The evening world. Newspaper, September 24, 1904, Page 1

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PRICE ONE CENT. . * HARLEM LAGKING IN POLICE PROTECTION ——_——_+4+ Few Policemen and No Roundsmen or Ser- geants Seen North of {25th Street— Williamsburg District Toured by Evening World Auto—An Improvement. Tho tota) of policemen discovered on the streets in The Evening World's investigation was not largely increased by the result of the automobile tour made through upper Harlem this morning. Brooklyn the night before was thought to be slimly protected from a police standpoint, but upper Harlem Was found to be worse than Brooklyn. It has been found ny Tho Evening World investigators that there are more policemen on post in tho first two hours after midnight in the Tender. Join than im any other part of the city—and fewer afterward, The most consistent patrol duty appears to be done on the middle east side, but police- men are hard to find over there at that, and to find them half a mile apart 4s not urcommon. } In the crowded lower Hast Side the patrol system dose not protect the people. Policemen arc found generally in places where there is human com- panionship. Lonely stretches of towering tenoments are left unguarded while the policemen chat in the cheerful glow of lights from saloons and lunch counters. The great danger of loss of life by fire in the tenements is increased from the fatt that it is generally necessary to hunt up & policeman sand sometimes it is a long search after a fire is discovered, + Conditinos are no better in the lower West Sids. In fact, the whole ays- tem of patrol seems to appear demoralized. ‘The Evening World's eeptonage has had the effect of making’many policemen remain on post who would oterwise have been taking it easy in a comfortable placa, but The Evening World cannot maintain a patrol system on the polis forever. ‘Winter is.pproaching. The patrot system is bound to become worse In + WAGONS MENA THO ~AMVDS SEIZE $1,000 GASH ' ” ‘Special’ Men Descend on No. 62 and No. 100 Vesey Street, Where Big Crowds Were Found Placing Bets on the Races. } Alleged pool-rooms at Nos. @ and 100| just been. established by Commissioner ralded late to-day | McAdoo is credited with the arrests, Wasey street were Soret. Burke was formerly high in the sent out by Commissioner McAdoo over | wag recently recalled from & rural pre- the head of Capt. Burns, of the Chureh | Cinet to take charge of the special bu- |reau. whigh has 90 far made four raids, Btreet Station. In it was stated at the Churoh Street Policemen Cohn aud Nolan furnished| Station that Robert Evans, who gave the evidence upon which the raid was| his address No. 1 West One Hundred made. They got inside several days ago, lee ee ae street, was the man- . @ Veney street. Philt and when the rooms were filled this Schnelder, who gave his address rn afterneon they signalled the police on) 104 Vesey street, is said by the poles | Bot the outside, who broke In and placed | to have conduated the other place, ‘he | $c2ht those in charge under arrest. rooms are aid to have had a heavy There wer e200 men In No. 62 when the play. of tate, and to form @ of a rooms large string of police got in and half that number In| j, located in « eownene to the Church Street Station. Two tele-| Two eteel-bound doors barred the en- “ Circulation Books Open to All,” NEW YORK, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1904 "LOAM BEST OF TREE L Great Filly Leads All the Way at Gravesend in the Seoond Special and Wins as She Opening Event Goes to Pelham, While Czaraphine Beats Favorite’ for the Third Race—Fair Crowd Present. THE WINNERS, FIRST RACE—Major Pelham (7 to 2) 1, Leonidas (7 to 8) 2, Collector SECOND RACE—Foxhunter (even) 1, Bt. Jude (4 to 1) 2, Royelle 3, THIRD RACE—Cearphine (8 to 2) 1, Escutcheon (8 to 1) 2, Blue Coat % | FOURTH RACE—Beldame (11 to 20) 1, Broomstick (7 to 1) 2 Mo. FIFTH RACE—Bulwark (8 to 8) 1, Ralment (8 to 1) 2, Danew Musie 3, | SIXTH RACE—Grenade (6 te 1) 1, | Ormende’s Right (11 te &) 2, Man (Boectal to The Bi OETA) fr