Indianapolis Journal, Volume 51, Number 160, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 June 1901 — Page 4
THE INDIA! A10LIS JOURNAL, SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 1901.
STIMM EL WAS A WINNER
Tin; hami angi:i.s kulii MT IM) II IS Ctltl t ( tISFlLLl. Hat for III ficnerowify Fort "Wayne Would !ot M;nr Scored Fox riuyetl W ell Other (Jniuf. Yesterday' ISesuIts nnrt Atlfmlnncf. Western Association. Indianapolis. 7; Fort Wayne, 5 7 Marlon. 6; Dayton. 3 VTO Toledo. 7; Columbus. 5 Wheeling. 3: Louisville. 5 y National League. Cincinnati. 6; New Yorfc. 4 l'l.Ml Brooklyn. 7; IMttsourg. 3 6) Cnicago. 5: Philadelphia, 4 2.5) St. Iouis-Boston FUin American League. Washington. S; Chicago. 3 1.44 Cleveland. 13; Baltimore. 5 ZJA) Philadelphia. 0: Detroit. 1 1.0Y) Boston. 12; Milwaukee, 1 '70 Slnnilinn of the Clubs. Western Association. Clubr. Played. Won. Lo?t. IVt. Indianapolis So 'Js 12 .!'") Wh'-eling M C; li .v Louisville u : In Davton 3s 1 J .471 Toledo 3 17 '-1 . H Merlon : 1 2) .444 Fort Wayne 11 17 21 .113 Columbus 4) 1.' l"S National League. Clubs. Played. Won. Lost. Trt. New York :m H li Cincinnati St 2o 14 W Pittsburg :s i'l 17 Philadelphia 37 VJ is St. Louis l 1: .4S7 Brooklyn 35 17 1 .4V, Borton ?.1 li' IS .4 Chicago C: 15 21 .3 American League. Clubs. Via ye 1. Wen. Lost. Pet. Chicago :z 'JS 1': .67 Washington :J1 In 13 ."M Detroit as 22 l; .:; Baltimore 31 K. lr .533 Boston 32 l'i IS .:.: Philadelphia 3.1 17 1: .472 Milwaukee ::7 11 13 .H7r Cleveland 12 21 For a short time yesterday's game with Fort Wayne looked as If it would be a repetition of Friday's battle, as the visitors started off in the lead, but when Indianapolis forged to the front they remained in the lead. The final score resulted 7 to 5 In favor of Indianapolis. The Iloosiers should have made more runs, as the visitors fumbled and threw badly and Mullen was hit often, but twice when the bases were all occupied and other times when Iloosiers wero waiting to be driven home 'the necessary hit was not made. The visitors seemed to have a fondness for fumbling bunt hits, and in this manner several Indianapolis batters who attempted to sacrifice landed on lirst base. Stimmel was on the flagstone for Indianapolis and most of the hits made off him were badly scattered. In the last two innings the visitors found him for two hits In each inning. But for his generosity in issuing two passes to first and grazing McCann's short growth of beard In the second inning, passing the batter to first, the score would not have been o close and Fort Wayne would never have been given such a lead in the eariy history of the affray. NEXT DOOR TO AN ENIGMA. For three 'innings it looked as if Mullen would prove an enigma, for he had the Iloosiers so dopey they could not hit him safely, but in the fourth, through a fortunate bunch of circumstances. Including: safe hits, a couple of bad errors and the inabilty of the Fort Wayne men to touch two of yae runners, Indianapolis was given an opportunity to wipe out the visitors' lead and assume the first place in the procession. Fox's playing shone as if It were plastered with goiu leaf, while Flynn and Ilickey also did good work in the field. Ileydon had a bad day and Kelly made an error that was so bad it was laughable. The easiest kind of a grounder rolled to him, and while he watched the runner approaching the initial bag the ball rolled out of his hands and the runner was safe. ' The first Inning was devoid of run-getting, although the Iloosiers had a chance to score when Hogriever led eff with a single and was sacrificed to