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ees Danae 4 atest ——a , 4 NENICAN BULLE IN BORDER FHT Marshal at Naco, Ariz. ts Gilbert and Sullivan Opera} Wounded While Federals | Company Will Present and Rebels Clash. | Old Favorite. { NACO, Ariz, March 15.—Fea or ILLOCKER'S well known comic American civilians and troops the M opera, ‘Tie Keggar Student,” | Arisona line here, Gen. Ojeda shortly will be revived at the Casino after 10 o'clock to-day gave the order to evacuate the town With hie men he marched away to the south: | east, leaving his fortifications and fac. ing an enemy twice hie strength. At 11 o'clock a fight was in prog- two miles below the border, Oje- men charge’ to the top of a dismounted and took skirmish | positions. Bracamonte’s group ad- vanced from the south againat the Federal positions. A. A. Hopkins, a deputy-marahal, was | wounded in the leg while standing at| the international line. | The firing was furious from the start. | ‘The Federals at once brought into play three fields pieces and the rebel out- | posts retreated. The Federals pressed | forward, encountering the main ap of Calles's troops. Each force held Its) Position, Bracamonte's group, which | was advancing on Naco at the time of Ojeda’s unexpected departure, then be- @an moving to the ald of Calles. Btartied by the unexpected assault of the Federals, Calles'’s forces at noon began to fall back. Bracamonte's group arrived, but fatied to stem the tide of retreat. The fighting this afternoon wi + aearly three miles south, with Feder doggedly pressing forward. Ojeda had two rapid firers besides his field pieces. i WOOED AND WON BRIDE BY MAIL AND TELEGRAPH. Thomas Cooley of “Westfield, Mass., and Miss Shepard of Chicago ‘Are Married Here. Thomas Rock Cooley of Weatfeld, | Mase. and Miss Helen Sears Shephard, the daughter of Mra. J. A. Shephard, prominent in Chicago society, were mar- | ried this eftrnoon at the Little Church | Around the Corner by the Rev. Dr. Houghton. Following the ceremony A wedding breakfast was celebrated in the! Empire Room of the Waldorf-Astoria. Both the Cooleys and the Shephards | come from Westfield, but some years | age the Shepherd family moved to Chi- | cago. Mr. Cooley and Misa Shephard | hed been childhood sweethearts and thelr wooing was kept up by wire and) mailiafter their separation. ! Me. Cooley, who is twenty-one years 0¥M, proposed by. letter to Mise Shephard, whe is nineteen, wome months ago. The | reguit was to-day's wedding. NADERO'SKNERE CAL GEN. HUERTA “SSE MURDERER (Continued from First Page.) fa the streets of Mexico City was pre- cipitated by the action of a» civilian named Adolfo Daseo, who had a Gov- ‘ ernment position. Mr. Alonso sald Dias and Reyes, after they had been re- leased from prison, marched tr, the pal- aco in the full expectation that the army had passed from Madero's con- trol and that they would be able to take possession of the Government without firing a shot. As a matter of fact, Mr. Alonso sald, the Government officers appeared to be powerless as Dias and Royes ap- proached the Palace. All at once Dasso, who had been watching the ap- Droach of Diaz and Reyes and their cheering escort, jumped out and yelled @ command to the troops on the roof ef the Palace to fire. The order of a civilian was obeyed by the soldiers. Reyes fell dead and the battle was on, TO BE REVIVED AT THE CASINO — on next Saturday night by the Gilbert and Sullivan Opera Company, which ine cludes De Wolf Hopper, Ggorge Mac- Frenne THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, MAROH 15, 1913. ‘AMERICAN HIT BY “BEGGAR STUDENT” ‘Boris Godunoff’’ Ready (EWEY THEATRE Second Novelty of the Season That Now Has Only Five Weeks to Run, by Moussorg- sky, a Russian of the Rus- sians, to Be Sung in Italian Chorus, Representing the People, Makes the Chief In- terest. ‘ariane, Arthur Aldridge, Arthur Cun-) ningham, Blanche DuMeld, Kate Con-| don, Viola