Newspaper Page Text
FEARLESS, INDEPENDENT. PROGRESSIVE NEWSPAPER. j Forty-third Yr-No. 113-PHce F.ve Cent,. OGDEN CITY, UTAH, THURSDAY EVENING MAY 15, 1913 Entered a. Second ers Matter at the Po.tofftce. Ogdec Utah I il DISSOLUTION, A NEW PLAN 1 Union Pacific Will ft Not Demand Ex- elusive Privileges I Over Southern Pacific A Property at Benicia I Reduce Offer For I Purchase of Road Sun Tnnrcn May 15 --The San Francisco Chronicle publishes the (statement that according to c-onfldeo ttal advices received here, the I'nion Pacific has devised a new plan for the dissolution of the Union Pacific Uf and Southern Pacific and Is prepared to submit It to United States Attontej Itieneral MrReynolds It in prohable says the report, that the plan will be laid before the stat.- railroad Commls slon Informally w ithin a few da t, in order that a prior understanding with the commission ma be reached be fore the plans are made public it Is stated the T'nlon Pacific seeks pnn clptJl) the purchase of the Centra' Pacific It is Hated, according to the advi mM ce received, that the I'nion Pacific Is wllltrjfr upon certain conditions, to withdraw its previous demand for any exclusive privileges over the South em Pacific property, thus opening the way for the Western Pa If lc and Atch ison, Topeka k Santa Ke to claim a share of the business on the Henb la Short Line and a share In the use of the industrial tracks thereon , In delsing the new plan however, it Is staled the I'nion Pacific cuts a,, down Its offer for the Central Pacific by approximately 12,000,000 Its orig inal offer was $103,000,000. Should Divorce Central Pacific. - c Washington, May lo Attorney General McKeynoldB lias reached I en tat I. e ( lslon that the Centra H clflc railroad should be divorced from I the Southern Pacific In the dtssolu- tlon of the lnlon-Southern Pacific I merger His conclusion, however, i. 9l not final crnl began the examination of a mem sjK orandum fileii bj ihe Southern Pa- , ' nol n ' I frr the Southern Pacific to give up I i,,thc Central Pacific. former Mtorney General Wicker I i . v in-.tr-teil ih.U the Southern Pa :: 9 HnfTc surrender Ihe Central Pacific mv 1 de r threa' cf a suit under the Sher H man anti-trust law to accomplish thai I result and Instructed former Solicitor B ( . . p -m 1 Puilliit to prepare one .M The final attitude of Attorney "'.on I l eral McReynold on tbe quertlon prob )Jl F ablv will be a determining feature in mm the" plan of dis oh mi on IV pjj - an s mbern Pai iflc. W EIGHT DIE U IN TORNADO ; Cff Terrific Storm Sweeps Over Nebraskan Town in Early Evening Catches Victims With out Warning Sixteen Blocks Are in Ruins j Seward. Neb.. May 15 Eight per sons were killed and 14 Injured In the ( tornado which swept a district one block wide and sixteen blocks long I in the north part of this city last I night, shortly before 6 o'clock ThS I wind storm came up In disguise of a I violent hall and rain storm ,A No One ha rei been found who pa v HH the funnel shaped cloud or who n aB what dancer the unusual darkness of the la'e afternoon contained. Three persons were killed who ha-! g-f eer opportunltj to seek refuge in their cellars and half a dozen were injured who said thai 'bey could see no tornado approaching The Dead. MRS WILLI VM H 18SINGEH FS MRS G W EDMONDS Mlts DAVID HOO BH B MUEL t RIM Al'C.CST Sl'IICLTZ KRMA SCIU'LTZ little daughter of August Bchnlta. MRS DAVID I MI-AY. MRS C w WASHERMAN The injured j Mrs Frncst Holland, arm broken J and minor bodv bruises. gjBM William Hassinger. body brulsed. 9 severe nervous shook. f John Kike, arm and ribs broken Mr John Pike, ribs broken and in- j ytm ternal Injuries Mrs S C. Longworthy. 6llght Injur- WWM les o h j JiW' Victor Wasscrman. arm broken, se- M riono It.Jurlee tr head. IB Mrs. Augu9t Schultz. burned on H bodv Internal Injuries Ym Eleanor, little daughter of August 'H Scbultz. badly burned on limbs and HI bark H August Bchnlta, -Ir. arm brokeu. e II ; verr hip wound H ,'Trd Steinbeck, eye put out. scalo r wound, bod) injured Bl Mrs Fred Steinbeck, internal In- I I Juries. M Mr and Mrs Henry Feigard. both H bruised. M I MlM Imlay. niece of Mrs lavid m IB la r:icht mi-rnnl lnjur.es-, bod;. HI bruised Freaks of the Storm. At the Schultr place, where August JJ ,' Sc faults ami a four year-old child lost SSjgB ; their lives, a baby boy of two month S5 wao blov.n out of the mother's arms and dropped down within a yard of where hl6 father and sister had been killed by flying debrlB Mrs. Setaultz and another child were pinioned un der the wreckage of the