second, but the next two men were easy picking for the visitors. Stimmel started the second inning bv grazing McCann'a face with the ball and sending him to first. Thornton advanced him to second on a sacrifice. Stimmel could not locate the plate and passed Babh and F. Miller, tilling the bags. Fuller flew to Hlckey. but Mullen sent a single to right which scored McCann and Babb, Miller reaching third. Mullen pilfered second, but Nattress struck out. There was no more scoring until the last of the fourth, when Indianapolis made a quartet of tallies. Bey singled and Shannon flew out. Kelly's drive to rignt placed Bey on third, Kelly reaching second on the throw to third to catch Bev. Ileydon dropped one toward F. Milier and the latter threw to the plate, but Bey was across the rubber before Fuller touched hirn. Fox singled to left anej .McCann fumbled the ball. Kelly scoring. McCann made a wild throw to third and Heydon scored. Fox leaching third. Flynn's hit scored Fox. and then Dibbius stole second. Ilickev hit to short and Nattress threw to Babh to citcn Flynn. but the Fort Wayne third '.aseman failed to touch him. Stimmel struck out and Hogriever walked, rilling the bases, but Bey forced Hogriever out at second. IN THE FIFTH. Kelly's error, Bevan's sacrifice and G. Miller's hit gave the visitors one in the fifth. The Iloosiers added two in their half of the Inning and had chances for more, but the necessary hit did not materialize. Shannon beat out a bunt and Kelly attempted to sacrifice. F. Miller picked up the ball and threw to the clubhouse, allowing both men to score. Heyden then singled and Fox reached first on Babb's fumble. Flynn attempted to sacrifice and Mullen booted the ball. With the bases filled Hlckey tlew out and Stimmel struck out. The one In the sixth was made on Bey's single, steal of second. Shannon's sacridce and Kelly's single. Kelly was caught at third later, and. with the bases filled again. Hlckey was retired, ending the inning. Bevan's single. G. Miller's hit to ric'.it and two outs scored the last run for Fort Wayne In the eighth. In the ninth F. Miller singled and Fuller sent a ily hick of first base that looked safe. Fox gathered it in and doubled Miller at second Mullen singled, but mattress struck out for the fourth time, ending the game. The score: Indianapolls. A.B. R. H. O. A. E. Hogriever, rf 4 0 2 0 0 0 Bey. cf 3 2 2 0 0 0 Shannon. If 4 113 0 1 Kelly. 1 4 2 2 1)11 Heydon, c 5 1 1 s 2 2 Fox. 2 4 1 3 3 2 0 Flynn. s, 4 0 114 0 Hlckey. 3 40 0 I 4 0 Stimmel, p 4 0 0 0 1 0 Totals S 7 12 2t 11 4 Nattress out on bunt strikes. Fort Wayne. A.B. Ii. H. O. A. E. Nattress, s 5 0 0 16 1 Bevans. cf 3 110 0 0 G. Millar, rf 4 0 2 0 0 0 McCann. if 3 1 0 2 0 2 Thornton. 1 2 0 o 11 l l . BaL-b. 3 .3 1 1 1 o 1 F. Miller, 2 3 112 3 1 FullT. c 4 f o 7 ü 0 Mullen, p 4 1 2 o t j Totals 31 5 7 21 14 7 Score by innings: .Indianapolis o 0 o 4 2 1 0 o 7 Fort Wayne o - 0 o 1 0 0 1 0-5 Bases on balls O IT Stimmel. 3; off Mullen, 1. Struck out By Stimmel. 9; bv Mullen 5 Hit by pitcher By Stlmnicl. 1. Sacrifice hits Bey, Shannon, Kelly, Fox Flynn. Bevans, Thornton. ' Double play Fox to Kelly. Stolen bases-Bey, Flynn. Fox. Mullen. Paired ball Fuller. Ltft on bases Indianapolis. 11; Fcrt Wayne. 5. I'mplre-Hcrnuns. Tim 1:45. Attendance 70U. ' - In Spite of MlloTr Fleid'liifc. COLUMBUS, O., June S. Williams waa tlX hard to-day and Toledo won In spit of
yellow fielding. Joss pitched a good game for the visitors. Attendance, $33. Score: Columbus 0 0 0 1 2 2 0 0 05 8 2 Toledo 2 0 0 0 1 2 1 1 7 10 8 Batteries Williams and ZInram; Joss and Gramus.
