The evening world. Newspaper, September 11, 1908, Page 1

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= S=SSS SEND IN YOUR VOTES | TO-DAY ano Ho A I TF Who Is the Most Pop ul PRICE ONE CENT, = FFU RC RC TE EO | AST IN WRECKAGE BY COLLISION ON ‘L. | +2: One Dead, One Dying and More) Than Thirty Injured in Daylight Wreck on Brooklyn Rapid Transit Road. THE DEAD. KOELLNER, FRED., motorman Cypress Hills train; died in the hospital of a broken back, fractured skuJl And internal injuries, THE INJURED. ABATE, GASPARD, of No, M3 Hamburg avenue; bruised and cut. BAILEY, ROSE, fourteen years old, of No, 38 DeKalb avenue; contusions of head. BEYER, MORITZ, fifty-six years old, of No, 78 Decatur streot; lacera- tons of face. CANNELLA, SAM, of No. 208 Atlantic avenue; cut by glass CAFIA, CASPER, of No. 627 Broadway; Incerations of face, DUNBAR, LEE, sixteen years old, of No, 48 Manhattan avenue; left leg and side Injured. DONNELLY. FDWARD, of No. Siz Stockton street; cuts on face and hands. FLEMING, MRS. F,, of No. 198 Bradford street; contusions of body and head. RESULTS EDITION | | “ Cirewtation Books Open to Alt.” | NEW YORK, FR WOMAN WITH RED. AUTO VEL BOUND IND STRANGLED Young and Pretty Bride of} Two Months Found Slain In Room, HER HUSBAND SOUGHT. Has Not Been Seen Since He Left House Several Nights Ago, A pretty young woman, who had been bound, gagged and strangled to death with a red automobile veil—posisbly she had been statbed, too—was found this afternoon {n the dining-room of the flat where she had lived on the fifth floor of the tenement at No. 315 East Forty- fifth street She was Mrs, Annie R. Mauro, a bride of two months. The police all over the city have been asked to arrest her hus- band, Antonio Maur, lately emp'yyed as a ticket chopper on the Third avenue “L" road, He has not been seen since he left the house Monday night. The Mauros came to the old tenement on July 12, which was their wedding day. The bride still wore her marriage finery. She was about twenty-two years old, plump, with black eyes and fingers loaded with rings—real diamond rings, GUYON, MRS. D., of No. 496 Fourth avenue; lacerations of head HODT, MRS. A., twenty-three years old, of No. 830 Forty+second street; bruises and hysteria. } HOUGHTON, J. L., of No. 113 Kosciusko street; bruises and cuts, KIRSCH, LOUIS, thirty-one yeats old, conductor on Cypress Hills train; skull fractured. KAUFMAN, A., of No. 86 Lexington avenue; bruises of body. PARBINI, ROSE, of No. S4 Catherine street; lacerations of head ROBINSON, DAVID P., of No. S64 Bedford avenue; cuts on face and hands. SHEROTH, MRS M., of Ferris street; hips and right side injured SHEPHAN, PATRICK, of No, 104 Edgecomb avenue; lacerations of head, TOMPKINS, E. C., of No. 344 Evergreen avenue; cuts on face and hands. WINTERHOLDER, MRS. KATE, of No. 367 Skelton street; internal Injuries | ‘and possible concussion of brafn, WALTON, A. H., of No. 1045 Madison avenue; bruised and cut. On a straight, up-grade track, in bright sunshine, this afternoon Fred Koeliner, a B. R. T, motorman, ran a three-car Cypress Hills “L” train, | \ crowded with passengers, into a train.of four empty cars standing on the east-bound track in Myrtle avenue at Cumberland street. Koellner died tess than an hour later with a broken back. Louis Kirsch, conductor | ‘of the Cypress Hills train, was probably fatally hurt. Between thirty and forty passengers sgffered injury, but nearly half of them did not) the couple quarreling bitterly two | 8!