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1
n i it fci n i I!' If lit' rll Ff i tr t 'I :t I i. r;j - E. r 'I f. ; - tf ! iff -- 1 'I i 3I i3j d THE REPUBLIC: FRIDAY, JULY G. 1000. MISS MAE DAY WON BY A HEAD. Beating Such Good Ones as Loving Cup, Bummer, and Doctor Cave. MYTH'S RACE QUESTIONED. Unless Mr. F. J. Kittleman's Kac- - ers Hun More Consistently a IJeque.st to Vacate .May lie Issued. The heavy shower of rain Just preceding tho racing hour settled the dusty track anl made tho weather er.joabls yesterday afternoon at the Fair Grounds The card was a rather ordinary one. P the fourth race, a sis furlong dash, gave tho sport tho proper tinge. In this race several sprinters of merit came to- gether. It was a. warm betting proposition. At the start of the speculation on this event, there was a steady flow of money on Silas Mae Dav and Loving Cup. Tho be- lievers In form had selected Miss Mae Day to turn the trick, and she was chalked up an 8 to C chance. But the big money gifing In on Lovlnc Cup, and tho suaden plunge by the Texar.3 on Bummer, made Mao Day's price rtcede to 2 to 1. The start of this race was a very good one, but Bummer was speedier afoot as the barrier slipped, and away ho went, leading the van down the back stretch by three open lengths. At the half-mil- e pole. Loving Cup lessened the lead to two lengths, with ills? Mae Day at Loving Cup's saddle girth. In this order tho three leaders raced around the stable turn. As the stretch turn wns made. Bummer perceptibly weakened and It looked that Loving Cup had the race at her mercy. An eighth out. Loving Cup ha I given Bummer hU quietus, and was racing gamely for the winning pest, when, sud- denly, Talley. on Miss Mae Daj, loosened up and commenced to hustle with Stubbs brothers' filly. Sha responded like an non- et t racing machine, ard from the sixteenth polo home she gained little b little, until the winning post was reached, where sho was a head in front of Loving Cup. with Bummer all out. two lengths back. Mr. J. D Lut-a- s started in this raca and the Buckmasier gelding ran a credita- ble fourth. One of the features nf the day's sport was t?t I the brdliant Mr. Louis Ler.lp's Terra Incognita. Mr. Lemp'-- - gelding succeeded In riichUy; the goal in time to oeat Kinp a head for tho third race purse. Tim favorite for thla race. Myth, made a cry poor shoeing He fmiihed some Hie lengfw back in fourth position. After the race tho Judgtrg Issued a bulletin statin? that n the ruturv Myth's entry would not be cd because of hU Inconsistent prform-tnce- s of late. They added, that if other racers of Mr F. J. Ki'llemaa's performed in an acrobatic manner, the stable would bo requested to vacate Sprinter Kittleman certainly h? som.3 iueer performers. The races of Crossxo-lin- a and Mvth have created considerable. talk. But then, since Mr. Kittleman bets his own money freely, and as ho has al- ways run his horses on the level since entering upon a turf career, it would seem rard to question his Integrity. The. general opinion prevails that Kirfeman's racers haie be-e- n "drilled" entirely too much of late and ceed a let-u- p. In x conversation with Mr. Kittleman about Sljth's race or jesterday. he saUI: "Here if the ticket for my own money, bet en Myth, an.r I can account Tor his poor ,race In no other manner than that Jockey Morse put up a very poor ride." Graves was baclcetl to odde-o- n to win the first rare of th day. and he performed nicety, winning by five open lengths from padrone and Bonaqua. Wild Pirate had an easy out for the sec- ond race, winning handily by half a length from Felde and Obla. George C. Bennett's Moros looked like a good thing in the fifth nice and was made a 6 to 2 favorite, but was never In the hunt. Lilly Pantland, a 13 to 1 chance, won this race by a length from EMna Greene, with Premus a fair third. The L'.eht. a to 10 chance for tho last race, was away from the post in good shape and beat Early Bird a length and a half at the end. Tom Cromwell was third In this race. Early Bird had all the tad racing luck In this event. He could not get out of a bad pocket until the field was well stralghUned for home. He then came with a rush, finishing a good second. To-dn- j'i I"nlr Ground Entrlen. First race, cna mil and strcnty yarCt, sell- - Ins: Tit Bequeath V"t 332 MuiXatorur . ...109 15 Parole d'Or.. 1 1M Celtic Bird... ...10 US Fernet jCot Hit 547 Croetmotlna. . ..X.3 iO HUib r.elJji . .10 I31S) Troubeam .. ...103 iot Mr Koiia 13) Second race, of a mile, purte: 361 The Butcher... .113 131 Ilrate's Daught- er KI Wall Ill 119 II? rireplar lift 199 The Count .....111 345 Kate Freeman.119 j;S I'ailene lis Hi Julittta. B 110 . . Honor Bright ..119 ... lift 143 Seethlnit m : nytne Eagu....m Third race, of a mile, telling: SIS Harry rulUla..lo S42 Orleans 101 (32) Sard 7 317 Ec Ford K 260 Money Mu$s....105 ... Alien Scorplcn.. 97 217 Centor 10- Fourth race, erne mile, pure: KS) Annie Oidfild..lM I IM Maud Wallace.. U in Io Noeter .... Ml 1(2 ldy Ca!!han..l04 S3S TicWful M 209 Ouide Itock los Mrut race. rs or a mue. lelllna: 339 XxtU 3 191 Wlnnebejour ... 95 Percy n 1C 21 Cotton Plant....l't 3(3 Elletit Ftlend... M 237 Aunt Mary lul 10 Imp. Clonsllla..liM fit ytuni lafgie .lvl 311 Ponnltard VS 235 lot 304 lioee Tree 1C4 177 ltandaizo 109 tlxth race, stx and cne-ba- lf furloru, eelllnjr: (211) Ohnet 95 33--) I.ady Car-oa- ... 93 17 Iron Chancel 3W IJer.ha Nell lui lor .107 2M NcklM 101 ... Colonel Gay... .119 35! Birdie May 1H 1 Eight Bella .. .r-- Z'0 Carttne tl 191 Macon .95 Ztf Grantor 1(4 23$ lbo 4. .. 91 EnLECTIOKS. First Itlice Sir Rolla. CToeimolIna. Troubeam. becond llac tieethtng. Julletta II.. WalL Third Race Zack ForJ, Said. Harry lmlllan. Fourth luce ltud Wallace. Tlckful, Annio Oldfield. Firth Itace Bonnirard, Imp. Clonallla. Aunt Mary biith Race Grantor. Necklace, Elbe. On tlte Quarter Stretch. "I Just came donn from Chlcasro lat nlejit." said a centlerran well known In turf circle, "and Til bet J5U9 orary of It that Ilantey Scbile-te- r will race his htmea at Uarlem. Tou cannot U-- indignant feellne- - ntnon-- r turfmen generally agalcut the Washington Park orriclaU for taking euch hasty action agalrat ltamey Scfcrjeber. We all know hie erratlo temperament, but at the eajne time, etery one who ha come In contact with him, either In a business or eoclai way. believe him wrongly accused of any intentional attempt at double dealing. I hoe-tl- y belleve that Schxeiber neer won or If he did. It was osiy a email bet, on the now celebrated Fly By Nlsht race. A fnr as con- necting l.'Hommedlru vlth Uarner. that part U all ronsenne. Ye, the feeling la xery warm, am all the- - boys wanted to etarl a petition at rnce. A rood many of the older heada thought It mlsht hurt Barney's cae In golni: after them rlaht away. Barney has tomb enemies, as a fol- lowing his occupation will surely hare, but even tfaete do not hesitate to say that the Washlnfrtoa Park people have acted rather hastily. Of courei'. Pteve IVHommedleu made a bla killlcir on Fly By Night, and because waa up on ac- count of Kultx belnic here in St. tuls. the klckera ffot their work In on the chnnKtnir of 5ockei. When the Eastern rlungr wins a h! net. the rln pets a wallorlnir, and some squeal. Fe reen IlIcmmedleu lose Jft.o'y) to a race. Then you neter hear a word abcut It. Because he happened to land en Ply By NlKht and unfor- tunately won. Barney gets the hot e- -d of It. I tell you It" all wronir. and If the Washington Park people are honest In thMr acta, they will ocme out openly with the evidence rathered In the case. If they hae no tubatantlal evidence to show crooked work, the quicker they can the Mot from Schrelbera name, the more sportsmanlike It will arrear to the public. When I ray Pcrcev will rare at Harlem. I say It wl(h the belief that the Board of Racing Stewards cf Washlnston Fark will surely reverse thu decision reached at the meeting held a couple nf. nlchta a:o, and the milcker they do that, or let the public know on what evidence they acted, the better will be tha public feeling toward Washington Park." What ha become of Jockey rom!r!ck7 This I? a common question about the track fr the past few days Tojrur Domlnlck Is irr.lnr throuch a course of disciplining, broueht about by hit refusal to obey his empleyer. Mr. Huahe. Ae aeon as the younirster comes to his sensea and oheya the orders Biven him by hi employer then the m. Lcult public will see tho boy with a leg up again. HPnnDV miss T. She- - nanale) IheTrsrlt Hccortl for Half a Mile nt Wnalilmrtnn Park. Chicago, July 5. At Washington Park to- day. Miss Bennett, carrying 122 pounds, equaled the track record of 4J seconds for a half mllo. anl Sly ran alx furlongs In -, while eclllrg platers In th last race REPUBLIC St. Louis Fair AsocI-itIo- - Fpring and day. July 5. Wc.Uht.-- clear; track fast. 259 llrstrace. nurw STA. ? oar-ol- InJ. horses. lUt. Sit lGraves .. .... .... 107 I 5 3 Ino 231 ?tadrir.A ....ml 4 .. ., Bonatiua .... ancawon .. lvj Mlsc Veros -a . 191 icor Baker ... Aentm O ail:olU .. . HuntnA V.. little Iin . ...I Wl 1" ...( i- - I : ...t j 5 ...I ID ! 3 ...11 1 ...I 1J 1 .. WZ H ... : . I M( l 4 z? :' f 7": . a 7 ' V " 11 It 1)' H Start irix.l Won eat-- up. second drltli? V Hirer H. T. Itatchler's It h.. 4. by Hobby Beach Etna G. Graves tias much tre Xadrone was all out at tlnlh. was com- ing ith strccg rush Sarcamon ran an lmrre'vt race. Time .124. :2I. Ci't. 1:134 roi t minutes. 260 Second rnc purse J100. Iri uo:"ns. lVt u -- I (37i uim in i t I i, :i ..! Ill t 2 -- 'i i"i i I 3' ... iMor.ry Mui-- i ....I US 1 1 I Ink ?tart ciio.1 Won tlrltlrs tconl !riii;. ce nicht W1M. Vt 111 llrate The l - t llttl. flow at titan. ar.d usoti up cltaslRg t - bt-- rn a trae nre Tlmr .!. .M. :U. !:'. ir.inu'cit. 261 Third race, purs-- $IX. In.! hoksi:s. vt 313 JTerra lncosnlta... lul 6 4 1M : i 3J7 iTheorj :: wi 4' 3nk 34 (Msth ..' 107 I ? 1' i e IS 3nkl :n . . ..( ill ' ..I Ml Mart iroo.1. Wen hard lro. yonl pir.if L lopla. Wlnrcr tin- - bet anJ H1 rxtarn. I KixkI rape ami finished Mrorp Mtliff ntry will hetraftt-- Tlm .13V.. :2h. 37. 1.C4-l'cs- t 1 262 Fourth race. pur K), I InJ HOUSES. Wt. RM) (Ml Map Day .... ?3 3' s 21 Iitlrc Cup lot (31S) Tlummer MI V l 4.1,1 333 ivicle Vante 104 ; (2Z5 Dr Ore e . Ilnvoo&tlon .. SI 113 IMeddlesorco Mlf H summer Pmlth refused JU't. Start trnod Won hard drive; weonl eiElly. Winner Ptubl Bros.' br. i Imp Her-nen- Aala I.ila. Winner the an.1 admlrablt rlJlen Uununer cracke.1 a Uteenth out Cjp ocllareil him. il.t lay came lta ruth at (Inlsb Just tettlnc Troith watching. Tliae :34. 3.5.. .43'4. l.HU. iTx 11 cunuxes. 263 Fifth race, purse C Ind. I 110n:i!. Iwt S t; I 1, TJT1.. lnt.t I trt 3 it.l .Cdna Grcne IPremu' iQuIck nar.EB Iflolden Hanest IHonltarv Hlrdle Ftono llllsa ..."I" Start cleverly: teconl Ennic fnisw excue- - Time-:-i:t. il. minutes I I ! 1 1 4 3 ; S 5 Ei 4 R 3 s 7. ' 1 10 ' I 11 .... I (33M I1J (2S1) 113 3 .... C.9II S I ) 313 .. ll 2 I 11J 317 Monf 113 317 I II) J1 l.r..wt ll... tt7 1H Zan 11) fair. Won all out. " m. uur nai clear and hart no M. no ran a bad rac. .57. .. 1.0.-- , l'"st l 7rtisixth ' Pursa i("' and selling, six and one-ha- lf longs: InJ. HOUSES. L S. i: : i s 109 1 !. 7 104 S 1J S 193 6 i- 4 ft. - 113 (23) The LlKht m( l1 (3ofi) Earlr Klrl ... t. t1 2 Tcm e.Ttmwe:i . 3' Snk; Mojr.d Cltr ... t.r.k Crstaillne .. .. 4 6 iejo S Wounta'n Deiv 2' 214 start good for all tut Deyo. Woi tandlly: 4 It Maid. Thft Ultht Bird shut on down back stretch, but lint K Wl . U 5C-- 1 UJ- - (Jf--l. HKIMC U( 07. .15. :i I.31- -. TIrre :5t4. I3a. Post I minutes. equaled the track record for seven and one-ha- lf furlongs. Mi Bennett's performance occurred In the Quiekftep Stakes G. B. Morris's Golden Age was the favorite, und Mies Bennett the tecond choice. Miss Bennett ruhed nt once to the front and made a runaway race of it. being eased up In the stretch. Harry Her-endc- finished second, with 13 to 1 laid against him. while Sobooi for Scandal came third. Sharp Bird ehowed early speed In the -- ond race, but tired badly toward the end. Sly won out handily from Utile of Memphl. The closing event was won by a sh). Wellerole. with Miss Shanley. another long shot. In the place and Tcucer. the favoilte, third. Summaries: First iac-- . cn rule HI (Boland), 7 to I. won: Floriiar, p-- (BuT.nun), 3 to 2. second; I.nma-hu- -. 103 Kn!rht. 13 to 19. third Tim. i:i)i4. The Monk also ran Second race, six furlonirs My. 109 fBullman). 9 to S. won. IMle of Memphis, ir (Matthews). 7 to 1. second: Head Water. V'j (Knight). 6 to third. Time. P12V Sharp Bin!. Alfaiela anl l"rlnce3 Thlra also ran. Third race. Quickstep Stake, half nile M- I- Bnnett, 132 (Crewhurst). 3 to 1, wen; Harry HirenJeen. lit (KnlBhO. IS to second: School fcr Scar.Oal. 115 (,c)woodi, 30 to I. third Tin-- . :4. Golden Age. Lady Schorr, tculptrcst and Admorltlon also ran. IVurth race, mile and a elit'enth Ooldrn Fot, Wt (Knight), e to E. won; Eva Bice. 103 (Mar- tin). I to 1. second: Andes. 1JJ (Mathews). 2 to 1. third. Time. l:4t'. Found and George H. Cor a'so ran. Fifth racs. mile ar.J Feventy yard- -, selling Orimar. 11S (Bullman), to S. won; Clay Pointer. 1M (KniKht). a to 1. -- econl: I'atroon. 10 (Slath--wi- i. to 1. third. Time. 1:H4. Retl Pirate, Wax. Sam McKeetcr and 8ac knlcht also ran. Sixth race. seen and a htlf furlonp- -. selling Mellocole. S3 (Raniom). ) to 1. on, Miss (Martin), li to 1. second, Teucher. 1"5 (rioland). 6 to 2. thlrvl Time. P33i Bltfr It"ot. TtamT F.. Marj-Iar- d Reserve. Tre. Hand. In k. tirailtlla. Doctor S. C Ajrrs and Henry C also ran. To-Da- nlilBKon Parle UnlrlrH. First race. lx furlongs: Allaltto 103 Modrtr- - 101 rarmsniaa 105 Cora HaTill II 113 The liady In Blue 104 Lomond 1M Emigre 1 Second race, ore runong- -, sriunK; Likeness- Smitll Jsek .. 