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EXTRA, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, JUNE 17, 1913. Coorright, 1018, by The Press Publishing Oe (The New York World GIANTS AT CINCINNATI— a 1 400000 0— CINCINNATI @ 01100000 ‘BROOKLYN ' AP ST. LOUIS— © 103 0040 +0 ST. LOUIS © 0 0 0 Oo Oo ST. LOUIS ‘AP NEW YORK— 200108 00=1 HIGHLANDERS 1 0 00 0 ONE MEN LOSE SONS WIN FROM ST.LOUIS. BY CLEAN HiT Dodgers Pile Up Big Lead While Yingling Baffles TO BROWNS WIT FOUR PCHES St. Louis's Batting Rally in} ” Sixth Inning Ruins High- landers’ Hopes. Cardinal Batters. HIGHLANDERS. BROOKLYN. R. H.PO. A. R. H.PO. A, Danie... 1 2 2 1 1 o£ s ‘Wolter, cf . 1 2 8 0 2 2 0 ‘Cree, If wa TA@ gg o 10 Sweeney, o 17 3 oo 1 ‘Hereell, 3...... 0 0 1 0 0} 00 3 Deckinpay; . 0 2 3 3 0} Daubert, 1b. 2 2 10 . t + £ 0 2 1 O0}Smith, 3b. 23 0 hn + 0 @3 00 o1 4 Kechaie,2b.. 0 1 0 1 0 02 5 | - 0 001 0 110 her, + 0 t 0 0 0 --- » © 0 0 9 0 8 13 27 00 0 r) LOUIS. Siew Sg RH. PO, 5 410 27:13 1 0 0 0 or Warhop in ninth. 0 0 3 ST. LOUIS. fot ot R. H.PO. A. 12 8 0100 0 0 3 ae 02-3 oot 0°22 0 033 12 4 5 0 0 0 242 0 101 12 0 6 o 1 0 111 00 0 0 0 oo1 00 o 0 0 0040 0 - - oo1 0 0 38 27 0 0 0 1 oO} 8 for McLean in seventh. -roco Batted for Perritt in seventh. Potals.......0++ 718 27 13 2 BALL PARK, 8T. LOUIS, June 17. (ipectal to The Evening World. ‘peaingt the St, Louis Browns here this This was the second “Mo turn his full strength against the! series here. The opener yesterday re- Wattors Manager Frank Chance made a| suited in an easy victory for the Dodgers. After Thursday's fpeen for the opening game to get as) Dahlen's men return Kast to play three (much hitting as possible In the batting| games with the Giants at the Polo order. He took Derrick off third base| Grounds, after which they tackle the @écided change in his lineup this aft fad replaced him with Hartzell, who! phillies in a series. + yight now ts the leading hitter of the| FIRST INNING—Moran grounded to lub. Birdie Cree was brought back into| Perritt, Cutshaw reached firet on Mow- QRe game and placed in left fleld, his|rey’s tumble. Stengel to Hugg! Gormer position. grabbed the ball with one hi Peckinpaugh and Borton were put! tagged Cutehaw for @ double play. Runs. No Hits, One Error. i @ewn In the batting order, so as to bring Cfeo'in the clean-up position. ui hance sald this afternoon that he had ume x to give Es! the young fel-| Sheckard few from the lots of the Bronx, a reai @hanee and has signed him to fem= Pdrary contract. fafatt, other amateur, who had’ out W hirty-minute warmup yesterday, and when Oake: t back to Philadelphia this morning. |tween his lees Di As an added attraction this afternoon | circult, Smith fanned. tho Highlanders ny elr guests the | popped to O'Leary, None Left, Oakes, No Runs. rors. None Left. oe! -eonnococowoc? nl oeco-coco-o™ - ecSon-coono-aP wl esscccoco---o™ —Earl Yingling, @ southpaw, went to POLO GROUNDS, June 11. rhe High-|the mound for the Superbas this after- fenders ‘began = three-game series| "00M, while Pally Perritt, right-hander, worked for the Cardinals, It was bilst- ering hot and only 1,000 fans turned out. ,| ORAL BETTING CASE ent out, Smith to Daubert. ined, Cutshaw toased out No Hits. SECOND INNING—Mowrey whipped t, Daubert singled to centre t the ball roll be- bert completed the Kirkpatrick | people, One Run, One Hit. from Randall's Island of Mental] One Krror, None Left. One Assiat. te, The wpfertunate <ittle tele} Mowrey Shah 19 | to hid ia Konetchy | wagers GIANTS WINNERS, {AIR BRAKES STOP |" AM BUTTERFLY ®| FROMMETAKING | WRECK TRAIN IN | ON WHEEL,” CRIES TESREAU'S PLAGE} TEST FOR CORONER Big Jeff Wild in Sixth and Is|/Engineer Dougherty, However, Yanked Out of Was Not Allowed to Handle the Box. Throttle in Spectacular Dash. PLENTY OF CLEAN HITS.|TEST NOT CONCLUSIVE. McGraw’s Play Batting Game| Testimony Not Clear as to and Knock Out Packard When Emergency Brakes Were and Ames. Applied i in Real Crash. . (Specta! From 0 Staff Correspondent.) GIANTS. @TAMFORD, Conn., June 17.—A eh Po. E.