Gillette, Anna Wheaton and Louise Barthel, ‘The Menara, Shubert | and W. A. Brady have provided a new Production in every respect. The first American production of the plece in Engtish was given by the MoCall Opera Compary at the Casino on Oct, 6, 1885. | {1 be taken to the | Grand Opera Hous The stock company at the Harlem House will present “The Spend- “Three Weeks” will be the offering of stock company at the Star Theatre, ‘The Gayety Girls’ come to the Col- umbla. | “The Merry Whirl” swings around to the Murray Hill Theatr | Ben Welch brings his burlesquers to) Hurtig & Seamon's. | Miner's Eighth Avenue Theatre will! have “The Whirl of Mirth.” At Miner's People's Theatre will be “The Pacemaker Robiraon's “Crusoe Girl at the Olymptc. VAUDEVILLE ATTRACTIONS. Primrose and Dockstader's Minstrels, with George Primrose and Lew Dock- atader on the “ends,” will be the bie feature at Hainmerstein's, Gertie Van- derbilt and George Moore in @ singing and dancing skit, Toots Paka and her Hawaiians, and the Australian Wood- cutters will also be on the bill. The Colonial will have Maurice and Florence Walton, the well-known dan- cers; Alice Fischer condensed ve sion of “Mrs. Jack," Cliff Gordon, Tay- lor Holmes, “The Little Parisienne,” « tabloid musical comedy: Roy Samuels, the Kinetophone and other attractions. The bill at the Alhambra will include Hermine Shone in ‘The Last Hope,” Peter, the educated money; W. H. Murphy and Blanche Nichols in “The School of Acting,” Van Rensselaer | Wheeler and Florence Mackie in an operetta called “The Key to the Heart"! and the Tom Davies Trio in “Motoring in Mid-Atr.”* For its headliner the Bront Theatre will have Maggie Cline. Other enter- tainers will be Willard Mack and Mar- jorie Rambeau in “Kick In,” Ed Gal- Ingher and Joe Fields in “The Battle of Bay Rum,” Mack and Orth in “The ‘rong Hero,” Ray Dooley’s Metropoll- tan Minstrels and the Kaufmann troupe of cyclists. At Proctor’s Fifth Avenue Theatre will be Edward Davis in "The Kingdom of Destiny," Eddie Leonard and Mabel Rursell in “Dandy Doings Down in Dizle,” Belle Story, Billy Gould and| Belle Ashlyn, the Ten Courtiers and others, ‘The Star Hout” will lead the bill at Proctor’s Twenty-third street Theatre. The chief feature at the Fifty- eighth Street Theatre will be Minerva Courtney in “The Little Shav at the One Hundred and Twenty-ffth Street Theatre Oliver Doud Byron in “The Better Way" will have first piace. Among the features at the Union Square "Theatre will be Dr. Herman's electrical spectacle, “The Window at the Haunted House;” Frank Sheridan in “Blackmail,” Rene Davies in songs, the Seven Marvellous Brocks, gym- nasts; the Primrose Four and Edison's talking pictures, Victor Hugo's “Notre Dame de Paris’ will be seen whl be presented in motion pictu form at tho Regent Theatre. —_———___. NOTES OF THE THEATRES. In @ canvass of 1,415 Britiah actresser ew found in favor of women's suf- frage, 326 against it and 845 indifferent. By absorbing the Empire Circuit, in & deal involving $15,000,000 in theatrical Property and 4,000 persona whore eal- Ties Aggregate $150,000 a week, the Columbia Amusement Company has ob- tained control of the burlesque business Mr. Aloneo personally witnessed sev- eral fruitless asaults made by the loyal Madero troops on the arsenal, where Dias was in control. He declares that a regiment of 800 cavalrymen charged the arsenal! on the evenli.g of Feb. 10, and , that within half an hour only eix men of the regiment remained alive. All the rest, with their horaes, had been cut ¢ pieces by the machine guns. Capt. Arthur Smith of the Monterey had a thrilling experience of his own on this trip. Just as his ship was leav- ing Vera Cruz Gen. Gavira of the Madro forces, upon whose head the revolu- tionists had set a price, came out in a launch and got aboard. The Monterey at once started for Progresso. SHIP'S CAPTAIN SAVES GEN. in the United States and Canada, The