@d—a five by nine floor, was a big Leach, 3b, bs nights last weeek. It was plain that| /andicap to the man, while {t suited the Wagner, 8s. . require the services of ambulance surgeons. In a statement given out by the officials of the operating depart. ment of the B. R. T. the blame for the wreck is placed upon the dead motorman. The train he struck was in plain view for two minutes be- fore he reached it, ‘Wiiiem Fuahs, a flagman, standing | = ‘et the side of the track, waved a .red danger signal a dlock away from the gtanding train, but Koeliner evidently | ase ere ad cay see it, An examination and / At Philadelphia. test after the accident showed that the| Boston ..., ....00020000 08 mir brakes were in good working or-| Philadelphia ...00007000 — er. Motormen say that, considering pentieries ~—Flaherty and Graham; the grade, Koellner should have been Poxen and Doolin, able to bring his train to a stop by ap- Saas: are NATIONAL LEAGUE. plying the brakes within twenty feet, AMERICAN LEAGUE. $50,000 In Checks Lost. ae But Koellner is dead, and the cause | FIRST GAME. ef the wreck must forever remain a| At Washington mystery. A feature of It was the 1085 phiadoiphia ..00 100.0 0 by @ bank messenger of a satchel con- Washington 0) 20 i Bonen i Hey taining $50,000 wortk of checks. Batterles—Plark and Powers; Johnson The four-car empty train was on the and Street. U ipire—Mr, Connolly, way to the Fresh Pond yards to be laid OND GAME It was in charge o? Joseph Ken- | Philadelphi ...0 0101002 97 nelly, of No. 1410 Gates avenue, motor-| Washington 000000006 00 man, and William Fuchs was riding In|, Batteries—Coombs and Lapp; Hughes | the rear car for the purpose of going |“ *. Umpire—Connolly back with a red flag to signal a train At Cleveland. following in case of a breakdown, St. Louls 1000000 Just beyond Cumberland avenue Ken- “!*veland 910091 nelly saw that a tle about halt a biock Herein ut a Spencer: Joss @head was burning. It had been set on Egan fire probably by a plece of waste drip- ping trom a hot box on a preceding At Detroit. train. He shut off the power and | Chicago Ht) $ 1 02 stopped his train and signalled with his Ye st Batterles—W: ivan? whlstio to Fuchs to go back with the ant Seimidy eine ivan: Mullen flag. jand O'Loughlin. { Then he went ahead, carrying his ———_ fMotorbox céntroller in his hand to ex-| tinguish the fira on the track. Len EASTERN LEAGUE. Hansen, a yardman, joined him. ; At Buffalo, Train’Did Not Stop. | 1010000 9400010 Fuchs saw the Cypress Hill train ap- MI proaching at full speed a couple of|K aceamentilater cUmoitie: the flag. He waved his signal, but the| At Toronto, train did not slacken speed. Fuchs) \ontreal 00200004 0% says the motorman appeared to be Toronto 00000000 00; standing at his post and looking ahead.| Hatteries—Jones and Clark, Mofmitt | The crash of tne collision was he ard and Pearce. Umplres—Black and Wil- inson, er Ray At Baltimore. : | t (Continued on Second Page.) Pnilierhae nile Oreo enale PGT 5S REET Baltimore we O OLO01000 Notice to the Trade. Batteries—Frock and Eaton, Adkins op | minutes after he had gone back with! O'Brien and Rudderham, Yi City Depot for BE ¥ and Robinson, Umpires—Walker and 0 Or TB Wand tain ave eee “Kelly, | . | alarmed and went looking for a rolice- ‘so Mrs. Katie Barrone, the janitres: says. Mauro wore his uniform as a gateman. He {s about twenty-six years | old, tall and slender, with a queerly- | |sloped oval face and a short mustache. | | He was dapper and quick in his move- ments, Both of them spoke good Eng- lis | Husband Had Been Morose. The man paid Mrs. Barrone one | month's rent in advance—$!2._ The flat was furnished with cheap gaudy fixings of an east side instalment house, all new and shiny, ‘Three weeks ago Mauro lost his job on the Houston street station of the elevated line. From that time on until Monday night, when he disappeared, he spent much of his time at home, The only visitor they, had | was a strange man who used to call sometimes in the evening. The loss of work apparently made| the husband gloomy. He had no money | with which to pay the second month's rent and the installment people threat- ened him. The neighbors on either side of them, through the thin walls, heard | Mauro was jealous, and seemingly with-/ out cause, On Monday evening the Mauros sat! for a while on the front stoop with the | other tenants. They had little to say to each other. Finally Mauro told his wife @ go upstairs. She demurred, | saying she wanted stay a longer. “You go on,’ he bade her, roughly, “or there'll be trouble. The yr ng wife went upstairs, Her surly Hh. and followed her, An hour later, or, ossibly two hours, he was! to