Seven in One InniiiK. LOUISVILLE. Ky., June S. Meekin had one bad inning and Wheeling batted out seven scores and the victory. Burns, an outfielder was substituted and he allowed but one hit. Attendance, 5 0. Score: It II E Wheeling 1 1 0 0 7 0 0 0 0 f 7 2 Louisville 1 0 0 1 0 2 1 0 05 12 3 Batteries Ames . and Herbert; Mecklng, Burns and Zalusky. Umpire, Latham Dunham "Was Wild nnd .Marlon Won. DAYION, O., June 8. Marion won easily to-day, aided by Dunham's wildness. Capt. Wright, of the visitors, was put out of the game for abusing the umpire. Score: miE Dayton 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 03 7 1 Maiion 1 0 0 3 0 0 0 2 06 10 1 Batteries Dunham and Blue; Pfelster and Smink and Aulcault. Umpire, Mullane. Attendance, 5ou. NATIONAL LISA GUI'. Ilnhn Pitched W ell nnd ' Cincinnati Won Lareftt Week-Day Crowd. CINCINNATI. June S The great Matthewson was an easy mark for the locals during the early innings of to-day's game, and they secured a lead which the visitors could not overcome. Bunched hits in the fourth and fifth innings put New York out of the hunt. Hahn pitched a splendid game. Nine of the hits made off his deliverycame after two men were out. Irwin's error in the sixth cost throe runs. One of the largest week-day crowds in the history of the local club was on the grounds. Attendance, 10.0S 1. Score: R II E Cincinnati 0 0 1 2 3 0 0 0 6 9 1 New York 0 0000310 04 11 2 Batteries Hahn and Bergen; Matthewson and Warner. Kitfton Too DlfMcult for Pittsburg. PITTSBURG. June 8. Pittsburg could not hit Kitson, and Brooklyn outplayed the home tfam at every point. Brooklyn's errors were not costly. Attendance, 6,K"0. Score: R H E Pittsburg o 0 O 0 0 0 O 1 23 rj 2 Brooklyn 2 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 37 11 5 Batteries Tannehill. Wiltz and Zimmer; Kitson and McGuire. Good DnttliiK Saved ChicaRO. CHICAGO. June S. Good batting gave the locals to-day's game after they had almost thrown, it away by loose fielding. The Philadelphia team played almost perfectly, but could do nothing with Taylor. White gave way to Orth in the fourth. after having been touched up for eight hits and four runs. Attendance, 2.200. Score: R H E Chicago 2 0200010 -ö 12 4 Philadelphia ...0 0 3 1 0 0 o 0 04 5 1 Batteries Taylor and Kling; White, Orth and McFarland. AMERICAN LEAGUE. Chicago Ontplayed by Wnrhlngton nt lint and In the Field. WASHINGTON, June 8. Chicago went down to defeat to-day, as Washington did yesterday, by the superior work of the opposing batsmen and pitcher. Mercer, while trying to catch a fly in the second inning fell against the right field fence with such force that he was compelled to retire from the game. Quinn made a sensational stop of a hot grounder. Score: R H E Washington ....0 0 3 1 0 2 0 2 S 14 1 Chicago 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 03 5 2 Batteries Lee and Grady; Patterson and Sullivan. nunrli of Huna In the Flftli. BOSTON. June 8. Sparks's wildness in the fourth inning unsettled the whole Milwaukee team to-day, and before it recovered form eight of the home team had crossed the plate. Waldron and Gilbert were put out of the game for kicking. Attendance, 8,070. Score: R H E Boston 1 0 0 8 0 2 0 1 12 8 3 Milwaukee ....0 00.02000 2 44 Batteries Lewis and Schreck; Spark.s, Garvin and Leahy. "nnttlnK rionlc" for Cleveland BALTIMORE, June 8. The Cleveland American League club had a batting picnic with the Baltimores here to-day, and Schmidt was batted out of the box In the fifth Inning, and Dunn, who relieved him, lured little better. Score: n 11 e Baltimore 0 0 0 1 3 0 0 0 1 5 6 4 Cleveland I 0 0 5 4 2 0 1 13 16 2 Batteries Schmidt, Dunn and Brcsnahaa; Scott and Wood. Detroit Loses n Pitcher' Battle. PHILADELPHIA, June 8. The Detroit team made its first appearance here to-day and was defeated by the home club in a fast and interesting game. It was a pitchers' battle from start to finish. Plank was invincible and Yeager pitched a masterly game, but his support was not equal to that of his opponent. Attendance, 10,0 Score: RH E Philadelphia ...2 0 0 0 0 3 1 0 6 4 5 Detroit 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 l 6 1 Batteries Yeager and Buelow; Tlank and Powers. TIinEE I" LEAGUE. Et-anavllle Defeated In a Good Game with Ilocktoril, ROCKFORD. 111.. June 8. Evansvllle dropped a second game to Rockford to-day. Bouldln ritched good ball, but lacked support. Score: R II E Rockford 1 S 0 1 2 2 0 0 -9 7 7 Evansvllle 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 23 6 4 Batteries Owens and Hanford; Bouldln and Roth. Umpire, Camp. ROCK ISLAND. 