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THE EVENING WORLD, F SYS JAS. RL REENE, UWNER OF COLIN Broken Down Racer Was Greatest Horse in America, the Big Broker Declares—Thirteenth Race, Like Sysonby’s, Was Hoodoo, The Fatai “Thirteen” in the Turt Careers of Keene’s Great Racers Colin's Victories. 1—Belmont, Sweepstakes Belmont, fonal Stallion, 3—Belmont, Eclipse. 4-Coney Island, Great Trial, 5—Brighton Junior. 6—Saratoga Special. 7-Saratoga, Grand Union Syaonby’s Victories. 1-Brighton Beach Sweopstakes. %4Brighton Junior. $Seratogo, Fiash Stakes. @-Garatogal Special. 6—Gravesend, Junior Champton. @Coney Island, Tidal %-Coney Island, Commonwealth. $Coney Island, Realization. $-Coney Island, Futurity. Brighton, Troquots. ®—Coney Island, Flatbush. W-Brighton Derby. 10-Brighton, Produce. U—Saratoga, Great Republic. M—Belmont, Matron I—Coney Island, Century. 12—-Belmont, Champagne. 18—Coney Island, Champion. 13-Belmont, Withers. James R. Keene, who has successively lost by death or accident the services of such great race horses as Domino, Commando, Peter Pan, Superman and Sysonby, was informed this afternoon by Dr. McCul- Jough, a veterinary, that Colin will never be able to race again. This report from the specialist confirms the opinion of Trainer Rowe and others that the great race horse's breakdown yesterday would prove to be permanent. Race trac the rest of his days Colin will 1 'stock farm. The veteran sports: Evening World rooms in the Waldorf. deeply affected over the Colin. patrons will never see their idol on the track again. For seen by an} of Colin more deeply than he felt the day at uis| death of Sysonsby. This ts because he 1. He was | bred Colin himself, while Sysonby was dition of | bought. The old sportsman entortains toward Colin @ feeling of affection akin an “It is a blue day he sald, to th: felt by a father for a child. sadly. “I hoped that the| Mr. Keene owned Domino, Colin's attention of Row in would grandsire, and Commando, his aire. recover, but a messa is morn-| Seldom does it fall to the fortune of a ing stl broken | horseman to own tn succession suoh a down, and I i ay begun tomake trio of throughbreds. Undoubtedly arrangements to send him to my farm) some n'g get in the stud will in- | herit make in Kentucky. “Of course, speed and courage sufMctent to I am bitterly dlsappoint- another generation of the Domine ttached to 1 was greatly Colin, | strain famous. who is very intellig nd playful. I Sysonby was by tmported Melton-Op- expected & t nm him this/time. Mr. Keene bought Optime with year, foal at a sale at Madison Square Gar- The Greatest Horse in America. j|den and shipped her to Castleton Stud “I am going down see him this |Farm, his piace tu Kentucky. There Sy- | @fternoon, and I dread the trip. sonby was foaled a short time later. He “At the time of his breakdown Colin | did not begin w attract Mr. Keene's at- was the greate ace horse in Amert- | te! tion until his first start as a two. 1 ca h year-old. ca. He could bent every horse he ever Wh Coin it was different. Mr. met without extending himself. Most Keene watched his baby antics when of his races were mere gallops for he ran by the side of his dam over the ‘hin. pastures of blue grass. He v: ed im 5 every day when he was finally shipped It is a pecullar coincidence that Sy- sonby died after winning thirteen races and Colin broke down after establishing the same record. The hocdoc number has twice interfered in two years with James R. Keene's champions. As between Colin and Syso: the former stands out as the greater race to the race tracks and placed in tral ing for @ career as a race horse. krowth an been wat | muster. Never Can Race Again. It ts hard to tell just how badly Colin 4s injured. Mr, Rowe is extremely ¢ yout the condition of the horse and refuses to allow any one outside the ed by the ¢ horse. He never