one more etc ‘queen, | Beldame, demonstrated her superiority jover other so-called thoroughbreds at Gravesend this afternoon, She met | Broomstick, McChesney and Africander in the Becond Special, and she led them {& merry dance for the entire route. | She won by five lengths and pulled up | fresh as if she had only been frisk- ing about the paddook, It is not likely that Beldame will be beaten this year yrstg whe is left at the post or falls ieee, was heavily backed to- lay. It was dellevéd that th be & hot pace and that he would “have ee however, rk ‘was | Phe Evening Werld’s charts are indesea from y, * No, 100. Only 11 prisoners were taken | of building. Phones, racing paraphernalia, and $1,600|(Tance at each place and these were in money were seized and removed to rettaeed bei the police who barred Headquarters. hot allow any one to ‘The new raiding bureau which has eB arrest _ GRAVESEND ENTRIES FOR MONDAY. (Roecial to The Evening World.) RACE TRACK, GRAVESEND, N. ¥Y., Sept. M—The entrier for Monday's races are as follows: First Race—Two-year-olds; about six fur- EP / . i Fae 4 Ray... im Blok." Colt sairy: af: ed Nhe erection an: one | Gees w spe a ' fang of thieves had inficted | NOT NAILED TO THE FLOOR, | me ot ers md nace woon tim. closed to substantiate his story, has admitted that he strong and St, Jude had to be driven to get the place by a neck. Fe yore Badly Beaten, ‘Thirty-third was @ hot favorite in the| Fo Sc ggh l a ishing a a second choice, broke badly, but raced around her field and, the lead in the stretch, won easily at the end. | and Sweet Papper were tne quickest to move and they raced in close order to the turn, -where Thirty- leave until the whom warrants were placed reuty had | hard thea drew Srey and raced | ™ together to the stretch, wi ‘aking the leads won easily from Eaoutcheon, who beat ‘oat three-quarters of a length. Beldame Led All the Way. hei ‘ed @ lot iirpore th ney a oupl e amart ones figuring that there woul ad iat Big Mac front of Broomat! and beat MoChesney a head Long Shot Made the Running. Gailowses, & 100 fo 1 shot, went to tne | trent at the start and made the run- ning to the atretch, where Bulwark | moved up and won easily by a length from Raiment, who. was ® lengtn in} front of Dance Murie. Grenade All the Way. jrenade went to the tat the start | was never | |g eee ae 15 DEAD, 150 INJURED, IN WRECK. GIANTS WIN AY i Fryer on the Southern Railway Crashed _ FOXHUNTER CAPTURES One THE STEEPLECHASE.| 10 Ea ‘ wentng World.) ID RACE TRACK, Sept. nder a nose for event was beat the gate, and, run-_ ning in hand ali the way, beat out che favorite, Leonidas. The steeplechase went to Anat he toe : . very easily, Cuara- rerurees, to her form fa the ti race from an cutcheon. ‘Thirty-third, a hot favorite, I erry beaten. ‘i ‘ attendance was only fair, being Saint. Burke, far below the avorage of r satu | Arvenal 4 by & special squad under Sergt, Burke, confidence of Commissioner Greene and | ¢ | Sih tot pan was fast, with Major Jessup well su ham jumped away wit! the start, and that set the pace, followed and Collector Jessup, and close order to the stretch. ere “4 idas, who waa off slowly, began to close “Stajor Be Leonid: nidas beat Coll ip a neck for the place. Invin. cible was only a head away, me M’ADOO’S MEN RAID UPTOWN POOL-ROOMS In addition to the two Vesey street raids Commissioner Mo Adoo’é special men swooped down upon two uptown poole roomé late this afternoon. of them was in East Thirty-second street. The otneriMATHEWSON PITCHES Thirty?fiith Siveet Pracincy and the o.; er in West Thirty-ninth street, in the Tenderloin Precinct. It was disclaimed a‘ Police Headquarters that there Major} been any designed “wholesale raids.” ——— 04 LATE WINNERS AT ST, LOUIS, Fifth Rase—Zinda 1, Monaco Maid 2, Willodene 3, Sixth Race—Dolinda 1, Burke Cochran 2, Mildred L. 3. hats Rnided Vy AT TORONTO, oo Seventh Race—Prince Light 1, The Elba 2, Dr. Stucky 3. codes Ob cosleaa oe AT HARLEM, ‘ $ixth Race—King Ellsworth 1, Don’t Ask Me 2, Dr Stephens 3 0 $0 KILLED IN ELEVATOR PULLEYS. Thomas