES, nine years, POORE, —. 4 GALLOWAY ROGERS, MICHAEL, ten years, MeDERMOTT, GEORGE, four years. | RIGGS, Mrs, WILLIAM, Riverside | MOORE, CHARLES, — Park. : | PACKSON, —. ROTEAU, —. LOURLE, —. | SULLIVAN, JOHN B. THE IDENTIFIED MORTALLY INJURED. PENROSH, Mrs. VICTORIA. GALLAGHER, —, little girl. ecnnivise MDERMOTT, —, little girl LOWELL, Mass., July 29.—An explosion which demolished the maga zine of the United States Cartridge Company, in Tewksbury, shortly after 9 o'clock this forenoon resulted in a casualty list estimated at noon a@! twenty-five dead and fifty-five injured. * This was modified at 2 o'clock when the number of dead was estimate®, at fifteen, with nine missing. At that hour the number of severely ims” ed was placed at thirty, although many others were slightly bruised jure cut by: flying glass. ‘Phe financial loss was placed at $40,000, only part of which ts covered by insurance, : The concussion was felt even in Boston, forty miles away, 2nd at Ex-’ eter, N. H., which is a greater distance from Lowell. MILITIA CALLED OUT. ‘The city was thrown into a panic and to restore even a semblance of order it became necessary to summon four companies of the “State militia. © Within 100 yards of the site of the exploded magazine were twenty i houses, and beyond that the buildings were very close together. Every, structure within a quarter of a mile was wrecked, being torn’ within and without as though bombarded with siege guns. 4 Byery human being who was in these houses at the time was more of hurt and some were killed outright. Four of the dead are boys who were swimming in the Concord Rivest at the time of the explosion. ‘They were killed outright. Their heads were cut off and the bodies were terribly mutilated. The bodies were picked uy less coming trip to Boston, fo? this team | plays better ball on the road than at |home. A few weeks will tell the tale.” Buckenberger, of the Boston team, at ithe gate this afternoon called down a wall-known Gotham rooter in great |shape. This rooter occupies a seat on “Knockers' Row.” the top right-hand bench on the grand stand, and though a good friend of the team Is a “fair weather man.” Every one of the Giant team comes In for his bitter denunciation, including McGraw, who he thinks now has some axe to grind by having the Giants lose. "You talk ke an old wi i | Buckenberger, the greates! periods snid that when we wont tne three weeks when these tamous pions could never get over six hits and @ couple of runs. “People were crying about the game being crooked, and could not under- stand why the world-beaters should Ko to pieces. Well, there was nothing crodked about it, Right afterward the champs struck their gait and won the pennant with a rlson finish, am not so well acquainted with this year's Giants, but Judging from their Werk at Boston I think they are one ut One rooter, who remains as when New Y ste Charles H.W he . Wilson's in the . the star left w Y a by reason tho When Eddie s agreed. that Doheny’s absence w materially cripple tie Term so that the pennant mighe tion a sure thing: ‘ play e should th AR» Wiest Pnalinge Cogtfad that McGinnity was some distance from the magazine plant, ‘The dwelling of Charles Le Blanc, on Bolton street, within the fire. belt, was one of those burned. Mr, Le Blanc was ill and confined to his! ‘Continued on Third Page.) ring Bresnahan and in a mix-up af {Rows Mertes eat nome, ‘walle, Babse | reached third, ann fanned. Three runs. more to be trusted mm a pinch, and 20] the Iron Man took on the Job with bad beginning. Cooley, the slugging left flel swung hard for @ Arive to centre and made on Tenney’s A hard punt nicely handled aan. Then the Giants or) Browne, did one of those t compels one to have! J in the team, From deep field Fourth Inning. Capt. Tenney retired to the tune of The Head Bowed Down." sick Gilbert nabbed Stanley's lightning aught « long fly off Stanley threw to third so accurately that | No runs. aise ¢ a foot or ie bag and Gilbert was hit by a pite! pa Dunn cavent with a foot wo ttins, | Warner popped to Greminger. MeGin Re WALLIN fOr ool as ot mpeed and nity singled to centre and Browne lined a good eve. He kept them close on to Aubrey, Gilbert rey mining second ie. wine, so that he could not sting to time to prevent a double py. Browne. 0 tne Gcorge retired ona. fly | han fanned at some wide ones. NoTuR& to second. Bresnahan cast a gloom over Fitth Inn the stands by it 0 be called out i on strik right In] Babb had his first assist off Mores. Batty McGinnity lodded to Batty, a clean bite being the result. The side went out om rattling double play from Gremingen ) Gilbert, to MeGann. No runs, a columas 4 end BD ara Babb ation ne NK DIDN'T COME? DRIVERS ON STRIKE. (© TR ries Krai) as M neat ed nothing, with ay sminger nsisted on Mertes walking, at for Poston, as Moran Aw wild to second, and Sam skinned third. The Bosto her got rhe passe, Ma 1,000 Men of Dodd's Express Went Qut for Shorter Hours—Possi- ble Trouble To-Morrow. drivers and helpers of rdds Express Company, better known the » York Transfer Company, a| went on strike this afte "| of the long hours they hi ‘The leaders say that th templated this movement for some time and will fight It to a finish, Trouble is ted to-morrow. One A thousand struck Aubrey out fu invaded right flel ist Bres also e from Cooley, No MoGinntty. drew the third pass from | Molarkey. Browne then got the Giants Ma iit) a fine swash to right that put caus! Toe on, the third station. | Bresnahat| o¢ the firm stated to an EB ning World Yoliowed with another eft, scoring) ° MHA Master A 3s reat ey Man. McGann tried ‘to sacri-| reporter that thes, woud ot men Ba Grominger leaped ten feet AML tne vieancles by to-morrow more a ned a foul pep with one har 7 tne: pean, 7 ve made the rankeat of all nis] (ine of the i ed thereon Bt trike ine Uiacharred for refusing: tot en dis an overloaded trucks w dling Browne out on a perte>t- steal to onitg. Mertes again Babb aingled over second, ly wa! ; ee

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