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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY AUGUST 18, 1903 JUDDEN SHOWER ~ SCRATCHES MAR AT <PH THIGK Soft Going Changes the Aspect of Several Racss Injunction and The Lady Ro- aTAKE EVENT Dick Welles Canters in First in the Specu- lation. “THE DEVILS DISCHPLEE" BRILLIANT AT THE COLUMBIA Henry Miller and Margaret Anglin Are Seen to Advantage in George Bernard Shaw’s Great Play---Large Audience Delighted With the First Production of ‘‘The Dairy Farm’ at the Alcazar PROVES Heavily-Backed Gregor K Is Beaten by Skilful at hesia Win From Good i Hawthorne. elds Special Dispatch to The Call CHICAGO, Aug. I7.—The racing at! - Hawthorne to-day was of the ordinary Suh kind. The Speculation Stakes was spoiled by merous scratches, only three horses going to the post out of sixteen original rters. Dick Welles, at the prohibitive of 1 to 5, won in a commmon canter. track fair. Summary: purse: St. % Fin. 1n en furlongs; 433 n_driving. Mirthul- s 103, also ND RACE—Steeplechase; short course; N forse, Welght % Fin, Paulaker, 140 (Z 11n Joe McGee (Johnsom) 4 2 2 1% 1 Won ving £ by Aloha-Pink > ran. Duke of York e m le; Speculation stakes: eight Key st 3 G (Knight) 2 King Eric- a3 plechas Jockey. St. % Fin : 3.81n 8 n i 3 : 2 1 3 5 3n £ A . 21 1t good. Won driving 2 b.g by Carlsbad- - e A ea Cornwall 168, Com- - K 3 io7, v Dance 103, « 0 ¥ ¢ v ! turlongs, purse key. St. % 13 $ 2.2 M HAWTHORNE SELECTIONS. By Inter Ocean. First race—My Gem, Lanark, In- structor. Second race—The Kentuckian, Sar- dine, Father Wentker. Third race—The Giver, Glassful, Hargis. Fourth race—John McGurk, Judge Himes, Bondage. Fifth race—Floyd K, Serge, Mam- | selle. Sixth race—Big Ben, Incubator, Ethylene. ————————— LOCAL TENNIS PLAYER DISPLAYS FINE FORM R. G. Hunt Defeats F. J. Hill of Omaha at Middle Western Tournament. OMAHA, Neb., Aug. 17.—R. G. Hunt of San Francisco Cisplayed the finest form of the day’s games in the opening of the » A the Chicagc Falette 112, Mineola 112, { a furlong, the 3 i Middle Western tennis tournament here £ e this morning. He defeated his opponent, t F. J. Hill, Omaba. . 85, Easy St 104, The score by points: SARATOGA SELECTIONS. Egngc s ""2'1"04'0";5?{" e New York Telegraph Hunt—4, 4, 3, 4, 4, 6, 2, +-31-6, e e —Castalian, Ingold,| wm—o, 2 5 1, 2 4 4, 0182 Claude Hunts play was watched with the Eecond race—Choate, True greatest interest by the players in the Albsny Girl. cere pament, and the general consensus of jon was that he did not exert himself He played a graceful game, using strokes and placing marvelously w His cross court strokes and back hand strokes were especiaily fine. He seemed to have little trouble in passing Hill at the net and returned almost every- thing put into his court. Hill’s points were gained mostly on net and out ball Other prominent players winning to-day were Sheldon, Kansas City: Fletcher, Gales- GRAND CIRCUIT WINNERS. :anz},I Hopkins, Chicago; Dr. Van Camp, - Omaha. John Taylor Takes the Hiram Wood- | OMAHA, Neb., Aug. 17.—Hunt, this af- Tuff Trotting Stake | ternoon, beat Van Camp of Omaha, 6-0; ™ wHRng 4 6-1. He is slated for winner of the tour- NEW YORK, Aug. 17.—The Grand Cir-| pament. meeting began at Brighton | e e ———— with ideal racing weather, | Whatcom Club Accepts the Offer. nce of 6000 spectators and “1 WHATCOM, Wash.,, Aug. 17.