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M ev a oh a « WBATHER-—Clearing to-night; Thors ONE OENT. Co. (The Ni Coprright, 1911, br The The “ Circulation Books Open to All," The Press Publ Noh ing: York World), NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1911. ire TEAM JUBILANT [TWO Gis FcR * 7 ng 4 oe Giants’ Manager Says Mar- ‘quard and Matty Will Bene- fit by Day’s Rest. BATTING 1S NEEDED. With “Rube” in Home Box and Slugging Restored He Is Sure of Victory. By Bozeman Euiger. 7 (Special to The Evening World.) PHILADELPHIA. Oct 18.—Thore ‘wes great joy in the camp of the Giants at noon to-day when the official @pnouncement was hung up that the Pame had been postzoned on account af rain. Al! during the night McGraw end his men had puiled for a down- *pour. When they awoke and. found the Pain still falling the piayera:began fs uring that their chances of winning the series wete growing brighter with every Grop. McGraw dectared that one day of rest ts Jost what he wants to put his pitca- {og staf in shape, This makes it pos- sible for Ames to pitch to-morrow, for Marquard to tackle the Athletics on the Polo Grounds on Friday and for Matty to be*thoroughly rested for the #aturday game in Philadelphia, Before the series began McGraw tried to adjust his twirling. With Matty on she mound in the opening game, there was nothing to do but let the Southpaw start on hostile soll. This new arrange- ent makes it possible for him to work om) the Polo Grounds, and in that spot he-{s usually invincible, WGRAW SURE THE HITTING SLUMP 18 OVER. ‘The Giants are etill bitterly bewalling thetr Inability to hit the ball, ‘The hit- ting slump into which they have fallen began after the second day in Brook- lyf, before the close of the National League season, and so fer they have not ered. hen it does break,” sald McGraw Tats morning, “I figure that our batters ‘Will step in and teee off eoise runs.” ‘MeGraw is very much disappointed over the showing of Devore, and if a had been possible this afternoon, Benéer had pitched. the chances that he would havo put the lit fdiow on the bench and Becker wou fe played left Meld. Josh te terribly waraged. He says that he Injured in -ne of the Brooklyn gamen that It still worries him in swinging. main trouble, however, is that Josi: hg@e lost heart on account of bel: i pres before the speed merchan Athletics, He struck out five times ts a row. He algo fa'led to get a bare 0 balls, and thk makes his romart: speed on the bases abdsoluetiy uselens. ‘The main topic of conversation among Giants to-day le the work of Um- Connolly In the game that was lost tq\New York yesterday, They have thing but praise for Dineen, the oth- Ameridan gue umpire, but thoy eciaro that Connolly gave them the worst of it in five base daciatons and that ail of them hurt. Hundreds of fans came over from New York this morning only to find the game postponed, They decided to stay over until to-morrow and just now the old town of Philadelphia is a buszing hive of baseball talk, The hotel men have at last come into thelr own and thely places are over-run with people seeking rooms for the night, The Giants ly are ut at the Majestic Hotel, more than « mtle from the centres of attraa- tion, and they will remain there until the hour of the game, McGraw has ad- vised ali of his players to stick to thelr hotel and not mix up with the threpge uptown, GIANTS GPENT QUIET PAY IN QUAKER CITY, ‘Tho Giants spent their afternoon play> bUMards and pool and attending the nee performance at one of the local theatres, They still figure thomseives ay being able to win the series and have los, hope by any means, American League players ware at the grounds as usual before W o'clock, Baker and Coombe were the heroes of the equad and they were vested hy hearty congratulations, Beth took Wor tovaueert ow Sivom ‘00 Woven Peaeh ” AS TAXI COLLIDES WITH MILK WAGON Dr. Crockett and Wife, Niece of J. P. Morgan, Go to Hospital. The Rov. Dr. Stuart Crockett, for sev- eral troubled years rector of the. Holy- rood Protestant Episcopal Church at Broadway and One Hundred and Elehty- reet, was seriously