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Lr ‘ ) ASEBALL ( PRICE ONE CENT. -(ORDOF THENCE WON ARATOGA HANDICAP LIKE NEW TURF STAR 1 DEHNS Griffith Goes Into Box Against the Tigers, and After Being Hit for Three Runs Retires in Disgust. Belmont’s Colt Takes Stake Feature at Spa’s Opening with Supreme Ease, Galloping All the Way from Start to * Finish, Sysonby Proves Claim to Champion Among Youngsters in the Flash, and Heart's Desire Throws Jockey, Runs Away aud Is Easy Winner Afterward. (Special to RACE TRAC Lord of phe Vale burst upon the Tht Eventig World.) | , BARATOGA, Aug. 1 *} ture OTHER WINNERS, FIRST RACE—W, R. Condon (20 world at Saratoga this afternoon IK) tq 1) 1, Girdle (18 to 1) 2, Emergency a new star., Racegoers are extolling his) 3, Mimosa finished first ubt was vielory most enthush ly. ts! i equalified. héw no wonder ‘why. Waterboy waa! “Oielisiee withdrawn, Waterboy could not beat} this superd fon of Hastings at tne) S8COND RACE—Bonfire (6 to 2) weights assigned in the handicap. | 1, Coligny (3 to 5) 2, Only two fin. Lord of the Vale won the Saratow’, isned, Handicap wits such superb ease that) aniee the thoroughbreds behind him. hign-| THIRD RACE—Sysonby (2 to 5) 1, class as they were, looked like a lot of | Augur (8 to 1) 2, Glorifier 3. polo ponies. Lord of the Vale went to the start and strode along with a great) FOURTH RACE—Lord of the Vale hounding stride that kept him In front! (§ to 1) 1, Bad News (6 to 1) 2, the entire distance. He was under | Caughnawaga 3. wraps all the way. Lyne Was Never Worrled, FIFTH RACE—He. a Desire (15 Yyne merely Kept hold of his nead|¢g 29) 4, Mirthiess en (8 to 12 Zeala 3. and steered pameart way around the track. Lyne s never worried, He looked over his shoulder all the way. He was like an éngineer looking back at a long train, Not even when Bad) === News came through nto second plave Aid he worry In the least. The superd went Coli: animal under him never faltered, ‘And place came on like a great plece of racing) machinery. SIXTH RACE—Bale (7 to 1) 1, Uns masked (6 to 1) 2, Stuyve 3, who was remo and secured Sysonby by Six Lengths. ysonby ‘The Picket was the choice of the p'ung.' the Flash Sta better than | to 2 against the K front of the fleld and winnin, A re as freshly he stat A ry 4 houlder, stuel 0 Ton ‘ale until the ta: turn was reached. Then Bad News! moved through ss bunch very rapidiy and took second place. He was never able to close up ground In the stretch and had to be content with socond two lengths in front of Cau Ts aA a ie into t lace in the stretch, iy waa not at his best to-day. : x Heart’s Desire Good One, Heart's Desire threw Hildebrand on the 0 Re it and ran @ halt alte: vas caught and Yn at the ed with over ers in the handicap. He was heavily e backed. John A. Drake and John W. ty. ‘tiorther and’ Mildemrand inches Gates betting as much as they could get, strong combination, and it) was WH on at $ to 6, The Picket was off at the ae ieee ictte sai hae front tall of the bunch and the pace set by 0 ore Lord of the Vale was 20 fast that The! sitar tron tesona” eens Jatosa Picket could never make up the lost we 8 \ Oe Lieb 7 latter was ground. He got up as far as third in} Only owever, and came ho the atretch, but the effort told on fim | age rt me and he stopped in the last furlong. run through the stretch and beat him Bad Ride on Bad News & length and a halt, Bad News, who was strongly fancied, Lord of the Vale Galloped In. was the victim of a bad ride. Kelly vet Saratoga Handican favorite in is hema hgg agll agdbate dined £ TIA 1. erboy and inside and made ‘his run on the turn | we aad by all the bis plunge going up from the rear to second piace, Of the Vale ie nea mt i bay eas within the @istance covered by a fur-| quickly backs down to 5 Bad tong. Atricander, who was said to/ Nowe tnd ee have