—At a )gramme. Summary: | meeting of the directors of the Whatcom 1 $5000 stake, 2:20 cl 3 baseball club to-night it was decided to | accept the offer of President Lucas of | the Pacific National League to take | Helena's place provided this city be al- lowed to take only those players of that team which it desires. It is stated that Whatcom has sufficlent money in fits treasury to guarantee that it will finish the season. —— e —— Clifford and Queenan Draw. Th race—Mineola, tesee, Testimony. Fourth race—Irish Lad, Hermis, Africander. Fifth race—Golden Drop, Adbell, Yellow Hammer. Sixth race—Sweet Alice, Mosketo, Partnership. Grand Vi- | to pl several second heats in i Horace 'W. Wilson, Sen- ¢ Jr.. Katrinka K, Nick- e also started. $1000—Major C won the sec- 2:0%; Frank Wilson won 00%. Kiowa and Direct L purse $1000; one and an Nonnemie won in 2:26%. Bernado, Page Hal and X, 1500—Rythmic | OGDEN, Utah, Aug. 17.—Jack Clifford e $age00, 3:07H. | of California and Perry Queenan of e © Prince of Orange, Dan se:me fought twenty rounds to a draw und Susie J aiso started before a large crowd in the opera house 2:00 clase pacing. purse $1000, mile dash— Prince Alert won In 203, Knox King, Harolg | Dere tomight. = === H Dan R also started e r————— Racing at The Meadows. FTLE, Wash, Aug. 17.—Results at The Americans Fire Upon Chinese. HONGKONG, Aug. 17.—The rioting which recently occurred st Fat Han, six miles from Canton, has spread to towns along the rallroad. The American en- gineers at work on the road have fired at the rioters. Several casualties are re- ported. @nd @ half furlongs—Aurors B won, 1 second, Barney Owens II third. Time, forionss—Brown Prince won, Troy. sec- 1 third. Time, 1:14. —Willlam ¥ won, Monday second, i -Burdosk half ‘furlongs—Bu won, Berendos third. Time, and & balf furlongs—Judge Voorhies Veterano Second Meetas spimd Time, PESPIRREICIP ey CHAMONIX, France, ‘Aug. 17.—Seven tour- ists, it was sonounced to-day, were kilied recently while attempting to climb the Aigull- les Gricz, behind Mont Blanc, on the Cour- mayeur side of the mountain me and a quarter miles, CENE Qj’W Qo V&S 788 FLSCHERS w I am. 1 first cau t the ear of the public on a cart im. Hyde Park, to the blaring of brass bands, and this not at all as a reluctant sacrifice of pri to political necessity, ac but because, i all dramatists and mimes of genuine vocation, I am a nat- ural-born mountebank.” So Shaw, in his filuminative preface to the “Three Pi for Puritans,” of which the first, “The Devil's Disciple,” was presented by Henry Miller, Margaret Anglin and their com- last nigkt at the Columbia Theater. or in spite of all temptations to be- long to other nations, we have again among us those eminently weicome play- ers. How welcome, last night's reception simply proved over again. These two have a unique niche in the local play-goer's heart. They are peculiarly our own, and we love ‘em for it, faults and all. The winsome Anglin first found herselt famous here, and "twill be a far day when Miller is forgotten in San Francisco. One felt it right friendly, but only true, when Miller said his and Miss Angin's “how- dye-dos,” for him to say that last night was a home-coming for them, and that the good-bye to be said in five weeks would be inconspicuously cheerful. But the house, filled to its last seat and more stopped Mr. Shaw's “‘brass band” for se eral measures when Miss Anglin came in, grace itself In her Puritan browns. The appearance of Henry Miiler was the signal for another intermeszzo, and audience did its best to compel a curtain speech at the time Shaw closes his first act. It was a welcome to be proud of, un-Columbian quite in its frank noise, and the actors surely enjoyed It. At least I saw Miss Anglin's pretty mouth puckered for a ‘‘good” cry over it! Subtract the personal popularity of the chief players and one still finds in “The Devil's Disciple” a play shrewdly inter- esting, of a ripe piquancy and rare flavor. ‘The “brass band” 1s over it all, but how well it is handled! One minds not at all— any more than in an Oscar Wilde play— that the characters are simply the mouth- pieces of the author, that the Presbyterian minister preaches “The Quintessence of Ibsenism”’; that General Burgoyne