took another horse's | 2nd rofuses to Milo’ say ore. stable attenda nim. Gust. In his thirteen she led his) "Dr Sheppard, the veterinarian who Geld. Sysonby's long string of victories! attended Syfonby, has not yet been twas marred by two ortunes, Ha| called to look at Colin. Some of the ran third in the Futurity at Shoopshead | {Miners say they, saw Colin eating grass tnelc nd the Keene ata- Bay tn 194. In this race had the morning and that outside position, got off badly apd gave| ar to be very lame fen pounds to the winner Artful, His may be able to walt and true form was not displayed. HE Pe pe EG Once In Dead Heat. ne wile belenippean cs 4 vith ng of | recing fleld another thoi a few days. Colin from the ughbred from In 1906 at Belmont Park Sysonby ran a ead heat with O. L. Richards’s Race Hing in the Metropolitan Handicap.| the Keeno stable has stepped on the However, the loss of the race could not | acene and May De) deatined ft sane the fe property charged to Sysonby. Shaw| was in the saddle and allowed his mount to run out. As a two-yeur-old Sysonby won $39,- @3. His grentest successes were made those of hig eCeSSOTR is ts Celt ther of Colin, ¥ nformation do all over, te destined in his three-yea: rm. Poor Colin | Was Maid ‘won $131, a two-year-old. His aU ymanis) winnings as a three-year-old would As qa two-year-old Celt started only have been much heavier, ib ime out he was beaten He was engaged for all the big events |t rhe nought this season. The value of the stukes | ¥ aggregated over $200,000. s (: he gave the best aining a decisive reason to think that he woul withdrew him annexed the 3 . AUS this season was a better horse than any « ji time yester- racing in this country. Only a ial days ago Mr. Keene said he bellev i AnaEe Colin would win every race in w kreat he started bs and! ‘an i ; an He is a candidate for the Keono fee 6 _breal a to be run Monday This is a snap-shot of the competent workers who start out of a morning to accept the positions WORLD have secured. Twenty-five Cents for a 12-Word Adver- tisement is All That Most of Them Pay. ive in the peace and quiet of the Keene | evelopment of Colin have | SUCH A NIGHT! FREEPORT WILL ~ NBER FORET I Town in Wild Tangle When Fire Drill and Flames’ Red Glare Got All A-Going. 'SURPRISE WAS PLANNED Prize Horse Drops Dead When Everybody Gets Bunched— Refreshments After. Accommodating friends and subscrib- jers arriving to-day by hired hack and | the morning train from Freeport in- formed our reporter of a series of most exciting happenings which eventuated last night in that enterprising and | growing sister community over on Long Island. By all acoounts it must have been one of the galasrat nights, if not the mo: gala, that Freeport has had tn many eons. Hardly a prominent family was remaining in {ts or their domicile. Down jet the First Presbyterian Church the flock ‘vere installing the Rev. Charles | Herbert Scholey as rector. | At the other ohurch in the town. [they were holding a business meeting. Scores of the fitting representatives of |Freeport’s Ueauty and chivalry had assembled at the Opera-House where | the Musical Mumms—Minnie and Maxie j assisted moving pictures and an illustrated baritone dress suit, were presenting an enter. tainment appealing to the most ch |and calculated not to bring the blush of shame to the cheek of the most fastidious. Finally Fire Oblef of the Fire Depart- |ment Archer B. Watlace had called | dress rehearsal of his men in that open | space down back of the livery barn. So ‘it oan well be understood that all Free- | port was agog by 830 o'clock P. M. | Never Such a Nioht. But this was not all, Seldom has the | neighboring community known a night | fraught with such excitement. Just | when the festivaltties at the Opera- | House were at their height, the Must- cal Mumms being engaged in render ling “Oh, Listen