111., June 8. Bunching of hits in the first two innings won for the visitors. Score: R H E Rock Island 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 12 9 3 Terre Haute. ...1 3 0 0 0 0 0 1 1-6 7 3 Batteries Smith and Arthur; Brown and Starnaglc. DAVENPORT. Ia., June S.-Batting by the locals and clean fielding won to-day's game. Score: R H E Davenport 1 0 400000 510 14 1 Decatur 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 03 7 5 Batteries Careyveau and Evers; Bruce and Rollins. CEDAR RAPIDS. Ia.. June S. Cedar Rapids won easily to-day by heavy batting. Score: n H e Cedar Rapids. ..0 3 3 4 4 0 2 0 16 It 3 Bloomington ..1 00000O02 367 Batteries Gibson and Weaver; Beedles, Thompson and Belt. Sontliena Aoclntion. At Chattanooga. Tenn. RUE Chattanooga ...3 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 04 6 1 New Orleans 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 2 Batteries Dolan and Roth; Freeland and Abbott. At Birmingham, Ala. RHE Birmingham ...0 0 1 0 0 1 2 5 09 13 1 Littb' Riok 0 0 C 0 0 0 0 3 36 7 4 Batteries Brandt and Culver; Sparger a:ul Lynch. At Stlma, Ala RHE Selma 3 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 05 0 1 Shreveport I 0 0 0 O 0 0 3 26 10 o Batteries Bailey and Alexander; Stultz and McGuiro. At Nashville j h n Naihvllle 1 0000303 7 10 Memphis 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 02 7 3 Batteries Corbett and Fisher; Robb and Kalkhoff. Intercollegiate Games. At Ann Arbor Michigan. 6; Chicago, 3. At Princeton: N. J. Princeton. 15: Yale, 5. At Cambridge, Mass. Harvard, 11; PennAt Buffalo, N. Y. Cornell, 6; Carlisle Indians. 5. Parda Take a Good Ciras. Epetl to tht Inätacapolis Journal. LAFAYETTE, Ind., Jun S. Purdu dafeaUd IlllnoU In the bast played gams of
the season on the local field to-day. Bronson's pitching and Rubey's work at third were the features. Score: RHE Purdue 2 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 24 11 2 Illinois 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 4 1 Batteries Bronson and Robertson; Falkenberg, Lundgren and Stahl. Played n Fat Game. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. MUNCIE. Ind., June 8. Independent teams of M uncle and Dayton played a gamo of ball this afternoon on the local grounds. Zook's pitching was too much for the visitors, except in one inning, when a double and two singles scored three Score: R H E Muncie 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0-5 9 3 Dayton ....'.....0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0-3 4 1 Batteries Zook and Henderson; Williman and Keoke.
Miami Takes the Last Game. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. RICHMOND. Ind., June S. Miami University won another game from Earlham College this afternoon by the score of 9 to C. It was the closing game of the season. Score: RHE Miami 2 3 0 0 2 0 1 1 09 6 6 Earlham 1 13010000-6 11 6 Ilnelall Notes. The Iloosiers were credited with five sacrifice hits. Stimmel struck out four times yesterday. Nattress performed a similar feat for Fort Wayne. Wheeling is the next attraction at Washington I'ark. coming next Tuesday for four game:-'. Wednesday will be ladies' day. Indianapolis and Fort Wayne play at the latter city to-day. returning home to-morrow to play the last game of the first series. It seems as if the weather man has done enough bad work in his time and he might give Indianapolis a few pleasant days while the team is playing at home. The third Silent Iloosiers won two games yesterday. In the first they defeated the Meridians IS to 13; in the second game they won from the Young Bases, 15 to 1. Next Saturday Marlon will play here and then Indianapolis plays at Marion the next three clays, as the series was transferred last month when Marion played here. Fox's work at second Improves as tho season grows older. He is certainly a very fast man and is not troubled with a chronic habit of getting injured like some others who havp played the base In former years. Hornung called Hogriever out at second yesterday and the decision raised the Iatter's wrath. The crowd did not blame the Indianapolis player for getting noisy, for he surely reached second before he was touched. Tlv Century nine defeated the Young Iloosiers yesterday by a score of 23 to 17 in a five-inning game. Brunswick, second baseman for the Century team, made a double play in the last inning. Batteries, Connor, Abstine and Winkler; Reazer and Teadd and Ike. Fort Wayne Is the luckiest crowd ever seen here. In the last inning yesterday Heydon hit a hard one that bounced off Mullen's shin and rolled over to Thornton before Heydon could reach first. In the seventh