hurt to-day In ashup between the taxleab in which he and his wife were riding and a milk wagon, Mre. Crockett was not physi- cally injured, but with her husband wa: taken to St. Luke's Hospital suffering from shock. wer The taxicab was crossing Madison ave- fue at One Hundred and Twenty-fitth street. James McGregor, the driver, put on speed to dodge @ southbound Madi- son avenue car. The taxicab skidded and @ corner of it struck a milk wagon, driven by George Michaelson of No. 358 West One Hundred and Twenty-seventh street. Tho crash was very violent. A front wheel of the cab was torn off and the front of the machine smashed. Dr. Crockett was hurled to the street, where he lay limp, while his wife, caugig in the wrecked cab, screamed for help. Policeman Schulta helped McGregor, who was unhurt, pick the rector up and called for an ambulance from Harlem Hospital, RECTOR, ANNOYED BY CROWD, REFUSES AMBULANCE, Dr. Crockett, who ts sixty years old, was much annoyed by the curious crowd which gathered around him, and when Dr, Baker came with the ambu- lance rpfused to get into {t, although Dr. Baker said he ought to go to the hospital to have the serious cuts on his nose and neck treated, “I shall go to St. Luke's then,” sat Dr. Crockett. St. Luke's te an Episco- Palian inatitution. Another taxicab was called and Dr. Crockett and his wife went to St, Luke's in the care of @ phystclan, who had vol- unteered his services, A Iittle later Mrs, Crockett, who ts a nleco of J. Plerpont Morgan, left the hospital, wearing her husband's mud plastered black coat, She went to their home et No, 160 West Seventy-second street. Nine years ago Dr C.rockett attracted tho attention of church peoplo by estab- Mshing a gymnasium and bowling alley tn connection with @ little misson, of which he had charge in Cypress Hills. In a short time he had the church out of debt and prosperous, He had served in churches in Washington, Baltimore and the West before coming here, ‘KEEP OFF THE GRASB” CHURCH LAWN, When he was called to Holyrood Chureh ho roused the wrath of some of the members of the church by try- ing to abollah the board of truatoce and qubstitute @ vostry. He tried to koep the lawn in front of the church neat and trim and pus up “Keen Off the Grass” signe, Likewise he chased away children who disregarded the algna, and took away a toy shovel from a boy who was digging in It, causing the younga- ter to cry, All these doings were lator embodied in a petition to have bim removed from the rectorate, In the oourse of the dispute Dr, Crockett told President Bolton of the Boam of Trustees that Mr, Bolton was the only real opponent of the reotor tn the ohuroh, “Even #0," aid Mr, Bolton, “did not not the Lord send only one angel to stand in the way of Balsam and his ase” Whereupon Dr, Crockett announced he was a man, even if he wore @ clergy, man, and grabbed Mr, Bolton and shook him soundly, Dp, Cronkett's wifo wag Mies Adeline Autphen of this city and In weatiy Mm hor own Fight, ON ee, PPA, Rew, INDICTMENT OF ‘OVER POSTPONEMENT: AMES | WIL PITCH NEXT GAN). CLERGYMAN HURT Highway Robbery Added to the Accusations Against Youth Held as Fiend. IS DOUBLY IDENTIFIED. Alma Sopano Declares Brach Was Member of Gang That Attacked Her. Two tndictments, each charging in two separate counts the details of the attacks made upon Agnes Waugh of No. 438 Eighty-third street, Bay Ridge, and Alma Sopano, another Brovxlyn girl, have been drawn, with Frank Brach as the defendant. It 1s reported that no indictments will be returned by the Kings County Grand Jury until Friday tn the cases, but it Is belleved that the Grand Jurors have already voted to sign the docu:€ents charging Brach with the two unusually brutal attacks pon helpless women. In the case of Miss Waugh, a pretty stenographer, who was frightfully hort when attacked @ week ago, almost within the shadow of her own home, it “was sald to-day that the indictments would contain charges including two grades of assault. In the case of Miss Sopano, one count {s to charge assault and the other high- way robbery. The girl.said that h hat, @ bracelet and a pocketbook were