following will become vaudeville houses: {Columbia, Murray Hill, Hurtig & Sea- |mon's, now building on One Hundred |and Twenty-Afth strect, People's, Min- er'a Bronx, and the Star, Casino and Empire in Brooklyn, At a meoting of the Playgoers at the | Hotel Astor last night, actors, play- among them, builiing It up step by step after chosing the subject. Gaby Deslya's mother, Mme, Anna Caire, is here. She arrived to-day on j the Kalserin Auguste Victoria, in the revival of “The Geisha," is afterwards going to San Franc and o. wrights and theatregoers wrote a play| ning and * | Alice Zepiil! will sing O Mimosa San | BY SYLVESTER RAWLIN “Rm GODUNOFF” {8 an- nounced for presentation at the Metropolitan Opera House next Wednesday night. The season of twenty-three weeks is within five weeks of its close, yet this is only the second new opera to be offered to the subscribers and to the public. The Philadelphia- Chicago and the Boston Opera Com- panies have given several new thing: @ try-out, but Mr. Gatti-Casazza be- Heves that it is better to revive good old works than to experiment with doubtful new ones. As he said to me recently, it is not so much the question of expense as the amount) of time consumed in preparing & new work that makes a manager pause unless he has a reasonable hope that it will win either artistic, or financial success, or both. Modest Petrovitch Moussorgsky, ® Russian of the Russians, is the com-! poser of “Boris,” for that undoubtedly will be the shortened name by which mont people will call it. To maintain the traditional policy of the Metropoll- tan Opera Company it should be sung In Russian, It won't be. Itallan ts the! text chosen. One might reasonably ask if not in Russian why not in English?! But, let that pass. Mr. Toscanini has; been preparing the work for @ long time and, of course, will conduct it. ‘The costumes and scenery are the ori- ginals designed and painted by the Reasian artist Golovine for the pro- duction at the Paris Grand Opera in 1908, No pains have been spared by Mr. Gatt! to make the production a success. Much of this will depend upon (iullo| Setti’s training of the chorus, for the! “people” are of first importance in this; drama and the characters, save Boris,| are episodic. Skillful chorus master that he Is, Mr. Sett! may be relied upon to have done his part. ABR VNOPSIS OF THE PLOT OF THE DRAMA, “Borts Godunoft” 1s a lyric drama in three acts, including seven scenes, the story taken from the historical novel of the same name by Poushkin. In the operatic version it is fragmentary ana disjolnted. Borls, who was Regent of Russia during the reign of Ivan the ‘Terrible's imbecile son, upon the death of the latter, murders Dimitri, the heir. Remorse drives him to a convent from whioh he ts persuaded by the populace to come out and be crowned. Mean- while a young monk, Gregory, learns from the recording monk, Pimenn of Boris's crime and that the murdered Dimitri and he were of the same age. He runs away and starts @ revolu- tion, pretending that Dimitri was not murdered and that he ‘s Dimitri. Boris, gloomy and depressed, is over- heard in @ confessing soliloquy by Prince Schonisky. Declaring his son, Theodore, the rightful heir to the throne, he dies in his chair, That's a crude outline of the material which probably will give opportunity for a coronation scene that may rival that of —An Opera in Which the | hardt, the accomplished German singer, For Wednesday's Opera j\WAYS INS pa HAMAR SWEAR to compel respect and admiration. Mr. Gattl-Casazza is to be congratulated upon having two such artists in his comp The ery of the Valkyrie at the opening of the second act was a bit trying to Mme, Fremstad's upper notes; imt after that she gave a lovely characterization of the youthful Brunn- hilde. Mme, Gadski sang: .cglinde Deautifully and made of her @ pathetic figure. Carl Braun's Wotan «i not as distine- tive as his Hagen in “Goetterdaemmer