voices —in the Shaw manner, wholly delicious— | the witty Irishman’s opinion of British | stupidity; that’Dick Dudgeon's gospel is | Shaw's creed. The whole thing is posed, but how excellently posed! The char- | acters are blocked in with a frank the- atricalism that is productive of nothing but joy, and one takes in even tHe time- worn dispatch at the foot of the scaffold | with a lovely and wholesome acceptance. | Mechanically the play is superbly built | and it succeeds in leaving, in its own | peculiar fashion, just the impression Shaw | desired to convey. Puritanism has never | been more siyly and daringly pilloried, | nor the colonial war more acutely rid- | iculed. The audience was delightfully re- sponsive. Mrs. Dudgeon's vicious puri- tanism, as she attacks the poor fllegiti- mate left in her keeping, immediately struck the audience on its humorous spot, and from there until the end of the play there was a continuous gurgle. The dia- logue, being Shaw’s, could not do other than scintillate. That 1is where it so heavily loses in realism and one so heav- ly gains in enjoyment. Miller has the part of the *“devil's dis- ciple,”” Dick Dudgeon, and Shaw's hero. His conception has fully the gay noncha- lance of the character, its skin deep cyn- jeism, its infrequent tenderness. A little, perhaps, Mr. Miller fails In conveying the bigness of the fellow’s personality, a lit- tle, perhaps, on the visionary and idealis- tic side of the character. Shaw has not given him the chance as the part Sydney Carton gave him, too, but one still feels that there are outlines a little fuller than the actor has filled, colors a little richer than he has painted. But 'tis a great part, finely played. and Mr. Miller's ad- mirers must by no means miss him in ft, As Judith, the minister's wife, who falls from sudden hate into love for the village scapegrace, Miss Anglin has a highly con- genial part. Rather cruelly Shaw has painted the lady, with her tiny ideals, her worship of distinction, her various con- ventionalities and appalling lack of hu- mor, but Miss Anglin wins a large suc- cess in the part. The Purh.;!;mn.m are ly W’ way. Mr. Morton Selten's General Burgoyne is not wholly convincing. It is a portrait in little of that fastidious aristocrat, HEY tell me that So-and-So, 1 é é who does not write prefaces to his plays, is no charlatan. the | (22 2= + SCENES FROM TWO OFFER- INGS FOR THE WEEK, AND TWO FAVORITE:! B i rightly keyed, but not enough of it. Hel has not the superb manner, the “grand | air’” with which one credits this exiled | Chesterfield, but he still delivers the Bur- goyne witticisms with right proper point | and flavor. Miss Alice Wander's Mrs. Dudgeon was an excellent plece of work, and the An- thony Anderson of George S. Titheradge well filled out the demands of that rather exacting part. Claire Kulp, of the rest, was charmingly simple and natural as| Essle. 1t being a Miller production, nothing, of | course, need be said of the mise en scene, and “The Devil's Disciple’” remains among those things that must not be missed. BLANCHE PARTINGTON. Fischer’s. Chairs had to be provided for the over- flow at Fischer's Theater last night and many had to be turned away. The double bill, “Quo Vass Iss” and “The Big Little Princess,” continues a potent attraction and the funmakers, Kolb, Dill, Bernard, | Blake and Hermsen, are, if anything, fun- nier than ever, especially in “The Big Little Princess.” Bernard as the school- mistress is inimitable and his song, “Mrs. Pinchin’s Boarding School,” had to be re- peated several times. Miss Maude Amber is very charming ‘as Sarah Crude, the fa- vorite pupll, and her song, “De Bugaboo Man,” is exquisitely rendered. Blake and Dill are very funny in their nursery rhymes. Flossie Hope and Gertie Emer- son, with their