inning Nattress ran over to cover second on Hogriever's attempted steal and gathered In Bey's hard drive. There were other cases where Fort Wayne as very lucky. YACHT VENCED0R WINS. Defeats n Good Fleet Over the Chicago-Michigan City Course. MICHIGAN CITY, Ind., June S. F. A. Price's sloop Vencedor finished first in the race from Chicago to Michigan City to-day, beating the second boat, Josephine, a quarter of an hour, actual sailing time. W. A. Stickney's Valiant finished third, four minutes later, and just ahead of Siren. The schooner Nomad was fifth, then Columbia and Katie H. The Michigan City challenge cup, awarded to the yacht making the best corrected time, was won by Vencedor by the narrow margin of twenty seconds from Josephine. The corrected time of the two yachts were: Vencedor, 4:22:o0; Josephine, 4:22:20. Lnwson Will Race Ills Yncht. BOSTON, Mass., June 8. Thomas W. Lawson to-day issued the following statement: "It now having been settled that tfce Independence cannot take part in the cup defense, I will do all I can to arrange as many races as possible Xor her until the season closes, that she may show her friends what a modern Boston boat can do. Her first engagement is the race at Newport against the Constitution and Columbia. July 2 and 6." Further than this Mr. Lawson would not discuss the subject. Cycler Pierce DefeatH Michael. PHILADELPHIA, June S. The second bicycle race of the season at Woodside Park to-day drew a large crowd, the principal attraction being a thirty-mile motorpaced race between "Jimmy" Michael Burns Pierce and Archie McEachern. The race, which was hotly contested, was won by Pierce in minutes 5 seconds. Michael held the lead from the fourteenth to the twenty-eighth mile, when Pierce forged ahead and won with comparative ease, Michael finishing second in 4::0l2-5. GENERAL STORTING ttEWS. President Leland Hathaway, of the National Fox Hunters' Association, met with the executive board at Lexington. Ky., yesterday and decided upon Estill Springs, Ky.. as the place for the next annual hunt! which will take place Nov. LSI The Commoner, by Hanover, dam Margarine, by Algerine. formerly the property of William Wallace, has been sold to Gen W. H. Jackson, of the Belle Meade stud. Tennessee, for SId.OM. The Commoner sold last fall in auction sales In Lexington to Baker Bros., Kinzea Stone and J. B. Ewing for $5.025. Miss Bessie Moore and Miss Marion Jones, former women champions of America at lawn tennis, met again yesterday afternoon in the final round "of the singles in the King's County Tennis Club's open tournament In Brooklyn. When they met last Monday in Washington Miss Jones was the winner, after a long, close match, but yesterday Miss Moore won in three straight sets 6-3. 10-8, 1-2. The University of Pennsylvania crew sailed for Liverpool yesterday on the steamship Waesland to compete In the Henly regatta for the grand challenge cup July 3 to 5 Inclusive. The Pennsylvania party consisted of fifteen eight '"varsity oarsmen, coxswain, two subs. Coach Ellis Ward and Graduate Manager Reginald Hart. The trip will cost the Pennsylvania rowing authorities ever $5.0 0. all of which was raised by voluntary subscriptions, half of the fund being contributed by the undergraduates of the university. Averages in Washington Lcngne. H. Hardle. Indians i$l H. Brinkmeyer, Tishies 179 II. Olds. Indians 177 W. Buddenbaum. Hoo-Hoo 17(5 F. Mueller. Hoo-Hoo 173 George Kirkhoff. Indians 173 A. M. Ray. Tishies 172 F. Talbert. Tishies 1:2 Charles Resner, Hoo-Hoo 171 C. H. Wiley. Indians 1C7 H. Seilken. Tishies 17 H. Lee. Indians 166 H. Bauer, Red Ravens ittf Ed Kessing. Hoo-Hoo 165 E. Mueller. Red Ravens ." 164 J. Tritchett. Tishies 164 Ed Brinkmeyer. Hoo-Hoo 164 Ed Prange. Hoo-Hoo 164 F. B. Comstock. Nevarres 164 O. Partlow. Tishies ici Gable. Orientals i6i Ostermeyer, Sohns p;4 rr I Resner. Hoo-Hoo 163 W. Brewer. Nevarres iV2 W. Römer. Orientals i6i C. Kirkhoff. Red Ravens loo W. Wiese. Red Ravens K3 W. Williams. Tishies 15$ George Schriver. Sohos 136 T. Brinkman, Orientals 1", H Euchring. Sohos ir. J. A. Linegar, Orientals ir". B. BoyV. Orientals ir.r, C. McEIwalne. Red Ravens 154 F. Dedert. Sohos 151 C. Baumworth. Orientals 151 J. Leist. Nevarres ITA W. Haubrick. Nevarres '.'.IUI J. Wallace. Red Ravens jo The Coonley-Ferry Wedding. UT1CA. N. Y.. June S. Miss Queene Ferry, daughter of the millionaire seedsman D. M. Ferry, of Detroit, and Avery Coonley, of Chicago, were married to-day. The wedding was an elaborate affair and took place at tha Ferry summer home near Sidney, N. Y. Nearly two hundred guests ware present from distant cltica.