99 t raBenn.tt :::: 1 ! Goeu Possart i Cora ttoiu ..... , . t.vi w, a.-- ., ..... t ........ .lot KM Cox 1)1 I Third race, mile and a sixteenth: Itrulare 103! Top Mat ..11- -. )td Pirate 1'WtJlm Mct'leevy .. ..in lTtnce Blazes 117 ..107 Man lend Reserve ...191 Icataatropbe ..111 Fourth race. mile, selling: Honeywood MiSllter Garter .. 97 tleorfe Knita IB Owtnl-n- i .. 9J Van Hoorebeke ft Troulwtllne .. f IJme Light ...Hi CTauncey Fisher ....103 Fifth race, Crieec-slxteent- of a mile: Chappauqua HIiLa Jocph!ne .... ...317 BUr Chime Mllulhlll ...103 Sixth race, one mile, selling. Tapan 1 Jmerlclr ...1"2 IJxadla lOSIGreatland ...1 TTe Hobby JS Tarhill ... 94 Ernln 971 To-Pa- ya Brighton. Ilcarh flntrlcs. Ktrit rsce. slv furlortars: Voter 12n!-k- y Scraper .1M Firearm ...... ,102 IrfCdevlIle 113 I l'ir.chfr ..102 Lew Kraft - 112 I Second rate, fle furlongs: Xerxea .. .10 .. ... ..... ..1M Mailmus 1071 The Regent. .. 99 IJef Prlrce 107 j Educate .. 9 Queen Pepper USl.nark .. 9 Courtesy ..- - lOIMluesswork .. 99 Harlem Lane 102 Prime II .. Third race, Montatuk Stakes, six furlongs: Commando .... ..... 123Mrea.in ..11-- 7 Baron Pti per 1"7 Politician ..1U7 Bedeck m Kourth race, arascea Stakes, one mile; Oneck Queen 121 Motley Hell cf I,rlntnn.. .Ill Drtud .. ..lot) Iroquois Utile ill Her Ladishlp ..liW Kamara 111 l.lleen LjIv ..H-- INerito ill Lair Cnctts ..1CI Lady of the Vale.. 109 Fifth race, mile and James HI Major Gliroy . ...111 I'recurser Ill I Brusquerle .... ..1"? Montanlo milady Mftssey .1 ...101 I.01-.- I Baltimore HI I Eileen Daly ... ...101 Herbert Ill 8ixth race, mllo and a furlorut: Favenlus 118 Candle Black.. .. ..! Maximo Gomes.. ....110 i:titr 104 Klnnlknlnik II') liter- - Perfume lt-- J Klcjr Barleycorn ....101 ILlnduU Sri niAMon jl'ihi.hi: ukathx. Merry 7al, A Itli J. ItrlS Vp, Heat Prince of 'Wales. Derliy . Inner. London. July 5. At the third day's racing of the New market first July meeting the l"rlnct-- s of Wales Stakes rf lo.ov) swerelenv the second horse to teceUe 1.300 sovereign and the third I.tXW somerelKns (and the nominator rf the winner 100 sovereigns and the nominator f the second 200 soterelgns out of the stakes.), for X an.1 4 ear olds the Rowley mile. va won by Mr. If. chapln a liay r.lij. Merry Gal, by Gallopin, out of Mary Seaton, en which J. Reiir had the mount. The lrlnce of Wales s bay colt. Diamond Jubilee tthe win- ner of this year's Herb)), by St. Simon, out of Perdlta II.. finished nemt. Lord William Bre-or- 4.rar-oI- d chestnut ctlt. Caiman, bv -- cohatchee, out of Happy Hay, riJJ.n by U Rein, was third. The be! line just previous to the start was a follows: Merry Gal. 109 to 30 against: Diamond Jubilee. 5 to 4 on, and Caiman, 4 to 1 against. Merry Gal won In hollow fashion by four lengths, thus upsetting a supposed certainty lor Diamond Jubilee, the J'rtnce of Wales a Derby winner. Two length separated second and third horses." Tre two RellTs were alo successful other A relunz plate of sovereigns for x ear-old- one mile and a half, was won by Tarollnta. with J. Rein up. The Exoter Stakes cf 30 sovereigns each with 2J0 sovereigns added, for 5 tlx furlongs, was won by Sang Bleu, en which L HelS had the leg. The July cup of 309 sovereigns, a cup and the remainder In specie, for all ages, six furlongs, FORM CHART. meeting, Forty -- third Jay. Thurs- - ami upward, selling, fix furlongs: llfttlns S. l Jockcjs. Opn Clot) Ti. . i v Fro7 1 145 2 2V, Jlce'.lnn .... V- - 1 4 5" I' 1Muro ma 1 4U 4'U.McCann .... 1 15 5 ' 3L, El IX. 11111 .... 7 11 4 I ""i irSIKaKehy .... 4 5 ' 7 llllnkey 13 2) 't t ITjtler M 4 J Woo.li... 13 4 II is j. vititoe .. &i tr) ; n it :j. t. woods; 19 i s I s fue and onc-hi- lf furlongs: I ItfltlrK. Jockrj. lOpcn Cliwl PI. i 1'- - IJ Woo-N- . ..1 9 ?) 3U 3ik Ullm.jrf .. .1 II 7 2' IJ T. WooJ ; 7 3''! 4 iPallthy .. ..417 Ulnn. r J. S. (t'Rrirn'it c. Imp Ilrxi of r.! t lowl flrt-ni- an.! true ilonet ilut Ktit frt-i- t In lirt hair. OLla maJe run it nnd upward, selling, one mile: s. r. JocKe j lOi-r- Ii'ttin iH: ' - 3' 3- - I 1 It. Tl- - i i: i IS ino 2r,o J T. VwL! 3 3 3' IMrfann .. ..I 4 3 1 -. 'lion.- - ; 4 no1 ! ,Ta'!-- t- Hi! G IJ. WtWilB ..I Winner 1mii. Imp'R h g.. 4. a I'otta Kin. ittt ..w. M...I. .... i. ... and upnnrd, si furlongs: Jocleyj. lOpen.Clo'f) 1 ITalley .. i S 3 11 3' IJ. W.M 3 IS-- 3 3 i 3 'X. IIIII . 4 3 3 la)3, 1.134. minute. t. bv be-- tthen Ivinn jtr.vng la ahead ai.. 1 5 4 k 11 1 1. 51 VI In events. 4" 4" J T. Woo.l 11 13 4 f4 C"i Jlorw in ; fi t.n '3 'Vrfllnn .. .. 7 9 3 7s jlittier .. .. 101 :! It S iKfn .. .. 100 4.-- 14 five furlorgs: Iletllnr. F. Jpck F. iOpen'Cloe 1 1 -!- it w- - vritn- - 1",1 2'4lKalleh .. .. 10 I 13 3' (Jilmore .... 4 4 J.1 f iTallev i 13 'Talley , s 13 7 .Morrl-on- .. 31 li 7 jllvtlfern .. ..1 ) 1) iMrtilnn ... 3 ' 3 1 v Il!nke . . -. 3-- 1 1)4 J. Wood 4 fi 11 11 .J. 7 Woods S Winner S. T. Galres A llm's b f bv reno nr.ine.i ftronc. tlreene stopnlnc at flnuh Culck liar?? coull not El inro-g- n. I Hettlt; Jockey. 10rn,Cloe PI. --) l'4ITal!ey .... ..I9-- I 9 10 3 I 5 2' iMors. .. .. .ii: 3 S' J. Woods . n 11 2 4' I" itlllmoie .. 3 4 1 I'lsIIJehtfoot . J) 1 J. t V lllctrn . ) 2.1 I' 74 IKatanaeh 5) I' 74 S Icarroll .. . 3.) W 15 ar-o!d3 upward, fu--- jt " -- rcon.1 t imer J. K Ilujihes" ch nw.tv ell and lad clear gclnir all the i'-- ?i arrl Tom rcmwell good, watch him in heavy U1UUII I.1VUUU. iiS&-- s A miln 1 rear-ol- d e . . Whitney s Aurora colt, ridden by McAllister". Terre Hand- - Itur-ea- . Terre Hsule, Ind ileS. 'A 3"1oVnr "nJationai uml Ar"ng! the bet time of : i the "M ' the 2.1 pac. frumir-tle- a: -- :" class paclrg. purse Slum. I 1 The Maid. b. m (Richard 4 4 Curtis) .. 3 3 3 Lit. s. ni. die Kennel)... ., if-."1- 0 u- -' " iCassiJ)) . 3 3 III bile m (l!n k) ...5 dis it class trctilni;. purs SI."-e.,'u- Alice, b. m (Ben Kenney).. 111 b m (lleo. A Kelley..., H.li m (itov Miller! ... 4 J - 2.11 class paring, purte 11,000: Arts', b h. (T. Q. Wtortrer) Ill ;':"" .awiv b & ,Roy Miner, ...:::. . MT7me2V..?14ul" K",5'r ::!! rorn collcgiaxs DEixATno. Jtilf Amalrnr Cluuiiplonslilp ) no DecldctI To-Ua- y. New York. July 6. Out of a big field of f,0.".'1!,'" ,vho '""S" " R01! tournament .Monday on the Uarden City links, only a,;'" o "gilt it out for the honor United State amateUr chjmlonahIP ' 'io These ure 'Herbert M. Harrlman or the Mectdowbrook club, the present chnrnptun: S. Douglass of the rnlrfleld County Club, t w W ceh.', ',''? cl.'atnploii in 1. M. Walter J. tof VokIar'J- - nn3 A- - Lockwood. an Lngllsh player, wfto has made Boston.. AU four ripresontrd different natlonalltles-.Dnu.las- x U a Scotcli-J?la- n T.r.n'" "n. Australian nnd Lockwood n hnglWhrniin by birth. Whim nlnv tidies . n.! .. X iXvzzxzzfSs ?- - - iit.iiiiviiiu ai.imt uir rtnulL was that, while the native-bor- n collegians wero defeated, they put up such a splendid game that par golf nnd better hud to l played by the winners In order to keep the jounger element out of the semifinal round John Ktiii. Jr.. former champion of Yale fnrcol Lockwond no closely that the E:ig-tshm- was forced to play four extra liide. making In nil Torty holes, be.ore lie tmnccumbe.1. Travif cnucd a seheatlnn In hH mornlntr play by establihlig n rtcor.1 of thlny-flv- e for tho nine hol.-s- . which U ono stroke better than the record made by Douglass yesterday. His opponent. Hitch- cock, of I'olnt Judith. It. 1.. .oxernl lht first half of the motnlng found In forty and ns V 'own and on the turn Tor home. The feature of the day was the extraor- dinary ahonlng made by John Held Jr. The Ln .llshman won and is entllletl to teke l:-- In trmltlnal Ho will meet Tr..l .. Douglas, and Harrlman will alho meet In the semifinals. GOMPERS IN CHICAGO. Confers With Uuililinp; Trades' Council Ofliciiils. Chicago. III., July 5. A secret conference was htld litre y between President Samuel Gompers or the American Federa- tion of Iitibor and President Edward Car- roll or the ChlCRgo Building Trades Coun-e- ll and Secretary E. A. Dais. It is supposed tho conference related to the present labor troubles In Chicago. L. X. KILE" SKIT. AhU That the SfcChortl Hallnny IIIII He Hrclared Void. Louisville, Ky.. July 5 The Loulfvlllo and Nashville, Chesapeake and Ohio, houthcrn Railroad In Kentucky and tho Iulsille, Henderson nnd St. Louis Hall- way filed in the United States Court au In- junction ruit acaltitt the Kentucky Rail- road Commission ami Its members, asking1 that the McCliord railroad bill, which cre- ated the commisfclon. be declared void be- cause It is acknowledged It conflicts with the paragraph of the Federal Constitution giving Congress atone the power to regu- late Interstate commerce. W. L. E. BUYS A inn. Coshocton anil Kontbern Hallrray TaUea From Ilece-lTer- . Cleveland, O., July 3. The Wheeling and Lake Erie Railroad Company announce to the control of tho Coshocton and Southern Railway by the lifting of the lecelvershlp and the fact that it will to operated for both freight and pnseiRer business beginning July 13. The office of the gereral superintendent has been abol- ished by the Wheeling anil Lake Erie and the operating work divided between the dl Mslon superintendents. So Longer Frlrmla. Tees: "Yon and May used to be very chummy, but you don't speak at all now, do vout" Jei: "No. Just before Easter we foolish- ly agreed that we would candidly criticise each other's rcrwr and hats when we got thexn." PhUadelphla Pruts. POWELL WAS GREAT BUT GOULD NOT WIN, Errors Back of the BiR Pitcher and I?ad Team Work Lost the Ball Game for St. Louis. IT WAS A VIRTUAL SHUT-OU- T. Had Xo( Dillard, PudliolT and Wal- lace AlisM-- Chances Philadel- phia Would Not Have Scoicd. ('Mil sr.iMMNfi. National league. American !iyue W K ivt W. U itl. VtmtiWvn .. .: 21 .641 Cblrtgo it M .eil Philadelphia 31 27 Milwaukee . S3 21 .S2 llttfburg ....54 r .ill Cletelmml ...31 2s .51m Chlcgo . ... 32 3) .Sin litdU ntt pull 31 V .314 Cincinnati ..2t 3? 173 ?Ilnnt.iiio!i .31 33 .4") Itottn . ..27 J3 .isk Kanm City 33 3 .V7 1M ....2J 32 .IJ- - Itetrolt 37 37 .l.'l New York ..21 37 3tS. lluflU .21 41 31 Yesterday (Jaliie. NRllonil American league. Phil 3. St l.tuts 2. I 7. Detroit Brook 2. Onrln. 0 Chi. 1. MIL 0. Chicago 2. t,..ton D. New Yolk 7. Plttt. 3. To-Ha- r's clcdnl Philadelphia at St. I4ton nt Chbaro Niw lork at Pittsburg. I'ow ell's pitching t Phllatlelphli jesterday wa- - so exceedingly gooi that Pt. Ixiu'.s would have vvon the ball game at League Park had she plaved anv thing In tho way of baseball. The St. Ixiult team hit Piatt harder than the Philadelphia team hit Powell. As uual. St. IaiuIs w.t quite Incapable of making any runs or tak- ing any advantage of opportunities to make runs. After lielng unablo to score for eight lnnlngi. St. InN made two rani in the ninth after two men were out. nnd tietl tho score. In the ttnth Inning a won with a triple by Thomas and a single by Delehantj. The official scorer gives I'hiladelphli ten hlt. Of these ten nt least were drives- that should have been eaten up. Thomas's run In the firt inning wai the result of a rank muff, or of a throw from DWiird by Sud hoff. who was subbing for McOraw. who hurt his thumb on Thursday afternoon and was unable to play. Cross's run In the fifth Inning was the result of an equally rank mutt or Dillard's eplendlil throw to the plate by Crlger. The ball came well ahemd of Cross on a lovely bound. It was a per- fect throw, but Crlger let It get away. Tho official scorer mlscd giving him an error. Were such a thing possible he should be given two errors for It. Had DiIHrd been an cottrant with, ai IWole would say. or "next." j J(s Bur-ke- lt hat It. to his Job In center field, he would have mado tw) catches or the triples knocked out by Thomas and Cro He should have been campttl under both balls. But Dlllatd Is mount; In the Leagvu and docs not know where batters hit. He played In clot-- for Cross, who Is an Infre- quent hitter, but hard swinger, who sends a ball when ho does meet It. which Is about once a week. Thomas Is n puny left-il- 1 w.i loper. Tho center fielder should pity back of short, and ire left fielder back of thltd. ri(,ht by the edge cf the clay, for him. Hnd Dillard been pUvlnrj right se men their triples would have been pop Hies. Then, in the tenth. Wallace let D'le-hantv- 's terrific wallop go through him. Good many peopl" thought It hou!d have been an error. Dclehany met It hln pret- tiest. Wall ice was plajing on the grass edge to shut off Thomas' run at the plate. It came right at him. Bob dropped to one knee to "cinch" It. He was nervous, for it was a sweet lick. It out through his hands ahd clamped knees like a noedle througa burlap and went Jolllly along, g- the and chuiUne the daisies under the chin on its way to Burkctt. Thomas bcorttl the winning run. So. all told. Powell should have had a shut-ou- t. Big Jack never was quite ro gool In his life before. He had great ipced and curves. Tho score shows but two errors back of him, but really there were bIx. A better game never was pitched. Piatt was not s.o good nnd was well hit. Ft. Louie plaved ball nt bat" and on bags. Several runim were thrown away by bad baerunnlng. The two runs St. luls did score came on wll 1 throws by Piatt anl Delehanty In the n'nth. after two men were gone. With Donovan on third and Sudhnff on first. Crlger lilt one down nt his faet which bounded JO fMt high. Piatt threw fast to first. Delehahty muffed the wide toss. Kudhoff ft sail for third, which Wol-mcrt- left naked. Delehanty threw without w siting to see if there was anyone to take the ball. It went to th fence, and two runs sttirctl. Douglas was In bad throwing form, nnd Ft. Iiuls should have stolen baes at will. Donovan nnd McG.inn might have trim a double steal In the ninth, but did not. Jlr-Ga- vvtiH forced at second afterward". With Crlger on s'cond. In the ninth. I'ow ell whs allowed to bit for himself. Robtnon should hive been sent up. Powell tried to run from first bne to third on Bur-- kett s double bat a or ino hum sack, nnd wns out a mile, though he had the pl-i- In j front of him. In the tenth Inning, when li wns tiesiraiiie to get. to oiue. iiurKett hit a bill with two balls and no strikes on hint. To be sure It tmii a good ball, and It re- quired a grent pity by Cros and a fine pick-u- p by Delehanty to get him. But P1.1t t wns wild, ard It was hardly ball playing. Though the team was broken up, it should hive won. for the Phillies were net In any kind of form. ST All. It. 11. 