twinkling feet, are not the least attractive feature of the show. They have a coon song and dance, “You Am De One,” and it delighted the audience, Miss ‘Eleanor Jenkins sings “There’'s Nobody Just Like You” in “Quo Vass Iss” very sweetly. The choruses are well rendered and the Indian dance is full of grace and charm, California. “Shenandoah,” with its fanfare of trumpets, its clash of arms and its charming love scenes, was presented suc- cessfully at the California last night. The house was crowded to the limit, and the audience was enthusiastic throughout the performance. Southern and patriotic airs by the orchestra were applauded. Central. The Central Theater scored a hit last night with its special Grand Army week attraction, *‘Cumberland, '61L,” a thrilling military play based on incidents of the Civil War. The house was crowded and in the audience many gray haired, blue coated veterans were in evidence. The play is patriotic and the plot replete with dramatic power, while the climaxes arouse the andience to enthusiasm. The scenery of ‘“Cumberland, 61" is pictu- resque, giving views of West Point on the Hudson and of the grand and rugged mountains of old Kentucky. The orch tral music, too, is a feature, all the American Dpatriotic alrs and the battle marches of North and South being ren- dered. Herschel Mayall, as the West Point cadet from Kentucky who espouses the Union cause and goes South with the boys in blue, and whose love for a Cumberland Mountain girl leads him be- yond the lines and into trying times in a fastness of the enemy, gave an impersonation that was cleverly con- vincing snd that won him approbation. Miss Eugenie Thais Lawton as the Ken- ’ Mvith a sentimental ballad. Applause was + LEANOR MERRON made good to | San Francisco last evening on her clatm which appears on the Alca- zar Theater programme, - that | “The Dairy Farm,” the play in| which Edwards Davis made his initial’ bow to the public as a prufessional!r thespian, *“is pure, sweet and whole- | some.” It is more than that for it is also interesting. Strongly it reminds one of “Hazel Kirke,' famous bn the stage for phenomenally long runs of continu- ous favor, especially in the character of Squire Hurley, the man of “iron will."” It outdoes ‘““Uncle Tom's Cabip” in the outrages that it depicts as having been perpetrated on one particular black man who is a refugee slavé, and is betrayed to his former servitude when in the hands of a supposed friend who is to conduct him to Canada. This the black man fin- | | ally revenges by a murder. No one will say that *“The Dairy Farm™ is ofiginal in any particular, but it was | cleverly compiled from a great amount | of avallable material of proved value in| affecting the risibilities and command- ing the tears of audiences, and the result is that it stands forth with every prom- ise of being a strong and continued suc- cess. | It is sweet and pure and filled with laughter, the laughter being due about! equally to the skill of the playwright and of the very clever work that marked | its production at the Alcazar. | No one will accuse the play writer of‘ not furnishing enough material, for the | play was not done until hard upon mid- | night. This was due to long waits be- tween scenes, incidental to the first pro- | duction, but had the waits been shorter the play would have filled up three hours or more. A The staging was all that the manage- ment advertised. There were live fowls, a live horse, a very falr stage snowstorm, | jingling bells to indicate the arrival of | Slelghs for the “'squire’s” merry-making | on Christmas eve, at least two score of people on the stage at once, moonlight | enough to seem real in a courtship scene | and to send romantic thrills through the | callow minded, a village street so ar-| ranged that the