kitchen bu were reecued by rolunteer flreni' n who formed a relief pany soon after the storm passed. Cast week Mrn W Q Fdmondr. husband died following a sudden II ness Hla widow mourned deeply for him and expressed a wish to Join hltn soon Yesterday's storm claimed her In Its list of fatalities She was j struck by a flying timber and killed j The city will dear Its own streets. pa Its own bills and will get along' without state troops according to a i ctfttement issued today by Mayor Cal ler Property to the amount of $40 j 000 was destroyed In the city, not in cluding damages o telephone lines Advices this morning from Tamo ra. StaplehnrPt Waco. Ree and I ll ' ca, west of Seward, which were last night reported damaged by the torna do. say that all those tow-ns were out of the track of the storm Wires to McCool Junction are still down and j no direct reports have been receiTed i from there Reaches Omaha Omaha. Neb. May 15. Reports re i eeived during last night and early to day Indicate that the destructive tor nado which formed In the southern part of Seward county lasi night took 'a toll of 17 lives, Injured 4" persons i and destroyed property valued at j K'00.000. At least three towns Seward. Ta- mora and McCool Junction suffered 1 from the elements, 'he greater destruc tlon being at Seward, where 11 per sons were killed and 80 Injured To maro is reported to have been de i stroyed. with tbe loss of four lives. I and McCool Junction to have suffered much damage to propert) and two deaths At Seward a much greater catastro phe wan averted by the fact that the tornado crossed only h comparative!. 1 I small part of the town instead of weeping across the more denselv pop ulated two blocks south The prop erty loss In that city Is estimated at 1100,000 and a corps of deputy sher- 1 1 if fs is patrolling the ruined district I i to prevent looting The tornado ap parentis originated southwest of Mr : Cool Junction and gathering farce as j it moved to the northeast, struck with full fur..- both at Tomora nnd Bew i r.l ll telegraph and telephone lines 1 ra demolished In the path of the I storm, cutting seeral trunk lines Ol wires between this city and Denver. large force of linemen was quickly lent to the scene, but until the wires .c repaired tbe full extent of lb'"1 damage nor the nuriber of casualties will not be definitely known. Continuing its course. the storm raged with greater or less Mry until it reached Omaha Here It crossed the cit near the southern limits, but ! its strength bad been so far spent that the damage done here was noun ! nal. This fact, however, did not pre , ent Oir.ahans generally, especially , ,e Inclined to be nervous, from seeking refuge in cellnrs and other places considered tornado-proof. Th experience of Easter Sunday taught them to consider seriously the ap proach of ominous looking clouds and the appearance In the southwest I last eenlngs storm was sufficient to set everybody to seeking an avenue of escape The afternoon had been oppressive j and many persons were on the QUI le and prepared for anything. Many wires are prostrated In wo3i ern Iowa as tbe result of the final efforts of the elements, which crossed I the Missouri river at ihis point and spent themselves in that state rt- OIL TRUST IN MISSOURI Standard Oil Official Declares Indiana Company Is Separate From New Jersey Concern Ouster Suit Opens in Chicago Chicago. May 16 Absolute divorce of the Standard Oil company of Indi ana from all other oil companies lias i been effected and the company is not In any sense a trust, according to L. J Drake, vice president of the corpo ration, who testified today in the oust er case brought by the Btate of Mta sourl The company seeks to remain in Missouri Mr. Drake, appearing before Jonn Montgomery, Jr. special commission er for the Missouri supreme court, testified that he formerly was a di rector in the Standard Oil company of New Jersey, but when he became vU president of the Indiana company his former relations ceased. He said In Cm? his present company severed its relations with the Republic Oil com pany and since then all relations with the Waters-Pierce Oil company has been ended. ' Our business In Missouri and else where is absolutely Independent and we t. ke no dictation or suggestion from any other company, said Mr. Drake. "Should we be allowed to re main In Missouri we arc prepared to spend $2. ''' ''" to extend our busi ness so that we may properly com pete with other companies." Tbe hearing was transferred to Ch; cago from Jefferson City, Mo , be cause of the