0. a n. Purlieu, if 0 1 3 0 0 K'lster. 3h 0 2 1 (I Wallace. t 3 0 1 4 j n Drnovan. rf 4 I 1 t 0 0 lilil-ir- cf 10 0 3 0 0 MrGann. lb 1 l 0 1 n SuJtitiff. Sb 3 1 1 0 s 1 ('riser, c I 'I 1 I 0 0 Powell, p 3 0 0 0 4 0 Totals 3J 2 9 M Tl 1 PIlILvDEI.PIHA. All. It. II. O. A. H. Thomas cf 4 2 2 2 a 0 SUk1. If 5 " 0 2 J 0 Pclrhmnty. lb 5 0 2 11 1) 1 Ia Jole. lb I 0 1 r, 3 o nick, rf 6 0 J 1 0 n IXiiiBlas. c 4 0 2 t " Wolverton. 1 4 0 3 1 4 9 Cross, a 2 1 1 1 k a Piatt, p 4 0 0 2 1 Totals :- - 3 7) 31 M 2 St. I.0 ls 0 0 0 0 0 A ) 3 -2 Philadelphia 10 0 0 10 0 0 0 -3 Famed runs Phllatlelphli 2. Two-ba- .r hll Wolterton I. Three-l-as- e s 1 Tho-nm- s L louble liars cross. I.a Jole and Delehanty 2: Slagle and Wolterton 1. Powell. McOann and Crlger I lilt by pltrher McGinn t. Bases on Kills Oft Powell !. oft llatt S. struck out -- By Pettell 3. by Piatt I. Pase.I hslls-tioiig- ljs 1. Stolen bases Donovan I, Sudhon 1. Metlann 1. Ksletcr 1. nick 1. IA Jol 1 Sacrifice, hit" -- Cross J. Time Two hours and tenly-nt- e min- utes. Umpire Hurst. II HBDtMi fiOSMP. Ill Kortnne- - Follows the- - St. Loaltl Tram- -. .Powell's. Fine Form. Sweet bad luck I" pursuing the St. Louis Baseball Club as eagerly and closely as .1 French adventuress chaet a rich and fool- ish young man. Thursday's game put w and Donlln out of it for a time. Sir Michael, tho Merry, twisted bis right knea dodging Tom Daly on Thursday. Ills spikes were too long. They stuck dtep In the poll. Whn MKkey turned to run back hU ppike8 held. Something had td give, for Mike was in a hurry, and that eternal vil- lain. Daly, was after him with the ball. The steel was not going to crack, bo tho fieh had to give. Mike was about the stand yesterday doing a "boccagh" stunt on crutches, lie does not know where or against whom he will make hN next ap- pearance. Mr. Donlln's existence- Is efy "Incidentalful." ns T. Thomas Fortune, the hegro spellbinder, would pay. Yet, atter all, what difference does It make? When McOraw and Donlln and Heldrlek and all of them were in the game tho team lost, anyhow. Burkett Is batting. Pass It along. I,t It travel like III news, which It will be to plt-hc- rs. Jesse hnx struck his belated stride. With the season half gone, he is getting his three per afternoon, sharp as lancets and hard as rocks. He cut them Wolverton yesterday a mile a minute. fiast ii),e ,ie 'Burkett of. old. It thing iTrf.r.-iti- ill.ft. TSijjKUi v. ;.; t.'ixr yAe break right and Jese gets bis step he will give the batting: leaders a run J6L For throe dajs now ho has been getting thre "That Rrpoklvn team is the luckiest In the world. said Jere Hunt mesterday. !" c..s ,hvt ,h da' the street car strike called off. ne wins two of three RoIIm ,,ure luck- - "e gets a bigger IiJitJ hi. ?'on,ry Jhan any man that has thl The name of iiorsesiiou Jtd' belongs to him for true." 1 J.'l!c.''1r T'?0ma'' and Catcher Buelow have from the bench marionettes at i.taue pdrk these few dav. It was naltl e",o..ia r !nat ,he ung men had been .nwmt .J1 'ra,e "f abstnet! to take a trip umong huvtnon leaguts utid tall grass teams of Okl thoma und Arkansas. Accord- ing to report, tbty are doing battery work for ambitious amateur teams in that koctlon or Hie I'nltetl States. It is stated t hut Tiiim.iA wa." Jolly good and terUbly xireel or his "wanning up" duties and of never gating a "ehancu t,, i.iteh In a eiiime. He was rusting for work, and he fcut 11. There may have been a time or a game when Powtll was it shade bettt-- r than ho was yesterday If -- . no one renicniUm it. lue gtnt of.ihe huge tori-- anil iMiiier-bet- it .ami had a dayzllng assortment ot thing that puzzh-- t nnd brat bitters. Deleliantj's dutt of slriklr.s were rank scralrht. Cros's Jnplfund Thomus's ditto would have been I"l' ciitehts with tin experienced man plaving ceiilt-- r MiCami might have col-Itr- one ball driven at him by I'lltk. Ih.-iug- It was hiiril. it was on the glove. Del t single In tht- - tenth throJgh Wallaci wan luck. Though It was a iiard-rumm- ball and no erorr, W.nace has gotten many harder outs. In all, about live real gool hits were made off John, and two of tine.) were bunts Had not S...11.0IT nuinvri 1)11- - I lard's fine asL-- t to get Thomas running to tnirti in me nrst inning, that run never woull have scored. Crias-.- t trlnle in the fifth should hove been a fly catch, and even then Crigtr should have caught Monte ut the plate on Dillard's lovely return of Piatt's fly. Cri-H- was out ten feet when Louis muffed the envy bounder. Had Dill ml j piave-- right for Thomas In the that j woUhvN triple would have lilr him on the l Dillard U a good fielder, but he is not yet acquainted with the hitters of thU leagti". and It eems no one takes trouble enough to post him. Hilly Kane, the St. Iouis athlete, wh' lias been doing ."hortfield stunts for To- ledo In the Interstate League this Mttwn. Is s!k with malaria. Kane has been play- ing 11 inlshty same down that way. If he was a left-ha- hitter he would be In the big League very shortly. He Is one of the last(t runners atd shortest stoppers the L'amu ever saw. McOann played good hall at bat and on bacs yesterday. Twice he was hit by pitcher, when such an occurrence was of lnt.stimable value to his team. He also plavtd ;:ood ball when he traveled higl. to in the- - ninth and made Cross throw high to Delehanty. La Join was In the game, his first since Ihe fateful day when he swung his right, or was I: his left, where hf thought Flick's head was, and "busted" an Iron locker, put In nt great expmxc In Colonel Roger's Phtlf deiphla clubhouse. Lawrence wis "there" In the field O. It. but his eye nt was worse than when he was making wild leads and untamed swings at Flick's Jaw tiiiil walloping lockers instead. Look- ing at the two men. it Is not easy to e where Flick has the llcklrg of Larry in 1.1m. Elmer in a sturdy lad. thick f chest nnd wldfc of stculder But he ha not the height, reach or we'ght of Larry tho Lam-in- er abemt him. Why. Flick must have taken thirty pounds the worst of the catch weights articles whlt-- h lie signed with the big second lugnian. They explain .t by raying that Flick hits straight, like Terry McGovern, while Lajole hooks and swings too much. Hooking and swinging if ht when golrg with gauntlets, but with tin bare knuckles the Ktratght fore face punch Is the goods. With the swing ard the hook the hands are liable to get broken lor s. wise nrnter win give nis nut, 1. his hard head crown to hands when he rfes the snipe comlrg. That 1") hojr Flick cot tho decision over Lajole, punch- ing .straight and working his left on the "ph!r," It Is stntrd that th- - little finger of left hand is broken and that It will be ii week or more ere Mack goes to baL Jnhnnln was nt the races jesterday after- noon, catching them going and coming. It Is whispered that he cannot lose a bet and that his wagers are big enough to bar him from being classed as a "piker." Mack mnks nbout 3.K) ns a ball plajer this sa-so- n, and will cop as much moro Irom tho races. His Baltimore ovster parlors are worth a neat tnn to him every year. Mak- ing about ISM"") this year Is not bad for a lad of 27. He is a good fellow. It is said; a. good ball plajer, which Is certain, and de- serving of all the luck a real pood f How thouM have. Willie Sudhoff did well enough at third mesterday. He can grab the grounder nnd throw well, but of course the line points have no clo-- e. acquaintance with William, who Is a good deal cf a ball plajer withal. Wullaro rubbed his shins and stamped n bit after Delehanty tore that amputator throuch him in the tenth. Bob did not give in ho was hurt, for Delehanty was laughing at him. The flrt hits Del made In a week came to him jesterday. When he got the fir-- t one his tongue hung down his chin as he rHn to first like a rough-coate- d St. Ber- nard In the dog duj.s. The spectators raised a rumpus jettcrd.lv-Umpir- e mini Hurst called Wallace out on n slide to second. Robert slid head first. The writer sat In the stand back of flMt base. From lhat position It did seem that Wallace had both arms around the bag and was ronrulslYf-l- prrlng It to his boom like a Reuben Launcelot greeting his ety best lady, when laid Douglas slow. It won tho writer's personal oplrlon that Mr. Hurst had acccmpllohed a very rotten decision. Indeed. However, two gentlemen, who aro excellent Judges, aw the play from the back of third bne. a much better po- sition to Judge tint play from than back of first. One of thes- -. a r.oted baseball au- thority and stanch supporter of Ihe SL Louis team, stated that Wallace was oUL He also said tint an cxrellent Ju Ige an nttichr- - of the Ht. Iviuls club, agreed with lilrri. He etptalned Ihe cessa,on pt motlon which afflicted Wallace before Lajole touched him and which deceived spectators back of first base and behind the play bv Faying that when Wallace hit the ground he did not slide, but stopped dead where he went down. "He tried to reach the bise," said the gentleman In question, "but waa tr-- fnr nnay to even get his hand on It. It was a correct decision and the censure of tho spectators did Hurst a very great In- justice." It muit be said that, as a rule llnrst Is a very good umpire. J. B. S ' Iltt'IMl WILL ,M)T tIT. me-- tork MnnsBer lit rtathrr Stnek on Ills Job. RKPt IILIC SPEI IAL Plttsburr. 1'a.. July 6. Rrganilnr the stories lhat he Is contemplating resigning ns manager or the New Yurk. Buck Ktrltie said "This tale It the Invention or .1 Clnelnnatl newspaper man. to whom word was rnrrlel that I met Air. Freedman as he passml through I'lncinnntl to Kansas Cit'. They how- - have l( thit Mr. Precdtunn. angrj t our Iotng streak, told me to have the team win games or quit mjself Thl Is not tnt". We have- - had a hard Mrrak. hut what te-t- has not? Th" relations Mr. Frer-I-m- an and mjplf are most curdlal. 1 have no Intention of resinning." si'w limn 7. 1'lrrnnim; n. Pirates Plrtyrd Cnrrtessly All r Itl anil nl lint. Pitt.burg July lest thnmth er- ror" and mleral.ly slow playlna. Attendance, 2.1m. !iore I'lttsburg. Netr York. AII.1I.O A.E. AII.II.D A.C Clarke, If. 5.0 3 0 V V'Haltn. cf I j Heau:n t. cf.3 12 0 0 (leason. 2 b 3 V ' VViramx. 2b I 1 2 I 1 Nelbaeh. If. 5 2 t IVarne- -. tf.5 t 1 0 fmltn. rf...2 0 RltChey, 2ti3 0 3 4 1 Dorl". lb.. .4 1 ? e'oolev. lh..4 1 IJ 1 0 Ira.l). s.. 3 I yimmer. c..l 12 1 , cI 0 Kl. s .. 4 114 ( Hlckm'n. 3b-- 4 1 I Vt adleH. p.l 1 1 0 0 Carrlck." p.. I 1 Mceteery ..10 0 0 01 - p .2 I 0 2 01 Totals ...3S 7 27 12 4 Tttal" 3v J nil 4 natte.1 ror U'ail.teli in fnarth. Pittsburg ., ) 0 o 0 3 1 0 0 o J Nets Volk 4 0131002 07 learned runs. New York I, Two-bas- e hits ler l. 1. Three-bat- e llch 1. Sacrifice rats Van llaltren 1. Smith I. Gta.ty 1. Htolen la'es Van Haltren 1. (lleason t. !mlth 1. Double pliya yelbach and liowerman L Tlrst base en lulls hr Wad.leii l. t.fi Carrlck 4. ?truck out-l- ly VVadJell 1. iy Ierer 1. by Car- ries 2. Time One hour and fifty minute. Pmplre Swartwood. HHOOKLl.V 2. CIXCIXAT1 . Red Could Find opa for Only One Hit. Clrelnnatl. O.. July t ops altowetl Cincinnati but one hit Newton, too. i Itched enee-tlvel- y. Dihien's hlttlnr; gave th champions tlelr runs. Score: Clncinnetl. Brooklyn. Alt 11 O.A.B. All 11 U. A.E. Barrett. Cf 2 0 3 0 i JOfieS. Cf. . 4 2 3 0 0 Corcoran, si 1 2 J 0 Kseler. rf . 4 110 0 Pecklcr. Ill 3 8 It I 0 Jns'". Ih 4 2 7 0 0 Crawfd. 11.1 0 1 I fheck'd. if. 4 0 5 0 0 MCBrlde, rf 3 0 2 0 A Dahlen. s.. 4 2 2 10 Uulnn, 2b. . J 4 I 2 0 cnr.. 3b.. .1 1 0 ! 0 ibim 1 i Df.lv II.. .. I V 2 1 0 relts. c t 0 S J 0 Parrel!, c. 4 2 7 10 Newton, p. 2 0 0 2 0 Net", p 3 0 0 0 0 Tota!s.....5"i" irn""! Total 25 18 17 0 Clnclrnatl o o 0 0 0 0 00 Brooklyn 4 j M 0 I I I 12 Earnrt runs Drooklya 2. Two-bas- e hitsSalt- - WUsJrryaetrlat'UB 5TJtt" U oltte HO Mirk on Boies to indicato Return contents. 11114 charges paid and ruio nonet back il coods cont ' J - jf KMf Jc7MJtIsr"A,ii 1n prime lint .. ,9-JvTi-- i' xrt ,st$ e3jfrsTriJLW- - 2aZs i i7 "' "ii it 1' j.isri J f3.u0 for four full quarts. Tliis WO S.1VR TOU 1 1. r drank and cannot bo all mltMl tnen'si prohte ami t.ii.ir untecalwoltltelf pure wlilt. jrj ittioi.i uilulter atlon. FULL QUARTS W ref e r Agency. Bank or Kiprcss Gimpany in IJnltea fctatts. JOHN &. CO., AoaretJ all crders lo Warehoute CE 609. Gil. 613 W. 121ft St CHICAGO. O'.ler Ariz.. Col., aeu..nyn preptld. or rntnte for ptrtirul ira lfore remltt'ra-11- iiwiiinsi an asssaii m len L Three-bas- e hlts-Dab- len I. StoleT btsei-Coreo- ran I. Dahlen 3. I lave-yut- nn. aifiran and Beekley 1 Ilrst on Newton 1. .; lilt ly ptcre.1 bill Nrp 1 Mr.uk out l!v Nor- -. . by Newton 3. Attemlani e. .). Time One hour and nfty-llv- e minutes, empire - I'm He ciiictno s. nnsTtiv o. Anure-Iilsl- s Hume- - omv Wi)n lHcltt Mrnlhr letorlrs. Chlcjco. III., July 3. Chlcaito mi on lt eighth straiKht name by shuttlrg cut lhs'on. lilts by l!an ami ilcTVrmlck ana wild throws by Lon and Clement" rave tlie ols all their rurs. Itth hers te-- e on their mettle and did good wtrk Vtteii lance J.3. Chic-nro- . 