The evening world. Newspaper, April 8, 1911, Page 1

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“INSIDE THE RING WITH THE GREAT FIGHTERS” Fro) By CHARLIE WHITE, Famous Referee New Sporting Feature Begins in THE EVENING WORLD To-Day 19DH0ODHHHHHHIHHHOOHONOHOOOOOOO ——————$— WHATHER—Rain probably to-might or FINAL RESULTS AND ENTRIES PRICE ONE OENT. Copsey 19) __| “Cireulat Oo. (The tom "Bee seu Vtoeeld The Freee Publishing NE tion Books Open to All” w ‘YORK, SATURDAY, APRIL 8, GIANTS TOY WITH YALE IN FIRST GAME OF SEASON Marquard Easily Hasty Hs Bulldc | BATTING 1G ORDER. Giants, Yale Players in Game at Devore. ¢. Badger... * of Mernttt, a Polo Grounds. Gee enone se Merkle, 1b Rialey, th. Bridwem, #* TESREAU MAKES DEBUT, | Navara Ur Maiti a sar nae| | Loutritl Freeman, p tendance—3,000 HILLTOPS TACKLE. __ WILKESBARRE TEAM AM the New York Colts Get a Chance in the Field Against the Collegians. (Spmaal to The Prening be 4 POLO GROUNDS, April 8/The Giants patted the But Dee gently 01 the head this afternoon for the fret @ame at home gla season, and tn # firm Gut fatherly manner spake as fol- lows: ‘Sonny, you may be flerce, but sow Bad better put the liniment in| your band and get ready. You are # ing to be mashed." Te accomplish this daring feat Mo- Geew promised to put tn hie entire demon squad of forty-two trained and | wotrained tig leaguers if it reached wbet point of necessity. Despite the! spimal chill that greoted our herves| freah from the Mexican border, they | ' went at their task of demolition wit | BATTING | ORDER. the uswal pepper that bobbed to the WiKibac bars murface in the South, Wehrell There were 3,000 of the faithful on! Hemphill, cf Nam to greet thaconquering champions, - Chess, Lb, New York Players Eager for Work as Opening of the Season Approaches. and notwithstanding our alleged Ameri. | Hartsel \rndt, 1b cam wpirit of pulling dor the under dog | Knight, ltunter, rf every mother's son of @ fan in the| Daniels, it, Manuach, it grand stand wanted to eee the poor apern. - atte, 3b, ltttle dog of Yale crushed to the ground ‘Vauighn, = Me Presky m5 and kicked all over the bright green-! inigher, ‘p aa sward, Murphy's ball yard. Bren #0, they had a hard time doing! eee it, €or the Yale twirler, Freeman by WILKES-BARRE, Pa, April §—It name, held the demon Giants in the wasn't exactly the kind of weather palm of his hand for three whole in- lings, and as the curves whistled around their eare the only man to 00 therefrom a hit was Rube ard, rural free delivery route baseball players ike to work in that | Prevailed to-day when the Hilltops and Wilkes-Barre lined up in their first | | Kame of the two-game series. But ; both teams needed the game and prac- mhio, That, !t might be explained, wa Jcompany of young Mongollana in the in accident due to the ball coming into tee, particularly the New Yorkers, icsaki uniforms of Boy Scouts, Some of ne particular groove in which the) Whose big season opens next Wednes-|:ie women were on horachack, Half a 311,000 one was swinging | day, and so the game was on. Nothing} |dozen of tie men carried cute moon- The said Mr. Marquard wrestied| short of a cloudourst could deter | Uttle children dressed in the rich. allantly to keep the collegians from| Chase and his men from the course! est of satine and brocades i " ing tho sand hel that brought them to this town of | awe ; : ae Rae tattle surcanséil Undine courts ria m to this town off ane costumes worn by the paraders nning, when Sophomore Merritt shot | one through the box, taking with it to ne Chase camp by the appea Was slronger to-day OE Fah alc a LM eg nce of Jack Quinn, who ios got in here from his Pottsville home g after trying himself out at the traps at Larry Doyle Scores. | Witiamstown, ‘The great spitball exe| There was no ¢ hat his absence from the of runs as a re eat im back in condition because between shots at the pigeons he wor at home with the sod- Y danger busters o ns He ought work ywith @ sharp ground: | to-day tuat first baseman finally | oe tg go home and shoot @ mateh for ¥ . 