little | Ump!re—Emalle. | seen to ct.ae out of his flat, lock the {door on the outside and hurry down- stairs and Out Into the street. He has not been seen since. Break In to Find Body. Nobody to-day could’ recall having seen Mrs, Mauro from the time of "the incident of the stoop, but nobody, it seemed, missed her until to-day, when an unpleasant smell in the hall sent Mrs, Barrone to the fifth floor flat. There was a notice from the instalment house, which had evidently been tacked | on the door Wednesday. | Failing to get any answer to her re- | Peated knocks, Mrs. Barrone became} man, She found Policemen Frank | Berger and Joseph Toomey, of the East | Fifty-ftth street station, These two | burst in the door. i }pours at the back of his cage, which | tomatic ar Giant ? HH ae SAVAGE MONKEY. OVERCOMES MAN N PERCE lH Crowd at Bronx Zoo Witness Terrible Battle Waged Twenty Minutes. KEEPER BADLY INJURED, NATIONAL LEAGUE, Holds Brooklyn Brooklyn 0000001 0 0 1) : J6cko’s Sudden Attack Takes | giants 00001203 —-6 Stages, While Reilly Off Guard in Pri- Hit Wilhelm mate Cage. | Cincinnati 00000000 1-1 | Pittsburg 00001010 — 2) (Special to The Evening World.) For more thir twenty minutes to- | POLO GROUNDS, Sept. 1L—-That | botore the eyes of a horrifled group of | St. Louis 0 0 0 2 t O_O DO = fatternoon, and early Indications pointed women and ohildren, When help oame. | Re‘lly was down on the floor uncen- scious, with the victorious monkey squatted on his back biting and tear-| ing at him. | Until lately Jocko, as he is called, had een one of the pets of the Primate House. He was a pheasus from North- ern India, an unusually large, fine spec- imen ‘of his species, standing nearly three feet high and weighing between forty and fifty pounds, Fred Engleholm, the head keeper, went on vacation @ month ago and Jocko, always docile and friendly in his hands, missed him greatly. The brute refused to eat or play and sulked for he occupled alone. When Engelhoim came back he found his ola playmate morose and vicious, refusing even to obey his old master, Only a day or two ago Engelholm had to knock Jocko out with a bat to save himself trom in- jury. This morning Reilly, who is a young many ving at No, 70 Fairmount ave- nue, entered the cage to clean It. The big gray creature gloomed in a corner with his forepaws over his head. De- celved into carelessness by this atti- | tude and in his heart despising the | monkey's strength, Reilly turned his |back on the crouched beast and began | + to sweap out the straw and litter. | With a chatter of rage Jocko landed | on Reilly's shoulders, clawing and bit- ing, Reilly grappled with the monkey (and they threshed about, the man strik- | ning. ing with his fists at the furry brute that clung to him and trying to tear | him loose, so that he could crush him to the floor and kick him to death, The eribbed spa monkey, which could filng itself trom de to side and then leap to the top almost too guick for the eye to fol- | Starr, 2b. low. In the first shock, Reilly had lost his broom, It slipped through the bar and he had to fight with bare hands, He dared not try to reach for the au- | catch which held the cage| door, for if he had lowered his arms | Totals .... for a moment, he would have had the | gray demon at his throat. He bevan to call for help. There were. IDAY, 8 in which they strug. | Clarke, If. |Camnttz, 1 Loft Coupon in Noon, Baseball |; and Final Editions | m " 73 ant SCOR MON 1 WHINE HH I TORR HT OI HH | | = Q y : Yu | “ Circulation Books Open to All.”’ 1908. EPTEMBER Ul, PRICE ONE CE NT, GIANTS KEEP UP Wi ANING STREAK PITTSBURGS DEFEAT REDS 2 10 | TO-DAY’S SCORES: While Brooklyn ts world, to @ crowd of 15,000, not the strongest attraction In th they have been causing a lot of trouvle around this town of late, and rooters ot all grades had to come out this after- noon and lend their moral support to | McGraw. The Giants must have sx straight games from Brooklyn 1s the ory of the fans, and they are well along in that direction. Wiltse was scheduled to pitch tnis af- | ternoon, and he Is just right