tmproved, showed nothing. Caughtewaga ran third, He was in the same position last year. Ve The Duryea stable lost Bumble Bee, @ creck. filly, early in the day, and that ‘accident seemed about to be repeated ‘when the filliee in the fifth race were going to the post. Heart's Desire, who was weartng the Duryea colors, threw Hildebrand and ran away, but was caught and remounted. She was not injured. Heart's Desire is superbly bred, being by Hamburg out of Admiration. She won her race very cally ; Mimosa won the opening event, but was disqualified for a foul, which the} t stewards sew and others did not, This gave oa race to W. R. Condon, a long nite ana br at: Ag 2 isaving | ia little incident of thie sort by her fleld soon after he vad ane vee and a halt in tn fron Sales Wins Last Race. Unmasked went to the front and win- niny 8 Bec Bonfire won the steeplechase, Jim-| 9nd a len it of oe added starter, fell and was so| Zeale. bad! that he had to be di rt Fed. His rider, Connelly, suff brok n@. Bonfire finish ne, others either falling or Bair closed strong Sat “aay Mg Pg fusing. won easily by two | PY nid Bigg os was muoh better Brat masked, believed it would be,~ Pnearly 10,08 people present," was fine and the Mirack fast. aise Wins, Ie Disqualified, The eat started badly in the frat race. el ek bf oe & strong fa- Vortie, and hy eed h Mimosa won she did jet any money. Mimosa ere a ToL but went back t au backed down to 18 to at) plok Bernard had the heaviest back- | fill ne Castalia, ‘Girdle and Leto! p | romaie > Bd turn, aay tl hdebrand Levy hare Sat ito until ung ie. e are The other ung A through on the rail, he A) her lead, and o1 an easy winner to the laat (Paul). & to & Condon ciosed Haldee, 19t (Aker), ate ! and 7 to 10. secon, ie, iJ. to 1 and 4 to 1, third, Mme ei " THIRD RACE-—Handicap furlongs.—Hopefull Mins, cy te tol and 7 to 5, won: Colum M. Johnson), 3 to 1'and 4 to who w: sth and a half in front of Btuyve. —a RESULTS AT FORT ERIE. RACE TRACK, ug. L The races run of as two-year-old FORT ERIE, A ere to-day result hy follows: ay RACE—Malder ir, til aye, ‘4 to 1 and Tappist, 102 (D. Boland), 1% 4 second; Auction, 110 (Treu-, land 3 to 2 third) Time “SECOND RACE--Four-vear-olda and and 1 to % won, was two lei front’ of Girdle. a the gr vy was a veneers he part of wands, a a Cah rlication ot Minos r Di Appears that ™ rv * Dream, 104 oor ee on the ee Sgeratreis :, . third, "timeniie | Condon} FOU KTH Cs was Bete Gels yecand nad furlong. heward, ior Preece ive Emergency third. > 6 ® sg land 3 aL 108 3 iNtbieky ae tedeaie by ‘e paepiee Mertligg (Paub. 9 to and 4 toe inna its usual horri- Peal third. inished, Jim-| FIFTH RACE—Four-year-olds e—Launay, iv (Nidlick), 6 to 1 and 2 to 1, won; Martin, QMtunro), 1 to - and 4 fo 1, second; Henfonso, 9 (Treubel), 5 to 2 and 4 to 1, third. Time—t.4 i. 1 re RACK” For <year-olda and hd (Mundo), 2 | up; one best. | bleachers. and @ half furionga—Bdna |t ; six furlongs.—Blue Grass Girl, NO and) foi |" gd tt te.0 ol dow! poet “WILD BILL” DONOVAN ON SLAB AGAINST VISITORS. Up to the Fifth Inning He Has Team from New York at His Mercy, and Hits Are Very Scarce, BATTING ORDER. Detrott New York Barrett, of Dougherty, if MeIntyre, If. Keeler rf Conghitn, ab, lberfeld, as. Crawford, rf. Anderson, 1b. e ‘arr, 1b, ihama, 2b, Lowe, 2. Pulte, ef, Drill, ¢ ‘onray, ab, O'Leary, 88, teinow, © Donovan, p. iriffith, p. Umpires—Dwybr and King, Attendance ~2,(00. (Special to The Evening World. DETROIT, Mich. Aug. 1.