BLUE GIRL THE WINNER
GREAT AMERICAN' STAKES CAPTURED II Y J. E. MADDEVS HOUSE. Broadway Irle, the Other Fixture at Gravenend, Taken by The Parader Race- Eliewhere. NEW YORK. June S. The Great American stakes of 512,50) was the magnet which drew about 16,X0 people to the Gravesend race track to-day. John E. Madden's Blue Girl, at 6 to 1, won cleverly over a rather slow track, with the next four horses head3 apart. Nasturtium, the favorite, getting the place from Major Dangerfield. The Great American was for two-year-olds at five furlongs. Eight horses started. Blue Girl and Major Dangerfield rushed out to make the running, but the others, with the exception of Saturday, were close up, and racing in a bunch. On the far turn Nasturtium was sharply cut off, losing three or four lengths. Blue Girl, Major Dangerfield and Whisky King was the order coming into the stretch, and when they were straightened out for home. Blue Girl drew away and won cleverly by two lengths. Garrigan, on Nasturtium, the favorite, claimed a foul against the winner, but the stewards would not allow the claim. In the Broadway stakes. The Parader won rather easily from All Green and Vltelllus, the other entries refusing. The Parader was an odds-on favorite, and led all the way. Summaries of stake events: Third race (the Great American, of 512,5j; five furlongs): Blue Girl 122 (Burns), 6 to 1 and 2 to 1. won; Nasturtium. 115 (Garrigan), even and 1 to 2, second; Major Dangerfield. 115 (Bullman), 20 to 1 and S to 1. third. Time, 1:02 4-5. Fourth (the Broadway stakes, mile and one-sixteenth): The Parader, 121 (Landry), 3 to 5 and out. won; All Green. Ill (Shaw), 2 to 1 and out. second; Vitelllus, 111 (Piggott). 7 to 1 and 9 to 5. third. Time, 1:49. Other winners were: First, Gold Spinner, 4 to 1; second. Andronicus. 5 to 1; fifth, Honolulu, 7 to 10; sixth, Belvino, S to 5. M In linos nnd Had Riding. CHICAGO. June S. Mishaps and bad riding were the features of to-day's sport at Hawthorne. After nearly everybody had fallen in the steeplechase and Sallus had won by about a quarter of a mile, Herodiade, the favorite in the Juvenile stakes, was the subject of a wretched ride by Coburn and came in fourth, the winner turning up in J. V. KIrby. Pronta, who finished third, swerved and Interfered with Herodiacle. for which Pronta was dlsquilfied, the favorite getting third money. After all of these mishaps Lady Schorr, the evenmonev favorite in the over-night handicap, at a "mile and an eighth, was beaten by Wild Pirate, which was 10 to 1 in the betting. The steeplechase was the spectacular feature because of the numerous tumbles. Isen, one of the horses that fell, was the subject of a plunge in the ring. His rider remounted him and got second money. Winners In order: Harry Beck, 7 to 10; Bangle. S to 5; Sallus, 7 to 2; J. V. Klrby, 12 to 5; Wild Pirate, 10 to 1; Vincennes, 6 to 5; Federal, 5 to 2. Betting Ring Lost Heavily. CINCINNATI, O.. June 8. The usual large Saturday afternoon crowd turned out at Newport to-day. Several good things were sprung on the bookies and the ring lost heavily on the victory of Anna A. B. and Strathbroeck. After winning the second event Anna A. B. was bid up by J. R. Hand $10) over her entered price. She was retained by her owner. R. J. Hiner. One of Hiner's stable boys, named Pat Hanna, was ruled off by Judge Russwurm for using vile language while the horse was being run up by Hand. Governor Boyd, In the last race, was also bid up. He was in for M.) and was boosted to $70 by J. Smith. Winners in order: Sister Kate II, 8 to 1; Anna A. B., 3 to 2; Lilly Fantland, 9 to 2; Strathbroeck. 7 to 1; Lady Kent, 13 to 5; Governor Boyd, 3 to 1. "Killing" on King's Illghirny. ST. LOUIS, June 8. Barney Rathbone and his friends made a killing on King's Highway in the third race at the fair grounds to-day, backing him from 25 to 1 tc 10 to 1. Wyeth won the Junior Championship stakes by six lengths in a common gallop. John W. Schorr's colt, Charles W. Meyer, favorite at 1 to 6, ran third. The ring offered 4 and 3 to 1 against the field, and this was eagerly secured, the books losing heavily on the race. Winners In erder: Sackford. 9 to 2; Kaloma. 7 to 10; King's Highway, 10 to 1: Wyeth. 10 to 1; Hottentot, even; Tammany Chle., 20 to 1; Latus, 6 to 5. Favorites Fared Bnilly. SAN FRANCISCO. June S. Favorites fared badly at Oakland to-day, but wellplayed horses took some of the events. Jockey Gutierrez, who was thrown In the two-year-old rare yesterday, is still unconscious and his injuries are more serious than at flm supposed. Winners In order: Torsida. Rio Dealtar. Escalante, Rathtcn, Good Hope. Jim McCleevy. Lifting the Skirt. New York Tress. In the education of women lifting the skirt is quite as Important as singing, dancing, reading, writing and arithmetic, yet girls are allowed to grow up and settle down wthoitt ever being taught the difference between the right and wrong ways of accomplishing this necessary diunnal feat. Some women, naturally artistic, early acquire the proper method. Whatever they do is perfection. But the great majority carry their skirts with as much grace and intelligence as they do a bunch of vegetables. They actually embarrass me. I am ashamed to look in the direction of a careless creature who Innocently and lnorantly makes a free, public exhibition of her hosiery and lingerie. Once upon a time, seeing a woman making an astonishing revelation. I signaled to her husband, an utter stranger, who was walking by her side, and called his attention to the excitement his wife was creating. He thanked me cordially and gave her a scolding that stopped the show. Miss Margery Daw and old Tip Induced the women of the country to button up