to hand the AMERICAN LEAGUE FIRST GAME, 0030 0000 SECOND GAME. 000 Highlanders 4 10 Boston 00 Highlanders 01 5 0 Boston 000 as, Superbas another lacing. He was warm- | ed up and ready to go in yesterday a’ Chane ama why TAG 7 = | Brooklyn, but at the last moment Me- | Graw decided that he had better save PITTSBURG | CHICAGO tm for to-day, Wilhelm was announced | as the entry for Brooklyn early in (he | ea day, but you never can tell what those CINCINNATI | THE BATTING ORDER baseball managers will do at the last R. H. P. A. Bi) Chicago. Louls. sd aa Poagiless, rf. .0 1 L 0 0jSlasle, If. It. Brooklyn {8 still without the services Faia Evers, 2b Charles, 2b of a good catcher, but Maloney is get- Hugging, 2b. .....0 0 Lt 3 0 Shine Osteen, ting welded into the job, and he is la- ealizyid) Cs ouonene 3 EP Stelntelae ab ble to stop some of that base running Q, ‘0! hi e Giants ve ha ) ch Bescher, the v.42 1 4 OO) aiaiea a! HWS U aelCGahieati fen iets aa Hoblitzell, 1b, Oe alt 0) Oy Eeling @ Fans all over town hailed with de- Mowrey, 3b. POue Teste o] jacana Rs light the starting of the games at 345 Ty WG aovoonao) UO 0) 0 (Special to The Evening World,) Ing.cad of 4 o'clock, It {s too dark after McLean, & ..1c0.0 0.4 2 0, ST. LOUIS, Mo,, Sept. 11.—Figuring on! clock to play good ball these early p the way the Cubs trimmed the Carats | {all days, and It wouldn't be a bad idea Dubus, p. ol W 4 nala yesterday Manager Chance ngures {t Nave them called as early as 3.00, janzel see 0 0 0 0 O that he will have @ snap In the semaine! First Inning. = = — — = ing games of the series—three In num-| Devlin got Bureh's grounder and threw Totals .... +1 6 2 14 1 ber, McCloskey, the St. Louls manager,| him out by a step. Lumley met. the p and drove it to *Ganzel batted for Kane in ninth thinks differently, but his oninion tg not Next one on the ni shared In by many of his followers here left fleld fence for two bases, Hummel, Aue in St. Louis. win0 think the Cubs rn eed US IC Ea aL SCIEN PITTSBURG. win the championship. ["Alperman casily tossed out Tenney. R. H. PO. A. E. Chance intends to have his complete Herzog beat out a slow one to short Shannon, cf, ....- 0 0 8 0 0 team ready for the invasion in the Bast,| Wilhelm tried to catch | crzog off first, 0 5 0 0 Howard, Sheckard and Schulte will peg erte ee n threw 6) 3 cover the outfleld. Chance, though hav-!out Bresna r 2 3 ing an attack of “charley horse," is not | Sheehan threw out | ; 3 2 1/exerting himself and will be in perfect Second Inning, GIINELDR a aces 10 0 «0 | Shape for the final clash in the Hast Alperman was thrown out by Bria 2 4 0 First Inning. well, mney pulls a beautitul ph Ms q 1 0 0.828% made a rank muff of Slasie's | pinning of MeMilian's long driy Wilson, rf. . fly and the batter reached first base, | to left an walked, and on Ohi 4 0 0) Rvers singled to centre field, sending | hit and run piay went to when Camnitz, p. 0 1 0jSlagie to third base. Schulte sent a| Maloney shot a single 5 Mes — — — — —/long fly to Murray, Sia scoring. | called out on strikes, NO RUNS. rie .2 4 27 10 1) Chance singled over second base, Evers Seymour grounded out to Jordan, un- ‘taking third base. assisted. Sheahan tossed out Devlin. Steinfeldt's long |drive to Murdock scored Evers, Chance Pitts-| Advancing to second base on the thraw McCormick cracked a single to right. Bridwell fled to Burch. NO RUNS. Third Inning. First Base on Balls—Off Dubuc, 2; off on Bases—Oimcinnatl, 5; burg. 2. to the plate, Ho no men spectators in the monkey house ipituck Out—By Dubuc, 2; by Cam- AReae ee Hotinan out ona fast) socormick was waiting for Burch’s —on.y women and children, Most of nftz, 4. Byermknookeavace RUNS, fly to lett, Herzog threw out Lumley. th ' Home Run—Wagner. cked down Shaw's liner and | Hummel's grounder \ easy for Brid- em ran about aimlessly screaming yitSpane Hit. Besoher. got him at first base. Charles out, | well and Tenney RUNS, and crying, But one girl sped to the! Two-base Hits—Hoblezell, Wagner, | Tinker to Chahce | Osteen fouled to| Maloney got Crandall’s roller in front lion house, where