The evening world. Newspaper, June 23, 1914, Page 1

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ws , ris | } Jockey Fuirbrother's part | . pane be ob BUCKHOR 4 ,9 N TO 1 Ctroulation Books Open to All.” | ‘@ PRICE ONE CENT. Covrmiets, tthe New by The Preee York World). NEW YORK, TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 1914. BUCKHORN, AT LONG ODDS, WINS BROOKLYN HANDICAP BY A NOSE FROM BUSKIN 12,000 Race Goers at Aqueduct Track Cheer Victory of Canadian Owned Horse—Belmont’s Rockview Third. By Vincent Treanor. aquepucr RACE TRACK, L. I., June 23.—Twelve thousand persons | fm a frenzy saw one of the best finishes that ever marked a Brooklyn | Handicap here this afternoon. R. J. MacKenzie’s Buckhorn won the, big race by a nose, with Buskin second half a length in front of Rockview. All through the long home stretch it was a drive between the three, with} first one showing in front and then the other. Three jumps from the finish Buskin was a stride in front after run- ning on the outside of his field at the stretch turn. IN FIRST INNING called on his mount for one last #! preme effort and it landed the vic- Avgust Belmont’s Rockview ran a creditable race, after fighting his way to the front on the backstretch. He faltered with the finish a dozen strides away. Outside of Flying Fairy, the others were never serious contenders, It was a tough race for the backers of Buskin to lone. He was shuffled to the rear on the backstretch, after | laying in the third position and even|Rucker Pitched Sensational | after that was repeatedly bumped. — | | Only a good, game horse thoc Bus-, — (Game in Final Struggle kin is could have overcome the dith- . culties he had to overcome to finish | where he did. | It looked from the press stand like ® plain piece of incompetency on Against Pirates. ! BROOKLYN, | | R. H.PO. A. EB. It was annonnced early that neither |o'ma: Luke MeLuke nor Charlestonian |) Vane St 2 ; ; ; ‘ ¢ would go to post in the handicap. g Luke has a quater cracked, and while | Dalton, cf. 90 0 2 0 0 this wouldn't prevent his racing to- | Wheat If......... o 1 3 0 0 day, his owners intend to reserve him | Smith, 3b ort 3 0 for future events. When the bugler | Stengel, rf o vu 4 0 0 called the horses to the post in the Cutshaw,2b.......0 0 4 2 0 opening vent those in the grand- | Nailer 0024 8 stand arose and applauded, It was 4) Rucker,p.........0 0 1 3 0 just tribute to the revival of racing | — me ee ee here for the first tlme in nearly ye: TSA easeb aes 2 5 27 18 «0 years. ‘There was no difference noted in the| PITTSBURGH. betting conditions. Anybody with R. H.PO. Av E, credit could bet by simply writing | Carey, It ovo 2 £ 8 O his wager on a piece of paper and| Mowrey,3b.......0 2 ft ft 0 handing it to any layer. Viox, 2b ov 220 District-Attorney Smith of Queens | Wagner, ss o 1 5 3 of County was represented at the track, | Konetchy, 1b o 17 2 0) but there was no occasion for inter-| mitchell, tt oO. @ 1.0 ference by any of the authorities, Kelly, cf. 0 014041 Granite inaugurated the meeting| Gi, 12 ne Sibson, c. , with an impressive victory in the first Cc 00020 event. It seemed natural to sec the | “PEF P ee ie 8 field break from the backstretch and] Torq) | 17243 0 run toward the grandstand. Besom was away on bis toes, with Pawhuska SUMMARY, First Base on Balls—Off Rucker, 2; right after him, and Belle of Bryn} iy Coo 2. truck Out — ‘By Mawr in close attendance, The same} Rucker, 2; by Cooper, 2 Left on order prevailed in the run to the Ba sok hs F Mtl Sty 6. 4 S are rh wwe Hits acrifice stretch and Besom swung around in| yee re ton ine front without losing an inch. When] —(urey, Cutsha Bnatonen Cre they were well straightened the fa-| pines Hixler Teeth ene” r vorite came through, and once in a contending position drew away easily, At the end he was well in hand, to win by two lengths, Pawhuska gamely lasted to head out Besom, SECOND RACE. Tho second race was ched @own to five starters with Flittergold the hot favorite. Helen Barbee won, but only after a bumping match with 1,800, ani to The Ex EBI FIELD, BROOKLYN, June There was a small crowd out to see the last game of the pres- between Fred wand Wilbert t. John's Or-| ent Pittsburgh Pirat inson’s Robins series Th | the 1 Fantae Weise i stg