1 there with true jot the D ath true | si00.a side, But as Jim Vaughn ia slated until Doyle and Snodgrass | for the opene in Philadelphia next} making t from second, | Wednesday this was the place for his odgrass s a, but oversild the | last preparat work out, and it was suceinet hi y of the first run Bill Clymer has a good bunch of ball Cee meee we pable of doing everything ih the “Boola” gong the war-|a little better than the New Yorkers, of the biue accomplished naught | Thats what he thought vefore the n their round. The Giants t 50t leame i i Rridwell ‘Ringled an lin inapiod. “A long. fy scored Brid,_ but POSTPONED “GAMES. Devil was amght between the sack Sankie ind died peaceful Marqua mped) PHILADELPHIA, April & 4 second single past the pt ae game between the iwo FE scored when Dev singled and ¢ major league baseball cea college centre fielder made a bad thr for this afternoon, was postponed the ball upsetting 6 Doyle o the third sack, Lotographer in its wild fight | account of rain, The series stan IN HOT BATTLE; NEW YORK SEES ITSFIRST CHINESE. STREET PAGEANT | Giant Dragon and Lion Chief Features of Parade Winding Up the Great Fa COSTUMES DAZZLING. 'Women A-Horseback and Men | Toting Babies Odd Sights— Fair Nets $25,000, New York is after witnessed Yu | Street parade, San Francisco is the only other American city In which @ dimilar | spectacle han been seen, | The Yu undertaken as a Ind-up fair which has] een for a week in Jimmy Kelly's Mandarin ‘Tea, Gardens, Nos. 11 nd 13 Doyers atreet. for the reilef of the Chinese famine sufferers. ever Gai was 0 the great under way | exploitation of this fair members of the | Hip Sing, On Leong and Four Brothers | Tongs have worked shoulder to shoulder |and their united efforts will add eome- | thing over $2500 10 the famine relief fund. When arrar nents were meade for [the Yu Gel @ Fedulsition was made on Ohimatown in San Francisco for a Moo- wonglung and a Seegee. The firet ta a papier macig representation of # drap- on, sixty-five fect long, the second the | figure of @ great lion, The arrival of these necessary adjuncta to the parade | afew days ago caused more excttement than Chinatown has experienced stnve the last street duel The pargde started from the Joss house, No, 16 Mott atreet, at 1 o'clock. |'There were some 400 Chinese in lin |ten, women and children, including @ were really gorgeous. All were new. Not even the grand entree of the Bar- num & Bailey circus at the Garden shows more brilliant and daggling col- ors than dia the parade down-town of the Chinese this afternoon. Of course, the features of the specs tacle were the immense figures of the! dragon and the lon, The dragon was [carried Dy thirty-fve Chinamen, Alt | that could be seen of them were their |sandalied feet from the ankles down j The dragon m: along like @ gigantic entipede. The Ine of the parade extended from |chatham Square through Worth atrest to Broadway, down around the Post Office to Park Row and up Park Row to Chinatown. Two brass bands neveral Chinese ds furnished the music. ‘The glittering novelty of the show attracted an immense crowd Lee Fong Was the Grand Marshal. fe was assisted by Chin Chong Wong and Lee Foy » three important offictals ted on staid and deliberate n are said to have beon bor- on from the stailes harlie Baclgalupo to | of the dertaker, | ts fret Yu Ga ai is Chinese for In the| THE DRAGON'S HEAD | ue “f i LEADING LADY | | FUR LYNCHINGS BY GEORGIA MOBS; NEGROES VICTIMS Jails Stormed at Ellaville and Lawrence and Prisoners Dragged to Death. CHINESE GIRLS, In PARADE | ELLAVILA April 8 tng the lynching of (. Hal Lawrenceville early thts n | more black men » Ga orning, three ved here dy one hund «J masked men. ‘Phe Jordan, Charlie Dawaor | Jthe whale to a point off Shinnecack ay Hurton, were in jail charged | | Reach it dived and remained lwith the murder of Newton Mason, under #o long thar even the old whalers white man, on Jan ot tt ing. ‘Phere was no trace of ‘ } jale next day and jt was wap ragged th Out Oh Abe this m watchers saw 4 ‘One Fa i was ead with fit spouting wngtea, Within ar ommand of 1 for the * expedition = ou ine wa PAGES probably to-night or Sunday. WETHER f Circulation Books Open to All.’ | 1911. Actors in Chinese Yu-Gai With Dragon From Photographs Taken Especially for the Evening World by Staff Artists. PRICE ‘ONE CENT. PRINZESS IRENE MOVED. SEAWARD BY TUGS AS Bll CARGO LIGHTENS ee oe ‘Liner Is Hauled a Bit Off Sand Bar and Hopes of Saving Her En- courage Redoubled Efforts Before Storm Comes. ‘CAPTAIN'S HAIR WHITENED IN FEW HOURS OF STRAIN. \1,743 Passengers Landed at Hoboken and Salvage of 2,700 Tons of Freight Proceeds Rapidly. For the first time since she stranded Thursday morning upon Lone , Hill sanispit off Fire Island, the big North German Lloyd liner Prinzess | Irene this afternoon showed signs of responding to the efforts of the rescue fleet to haul her clear of the bar. f | _ _ At 3,30 o'clock an officer of ihe revenue cutter Mohawk, returning jto his own ship from the Prinzess Irene, reported that the tugs which hitched to her at high tide and started pulling had just moved the stranded | vessel’s stern two degrees seaward and had Possibly succeeded also in pulling her vast bulk back a few inches out of the silt which now hokis her fast from bow to keel. ‘The wood newn that the great veasel had been budged ever so ttle lent | added xest to the work. It was an- that heavier Kedge ancho: | Hounced t han those then in use would be pl ‘ed seaward and that the connec | RAN | cables would be doubled in length. Within @ few minutes new cables r MEXICO I DEAD were belng paid out from the port stern in @ southeasterly direction. The Mer- rittChapman Company's two big t wreckers, three other large tugs and two Government vessels were standing | | DY ready to haut again at the beached 2 +o. | ahtp, Son on Nave to Murder Scene] Passengers All Landed. Will Arrive Too Late— I Alte her L743 passengers having been transierred and landed in New | York, the Pringess Irene early to-day became the ventre of one of the biggest sof kalvage ever undertaken along While tugs were making per- empts to draw her off, the Widow Prostrated. |p telegram recelved to-day by relatives, sistent [at No. 3 Emory street, Jersey City, the’ work of home of George W. Crichfeld, the aa- forward steadily Ber te. riety | ; “|phait mationaire who war shot from) | Tank ther conditions, the Jack woo | from Georgioa and two from South, {ambush near hie ranch at Tuxpan, | hundreds of men who swarmed into the LAWRE two from Georg Mexico, Tuemlay last, stated that he|frelsht hatches at dawn were able to A mob drarged Charlie Hale, colored cheapie ace copepod |atea et 90 o'clock yesterday afternoon, | make wonderful headway, end “the Jfrom the jail here carly to-day and ave commanded one, hut hie nepmatis| Cee on ncia wan overwhelmed by the| ship's Owners were encouraged to Hane Inanget im pein Pees he Big Feller That’s Been "Re Murmute. insted je{nena of her husband's death, as eaciy that the vessel would be pulled off with As the body ne dh ne \tolegrams had heartened her to hope he|! sla: Beeb ; shots Playin’ Peek-a-Boo. for Atlantic, buns hed @ fregrain velting, “of ‘Sr. Crich |Jteve to. the: Priedrien “Wulneue dete Hale attacked Mrs. ©. (. Wittian earing from © no details of how he |ompleted shortly 1 © yesterday Vhree Weeks Ays coming up close His son, Orant, ning. |MSMt and the rele? ship started for t formed until afte ge the whalers tarted for Mexico on|NoW York three hours jater, passing e officials thought —_—_—_— : This One a Fighter. a y Tuesday afternoon, but 1 not expected |Sandy Hook at midnight and steaming 2 to 1 in favor of the Amerteans ‘ a wi shina ik afternoon Cupt.