Fux, a painter, twenty-one years old, was ca the e'evator pulleys at the sixth floor of the No, £47 Madison avenue, late to-day and killed. TWe police arrested the superintendent of the puildi Frank W. Rose, of No. 59 West One Hundred and Twenty. Hundred and Forty-fourth street, the eighteen-year-old eles EVENING WORLD RAGE CHART SIXTH DAY AT GRAVESEND. all i i. by We Tohaun BtrathinandOaet| Looal Men Ashamed of Their Burlesque on the National | Game Yesterday, Playing All They’re Worth. Ion Lonoke iolen Prasee Heiumont."alibert. Double Payee Mo: | POLO GROUNDS, Sept. 4—Tirere was no fooling with the Glants to-day, jand they watloped the 18% champions \handily. Matty pitched end was in his usual form, allowing but four scattered | hits, one of them a home run by Beau- mont. Grat race at Aqueduct. | Gilbert filed to Dahlen, Beaumont did | lkewise to Mertes. Richey's hot liner ell to Matty's mitt. NO RUNS. Beaumont got Donlin’s lift. Rafter sa | minsed the third strike, but got Browne | | at first. McGann got @ pass to first, He stole second. Ratier threw out Mertes, NO RUNS. @ $ 12) Devlin to Moann got Wagner at first so ‘ih | Gilbert threw out McCormick, Brans- field ted out to Donitn, NO RUNS. Dahlen was thrown out, Leach 9) noonORS RUSHED TO SCENE. ¢ : Bransfeld, Devlin filed to Bransfeld. Gilbert died, third to first, NO RUNS, Leach singled. Deviin made a great | one-handed catch of Rafter’s high liner, | 65 | McGann cal | RUNS red. Hi not seriously hurt. | Warner fiied out to Bransteld. statty | J le was y hu two-year-olde; five and stre' them. Thirty-third and Thirty- I. Overwelghia—Consuela held phine held the race ate al RACE~The Second Special, for three-year-olds Bake ak Sie ae safe single to centre. Dnolin ates. “arown singled, and on MoCor- inner, ch, f, by Rul ire ‘ond, Mertes was easy, pitoher to first, TWO RUNS. W. Gilbert was pereue oul Givert to © nee ee~ Warher to Devlin AG mined it was clever work. NO Ve TA nye n* » i » sdded; for maiden (wo-yea Fag y Wisner. » home, but was thrown out at the plate ] Iked: Donlin was by Tetey onal, ONE RUN, New Yortess 61° 019 Cleveland. Chicago. .... 3011010 id be a hot | = come SSeS ee -caenw Siowe-u it, eee | BaS8ssef Bob! Gilbert fouled to Warner. one up to Beaumont and Beaumont just | throo strikes, RUNG se. Wick B J Wilke sted to Beaumont. Deviln sol touched tt popped to Rafter. NO RU | ighty Wagner fanned, greatly Tht, delight of che crowd. So did the | Gat Theaser MoCormick. Matty struck out " std 1 vietim. NB. TEE TOO Prove to the Pirates that They ire Real Champions and Ply VICTIMS ALL IN DAY COACHES the Fastest Kind of Base- ball, IN CHAMPIONSHIP FORM. | erect woours wr ecccucop noiouessel acouuwc iz # ee etercccceccc® fourth street, and Gustav J. Speckman, of No. 560 East One m2 ae ‘ | Killed and many injured in a collision between ¢wo passenger trains 06 and Matty. ‘Gpeoial to The Evening World.) First Inning. Third Inning. led Leach at first to Matty, NO) fumble Matty and Doniin hit, to Robertatile, who got at the plate. Dan stole sec- Fourth Inal: iibert singled, y wrote secon. a going to third. Gilbert kept on Fifth Inaing. and he was thrown strike . Bransfield fied out to Devlin, “Leach stretched a single lato! warignaL LEAGUE STANDING. | . Rafter was tossed out , NO RUNS. rows, struc out. MeCormlck took | noe york.101 0 .TH8t. Louts. McGann's fly from Beaumont. Mertos igingled past egner Richey to first for NO RUNS. Sixth Inping. j tall was thrown Dut by aMtty. W, | for a home run, Browne Warner nit safely, Matty Seventh Inning, , Branafield being the third! Collision Caused by a Misreading of Orde a report of a train wreck at Newmarket, Tenn., to-day indicating that sew~ enty-five persons were killed and one hundred and fifty injured. The ac dent was the worst that has ever occurred on the road and apparently due to the misreading of telegraphic orders by W. B. Caldwell, the ¢ ductor of the train which was running from Knoxville to Bristol, eonger train from Bristol to Knoxville, collided just west of Newmarkel, Tena., to-day. The engines and coaches