final) chan Asylum boys were the guests of | bumper, Punch Bow! jum President Hb! nd their band kept front at the start and showe by two lengths to the st Barbee was second all th Filttergold lay third, W were straightened out for home, Helen Barbee challen in an eighth of a mile out by a length, Flittergold strong and just got up to beat Pu Bow! out of the place money, THIRD RACE. George Odom: finally put Embroid- ery over in the third race, She came from the rear after the turn into thc stretch and, catching Amazon and Egmont, the early pacemakers, won the fans in gc mor. | FIRST INNING Carey singled | over second, Mowrey sacrificed, Mil- ler to Daubert, Viox lifted an easy (Continued on Sporting Page.) > NATIONAL LEAGUE. | AT PHILADELPHIA. ST. LOUIs— 1050000 PHILADELPHIA— 1100000 evies~ Hagerman, Steele and! Rixey, Jacobs and Killiter, | es wy | Comiired Byron and Orth (Continued on Sporting Page.) ; | Spy WON FOR DODGERS | @nother prisoner in custody. | he came to deliver a message. GIRLKILLED MAN WHO TRIED TO DRIVE HER INTO STREETS Declares He Attempted to Force Attentions of Other Men Upon Her. BROTHER “FRAMED UP.” “Didn’t I Do Right?” She Asks Police—Contradicted by Male Companion. An eighteen-yc.r old irl with bleach hair, which formed a strik- in frame for h.. ‘ive face and dark brown e confessed in a m:..ter-of- fa... way at Po!:ce Headquarters to- day that she sh.. a m. . in the back and killed him on April 6 in a fiat on the top floor at No. 634 Eact Thir- teenth strc:t. The girl le Maria Mag- alusio and \e man she killed was Giusep Marino, v », she ar-erts, was the leader of a gang of Black Hand oxtortioners and an exploiter of white slave: 7 “T killed nim” @atd the “gter, “tes cause he wanted me to be his slave and because he tried to use me as an agent in his black hand schem In or that he might have his way with n he * d my brother, who was my on'; vector, sent_to the pent. |tentiary, 1 id ment; eldest.” ‘The detectives. who Have been Wwork- ing on the Marino murder case have He ‘ts William Flack of No, 408 East Twen- ty-third street, who reported to the po- Nce the finding of Marino's body on April 10, four days after the murder. Flack has also made @ confession tv which he said that he and the Maga- lusio girl, learnjng that Marino had| money, lured him to the Thirteenth street flat where the girl was living alone, tried to rob him, and when hv resisted murdered him, The girl waa confronted by Flack in the District-Attorney's office this | yrrtorma afternoon. She laughed when she saw the man who said he aided her in killing Marino. “That fellow," she sald, “doesn't know what he Is taking about. He was never in the flat but once, when The man who can tell you about tt te a fellow named ‘Cockeye.’ He knows I killed Marino. He was right here whon I did. He told me if I didn’t kill Marino Marino would kill me. “It was ‘Cockeye’ who got me boy's cloth to r and bleached my hair. I was back In the flat four times betwen the day I killed Marino and the day his body was discovered. I had to make four trips to get my things there.” FLACK’'S CONFESSION LED TO HER ARRES’ It was through Flack’s confession that the detectives got on the trall of Marla Magalus' But the girl, liv- ing at No, 219 East One Hundred and Nineteenth atreet with friends kept in such close hiding that the sleuthe could not locate her, When she wen! Clarke's | out at night she wore men’s clothes | Detective Buckley learned that the Magalusio girl had left a dress to be pressed and cleaned at a tailor shop t No, 210 East Nineteenth street. A h was put on the shop. Buckley was waiting there last night when she called for the dress. She confessed she was getting ready to leave the city, as she knew the po- lice were looking for her. After the line-up in the Detective Bureau this morning the girl was asked about the killing of Marino, To the surpprise of the detectives she made a complete confession, which however, does not agree with the story told by Flack. “T was living with my parents at No. 404 East Eighteenth street two years * phe sald, “when I eloped wit! He deserted me alxz months ugu. 1 could not go home, au} the victims. NATIONAL LEAGUE AT BROOKLYN— BROOKLYNS WIN 0 00000 PITTSBURGH 0 0 00 00 0 Batteriee—Cooper and Gibson; and Hart. 12 - 2 