to the Mocking Bird, | |tor the Mocking Bird ts Singing In the |Wwildwood, Ob, Hally,"" on the xylo- phone !n a manner certain to win appleause from the most discriminat- ing art critic and music true lover; just when the Presbyterian congregation and |the other one were busy, a wild alarm rang out upon the alr, and simultane- | ously or immediately preceding this the western horizon was lit with a baleful glare as if the fire flend were licking out his flaming tongues bent upon de- |atruotion, even though some hapless soul might be pent up Ike rats in a |trap, surrounded on every side by the devastating element. space of the fewest imaginable num- lber of moments hundreds of men, women and children, hired girls and others, were po = rough th va ous str bound for the scene o: conflagri The Opera House was well nigh deserted, only the Janitor and formers remaining. The sting of the other congregation stically broken up by so many members hurriedly getting their hats and departing. 18 r the Red Demon. lat the scene a disap- ted all, It was merely made with several of ef Wallace gc nis men in pol: a large bonfire those packing crates by for the purpose of dr! the art of fighting and conquering the red demon—i. e,, fire. The ladles were enjoying a general the discomfture of the others, hat moment n from tne laugh al when at other ala environs of at once all hands began to © hat direction as rapidly as 7 r afoot or Presty lath and 1 ing. t Crock: 1 and Ready npanies a tree and mussed Tulley, whose first 1 get, who hap: pass ‘the tree at as did. Horse Dropped Dead The was Ul y r haraty las : when steame the dead heart. ‘Th a blue r a den, ar longed. of t Freepo' When the crowd at will, and t rope acro! forward ment mpting col perously responled was hat Ittnge him $7. owning his own| Our informants state that within the| { show thi y ey wore on Many har and feeling ran high for a eventually Quiet was rest 1 to the| second alarm w ed_and the Srasbyterians we th their been twice terrupted Still Another Surorise at yet stil awaited eeport. There 1 nd Jarm ad sel by Mrs efficient Fire C BALL CHORE, “LONG MISSING ARE OUND DEA |Demented Mother Supposed to Have Killed Both and Buried Them. (Spe BROCKTO. bodies of the fa) to The Evening World.) Mass, May 2.—The childre who disappeared n vsteriously early cember afte: Mrs. Mary Bail, home, were fo: a buried fn a id here to-day. The body ¢ Thomas Bal Jeeven-vear-old son, was f Jana that of his sister, Mary Grace Ball, eight years old. a short distance away. At the time of the disappearancee of the children the mother was lost to her relatives and friends for several days When she was finally discovered wan- dering about she was in a deplorable condition. Every effort was made to et from her some Information relative to what she had done with the boy and girl. Police, physicians, relatives and ltriends all tried to get her to speak but the demented woman could remem- ber nothing. After a time she was sent to the insane asylum at Taunton, and the search of several weeks revealed nothing as to the disposition of the children. Recently the search was re- newed. Tt is be were killed by ward tried them. DEATH LETTER FOR Ball st T their mented mother, ad taken them from iat the little ones mother, who after- ~ CHICAGO PRIEST WRITTEN IN BLOOD CHICAGO, May 2.