—Manager | Griffith and his team dropped into town to-day after being on the road since yesterday morning. The men were dusty and Ured, but their leader said a little thing Uke that would not hurt them much, Griffith considers thie the best with Boston one game distant from New York and Chicago. He laments the accidents which kept Elberfeld, Fultz and Gangel out of games and claims that with their services contin- ually he would have been way out in front, } There is a great deal of newness about the locals, Bill Coughiln aigned a contract and was out for morning practice, wheh means the release of Greminger shortly, Lowe counts on two of the four with New York, whieh wil keep that team out of first place. ‘The Detroit players gave ex-Manager Barrow a gold locket studded with dia- monda to show that they liked him, no matter what has been sald Owing to the fact that the Tigers j [have lowt an averagfe of three out of |four games for three weeks the at- tendance war "or large, '90 heing there when piay dega Firet In Dougherty w ton a high foul to Carr. McIntyre raced in and got Keeler's pop up back of short. Elber- feld mot @ great hand when he came to bat, but the best he could do waa to contribute a fly to his rival O'Leary NO RUNS. Barrett retired on a grounder, Will- fams to Anderton, McIntyre sent a line fl) to right, and Keeler just got ‘k ip time to catch It. The crowd again welcomed Coughlin, and he re- sponded with e bunt, which neither Con. He | TY for Kletnow could reach, Coughlin attempted to steal, and was Kkeinow to Williams. NO BOM, + Second I MoIntyre made a wondertul catch of Anderson's foul off the edge of the Williams hit nothing but air. Fults fied to Crawford. NO RUNB. Crawford grounded to Biberfeld and was out at first, Carr coaxed a base out, second by Lowe, Williams to Blber- feld. Drill got a hand when he came RACING # SPORTS a SPORTS | fam [Circulation Books Open to Ail” | "WAVNL 'HIGHLANDERS AND (FOR RACING CHART AND OTHER Playing Manager | Daratory to making popcorn candy this afternoon, on dalla off Griff, but was forced at} Japi NEW bW YORK, MONDAY, AUGUST 1, 1904 | HIGHLANDOERS VS. DETROIT HIGHLANDERS .........0 0.00 DETROIT ..............003 0 BOSTON AT fw ikwar 0 0 0 0 0 BCSTON.. .. .........00300100 48 CLEVELAND.. .. ......000000000—0 | NEWARK AT BUFFALO. NEWARK .......-...-..-001000001—2 BUFFALO ......-......00003100 —4 At St. Louis (A. L.)—End eighth: Philadelphia, 3; St. Louis 0 At Detroit (A. L.)—End seventh: New York, 0; Detroit, 6. At Chisago (A. L.}—End eighth: Washington, 2; Chicago, 4 ——— +44 LATE RESULTS AT ST. LOUIS. Fifth Rise—Argosy 1, Franco 2, Garrett Wilson 3, ARMS AND LEGS BROKEN BY A FALL, ‘ohn Carroil fell from the third floor of a building at Likerty and ('assau strets this afternoon. Both legs, both arms and race he has ever known in baseball. | tis jaw were broken. +e BURNED WHILE MAKING CANDY. William J, Madden and Charles Carpenter, members of the firm of William J. Madden, & Co., of No. 15 Desbrosses street, were watching ‘a large kettle of oil and sugar as it — ye en the ’ cettle boiled over and both. men were badly burned. AUSGTANG CHECK JAP N FOUR ONS BATTLE After Suffering Many Repulses the Mi- kado's Troops Resumed the Attack To-Day, but the Czar’s Forces Hurld- ed Back the Japanese Infantry. ST. PETERSBURG, Aug. 1,.—Against an overwhelming force of anese, comprising three armies attacking from three sides, Gen, Kuro- patkin still holds his position around Haicheng and Liaoyang. The Japan- to bat and responded fittingly with al ese were frequently repulsed yesterday and Saturday at various points nice single over Conréy's head. O'Leary struck out. NO RUNS. ‘Thi Inning. Conroy walkelt, ‘nen Lowe off a wonderful high bounder to » Who gould wet back to first base. the bag and got Kleinow, and Con thinking {t was @ fly ball, started back, oe Lowe touched him, making a double pay, one made the first meals ie ae is ald Iked, | a liner to centre, to centre, riling rien ‘* grounder to Carr Donovan bunted to Grimth and away with It. Barrett singled, Mcln. tyre was ait AL a bases were . Dougherty. and! nlay. Crawford’ and Mgnt out to = al third base. started to . down and stopped + th pin we and . but was finally sate ‘on third. when Lowe made a bad throw. 