The evening world. Newspaper, July 31, 1905, Page 2

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~ Th is true that there will be plenty 2 copying Saratoga, and gambling for ‘large stukes; but—and any one Whoever has visited the place knows -faro clings and $500,000 racetrack press agent yarns pure and signed to attract visitors to big plungers will plunge 88 usual, the little pikers will-pike as |, and that ts all there ts to it, ‘The gambling houses will, of course, crowded every night, for the simple that visitors to Saratoga have of amusement after the ‘The pi ‘will be racetrack men, hore ‘These latter, however, will gamblers themselves, and know that the even chance for his money. ae days real bookmakers were to be found in the betting rings of the don’t believe it just let a scranger offer to bet one of the present generation, say $500, on a horse which the “bookie” bettors 2S They pay them here in New York every day. Men lke Mr, Gates and Mr. Drake will have their usual flyer, and ‘the public generally will sit in and buy @ few stacks of chips; but there will be no fortunes won or lost, and when you read such stories just lft your hats to the press agents and acknowledge they are earaing their money. INH two winning ball teams, 15 W it any wonder that New York fans are happy? From the be- ginning of the season there never have been any doubts about whe Giants; but with the Highlanders tt was different, There was a suspicion in some qua ters, and for a time st looked w. founded, that Grif's men were tray ling on past reput 8. Now it is dif- ferent. The Hisilayders are making good, are playing a8 good ball team in tho WILD MAN CAUGHT lN JERSEY WOODS Went Naked Over a Week and Lived Only on Berries Untii i Constable Got Hin—Had Dis- : appeared During Hot Speil. . Reverting back to the condition of primitive man through mental aberra- tion, John Vincent Gallagher, of Ho- boken, lived the fe of a wild man in the woods near Hackensack unt! his capture to-day by Constable Jacob Dunn, near Lodi Junction Without @ shred of clothing, the man thas lived for over a week in the woods, Uving on wild borries and acorns. He Was exposed to the flerce heat of the @un and later to chilling rains and al- ways to the awful torment of mosqul- : hat swarm all about the Hacken- d pouse hus loins he gird- see were caught by me apeney and New Gare Into the approached. ry man ie “Goneth We Dunn seen man running a Dear Lodi, tat ment the man had Fas aint ane pele Oo, At ep fron and ‘the constablo. went of Bt Be wild mau eke in be) too yer ot gepenred. ie on, and from now until a of August look out for rincipal patrons of these | trainers, betters and book-| materially to the revenues of | gambling houses, for two reasons. | One js that they are professional | percentage ts against them; the ovher is that not one out of ten will take an) In for- | country, but now it is different. If you | WEALTHY GIRL John G, Oak Methodist Ept: Charles Lewis, of Washington Hexhis, 3 any | who was anxious to learn whether his json of a wei and edded that the couple had called ] SANTOS WINS Althoukt onl! fow of the “regulars” put In appearance on the Speedway vesterday there wero several Interesting brushes. Thomas Leahy's black trotter Santos won two good races, defeating {some of the best stevvers on the road. | it @ lively. aie mered brush Santos gutfooted Teddy K. driven by 7. B. en trl uit up ‘Heddy i. but ens OF is elas parted close to the vieaay aa a Into a Wallop and wi tearing d@wn ‘the road when Mount Policeman, -deieel nd Ag Age Konnedy saad Und was badly shaken, up, bat was not hurt. After a rare of @ quar- ter of a mile hold on the bridle and stopped the rai Santos coutinued er Rood work when she tackled the bay. trotter Bpringhily. driven by C. Lott. When Sprightiv and