stolen when she was the victim of a viclous attack by three men on the night of Aug. 20, PRISONER’S BIG HANDS AIDED IDENTIFICATION, Alma Sopano, the other victim, also pfore the Grand r assailant. She from-a dance when she was eelsed by @ big man who struck her, put his hand over her mouth to stifle her cries, and dragged her into @ field, where he was joined by two other men. The girl says she was kept pris- oner from shortly before midnight until 8 o'clock in the morning. Brooklyn detectives who had been en gaged on the Waugh case sald that Brach's big hands aided in bis identtf- cation in both cases, and helped ‘tp hy capture. They say that Miss Waugh's Glleged declaration after the attack that she had not seen her assailant, and knew only that he was a big man with large, strong hands, helped throw Brach off his guard, but that Miss Wa: really had given a description that fitted Brach in every particular, As soon as Miss Waugh 1s able to appear in police court she will confront Brach and make her {dentification of him comple: He has been held with- out bail by Magisirate Hylan in the Fifth Avenue Court, Brooklyn, until Miss Waugh can appear. Dr. David Livingstone, who Is attending the youn g| woman, says he thinks it will be te days before she 1s rufficiently recovered to go to court, ‘The Brooklyn police last night got a tip that led them to suspect that Brach may have known something of the se- ries of attacks upon young women In the Blythebourns neighborhood in June. 1910, TWO OTHER BRUTAL ATTACKS BY NEIGHBORHOOD GANG. At that time two different young women, Miss Helen Wilson of No, 8 Adelphi strect, Brooklyn, and Mrs. Pauline Krayeka of No. 197 Bast Third street, Manhattan, wore setzed at night and dragged into @ vacant stable at Eleventh avenue and Sixty-fourth street. They were beaten and abused, Brach's home is at Eleventh avenue and Thirty-sixth strest, in the truck- patch datrict that bordéra the east side of Greenwood Cemotery, In the last two years there have becn many attacks on Women in the Blythebourne and New Utrecht districts. which were not. re- ported to the police, Brooklyn, extending Cemetery to Dyker Seventh avenue to Si comparatively unaettiod, Bragh reavsertod yesterday that he aia not quit work at George Morch's tla- shop, No, #H Lawrence strest, Jlate bush, until 6 P, M, Just Wednesday, the night of the attack Ww The prisoner's brothe:, All that part of Greenwood from Y ‘Opera Star Who Got Secret Divorce OLE FREMSTAD'S “TWAS LUCKY” SAYS BAKER PANG HOME RINDRNES (Specie! to The Evening We PHILADELPHIA, Oct. ‘big man of Philadelphia, 1s saying that he was luaky. The luck of making a long fall to somebody,” that {t fell to me. in hitting a home run, hit on the nose. How often hands? I usually hit into and Mathewson's curve was of right field when I met ft fence in the Polo Grounds got it over. That's all ther have done the same thing. I was a little however, as the experts have ing that a curve ball ts my If you will remember !t was that I hit off Marquard on Matty’s curve of yesterd squarely over the and, having judged the speed doesn't take 60 much st a long drive an tt hit the ball at the spot where aims, “Mathewson ts a wonderful he had me going two of t [but ft didn't go tn the. righ Jand Murray caught the ba right centre, “That Dall was hit almost the one that went over the “T haven't got anything to Jyoung hero aid, In answer quiry about the Inctdeat at | when half bie clolhea weer to minutes tater, In ro} Any other batter on the te Joos in the tho wpiking I got from Snodgrass,” y Jack Berry, ho wad; Baker, the man who has stolen old | Bill Penn's stuff and 1s now the real a modest, unassuming chap, and he explains | ‘nis two terrific drives that beat the | ¢%Perlence I had as a ball player was Giants two days in succeession by hit has to said the young farm: er from Maryland, “and tt so happened SCHOOL BOARD DEMANDS There {sa lot of luck | en if the ball ts | do you see | hot drive go straight into some flelder's right field, just slow enough for me to pull It n the direction) Comptroller Pi The low was also placed just right for this drive, and 1/4. e te to It am mieht 4 that I hit a curve, been say kness. fast one Monday ay oroke middle of the plate | 1 of It ace ourately, my swing met it squarely, It ngth to make ability to the batter er and a at tt it direction i in deep| as hard as! fonce, about the to an tne third base, orn off, I way “HI said yesterday ho i@ ready to @o inte ano er Rar) \eeust on. ehuveday swear that | ‘He jumped cloar serosa the bag to ay afte’ moing home jnat Wednes.