4 EB out. O'Leary to Carr. Grif quit in disgust and et nh left. pBander, ramen in to fi ame. Drill open fi which Keeler, feuds but waa caught napping, } to, Anderson. Donovan’ laid down an- vther safe bunt. Barret was out, Elher- feld to Anderson. N Fith Puttmann was out, Cleary to Carr. Dougherty wax out. Donavan to Carr. | Keeler got away with a awell bunt atx | feet in front of the plat Elberfeid | out, Lowe to Carr. NO R | Mefntyre singled. Coughlin sacrificed, einow to Anderton, Crawford wan from Puttnam to Anderson. Cart RUNS, hyo out the « "la A bunt, | Done Williams hit nately Ito abort. “Pults. singled to deep right. ‘Conroy watked, Alling ine bases ry. ~en x mg ¥ Belo 4 er on Kicinow ‘nt * the artillery duel lasted all day, Lowe covered with th: Hiched Dall and the| twent: along a battle front fifteen miles in length. A renewal of the attack was made to-day. There were frequent charges by the Japanese infantry, and! but the fourth day of the battle ended Russians still holding their positions, The satisfaction felt by the Emperor and the general staff at the Japanese setback is overshadowed by news of the death of Gen. Count Keller, commanding the Russian forces. He chose an exposed point from which to watch the battle and was struck by a Japanese shell, dying in y minutes. «| GREATEST BATTLE OF WAR. This engagement between the combined Japanese forces in Manchuria and the Russian army is the greatest battle of the campaign, and the re- sult of & Russlan defeat would be extremely disastrous, The Japanese force {s enormous, and Gen, Kuropatkin reports that more troops are being land- e@ in the vicinity of Newchwang, from which point they can be hurried io up to reinforce the depleted ranks of those who have borne the brunt of the Pele fighting. The Russian artillery has done magnificent work in the battle, fre- quently forcing thie Japanese to shift thelr positions, Japanese artillery. (Cuntinued on Second Page.) _ "awe ST. LOUIS WINNERS, WORLD'S FAIR RACE TRACK, 8T. LOUIS, Aug. 1.+Following are the re. sults of the races scheduled for to-day FIRST RACE—Four and a halt tur- longs.--Dave Stahl, 12 to} close and $ to 1 ploce, firsi; Allee Platt, & to 2 place, second; Anadarco % to ? show. third. HARLEM WINNERS. HARLEM RACE TRACK, CHT- CAGO, Aug. L—The races scheduled to be run here to-day resulted as follows FIRST RACE—Six furlongs —Geran- tum, 9 to 1 and 6 to % frat, Judge Hieies § to} and 2 to 1, second; Julia 16 to Land 7 to 2, third, Thme—t.15, ig ets RACK—steepbechiages short | pie. 2 course,—Handyice, § to 5 and 8, to 19, Won, Trenct the Mere, Tto Land's to 2) BRCOND RACE—Six furtongs—Por-| second: Ainin Ciel, It to 1 and 4 to 1, Titel asdbiel an hin vii third, “Time—3% } 20g Fe Beet: Kilo. 4 te! THIRD RAC arden City Handi-|* ne115 V2, capi ate furlong: mericano, 4 to | and firat (an added starter); Clifton One mile and seventy {ito 19 and 1 to second: Gyp-| Yard ' » 1 cloae and 3 na fo to Land M to 1, third, Time) tare, all RTH RACK~-One mile and 4 » ox A sat | FOURTH RACE ~ One ve t dat ¢ to F | Btore 2 wm db ehwe. 2 oy + 2 to 1 and 8 wo 5} Lady Biriinmere even, secand, cy j igeat, ows, third, Timemt."t 14 ae [sates MAY LOCK OUT. / ALL BUILDERS If Strikers Do Not Yield the Employers’ Association Will Shut Down the Entire indus-| try of Manhattan. GREAT BITTERNESS IS SHOWN ON EACH SIDE. Members of Seventeen Unions Are Called On to Strike and Operations on Buildings Are Interrupted. dn anticipation of a general lockout) tn the building trades the Bullding | ‘Trades Alliance ordered the unions aMilated with that or to call their men off all jobs of the George A. Puller Construction Com- pany, The strike was declared an hour after the men had assembled for work to-day, and the following buildings in course