1 Rucker and Miller, o- 1 COLLEGE GAME aT NEW YORE— YALE 0 000 00 00 0o- PRINCETON 0 0o0o0100 0 0 0-—- 1 and Steinberg. EVENING WORLD RACE CHAR AQUEDUCT, L. |., TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 1914. F Day of Queens County Jockey Club Meeting. Clear. Track Fast. LAL PPS, BAY Sire siete vent in: MME A GIR es Heckton —Adnuthe, ms, Ti 26. é is Weather 19 ~~“Tielen Barter followed the pace drive home, lunch Howl had a lot rin carly, just got be ow hunch Howl to the strat peed, and weakenel oniy Mar Cane couldn't plsce “same, Wianer, oh, fy by pe Fin : ian 9 i Pe i a5% brite ins tae ae aM rr OHS Futurist ws ‘a 3 ? HH eel, but faltered in the fi ° Ttace de latretel He cl oat the tim for alia and Gj ward: pelling: $0 Wace” samme iF Tat 4.2, ‘Winner, Momadinr, ho ____ Open High, Clos, ns a8 2 8 he 5 $7 8 10 12 10 2 Sumter 6 8 & finow at stretel tiirw wr, went on to win Weakening only dn $4 dwnee, Hronksike Stable,’ ‘Time, iu ffont bi two length Cros Monoacy, cloeing mul was badly benefited by D thned.~ Virile Malden twosvea CHE 5.00, St Buxton las Keleris MeKoignt Maro Fairhrother 1 won easily, Lampoon, off at the strete turn, BUILDING COLLAPSES: TWO BURIED IN RUINS] soon | Both “ictims Bescues, One, a IAN Woman, Being Found Mor- Batteries — Peters, Somers Land; Fatkenberg and Kartdan tally Hurt, pires-Mannassau and Croas FEDERAL LEAGUE. AT INDIANAPO! '@ and Um- A three-story frame building at 20% Platbush avenue, Brooklyn, without AT CHICAGO. BUFFALO— ooo0100 CHICAGO— oo00000 AT KANBAS CITY PITTSBURGH— N collapsed warning shortly before 5 o'clock this evening, bury- ing 4 man and his wife in the ruins. The husband extrieated himaelf and | went to the aid of his wife, who was caught beneath the debris, When 000100 finally dug out by firemen, police and | yansas CITY— others the woman was unconacious, 021000 She wan hurried to Holy Family Hos- | ps eR at pital in a critical condition, | shed to Death by ¥: Wrabl Fs | years living kept a clothing store on the ground | eer between two freight cars in floor of the house that collapsed, were | the yards of the Long Island Rallroad Levy sand he did not! at Sixty-siath street, Bay Ridge, this think any one ved on the two upper afternoon and instantly killed, He was Me et tel moreno erence Vincent old, ay. Mr. and Mrs, Benjamin Lavy, who! ‘ in Umpires—Rigier fo) Batteries—Deyo and Salmon; Way and Hunder, Umplres—Stafford | Blossom, ss.. TERS CEN UP YA BLO I FIAL CANE Deyo's Pitching Was Com- plete Puzzle to Yale Batters —8,000 Cheer Victors. YALE. Miadtebroot, ct...) 3°, “, &|Thousands Crowd Skyscraper Roofs, Hanes tt 0 3 4 9 8) ta See New “Back Flop,” Which Ra oe 8 ke Is Far More Spectacular Than = i a the “Loop the Loop.” Swihart, ib .0 0 § 0 0 wane § § 8 2 MAKES DIVE OF 1,000 FEET, Totala......scees ore SPECTATORS BREATHLESS. mn HPO, a &/Stays Up 37 Minutes in a Moisant ¢ 9 1 ° 0 Monoplane and Lands Easily on ee es Governor's Island. -0 @ 2 1, 0 -@ 0 2 2 Off Charles i:. (Do Anything) ‘Niles, the young aviator, this afternoon reer ve a , : ; {| made his Molsant m vhs palatal ine Pi - Nett: per- fe nee: oe forms In the water. ° Salling along from 2,000 to 3,500 feet above the Firet Hanae on Balls—Off Way, ya, 2. Struck Out—Ry Way, Deys, 5. Left on Bases—Ya i$ Princeton, 3, Two-Base Hit—Hanes, Bacrifice Hite—Hanes, Land, Green. Bares — Cornish, Swthart, Double Plays—Green to sal- piren—-Stafford and Stern- endance, 8,000, fon. berg. A POLO GROUNDS, NEW YORK, June 23.-—College baseball entertained 8,000 fana this afternoon, and they were not all of the Rah! Rah! either. Hundreds of veteran big league fans curious to the old game an it ia done by amateurs got front seate (Continued on Sporting ae INTERNATIONAL LEAGi ©. AT NEWARK. MONTREAL— 10001000 NEWARK— oo0000000 Batteries - Mason and Howley; namann and Heckinger. AT PROVIDENCE. FIRST GAME. BUFFALO— 000000100-1 PROVIDENCE— 00200003 Hatteries Beebe and Sehuitz and J, Onslow BECOND GAME, BUFFALO— 0200 PROVIDENCE— 10010 | Batteries-Jamieson and Kritchell; [Oldham and rr. AT JERS! ROCHESTER— { 203 | JERSEY CITY— 000 Batteries Hughes and Luque and Reynolds. AT BALTIMORE Page.) —&§ Lalonge; Yv CITY MeMurray; FineT Game. TORONTO— | 000000000 0 | BALTIMORE— | 01010001 3 | Batteriee-Herbert and Kelly; Ruth and Egan —_—— | WILL SELL BATTLESHIPS. Ce Votes to Dispose of Two Vessels to Greece. WAHNHINGTON, June 23.