Santos returned for another heat Col. W. H. Greene's Arizona joined in and the trio had a lively strugmle. San- tos winning by half « length from Ari- zona, but In turn Peter Ehelaoy, wag outfooted by Better Luck. Sprimhtly had a winning brush with Bonnie Betsey. the pair finishing heads apart. Oa WEISS A FAST SPRINTER. P., Welem and 1. .H. Tice ware the ae winners at the es of the ational A.C. whieh were held yesterday. at Inewood Park, ach won two events and other both mile runs ‘in fast time. re hinged mes. Tice, Lee from ‘scratch, the halt MIDNIGHT BRIDE Friends hy Elopement ana Marriage with R. J. Watier- son, Son of Rich Southerner. PEEKSKIL ¥., July m.—Rev. pastor of the First opal Church here, re- ed a hurried visit to-day from d by the ric J. Watterson, ny mine owner in the th, pastor answered in the affirmative on him at 11 o'clock last night, with witnesses, and all thelr responses being satisfactory, he had made-them man and wife. Mr. Lewis went away much relieved, for his daughter was missing from their home at Oscawana Island this morning, Young Watterson met his bride only five weeks ago at Oscawana Island, where he had been @ member of the ¥. M C. A, camp. He !8 twenty-one years old and the young woman eighteen, Mr. Lewis said later that neither he nor his wfe had aay objection what- ever to young Watterston, although they would have much preferred that their daughter should have been mar- ried at her home in the pesence of her relatives and friends. it is supposed that Mr. Wattersoy parents, who live in New | Orlew ew nothing of his intended mar- riage, REFUSED AID 10 EXCURSIONISTS Big Steamer and Yonkers Police Pairo! Boat Left 2,000 Women and Children Adrift on Disabled Barges to Their Fate (Special to The Evening World.) YONKERS, Ju'y 81.—While 2,000 ex- cursiontgta, mostly women and children, on board two barges were drifting 4 mntdvatroam on the Hadwon river inal Neptune was ign he City, of But never made ON SPEEDWAY [7 at Saratogs me 338 et NEF Pace CAR ITS TRUCK AND KILLS BOY Miss Eva Lewis Surprises|John Maloney, Nine Years Old, Jolted from High Seat to Be Ground to Death Under Trol- ley Wheels. _ John Maloney, nine years old, was killed to-day in Brooklyn, near Third avenue and ‘Thirty-fifth street, in a collision between a Third avenue car, bound toward Manhattan, and a heavy ray belonging to the Robert Graves Wall Paper Company. The wheels of the car went over the child. Jams Kenny, driver of the dray, was thrown from his semi to the street by the collteion and was badly cut and braised and perhaps internally injured, He was removed ¢o the Norwegian Hos- pital, NE RN PON EDITED BY ROBERT EDGREN, \ I SCENES AT THE SARAT OGA T. 7. RA CK, “NATIONAL LEAGUE. PC. WE BS; Pail’ pha 38 a7 New York, 6; Cincinnatt, 2. Batladelpale, chicago, 1. Second game. at roe aipiia at Chieako. Baecsin #4 a WITTE HIDES HIS POWERS, SATO ASSERTS Spokesman for JapanesePeace Envoy Says Russian Talks Vaguely. Baron Rosen, the Russian Ambassa- dor, who came to, this city to-day from Manchester-by-the-Sea, refused to com- ment on the interview with M. ‘Witte, his fellow-peaco plenipotentiary, sent to the Dally Express of London by wireless telegraph from the steamer Kaiser Wilhelin der Gr "I cannot discuss the statements of M. Wittef’ be sald. “I have no of- ficial knowledgé of the instructions ho holds. I don't even know how many are in his party, M. Witte will have the pleasure of sleeping in a $10,000 bed while in this city, as the royal sult at the St. Regis ‘was reserved for him by Baron Rosen to-day. He will hi a drawing-room, @ dining-room, a library and two bed- rooms, the -outOt which was furnished at an‘outlay of $200,000 for his personul Little Maloney was a chum of Kenny and his vacation had been spent niding on the seat of his friend's