their plackets. It was a tremendous victory, greater. In a way, than the battle of Barnet. Now something must be done about lifting the skirt, which is being made in a bell shape and long enough to qualify in the street-cleaning department as a "White Wing," or perfect sweeper. Some clever women practice before a mirror until th?y learn where to grip the skirt for a modest, graceful elevation, then they sew on the under side two buttons to mark tho spot. In the street it Is not necessary with this arranement to look around In a twist and make half a dozen grabs at sundry parts of the gown. A little feeling with the hand will find the buttons, and a hold taken there will render madame secure, safe and confident. Literary Brooklyn.. New York Evening Sun. These things happened in Brooklyn, in a library. A young man walked up to the desk of the information clerk. "Haven't you got Shakespeare in prose?" "In prose? No. There isn't any such thing. Don't you mean Lamb's 'Tales from Shakespeare?' " "No not that. You see it's this way: In the poetic-form th y have the characters' names befoie every speech. I don't like it. It mixes things up. I can't consecrate my mind." "What?" asked th information clerk, thinking of shades of Mrs. Malaprop. "I can't consecrate my mind," said the young man with perfect distinctness. Then In came a woman an imperious aggressive, club-woman woman. "What's the book that's being most read now?" "Well." said the information clerk, "lots of books are being read a good deal now. There's" "Yes. but I want the one the single Individual one, that more people are reading now than thev nre rartlnsr anv other "Well, there's." suggested the "clerk. I giving tne name or one 01 me season s successes. "Oh!" gasped the woman. "Oh! oh! Do you suppose I want to read a book that everybody's read and done with?" "Who." remarked the information clerk In tellins: tho episode, "who said that he'd rather be something else than a dead Milton? Now you see why."
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TRAITS OF LOST DOGS. Easy to Toll Whether nn Animal Is rnnipercd or Homeless. New York Commercial Advertiser. Any one walking along One-hundred-and-second street, near East river, would have his attention arrested by the complaining howls of many dogs. These howls come froni the low, wooden dog shelters, for It Is here that all the vagrant dogs picked up by the men in the dreaded red carts are taken, as well as sick dogs and lost dogs that of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals is asked to take away and dispose of. Once inside the shelter the noise Is almost deafening. Dogs snarl and howl their loneliness in every key. But the official at the desk merely asks the visitor politely, "Have you lost a dog?" as though a hundred or more dogs were not whining behind the closed door back of him. He does not mind the noise; in fact, he says that he Is so used to It that he would miss it If the dogs should keep quiet. When the visitor enters the dogroom the barking stops for a moment: large and small dogs, curs and well-bred dogs crowd forward to the bars to see who it i.--, each one hoping, undoubtedly, that the new comer may b'e his master. Then, as one passes along the line of pens. the yells of the disappointed d)gs break forth again. On the opposite side of the room the cats sleep calmly in their separate cases. Thev have enough to eat. and they barely blink at the visitors; their in- 1 1 . . . . 1 omerent aitituue implies inai xney jiae learned to wait, unlike the impatient dogs opposite, that are upset by the mere opening of a door. The pens are scrupulously clean and one of the men explains the division. "The dogs in this first pen, their time Is short; they'll have to die this afternoon. They're Friday's catch. We'll save . that one," pointing to a bright-eyed Irish terrier, that alone, had not rushed to the side of the bars. He had watched eagerly, had seen that we were not his people, and then dropped his head between his paws. He was Iving where he could watch the door. "Each one of 'em takes it different, " the man went on. "Now, that there terrier that didn't get up has hardly moved since he came, an he won't eat. There's quite a few like that among the older dogs. Now, here's Saturday s catch. They got until to-morrow. You see that yellow pup making all that row? He ain't stopped a minute, hardly, since Saturday. Here, you c'am yourself," he said to the dog. The yellow pup in question sat in the middle of the pen and barked and yapped persistently and unemotionally. He held up one pathetic paw, that had been hurt. But his yelps were not of pain, but of indignation. He wanted to go home, and did not intend that any one should forget that for a moment. Mor-t of the doiis In this pen were curs' of the worst description. Yellow dogs, nondescript black and tans, scraggy and unkempt. But most of them showed by the way they crowded toward visitors for sympathy that they had belonged to some one. while the little, thin street dogs that had been lost so long that they had forgotten they had ever had homes lurked distressfully In the back of the pen. Among all these "no dogs" stood a magnificent black and white setter. His whole aspect was of deepest grief. He could not understand why he. who had always been such an object of care (for even after two days at the pound he looked well groomed), should be shut up here, and he stood on his hind legs against the bars and poured out his troubles In low whines. "He needn't feel so bad." said the man. "Some one'll come after him. sure. He's too fine a dog to lose. Here's the Saturday's catch at Flushing. Some o them cut-o'-town places seem to think their cogs