she found Engelholm,| Stolen Bases—Lobert, Search, |Chance, NO RUNS. {of the plate and threw him out. Tenney Umplre—Regler Second Inning. jwas thrown out by Sheehan, Hergog The head keeper got there barely in smaghed a long three-bagger Into right time to save his helper. Reilly was Se Tinker singled to left and stole sec-|centre. but Bresnahan filed to Hummel. down, senseless, with his face In the! (Special to The Evening World.) ond base, A wild pitch put him on INS straw, while -Jocko, with his small,) EXPOSITION PARK, PITTSBURG A Ee Kling. lifted to Murdock, Fourth Inning. wicked face badly battered, but still full’ sept, 11.—Xhe new titohing material that| beat out a roller te’ grenes: S!21® onlin got Jordan's fly to right. of flgtit, danced over his prostrate foe, vyaty TERS ato Knoetshy. ON RUN eT!) After making a one-hand stop Deviln trying to get at his throat, Engeholm! Pittsburg has captured for nex Murray Ilfted to Hofman, Konetchy | (oseed out Alperman. MeMilan was had to beat the monkey almost to death !00ks very oromiaing, Brandom and] walked. Kling got Murdock's foil ee ee oe eer oansnniiy the with a club before he could drag Reilly Vail have already reported and from| yung “8 Us Evers to Chance, NO! third strike and throwing him out at out of the cage thelr action seem to have the goods, | first, Seymour's dounder hit Jordan § Reilly was in frightful shape. His Young Sifton, from the Southem) _ Third Inning. | the chest and was good for a sin face was cut in many places his left Teague has been doing some wonderful], Schulte popped to Charles, Chanico Aenea Pere Tees En TeIRES Ar hu va H 7 ye ol ound ay. S “ted . wee thumb was chewed practically off, there work In that organization since ho! °° steinteldeeae, eeace ne Wray | Cormick struck out. Deviln stole sec- was @ four-inch gash in his back, and joined Memphis lately. Murray Parker w. NO RUNS. man lifted to) ond. Bridwell walked, filling the bases from the severed main artery of his right wrist blood jumped in spurts, Dr, Heichel rushed ‘aim in an ambu’ance to Fordham Hospital, where it was said his condition was serious, — Crandall forced out Bridwell, Meuilan NO RUN Fifth Inning. Bridwell tossed out Sheenan. Maloney filed to McCormick, Wilhelm was out, Herzog to Tenney. NO RUNS Tenney filed to MeMille of the Springfield, Mass., team, in the last two cames has allowed but three hits In the last eighteen innings he has nitched. What makes him look good Is the fact that he gave but one walk. Barry. from Providence, along with Bliss elevated to Hofman. Steinfeldt ohusked Sout cromme. A lightning as- ist by Stenfeldt got Shaw 1 eb Gea got Shaw on a bunt to Alperman. Fourth Inning. Fromme and Kenetchy got | Kling singled to lett. held and week They came upon the murder In the | | BY eee vas they. have 456) second room of the set—a dark, pas- re ea Het aelecaes ties soot econd bags on a wild. pitch Prolster Traiieg Andi esle eronts nan sage-like place, lighted trom the air- | = |Ghoutd the Pirates diecover another| netchy, NO-RUNS” "OTM © Ko-| watked, Donlin drove a 10 shaft, and evidently used as a bed- I yeagox among the bunch Manager| Chiles died, Pfotster to Chance, | Lumley and Herzog scored. Bresnahin room and dining-room. Clarke will start out next season with| SIngle came tn for Osteen's boost, Mur. | #0" Lae ale re un Mah, cUNEE EUS On the floor lay the body of the} “yather clever lot of alab artists, Ab-| TY singled to centre field. So did Ko- |” ONE RUN | pride, with her arms twisted under stein, who will again be seed with the] {ese ikonmonseurray, maced to third SILAS her. A handkerchief was stuffed in| Pirates, has Improved ereatlv and tuch| man's throw to Steinfenden™ EAieaee | «Buen Slediate) MeCormicle | Lumley her mouth for a gag. and about the| poet See a clever judge of ball players as Hugh! loubled just Inside the right foul Ine, Was Ousythe Same Been throat was what looked at first like a Dufty says the ble follow 1s bound to/ scoring Murray and Konetchy, Tinker | "Devlin, walked, mL on rope of crimson silk, Later it was| Martin H. Bullwinkle, a saloonkeaper, | gis in fast company this time. He Is] Rivas Bynes dinky liner, TWO| secormick's two found to be a red automobile yell, Ws found dead with a bullet in both a hand hitter and a «ood base Fifth | | probably part of the girl's wedding brain at No. 78 Bedford avenue, Brook-|traaier, With @ «ood first-tacker the ri ning, | gear. It had been rolled into a cord) !