peddler’s cart is driven realistically through it, and other details | were provided to give excellent semblance | of reality. It was worth all the money | expended on its production and all the | money an audlence that crowded the | house paid to see it. There was great curiosity to see the ex- preacher, Edwards Davis, who/ ap- peared for the first time in this city be- | fore a goodly number of people who had | heard him in the pulpit. He was the ostensible hero of the play, lover, abo- fon orator, husband of the heroine, rescuer of the squire, who, according to a stage idea as old as the history of the drama itself, is about to be sold out on foreclosure Of mortgage. The truth is that Davis made a dignified figure for the most part. There were some manner- isms that were reminiscent of pulpit ora- tory, but the general effect of his work was'good. He was successful beyond or- dinary expectation' and never awkward. He evidently has enough dramatic ability to make a very much stronger showing with greater experience. Hardly too much can be said in favor of Henry D. Byers as Squire Hurley. The same praise may be given to Tony West as Joel Whit- beck, the Yankee peddler, whose clever- ness had a tang to it. Excellertly well also did Marle Howe, Oza Waldorp, Juliet Crosby, Helen Hartley and Herbert Ash- ton. Clarence Baker does a nice turn liberal to the end. The indications all were that in “The Dairy Farm” the Al- cazar has picked a winner. @ il @ tucky belle whose love of a Union hero overcomes her sentiment for the South looked and acted the part charmingly. Miss Lawton is one of the clever and beautiful daughters of the Blue Grass State. Henry Shumer had the thankless role of a consclenceless Southern colonel, an officer who lacked the chivalry pro- verblal of the South, and George P. ‘Webster gave an effectlve Dick Kansett, a cadet with a history and an oath of vengeance. George Nicholls played well the part of the sturdy mountaineer who CORBETT PLANG IS5 MAE DAY - T0 LEAVE GITY TAKES HANDIGAP |Leads From Start to Finish in Kinloch Event. Will Appear in Mono- logue at Highland Park. Plans for the Featherweight}Mafz}lda Beats Jehane by a | on the streets. | tumes are handsome in the extreme. | the Campbell brothers, glers, and Mexias and Mexias, a clown | harbors a vendetta against the family of the hero. He Is the father of the heroine and he strikes at the Union hero's life in the most startling scene of the drama, on a bridge which has been set afire to prevent the s Championship Battle | in October. —_— Ex-Champion James J. Corbett will | leave to-morrow night for St. Louls, where he will appear in his monologue af Highland Park. From there he will go to Boston, where he will appear. He has al- ready many weeks' engagements booked in advance. “Young Corbett’” has sent $1500 out to Harry Corbett to bind his fight with Ben Jordan, the English pugilist, for the featherwelght champlonship of the world, | The battle will take place in this city in October and is sure to draw a crowd. The mill will be under the auspices of the San Francisco Athletic Club. The cnly objection that “Young Corbett” bhas to the fight s the fact that 1t will iake place here in October and at that time the race horse men wiN not all be out here. Corbett would like to have his race track friends gathered round the ringside when the event comes off. “Jud” Gibbs has weight Champion Gans and Joe Walcott, offering them a liberal purse if they will fight before the S8an Mateo Athletic Club at Colma. This athletic club has in course of construction a large pavilion capable of seating 10,000 spectators. G'bbs is manager of the club. [ e e ] ] Ernest Howell, Millar Bacon, Genevieve Kane and Myrtle Vane contribute a pret- ty comedy element to the play. “Cum- berland, '61” will draw