| aot mo, T waa in my right position ht, Ww with him until at least) "While Baker has ittle to say about The attack on Mise Waugh that incident the other players of the PM, between 685 1, M, and 6.04 Athletic toame@ are & lite sore about Clilot tngpestar stushon of the Centra; | NAker Meine wpiked, | They nay Met Office jn Prank Brach's ploture {a ip the Rogues lanhattan asid to-day ‘nat aallery and te mamtery® 179% | Cobh and Anodgr: runnerd shat have spiked they argue thas es he has Athletics’ Star Batter, Who Has Beaten Giants Two Straight, Tells How He Connected With Matty’s and Marquard’s Curves, |the others he must be playing the 18.—Frank Position properly. “A goon as the reason ts over,” added Baker, “I am going on a hunt- |ing trip along the Chesapeake Bay, I Jead that kind of life all winter. You know I was raised on a farm, The firet [ee T played on @ team that was run y Charley Herzog now of the Giants. ie and I are neighbors out at Ridgely, | Md, _—__ $33,000,000 | FOR 1912, | Budget Committee C Calls Educa- tional Experts to Consider Bud- get’s Increase of $4,000,000. rendergast and President ‘Mitchel of the Board of Aldermen, ae a committee of the Board of Estimate to- y gave a hearing on the school budget for ¥ The Board of Jeation asks for $33,000,000, or $4,000,000 more than last year, Superintendent Maxwell estimated that there would be 671,000 children in attendance next year, an increase of 16,00. He asks for 623 m teachers. Seated with the committee were Prof. Hanus of Harvard University, specially engaged by the Board of Ed- ucation to diseset the achool budget, and Mra, Matilda Ford, Comptrolier | Prendergast's school ‘expert. Facing them wee President Winthrop of the Hoarl of Education, Superintendent | Maxwell, Gen, Wingate and Miss Olivia Leaventritt of the Board of Edu lon, pei sn aah |e. One time T oanst one on the nove| BAPTIST COLLEGE HEAD HELD AS FEUD SLAYER, MANCHESTER, Ky., Oct. 16.—Rev. A. J. Burns, president of the Baptist College at Onelda, is under arrest here charged with having killed his cousin, Pecy Burns, who was shot from an busn last night. The reopening of a old feud between two Burns fact {e held responsible for the killing, Bloodhounde this morning tock up the trail and followed It to th r of Rev. A. J. Burns's home, the police say. The college of which Rev, Burns |» the head 1s kept up by wealthy Baptists of Li ton and Loutaville for the ed- ucation of mountain children, —_—————— | For Racing Result! and Entries Page Four. “GRAW PICKS AMES TO WIN NEXT GAME. SEALED VERDICT IN THE RUZZIELAMB’S /SUIT FINAL 2A BOUTIONS vam, 80 PAGES DIVORCE AVENGES HER PREDECESSOR First Mrs. ipa Sil She Knew Opera Star Would Find Unhappiness, SET HER HUSBAND FREE. Fails to Reach a Says She Consulted Singer ing His Seven About Naval Man's Infatua- tion Before Suing. At No. 88 Morton place, Hast Orange, N. J., ts @ woman who says she under- stands exactly the feelinga of Olive Fremetad, the Metropolitan Opera etar, in divorcing Edson W. Sutphen, hoe South American mining promot is Mra. M. Elisabeth Sutphen, who i fifteen yeare was Sutphen’s wife. She divorced Sutphen because of his infat- uation for Ove Frematad. “Bo Olive Fremstad has got it,” she said, as though talking to herself, when an. Evening World . reporter | taid . her to-day of the Frematad divorce, “tb new she would get, it, just the way 1 Ite 36 had. te come GAYS GINGER, WAS “VERY NICE! on Apour IT.” “You must understand I have no hard feelings against Olive Fremstad. I called on het here once, juat before my divorce, and told her that I had seen her with my husband in Parts, and asked her if I had grounds to divorce him, She was very nice about i" Mra, Sutphen has « dressmaking shop. She tried unsuccessfully to keep a board- ing house, and is now dependent together upon her own efforts to support herself and her son, Judson Sutphen, though by the terms of her divorce, she says, sho {s ontitled to #00 a month alimony. “In 1882 I wae at Pinney Point, M4." 