of construction @ tied up im | mediately: The Times Building, Forty-second street and Broadway, Sturtevant Bulld- Ing, Twenty-ninth street and Broadway; Trinity Building, next to Trinity Chureh, New York Hippodrome, Forty-third Street and Broadway, and Taber Bulld- ing, Wall and Pear! streets, Philip Weinsheliner, President of the Bullding Trades Alliance, who declared the strike on the subway last week, la responsible for the atrike to-day sibly he called the men out be a claim that the Fuller Company has’ ries and trimming yards, Steike to Forestall Lockout. ‘The real reason is because the Board of Governors of the Bullding Trades ‘The been using stone from non-union quar). PRICE ONE CENT, MT TOUGHT HG BUILOINGA i “Flatiron” ral Its ts Fagialta) si the General Post-Office and Several Oth Downtown Structures Are Damaged Dut the Sweep of the Remarkable Storm, THIRD AVENUE “L” TIED UP; BOLT STARTS FACTORY F i Traffic Suspended While Fire that Si Was Being Put Under Control--S Women Scared by the _lerrilying Lightning held undisputea sway over New York this after | the most severe electrical storm of the summer raged. Many in the lower part of the city were struck and in the resideng trees were riven and church spires were damaged by vicious bat So far as is known > one was killc4 in the city, this morning for a meeting at 4 o'clock this afternoon to conrider the question general lockout against) ed with the Bulding Trades Alliance and to’ talk or’ the) project of making New York, shop” elty im the bullding trauéa, The strike and thé movement of the | employers grew out of a series of dis putes that promise to involye the em- plovers and the union men In the build- {ne trades in another gigantic strugale. The feeling is extremely bitter between tha two sides and both have been pre- paring for the Aht that appears to be beginning. esert that if they are drive will declare finish on the anions and nion men ynder an open- fay Em pleyers. It te aaperted by the employers that the untons have repeatedly violated the arb&ration @greement they en- tered into a year ago. The Subway strike is considered by the employers laa @ violation of this agreement, also the strike of the marble workers on Hall of Records, and a sirtke of the painters dectared last Saturday on all contracts of J. L. Nelson & Co, The plasterera at a meeting Saturday night practically decided to pay no attention to the arbitration agreement under certain conditions, and the ¢m- ployers concluded It wae time to act. Weinshedmer, the new leader of the butlding trades unions, heard of the call for the meeting as soon as it wi issued. Without di he called out men on all the Fuller jobs, It !s tn power to tle up the building operati» of the clty as thoroughly as they we ever tled up by Sam Parks, and he would not hestitate to do it if he thought necessary. We mer In a Power, In fact Welnsheimer is interested in this dispute in more ways than one. He ‘a a power in labor circles, although he ha@ not been known to the public at large, and hia friends say that his con. trol te moce absolute than that of Parks. He dresses in the height of fashion, wears diamonds and is suave, In addition to holding the office of | President of the Building Trades Aj- Hanoe, successor to the old Parks or- ganisation, he is President of the Amal- gamated Journeymen Plumbers and Gasfitters’ Union and Secretary of an organization called the Industrial Fed- eration of America. The employers as. sert that his ambition is the real cause of the trouble that seems almost cer- |taln to paralyze the building industry not only of New York but of other elties. meeeeneme EMPLOYERS THREATEN GENERAL LOCKOUT. Paul Starrett, of the George A. Ful- der Constrvction Company, at noon de- oth that If the men employed in the Subway and upon the Puller jobs did not return to work