were badly damaged. te 1 1|}CRASHED ON A CURVE. were destroyed. The engine, one combination car, one baggage car’ my three coaches of No, 13 were almost totally wrecked. The four sleepers 4 No, 12 did not leave the track and were not damaged. a hundred to one hundred and fifty injured, under their engineh, It will take eight to twelve hours to clear the tr ‘The passengers on No, 12 will be sent back to Knorville and from there The cause of the wreck to said to be misreading of artere the condigetor af No. 15. WD Acenprtir ders pay dS 2-4| H Kane engineer, Conductor Thomas Murphy wae dn charge of O..N, Parrott, the engineur.” Southern Railway at Newmarket, which is thirty miles from this city, N. C,, which left here at 9.35 A. M, and a local passenger from Tenn., to Knoxville, due to arrive here at 11 o'clock. THE KNOWN DEAD, bound train; C. N. Parrott, Knoxville, engineer east-bound train; James | King, Knonvilie; James Millx, colored, Newmarket, Roscoe King, fireman, Newmarket, Tenn., and MC, Ernest, Clty, Tenn., were also among the dead. man from Tennessee, was among the killed. Delong Rice, of Nashville, Tenn, was riding in the sleeper with tis ws | sons and all escaped injury. to attend the funeral of W. R. King, a prominent citizen of that plas who died yesterday, James King, one of the dead, was « brother of WR, ine . and @ halt miles west of that place, the west-bound train running past the meeting point. A relief train carrying physicians has left Knoxville, Supt. Loyall was in Chattanooga when the collision occurred and ts em. ht Robertaille’s pop and route to the wreck on a special train. 4 PHILADELPHIA AT CHICAGO. Prladeiphie ., 0.000.000 0 0— 0| MMisbury-ree. 00.0 Ratteriee—Plank, Henley and Noonan; | Mathewson and Warner, ey Patterson ang Sullivan UNI | her games tn the American aden doubled. Devil ndied, Robert-| prague were postponed on account of | Chicago... oO ;jaitle, 22 Brana raine Warne seat s, lick 62 Vif’ kept on | AMERICAN LEAGUE STANDING, | , Hititries Wicker and Kiing; Chicago... % 54 .t07 Brook PRICE ONE CENT, _ a Crowded Local Passenger Train on a Curve at New Market, Tenn., Demolished Cars and Caused Appalling Loss of Life, i AND BURIED IN WRECK by Trainmen and Wreck One of the Worst in History of Road==Doctors Rushed t the Scene of Fatality, ATLANTA, Sept. 24.—The Southem Railroad officials have received on The full report which the railroad people have received is as follows; “No. 16, © passenger train, from Knoxville for Bristol, and No, 13, pass ey “The wreck occurred on a cuzve. The baggage-car-and engine of No, 15 “Between fifty and seventy-five coach passengers were -killed and “Two passengers on the sleepers were injured, Both engineers KNOXVILLE, Tenn., Sept. 24.—A number of persons were The trains were the eastbound passenger from Knorville to The known dead are: Wiliam H. Kane, of Knoxville, engineer weaby. R. B. L. Mountesstle, of Knoxville, Democratic National C Every car in the eastbound train was demolished except the None of the passengers on the west-bound train was killed. Alarge number of persons were going from Knoxville to ‘The trains were due to pass at Hodges station, but collided about one Congressman Henry R. Gibson, of Knoxville, was among those pete ; AMERICAN LEAGUE. NATIONAL LEAGUE, © st PITTSBURG AT .30000001 —4 ppb CE A CHICAGO AT BROOKLYN, — Brooklyn..... 00000 wit. Pe SECOND GAME. Chicago...00 % Aa” Detroit... r Batteries—Lundgren McCormack fanned, but the third/ ppiia'phiats 6 .05/ Washing’n5) 12 944 cohol) ‘and’ Jacklitechs ot Ce jas missed —— Game called by agreement, — CINCINNATI AT BOSTON, FIRST GAME, we ne, were Matty lobbed | one to Dahlen. Bobtail was docked on | Cineinnatl, boost. One run. | Gilbert. fied to his | Shs W, Gilbert was tossed out by Matty, | 8T- LOUIS AT Past Beau Gann, Sin to Medan, NO RUNS. Story of Brooklyn game with chie| and Doom, | cago on Page 6. NO RUNS. A, Leach to first, NO RUNS, Nini ing. was a victim, Gilbert to Me- | On ner finished the game |$e. Lewin... 02100 UJ

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