availability here of the company's records I-rank Ilaterman appeared as counsel for the company, and Attorney General Barker of Mis sourl for the state. oo Railroad Agent A W Cor. lk-ltlng agent of the Chicago North western, was In Ogdcn today on offi cial business WINS CUP: LOSES GIRL Corporal Heffelfin ger's Romance Has Sudden End ing Fiance Returns Mar riage License to City Hall No Statement From Parties Con cerned Washington. May 13 Corporal J L. Heffelfinger, crack rider of the Fifteenth United States cavalry, did not dream that while he was v. inning honors and blue ribbon at the recen'. military horse show, he was riding out of the affections of bis fiancee. Miss Emma V. Griffon of this city. Post socletv at Kort Meyer had been looking forward to the wedding ar a i culmination of a pretty romance be , gan more than two years ago In San Francisco. The fact that the army's crack horsemen had come a cropper In his riding for the matrimonial hurdle be-i came know n today when the mar- I ( ria,ie license that had been issued for tbe wedding was returned to the city I hall with the following Inscription In i Miss Griffen's handwriting "Did nol UBe this, as I have a rea son." orporal Heffelfinger could not be found at the arm) post today an. relatives of the young woman denied all callers. Miss Griffon was said to I have quietly left the city. oo SUFFRAGISTS ENTER PLEAS Militants Declare Thev Are Not Guilty of Conspiracy Bail Is Allowed to Those Who Will Refrain From Further Trouble London, May 15. Sii militant suf i fragette leaders and a male adherent of the "cause" were committed today j for trial at the Old Bailey sessions on charges of conspiracy under thfl ! malicious damage act. All of them I pleaded not guilty and resen ed their ', e'efense. Ball was allowed on the prisoners" promise to refrain from militancy pending trial. The amount of the bail ranged from I 4000 In the cases of Miss Alice Lake, Mis.- Laura Lennox and Mrs. Beatrice j Saunders, to C15.000 in the case of the analytical chemist Clayton Among the exhibits presented by the police against the militants was I the suffragette roll of honor, entitled "The Crimes Record Book "' Particu lars of some 1400 convictions for suffragette outrages in which -455 i persons were convicted were entered In the book which also recorded the amounts of money paid to some of tb-j perpetrators. One item referring to "Prisoners 1 hampers $400" indicates that con siderable cpiantities of candles, fruits and other delicacies must have been supplied to the imprisoned martyr? oo TARIFF BILL I UNDER FIRE Smith Blocks At tempts to Vote on Question of Public Hearings Kern Res olution to Come Up Late Today Washington. May 15 When the tariff bill earae up in the senate again today there was a wrangle over whether if or Senator Kern's reso I lutlou for an Investigation of the ' West Virginia coal strike situation ' should have the right of way Mr Kern finally agreed to defer his reso i lution until 5 o'clock. An agreement to ote on the ques tion of public hearings after five hours' debate was about to be made by unauimous consent when Senator William Aldeu Smith blocked It. "The attitude of the other side of the chamber.'" said he. "Is so arbi trary in this matter that I do not ' feel It calls for any generosity from this side." i 'hen resumed on the Penrose-La Follet'e amendment to 1 the motion to rofer the bill to the finance committee. The amendment was to instruct tho committee o give I public hearings. Senaor Kern, made an agreement with Chairman Simmons, of the fi nance committee, to let the tariff bill have the righf of way and call up his Investigation resolution at 5 o'clock this afternoon Among the many communications 'from the strike 7.one. which Mr Kern has received Indorsing his proposed , Investigation, was one today from a West Virginia postmaster wbosei name the senator withheld The post master charged that the true con ditions In the coal fields were being withheld from the public and that u former United States official was among those responsible. Senator Works declared there was no foundation for the statement thai California beet sugar manufacture! made exorbitant profit. Senator Thomas eluded to the an-ti-atlen Agitation in California and said he agreed with the attitude of j the Californians and declared that 'he tariff had been responsible for the presence of thousar s of laborers In the state now held objectional "With the action of California. I I have abundant sympathy." he said, "and with the policy I can find no i fault because