—Sale of the battleships Misatasipp! and Idaho to \Greece was authorized by Cungrens when the House this afternoon by « vote of 172 to 87 concurred in the Senate amendment to the Naval Appropriation ranting authority to Secretary of Navy Denisle to-make tie sale, f 20 PAGES PRICE ONE OENT. “DOANYTHING’ NILES DOESDARING STUNTS 3 000FEETOVERCITY skyscrapers of lower Manhattan and the water of the Upper Bay and the East River he “looped the loop,” turned somersaults, rode upside down, rode “wing or wing’—or after the fashion of a small boat in the trough .o* the sea—did “back flops,” performed spirals, and vepeatedly eaded his machine straight downwards and dove like a plummet a dis- tance of from 500 to 1,000 feet. Taine see ee Tl It was the first time such an ex- RESULUTELEAVES [zsessie=s BOTH RNALS FAR BEND IN RAE to drag hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers from their desks or, Far Ahead of Vanitie and De- fiance, Which Is Away workbenches this afternoon to see the mont thrilling air performance ever Astern at Fourth Mark. given in these parts, Niles was in the air thirty-seven | minutes, Most of the time he was in view from all the south and east windows of the skyscrapers down- town, He made three complete cir- |clas over the Lower Bay from the Statue of Liberty to the Brooklyn shor long the East River to the Hattery, and then down to the Statue of Laberty in, On one of his trips jhe crossed « he tp of the Island at | about the line of Wall street, | It was not until he was on his second cireult that Manhattan aky- scraper occupants awakened to the fact that there was a free show on, Then windows began to fill and roofs became populous, Thousands swarm- ed to the Battery und to points of vantage along the Mrooklyn wharves and heights, When Niles made his final dive earthward and landed like |@ bird on the parade ground at Governor's Island there wasn't much business transacted in the tall build- ings below Canal street, Niles is the new daredevil of the air, His “back flop’—which means heading the monoplane aloft and then pulling it over backwards—ia his own invention, He announced yesterday that he would go up at 3.30 o'clock and perform stunts that would make the people sit up and take notice, He did that same—and then some. Niles left the ground at Governor's Island at 2.33 o'clock, He went up ASSOCIATED PRESS BOAT, OFF RYE, N, Y,, June 23.—The three cup candidates, Vanitio, Resolute and De- flance, sturted shorty after 1 o'clock to-day tn another preliminary atrug- ale to determine to which is to be en- | trusted the honor of defending the Am Sir ‘Thomas a's Cup against Lipton's new Shamrock ‘The wind was ao light that it barely” rumpled the surface of the water the three sloops crawled over the starting line. Deflance, Vanitie, Res- | olute was the order, with leas than| |half a minute separating the firat from the last. The course was a tri- angular one, consisting of one beat | and two reaches, the course to be sailed twice over, making thirty miles in all. It wi | match at the start, Defiance came about on little more than a drifting | At 1.12 o'clock the port (Continued on Sporting Page.) |in two great circles until he had ———— | reached an altitude of about 3,000 AMERICAN LEAGUE, [feet “Then he. sailed over to ine — Statue of Liberty and when directl: ncn AT DETROIT. over that landmark, pointed the pis ri ier 0 of his machine downward and headed for orch with his propellers gos DETROIT— ing at full speed. He went perpen- 0000 dicularly In the direction of the mid- Batteries-Mitchell and © Noill; | dle of the earth for about 600 feet, Dauss and Stanage. ('mpires--Hil- | righted his machine, and nonchalante derbrand and O'Loughbli |v looped the loop twice in succession, iba a k to Wile A. J, Motsant, watching from Gove WASHINGTON, June 23.—By direc | ernor’s Island, sald: tion of Emperor William, Commander! “My brother John, who was killed Hoved, Gorman Naval Attache, today in New Orleans, was the first to wi "galled on President Wilson ang prevent 4 prige for circling " . ed Wy aim \e copy © eo eaireh Tear jooeh 2 Geguamn”” arta, ve eaetinted os

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