1 Boston AIIH.OAC I AIHI.OA.ri Mcfarthy.If I 1 2 ) 0 Har-ll'- cn ef 3 2 1 0 a ( hil.ls. :i, ., 1 1 u! Colllri". 3b. I o S 1 1 Mert- -, lb.. 3 :) 0 0 Mahl If 4 o 1 ) ) Ryan. rf. ..3 12 0 1 Tenney. lb .3 0 7 2 O Ireen cf 3 1 2 o nj freeman, rf.t 110 0 McCor-k- , r .3 1 o SOI lyave, 2b... I I 1 2 l) Hraill-- v, 11.3 0 3 2 0 brc Itoidhue. c.3 210 (t Clements. C.3 0721 Tailor, p.,.,1 0 0 3 v Dlneen. p.. .4 2 3 10 Totals ... 21 "? Tctals ....24 7 21 12 3 Chlcaito o 2 0 0 0 0 0O ft- -2 Ibston 00 Larne.l runs Non. las (Tileago 3. Bt "ton 1 Tuo-ba.- e lt.l 1. 1. Ionahu 1 facr!3c hit"- - e'eHln" I Rra-Ile- I Mule-- i t,j.e- - Vtrtes I. Ryan 1. Green 1 1 Iublet-lay- Clements anil Collins 1. Mruok tut By Taylor 2 by Dlneen 4 UIM pitches Dlneen l. Tlnits Two Ixurs and nlno minute". L'n.ilre Terry. 7. Detroit (".. Indianapolis. Ind . July 3 Cronln mtas battel for five run li the ninth innlrc otter pltchlnr sut-er- ball all t&roJuh- - Barnes relieved tluese In th fifth Innlnt. tcore: Jl II E Iidlanapoli i 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 k- -I It 3 Drtri.it 0 0 3 0 10 0 0 3 i II S Batteries Ind'anapolla. Cuese. Barne9 and powers; Detroit. Cronln and McAllister. Chleaito 1, Milwaukee! O. Milwaukee. Wis.. July 5. Domrd-- s error In the retenth Inring rave Crlcago th- - eame llt.lh irftchers wero effective throughout, hut tho visiters I.al tho luck with them. lMd?s the pilchlnr. ltotta n catch of SuxJen'a fly In tbe eeventh was tht feature. Score: R. H. E. Mllaaukea 0 0 g 1 ChlcaRO 0 I 0 Batteries Doallnir ard Smith. Katoll and Burden. W'eatern Lem$ae. Denver. July E. Score: n h. n Denver 0 01. li it I'uel ! 3 112 0 110 3 113 IJ 3 Batteries Kara and Rjlllvaa; Herkea. par-ot- t ana (Iraham. Eloux City, July 6. Score: R. II. E Sioux City 0 10 0 2 0 4 0 .. s S 2 St Joseph 12 5 I Batteries Iarvln and Cote, Mausln and Imlin. Des Moines, la., July S- - Score: R. 1LE Dea Mdncs IS 15 S Omaha 2 0 0 4 1 S 2 0-- 11 13 5 batteries McFnrland and Ptjla.er: Egan. Wll-so- a and Ituzon. Pacltle Tennis Fan Francisco. July I George F. Whitney has retained th tennis cf the pacific tnates by defeatlnr Sumner Kardr In a series of ten games. He is now th permanent posse"sor rf tte cup. lie will sioa g Eaal to pasticlpalo In thla teason'a matches. Won. REPUBLIC SPECIAL. Illc.mlr.tton, III July I. One ef ths best rentes of tfc year was played to-d- between and Jacksonville, the honw team. ir.mr to . This waa Blooralngtoa'a thlrt atralsht oft tne visitors. After th firSt irnlrg Jacksonville played great ball. Hamplo pitched a magninertt am for IJIismlnxton. striking out seven. Score: R, H-- 3 10 0 0 10 0 3 4 Jacksonville- 1 0 0 3 10 0 0 04 10 4 Batteries Samp' and Rollins: Etarlts) and Cal- ls; an. Decntnr Downed Terre Hasite. republic; SPECIAL. Decatur, III July 5 Tha Decatur team de- feated Terre llaute again this afternoon anl will en from her to lerie. llaute to play three, frames. The score: ic 1U1-- . Decatur 0 0 0 0 110 3 214 ir y Terre Haute ....! 0 4 0 0 3 2 2 0--13 IS S Batteries Decatur. Herbert and Badger: Terra llaute. rfttaln. L)un3 and Puller. Central Leasrne. REPt-'RLI- Sl'ECIAL Danville, III , July J. Baseball Central League score. IL II. E. P'oria 2 2 i I 1 'ant Ills 0 1 3 3 Baltcrle" Oaeas and Mct'.UIre; Ctrns and Jessup. JEFKniEs to Mnirr iit-iiLi- Itnttle to lie Arranged Wllbln a Few Days. REPUBLIC SPECIAL New York. July B A match between Jim Jeffries nnd Gus Ruhlln for the of the world wil! arranged In a few dajs. Both fighters und their managers have signified their willingness to clinch It, and will rfsn articles of agreement ths earlj' part of next week. At prent both men are on the road, and ns their end next Hitunluy night, there is no doubt thit thej- - will get right dawn to busi- ness on tht-i- r return to this cltj' and lose no time In affixing their signatures to the ar- ticles. As soon n BIllj Hrady. manager of Jeff- ries, lenrnfd In Paris where is at Ruhlln had defeated Sharkey, he cabled to Charley McCall, his In this cltj-- , stntlng that he mut clinch a match ns quickly ns posFlble with Ruhlln. as he wns Jeffries could beat Ruhlln, nnd thereby would get the chance to make several thousand dollars. McCall Is ready now to clinch the match nfter receiving Brady's If all for the tight are and there Is no doubt they will la. the contest will be one of the biggest betting affairs that has occurred ritice the gr-- nt battle between and Jim Corbett a few years ago. Huhlln's great showing with Sharkey has gained him a host or admirers, and. as this delegation will constllute the prominent bettors on fighters, there 1 every indication that the Akron man will be heav- ily backed when he enters the ring. HACK THIIHY TO niivr KnB. tlronklyn Ilriy'n Admirer Think He Villi lies! the LlKht Weight. REPt'BLIC SPECIAL New York, Julv a. Interest In the battle between Frank Krne and Terry McGovern Increases at a surprising rate ns the date. of the fight July 1& approaches. Sronln-- r mm nbout town are freely the outcome and opinions seem to bo about oiviueti. Terrj's admirers think he Is Invincible and wl I back him against Hrne or any one. edse to tre limit. The cliam-- n. ldon ha a betting contingent behind him tuo, wnicn pnimis to mane tntngs lively i d kardry tetaf. in America i Bear thu in mmd. ujti , , . PENMSYLVUNII whlikey 1SXJS E.prtj, medicinal and ireneral am bay tt . aid for ? use. . crenaii CAE!lSE,!PEN3SYLVANIA RYEat SOO isthofinet7yeirolitrye JraEjprtH in any SCHWEYER DISTILLERS, . for cai..Idah.i.Mont-.J.e- ik ilt i . "...30130 i7TTl uoOOOOOO Indianapolis) ooonooon 00000100 000010 0000100 4S402003. Chnxnploti. championship championship Illoomlnictoa . Ilioomlnrton . ODOOOOOC OOlOOOuO Chnmplonahlp champion- ship bo engage- ments he pre- sentthat representative communication. arrangements satis- factorily completed, ritzslmmons discussing light-weig- ht pll.Lu aasVjsUoat-BM- CT ij WHISKEY RYE prescribed . Mcx...ev..tre..t.ii, The famous Peansylyanta Ke. lor zi years doable di-ti- lll ar-- 3ca in sow uuaer onalArcctnofJIr.JolmbthweTerLiaiseif Sever les than 8 m ears old. to : it o and la years old when fir-- l Ixtttied. bold direct to distillery at tho the consum-- r Irom cur low prico of SUli for four full quirts that cannot be bonght elsewhere for less than $o.'JU. We aNo offer our SEVEN TtAK OLD duplicated for Ics then SOO. xS"7 Prtptii ! 'riil'Mn,, MH ieCTCniiiiMwnasiH A nosttlve and Dermanentcure fOTall nnnatralCts- - charyeJof the Urinary Orrane; 1.7oOcouioIetecir In 1889; ImmediatereKef for IKadtlerand Kidneys; quickest and safest cure knoi.j book tree; ref asa ; there are none "just a" iroort "insat os (tirev's. the onlv genuine. Drveirlll.oTr-yraai- t J . W. Ocdney. SO J Last bitth Street. New York. DR. SCHRE8NER, 816 Chestnut St.. St. Louis. Mo, The RELIABLE tPECIALIST private and chronic Lojt Manhood. Nervous Debtltty. Lost Vtxor. bsmtcal V. takces". Night losses. Debllt-tati- rg Dreams, Early Decay. ffN arlcocele and all results cf er- rors of youth or excesses In Ia:r jears rermaneztly cured. Gonor-rhce- a. elleeu Stricture. Lrnatu-r- al liischacges. and all dieea9 sM cf Klilr.evs and UladJer. and R.ood Poison, all stares, posltiv ely cured. Chants law. o lt-- town patients treated by mall. BooV anl Question Urn's on Special Diseases seal Frea. Ccnsultatljn Pre- -. Call or write. Hours t a. m. to p. m. Burdaya io to 12 m. EVERY PRUGGIST TAKES REPUBLIC WANT ADS. from now on when the money-lade- n McGov- ern men make their presence known. Although the conditions of the fight in one waj- - favor McGovern, nnd In the othT way place him at a disadvantage, his fol- lowers cannot see how he can lose, and ac- cordingly are not a bit backward in claim- ing that he will give ITrne his quietus. Just as he has done to such prominent fighUra as Dixon, Gardner. Forbes. White. Calla- han. Rotchfort and others. Thev Intend to bet their money on him to beat Erne. KID PAGE AiU lJUJlHV SCHKK. Meet on July II) nt the nest End Club. The V.cst End Club, which, for the past ,months. has been a haven for tho striking street railway employes. Is once more a headquarters for the club members. President Ilauzhton nnnources the long-look- for match between Kid Page and Dummy Schenck for the lJth of this month. On the same evening, Al Milier and J. Douglas will come together, also Juliui Klein and Charley Cornwell. The Page-i'chen- ck match Is for the lipcurd cham-pienshl- p. The entire evening's programme will be strictly a club membership affair, and no outsiders will be admitted. TALK OF FRENCH ALLIANCE. France Would Have Friendly Treaty With the United States. Paris. July 6. Recent reference-- , in th Fnris paper to the Franco-Americ- an dem- onstration of frier.d'hlp have clearly shown that an alllarce between the Republics is uerlouslv considered. The Figaro is the latest Journal to tak JiD the Idea. It suggests. In an important leading article, that the bonds between tha two mtintrin b drawn still closer than they are at bj' means of a treaty of commerce. After potnting out that American sympathy- - for was much weakened by the Mexican War and nttltude of the Imperial Government during the Civil War. the writer sajs that the situation has been much improved for fome time past, as ts evidenced by the warm expressions of friendship at tne un- veiling of the Washington and Lafayette monuments. "lUre, then." he explains. "3 a new alli- ance, based, not en written treaties, but on a community of sympathies, not on tho eventualities of a war to be raced In com- mon against a third Power, but on a move- ment of ideas, whence has arisen confl-den- ce between two great nations." Reference Is then mad J to the announce- ment of Mr. Chamberlain. British Secretary of Slate for the Cilonies. of a political alli- ance, and the article concludes; "Do not let ua fall into the same errors of. appreciation and Judgment as have tins KnglUh. All we are bl to obtain from the United States is a disposition on the part of the Government and people to consider th- - French Republic a sister Republic, whoso colonial Interests In the Atlantic and Pacific ought never to bo looked upon with preju- dice, nnd whose Intellectual Influence wilt be received henceforth with more favor than Jealou"j The community of institu- tions between th! two countries have ben an Important and durable factor in their upward growth, and the result obtained, which w 11 be much greater it sanctioned by a soil! treaty of commerce." ANTHflfTPER.AL.ST.C PLANS. Executive Committee Prepares for the Indinnapoiis Meeting. Irdlnnapolls, Ind.. July C Tho Executive Committee of tho American l- istlc League has sent notifications to this city that the first national convention of that organization will b held here Augui.6 1." and 1. Speeches will Im delivered by Bourke Cochran of New York. , Houtwelt of Massachusetts. Bishop SpaltliT me of Peoria, Carl Schurz and AndrotSr Carresie. Th- - league cxjcta L1W person present. A. Mlzte of Chicago Is the na- tional secretary. 103 Help Wanted Ads printed In 'n Republic How Mildred Cams by the Lots. for the fact that Mrs. Dewoy. wlfo of th Admiral, owns considerable property In MlcblU. the Karle says lhat some of tills waa ven by Ceneral W. II Haaen. Mrs Domreya first husband. In a poker aame "The story gce." sits the Eerie, "that In 1571. whn Gen- eral Hazen and bis troops were stationed near Wichita, thfte waa a spirited poker rama in In whlrh "everal of tho ptoneera and Ererrrss Ilasen were enraged. Ons engarement all day and alt night between General Hazen and a nun named HinCroft. When tha KPTar flrrtllv broke up General Hazen had vmori all e.f Bancroft's rncney and 14Q besides, which Bancroft could not pav. li criler to settle, with Gtneral Hazen. Banrroft ts said to have deeded Hafen -- bout fifty lota in the growlra younr vil- la re of U Ichlta." Later luncrcll redesmed most if the 1. 1". but several of them remained tha prni-ert- of the General, and within the past two) years Mrs Iewey has deeded soma of them anay. Kanaa City Journal. CARBUNCLES These tomienlinte nnd painful eruptions proceed from tho same cause vitiated condition, nf the blood and a debilitated state of health. Carbuncles are much more nerlous, eating great holes In tho flesh, making elow-healiti- jr, danxerous wound-i- . Hoils are reinled by many as of llttlo ImportantTe )mcthing rather to b dealred a a menus of thlnnlne; the blood; hut this Is an erroneous Idea, a offensive chronic sores and ulcers, and even Cancer, often begin with a Boll. The seat of the trouble is In the blood to be rid of thee pests permanently YOU MUST GET THE POISON OUT OF THE BLOOD. P. S. S. can bo relied upon with certainty to do this. It not oulv forces out all poisonous matter from the blood, but, belnc; purely vegetable, at Ihe same time iitvTJiTites and builds up the jrcncral health. ."o need to fear further troubta from Boils and Carbuncles after a course of 8. 8. 8. Mr. K. J. Willis, of 1W4 Mission Street, 8aa Francisco, Cal., nays: "I have foryears lcn subject to painful Bolls Und Carbuncles over my lxvly during tho spring season, and afler much snffsrlns; ana usclees doctoring I finally fbnnd a perfect cure in t--. S. S. It seemed to go right to tha root f the trouble and to drive out thoroughly and emcaelouily the poison that was lUidennluIng my health. It Is the monarch nf blood medicines." Bookon Blood and Bkln DIaeaae rnalled free. The S. a S. Co., Atlanta. G A