don't need a license. We got a pretty good haul there." he said, complacently. "They'll be kept till Thursday to give their people plenty of time to get em. Here's the licensed dogs and well-bred ones '' Then he darted forward, for in the aristocrats' pen a fox terrier had killed a little Italian grayhound and was tearing a hole In his side. In the meantime the other nogs, a St. Bernard, a beautiful greyhound and several good terriers looked on while the fox terrier made his unnatural meal.. The dog guardian took out the body of the other dog. "It don't happen often." he said, "but now and again they kill each other before we can get here. As soon as we know a dog'a quarrelsome or has got a spite against another dog we take him out." When the visitors were returned, they found the setter dog had lain down in a corner, and half a dozen short-haired little mongrels had settled down on top of him, grateful for the warmth of his long hair. "Now that dog there's a fine home dog. He was picked up outside this morning." said the guide, pointing out a fine coach dog. "The boys up to his place'll come dewn in a body when they get our notification. Seems like he knowed it. for he ain't worrying none. No, we don't get many cats, except what we call 'emergency cats;' they're the sick ones that people asks us to take away. Inside here is where they meet a painless death," and he led the visitors into a room where a big box stood. The dogs are placed Inside, and illuminating gas is turned into it. "Oh, thev get homes lots of times." siid the man reassuringly. "A lady came the other day to get her dog. and took away three others with her: paid their licenses, of course." And as the visitors went out they heard a voice demanding: "I vant a smart dog fur a vatchdog. Can you gif me one?" AMAZING IGORACE. Results of an Examination of French and German Array Recrnlts.' Philadelphia Telegraph. Quite recently a French cavalry officer was astonished to find that after having posed the questions. "What Is the war of 1S70?" "What is Alsace-Lorraine?" "Who is Bismarck?" to some fifty of his raw recruits, three-fifths of them could five absolutely no answer at all, one-fifth had a foggy notion that Lorrain was a province, that Bismarck was a German general or Emperor, and that the war of lv?o was somewhat disastrous; while the remaining fifth, coming from Paris, were so far better Instructed that they had heard the nature of the French disaster la the. Ujt
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war. The above state of things need, however, cause no great excitement. The continental yokel Is by no means the carefully instructed machine that some folks imagine him to be; and the following anecdote, which caps the lamentations of the French officer, r.ot only puts the German recruit on tho same Intellectual level, but shows how soon after his eiecease the memory of a "prophet" di-s In his native land, even though, contrary to alleged usage, he njoyed its grtatcst honors during his lifetime-. A G-rm.in lieutenant of Intantry quartered on the western frontier, put two questions to seventy-eight of his recruits a few days aft-r they joined the regiment and It hhould be remarked that the country folk on the western frontier are somewhat more enlightened than their compatriots of the March of Brandenburg and of the eastern frontier. The questions were: "Who was Bismarck?" "Who was Windhorst?" Twenty-one of these twenty-eight yokels declared they had never heard of Bismarck; twentv-two said he had been a great general; six thought he was a former minister of war. and nine pictured him to their minds as a celebrated leader of armies. Five "of them did know that he was the first chancellor of the empire, and nine indeed said "Bismarck founded the German empire." Among the other answers the following are typical of rustic ignorance and powers of Imagination; "Bismarck was the first German Kmpemr," "Bismarck was a great poet," "Bismarck was a translator of the Bible." and "Bismarck was tha ürst company o3cer in th war." The
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cf In 126 East New York Street OKI Plione, lOCR. Patee Motor CO., Eighteenth Street and Belt Railway. Gold Crowns 3.0 0 I'.ridg Work 3. 00 Forrelain Crowns.. 93.00 Killings &0 last answer was that of a recruit, who thought he knew all about his country, and was giving an excellent definition of Bismarck. It ran: "Bismarck was the Kalfer's greatest enemy." When the Instruction had reached this stage the officer la question thought he had better change th subject, lest some unpleasant difference between liims.-lf and the men shou'd arie so he s.iid: "Who was Windhorst?" Tnreel quarter of the. class immediately held up their hands ready to answer. Winelhorst was for many years the b. ad of the B,.man 'atholic or Center party in th Itei.hstag. lie had b.en previous to thv a minister under the Guelphs of Hanover, and was an inveterate opponent e.f Bismarck. Obviously there must be some reason whv. on id western frontier, diminutive Windhorst should be still remernh re d. whllM th giant Bimarck is already forgotten. Bismarck was about twice Windhorst' height when they steod side by side. They wer iKith men of gnat Intellect, but Bismarck made Germany what she is. Windhorst could not have done so. een If hj had, wished it which be did not. I'rhan Igruornnre. Thlladelphla Tress. "What these town editor don't know about farmhr." remarked Farmer Koruhusk. "would fill a bo k." "Wat's the matter now?" inauired thi neighbor. "Why. here they keep on talkln about the wheat pit. when they ain't no tclj thin. Cherries ha pits, but wheat aia'L"
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