| train, the shade of No, 63's second tion, ran over the tracks from Ni > woonoo~sco? twenty more. econ--c--c0”7 enn -nonwon= e-ceonnne-S ecooo-o-coo e = x 3 a x faacy 9 so that it might be run again. be assured there had been no tamper- ing with the alr brakes gine pulled out of the New Haven sta- @rawn on Thursday last. It was at 12.61 when the emergency S| coca scoanans | noo-acoucco? nl ecoo-ceeoco-F% +looco-ccococow = -leco-cocccce! (Special to The Evening World.) CINCINNATI, June 17.—Cheered im- mensely by the glad news from Chi- cago that the Phillies weve on the the scene of the wreck. into the Reds again as tthough they were already debating the world's weries. FIRST INNING.—Tinker threw out Burns. Shefer out, Groh to Hobiitsel, Fletcher singled to centre. Doyle doubled to centre and Fletcher was safe ‘at the plate, when Clark dropped the ball. Merkle filed to Marsans. One Run. Two Hits. One Error. One Left. Beecher got an infleld hit. Bates popped to Tesreau. Marsans was safe on Fletch bad throw, Doyle made & wonderful pickup of Tinker’s low liner and retired Joe at first base. Doyle threw out Hobiitsel. No Runs. One Hit. One Error. Two Left. SECOND INNING—Murray singled to centre, Meyers hit into a double play, Groh to Tinker to Hoblitsel. Snodgrass walloped to centre field bleachers for a home run, Tesreau sin- to 5, even and out, sled to centre, Burns walked, Shafer] gy iiwey, 8 to 1, 3 to 1 and 8 to 8, to (Continued on Second Page.) forced Burns, Tinker to Groh. One thira, Run, Three Hits No Errors. Two Left. Almeida struck out, Fletcher threw Groh out Clark walked. kard Hark, Fletcher to Doyle, No|0@h seconds Counterpart, 10 One Left, |evem third, ingied past| FOURTH RACH—Iron Mask, 3 to 9 to Tinker| and 3 to & first; Spring Bosra, 90 to 1, ay Merkle|® to 1 ama 4 to 1, second; Mester Pryane, 8 to 1, 3 to 1 and & to 5, third. 1, 4 to 1 ana 7 to 5, third. THROWN OUT OF COURT; |. eee eee eae a. sa'ee WAGERS CAN GO ON, |¢ te } a24 2 to 3, second; Staxe and Cap, 7 to 1, 5 to 8 and 6 to 5, third. —— Merits of the Law Not Passed Upon AT LATONIA. FIRST RACE.—For maiden two- in To-Day’s Ruling at year-olds; purse $600; five furlongs— Albany. Ovation, 109 (Callahan), firat; Char- x meuse, 109 (Steele), neco ndar, ALBANY, June 7—Without passing) 115" (peak), third. ‘Time, 1.01 4-5, on ita merits, the Court of Appeals to-} pine, Cherry, Mary Li Nellle day dismissed the appeal in the Shane] jrene, Penalty, Dr. Samuel, Martha case, upon which an interpretation of | sf.Kee, ‘The man, Al Jones, Emer- the anti-gambling 8 was sought, ald Gem ‘The appeal was dismianed becaune it] yaia: Oy was not taken in the name of the required by law. The effec of the dismissal is practically to wtratigiht, $11.69; place, show, $5.40; Charmeuse, place, show, $17.80; Lindar, show, + 10. tain the courts below, which held that] SECOND RACE~Dhree-year-olds and “not in the statute prehiviting om meerenetatainieemtomee |! Wanuaues oo Teabid Tego ‘Haven to Stamford to-day, duplicating the trip of last Thursday, when the dig new Pacific type engine, No. 1338, plunged head-on into the rear of the train's first section and killed six persons, injuring ‘The New Haven Raliroad resurrected the wrecked train to provide = test of air brakes for the benefit of the Inter- te Commerce Commission, the Con- necticut Public Utilities Commission -~“ “CIN pont Coroner John J. Phelan. They put = Pe A. E,| Wreck of the fine locomotive in their New Ha’ shops and worked over it for four days, repairing the watchful dove , wo that the investigators might tion with the same train which it had brakos wi plied, exactly as Charles J. Dougherty, the engineer, had applied them on Thursday, and the train rolled slowly to a standstill 1,800 feet cast of The train, running at @ miles an hour, was brought to @ standstill in $8 seconds and in a distance of 2,700 slide and that they didn't seem to have| oer put no attempt was made to apply any ammunition left, the Giants lit} the air brakes as Dougherty iad ap- a 6 and out, first; Strenuous, 13 to 5 and to 1 ana (Continued on Twelfth Page.) FIFTH BACZ—-Malage, 7 to 2, even —_——— and out, iret; Shannon Biver, 6 to 1, 2 to 1 and 4 to 5, second; Tom Cat, 12 to ran, Two-dollar mutuels orally between individuals | upward: purse W00.