they are face to tnee there with conditions based largely on our protective system " oo EXPLOSIONS OF DYNAMITES Series of Outrages in Maryland, Pennsyl vania and West Vir ginia Causing Great Anxiety Dozens of Persons Dead, Scores Injured Pittsburg. Pa . May 15 Frequon: explosions of dynamite and powder within the la6t week in western Peuu sylvania. Maryland and West Virginia r.nd attempts to explode heavily filled I magazines are causing anxiety. Sim e last Saturday a dozen persons have been killed, scores have been injured. I some fatally, and much property has I been ruined. Last Saturdav "00 sticks of d na- i r.iltc exploded in the marine of the , Sun6b te Coal and Col.e company s mine near Masonlown. Pa . resulting in the death of four and injury' of two-score, and yesterday there was an explosion of 1,700 pounds of dyna- mite and seventy kegs of powder stored in the magazine of the Consoli dated Coal company at Echart. Md , in which three were killed and a dozen Injured. Last Monday an attempt was made to blow up the Brownsville-I'nion -town passenger train at Leckrone. Pa. lA trackwalker found nine sticks of dyuamlte placed under the joints of the rails of tbe Monongabela rail road. -oo WILL CLAIM BIG ESTATE Two San Francisco Girls En Route to Prove Right to Share of $160,000,000 Left By Carl Springer San Francisco. May 15 --The Miss es Minnie G. and Pearl F. Holmes, manicurists in a big hotel here, are on their way to Sweden to c laim a share of an estate valued at $160,000. I 000. They have told their friends I they are confident they will return 1 millionaires, but Just the same they arranged with the hotel management to hold their Jobs open. The young women will endeavor to prove that they are direct descendants of one Carl ( hrlstopher Springer, who I In 1758 came to this country from I Stockholm. He settled in Delaware and acquired a large tract of land v hi. h now takes In the entire city of i Wilmington. Springer left a will bequeathing his estate to his sons, but the heirs squabbled and one of them torj up the will. Ever since descendants of these 6ons have been trying To ob tain possession of old Springer's hold ings. The Holmes' girls. ' bo were born at Salina, CaL say they are the de scendants of one of ihe warring sons. Lawrence Bprinfpr FEDERALS ! IN RETREAT Remnant of the Army Reaches Empalme Abandon Quantities of Ammunition and Sup plies 500 Regulars Lost in Last Battle Nogales, Ariz. May 16 A remnant of the federal army uudor (General Gil is believed to have reached Em palme. a suburb of Guavmas. accord ing to advices received here today Sunda the federals abandoned quan tities or ammunition ana supplier which were seized Immediately by the Constitutionalists. Colonel Hill was sent with his insurgent troops to Intercept the fleeing federals, but their reported arrival at Empalme in dicates that Hill was unable to stop their retreat. American refuireoc arriving today confirm the report of General Obre gon state commander, that 50ti fed erals were killed in the fighting south of Ouaymaa while sixty Constitutlon alisis w.tc killed and thirteen wound-1 ed. They attribute the heavy federal losses 'o the disorderly retreat Refugee! from the front report that only 1200 of the federal arm which , originally number 2r.oo, reached Em palme South of the state troop3 base at Ortiz wire communication is interrupted and the general confu sion thus far has permitted few def inite details to reach the state capi tal at Hermosillo It Is asserted,1 however, that the state roops will attack Kmpalme and Guaymas, if ilif assault is not already In progress. General Alvaro Obregon has be q made I brigadier general by Governor ( arranza of t'oahulla. head of the j revolutionary army. CONSIDERING ALIEN BILL President Wilson Will Confer With Secretary Bryan Before Tomor row's Cabinet Meeting Will Deliver Note to the Japanese Ambas sador Washington. May 15 President Wilson has arranged to confer with Secretary Bryan early tomorrow be fore the cabinet meeting to draft a reuly to the formal protest by .lapan against the California nntlalien laud bill which Governor Johnson has an nounc-ed he will sign. The note will be submitted to the cabinet and then delivered to the Ja panese ambassador Indications are thai the attitude of the federal go -ernment toward the legislation Itself, as well as questions of discrimination raised by Japan, will be fully defined. Holds Off Signing Bill. Washington May 15 Governor Johnsons decision to s'gn the Cali fornia antl-allen land bill despite Ja pan'l protests was