¥n, this afternoon. The police Teport | pirates will certainly have a better wort, 1B Konstohy, Chances crinced | Bra e} dropped | and bound about her neck so tightly as to draw deev Into the folds of | swollen flesh | The long ends of the vell had been! | carried down from the knot beneath the (Continued on Second Page.) —»—_—. | 955,00 to California | via Washinaton-Sunset ehange from Washington. {3S od Bread : mere Route, ft as a sutcide. A month ago plumbers repairing pipes In Bullwinkle's place broke a gas cock. and the saloon man was nearly phyxiated in a nearby room. He re- covered, and since he has worried a great deal. His excise lcense was to have been renewed on Oct. 1, and he feared that have the money to pay as- tae 0 CE OeP RE FFP aT eenntite? musie; World Wants Work Wonders, \team to su the season of 19% than lat sin ‘ seord Steinfeldt singled through Byrne, Evers | gall fired to Hu vite acored. they did last spring. scoring. Hofman walked, | fli the | the other runners First Inning. Regal Tater Upton to Shaw, Chance | shrew out Tenney 3s McCormick senre 1. 4 qui,| Scoring. Kling singled to left, sort rome ponped out to Sheehan. ( Bayless was easy, Leach to Gil.) Beelntetat and “Hotman ‘ang “ine | Hee Wagner had to hustle to get Hugeins's| moved up on the throw. to the han Saventh: wane tap over Camnita's head, but his throw|Sallee replaces Fromme in the box A out to Hers NN LE Charles, tossei out Pfestter. THREE} Jordan popped oot esr aMt ont RUNSN. an singled to right. MoM (Continued on Second Page.) Bliss rolled Pfeister. Sallee watked, |Beymour’ Sheehan | singled, —————— Shaw singled to right field. Charles PUNE Apeie into left and. Alverman Restate ete ee eeethaah alee bases. Osteen lifted feored. Wilhelm fouled out to Tenney, coring. Schulte cE y B RUN. oon Bresnahan and Murray's drive. Od “threw out —_———_-4-+-—____. Crandall Pitches Splendid Ball and Team Safe at All New Yorkers Opportunely. GIANTS, = = ~ S sS Tenney, 1b, he rog, 2b... Bre nahan, coe Don.in, rf.... Seymour, cf. Devlin, 3b...... McCormick, If....... | Bridwell, ss. Crandall, p. eco-noo-No etroncoca > le mwuemccows lomuocnnon [Totale sseseessee, 6 BROOKLYN. ecococoocooc: Burch, cf....... +404 Lumley, ri, Hummel, If, Jordan, ib.. "Alperma in, 2b McMullan, ss.. Sheehan, 3b., Malore), Csieensc.e Farmer, ¢. Widelm, p. cocoon eo oce * e----necro= men uwaocoooPr Totals. . o UN red ah 1 n Balls—O% Wilhelm, 4; Brooklyn, 3; Giants, 9. y Wilhelm, 3; by Cran- Miree-Base Hit—Herzog Two-Base Hits—Lumley, and Cranda McCormick. Stolen Bases—Maloney, Devlin, Here 208 Bresnahan, Tenney and Mo» Corn Pa Ball—Maloney. Umpires—Messs. Johnstone and. Klem, HOW THE LEADING {EAMS NUW STAND, Wh ls (teh Giants .. .. 80 46 © .635 Pittsburg ... 81 50 .618 Chicago .... 81 5) 614 Donlin rolled out Seymour struck out. NO RUNS. Eighth Inning, _Hurch watked, but wos forced on Alpennan to Jordan, RUNS. mley's grounder, ‘enney to Briwell, Hummell flied to Seymour, | Herzog ew out Jordan, NO RIN! Pat to third on to 2 he Crandall e to ude & an fouled THRE § Ninth Inning. m cateh'n: or New Ale an singled to right, and MeMillan 1 to left. Sieehan hit into a doue lay. 0 Herzog to 7 third, Fara NO 1 Tenney TUGERALD AND / CROSS AT WEIGHT FRR BIG BATT —_—- ss and Willie Fitzgerald | welghed in at 3 o'clock this afternoon at Leach Cro: mateh ‘for thelr to-nig' the Na» t ‘Twentys an moved the t 135 pounds, tional Athlet | fourth street n was set either Maneger White, of the National Ath- tle Club, was § at Fitzgerald's | gplendid condition. The “Fighting Harp’? ne never felt better. “He certainly sahd met looked better,” sald White, ) eleceecceocecceo™

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