dray, hold- ing the horses, while Kenny was load- ing or unloading *his truck and some- times driving when traMle would per- mit. Kenny drove past Johnnie's home, at No. 13 Thirty-sixth street, a few minutes before the accident, to take him for his dally outing. When the car struck the dray it jostled the boy's light body from its perch and he rolled down between the truck wheels and the car. Spectators of the oollision were crying to the motorman tp cut Of the, curren Dat apparently he los alopey wept under bal car wheels and his death was only @ matter of re, Builth, th LON Lew Bunt be MOLOTMAN, Was ar- rested and fe OES to await @ coroner's inquest THUG'S VICTIM UNDER A TRAIN Police Believe Anderson Was Murdered, Robbed and Body Thrown on Tracks to Hide the Crime. Robbed, murdered and thrown en the track of the Btaten Island Transit Rallway to be cut to pieces ao the crime might be concealed ds what the police believe were the circumstances purr rounding the killing of Samuel nue A: oer Ap- Gerson, a young Norwegian, whose Bled body was found to-day on the le near Huguenot, ‘ ol ea easel over. to + mie, Ht a ti i woud have one or rae nt wang te Cant Bakar han OF aut the: baiPalthio Anderson's big-bladed opun adjoining sults. Mr. Sato, the official spokesman for the Japanese peace commission, smiling- ly underwent @ croasfire of questioning on, M. Witte's interview at the Waldc — Aig ie tS apood ex- fe ped into the set he said, with ‘Oriental suavity. a ae is more than a mere courier, as he says. Read his interview carefully aha” trogen will eee that he proclaims than a courier. He ‘to deal pie pre government to a “M. tte it asen oR demand, “the doneberougon STANDING OF THE CLUBS. $3 40 SorlBrooktya’ “J-2t a3 ale i RESULTS OF YESTERDAY'S GAMES. ‘ GAMES SCHEDULED FOR TO-DAY. Pot aroun at ciselnnat use. The other members of the-Russian Peace Commission will be quartered in AMBEIGMTTERGUR: No games scheduled. Cleveland at New York. St. Lout Boston. YELLOW FEVER CAN'T BECOME EPIDEMIC HERE Health Officer Dr. Doty De- clares New York in No Danger. “New York hes no more reason to fear an epidemic of yellow fever than has Labrador or Greenland.” said Dr. Doty, Port Health Officer, to-day. ‘The bacteriological examinations in the cases of Thomas McGill, steward, and Vincent Noro, fireman, of the Pan- ama line steamsbip Seguranca, will be completed to-day, when {t will be de- termined whether or not they have yellow fever. McGill ig in good shape, but Noro is dangerously ill. They ar the only members of ten of the Se- wuranca’s crew transferred to Swin- burne Island who were seriously ill, and it may develop that both have yellow fever, Symptoms of fever, the nature of which bus not been determined, were discovered to-day on the steamer Pro- teus from New Orleans. While the health officials at Quaran- tine were anncuncing that this steamer from fever-infected New Orleans was free from fever symptams the symptoms were developing in four children. The children were transferred to Hoffman's Jeland for inspection. One case of yellow fever has alroady terminated f«tally at Swinburne Island this summer. and there are five cases under observation there now, and thirty-five suspects held at Hoffman Island awaliing developments. Seven- teen of these were taken from the Seguranca and two from the Morgan Aner Bl pee, fom New Orleans, GRAND CIRCUIT MEETING OFF c peewee Glenville Track’s Races Will Be Abandoned, Following an Or- der Prohibiting Pool Seiling Issued by Mayor. CLEVELAND, July 81.—It = this’ afternoon io deeds to abandon the Grana Cirouk trotting meting sched- uled for this week at the Glenville truck in this olty. The only event this GALLAGHER WHIPS LINK ) ROUND BOUT IN FAST 15 Boys Met Before a Private Club in Philadelphia,and Put Up One of the Fastest Fights Ever Seen in the Quaker City—Heavy Betting on the Result. PHILADELPHIA, July 31.