good houses all the week. Orpheum. Elfie Fay, who winds up the programme | at the Orpheum this week, is termed “the | craziest soubrette on the American stage.” | She might more aptiy be called the fun- niest, for she does stunts that would bring shouts of laughter from a chronic dys- peptic, and she does them in a manner that shows that aside from her ‘“‘crazy” antics she is a little lady who possesses talent enough to place her far ahead of | many so-called star comedfennes. Tivoli. De Koven's “Highwayman mille d’Arville and Arthur in the leading roles, still with Ca- Cunningham pleases at the Tivoli, and the opening night of the final | | week drew as large a house as the first, notwithstanding the counter attractions of the electric lights and the old soldiers Miss d'Arville was in good voice last night and g with a spirit and sweetness that wc continued cores. Edwin Stevens, the Foxy of the opera, was in his best vein and | kept the audlence convulsed with merri- ment. Stevens’ humor is spontaneous and is never overdone. Ferris Hartman as Lord Kilkenny was an frresistible cari- cature of an Irishman and kept the au- dience in a roar. With Webb and Annie Myers added to these there is no lack of comic talent In the Tivoli eompany. Grand Opera-House. “In Harvard” is by all odds the best burlesque production that has been pro duced at the Grand Opera-house, and that is saying a great 'deal. The finale of the second act, “College Days,” is a revela- tion both in color and motion an‘ the co: In fact the piece abounds in beautiful effects and lavish scenic environment. Cheridah Simpson’s piano specialty, In which she imitates a music box and an autoharp, | 1s clevely executed and her singing seems to improve with a second hearing. Ray- mond and Caverly have some amusing parodies and both comedians work hard | to insure the success of the play, which began its second week last night. Ross and Anna Wilks song and dance specialty entitled *The Red Carnation,” and Harold Crane makes a hit with his coster songs. Louisc Moore is seen and heard to advantage in “Rain- bows Follow After Rain,” in which she is assisted by the entire chorus of pretty girls. Julie Cotte and Winifred Gordon give effective aid in the song “The Troubles of the Reuben and the Maid.” Chutes. Hodges and Launchmere, a clever col- ored couple, made a great hit at both performances at the Chutes yesterday. Others on a capital programme we: Jessle Dale, the young barytone, in illus- trated songs; Bandy and Wilson, a danc- ing duo; Harry Baker, a novelty musician and his dog. The animatoscope showed many amusing moving pictures. The amateurs will appear on Thursday night. —————————————— Beekeepars to Meet at Los Angeles. LOS ANGELES, Aug. 17.—Delegate: are arriving to-day for the opening ses- sion of the National Beekeepers' Assocl- ation, which will convene here to-morrow. The attendance of bee men is expected to be unusually large. The first day of the convention will be devoted to sight- seeing and a public reception to delegates in the evening at which welcoming ad- dresses will be made by Mayor Snyder, 0. T. Andrews, representing the Califor- nia association, and Professor Cook of Claremont. e For every happy individual there are a dozen who are envious. telegraphed Light- | en- | Quiller | Budd | have a pleasing | Indian club jug- | Nose in Race for i Youngsters. Special Dispatch to The Call. ST. LOUIS, Aug. 17.—Miss Mae Day, | the even money favorite, won the fourth | event at Kinloch Park- this afternoon in handy fashion. She jumped into the lead at the start and maintained it through- out, winning by, a half length. Mafalda won the third race by a nose from Jehane, after a vigorous ride through the stretch. Weather clear, track fast. Summary: FIRST RACE—Four and a haif furlongs; purse | Betting. Horse. ¥ 2 to 1—Toupee, 115 tart good. driving. s br. c. by Tenny-Floree. Our_Lillie 113, Turrando la vale 115, Griet 115, Ario 113, 118, Hogarth 115, also ran SECOND RACE- ix furlongs; selling: Betting. Horse. Weight Jockey. St. % Fin. 7 to 1—Irene Mac, 100 (Mclntyre).10 5 12 6.to 5—Miss Gould, 100 (Higgins).. 