—Florence Roverts, MYSTERY WOMAN “Man-Made Laws Will Make Me Implacable Enemy of So- ciety,” Cries Mrs. Fitzhugh. PLEA TO SAVE SELF. ‘Not a Criminal Yet, but Prison Sure to Make Me One,” She Declares. “I am an innocent woman, but I have confessed to being a thief to save myself from four years in Auburn prison and to get @ lesser sentence dn the Bed- ford Reformatory. I am not a thief, but Heaven knows they are doing their best to make me one by sending me to one of those horrible places. I may become so embittered toward this man-made world and tte man-made laws that when I come:out I aha.. be @ remoreciess enemy of eoctety." trict-Attorney’s office tu penetrate the mystery of her identity and to convict her of the charge of atealing purses from the pews of fashionable New York churches, Worn dy ‘her long imprison- ment in the Tombs and the ordeal of yesterday, when she was finally brought to plead ity before Judge Swann and ‘wen remanded for sentence next Thurs- day, the ‘Woman of Mystery” mude pitiful, huddled figure of misery a» she sat in the matron’s roam of the wornan's prison and poured o@ her story w an Byening World reporter. “All iny Ife I have been the victim of man's oppressio! said, “While at echool in Maryland, when I was aix- teen years old, I made @ runaway . riage with young Randolph }itshugh. Our life was terribly unhappy. He died and I returned to my family in Wash- ington, I found all but my mother had turned against me, and when my next trouble came and I was wrongly ao- cused of obtaining goods from @ depart- ment atore on false pretenses it was only by the kindness of the District-At- torney that I escaped prosecution, My own family turned away from ine. “all I had done was to charge som goods to an intimate friend of mine who had an account at the sture, 1 had often done it before and shu had given me carte blanche, She was in Europe when I obtained the guods in her name. For thie I was arrested She came to my rescue by cable, bu: my family thought they had been dis- graced and I was shunned as thougn I were a leper. DECLARES SHE MARRIED GOv- ERNMENT ATTORNEY. “In the depths of my bitterness I welcomed the attentions of Alfred 8. Northrup, a Government attorney, and we were married in Febuary, 1911, in Baltimore. Then I was left alone with a baby a few weeks old. I had trusted him implicitly, #0 much so that I never bothered to take good care of our mar- riage certificate. When the time caine and I needed it I could not find it “Priends of my husband are back of this persecution. He would like to sev me imprisoned for life #o that I could ction againet him.” young woman's nerve for- She began to tremble yio- ing and unclasping her long ers, Tears streamed from nd she dropped her head upon prison table, After a while she shook her shoulders, threw back her head, blirfked the tears from her in- scrutable, heavy Mdded eyes and with a flash of spirit cried, “I tell you I am being hounded to prison by men- » It le "The suffering—the horrora of being sepa- rated all this time from my little baby. But there is no woman I could turn to~ | save my mother, and I would not drag her Into thie. “They call me a yet. What I may be through with me heaven have seen enough horr during my three months in this horrible place to| cad antennal ws ond Page os 18 1 8 P A AGES E 8 WOMAN WHO SAYS SHE’LL LEAVE PRISON ALDERMEN Rt FCT TO BECOME A FELON. Tammany, in Riotous Session, Fe BITTER FIGHT IS WAGED Personalities and Charges of Croo . This was the remarkable declaration to-day made dy “Mrs. Rantolph Wits- ” the cultured young Southern wo-' for months has persistently baffled the efforts of the police and Dis- rejected, in its entirety, the report of the Curran Aldermanic vestigating Committee, which demanded the removal of Police © missioner Waldo as “incompetent.” DETECTIVES BAR WAY T0 GAMBLERS AT POLO GROUNDS e No Known Professional Betto; Admitted to Highlanders’ Game To-Day. poll a heavier one to adopt the report. Defections from