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Page 1: Library of Congress · n i it fci n i I!' If lit' rll iFf tr 'It:t I i. r;j-'IE. r f.; - tf! iff-- 1 'Ii 3I i3j d THE REPUBLIC: FRIDAY, JULY G. 1000. MISS MAE DAY WON BY A HEAD. Beating

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d THE REPUBLIC: FRIDAY, JULY G. 1000.

MISS MAE DAY

WON BY A HEAD.

Beating Such Good Ones as LovingCup, Bummer,

and Doctor Cave.

MYTH'S RACE QUESTIONED.

Unless Mr. F. J. Kittleman's Kac- -

ers Hun More Consistently aIJeque.st to Vacate .May

lie Issued.

The heavy shower of rain Just precedingtho racing hour settled the dusty track anlmade tho weather er.joabls yesterdayafternoon at the Fair Grounds

The card was a rather ordinary one. Pthe fourth race, a sis furlong dash,

gave tho sport tho proper tinge. In thisrace several sprinters of merit came to-

gether. It was a. warm betting proposition.At the start of the speculation on thisevent, there was a steady flow of money onSilas Mae Dav and Loving Cup. Tho be-

lievers In form had selected Miss Mae Dayto turn the trick, and she was chalked upan 8 to C chance. But the big money gifingIn on Lovlnc Cup, and tho suaden plungeby the Texar.3 on Bummer, made Mao Day'sprice rtcede to 2 to 1.

The start of this race was a very goodone, but Bummer was speedier afoot as thebarrier slipped, and away ho went, leadingthe van down the back stretch by threeopen lengths. At the half-mil- e pole. LovingCup lessened the lead to two lengths, withills? Mae Day at Loving Cup's saddle girth.In this order tho three leaders raced aroundthe stable turn. As the stretch turn wnsmade. Bummer perceptibly weakened and Itlooked that Loving Cup had the race at hermercy. An eighth out. Loving Cup ha Igiven Bummer hU quietus, and was racinggamely for the winning pest, when, sud-denly, Talley. on Miss Mae Daj, loosenedup and commenced to hustle with Stubbsbrothers' filly. Sha responded like an non-et t racing machine, ard from the sixteenthpolo home she gained little b little, untilthe winning post was reached, where showas a head in front of Loving Cup. withBummer all out. two lengths back. Mr. J.D Lut-a- s started in this racaand the Buckmasier gelding ran a credita-ble fourth.

One of the features nf the day's sport wast?t Ithe brdliant Mr. Louis Ler.lp's TerraIncognita. Mr. Lemp'-- - gelding succeededIn riichUy; the goal in time to oeatKinp a head for tho third race purse. Timfavorite for thla race. Myth, made a crypoor shoeing He fmiihed some Hie lengfwback in fourth position. After the race thoJudgtrg Issued a bulletin statin? that nthe ruturv Myth's entry would not be cd

because of hU Inconsistent prform-tnce- sof late. They added, that if otherracers of Mr F. J. Ki'llemaa's performed

in an acrobatic manner, the stable wouldbo requested to vacateSprinter Kittleman certainly h? som.3

iueer performers. The races of Crossxo-lin- aand Mvth have created considerable.talk. But then, since Mr. Kittleman betshis own money freely, and as ho has al-ways run his horses on the level sinceentering upon a turf career, it would seemrard to question his Integrity. The. generalopinion prevails that Kirfeman's racershaie be-e- n "drilled" entirely too much oflate and ceed a let-u- p.

In x conversation with Mr. Kittlemanabout Sljth's race or jesterday. he saUI:"Here if the ticket for my own money, beten Myth, an.r I can account Tor his poor,race In no other manner than that JockeyMorse put up a very poor ride."

Graves was baclcetl to odde-o-n to win thefirst rare of th day. and he performednicety, winning by five open lengths frompadrone and Bonaqua.

Wild Pirate had an easy out for the sec-ond race, winning handily by half a lengthfrom Felde and Obla.

George C. Bennett's Moros looked like agood thing in the fifth nice and was madea 6 to 2 favorite, but was never In thehunt. Lilly Pantland, a 13 to 1 chance, wonthis race by a length from EMna Greene,with Premus a fair third.

The L'.eht. a to 10 chance for tho lastrace, was away from the post in goodshape and beat Early Bird a length and ahalf at the end. Tom Cromwell was thirdIn this race. Early Bird had all the tadracing luck In this event. He could notget out of a bad pocket until the field waswell stralghUned for home. He then camewith a rush, finishing a good second.

To-dn- j'i I"nlr Ground Entrlen.First race, cna mil and strcnty yarCt, sell- -

Ins:Tit Bequeath V"t 332 MuiXatorur . ...10915 Parole d'Or.. 1 1M Celtic Bird... ...10US Fernet jCot Hit 547 Croetmotlna. . ..X.3iO HUib r.elJji . .10 I31S) Troubeam .. ...103iot Mr Koiia 13)Second race, of a mile, purte:

361 The Butcher... .113 131 Ilrate's Daught-erKI Wall Ill 119

II? rireplar lift 199 The Count .....111345 Kate Freeman.119 j;S I'ailene lisHi Julittta. B 110 . . Honor Bright ..119... lift 143 Seethlnit m: nytne Eagu....mThird race, of a mile, telling:

SIS Harry rulUla..lo S42 Orleans 101(32) Sard 7 317 Ec Ford K260 Money Mu$s....105 ... Alien Scorplcn.. 97217 Centor 10-

Fourth race, erne mile, pure:KS) Annie Oidfild..lM I IM Maud Wallace.. Uin Io Noeter .... Ml 1(2 ldy Ca!!han..l04S3S TicWful M 209 Ouide Itock losMrut race. rs or a mue. lelllna:

339 XxtU 3 191 Wlnnebejour ... 95Percy n 1C 21 Cotton Plant....l't3(3 Elletit Ftlend... M 237 Aunt Mary lul

10 Imp. Clonsllla..liM fit ytuni lafgie .lvl311 Ponnltard VS 235 lot304 lioee Tree 1C4 177 ltandaizo 109tlxth race, stx and cne-ba- lf furloru, eelllnjr:

(211) Ohnet 95 33--) I.ady Car-oa- ... 9317 Iron Chancel 3W IJer.ha Nell lui

lor .107 2M NcklM 101... Colonel Gay... .119 35! Birdie May 1H1 Eight Bella .. .r-- Z'0 Carttne tl191 Macon .95 Ztf Grantor 1(423$ lbo 4. .. 91

EnLECTIOKS.First Itlice Sir Rolla. CToeimolIna. Troubeam.becond llac tieethtng. Julletta II.. WalLThird Race Zack ForJ, Said. Harry lmlllan.Fourth luce ltud Wallace. Tlckful, Annio

Oldfield.Firth Itace Bonnirard, Imp. Clonallla. Aunt

Marybiith Race Grantor. Necklace, Elbe.

On tlte Quarter Stretch."I Just came donn from Chlcasro lat nlejit."

said a centlerran well known In turf circle, "andTil bet J5U9 orary of It that Ilantey Scbile-te- r

will race his htmea at Uarlem. Tou cannotU-- indignant feellne- - ntnon-- r turfmen

generally agalcut the Washington Park orriclaUfor taking euch hasty action agalrat ltameyScfcrjeber. We all know hie erratlo temperament,but at the eajne time, etery one who ha comeIn contact with him, either In a business oreoclai way. believe him wrongly accused of anyintentional attempt at double dealing. I hoe-tl- y

belleve that Schxeiber neer won or Ifhe did. It was osiy a email bet, on the nowcelebrated Fly By Nlsht race. A fnr as con-necting l.'Hommedlru vlth Uarner. that part Uall ronsenne. Ye, the feeling la xery warm, amall the- - boys wanted to etarl a petition at rnce.A rood many of the older heada thought It mlshthurt Barney's cae In golni: after them rlahtaway. Barney has tomb enemies, as a fol-lowing his occupation will surely hare, but eventfaete do not hesitate to say that the WashlnfrtoaPark people have acted rather hastily. Of courei'.Pteve IVHommedleu made a bla killlcir on FlyBy Night, and because waa up on ac-count of Kultx belnic here in St. tuls. theklckera ffot their work In on the chnnKtnir of5ockei. When the Eastern rlungr wins a h!net. the rln pets a wallorlnir, and some squeal.Fe reen IlIcmmedleu lose Jft.o'y) to a race.Then you neter hear a word abcut It. Becausehe happened to land en Ply By NlKht and unfor-tunately won. Barney gets the hot e- -d of It. Itell you It" all wronir. and If the WashingtonPark people are honest In thMr acta, they willocme out openly with the evidence rathered Inthe case. If they hae no tubatantlal evidenceto show crooked work, the quicker they can

the Mot from Schrelbera name, the moresportsmanlike It will arrear to the public. WhenI ray Pcrcev will rare at Harlem. I say It wl(hthe belief that the Board of Racing Stewardscf Washlnston Fark will surely reverse thudecision reached at the meeting held a couplenf. nlchta a:o, and the milcker they do that, orlet the public know on what evidence they acted,the better will be tha public feeling towardWashington Park."

What ha become of Jockey rom!r!ck7 ThisI? a common question about the track fr thepast few days Tojrur Domlnlck Is irr.lnr throucha course of disciplining, broueht about by hitrefusal to obey his empleyer. Mr. Huahe. Aeaeon as the younirster comes to his sensea andoheya the orders Biven him by hi employer thenthe m. Lcult public will see tho boy with a legup again.

HPnnDV miss T.

She- - nanale) IheTrsrlt Hccortl forHalf a Mile nt Wnalilmrtnn Park.

Chicago, July 5. At Washington Park to-day. Miss Bennett, carrying 122 pounds,equaled the track record of 4J seconds fora half mllo. anl Sly ran alx furlongs In

-, while eclllrg platers In th last race

REPUBLICSt. Louis Fair AsocI-itIo- - Fpring and

day. July 5. Wc.Uht.-- clear; track fast.

259 llrstrace. nurw STA. ? oar-ol-

InJ. horses. lUt.Sit lGraves .. .... .... 107 I 5 3 Ino231 ?tadrir.A ....ml 4.. .,

Bonatiua ....ancawon ..

lvj Mlsc Veros-a .

191 icor Baker ...Aentm O

ail:olU .. .HuntnA V..little Iin .

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Start irix.l Won eat-- up. second drltli? V Hirer H. T. Itatchler's It h.. 4. by HobbyBeach Etna G. Graves tias much tre Xadrone was all out at tlnlh. was com-ing ith strccg rush Sarcamon ran an lmrre'vt race.

Time .124. :2I. Ci't. 1:134roi t minutes.

260 Second rnc purse J100.

Iri uo:"ns. lVt u-- I

(37i uim in i t I i,:i ..! Ill t 2 -- 'ii"i i I 3'... iMor.ry Mui-- i ....I US 1 1 I Ink

?tart ciio.1 Won tlrltlrs tconl !riii;.ce nicht W1M. Vt 111 llrate The l - t

llttl. flow at titan. ar.d usoti up cltaslRg t -

bt-- rn a trae nreTlmr .!. .M. :U. !:'.ir.inu'cit.

261 Third race, purs-- $IX.

In.! hoksi:s. vt313 JTerra lncosnlta... lul 6 41M : i3J7 iTheorj :: wi 4' 3nk34 (Msth ..' 107 I ? 1' ie

IS 3nkl:n . . ..( ill '

..I MlMart iroo.1. Wen hard lro. yonl pir.if

L lopla. Wlnrcr tin- - bet anJ H1 rxtarn. IKixkI rape ami finished Mrorp Mtliff ntry will hetraftt--

Tlm .13V.. :2h. 37. 1.C4-l'cs- t1

262 Fourth race. pur K),

IInJ HOUSES. Wt.RM) (Ml Map Day .... ?3 3' s21 Iitlrc Cup lot

(31S) Tlummer MIV l 4.1,1333 ivicle Vante 104 ;

(2Z5 Dr Ore e. Ilnvoo&tlon .. SI

113 IMeddlesorco Mlf H

summer

Pmlth

refusedJU't.

Start trnod Won hard drive; weonl eiElly. Winner Ptubl Bros.' br. i Imp Her-nen-

Aala I.ila. Winner the an.1 admlrablt rlJlen Uununer cracke.1 a Uteenth outCjp ocllareil him. il.t lay came lta ruth at (Inlsb Just tettlncTroith watching.Tliae :34. 3.5.. .43'4. l.HU.iTx 11 cunuxes.

263 Fifth race, purse CInd. I 110n:i!. Iwt S t; I 1,

TJT1.. lnt.t I trt 3 it.l.Cdna GrcneIPremu'iQuIck nar.EB

Iflolden HanestIHonltarv

Hlrdle Ftono

llllsa ..."I"Start cleverly: teconl

Ennicfnisw excue- -Time-:-i:t. il.minutes

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14 3; S5 Ei

4R

3s 7.

' 1 10 '

II 11 .... I

(33M I1J(2S1) 1133 ....

C.9II S I )

313 .. ll2 I 11J317 Monf 113317 I II)J1 l.r..wt ll... tt7

1H Zan 11)

fair. Won all out." m. uur nai clear andhart no M. no ran a bad rac.

.57. .. 1.0.--,

l'"st l7rtisixth ' Pursa i("' and selling, six and one-ha- lflongs:

InJ. HOUSES. L S.

i: :i s109 1

!. 7104 S1J S

193 6i- 4

ft.

-

113

(23) The LlKht m( l1(3ofi) Earlr Klrl ... t. t1

2 Tcm e.Ttmwe:i . 3' Snk;Mojr.d Cltr ... t.r.kCrstaillne .. .. 4 6

iejo S

Wounta'n Deiv 2'214

start good for all tut Deyo. Woi tandlly:4 It Maid. Thft UlthtBird shut on down back stretch, butlint K Wl . U 5C-- 1 UJ- - (Jf--l. HKIMC U(

07. .15. :i I.31- -.TIrre :5t4. I3a.Post I minutes.

equaled the track record for seven and one-ha- lf

furlongs.Mi Bennett's performance occurred In

the Quiekftep Stakes G. B. Morris's GoldenAge was the favorite, und Mies Bennett thetecond choice. Miss Bennett ruhed nt onceto the front and made a runaway race of it.being eased up In the stretch. Harry Her-endc-

finished second, with 13 to 1 laidagainst him. while Sobooi for Scandal camethird.

Sharp Bird ehowed early speed In the --

ond race, but tired badly toward the end.Sly won out handily from Utile of Memphl.The closing event was won by a sh).Wellerole. with Miss Shanley. another longshot. In the place and Tcucer. the favoilte,third. Summaries:

First iac-- . cn rule HI (Boland),7 to I. won: Floriiar, p-- (BuT.nun), 3 to 2.second; I.nma-hu- -. 103 Kn!rht. 13 to 19. thirdTim. i:i)i4. The Monk also ran

Second race, six furlonirs My. 109 fBullman).9 to S. won. IMle of Memphis, ir (Matthews).7 to 1. second: Head Water. V'j (Knight). 6 tothird. Time. P12V Sharp Bin!. Alfaiela anll"rlnce3 Thlra also ran.

Third race. Quickstep Stake, half nile M- I-

Bnnett, 132 (Crewhurst). 3 to 1, wen; HarryHirenJeen. lit (KnlBhO. IS to second: Schoolfcr Scar.Oal. 115 (,c)woodi, 30 to I. third Tin-- .:4. Golden Age. Lady Schorr, tculptrcst andAdmorltlon also ran.

IVurth race, mile and a elit'enth Ooldrn Fot,Wt (Knight), e to E. won; Eva Bice. 103 (Mar-tin). I to 1. second: Andes. 1JJ (Mathews). 2 to1. third. Time. l:4t'. Found and George H. Cora'so ran.

Fifth racs. mile ar.J Feventy yard- -, sellingOrimar. 11S (Bullman), to S. won; Clay Pointer.1M (KniKht). a to 1. --econl: I'atroon. 10 (Slath--wi- i.

to 1. third. Time. 1:H4. Retl Pirate,Wax. Sam McKeetcr and 8ac knlcht also ran.

Sixth race. seen and a htlf furlonp- -. sellingMellocole. S3 (Raniom). ) to 1. on, Miss

(Martin), li to 1. second, Teucher. 1"5(rioland). 6 to 2. thlrvl Time. P33i Bltfr It"ot.TtamT F.. Marj-Iar-d Reserve. Tre. Hand. In k.tirailtlla. Doctor S. C Ajrrs and Henry C alsoran.

To-Da- nlilBKon Parle UnlrlrH.First race. lx furlongs:

Allaltto 103 Modrtr- - 101

rarmsniaa 105 Cora HaTill II 113

The liady In Blue 104 Lomond 1MEmigre 1

Second race, ore runong--, sriunK;Likeness-Smitll Jsek ..

99t raBenn.tt :::: 1 !

Goeu Possart iCorattoiu..... , . t.viw, a.-- .,.....t ........ .lotKM Cox 1)1 I

Third race, mile and a sixteenth:Itrulare 103! Top Mat ..11-

-.