ung." his characterization of which 1s unequalled, but it is commanding, Lou-) ise Homer was at er best as Frieda and Waliraute, Jacques Urlus was & fine Stegmund, and Basil Ruysdael was | & good Hunding. ‘The other sisters of | Brunnhilde were Lenora Sparkes, Bella] Alten, Vera Curtis, Rita Fornia, Flor-| ence Mulford, Marie Mattfeld and Lila Robeson, in a ul Valkyrie choir. ELENA GERHARDT, SOLOIST, WITH SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA. Walter Damrosch chose Elena Ger= soloist at the last Friday matineo of the season by his Symphony Orches+ | tra at Aeoltan Hall yesterday. She was | heard in four songs by Wagner, orches- | trated by Fellx Mottl, and in a Hugo Wolf group of songs, to the plano a companiment of that master of the art, Erich Wolff. If Miss Gerhardt had | not already made her place here, she would have established it. by her lovely singing yesterday. Mr, Damrosch directed the orchestra through Beethoven's seventh symphony, Dvorak's “Carneval” overture and the Prelude to the second act of his own) “Cyrano.” The lattér, very well per- formed, aroused a storm of applause, and Mr. Damrosch made Alexander Sa lavsky, his concert master, who played | the solo violin part, take a share of it. MRS. HECKSHER’S CONCERT OF HER OWN COMPOSITIONS. Mrs. Austin Stevens Hecksher, who was Miss Celeste D. Masscy, an ac- comp!ished amateur musiclan, gave & concert of her own compositions at Aeollan Hall last night. The soloists were Florence Hinkle, soprano: Efrem Zimbalist, violinist, and He: > Kronold, ‘cellist. The Symphony Orchestra, con- ducted by Alexandc: Saslavsky, its concert master, not only supported them, but played Mrs. Hecksher's or chestral gulte, “Dances of the Pyre- nees,” an Astatl: dance, and an old French dance. Mr, Zimbalist's number was a suite for violin and plano, “To the Forest," and Mr. Kronold's a + mance for ‘cello and plano, Miss Hinkle ng five songs. If it may not be said that Mrs, Heck- her's compositions held much breadth, or depth, at least they made a show of melody and no little aptness in con- struction, But wasn't it a bit ambl- tious, Mre. Hecksher, to give a whole evening to your own works? How few composers, of any country, could stand such @ tes PUBLIC SCHOOL RECITALS FOR THE COMING WEEK. The Board of Education announces the following lecture recitals for next Meyerbeer's in “Le Prophete.” Adamo Didur w'll be Borts, Leon Rothier Pimenn, Paul Althouse Dimitri, and the cast will include Loulse Homer, Anna Case, Lenora Sparkes, Maria Duchene, Jeanne Marbourg, Bada, De Segurola, Reiss and Rossi. WHAT THE BILLS ARE FOR THE REST OF NEXT WEEK. On Monday night “Cyrano” will be repeated with Amato, Frances Alda, Riccardo Martin and the original cast, Mr. Herta conducting. On Tuesday evening there will be a special pei formance for the benefit of the Opera Emergency Fund, in which the fourth act of “Rigoletto,” the second act of ‘Alda, the second act of "Madama Butterfly,” and the second scene of the thind act of “Die Me will be performed, The ct most of the principal company, but not Caruso, Curtose” will be sung on Thursday eve- he Tales of Hoffman” on Friday evening with the famillar casts For the Saturday matinee “The Girl of the Golden West” will be sung with Caruso, Emmy Destinn, Amato, Dinh “Le Donne The of and "Die Meister will be the popular price opera on Saturday night. will be a special performance Gilly and the rest of the familiar cast. | emy Parsifal” on Good Friday afternoon | tenor, will be the aololat. week: Tuesday, at Public School No. “Grieg and the Scandinavian Song and Public School No, 132, “Saint- Saens," Wednesday, at Public School No, %, “Irish and Scotch Ballads, at Y. M. H, A. Hall, “Classic Music versus Romantic Music and Popular ‘Thursday, at Public School Untonport, ‘Scotch Music. No. Friday, at Public School No. 17, “Songs of the Land of the Sheppes." JOHN McCORMACK TO SING ON 8ST. PATRICK'S