—Rev. Peter J. | O'Callaghan, head of the Paulist order in Chicago and Attorney Francis E. Hinckley have been informed through | jan anonymous letter written in blood and wrapped in crepe that they have | |meen marked for death by mysterious | |enemies, and St. Mary's Church, wa. | bash avenue and Hubbard Court, has ten decided to be blown up hy dyna- mite. The threatening letter was dropped | into the poor box of St. Mary's Church | of which Faher O'Callahan {s pasor. | It was unsigned and unaddressed. On one side was a crudely drawn picure of a skull and crossbone. | Death to the priest and the lawyer was threatened, it Is believed. as the re sult of thetr efforts to obtain a pardon for Herman Billek, under sentence to hang on June 12 tn the Cook County Jatl, on a charge of potsoning six mem- bers of Vreal family. | A chemical analysis proved tha {red fluid In which the letter was written was blood and not red ink, Father O'Callaghan declares that will lay etter before Gov. Deneen the hope that it will induce the Gover- nor to pardon Bi Father -O'Callaghan and Mr. H ley drew a confession from Jerry Vrzel a few months ago that he had given | perjured testimony against Billek at the trial, By this means they succeeded in ‘bringing Billek’s case before the pardon board. The board rat with Go in extraordinary session in Healy's office and examined dence. The gation led t ernor to » Billek and to a the date o execution to June ——_»— CARDINAL LOGUE’S TRIP. Cardinal Logie, Primate of Ire will be the guest of the Rev. M. J. Fitzpatrick, rector of the Mission of the Immaculate \ at Mount Loretto, Staten Island. to-morrow. ardinal Logue has taken a int n the work of the Mission since it was founded by the ather Drumgovle, ‘The Cardinal and his party wil r met by es and Ww Horr ieon th d the dx rill of the 1.2% and ad Judges and ymen of the ¢ > BRIGHTON BEACH PARK WILL OPEN TO-MORROW. Brighton Reach Park, whose popu- larly grows gre wi every pass. | ing year, opens wrrow. ‘The new | Brighton Beac eas train service will begin on S$ Bei, RTS run from Park iow in twenty nutes, The whole par the build has been laid and pike for att Chinese ¥ the most world; Un nton's trained buffaloes, mules &e., are also ding | fe ‘ ne were brought from the AO) Ranch, Biss, Oklahoma Brighton Harts attr audeville 0 Lcompson's Scenic the ink on the | remod- nas been Pain's Fireworks greatly en will open. ¢ ine with greatest displa ttempted. “ the |, |ROOSEVELT ORDERS FLAGS new- | RIDA. ‘DARING LEAP FTW TH FRM A WIND Youths in Safety, Make Landing but Run Into Po- liceman’s Arms. Two youths who are under arrest on | a charge of burglary to-day leaped from the fifth story of an apartment house at No. 1 West One Hundred and Thir- teenth street Jomped from a window In the bedroom of Mrs. Gussie evine, wh Landing on dullding adjoining, until they In descending the st street they walked Into the arms of rolman Allgier, of the East On Hundred and Fourth street station, who handcuffed them together in a Jiffy A few moments after Mrs. ein had gone out this afternoon the janitor of the bullding, Solomon Levine, saw two young men going upstairs. He fol- lowed them and declares they entered Mrs. Elstein’s apartment with a skele- ton key. One of them drew the inside chain on the door Levine hastened downstairs and tele- phoned to Police Headquarters. In @ few moments Alizier had reach the house. He threw his welght against the door and burst {t from Its hinges. In Mrs. Bistein's bedroom he saw two men leaping from a window. They cleared the six-foot areaway in safety and started westward atop the houses. Allgier hesitated about taking the leap. He ran downstairs watching for the fugitives: n he had reached No. 72 he entered that building to get he roof. As 1 story he encountere was absent from the house. the roof of the four-story they fl rea Ned No. 73 to reach the housetops He marched them off to the stat use, where he k from them ch of kevs, ee Canadian bills, worth about $150 anda pat The prisoners said t revh, seventaen vears old, and Frederick Fay, old, no home. Upon. retur Pistein apart ment Allgter fou vo jimmies on t floor of the bedroom. He took charge of the place unt’! return of Mrs, Elstein. HEARSTS GAIN TO DATE IS 73 VOTES Result of Recount of Ballots in Eleven Boxes Opened. ned and Lan Me- R » tar with eleven boxes op d before Jus ase to test May to office, V