| 9 arrive at the ranch unt! to-morrow, linto the upper bay shortly after 1 bumped teh fence for a two-base shot | ~~ er si kirlded w at ha y enough to the! gince the first report of the shooting |o'clock, The cabin passengers hea cored, Snodgrnea was N=] CINCINNATI, April § Today's : be teow re, Crivhfleld has revelved only brief hoped to be landed without de on a filmsy 6! ssn ANA ne ands | inclonat! Yetohale: wae wrevented FRIENDS AWAIT THE: END, | 20st three wees Wy tn the! telegram sho got yesterday stated that |embark the more than 1,400 immigrant acking tn vi waar tes Mg coo eae tee rela ee . , t soon] he had @ good chance to recove in a strange land in the middle of the was imminen iraw too on ad ‘ a | — a feht, and the Stars and substituted the -Mavor of Clevel 1 St , and ar re _> \ nla vessel anchored off the tos BOYS FIND ‘SKELETON | jExwayar ells aor : vith har BULANCE HITS | statue of Livorty until after daylight (Continued on Second Page.) IN BRONX PLAY CAVE.| Coma and Can Live but a | harpoe ad A latuetan’ wile “AUTO AM when she slowly made her way’ is to . Few Days at Most : re : loated to shore of the BOY AND PICKS HIM up. | er pler. | 7 URVEUARE, ADH A aot : l f the battle unt mipie of — | Barly as was the hour anxious friends Rumor That Murder Is Revealed! sBVEL d : * after the first harpoon was Bicvclist Who Was Tossed Becomes| and reiatives of immigrants and cel un hat es 1,. Johns . wing a re 1 Bicyelist Ww nN W a ed ° Disinterred Bones cadeese ciel gins . . i > mts were Sort of First: Aid. ong the emotional | Edward Sebled ear old an , 5 ‘ : ‘ but to-day ts b ed to ¢ ! 1 ale Tannery es Sea 8 “ : | Being run over Dy an ambulance od Telatives’ ae ead Dna Le caveniawars “!New Yorker Defeats Joshua Hs ae A Eee war whale [la Abd the na “4 froin | Balog rn ambiance | though veturned from the cf Lie uns ne OR . ¢ 1 directions the victortous | sures thi ne inured dead As the dripping of water wears}! near Kast One Ifindred and Thirty. . PS Fe ' No official anno . ween | iuntin ratus at ave ex: |® 4 pags be quick! So Harry Lawsoa, away a stone, so our habits wear | tira street and Wills avenue this af. Crane of Boston in made, but close frieuds of th« y| perience, The news that @ whale has | Mnalere upon then ee wa ee ae ee aA Saat Gon Captain’s Hair Turned. grooves in which we are apt to walk w his pi mnearthed a ie < admit that dissolut st rely: n the offing causes thene | U* &! dag a s rema Hundred and tiy-fi?th scree, learned | Mrs. ©. F. Pfaffmann ef No. 200 Weat through life, moving not to grasp ¢ ran to a policeman Straight Sets. jays distant, ‘The nin Pe j t w r ap / : «afternoon riding. a | Blwhtyonixeh et, who, with her the opportunities that beckon at sim murder had been state of come part 9 ry ake to the até and start is athe, Was one of the first passengers every SteP ; i i rho. frou atcunded Cte Rafael This rut or “groove” Is a prison ‘ Gouid of New| TO FOUND us S. UNIVERSITY, Whale layed Peek-a-Boo , after the Irony Aranda Ooet eam out of which you may climb by ay . t ha ee whales appnared seizing hold of some of the more ne r an \ ' than 8,000 opportunities to better the . ‘our business or ts condi y to the Morgiie io be individually advertised in aly O00. pareons watoh tthe report that a veved The Sanday World 4 To-Morrow had been un et No Extra Charge for It Ayertisement ne World may be left, a ant Kies paint Stemuger"ewrice Lathe sy uu 7) a ‘9.6Y {ur neh ite! oO Lao 1B ited Stare 1b: j ing for the p ervice 1 an . . bd orary e Wa: | consideration of some distin ed o vices rendered the nation is auth: ted. ee days ag bouts night s. Pfafimann was quite friendly 1 with the captain and was one of fow passengers who talked wit after the Lrene struck the sand She valid this morning on the per in “| Hovoken that there Was a noticeable || whiteness in his hair the day after the | Irene grounded ‘The health af every im ae of the LM a

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