)td Pirate 1'WtJlm Mct'leevy .. ..inlTtnce Blazes 117 ..107Man lend Reserve ...191 Icataatropbe ..111

Fourth race. mile, selling:Honeywood MiSllter Garter .. 97

tleorfe Knita IB Owtnl-n- i .. 9JVan Hoorebeke ft Troulwtllne .. fIJme Light ...HiCTauncey Fisher ....103

Fifth race, Crieec-slxteent- of a mile:Chappauqua HIiLa Jocph!ne .... ...317BUr Chime Mllulhlll ...103

Sixth race, one mile, selling.Tapan 1 Jmerlclr ...1"2IJxadla lOSIGreatland ...1TTe Hobby JS Tarhill ... 94Ernln 971

To-Pa- ya Brighton. Ilcarh flntrlcs.Ktrit rsce. slv furlortars:

Voter 12n!-k- y Scraper .1MFirearm ...... ,102IrfCdevlIle 113 I l'ir.chfr ..102Lew Kraft - 112 I

Second rate, fle furlongs:Xerxea .. .10 .. ... ..... ..1MMailmus 1071 The Regent. .. 99IJef Prlrce 107 j Educate .. 9Queen Pepper USl.nark .. 9Courtesy ..- - lOIMluesswork .. 99Harlem Lane 102 Prime II ..

Third race, Montatuk Stakes, six furlongs:Commando .... ..... 123Mrea.in ..11-- 7

Baron Pti per 1"7 Politician ..1U7Bedeck m

Kourth race, arascea Stakes, one mile;Oneck Queen 121 MotleyHell cf I,rlntnn.. .Ill Drtud .. ..lot)Iroquois Utile ill Her Ladishlp ..liWKamara 111 l.lleen LjIv ..H--INerito ill Lair Cnctts ..1CILady of the Vale.. 109

Fifth race, mile andJames HI Major Gliroy . ...111I'recurser Ill I Brusquerle .... ..1"?Montanlo milady Mftssey .1 ...101I.01-.- I Baltimore HI I Eileen Daly ... ...101Herbert Ill

8ixth race, mllo and a furlorut:Favenlus 118 Candle Black.. .. ..!Maximo Gomes.. ....110 i:titr 104Klnnlknlnik II') liter-- Perfume lt-- J

Klcjr Barleycorn ....101 ILlnduU Sri

niAMon jl'ihi.hi: ukathx.Merry 7al, A Itli J. ItrlS Vp, Heat

Prince of 'Wales. Derliy . Inner.London. July 5. At the third day's racing of

the New market first July meeting thel"rlnct-- s of Wales Stakes rf lo.ov) swerelenvthe second horse to teceUe 1.300 sovereign andthe third I.tXW somerelKns (and the nominator rfthe winner 100 sovereigns and the nominator fthe second 200 soterelgns out of the stakes.), forX an.1 4 ear olds the Rowley mile. va wonby Mr. If. chapln a liay r.lij. MerryGal, by Gallopin, out of Mary Seaton, en whichJ. Reiir had the mount. The lrlnce of Wales s

bay colt. Diamond Jubilee tthe win-ner of this year's Herb)), by St. Simon, out ofPerdlta II.. finished nemt. Lord William Bre-or-

4.rar-oI- d chestnut ctlt. Caiman, bv --

cohatchee, out of Happy Hay, riJJ.n by URein, was third.

The be! line just previous to the start was afollows: Merry Gal. 109 to 30 against: DiamondJubilee. 5 to 4 on, and Caiman, 4 to 1 against.Merry Gal won In hollow fashion by fourlengths, thus upsetting a supposed certainty lorDiamond Jubilee, the J'rtnce of Wales a Derbywinner. Two length separated second and thirdhorses." Tre two RellTs were alo successfulother A relunz plate of sovereignsfor x ear-old- one mile and a half, was wonby Tarollnta. with J. Rein up. The ExoterStakes cf 30 sovereigns each with 2J0 sovereignsadded, for 5 tlx furlongs, was won bySang Bleu, en which L HelS had the leg.

The July cup of 309 sovereigns, a cup and theremainder In specie, for all ages, six furlongs,

FORM CHART.meeting, Forty -- third Jay. Thurs- -

ami upward, selling, fix furlongs:llfttlns

S. l Jockcjs. Opn Clot) Ti.

. i v Fro7 1 1452 2V, Jlce'.lnn .... V-- 1 45" I' 1Muro ma 14U 4'U.McCann .... 1 15 5

' 3L, El IX. 11111 .... 7 11 4I ""i irSIKaKehy .... 4 5

' 7 llllnkey 13 2)'t t ITjtler M

4 J Woo.li... 13 4 IIis j. vititoe .. &i tr) ;n it :j. t. woods; 19 i s I s

fue and onc-hi- lf furlongs:I ItfltlrK.

Jockrj. lOpcn Cliwl PI.i

1'- - IJ Woo-N- . ..1 9 ?)3U 3ik Ullm.jrf .. .1 II 7

2' IJ T. WooJ ; 73''! 4 iPallthy .. ..417Ulnn. r J. S. (t'Rrirn'it c. Imp Ilrxi of

r.! t lowl flrt-ni- an.! true ilonet ilut Ktitfrt-i- t In lirt hair. OLla maJe run it

nnd upward, selling, one mile:

s. r. JocKe j lOi-r-Ii'ttin

iH:' -3' 3- - I 1 It. Tl-

-i i: iIS ino 2r,o J T. VwL! 3 3

3' IMrfann .. ..I 4 3 1 -.

'lion.- - ;4 no1 ! ,Ta'!-- t-Hi! G IJ. WtWilB ..I

Winner 1mii. Imp'R h g.. 4. a I'ottaKin. ittt ..w. M...I. .... i. ...

and upnnrd, si furlongs:

Jocleyj. lOpen.Clo'f)1 ITalley .. i S 3 113' IJ. W.M 3 IS-- 3 3

i 3 'X. IIIII . 4 3 3

la)3, 1.134.minute.

t. bvbe--

tthen Ivinn jtr.vng laaheadai..

1

5

4k

11

1

1.

51

VI

Inevents.

4" 4" J T. Woo.l 11 13 4

f4 C"i Jlorw in ; fit.n '3 'Vrfllnn .. .. 7 9 3

7s jlittier .. .. 101 :! ItS iKfn .. .. 100 4.-- 14

five furlorgs:

Iletllnr.F. Jpck F. iOpen'Cloe 1 1

-!-

it w- - vritn--

1",1 2'4lKalleh .. .. 10 I 133' (Jilmore .... 4 4

J.1 f iTallev i 13'Talley , s 13

7 .Morrl-on- .. 31 li7 jllvtlfern .. ..1 ) 1)iMrtilnn ... 3 ' 3 1v Il!nke . . -.

3-- 11)4 J. Wood 4 fi

11 11 .J. 7 Woods S

Winner S. T. Galres A llm's b f bv renonr.ine.i ftronc. tlreene stopnlnc at flnuhCulck liar?? coull not El inro-g- n.

I Hettlt;Jockey. 10rn,Cloe PI.--)

l'4ITal!ey .... ..I9-- I 9 10 3

I 5 2' iMors. .. .. .ii: 3S' J. Woods . n 11 24' I" itlllmoie .. 3 4 1I'lsIIJehtfoot . J) 1 J.t V lllctrn . ) 2.1I' 74 IKatanaeh 5) I'74 S Icarroll .. . 3.) W 15

ar-o!d3 upward, fu--- jt

"-- rcon.1 t imer J. K Ilujihes" chnw.tv ell and lad clear gclnir all the i'-- ?iarrl Tom rcmwell good, watch him in heavyU1UUII I.1VUUU.

iiS&--sA miln 1 rear-ol- d e . .

Whitney s Aurora colt, ridden by McAllister".

Terre Hand- - Itur-ea- .

Terre Hsule, IndileS. 'A 3"1oVnr "nJationai uml Ar"ng!

the bet time of : i the "M' the 2.1 pac. frumir-tle- a:-- :" class paclrg. purse Slum.

I 1

The Maid. b. m (Richard 4 4Curtis) .. 3 3 3Lit. s. ni. die Kennel)... .,if-."1- 0 u- - ' " iCassiJ)) .

3 3IIIbile m (l!n k) ...5 dis

it class trctilni;. purs SI."-e.,'u-

Alice, b. m (Ben Kenney).. 111b m (lleo. A Kelley...,H.li m (itov Miller! ... 4 J-

2.11 class paring, purte 11,000:Arts', b h. (T. Q. Wtortrer) Ill;':"" .awiv b & ,Roy Miner, ...:::. .MT7me2V..?14ul" K",5'r ::!!

rorn collcgiaxs DEixATno.Jtilf Amalrnr Cluuiiplonslilp ) no

DecldctI To-Ua- y.

New York. July 6. Out of a big field off,0.".'1!,'" ,vho '""S" " R01! tournament.Monday on the Uarden City links, onlya,;'" o "gilt it out for the honorUnited State amateUr chjmlonahIP ' 'io

These ure 'Herbert M. Harrlman or theMectdowbrook club, the present chnrnptun: S.Douglass of the rnlrfleld County Club,t w

W ceh.', ',''? cl.'atnploii in 1. M. Walter J.tof VokIar'J- - nn3 A- - Lockwood. anLngllsh player, wfto has made Boston..

AU four ripresontrddifferent natlonalltles-.Dnu.las- x U a Scotcli-J?la- n

T.r.n'" "n. Australian nnd Lockwoodn hnglWhrniin by birth.Whim nlnv tidies . n.! ..

X iXvzzxzzfSs ?- -- iit.iiiiviiiu ai.imt uir rtnulLwas that, while the native-bor- n collegianswero defeated, they put up such a splendidgame that par golf nnd better hud to lplayed by the winners In order to keep thejounger element out of the semifinal roundJohn Ktiii. Jr.. former champion of Yalefnrcol Lockwond no closely that the E:ig-tshm-

was forced to play four extraliide. making In nil Torty holes, be.ore lietmnccumbe.1. Travif cnucd a seheatlnn InhH mornlntr play by establihlig n rtcor.1of thlny-flv- e for tho nine hol.-s- . which Uono stroke better than the record made byDouglass yesterday. His opponent. Hitch-cock, of I'olnt Judith. It. 1.. .oxernl lhtfirst half of the motnlng found In forty andns V 'own and on the turn Tor home.The feature of the day was the extraor-dinary ahonlng made by John Held Jr.The Ln .llshman won and is entllletl to tekel:-- In trmltlnal Ho willmeet Tr..l .. Douglas, and Harrlman willalho meet In the semifinals.

GOMPERS IN CHICAGO.

Confers With Uuililinp; Trades'Council Ofliciiils.

Chicago. III., July 5. A secret conferencewas htld litre y between PresidentSamuel Gompers or the American Federa-tion of Iitibor and President Edward Car-roll or the ChlCRgo Building Trades Coun-e- ll

and Secretary E. A. Dais.It is supposed tho conference related tothe present labor troubles In Chicago.

L. X. KILE" SKIT.AhU That the SfcChortl Hallnny IIIII

He Hrclared Void.Louisville, Ky.. July 5 The Loulfvlllo

and Nashville, Chesapeake and Ohio,houthcrn Railroad In Kentucky and thoIulsille, Henderson nnd St. Louis Hall-way filed in the United States Court au In-junction ruit acaltitt the Kentucky Rail-road Commission ami Its members, asking1that the McCliord railroad bill, which cre-ated the commisfclon. be declared void be-cause It is acknowledged It conflicts withthe paragraph of the Federal Constitutiongiving Congress atone the power to regu-late Interstate commerce.

W. L. E. BUYS A inn.Coshocton anil Kontbern Hallrray

TaUea From Ilece-lTer- .

Cleveland, O., July 3. The Wheeling andLake Erie Railroad Company announce

to the control of tho Coshoctonand Southern Railway by the lifting of thelecelvershlp and the fact that it will tooperated for both freight and pnseiRerbusiness beginning July 13. The office ofthe gereral superintendent has been abol-ished by the Wheeling anil Lake Erie andthe operating work divided between the dlMslon superintendents.

So Longer Frlrmla.Tees: "Yon and May used to be very

chummy, but you don't speak at all now,do vout"Jei: "No. Just before Easter we foolish-

ly agreed that we would candidly criticiseeach other's rcrwr and hats when we gotthexn." PhUadelphla Pruts.

POWELL WAS GREAT

BUT GOULD NOT WIN,

Errors Back of the BiR Pitcher andI?ad Team Work Lost the Ball

Game for St. Louis.

IT WAS A VIRTUAL SHUT-OU- T.

Had Xo( Dillard, PudliolT and Wal-

lace AlisM-- Chances Philadel-phia Would Not Have

Scoicd.

('Mil sr.iMMNfi.

National league. American !iyueW K ivt W. U itl.

VtmtiWvn .. .: 21 .641 Cblrtgo it M .eilPhiladelphia 31 27 Milwaukee . S3 21 .S2llttfburg ....54 r .ill Cletelmml ...31 2s .51mChlcgo . ... 32 3) .Sin litdU ntt pull 31 V .314Cincinnati ..2t 3? 173 ?Ilnnt.iiio!i .31 33 .4")Itottn . ..27 J3 .isk Kanm City 33 3 .V71M ....2J 32 .IJ- - Itetrolt 37 37 .l.'lNew York ..21 37 3tS. lluflU .21 41 31

Yesterday (Jaliie.NRllonil American league.

Phil 3. St l.tuts 2. I 7. DetroitBrook 2. Onrln. 0 Chi. 1. MIL 0.Chicago 2. t,..ton D.New Yolk 7. Plttt. 3.

To-Ha- r's clcdnlPhiladelphia at St.I4ton nt ChbaroNiw lork at Pittsburg.

I'ow ell's pitching t Phllatlelphlijesterday wa- - so exceedingly gooi that Pt.Ixiu'.s would have vvon the ball game atLeague Park had she plaved anv thing Intho way of baseball. The St. Ixiult teamhit Piatt harder than the Philadelphiateam hit Powell. As uual. St. IaiuIs w.tquite Incapable of making any runs or tak-ing any advantage of opportunities tomake runs. After lielng unablo to scorefor eight lnnlngi. St. InN made two raniin the ninth after two men were out. nndtietl tho score. In the ttnth Inning a

won with a triple by Thomas and asingle by Delehantj.

The official scorer gives I'hiladelphli tenhlt. Of these ten nt least were drives- thatshould have been eaten up. Thomas's runIn the firt inning wai the result of a rankmuff, or of a throw from DWiird by Sudhoff. who was subbing for McOraw. whohurt his thumb on Thursday afternoonand was unable to play. Cross's run In thefifth Inning was the result of an equallyrank mutt or Dillard's eplendlil throw to theplate by Crlger. The ball came well ahemdof Cross on a lovely bound. It was a per-

fect throw, but Crlger let It get away.Tho official scorer mlscd giving him anerror. Were such a thing possible he shouldbe given two errors for It.

Had DiIHrd been an cottrant with, aiIWole would say. or "next." j J(s Bur-ke- lt

hat It. to his Job In center field, hewould have mado tw) catches or thetriples knocked out by Thomas and CroHe should have been campttl under bothballs. But Dlllatd Is mount; In the Leagvuand docs not know where batters hit. Heplayed In clot-- for Cross, who Is an Infre-quent hitter, but hard swinger, who sendsa ball when ho does meet It. which Is aboutonce a week. Thomas Is n puny left-il- 1

w.i loper. Tho center fielder should pityback of short, and ire left fielder back ofthltd. ri(,ht by the edge cf the clay, forhim. Hnd Dillard been pUvlnrj right se

men their triples would have beenpop Hies.

Then, in the tenth. Wallace let D'le-hantv- 's

terrific wallop go through him.Good many peopl" thought It hou!d havebeen an error. Dclehany met It hln pret-tiest. Wall ice was plajing on the grassedge to shut off Thomas' run at the plate.It came right at him. Bob dropped to oneknee to "cinch" It. He was nervous, for itwas a sweet lick. It out through his handsahd clamped knees like a noedle througaburlap and went Jolllly along, g- the

and chuiUne the daisies underthe chin on its way to Burkctt. Thomasbcorttl the winning run.

So. all told. Powell should have had ashut-ou- t. Big Jack never was quite ro goolIn his life before. He had great ipced andcurves. Tho score shows but two errorsback of him, but really there were bIx. Abetter game never was pitched.

