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ee A se “ Circulation | Books Open to AIL’? ] NEW YORAH, MONDAY, | at \ | ! | “ Circulation Books Open to AIL” | AUGUST 12, 1907. NEW YORK TELEGRAPHERS GOOD SPORT EMPIRE TRACK Some of the Women Telegraphers W ho WV ent on Strike in the W estern Union Office To- Day | oe | Transit Facilities Much Improved | and Workmen Begin Laying of Second Trolley Track to Con- nect with Specia! Trains. Oy (Special to The Evening World.) ! pen ee eee EOSPIRE CITY RACK TRACK Aust 12—Racing at Empire City s: EMPIRE CITY RESULTS. mumed to-day under | h favorable than were enco: r Sa | FIRST RACE—Corncob (7 to 10 @ay. In addition to improved affairs at| and 2 to 5) 1, New Garter (8 to 1 the track itself, there was f provement in the matter of tr thon. “A good-sized Monday f present, and the races, wal ly conteated, were enjoyed by persons present card Powan an altractive and interes and furnished a good day's speculatu throughout. In erder to prevent a recurrence fhe acenes of Saturday, when thousands CE—Q’ lewereidatesaloucnicerrossacseeheK | GOCrUG bACEauadcilion(10)te miles to the track, President Butler| 1) 1, Gold Proof (5 to 2 for pace) 2, Planned with the trolley officials for | Hansel 3. building a parallel track from Mount! me Say FIFTH RACE—“ Ibert Star (3 to Vernon. He offered to defray the ex- D penses of ghe construction, but the trol-| 1) 1, Inauguration (7 to 5 for place) 2, Parisian Maid 3. ley agreed to ge: buoy on {ts own ac- - } eount. Sever: Y put to work last night and to-day the! SIXTH RACE. rincess Orna (11 | ‘work hag progressed to an extent which to 8) 1, Cobmosa (1 to 2 for place) will assure prompt connection b: | + morrow orenext day at the latest, | Penrhyn 3. also’ an im for place) 2,.Lady Sickel 3. | SECOND RACE—Taunt (9 tv 5) 1, The | THIRD HACE—Polly Prim (3 to 1 land even) 1, Pretension (3 to 5 for, place) 2, Tommy Waddell 3. | 5 ' i, ape, track ighining fast to-day —_——- ore juled to go 1 | Gist race! wero. seat. to The! post SARATOGA RESULTS, | Corncob Gets the First. FIRST RACE—Sewell (¢ to 5) 1, POISONED DIRS (GIANTS BEAT PIRATES; Corncob, the candida lJ. C. Core (7 to 5 for pace) 2, Den tae Maanlstalled. Main Chance 3. Garter, ae of Lad SECOND RACE—Paprika (10 to 1) | AS Ratateeronies 1, ‘Mooksie (even for place) 2,/ NOW, IN CO D PI ACE froat and’ won. by Amanda 3. Garter moved tip = s ona Ben THIRD RACE—Nimbus (13 to 10) ae nn haad. head ro 4, Desirious (7 to-5 for place) 2; Keep, H (FINAL SCORE. ) brie! ay | rears suas. Oa Wvns edough & Moving 3. | ; Aug. GIANTS. . FOURTH RAGE—Dreamer (7 to £| from and 1 to 2) 1, Rye (9 to 10 for place) | Penne, 2 10002000— 5 2; Jaconite3: t i ap tetms Seema “ - In Raid’ on Tenth Avenues came. v1 Gicese PITTSBURG. ing to FIFTH RAC issourl Lad (8 to . mitz and turn, in/an eftert pear | eee Dolce Caize Deadly, : BSR 2010 a wi ai exe gH ansu amenities gee] House, Police Seize Deadly, ||/toreven ew York lead. 00000 3 Pretenal sy NEES) Oy Geer Gr a Weapons First Inning. | Umptres—O'Day and Klem. — - Bhannon out, Wagner to — eee SIXTH RACE—Magazine (12 to 1)| _ —_— Browne alngled. Devlin singled NEW YORK. 1, Chulita (even fer place) 2, Gene| Inspector afferty’s 4 owing COUR edit edit Ro HPO A 2 Ruesell 3. on the Armenion murde-s a ban te nledi scone eyed Sbannony) If) Gon f20-0 a és saat —| place in lower Tenth avenus, near Nir 5 Sheehan to Gloson, TWO, Browne, rf OF 3000) Pe eNOS souls not | fenth street, late this afternoon, wiileh DeLnake : tain his advan | the police say is the secret head dries | 1. Devlin, 3 Lela: | IMibantBtaniinty Dane, of the Hunchakgst terrorists. 