de a gain of 73 votes. an’s attorneys were not at all cast down by the finding of mis- counts which showed a net gain of 68 votes In eight boxes, and resumed the task to-day with de These were the § fr. Hearst's lawyers ross frauds, and Mr. lawyers, “Why Mdavit of a Hearst district. thats had been counte - bOX 149 vot We over the result to dat of the eight districts was f tly canvased, the apparent s for Hearst it was was based o nthe in. lured void ch had be iF “result Hegericn's rulings « the ball the inspectors and those wh iuted over the ests of Hears watchers. —_—. FORMER SCOUT WITH CODY IS SICK AND DESTITUTE. J. Henderson, Indian Fighter and Civil War Veteran, Goes to Hospital. John J. Henderson, a civil war nda scout with “Buffalo Bil e Indian fighting days, was levue He this aft from K and de house, No. 319 West ‘Twen rect. He is seventy-elght y Five weeks ago he fell and b M. Ball, who has } it nmissione Missourl and nds ‘in service, the ) he carries to-day. Hend r a $10 monthly pensior The ldier’s wife died and he has not son living in South Da- s Henderson is ver yetors look for him to ift pull through, GUNNESS PITCH FORKS BRING $5 EACH AT SALE, (Special to The Evening W LAP Ind., May thousand relic hunters and bu ed over the Gunness farm to- ore-Administrator Fogle began of (irs. Gunn. "® personal Pitchforks brought ea other nsigniticant articles ht many times thelr actual val + dog Pony and other stock on the ror on the afternoon sale ledule. Tt was a veritable plente day on Murder Hill. | ea ee HALF-MASTED FOR LEE. WASHINGTON, May President Roose to-day fssied an order (iat mander-in-ehief of the MAY 29, 1908. i along the | | :| Dr. GIRL HEIRESS OF -LAMPERT'S CASH LOSES I COURT Surrogate Beckett Holds That Undue Intiuence Was cised by Miss Smedley. The will of Hiram ¥. Lamport. one jof the found d first president of the Continental e Insurance Com | | pany, and also first presiden the | Insurance Clerks’ Mutual Benefit ciation, was to-day upset by Surrogat& in Beckett after hearing the testimony a long contest. | Mr. Lamport, le Amagon didn’t ] 5 Sania eanlbe iat a nbea atoll consisting) Auelyiatio) wialivecys| senlouswoverstha|(mare epunsale) fore coren) to, teavee chiefly of personal property and valued {entire affair, for she believes the routing | alone on the street cars.” at about $100,009 of her foe was due to the efficacy of| Stanley ts fat and black and ig more | to “his fri Mary Clementine|Prayer. not to mention, incidentally, a| than six feet tall. He was dressed | smediey, who had nursed him for some | | yeare prior to his death, he left $15,000 ang also appointed her his restdua’ legatee. To James L. Parson, assistant cashler of the Chemical National Bank, who propounded the will, $2,000 in case he should qualify as an executor. Vari- ous relatives got In all $31,000. | The will was contested by Althea Jewell, a grandniece of the testator; ! Clarence C. Lamport, a nephew, nt- teen more remote heirs, on the ground [that it had been secured by the undue influence of } medley. Mr. Lamport was eight when six years old and children before he died. His wt | | ng the probate of the will Beckett says considered all the test jL am convinced that t of the evidenc | clusion pounded n which was exercised oy tine Smedley, and was undue. | “I will refuse }1 will also ref and tot of the 1 the cont Miss 5: | nis side, | paid his | ried the t | other peo took place . in the spa jawye wer: is Property ides n Took Charge of H amounting n r 1, 105, 01 at the Fifth woour a Haten Ir Dr epald “Wha, ordinar ANOTHER ARREST I! EASTON BLACKMAIL CASE. ‘Three on Which Are Held. Chirge x, all 60 from 3 le arrest: was made by Stamford, of the Harle also, arrested Irving ¢ Dawson Str 4 Friedinan pre Magistrate nant | HITCH your wagon to a star said Ralph Waldo Emerson |] when selecting a dentifrice be sure you get