unofficially com municated today to Viscount (hinda. the Japanese ambassador, as a mat ter of information, with the under standing that Secretary Bryan may later present Governor Johnson's an swer officially with such comment as he may wish to make In behalf of the federal government Mr Bryan Is In New York and in his absence tbe subject will be con sidered bv Counsellor Moore to lne it readv for tbe secretary to lay be fore ihe cabinet at tomorrow s ses sion when an effort may be made to reach a final determination on the line of pollcv for the negotiations with i Japan I When the ambassador has received Secretary Bryan's formal communica tion it will be necessary for him to ! communicate It to the foreign office 1 at Toklo and receive Instructions for preparing s rejoinder so that prob abl a week will elapse before the I negotiations can move another step I Interest has been excited by Gov ! emor Johnson s quotation of that part of the California law which appears to limit his action so far as It rec ognizes Japanese rights to 'he axlet lng treatv of 191 1 and there Is some speculation as to whether that was Intended to foreshadow a refusa oa the part of the California authorities to be bound bv the stipulations of any treatv that may hereafter be nego tiated between the United States and Japan that would appear to be in con flict with the provisions of the new '"officials here fall to discover any I League Baseball EyeryJTluVWeek Helena vs. Ogden al Glenwood Park I GAME CALLED AT 3:15 P. M. LADIES FREE EVERY FRIDAY point not suggested to Secretary Bryan when he was in Sacramento, with the prohable exception of ref erence to ihe fact that the present Btate constitution In erms sanclons and even requires the enactment of I such legislation as the Webb act. The fact that though announcing his intention to sign the act. Governor Johnson has not actually affixed his signature Is regarded here as an act of courtesy. Intended to hold the door open to a last word from the admin istration if it should desire to com municate further with him before the final act of approval. Japan Is Waiting. Tokio. a) 16. The foreign office Is optimistic as to the onicome of the controversy oer the California alien land ownership legislation. In reply to an Inquiry today, a high of ficial said T ti negotiations between Japan and the United States are progress ing satisfactorily We expect to reach a friendly and permanent solu tion of the difficulty." oo BIND AND GAG GUARD Two Masked Men Commit Daring Dia mond Robbery in New York Skyscraper Dis trict After Overpower ing the Watchman New York. May 15. Two masked burglars bound and gagged Henry Bariell. night watchman at B Maiden Lane skvscraper In the heart of the wholesale diamond district todav. locked him in a vacant room and leisuarely looted the safe of Sigmund Kohn. a diamond seller with offi' BS on the floor above, of $lo00 in gems. I , They escaped with their booty Bar tell broke from his bounds an hour later and gave the alarm Bartell told the police that the two ' men leaped out of the shadows on tbe first floor about sunup, bore him to the floor and throttled him before he . could make an outcry. Th gagged him w ith handkerchiefs and bound blm with ropes, he said. Leaving him I they used a diamond pointed cutter to remove the glass from Kohn's I door The safe, a small, old -fash -I loned affair, was easily pried open. oo GOODS MUST BE SHOWN IN OGDEN declaring that the practice of trav eling to Salt Lake City to look over the samples of commercial travelers who disdain to remain in Ogden, al though doing business with Ogden m r ii.tntt is an extrcmel poor one for the business men of Ogden to fol low . Ihe directors of the Ogden pub lllclty bureau today decided to get out letters on the subject and send them to all merchants of the city. The subject was taken up for dis cuaaton following the reports of some of the directors that such practices are indulged In ' Ogden merchants Ii was pointed out that many sales i men who are supposed to visit the ' Ogden business houses put up in elab orate hotels In Salt I-akc and tele ; phone to their Ogden customers that they arc prepared to show them their ' line providing the Ogden men travel to Salt Lake The Ogden men. it Is laitned. do as the salesmen bid and spend money In Salt l-ke which should be spent by the salesmen .n Ogden. The Ogden publicity bureau direct ors hold that ir the salesmen boycott the city the merchants should boycoU such salesmen BUREAU TO BUY A PICTURE MACHINE After the secretary of the public i