NIGHT. John McCormack, the popular Irish tenor, will give another recital tn Car- negie Hall on St, Patrick's night. He will be assisted, this time, by Melville Clarke, the Irish harpist. The pro- gramme will consist almost entirely of Irish songs, old and new. Before he finishes, it may be’ taken for granted that he will have sung all the favor! ballads. He won't be given @ chance to overlook them, The Philharmonic Soctety will give no concerts In New York next week, | but it will make its last Brooklyn ap- pearance for the season at the Acad- of Mustc to-morrow afternoon, Fdmond Clement, the French when The Mendelssohn ‘Trio will continue \ preme | five years to run, and it has stood idle lof Federal patronage in New York Sta! | will be sung to-morrow evening at the | with Mai William Fox Says That Only Collusion of City Officials Permitted Its Operation. RED HAND IN ACTION | ASARVAL TOBLACK | TNBLACKMAILING LINE Begins With Demand on Artist Agnew for $500, but He Calls Police. The “Red Hand," which preys on ar: William Fox, the vaudeville manager, In @ sworn statement made to the Su- Court to-day, charges that) Timothy D. (‘Big Tim") Sullivan and his partner, George J. Krause, obtained | & permit to operate the Dowey Theatre in Bast Fourteenth street “only by act- Ing in collusion with certain officials then in charge and control of the) Municipal Departments of the City of | New York. Mr. Fox declares the con-| nivance of public officials was necessary | because the theatre building has violated | State laws and city ordinances, particu- larly those relating to safeguarding of | Mfe against fire, since its erection. To| comply with the fire laws now, the man-| ager adds, would necessitate the demoll- tion of the structure and would reduce the seating capacity from forty to fifty per cent. Ever since its erection, he swears, the Dewey has been an illegal structure and a public nutsa Mr. Fox's statement is made in i answer to a sult brought by Sull Krause, as partners, against manager to collect 461.54, sald to be | the weokly rent on the Dewey Theatre due on Jan. 9 and Jan. £7 of this year. ‘The sult 1s based on a contract signed July 2 1%8, by which Mr. Fox leased the Dewey and Gotham Theatres in Kast One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street from Sullivan & Krause, the rent of the former to be 40,000 a year and of the latter $30,000, Tho rent was to be patd in weekly instalments, and Mr. Fox deposited 1,00 as security. The complaint sets forth that Mr, Fox paid his rent until Jan. 2, In his answer the manager declares that various city departments, especially the Fire Department, have demanded again and again, since the signing of the lease, that the Dewey Theatre be re- modelled to comply with the laws, and that Sullivan & Krause have refused to heed these demands. For this reason. Mr. Fox says, he surrendered the the- atre in January, though the lease had since. Mr. Fox asks a judgment of $3: $83.33. against the Sullivan firm, as be- ing two-thirds of the $50,000 deposit. Charles L. Hoffman of No. 31 Nassau street is attorney for Sullivan & Krause, while Rogers & Rogers of No. 160 Broadway appear for Mr. Fox. “Big Tim" was recently adjudged in- sano and is now confined in a sani- tarium in Yonkers. ee SULZER NOT MEDDLING IN FEDERAL PATRONAGE. Governor Says He Told President Wilson He Would Keep His Hands Off. ALBANY, March 15.The question of the distribution of patronage is a trou- Desome one, in the opinion of Gov. Sulzer, who declared to-day that if ne could have his way about dt, every man who is given a political Job would get it on his merits through the civil ser- vice. The Governor made it known that when he was in Washington attending the inauguration of President Wilson he told the Democratic leaders he would have nothing to do with the distribution He @aid it was agreed that all Federal matters shoukl go through Senator O'Gorman and the Democratic Congress men, and when there is no Democra! Congressman im a district tt would be ibtributed on the recommendation of the county committee, The Governor, however, reserved the right to tndorse any of his friends for Federal positions. He sald seven friends called on him yesterday, nearly all of whom resided outside New York State, and asked him for letters of indorsement for Federal positions. —_—e——— JIM HALL IS DEAD. STEVENS POINT, Wis., March 15.