4 Mra, Sutphen, “when the training ship Dale came in, Mr. Sutphen had just been graduated from the Naval Academy and was @ midshipman, I fell in love with him. He was handsome, had fascinating manners and wore uniform, We were married soon after, Four years later, when he was an en- sign, ho resigned from the navy and took me to Buenos Ayres, where paving busin indeed, and became adjourned Part XII. of the Supreme Court for the day. DAMM'S WAGON DAMS BROADWAY AT DANIM “FIRE” Truck Hit Pole an Pole and Firemen Said Things Because of False Alarm. very rich, “About six years ago he told me he thought I ought to take Judson to Eng- land and put him in school. He ar- ranged that he would #end his moth Mra. J. J. Sutphen, of Omaha, his broth- er-tn-law, Dr. H.C, Simmes and his aunt, Miss Mary Webster, over to live with me, #o I would not be lonely, 1 went to London ami took @ fine apart- ment at No. fC Beiagicn Gardens and lived there very nicely, A vividly decorated truck belonging to Willam F, Damm of No, 48 Liberty atreet turnal in a false alarm of fire from Broadway and Broome atreet to- day and Dammed up Broadway traMc for half an hour. ‘This wi » driven by Frank Gearing, Iwas turning into Broadway from Bre we street when the Damm hind wheel TRACED HIM TO PARI struck a pole on the corner which sup- OHE OROLARES, porte a fire-alarm box, The Damm “One day I went to Paris to do some! wagon, heavily laden with furniture and phapeiny 1 was just coming out of| works of art, struck the pole with such force that the fire alarm was set off. Gearing tried to get the Damm truck away from the and tn that way he kept sending tn alarms, Pretty soon there was clustered about the Damm wagon and the fire-alarm box the gosh aide Olive Frematad. hotel in Paris looking for him. Continental I found an ‘E. W. Stephens and wife’ registered. I knew then he was there, because he had sald, I went to every At the ingly, that #0 many persons pope ie our name for Btephena he meant to payee dialed ire apparal 4 use the name !f he ever required an | *#!nable 5 alias. There was Battalion Chief Helm, re- "T could not get to his room, but 1|peatin the » of Damm over and satisfied myself he was there and I sentlover a 1a lot of captains and him a letter, telling him what I had|foremen and regular firemen with rub. learned. He got it. I went co London conte on ng the samo thing He followed and found me at the Gre a Walia (ake a amen venor Hotel. He settled $50,000 on n sadder trueke: four tan and promised me #00 a month allimon “Then T came here and got the di-|ders and a fire patrol wagon success vorce from him, With the money I) fully dai © tide of trolley cars. bought @ place at Westgate-on-Sea,| With the aid of a couple of pike poles England, and entertained a gnpat deal. | tho tires 4 the Damm wagon 1 policemen and trolley |1 weft England with only enough money | te firemen a and conductors and the to pay my way here he followed me to| car motor: entirely out of | cael i — |" procees'ngs Jail for Robbing «a Churoh, remstad announced her After confessing that he had for marriage to Sutphen at Salt Lake City, hal: J April 15, 1906, just after the Sutphen ai. |the second ttme stolen @ chalice from |vorce, It was given out that they hud) the altar of a church, James Brady, met in this country only @ few weeks|@ Bowery lodyer, was sent to the before Penitentiary for eleven months by Juss When Misa Fremstad arrived horw| tice Moss in Spectal Sessions to-day, yesterday sie admitted that the decree fin b was from Corpus Chriatt | of divorce from Sutphen had been © » 221 West aligned Jily, when she was abroad, on the report of Robert L. Luce, ret-/ pawn the veasel, In June, 1909, Brady eree. She charged him with mis tot | Was sentenced to the penitentiary for in thie city, He is now in