4 4 2 1n 8 to 1—Aylmer Bruce, 100 (Bridwh) 1 1 3 6 Time, 1:15. Start good. Won easily, Win- ner, H. Dernham's b, f. by His Highness-Kar~ ma’ Kitty Cut a Dash 104, Rejoice 104, Mag- hon! 95, Bisuka 95, Betmuda 95, Style 100, Sil- | ver Fringe 100. Redoia 100, Lexington Bess 100, also ram. | _ THIRD RACE—Five furlongs; purse: | Betting. Horse, Weight, Jockey. St. % Fi. to 1—Mafalda, 108 (Austin).....2 2 11 7 to 2—Jehane, 98 (Bridewell).... 8 1 2 11§ | 5 to 2—Mag Nolin, 108 (Watson).. 4 4 35 Time, 1:01%. Start good. Won driving. Winner, E. P_Hayes' b, Interrogation 103, F f. by Russell-Soprano. 98, also ran, 6 to 1—Taby Tt | _Time, 1:41%. o | Winner, W. W. Elliott's br. m. by Hermence- Aala_Lalla. Macy 108, Lady Strathmore 98, iJ»-. Lesser 107, also ran. | FIFTH RACE-Mile and seventy wards, | selling: | Betting. Horse. Weight. Jockey. St. % Fin. | "4 to I—Dr. Hart, 103 (Sheehan).. 1 2 14 | 20 to 1—Lynch, 98 (Perk 412h | 18 to 1—Alborac, 97 (Me o 432 | _Time, 1:47%. Start von__easily. Winner, M. Goldblatt's b. g by Hart Wallac Florence Shanks, Menace 105, Tony Lepping 100, W Canyon 97, Blanco 98, Murmur 92, also ran. SIXTH RACE—One and an eighth miles, sell- % Jockey. St Fin. to 1—Baronet, Smith). 4 12 1—Tickful —Jena, 104 (Sheebam) .8 e Start poor. Won easily. Win- F. Danlels & Co.'s ch. h. by Prince oy ttle Tag. Whitmore 99, Irving Mayor 104, Whaleback 104, Mission 104, Geldone 102, Chandoo 105, Dawson 107, Terra Incognita 99, 02, Little Lot also ran. KINLOCH PARK ENTRIES. Weather clear; track am, 3 - x half furlonzs, selling— tdara 100, Eliza Cook 105, Worthington. 110, Dave 105, Legation 100, Water Crossmolina Temptress 100, selling— 105, Stub Irby Ben- Budweiser 95, King 100, Howard P 100, 18 six furlongs, purse, Tangent 118, Silver 109, Arthur 100 Ros | Mimo 111, ith 100. Third race, a half_furlongs, selling— Reducer 107, Una Price 105, One More 107, Ladas 110, Miss Guido Tenny Belle 100, Sweet Dream 106 Northern Spy 110, Macbeth 107, 95, Lou Clieveden 100, Fugurtha Fourth race, six furiongs, handicap, purse— Fenian 96, Ben Adkins 100, Wreath of Ivy 101, Hugh McGowan 99, Old Stone 104, Rainland | 119. | " Fifth race, seven and a half furlcngs, purse —Alfio 101, Benson Caldwell 106, Nearest 110, Mallory 101, Hottentot 9. Stxth race, one mile and sevesy yards, sell- ing—Noweta 91, Stand Pat 96, Pourquol Pas 86_ Hilee 106, Montana Peeress 91, Helen Print 102, Irish Jewel 105, W. B. Gates 106. KINLOCH PARK SELECYITONS. By the New York Telegraph. First race—Temptress, Dave Som- ers, Water Edge. Second race—King Rose, Griffith, Lacache. Third race—Sweet Dream, Beth, Fugurtha. Fourth race — Hugh McGowan, | Wreath of Ivy, Old Stone. Fifth race—Nearest, Alflo, lory. Sixth race—Pourquoi Pas, Stand Pat, Irish Jewel. — e RUSSIAN TROOPS FIRE INTO MOB OF STRIKERS Fourteen Men Are Killed and at Least One Hundred Are ‘Wounded. LONDON, Aug. 15.—Fourteen strikers were killed and 100 to 13 wounded In a military onslaught which occurred in the vicinity of Kieff as late as August 11, ac- cording to a Russian corresj ondent of the Harry Mac- Mal- Times. The troops, he says, fired sev- eral volleys into the strikers at close quarters. The correspondent regards this occur- rence as a significant comment on the officially inspired reports that matters had resumed their normal aspect in the disturbed distrtcts of Southern Russia. —_————————— A lawyer may be good natured even in cross-examination. 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