Piatt was not s.o good nnd was well hit.Ft. Louie plaved ball nt bat" and onbags. Several runim were thrown away bybad baerunnlng. The two runs St. lulsdid score came on wll 1 throws by Piatt anlDelehanty In the n'nth. after two men weregone. With Donovan on third and Sudhnffon first. Crlger lilt one down nt his faetwhich bounded JO fMt high. Piatt threwfast to first. Delehahty muffed the widetoss. Kudhoff ft sail for third, which Wol-mcrt-

left naked. Delehanty threw withoutw siting to see if there was anyone to takethe ball. It went to th fence, and two runssttirctl.

Douglas was In bad throwing form, nndFt. Iiuls should have stolen baes at will.Donovan nnd McG.inn might have trim adouble steal In the ninth, but did not. Jlr-Ga-

vvtiH forced at second afterward".With Crlger on s'cond. In the ninth. I'ow ellwhs allowed to bit for himself. Robtnonshould hive been sent up. Powell triedto run from first bne to third on Bur--kett s double bat a or ino hum sack, nndwns out a mile, though he had the pl-i- In j

front of him. In the tenth Inning, when liwns tiesiraiiie to get. to oiue. iiurKett hit abill with two balls and no strikes on hint.To be sure It tmii a good ball, and It re-quired a grent pity by Cros and a finepick-u-p by Delehanty to get him. But P1.1t twns wild, ard It was hardly ball playing.Though the team was broken up, it shouldhive won. for the Phillies were net In anykind of form.

STAll. It. 11. 0. a n.

Purlieu, if 0 1 3 0 0K'lster. 3h 0 2 1 (I

Wallace. t 3 0 1 4 j nDrnovan. rf 4 I 1 t 0 0lilil-ir- cf 10 0 3 0 0MrGann. lb 1 l 0 1 nSuJtitiff. Sb 3 1 1 0 s 1('riser, c I 'I 1 I 0 0Powell, p 3 0 0 0 4 0

Totals 3J 2 9 M Tl 1

PIlILvDEI.PIHA.All. It. II. O. A. H.

Thomas cf 4 2 2 2 a 0SUk1. If 5 " 0 2 J 0Pclrhmnty. lb 5 0 2 11 1) 1

Ia Jole. lb I 0 1 r, 3 onick, rf 6 0 J 1 0 nIXiiiBlas. c 4 0 2 t "Wolverton. 1 4 0 3 1 4 9Cross, a 2 1 1 1 k aPiatt, p 4 0 0 2 1

Totals :- - 3 7) 31 M 2St. I.0 ls 0 0 0 0 0 A ) 3 -2Philadelphia 10 0 0 10 0 0 0 -3

Famed runs Phllatlelphli 2. Two-ba- .r hllWolterton I. Three-l-as- e s 1 Tho-nm- s

L louble liars cross. I.a Jole and Delehanty2: Slagle and Wolterton 1. Powell. McOann andCrlger I lilt by pltrher McGinn t. Bases onKills Oft Powell !. oft llatt S. struck out -- ByPettell 3. by Piatt I. Pase.I hslls-tioiig- ljs 1.Stolen bases Donovan I, Sudhon 1. Metlann 1.Ksletcr 1. nick 1. IA Jol 1 Sacrifice, hit" --

Cross J. Time Two hours and tenly-nt- e min-utes. Umpire Hurst.

II HBDtMi fiOSMP.

Ill Kortnne- - Follows the-- St. LoaltlTram- -. .Powell's. Fine Form.

Sweet bad luck I" pursuing the St. LouisBaseball Club as eagerly and closely as .1

French adventuress chaet a rich and fool-ish young man. Thursday's game put w

and Donlln out of it for a time. SirMichael, tho Merry, twisted bis right kneadodging Tom Daly on Thursday. Ills spikeswere too long. They stuck dtep In thepoll. Whn MKkey turned to run back hUppike8 held. Something had td give, forMike was in a hurry, and that eternal vil-lain. Daly, was after him with the ball.The steel was not going to crack, bo thofieh had to give. Mike was about thestand yesterday doing a "boccagh" stunton crutches, lie does not know where oragainst whom he will make hN next ap-pearance. Mr. Donlln's existence- Is efy"Incidentalful." ns T. Thomas Fortune, thehegro spellbinder, would pay.

Yet, atter all, what difference does Itmake? When McOraw and Donlln andHeldrlek and all of them were in the gametho team lost, anyhow.

Burkett Is batting. Pass It along. I,t Ittravel like III news, which It will be toplt-hc- rs. Jesse hnx struck his belatedstride. With the season half gone, he isgetting his three per afternoon, sharp aslancets and hard as rocks. He cut them

Wolverton yesterday a mile a minute.fiast ii),e ,ie 'Burkett of. old. It thing

iTrf.r.-iti- ill.ft. TSijjKUiv. ;.; t.'ixr yAe

break right and Jese gets bis step he willgive the batting: leaders a run J6L Forthroe dajs now ho has been getting thre

"That Rrpoklvn team is the luckiest Inthe world. said Jere Hunt mesterday.!" c..s ,hvt ,h da' the street carstrike called off. ne wins two of three

RoIIm ,,ure luck- - "e gets a biggerIiJitJ hi. ?'on,ry Jhan any man that has

thl The name ofiiorsesiiou Jtd' belongs to him for true."

1 J.'l!c.''1r T'?0ma'' and Catcher Buelow havefrom the bench marionettes ati.taue pdrk these few dav. It was naltl

e",o..ia r !nat ,he ung men had been.nwmt .J1 'ra,e "f abstnet! to take a tripumong huvtnon leaguts utid tall grass

teams of Okl thoma und Arkansas. Accord-ing to report, tbty are doing battery workfor ambitious amateur teams in thatkoctlon or Hie I'nltetl States. It is statedt hut Tiiim.iA wa." Jolly good and terUblyxireel or his "wanning up" duties and ofnever gating a "ehancu t,, i.iteh In aeiiime. He was rusting for work, and hefcut 11.

There may have been a time or a gamewhen Powtll was it shade bettt-- r than howas yesterday If -- . no one renicniUm it.lue gtnt of.ihe huge tori-- anil iMiiier-bet- it

.ami had a dayzllng assortment ot thingthat puzzh-- t nnd brat bitters. Deleliantj'sdutt of slriklr.s were rank scralrht. Cros'sJnplfund Thomus's ditto would have beenI"l' ciitehts with tin experienced man

plaving ceiilt-- r MiCami might have col-Itr-

one ball driven at him by I'lltk.Ih.-iug- It was hiiril. it was on the glove.Del t single In tht- - tenth throJgh Wallaciwan luck. Though It was a iiard-rumm-

ball and no erorr, W.nace has gotten manyharder outs. In all, about live real goolhits were made off John, and two of tine.)were bunts Had not S...11.0IT nuinvri 1)11- -

I lard's fine asL--t to get Thomas running totnirti in me nrst inning, that run neverwoull have scored. Crias-.- t trlnle in thefifth should hove been a fly catch, and eventhen Crigtr should have caught Monte utthe plate on Dillard's lovely return of Piatt'sfly. Cri-H- was out ten feet when Louismuffed the envy bounder. Had Dill ml jpiave-- right for Thomas In the that j

woUhvN triple would have lilr him on thel Dillard U a good fielder, but he is

not yet acquainted with the hitters of thUleagti". and It eems no one takes troubleenough to post him.

Hilly Kane, the St. Iouis athlete, wh'lias been doing ."hortfield stunts for To-ledo In the Interstate League this Mttwn.Is s!k with malaria. Kane has been play-ing 11 inlshty same down that way. If hewas a left-ha- hitter he would be In thebig League very shortly. He Is one of thelast(t runners atd shortest stoppers theL'amu ever saw.

McOann played good hall at bat and onbacs yesterday. Twice he was hit bypitcher, when such an occurrence was oflnt.stimable value to his team. He alsoplavtd ;:ood ball when he traveled higl. to

in the-- ninth and made Cross throwhigh to Delehanty.

La Join was In the game, his first sinceIhe fateful day when he swung his right,or was I: his left, where hf thought Flick'shead was, and "busted" an Iron locker, putIn nt great expmxc In Colonel Roger'sPhtlf deiphla clubhouse. Lawrence wis"there" In the field O. It. but his eye nt

was worse than when he was makingwild leads and untamed swings at Flick'sJaw tiiiil walloping lockers instead. Look-ing at the two men. it Is not easy to ewhere Flick has the llcklrg of Larry in1.1m. Elmer in a sturdy lad. thick f chestnnd wldfc of stculder But he ha not theheight, reach or we'ght of Larry tho Lam-in- er

abemt him. Why. Flick must havetaken thirty pounds the worst of the catchweights articles whlt-- h lie signed with thebig second lugnian. They explain .t byraying that Flick hits straight, like TerryMcGovern, while Lajole hooks and swingstoo much. Hooking and swinging if ht

when golrg with gauntlets, but withtin bare knuckles the Ktratght fore facepunch Is the goods. With the swing ardthe hook the hands are liable to get brokenlor s. wise nrnter win give nis nut, 1.

his hard head crown to hands whenhe rfes the snipe comlrg. That 1") hojrFlick cot tho decision over Lajole, punch-ing .straight and working his left on the"ph!r,"

It Is stntrd that th- - little finger ofleft hand is broken and that It will

be ii week or more ere Mack goes to baLJnhnnln was nt the races jesterday after-noon, catching them going and coming. ItIs whispered that he cannot lose a bet andthat his wagers are big enough to bar himfrom being classed as a "piker." Mackmnks nbout 3.K) ns a ball plajer this sa-so- n,

and will cop as much moro Irom thoraces. His Baltimore ovster parlors areworth a neat tnn to him every year. Mak-ing about ISM"") this year Is not bad for alad of 27. He is a good fellow. It is said; a.good ball plajer, which Is certain, and de-serving of all the luck a real pood f HowthouM have.

Willie Sudhoff did well enough at thirdmesterday. He can grab the grounder nndthrow well, but of course the line pointshave no clo-- e. acquaintance with William,who Is a good deal cf a ball plajer withal.

Wullaro rubbed his shins and stamped nbit after Delehanty tore that amputatorthrouch him in the tenth. Bob did not givein ho was hurt, for Delehanty was laughingat him. The flrt hits Del made In a weekcame to him jesterday. When he got thefir-- t one his tongue hung down his chin ashe rHn to first like a rough-coate- d St. Ber-nard In the dog duj.s.

The spectators raised a rumpus jettcrd.lv-Umpir- e

mini Hurst called Wallace out onn slide to second. Robert slid head first.The writer sat In the stand back of flMtbase. From lhat position It did seem thatWallace had both arms around the bag andwas ronrulslYf-l- prrlng It to his boomlike a Reuben Launcelot greeting his etybest lady, when laid Douglas slow.It won tho writer's personal oplrlon thatMr. Hurst had acccmpllohed a very rottendecision. Indeed. However, two gentlemen,who aro excellent Judges, aw the play fromthe back of third bne. a much better po-sition to Judge tint play from than back offirst. One of thes--. a r.oted baseball au-thority and stanch supporter of Ihe SLLouis team, stated that Wallace was oULHe also said tint an cxrellent Ju Ige annttichr- - of the Ht. Iviuls club, agreed withlilrri. He etptalned Ihe cessa,on pt motlonwhich afflicted Wallace before Lajoletouched him and which deceived spectatorsback of first base and behind the play bvFaying that when Wallace hit the groundhe did not slide, but stopped dead wherehe went down. "He tried to reach the bise,"said the gentleman In question, "but waatr-- fnr nnay to even get his hand on It. Itwas a correct decision and the censure oftho spectators did Hurst a very great In-justice." It muit be said that, as a rulellnrst Is a very good umpire. J. B. S '

Iltt'IMl WILL ,M)T tIT.me-- tork MnnsBer lit rtathrr Stnekon Ills Job.RKPt IILIC SPEI IAL

Plttsburr. 1'a.. July 6. Rrganilnr thestories lhat he Is contemplating resigningns manager or the New Yurk. Buck Ktrltiesaid

"This tale It the Invention or .1 Clnelnnatlnewspaper man. to whom word was rnrrlelthat I met Air. Freedman as he passmlthrough I'lncinnntl to Kansas Cit'. Theyhow-- have l( thit Mr. Precdtunn. angrj tour Iotng streak, told me to have the teamwin games or quit mjself Thl Is not tnt".We have- - had a hard Mrrak. hut what te-t-

has not? Th" relations Mr. Frer-I-m- an

and mjplf are most curdlal. 1 haveno Intention of resinning."

si'w limn 7. 1'lrrnnim; n.

Pirates Plrtyrd Cnrrtessly All r Itl anilnl lint.

Pitt.burg July lest thnmth er-ror" and mleral.ly slow playlna. Attendance,2.1m. !iore

I'lttsburg. Netr York.AII.1I.O A.E. AII.II.D A.CClarke, If. 5.0 3 0 V V'Haltn. cf I j

Heau:n t. cf.3 12 0 0 (leason. 2 b 3 V 'VViramx. 2b I 1 2 I 1 Nelbaeh. If. 5 2 tIVarne- -. tf.5 t 1 0 fmltn. rf...2 0RltChey, 2ti3 0 3 4 1 Dorl". lb.. .4 1 ?e'oolev. lh..4 1 IJ 1 0 Ira.l). s.. 3 Iyimmer. c..l 12 1 , c I 0Kl. s .. 4 114 ( Hlckm'n. 3b-- 4 1 I

Vt adleH. p.l 1 1 0 0 Carrlck." p.. I 1Mceteery ..10 0 0 01 -

p .2 I 0 2 01 Totals ...3S 7 27 12 4

Tttal" 3v J nil 4

natte.1 ror U'ail.teli in fnarth.Pittsburg ., ) 0 o 0 3 1 0 0 o JNets Volk 4 0131002 07

learned runs. New York I, Two-bas- e hitsler l. 1. Three-bat- e llch 1.Sacrifice rats Van llaltren 1. Smith I. Gta.ty 1.Htolen la'es Van Haltren 1. (lleason t. !mlth1. Double pliya yelbach and liowerman LTlrst base en lulls hr Wad.leii l. t.fi Carrlck 4.?truck out-l- ly VVadJell 1. iy Ierer 1. by Car-ries 2. Time One hour and fifty minute.Pmplre Swartwood.

HHOOKLl.V 2. CIXCIXAT1 .

Red Could Find opa for Only OneHit.

Clrelnnatl. O.. July t ops altowetl Cincinnatibut one hit Newton, too. i Itched enee-tlvel- y.

Dihien's hlttlnr; gave th championstlelr runs. Score:

Clncinnetl. Brooklyn.Alt 11 O.A.B. All 11 U. A.E.

Barrett. Cf 2 0 3 0 i JOfieS. Cf. . 4 2 3 0 0Corcoran, si 1 2 J 0 Kseler. rf . 4 110 0Pecklcr. Ill 3 8 It I 0 Jns'". Ih 4 2 7 0 0Crawfd. 11.1 0 1 I fheck'd. if. 4 0 5 0 0MCBrlde, rf 3 0 2 0 A Dahlen. s.. 4 2 2 10Uulnn, 2b. . J 4 I 2 0 cnr.. 3b.. .1 1 0 ! 0ibim 1 i Df.lv II.. .. I V 2 1 0relts. c t 0 S J 0 Parrel!, c . 4 2 7 10Newton, p. 2 0 0 2 0 Net", p 3 0 0 0 0

Tota!s.....5"i" irn""! Total 25 18 17 0Clnclrnatl o o 0 0 0 0 00Brooklyn 4 j M 0 I I I 12Earnrt runs Drooklya 2. Two-bas- e hitsSalt- -

WUsJrryaetrlat'UB 5TJtt" U oltteHO Mirkon Boies toindicato

Returncontents. 11114chargespaid and ruiononetback ilcoodscont 'J - jfKMf Jc7MJtIsr"A,ii 1n primelint .. ,9-JvTi-- i' xrt,st$e3jfrsTriJLW- - 2aZsi i7 "' "ii it 1' j.isri J

f3.u0 for four full quarts. TliisWO S.1VR TOU 1 1. r drank and cannot bo

all mltMl tnen'siprohte ami t.ii.iruntecalwoltltelfpure wlilt. jrj

ittioi.i uilulteratlon.

FULLQUARTS

W ref e r Agency. Bank or Kiprcss Gimpany in IJnltea fctatts.

JOHN &. CO.,AoaretJ all crders lo Warehoute CE 609. Gil. 613 W. 121ft St CHICAGO.