Central|@ year for stealiny a chalice from 9¢, Amerion, sea l Andrew's Chueh tu Duane atreeh oS wet str waa caught when trying to ro If the jury] o, 1 spent my money too fast and then | trom the le and the Damm horses the allmony stopped. Mr, Sutphe DA eer. denis Naas Ae Ana borrowed %,000 from me. Later he| 1284 agg tcaget ys aac Pel came back and begged for more. When | ons a4 th pier and, out of sheer pity, I gave| passengers who had veen held up in m a five-pound note. He sald it was|the trafic dam just said “Damm, | the only money he had in the world Damm, William F, Damm” er words to! | 1 that Miss From-| nat effect, PRICE ONE lB WURY A DEADLOCK OVER RUZZELANB'S $5000 DAMAGE SU Decision Concerns Years of Love- making and Court Orders a Sealed Verdict. MISS SMITH’S LETTERS READ AGAIN IN JURY ROOM. Ruzzielamb Arraigned in Closing Argument for Dragging a Woman’s Name Before the Public. After having been out three hours;should reach a verdict tonight it @ half the jury tn the case of| will be written and sealed to be read Ruszielamb Sigfried Griswold against | by the Court tomorrow moraing. Helen Woodruff Smith for $50,000] Tie careful deliberation of the case damages for broach of promise of /¢Vidently being given by the jury is marriage, fallood to reach @ verdict, | ke by Russlo and his attorneys as and at four o'clock Justice Brown | Plsesing intimation that they are to be successful in their unique suit. “They aro either in disagreement arguing the amount of damages,” was the general comment of those {9 the courtroom waiting hour after hour for the jury to retun. Both attorneys had their innings in the morning and Justice Brown's charge to the Jury was an impartial treatise on the law governing cases of breach of prome ise. ‘The correspondence that Russie= petit Bh soe. Jacob Gordon. had ine vidence was sent to the psi Sages and tt seemed evident the en tire Jury was anxious to give Russie’ case full consideration, The surprise of the day came when after Ruzzle's attorney, Jacob Gordon had rested his case, Attorney Meoney Also rested without putting Miss Sm.th on the etand, It had been expected that she would have to deny having promise® to marry her Stegfried, Mr, Mooney, im his summing up, sald it was not neces sary to subject her to the further hue millation of @ cross-examination whe the law plainly stated a formal dental nense,”’ maid Mr. Mooney, “and judge for yourselves whether the plaintiff hag carried the burden of proof as he Is res quired to do and shown that she hed promised to marry him beyond all reae sonable doubt." PLAN OF DEFENSE DISAPPOINTS. RUZZIE’S LAWYER, It was apparent that in deciding not to put Ruzzle's Brunnhilde on the stan@ the defense had deeply disappointed Ruzate's attorney. He had prepared to oroas examine her at great length, I his ing address to the jury Mr. Gore mn charmed the defense with having on afraid to face the cross examinae on, Whatever one may think of the merits of his case there t# no denying that as + witness Ruzalelamb was the @enuine merchandise, In the matter of resisting Attorney Mooney's rapid-fire batteries of slurs and innuendoes and his broad sides of twelve-Inch counter accuse. tions, Ruzale wa sthe Dreadnaught of the Sea of Love, armored above and below waterline, and well manned in bis aus burn fighting top. Twice only was Attorney Mooney able to pierce Ruzzie's armor of come placent self-satisfaction—once, when brought the initials of a mysterious Mra ©. Into the case and endeavored to show that while Russie was supposed |to be devoting his entire soul to the pursuance of his nine-year affair with his matronly Brunehilde he was not be- yond signaling distance with another pair of loving eyes; and again, when he intimated that the final break be- tween the couple was due to money | Matters and rot the intrusion of ane jother man, On both occastons Ruzste flared ap and became peevish, | SAY8 THE ‘OTHER WOMAN’ WAS A FRIEND OF HIS MOTHER, “Don't you dare bring that other woman's name into thie case," he snapped, "Shoe nothing to me ead never was, Sho'a a ¢rtend of my mother." Ang to the ophee avousson suse eS,