the Fusion | were frequent, many Aldermen, in recording thelr votes, explaining t the report was “incorisistent” in that it attacked Waldo instead of Mag Gaynor. ferred to the “Embalming Committee.” Aldesman Curran said: OMciailn of the New York American League Club placed private detectives at all entrances to the Polo Grounds this afternoon to bar professional base- from entering the ‘The ejection of @ large num- Der of gamblers from the grounds in Philadelphia and thie city yesterday ‘was the first move in @ campaign of ex- termination, according to the diamond Hecretary Tom Davia of the lander Club declared to-day that all ate Grounds while his team PHILADELPHIA— would be quickly suppressed. “This club won't permilt of gambling at ite grounds for a minute,” said the “Our action yesterday was only the first move to rid the game in this olty of the obnoxious bettin; We don't intend to h diamond game subjected to the trouble the race tracks had. The Polo Grounds police force will be on the alert to bar out gamblers, and we do not care whether they come from Boa- . New Jersey or New York will not be given an opportun! their trade here, and that's fin President Tom Lynch of the League was also determined that gam- blern would be chased out of the Polo when the Glants CHICAGO— Board came into play. Several’ BOSTON— 000000100~-1 PITTSBURGH— BOSTON— “The National League does not per- DETROIT— n guindling at grounds,” begun Mr, Lynch, them out of Boston and we will put them out of business no matter they try to locate. If any club ment is anyway lax in this matter | the league directors will promptly step in and punish ‘the guilty parties, Hempstead of the Giants has co-operated with me in # plan to wipe out the bettors, and I can certainly say that the gamblers will be nipped the minute they start any of their handi- work when thé Glunts play on the Polo CLEVELAND— ‘ is ne from a trip with the team out one in the club offices Voie afternoon would state Just what jaction will be Laken againal the gam. aietesens YALE SHUTS OUT HARVARD.| tammany alderman Waisn Harvard ......0000000004 Yale ieute in Ms olen angi American __— PRICE ONE B OENT. i FUL CURRAN REPORT BY AVOTE OF 45 10 Reversal of Resolution Ear! Adopted by Board to Voteon ' Each Recommendation. ON “FIRE WALDO” CLAUS: Politics Hurled on Floor. President Defied. “By't vole of 45'to 29 the Board of Attermen tate’ this’ The vote was surprising, the Fusionists being confident they On motion of Tammany Leader Dowling the report was As soon as the vote became known, |be toked by this buach than qwin'@ “I'm licked—no, the people of the City eked, But I'd rather contest, obtaining the pores board to vote on the repertie NATIONAL LEAGUE. mcnsetone Seren AT GHICACO. bi wou “ALoaneaamey The vote was esarcely read 0 0 00 0 OO O O— Oitactics of the Tammany ride 20100100 AT PITTSBURGH, — 4| Tiger fold jumped to their feat, ing motion after motion te 00000000 0-0 —— AMERICAN LEAGUE, leader, who earlier in the Bost missioner Waldo hadn't AY Gostom in a million of being DETROIT— ally recognised by the 2 Dowling moved to take up oo00000 4) 62 recommendations, ‘one refering to and vote on them chair declared him fighting young 0 0 2:0 1 1:0 O O— 4} dramatically stood on a chair, 10211200 —7 SECOND GAME, BOSTON— his hands, and appealed 0 12:0 0 0 O O Q— Bjcolleagues to overrul —_ the chair, AT PHILADELPHIA, ‘There was 8 chorus CHICAGO— ‘fll sides, and dosens to points of order 0000100 0 O- Beaton. Finally « PHILADELPHIA— was remaeed Gul A 0100 0 2 0 4 — 7) Aiderman Dowiling’s appeal trom chair, Theo Chairman Curran ii that the appeal was out of order this brought the Fusion leaders, Ms brook, Folke and Bowles, to the f O 1 1100.0 0 O- 38) cr in, President's chair, waving AT WASHINGTON, WASHINGTON— hands trantically for faery 20000 3 0 1 — 6/CURRAN DEMANDS 52 ~ ROLL CALLS. SOORE BY INNINGS, confused the undignified scene iby. ing Alderman Curran if he sereceeree® OO 22.000 —@] separate roll call on all the Hitchcock and Young; Gile and Bur-} mendations, The Fusion Cl dette, swered “Yea.” Then A eres to vote en one 1