bureni had announced that It appear- j I ed almost impossible to rearb any agreement with a moving picture house regarding the taking of a reel of pictures near Ogden. the directors! decided to Investigate the possibilities of purchasing a motion picture cam era an,) halng a local photographer ! do the work After the pictures are made, the work of having the film i shown must be arranged b the bu-i reau and tbe directors to investigate' i that side of the question also The greatest difficulty with the pic- j ture houses was in securing a con- I tract Insuring tbe display of tbe plc tures In theaters. Tbe directors decided to issue a monthly bulletin giving a synopsis of 1 what li- l-en done by the bureau nnd what is planned. The bulletins will also contain suggestions on i ; boosting the cit The secretary announced that the copy is ready for the new booklet 1 and that Gerrit Fort. Union Pacific j I passenger agent, had approved the plan of publication. oo I Union electrical workers at St. Paul Minn . have opened a vocational I training tchool for electrical work-, ors, I LOS ANGELES BUNCO TRUST Edwin T. Earl, Mill- ionaire, Testifies Be fore the County Grand Jury Regarding Ring's Operation in Fleecing Tourists By Fake Races Los Angeles. Cal.. May 15. Wwln J T. Earl millionaire newspaper pub- J Usher, who was a witness yesterday H before the county grand jury, was H called again today It was under stood that his testimony was required In connectipn with allegations of Dr. L. O. Wilcoxon. a prlsouer. that ef- H forts had been made to Induce him J to try to bribe District Attorney John i D. Fredericks and Sheriff William llammel H Wilcoxon Is In Jail, awaiting trial on a charge of swindling lie Is a veterinarian, and is alleged to have J ' lcen a member of the so-called na- tional bunco ring which fleeced tour ists here on fake horse races and J I other sporting eventa ' oo TRANSPORT MEAT FROM AUSTRALIA San Francisco, May la - Four hun dred thousand pounds of frozen Aus tralian beef and mutton the first shipment of its kind to the Pacific coast were landed here today from the steamer Tahiti The meat was sold In Australia with the understand Ing that only a nominal profit should be made here If the agreement is violated, Australia will ship dlrec". eliminating the middleman's profit, ! and assuming all the risk An Immediate fall in prices is ex pected. California and the Pacific coast states eat meat raised west of the I Rocky mountains and comparative ta- ' bles show ihat the average of pries Is hlelier here than in Chicago In an effort to mark down the card, in dependent dealers arranged for the " ustiallan shipment The Union Steamship company is so certain that the trade will be permanent that It has placed orders for four refrigerator ships to be used exclusively on the Australia San Francisco run. M FOREIGNER HAD I FOLLOWED I WOMEN I Gust Victor, a Greek laborer, was found guilty of following Mrs. R. 13. Chappie and her sister on the evening of Mav L2 and was sentenced to 45 davs by Judge W II Reeder this morning Although 'be testimony did not show that the Greek had spoken to the ladles, his actions on that night and at other times were sufficient in the judge's mind to Impose the sen- The witnesses stated I hat Victor was first seen that evening on Wash Ington avenue and Twenty-sixth street where he was standing behind a tele phone pole From that point he fo' lowed the ladies for two blocks and left only after Ray Belnap. who was near, had ordered him to do so When the man was arrested he was standing behind a pole at Twenty ' sixth and Crane avenue oo H TODAY'S GAMES I Reds Defeat Doves. Boston. May 15 ( National i Cincinnati J J Boston 9 " Batteries Johnson and Clarke; Hess. Dickson. Gervais. Strand anl Whaling. Naps Snut Out Athletics. Cleveland. Mav 15 i American R H. E. Philadelphia 0 Cleveland 2 5 2 Batteries Plank. Wyckoff. Bush and Lapp; Falkenberg and Carisch. Game Postponed. Detroit, May 15 (American) Detroit-Washington game postpon- ed; Dodgers Beat Browns. Brooklyn, May 15 (National) R. H E. St. Louis 6 ll J Brooklyn 8 10 1 Batteries Steele. Peritt, Sallee and Wlngo. McLean Ragan. Rucker and Miller. Quakers Defeat Cubs. I Philadelphia. May 15. ( National) ! Chicago J J 4 Philadelphia - 1 rv. ri. r- Batteries Overall and Archer: Alex ander. Rlxey. Brennan. Seaton and , Dooin. i M innings, i Pirates Beat GJants. New York. Mav 15 National i - H R. H- b. ; Pittsburg ll J New York . ' - Batteries: Robinson and blmon. Demareo. Wlltse and Meyer-. Hart- I (Additional Sports on Page Two )