O'.ler Ariz.. Col., aeu..nynpreptld. or rntnte for ptrtirul ira lfore remltt'ra-11-

iiwiiinsi an asssaii m

len L Three-bas-e hlts-Dab- len I. StoleT btsei-Coreo- ran

I. Dahlen 3. I lave-yut- nn.

aifiran and Beekley 1 Ilrst on Newton1. .; lilt ly ptcre.1 bill Nrp 1 Mr.ukout l!v Nor- -. . by Newton 3. Attemlani e. .).Time One hour and nfty-llv- e minutes, empire -I'm He

ciiictno s. nnsTtiv o.

Anure-Iilsl- s Hume- - omv Wi)n lHclttMrnlhr letorlrs.

Chlcjco. III., July 3. Chlcaito mi on lt eighthstraiKht name by shuttlrg cut lhs'on. lilts byl!an ami ilcTVrmlck ana wild throws by Lon

and Clement" rave tlie ols all their rurs.Itth hers te-- e on their mettle and did goodwtrk Vtteii lance J.3.

Chic-nro- .1 Boston

AIIH.OAC I AIHI.OA.riMcfarthy.If I 1 2 ) 0 Har-ll'- cn ef 3 2 1 0 a( hil.ls. :i, ., 1 1 u! Colllri". 3b. I o S 1 1

Mert- -, lb.. 3 :) 0 0 Mahl If 4 o 1 ) )Ryan. rf. ..3 12 0 1 Tenney. lb .3 0 7 2 O

Ireen cf 3 1 2 o nj freeman, rf.t 110 0McCor-k-

, r .3 1 o SOI lyave, 2b... I I 1 2 l)Hraill-- v, 11.3 0 3 2 0 brcItoidhue. c.3 210 (t Clements. C.3 0721Tailor, p.,.,1 0 0 3 v Dlneen. p.. .4 2 3 10

Totals ... 21 "? Tctals ....24 7 21 12 3

Chlcaito o 2 0 0 0 0 0O ft--2Ibston 00

Larne.l runs Non. las (Tileago 3.Bt "ton 1 Tuo-ba.- e lt.l 1.1. Ionahu 1 facr!3c hit"- - e'eHln" I Rra-Ile-

I Mule-- i t,j.e- - Vtrtes I. Ryan 1. Green 11 Iublet-lay- Clements anil Collins

1. Mruok tut By Taylor 2 by Dlneen 4 UIMpitches Dlneen l. Tlnits Two Ixurs and nlnominute". L'n.ilre Terry.

7. Detroit ("..

Indianapolis. Ind . July 3 Cronln mtas battelfor five run li the ninth innlrc otterpltchlnr sut-er- ball all t&roJuh- - Barnes relievedtluese In th fifth Innlnt. tcore:

Jl II EIidlanapoli i 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 k--I It 3Drtri.it 0 0 3 0 10 0 0 3 i II S

Batteries Ind'anapolla. Cuese. Barne9 andpowers; Detroit. Cronln and McAllister.

Chleaito 1, Milwaukee! O.Milwaukee. Wis.. July 5. Domrd-- s error In the

retenth Inring rave Crlcago th- - eamellt.lh irftchers wero effective throughout, hut thovisiters I.al tho luck with them. lMd?s thepilchlnr. ltotta n catch of SuxJen'a fly In tbeeeventh was tht feature. Score:

R. H. E.Mllaaukea 0 0 g 1

ChlcaRO 0 I 0Batteries Doallnir ard Smith. Katoll and

Burden.

W'eatern Lem$ae.Denver. July E. Score: n h. n

Denver 0 01. li itI'uel ! 3 112 0 110 3 113 IJ 3Batteries Kara and Rjlllvaa; Herkea. par-ot- t

ana (Iraham.

Eloux City, July 6. Score:R. II. E

Sioux City 0 10 0 2 0 4 0 .. s S 2St Joseph 12 5 I

Batteries Iarvln and Cote, Mausln and Imlin.

Des Moines, la., July S-- Score:R. 1LE

Dea Mdncs IS 15 SOmaha 2 0 0 4 1 S 2 0-- 11 13 5

batteries McFnrland and Ptjla.er: Egan. Wll-so- a

and Ituzon.Pacltle Tennis

Fan Francisco. July I George F. Whitney hasretained th tennis cf the pacifictnates by defeatlnr Sumner Kardr In a series often games. He is now th permanent posse"sorrf tte cup. lie will sioa g Eaalto pasticlpalo In thla teason'a matches.

Won.REPUBLIC SPECIAL.

Illc.mlr.tton, III July I. One ef ths bestrentes of tfc year was played to-d- between

and Jacksonville, the honw team.ir.mr to . This waa Blooralngtoa'a thlrt

atralsht oft tne visitors.After th firSt irnlrg Jacksonville played great

ball. Hamplo pitched a magninertt am forIJIismlnxton. striking out seven.

Score:R, H--

3 10 0 0 10 0 3 4Jacksonville- 1 0 0 3 10 0 0 04 10 4

Batteries Samp' and Rollins: Etarlts) and Cal-ls; an.

Decntnr Downed Terre Hasite.republic; SPECIAL.

Decatur, III July 5 Tha Decatur team de-feated Terre llaute again this afternoon anl willen from her to lerie. llaute to play three, frames.The score:

ic 1U1-- .Decatur 0 0 0 0 110 3 214 ir yTerre Haute ....! 0 4 0 0 3 2 2 0--13 IS S

Batteries Decatur. Herbert and Badger: Terrallaute. rfttaln. L)un3 and Puller.

Central Leasrne.REPt-'RLI- Sl'ECIAL

Danville, III , July J. Baseball Central Leaguescore.

IL II. E.P'oria 2 2 i I1 'ant Ills 0 1 3 3

Baltcrle" Oaeas and Mct'.UIre; Ctrns andJessup.

JEFKniEs to Mnirr iit-iiLi-

Itnttle to lie ArrangedWllbln a Few Days.

REPUBLIC SPECIALNew York. July B A match between Jim

Jeffries nnd Gus Ruhlln for theof the world wil! arranged In a few

dajs. Both fighters und their managershave signified their willingness to clinch It,and will rfsn articles of agreement thsearlj' part of next week. At prent bothmen are on the road, and ns their

end next Hitunluy night, there is nodoubt thit thej- - will get right dawn to busi-ness on tht-i- r return to this cltj' and lose notime In affixing their signatures to the ar-ticles.

As soon n BIllj Hrady. manager of Jeff-ries, lenrnfd In Paris where is at

Ruhlln had defeated Sharkey, hecabled to Charley McCall, hisIn this cltj--, stntlng that he mut clinch amatch ns quickly ns posFlble with Ruhlln. ashe wns Jeffries could beat Ruhlln,nnd thereby would get the chance to makeseveral thousand dollars.

McCall Is ready now to clinch the matchnfter receiving Brady's

If all for the tight areand there Is no doubt

they will la. the contest will be one of thebiggest betting affairs that has occurredritice the gr-- nt battle betweenand Jim Corbett a few years ago.

Huhlln's great showing with Sharkeyhas gained him a host or admirers,

and. as this delegation will constllute theprominent bettors on fighters, there 1 everyindication that the Akron man will be heav-ily backed when he enters the ring.

HACK THIIHY TO niivr KnB.tlronklyn Ilriy'n Admirer Think He

Villi lies! the LlKht Weight.REPt'BLIC SPECIAL

New York, Julv a. Interest In the battlebetween Frank Krne and Terry McGovernIncreases at a surprising rate ns the date.of the fight July 1& approaches. Sronln-- r

mm nbout town are freely theoutcome and opinions seem to bo aboutoiviueti.Terrj's admirers think he Is Invincible

and wl I back him against Hrne or any one.edse to tre limit. The cliam-- n.

ldon ha a betting contingent behind himtuo, wnicn pnimis to mane tntngs lively i

d

kardry tetaf.

in America i

Bear thu in mmd.ujti ,

, .

PENMSYLVUNIIwhlikey 1SXJS E.prtj,

medicinal and ireneral

am bay tt

.aid for ?

use. . crenaii

CAE!lSE,!PEN3SYLVANIA RYEat SOOisthofinet7yeirolitrye JraEjprtH

in anySCHWEYER DISTILLERS,

.for cai..Idah.i.Mont-.J.e-

ik

ilt

i

.

"...30130i7TTl

uoOOOOOO

Indianapolis)

ooonooon00000100

000010

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4S402003.Chnxnploti.

championship

championship

Illoomlnictoa.

Ilioomlnrton

.

ODOOOOOCOOlOOOuO

Chnmplonahlp

champion-ship bo

engage-ments

he pre-sentthat

representative

communication.arrangements satis-

factorily completed,

ritzslmmons

discussing

light-weig- ht

pll.Lu

aasVjsUoat-BM- CT

ij

WHISKEY

RYEprescribed

.

Mcx...ev..tre..t.ii,

The famous Peansylyanta Ke. lor zi yearsdoable di-ti- lll ar-- 3ca in sow uuaer

onalArcctnofJIr.JolmbthweTerLiaiseifSever les than 8 m ears old. to : it o andla years old when fir-- l Ixtttied. bold direct to

distillery at thothe consum-- r Irom curlow prico of SUli for four full quirts thatcannot be bonght elsewhere for less than $o.'JU.

We aNo offer our SEVEN TtAK OLD

duplicated for Ics then SOO. xS"7 Prtptii

! 'riil'Mn,, MHieCTCniiiiMwnasiH

A nosttlve and Dermanentcure fOTall nnnatralCts- -charyeJof the Urinary Orrane; 1.7oOcouioIetecirIn 1889; ImmediatereKef for IKadtlerand Kidneys;quickest and safest cure knoi.j book tree; ref asa

; there are none "just a" iroort "insat os(tirev's. the onlv genuine. Drveirlll.oTr-yraai- t

J . W. Ocdney. SO J Last bitth Street. New York.

DR. SCHRE8NER,816 Chestnut St.. St. Louis. Mo,

The RELIABLE tPECIALISTprivate and chronic

Lojt Manhood. NervousDebtltty. Lost Vtxor. bsmtcalV. takces". Night losses. Debllt-tati- rg

Dreams, Early Decay. ffNarlcocele and all results cf er-rors of youth or excesses In Ia:rjears rermaneztly cured. Gonor-rhce- a.

elleeu Stricture. Lrnatu-r- al

liischacges. and all dieea9 sMcf Klilr.evs and UladJer. andR.ood Poison, all stares, posltiv ely cured. Chantslaw. o lt-- town patients treated by mall. BooVanl Question Urn's on Special Diseases sealFrea. Ccnsultatljn Pre- -. Call or write. Hourst a. m. to p. m. Burdaya io to 12 m.

EVERY

PRUGGIST

TAKES

REPUBLIC WANT ADS.

from now on when the money-lade- n McGov-ern men make their presence known.Although the conditions of the fight inone waj-- favor McGovern, nnd In the othTway place him at a disadvantage, his fol-lowers cannot see how he can lose, and ac-cordingly are not a bit backward in claim-ing that he will give ITrne his quietus. Justas he has done to such prominent fighUraas Dixon, Gardner. Forbes. White. Calla-han. Rotchfort and others. Thev Intend tobet their money on him to beat Erne.

KID PAGE AiU lJUJlHV SCHKK.Meet on July II) nt the nest End

Club.The V.cst End Club, which, for the past

,months. has been a haven for thostriking street railway employes. Is oncemore a headquarters for the club members.President Ilauzhton nnnources the long-look-

for match between Kid Page andDummy Schenck for the lJth of this month.On the same evening, Al Milier and J.Douglas will come together, also JuliuiKlein and Charley Cornwell. The Page-i'chen- ck

match Is for the lipcurd cham-pienshl- p.

The entire evening's programmewill be strictly a club membership affair,and no outsiders will be admitted.

TALK OF FRENCH ALLIANCE.

France Would Have FriendlyTreaty With the United States.

Paris. July 6. Recent reference-- , in thFnris paper to the Franco-Americ- an dem-onstration of frier.d'hlp have clearly shownthat an alllarce between the Republics isuerlouslv considered.

The Figaro is the latest Journal to takJiD the Idea. It suggests. In an importantleading article, that the bonds between thatwo mtintrin b drawn still closer thanthey are at bj' means of a treatyof commerce. After potnting out thatAmerican sympathy- - for was muchweakened by the Mexican War and

nttltude of the Imperial Governmentduring the Civil War. the writer sajs thatthe situation has been much improved forfome time past, as ts evidenced by thewarm expressions of friendship at tne un-veiling of the Washington and Lafayettemonuments.

"lUre, then." he explains. "3 a new alli-ance, based, not en written treaties, buton a community of sympathies, not on thoeventualities of a war to be raced In com-mon against a third Power, but on a move-ment of ideas, whence has arisen confl-den- ce

between two great nations."Reference Is then mad J to the announce-

ment of Mr. Chamberlain. British Secretaryof Slate for the Cilonies. of a political alli-ance, and the article concludes;

"Do not let ua fall into the same errors of.appreciation and Judgment as have tinsKnglUh. All we are bl to obtain from theUnited States is a disposition on the part ofthe Government and people to consider th- -

French Republic a sister Republic, whosocolonial Interests In the Atlantic and Pacificought never to bo looked upon with preju-dice, nnd whose Intellectual Influence wiltbe received henceforth with more favorthan Jealou"j The community of institu-tions between th! two countries have benan Important and durable factor in theirupward growth, and the result obtained,which w 11 be much greater it sanctionedby a soil! treaty of commerce."

ANTHflfTPER.AL.ST.C PLANS.

Executive Committee Prepares forthe Indinnapoiis Meeting.

Irdlnnapolls, Ind.. July C Tho ExecutiveCommittee of tho American l-

istlc League has sent notifications to thiscity that the first national convention ofthat organization will b held here Augui.61." and 1. Speeches will Im delivered byBourke Cochran of New York. ,Houtwelt of Massachusetts. Bishop SpaltliTme of Peoria, Carl Schurz and AndrotSrCarresie. Th- - league cxjcta L1W personpresent. A. Mlzte of Chicago Is the na-tional secretary.

103 Help WantedAds printed In 'n RepublicHow Mildred Cams by the Lots.

for the fact that Mrs. Dewoy. wlfoof th Admiral, owns considerable property InMlcblU. the Karle says lhat some of tills waaven by Ceneral W. II Haaen. Mrs Domreyafirst husband. In a poker aame "The storygce." sits the Eerie, "that In 1571. whn Gen-eral Hazen and bis troops were stationed nearWichita, thfte waa a spirited poker rama in

In whlrh "everal of tho ptoneera andErerrrss Ilasen were enraged. Ons engarementall day and alt night between General

Hazen and a nun named HinCroft. When thaKPTar flrrtllv broke up General Hazen had vmoriall e.f Bancroft's rncney and 14Q besides, whichBancroft could not pav. li criler to settle, withGtneral Hazen. Banrroft ts said to have deededHafen -- bout fifty lota in the growlra younr vil-la re of U Ichlta." Later luncrcll redesmed mostif the 1. 1". but several of them remained thaprni-ert- of the General, and within the past two)years Mrs Iewey has deeded soma of themanay. Kanaa City Journal.

CARBUNCLESThese tomienlinte nnd painful eruptions proceed from tho same cause vitiatedcondition, nf the blood and a debilitated state of health.

Carbuncles are much more nerlous, eating great holes In tho flesh, makingelow-healiti- jr, danxerous wound-i- .

Hoils are reinled by many as of llttlo ImportantTe )mcthing rather to bdealred a a menus of thlnnlne; the blood; hut this Is an erroneous Idea, aoffensive chronic sores and ulcers, and even Cancer, often begin with a Boll.

The seat of the trouble is In the blood to be rid of thee pests permanentlyYOU MUST GET THE POISON OUT OF THE BLOOD.

P. S. S. can bo relied upon with certainty to do this. It not oulv forces out allpoisonous matter from the blood, but, belnc; purely vegetable, at Ihe same timeiitvTJiTites and builds up the jrcncral health. ."o need to fear further troubta

from Boils and Carbuncles after a course of 8. 8. 8.Mr. K. J. Willis, of 1W4 Mission Street, 8aa Francisco,

Cal., nays: "I have foryears lcn subject to painful BollsUnd Carbuncles over my lxvly during tho spring season,and afler much snffsrlns; ana usclees doctoring I finallyfbnnd a perfect cure in t--. S. S. It seemed to go right totha root f the trouble and to drive out thoroughly andemcaelouily the poison that was lUidennluIng my health.It Is the monarch nf blood medicines."

Bookon Blood and Bkln DIaeaae rnalled free. The S. a S. Co., Atlanta. GA