the best Lyon’s | RFEOT | Tooth Powder || has been used by people |] of refinement and endorsed by the most eminent dentists in the land for over forty-one years Mrs. Anna Clack, a brawny, middie- |aged woman, made everybody In Deputy | 1" for a vigorous raking over the coals Poiteo Commissioner Hanson's court| 0-day from Mngistrate Cornell in the rock with laughter t when she tola] “est Side Police Court. how she had red the wit# out of going to give you the limit," sal@ Patrolman William J. O'Brien and made| the Magistrate. “and I wish I could jhim run from her apartment like the} give you m It is you and your | plague was afte who died in Parts on| But the redou +n iis post 1 asked him to 60] infurtate Stanley. who gave her se with me. Mrs. Clack’s son told us his| eral blows on the side of the head. {mother was upstairs, and we went up.| ag che prote oe | i 33 COP RIN WHEN — CARROWDY GETS WOMAN PRAYED FULL LINAT OF AND COT A GUN LAW FROM COURT Now W. J. O’Brien Is Waiting to Have Fitting Punishment Meted Out. Magistrate Cornell Sorry He Cannot Impose Still Greater Punishment. James Stanley, a negro rowdy, came him kind who are a disgrace to the city and 82 calibre revolver. O'Brien was before the Deputy Com- | missioner on a pecultar charge of cow ardice. Samuel ‘I. Levy, a little m: Clack, at had had trou- da summons, to serve alone Hashily and ais manner in court was one of defiance. Last night shortly bee fore midnight he was with his wife, Irere, on a Broadway car bound downe town, and which was nearly filled, principally with white women, ~At One Hundred and Fifth street the couple hegan to quarrel, and the attene fon of the passengers was attracted the man’s loud abuse of the woman. e began to cry, and that seemed to who lives next door to Mrs No. ble 15 Beekmen plac with her and sect be was afraid This was on May She had threatened to shoot me,” he said in court, “ao when I saw this po- I was in front and when she took the | gnoulders summons she says. You get out of on the floor of the ca! here. I'm going to get a gun!’ f "Shame!’’ from several of T didn't wait very long, but the COP the women increased his fury, and he I at nt gt er a severe beating. 11 heard | ‘There were 1 men on the car. six but it was a woman, Miss Lillian alk Morsley. of No. 1 West Elghty-fifth 1 5 1 over and remon- 12; de done ou away from my eating that woma ne walked was a man I'd beat y “You go back and your own business I'm going turned to a FORMER CONSUL MILLER DENIES MAE WOOD'S STORY. CARDINAL LOGUE AT FUNERAL MS —-_— Goes to Philadelphia to A Requiem for Monsignor Out of Sorts HAT IS, something is wrong with baby, but we can’t tell ust what it is. All mothers recognize the term by the lassitude, weakness, loss of appetite, inclination to sleep, heavy breathing, and lack of interest, shown by baby. These are the symptoms of sickness. It may be fever, congestiong worms, croup, diphtheria, or scarlatina. Do not lose a minute. Give the child Castoria, It will start the digestive organs into: operation, open the pores of the skin, carry off the Toetid: matter, and drive away the threatened sickn mE f= ' Geauine Castoria always hears the signature of Lehi \ (hearer eS ees DETECTIVE SERVICE. LEANING ISSBBWAT A t What Will Be Done to William Jennings Bryan? REFUL 421-E-48 BUCKBEE 21 PARK: ROW (CARPET LEANING ( To answer this question intelligently one must first know what has “been done” to this worthy gentleman in élections gone by. Ah! That’s just the sort of interesting and valuable information that crowds the 1,000 pages of The World Almanac and Encycloped |= ia for 1908 In fact, there’s scarcely ¢ ypolitical question that this greatest of all ready-reference guides does not answer—in facts and figures! You need this book in your home and in your office. NEWSDEALERS SUPPLY IT AT 25¢ PER COPY iT WILL BE SENT BY MAIL FOR 35c