—In one of the dest and hardest fights acen here in a long tim id” Gallagher, of this elty, scored a well-earned yictory: (ver Johnny Link, of Pittsburg, last might. ‘The fight was held in private, And) went ‘Ifteen rounds. There ‘vas & lot of betting on the result, and the Gal- lagher admirers made a reatilar clean- up. Fully two hundred persons wit- nessed the fo. Link had his nose broken and was otherwixe badly punished. !n the’ first round both men started in with’ real earnest and blows came in rapid suc- cession. The men weighed 122 pounds each, afd {t started as a very evenly balanced fight. In the second round. however, Galiasher was giving more telling blows, which hit the point dl- fected, while Tink appeared to be a little pervous, Th the third round Gallagher eent a Weft jab w Link's jaw that made him tremble and dazed him for a second. He quickly recovered, however, and sent a SARATOGA ENTRIES. (Special to The Evening World.) SARATOGA, July 31.—The entries for to-morrow’s races are as follows: po SESda8 afternoun will be the Consolation heat of the Merohants and Manufacturers’ race, which was not completed at b- ear the ths, dient track ‘wilt be ig Sehed i be trotted, ra ul wed for Cleveland will morrow. ‘This announeerae nt Wi pay the Sip arlltnonan stan PROVIDENCE ENTRIES. right-hand swing to Gallagher's neck which left its mark. In the ninth round Gallagher sent a left-hand swing to Link's body that almost sont him throtwzh the ropes, Link retallatea by vending a swift right-hand jab «of Gal- lagher's face, bringing the blood, This Angered Gallaghce to such an extent that he renewed his tactics and sent Such @ terrific blow to Link’s face that it broke” bis nose. The bout was stopped for a few séconds, In the twelfth found Link commenced | to weaken, and from that time on Gallagher was punisi in a ‘hard manner, and at the sound of the bell Link was so groggy that he was hardly able to stand. — EAST INDIANS FALL UNDER DUTCH GUNS. Natives Who Rebelled Defeated, with 260 Killed—Fortifice< tions Razed. AMSTERDAM, July %1.—The Dutch expedition sent against the rebellious native State of Honi, in the Island of Celebes, one of the Sunda Islands, in + the Bast Indies, juflicted severe punish- Ment op the natives, 20 of whom were kdiled. ‘The fortifications of Badjoewa, one of the chief towns, were Tazed by the guns of the warships. eed RE FIVE HURT IN WRECK. Rock Island Train Runs Through an Open Switeh Near Joliet. JOLIET, UL, July 31:-Five persons were injured In an accident to an east- bound passenger tratn on the Rock I and Railroad to-day about a mile wes! Of Joliet. None of the injured ts fauy hurt. John Smiths of sees ag 4 dining-car waiter, mad his lew gravel-pit. The ateenger train ran o Paiking the work-train | nem AMUSEMENTS. Nt BW YORK Boor and Wistaria Grove. SU; ay MER ited tals! “La ‘Domino Rouge," ity | The boy the Red THE 3 & CaMAl First Time iropran Comedy my pt Adm. to Table Seats. 81. Best Seats, $1.50. New York Theatre| ~¢: BI En: it i Rew Worx in 8 Months. axo™ LITTLE COHAN =" Jones iHSTOW FLOOD & NEW YORK =.NORTH POLE MANHATTAN BEACH, WILLIAMS'S VAUDEVILLE 4 a PAIN’: Da PORT ARTHUR | By": GRAND FIREWORKS. Mave Bhi £ Hi john F. Bymes's Co. a0 He ae. a ae B00. pay et THALIA 22st | sai WhiePh tire BROOKLYN Seren wi ner | taken have been s' " said Mr. “But aa Benes Sele > d 1 A*Conieol 4: OF ch i 4 ‘ ot = ROSEN VISITS PRESIDENT. OYSTER BAY, L. 1, July &.—Prest- dent Roosevelt entertained at luncheon to-tay Baron Rosen, who ie associated with Mr, Witte as an envoy of the Bm- peror of Russia to the peace conference, It Is expected that Mr. Witte's visit to —— ROJESTVENSKY IS: ABLE TO SIT UP, TOKIO, July

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