1 { u Strang, c geod OG 2 | Albert Start won the Afth race in a{#lace, which ts In the rear of a Rie |) Bresnahan, c. wy 36 =i jarive trom Fnauygura ion, / with the fa- arte ieee Couns Picea ins ens | McGann, 1b, e113 020 rey see herpes nls hic ‘Pwo. Dahlen, ss..... PD O00 83 je r nauguration Te E ‘ as s ppeared to De winning, |" Inaing: Meyieies } H a a voy} When Alyert m racy Jooking | two bo: h ) Mathewson, p...... Ogee One 4 ve home to a Youngster! ranged alongside and won | thirty ealiber revolvers, a- bottlo . \ ane Rolng away. The favorite was lengths | of poison bullets, a bottle of black til gle, TOM CaN figs Me the behind the place horse, She wan heavily ‘i Sse Brown Totals. .......... S12 27, 14 Savaruls wos] played and her stable regarded her. as He ate of antimony, three fuses, colls of Aoutat fl sy sure winner before the start. er wire and two note books. ver Dahl 5 PITTSBURG. phat aa $4 ee on filed to Dahlen. Sh Favorite Wins Sixth. ah qacieelives as Inveasdiaiins ilen, Gibson out to Deviln, Ha FO A tie day etn aa uy Anderaon, rf... .... Shed Bcd Eh sitar teat (Ibe I log Third Inning. Leach, cf.. 1 0 = teens lt hom “they arrested ie faltered: aathuotced alii cAtmeninnuswerentakenatonieaaihaien - ee - | following the start, held on long enouxn| Qvarers te Fourth 1 puty Commission | but. was out tr EeRer eR: Ch 4 to wet third. The others were close up. ° ir Woods's atiice. There W: ods | icant OR Storke, 2b 3.2 Re prot nd Mowatt nined hy! istri ounded out to 1 nm : | Jerd Med \ | Nealon, 1b. 11 0 Jota (turney nove ely Sheehan, 3b. 4.3 A ke tl | thmneselver with th ‘ONE d Dies amer 7 akes the ihe aa ating 4 aon fanned. Doyle Mie ake o 1 Catskill at the Spa "HAD ROPE AROUND eS Oe Conia a7 «| NECK AS PROOF. vr ningted. Btorke Phillippe, p oo 4 fepecial to The Rvening World.) upward, winning from Rye. which was! ee selin threw -Bneatian’ out = AES ies ) BARATOGA RACE TRACK, N. ¥..| secondeand Jacobite, third ThirteenYear-O Boy Tells ® HELLS oe 2738 f Aug. 12—Dreamer chptured the Catakin| The weather was -tqeal here to-day | Strange Tale of Rephecvany Inning. | | gelling event, for three-year-olde and (Continued on Second Paxe.) Ott B eet ate Penne xte Of Lelielae io) Camntz, 1 \ —— her Boys. | Phillippe, 1 % filer’ ¥irst Base on F Of Mathewson, Z Edward Detty, thirteen. years old, of | fanned. 4 pit Le otto st Comat bathe ‘ | No. 1895 Lexington avenue, ran breath-| devson out. NO RUN First Base on ats, 2) Pitts 5 lessly into the East One ‘Hundred and | sixth burs, 1 : : Twenty-aslxth street station to-day ahd,; "rernaban ~ingh 1 sate on| Left on Bases—Giants, 4: after Producing a rope, told «a welrd | Stork's fumble, egan pitch- | 4 Struck Ou y Mathewesd é tale Re i | 1: Camnit e paid his employer, J. 1 i 71 \tallor at. No.7). Bast One Nundzea | | zeit and Seventh ‘street, had sent him out | | | with $100 In’ checks! and cash, On the | ny 2. | Psi) way he had met some youths, who too! grounded ‘out to Storke, Bresna> a beat { Shee WITNESS OF PERJURY. bo: Ninth Inaln: [BOSTON - CHICAGO prosecute Olga Molitor, the deceare: woman's daughter, for perjury, because her lawyer bas given out a statement in her bohalf, oaying that whe maw the Dublen | threw at first Saigere and Gibson eecond Toronto. 3 ‘Montreal Te 4 a rie KN a [EASTERN LEAGUE. a him to @ roof (he couldn't remember | piwant Mates bevel 3 ! vynere), tied a ir (By Long- Distan Topher chine, Pim te /@ chimney and) “roach aingled, > f eS Mathew on, W Be NERS: ee non. Wagner n Mavhew on, Wo was caught 4 t c OLEVELANG, ; ACCUSES HAU MURDER — [orn S01 iodo, sega La WASHINGTON NA e Banution, Cuarke tripled. Wagner tin WASHINGTON 4 KARLSRUHE, Aug. 12.