— Jim Hall, who on March 8, 1898, fought Bob Fitzsimmons at New Orleans for a purse of $40,000, died at a tuberculosis sanitarium near this city to-day. Hall beat Fitzsimmons in four rounds at Sydney Feb, 10, 1890, but Fitz always claimed this was a fake. Fitzsimmons won the New Orleans fight in four rounds, Old First Presbyterian Church, under the direction cf Dr, William C, Carl, ret Harrizon, Elisabeth Can- fieM, Charles W. Harrison, and J. Wiil- fam Filson eoloists, and an ented choir, In the morning Gounod's “Galli will be sung. [orn wai tists exclusively, is the latest local union of the International Blackmaflers Benevolent and Assimilative Associa- tion, It started to-day in on Artist Charles R. Agnew, who has a atudio at No. 4 West Twenty-ninth street, but the new chapter did not assimilate any of theAgnew money. Agnew was busy painting a cubist picture of a spring morning in a frank- furter factory when @ ragged man with a despondent look on his unshaven countenance presented a note at the studio door, “There is an answer, but I don't know What it is," said the ragged messenger. The note advised Agnew that he would have to part with 8500 immedi- ately to the “Red Hand Gang” unless he wanted his studio blown up by mid- night. “Pay quick or we act quick,” was the closing injunction, Agnew, on the pretense of going to another’ room to get the money, went to the telephone and called up Head- quarters Two detectives galloped around from the West Thirtleth street ‘ation and arrested the unshorn stran- wer, At Headquarters he said that it was true he was a member of the Red Hand Gang and that a man named Tuso was its leader, but he did not know that the note Tuso had intrusted hin to deliver demanded mone; Charles Cinouves, for such was his name, was locked up and a hunt started for the red handed Tuso. petcttbnianntein>~ Sica SCHWAB’S HOUSE ROBBED OF JEWELRY AND SILVER. Police of Bethlehem Looking for Burglars Who Also Got $500 of Steel Magnate’s Cash; BETHLEHDPM, Pa., March 16.--Sta' police and local authorities admitted this afternoon that they are searching for burglars who robbed the home of Charles M. Schwab, head of the Bethle- hem Steel Company last Thursday night getting £00 in cash and much silver- ware and jewelry. It was reported at first that Schwab, who was at home with Mrs. Schwab at the time, was held up at the point of a revolver and forced to give up the money, but this was denied to-day. The police say that neither of the Schwabs |knew of the robbery and were not | molested. ES ieee JUAREZ ENTRIES. FIRST RACK—Setting upward; six furlongs,—Janus, 96; Daylight, 100; Dad Steams, 102; Ah Moon, 106; Henry Will: fama*, 108; "King Lear, 107; Looia, 108; De- Jena, 108; Heine, 110, Sly Lad, 110; Two Oaks, 116; Ishkodah, 110, °° SECOND RACE—Felling; three-year-olda upward; six furlongs,—-Minnie F,. 04: Red Widow, M: Joly Tar, 0; Loan Shark, 90; Rosenta®, 105; Sadie Shapiro, 108; Galene Gale, 106; Hose: worth®, 106; Hidden Hand, 110; Billy “Meyer, 110; Fort Johneon, 110; Blanche B., 110, THIRD RACE—Selling: three-year-olds and up- want; six furlongs.—*Free, 100; Prince Conrad, 107; Hugh Gray, 107; Perey Henderson, 107; Me Alan, 197; Zinkand, ; Ramey Oldfield, 110: thmee-year-olde and Pedro, 110; Definite, 110; Descendant, 110; Stare, 110; Rio Pecos, 110, E--Handicap: three-year-olde and . 