It would follow! ‘that the Board of Governors would | this afternoon shut down the entire !bullding Industry of Manhattan, “It will be the qreatest lockout the city has ever seen.” sald Mr Starrett Every member of a union connected ; |with the Building Trades Alliance will) be put out on the streets and we will see if these new leaders win out ‘The men had grievance against the Fuller Company, and thelr strike to-day was upon a tramped-up charge. | non-union Rave a union “of their own and by juat a9 Frye ht eal thematives regular ae A bolt of lightning struck the third rail on the Third Fift-second street near a passing ‘rain with a report that's | whole neighborhood, | ‘The Post-Office was struck twice. A bolt.ot ligt ting | flagpole on the north end of the Flatiron Building. at.T land Broadway. Flagpoles in the financial district acted sii tractors and went to the street in clouds of splinters, POST-OF FICE POLE SHATTERED, The first building downtown to feel the force of the li the Post-Oftice, which was struck in two places, The tnguill northwest corner was knocked to toothpick sizes by a forked k descended straight from the sky. weBy After finishing the flagpole the lightning shaft tore off a the cornice and set fire to the woodwork underneath. ‘Then s struck the flagpole on the Park Row side of the Mal! street fro in the building knew it had been struck until the tenants of a nel skyscraper telephoned to the Postmaster that the root of the bull op fire. Employees who climbed up to investigate found that extinguished the ‘fames. LIGHTNING STARTS A FIRE. While the storm was at its height a bolt of lightning big stacks of the new Long Island Railroad power-house, om Long Islend City, caromed off and struck one of the five up the plant of the Edward Smith Varnish Company, at Fourth street. The lightning set fire to the building at once, 4 the firemen could be summoned all five of the buildings were: the big plant of Bmtl Calman & Co,, manufacturers of D nishes, which adjoins it, was threatened. pat, There were four terrific explosions, followed by an outburst About 100 persons were in the building at the time, but all — ‘ alarms of fire were turned in, and the entire force of Long Island City w soon on the scene. Two fireboats arrived afterward, but the combined could do little more than protect the adjoining property. The shore were handicapped {rom the first by the rottenness of their ‘hose. after hose burst, and this made considerable delay in getting streams os fire. wr. There are three tenement houses next to the Calman Italjan tenants began to move out their household goods when got uncomfortably close. The stables of the Long Island pany are near the burning buildings and al! the horses ware | by the employees to a place of safety. From the upper windows of the Pulitzer Building the fre o plainly seen. Huge volumes of smoke rolled skyward for over an bi great tongues of flame leaped from it. In the Yorkville district of Manhattan the storm was p vere, The feed rail on the downtown side of the Third a’ (Continued on Second Page.) Bes Shik: is RESULTS OF TO-DAY’S GAMES, EASTERN LEAGUE, i) JERSEY city AT TORONTO ! MORNING Cae, Jersey City NATIONAL LEAGUE. CHICAGO AT PITTSBURG. ee. 000000000- 0 Pubure..... 00207000 4 Battertes—Briggs end ONeill; and Smith All the other games in the National 4 | League were postponed on account of! rain BALTIMORE bi “NATIONAL LEAGUE STARS Beltimore . } $ ‘ reese we re 0) Rochester . | New York.at 2% 121 St. Lonis ¢ a SU) Battorien—Wiltse and Chicago... 3M OP Hoston.....8) 57 AN ner and Nichols. 34 Brookiyn. 2 50 81 Phila'phia® @ Cineinnats 2 & a! PROVIDENCE | AT Vitteourg 0 a —_— Providence . | c { AUSRICAN: LEAGUE STANDING. Nonral8 Bg n MeManus. : re 7h PC Boston....88 a8 O12 Phfla’ph inde 8 Chicago,,.8 8 Lovis..04 48 New Tork” 3 * Clevelgnd.éi 38