-Counaol for lan sate! sheehan Bro out at frat ie il AL reanalian war | 3 ‘Miele ed. NO ST. LOUIS’. Karl Hau, formerly "of Washington, eneiemaian wan! Devlin fanned. Strang also tanned, N ‘ “BOS TON AT ca , . under sentence of death for tho aheehan: ur was fired from the, lke filed to Doyle. Nealon, Shee $ of his mother-in-law, Frau | coaching ines for. kt ckdng Darien out, | han doubled to centre, Gibson Aled to have entered a moiton to} Sheshan to Newton y Browne, NO RUNS. ; person Bpot her acters and is} when Mathewson, mufied Sirang # re Sevag RAS id DELPHIA ... - woo Borvinced pa Pea. me whereas | turn throw, Phillppt fanned, NO|N: ‘ v1 10Q91020 O08 Be DEL E 192 tha Teosseedly +} fe a os | TRON ae Trot SA pate nsttatet) ese NE) CHEE DEAROIT ...----- --- Le Doris aied ee hd Bodies “ocd 6 8.80000 Fal ‘ prs Giorbe.. Mathowaon & toe a te are ‘GEM BEDECKED WOMAN HELD AT LS SLAND Detention of -Paula~ Klippen-; burg Starts Story of a Threat to Expose Scandal. Paula KUppenburg. a young Parisian | who Is Mterally covered with diamonds, | js Geing held with otner suspects and undesinablestat the Ellis Island de- | with the West and South. | telegray Thunderstorma to-night; cooler Tuesday RESULTS EDITIGN 3 PRICE ONE CENT. Wires Tied Up Pretty Generally : ; Through West and South, and Disturbance Is Likely to Spread ~ ~Throtgh. East. MILLIONS TO AID MEN, IS PROMISE OF GOMPERS. Railroad Operators Ready to Go. Out if Com. mercial Work Is Turned Over to ~ Them—Branch Offices All Crippled, All the union telegraph operators in the main and branch offices of the Western Union and Postal companies in this city struck this after« New York is practically cut off from telegraph communication The strike is expected to extend to Boston and the rest of New England to-night. In the Western Union office the strike was declared at 1 o'clock. The strikers say that more than three-fourths of the force on duty at that hour walked out. The ofticials of the company declare that of 400 men and women on duty 201 remained at work, but they will not allow an inspection of their operating rooms. ‘The signal to the Postal operatora was given at 2.30 o'clock. E, F. May tin, one of the leaders of the union, stood up at his table in the ig operat- ing room on the twelfth floor and blew a whistle. working at the time, fifty of them women. NO DISORDER IN THE STRIKE. ‘The exodus was almost unanimous. Nine men and three women re- | noon. There were 350 operators mained at work. The strikers marched out of the. building and across to City Hall Park, where they held an impromptu mass-meeting. There was no disorder at elther place. Following the strike in the main offices orders were given to the Im- portant branches. In the Wall street district ofices more than 90 per cent, of the men on duty walked out when the signal was given. All branch omces in charge of union operators were closed as fast as the news of the strike reached them, OFFICERS NOT CONSULTED. Most of the branch offices were put completely out of business. The two operators at the Harlem branch, in West One Hundred and Twenty- fAfth street, and three in the branch at the Grand Central Station got word +, of the strike as soon as it was declared, and were among the first to quit, ‘A girl on duty In the Western Union office, at the Fifth Avenue Hotel, did not walk out, but she refused to send any messages. There are nearly 3,000 ph operators in this city on @ warrant! and Rehind her detention from the Department of Commer |Lebor js said to lurk a de to | | suppress an attempt at ail, based | ona thr expone 1 double | Te Or W TorKer a rthe te same as the double lfte of Charles | Tyson Yerkes was exposed by his | death, | ‘The Woman's arrest at the Hotel Im perial Is said to haye followed a threat | to tell a story7of a foreign “eatablinh- ment’! which would cause a scandal in ils diy. “Bhe had been stopping. at ine Her name | Kiinger- ‘ob- her Auguste Victoria . was on the pa er Hist” urg. At the time she landed the servers at the dock were struck by array of diamonds. Volmer, of No, 2 Bread- applied to the Department of | ‘ommerce and Labor for a warrant, narging the woman with kK of bid | rues of the de- Under the ne should be ex- custody missioner | | . who placed ghe diamon: | ked young. woman in the detention | pen, together with a few paupers, and 4 who had becn detained for ns. { Commissioner Watchorn sald he knew nothing abo cane except that tne] hearing morroy The aged Lawyer Vol- mor. Is Horace Milk 1 blond of twen- fizure and| iner maae fr Aauitlod. her dlamonds were w oun. Lawyer Volmer would tell notning about the case except to admit thac nls Client was Horace Miller, The fact that fue complaint was brought througn the channels of the Department of Com: | meroa and Labor by way of Washing- ton indicates that an attempt was made to burry the woman out of the country pefore anything was known of the mat- ter by the publi or press. etate eration of Tabor and-t [imperial mince arriving on the Kalserin | © |Greater New York and summoning the operators to the main offices. Neithe® the national nor the local officers of the Commercial, Tele- Union had anything to do with calling the local strike. Joseph President of the local Lranch, knew nothing about the Western “out until nearly half an hour after it happened. He ordered ors in newspaper and other private heir Younds hess graphers’ Ahearn, Union walk pickets sent out to notify ‘anion opera Ditices to quit, and as raphlly ap Che plekets coud mn offices were closed ‘ In anticipation of the strike the branch office managers had their ments and accounts all ready. No time was lost in getting away. Phe strikers went out with every appearance of cheerfulness. They say they have a war chest of $3, 500,000 to draw upon from the American Fed- he Order: of Commercial Telegraphors, besides thelr. own resources. |RAILROAD MEN - If the Western Union attempts to send commercial messages over the railroad wires the railroad telegraphers will Join .n tue strike. By to-mor vow morning the disturbance will have spread to every office in the country in which unton men are employed.: Thousands of operators were only walt- Ing to sce what New York would do before declaring themselves. The night Western Union and Postal offices joined the walk-out when th The operators who re- TO HELP: the arrived for them to report the main onices, and branch offices were called ere placed on guard In the forces. In ume mainea loyal were kept ip upon for non-union men Pinkerton detec Western Union and Postal Buildings: ELEVATOR MEN QUE. When the Western Union operators walked out Assistant Superintendent Barclay ordered the elevator men to refuse to carry the strikers to the ground floor, The elevator men promptly quit. About 100 messenger boys, i the office on the ground floor of the Western Union Building employed { marched eut with the operators. ‘The Postal officials made no attempt to interfeere with the strikers who desired the 8 Vice-President’ Adams issued orders, as soon as the strike was declared, closing 185 branch offices in Inas- union men and women elevators, cond to use all the branch office operators are the response wis not heayy. to see much as nearly strike,” eald Mr. Adams. “Our men had no "1 am sorry (Continued on Second Pa COMPLETE CHARTS OF TO-DAY’S RACES PRINTED ON PAGE 2