00; Bake, 00; lor ‘mir, 105, three-year-olds and 108; Mimorioso, 100; wa—Zenoter, | 04 5; *Rosey Pobey, 106; Golden Agnes, 108; Deer. foot, 108; Jim L,, 110; Redmond Adams, 111 Jack Hille,” 110; “Salvage, 110; Delaney, Frank G. Hogan, 110. Apprentice allowance, Track feat, RESINOL WILL STOP THAT ITCH Brings Instant Relief and Quickly Clears ay Skin Eruptions. No matter how long you have been tortured and disfigured by itcbing, burn- w or scaly skin humor: of that soothing, anti: nol Ointment on the sores an: fering stops right there! Healing be- gins that very minute, and your skin gets well so quickly you feel ashamed of the money you threw away on use- less, tedious treatments. Vherever drugs are sold, you can be i Ont 110; This is because doctors have prescribed it so regularly for the last eighteen years that every druggies knows he must keep it constantly in stock, It comes in opal jars, for fifty cents and one dollar, or you can try it at our e pense, Write today to Dept. 9-5, Resi- nol, Baltimore, Md., for » sample of tom, i Mi “Ta 113. ‘Tim Jum New Feanees, 118; Detect New Star, 118; Golden ‘Freasire, 116, Sklon, UG et Oe, TIS i " POUT ACE " Hooy Mvhatiow arated ' mloite, M1, aVolthions®, 1 1, 10, Rounder aMerry Lad, 100, Mb 4 Witte Wool, 18a. € Shackictin, 108, CHARLESTON WINNERS. FIRST RACE.—Thre ing; six furlong (Skirvin), 6 to 1, 1 first; Fairy Godmother, 101 (Buxton) earcolds and wt ur: ried, “Therese Git +E vermtlindy 98" (Montour), 7 to 1, 6 to 2 and 7 to third, Time, 1161-6. Coeur d'Alene, | SIXTH RACK Pore & Se fh Terra Blanco, Mama Johnson, Pink | wien; selling i | sot Bay Lady also ran and finished as named. E IND RACE,--Four-year-olds and | up! selling; six farlonge—Tony W., 11 i . 18 to 5, 3 te 2 and 7 to Wt hnt I frat; York Lad, 111 (Wilaon), 7 to 1 * 5 to 2 and 6 to 6, second; Veneta Strome, 115 (Mondon), 6 to 1 and 6 to 5, third, ‘Time, 1152-5. 1 hate ; e surer per, Martre, Inciston, Alderman Chicco} Henry W. Medicys, treasurer of the and Berkeley also ran. Brooklyn Baseball Club National THIRD RACE—The Calhoun Selling | Leaxue, Is recovering from a severe Stakes: two-year-olds; four and one half | operation for stomach trouble winich was furlongs. —Gordon, 121 (Mondon), 1 to 3,| performed on him at the New York out and out, won; Chas. Cannel, 108] pfoapital last night. Mr. Medicus was (Buxton), 10 to 1, even and out, second; | seized with a sudden Sness while in a Please Welles, 115 (Pickett), 5 to 2, 1 to) parber shop in this city early last eve- 4 and out, third. Time: 06 1-5. No other] ning and was immediately @ushed starters, the hospital, At SP. M. he wad pli on the operating table. oad CHARLESTON ENTRIES. RACK TRACK, CHARLESTON, Mareh 15.—-The entir races are as follows FIRST RACK—Parve $300; three year-olds and tipward; maidens; furlongs,—Fu Avoa Claire, 100; Snow. Piake, The One Ideal Dentifric Blighty per cent. of out adult population are Affected with Riggs Disease of receding gunna. With Dit, FORHAN'S DENTAL CREAM one may successfully treat wet copilitions of tt nal qualities of FORMAN'S ASTRINC des, it makes an ideal dentifrice. It onghiy purfin the mouth, four-yearolls | restores the normal pink we of the arllag Domah | Syurerh uate to. the tet 8. ¢. for Monday's 108; *Bad News 11, 110; ¢ Hi 111; Cite Top, 111; Lady Hughes, 111; Star cite, 111; Dl FORMAN tehgheth ite ark a Chilton Squaw, 18; Star Rose, ance, pleasing to the taste, in ele 118; Casque, 115; Blitzen eeent Haysible tuber, abvut twice the site of ontinary Sparks, 116; Madman, 118. ' tooth-paaste Retails at cents, with THIRD RACE —Piirse $300; fou and! positive ssmurance of satisfac upward; eefling: six furlongs, 106; funded. Women’s Shoes, $2.50 .In the Cammeyer Basement Will Be Found a Line. of Men’s «« Women’s Shoes « Oxfords at $250 That We Positively State Are Better Be Than Any Three GAVIRA, Catherine Cameron {s. to appear in| Resinol Ointment and a miniature cake Mischa Elman, the Rui At that port a Mexican gunboat, hav- ing aboard a Mexican oMcer and a etal) of soliders and the Consul and vaudeville in a sketch by Richacd Warner, “Kit Martin's Affair.” Harris & Selwyn will produce “Her jan violin | to play at the Regont Theatre next Ist, will play at to-morrow night's con-| Week. It 1s compored of Hans Bruno | cert. Anna Case and Umberto Macnes| Meyer, violinist, formerly of the Leip- | sic Gewandhaus Orchestr: James Florence Hinkle, soprano, and Maxi- millian Pilger, violinist, will give the concert in the Campus Course at the of Resinol Soa Dollar Shoes Sold. | will sing. , Vice-Consul of the United States, met| First Divorce,” the first play of C. B. | . poe Henry Gordon, formerly ‘cellist of the |New York University auditorium on) Line Geaeal end T gene eet and Bell, an attorney of Hamilton, Canada. |upie WALKUERE” AGAIN Munich Kann Orchestra, dnd Thomas | Tuesday evening. . e Consul several soldiers boarde th oadll Musgrove, pianist, who was the ace|_ a ‘ W the veuuel and the oficer made ha way ser Reniy et Pala fe the Qoioelal IN A FINE PERFORMANCE | compantet for Maud Powell, the violin. | ~Columbla University. anncundea a Apa in or 1 y . i aoe ert nent avira be aurtendeneg| Which she was starring on the road| “Die Walkuere” was presouted once| iat. on her recent tour, organ recital by Richard Keys Biggs | ‘Nise fo op wien iver be tale Ge | F. ne : S| a 4 ks more at the Matroncil of Cleveland, at St. Paul P aro. ekg, . ‘ Capt. Smith asked the advic for John Cort, has been abandoned, | More @ etropolitan Opera last) uM *the 1 ” Tuesday at 410 P. M, The public 18 LITTLE : t Consul. 1 Lean, who was leading comedian | M&M to an audience of great sige, The ‘The Message from*the Cross," a} . . | S Leathe S$. “Use your own judgment,” said that) in with Three Wives," starts sustained popularity of Wagner's music lanisa ue been S Manarant | say7iege All All Styles jal. H devitio Apri! 17 in a danc! ramas was never more in evidence |!!! be * Bt | bid Mahon vou. have the authority trom |e: tee Union aque “I than throughout the present” soason. Fauls Shas vy LM tn Pe pon tree Perey myers aaa Washington," said Capt. Smith to the The performance was an admirable °°"P° as ne q ; Mexican officer, “you may take Gen, Raner Helwye me compyted a new one, full of appeal t eye and ear, Mr. | will be Ada Cook, John Barnes Wells | on Wednesday afternoon, fd will Gavira. You have not that authority | fre which he has named Herts conducted with his usual enthus|®¢ Dr Carl Dutt, Eamund Jacques, also give his usual Sunday afternoon Rew and you cannot take him, as he is | Married. siasin, tempered with a disc: tion thar Creaniat-cholrmaster, will direct, reoltal to-morrow at 4 o'clock, net charged with a crime, Kindly 3 my ship. | "Phe Mexicans, protesting, were es- to the side and sent to their boat. . Gavira remained on the Monterey until the vessel reached Havana. The passengers presented Capt. fmich with { SE cien expressing thelr admiration his action {n this matter. a Give $5 io Boom W a WINSTED, Conn, March .—The di- | rectors of the Winsted Business Men's Association at a meeting last evening avoided any swamping of voles by TENT NPE Fredeiee ean wi ran re, Frederic! joan will overstrenuousness in tie orchestra, It give their annual Maundy Thursday was rather curious to fl. Olive Frem- hy | recital on the “Stabat Mater Dolorosa’ | stad as Brunnhilde and Johanna Gad- at four o'clock in the Church House of pproprietet 5 to a fund to have Win- ted written up in ab out-of-town news- paper. * aki ay Sieglinde, On: would have @x- the Church of the Messlah. ‘Thoir frat | pected the parts to be transposed. one was given twenty-two years ago, Both, however, are capable of imper- ,Sonating either characte in @ manner “The ven Last Words,” by Duels, Tal Esen Morgan ts to give a week of Easter concerts at Asbury Park be- ginning next Thursday evening. A concert of Irish song will accom- pany a lecture by the Rev. T, J, Shealy, 8. J., on “Ireland's Ideals,” at Carnegie Hall to-morrow night