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Npw IVi embers , Ol c p PGS" __
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jQg[lt , i!- S UTFlUdl nffiriol Familu r CUIIliy. i
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/AfANllW v TrT T7C AivC. APF FITTTFP I lLLLL*b ;
-“'rf-cts Moody for |
S itat for Naval Secretary :
Gene rail Morton
an d Metcalf to Succeed Cortdyou.
special . . A ,
V Washington says:
*
. tne cabinet , . . a „
reeping change m
^resident Roosevelt was announced
fficially at the white house Friday.
'he ann ouncement ouncernent came e in the form
{ a brt of typewritten statement is
-Pd by Secretary Loeb as follows:
The following cabinet appointments
S’ announce!!.
lL W. H. Moody, ot Massachusetts,
P ^eral.
| Paul ', * nf Illinois * •, vporetarv .
{the navy.
Lretary Victor H. Metcalfe, of California,
pcreuuj' of commerce and labor.
The resignation of Secretary Cor*
‘
eiyou ,nrt Attorney ", General Knox
been accepted to . take , effect „
ave
July L
For two weeks or more it has been
known that these changes w r ere im
[ending. When Secretary Cortelyou
■as appointed by President Roosevelt
|o be his campaign manager, from the it was
ertain he would retire cab
let upon his assumption of duties as
[hairinan of the republican commit.
tee. Just before he left for the Chi
ago convention be placed in the hands
f the president ^is letter of resigha
ion from the secretaryship of com
aerce ana labor.
A week ago Attorney General Knox
ormally announced he would retire
rora L.ie department of justice prob
iwy at tne end of the fiscal year. It
;as utiderstoou at the same time that
iecretary Moody would succeed Mr.
inox as attorney general. This
itatement made, however, that while
he transfer of Secretary Moody to
he department of justice would be
irobable, it was dependent in a meas
ire on the president's success in se
miring a worthy successor in the navy
iepartment.
In pursuance to the purpose to se
ure the services of a thoroughly able
md congenial man, President Roosc
elt tendered the appointment of sec
tary of the navy to Paul Morton,
irst vice president of the Atchison,
Topeka and Santa Fe railway. Mr.
Horton is a personal friend of tDe
(resident's of many years’ standing,
le is a son of the late . Sterling Mor
on, of Nebraska, secretary of ?,gri
luiture in President Cleveland’s last
idministration.
ing
ID
He was educated in
schools and at Yale college,
the law- department of
was graduated in 1876. He
to practice in the
and New York courts and followed
profession at Uti,ca for two
moved to Oakland. California,
^19, and continued his practice
elected to the fifty-sixth congress.
(Vas re-elected to the two
congresses and has served in
’agton nearly six years.
DELEGATES W.TH0UT INSTRUCTIONS.
fl dh Carotin Democrats Name State
(! dnr Select St. Louis Representatives.
’
Raleigh special says: At 5:45
ri ock Friday morning, just before
-J'lrnment of the prolonged night
lj° n ’ die ^bert democratic B. Glenn was
P r onvention
” eensboro for governor of
ar °lina.
A tesolution was passed by the
ve ntioa i instructed., the delegates'
the National convention to vote
unit as
011 & d matters coming
ji e ®i but otherwise
the members
Uni hstructed.
Sm, Cream 1+w++1 _ H+f+++ . H .^;
of News, t
i i
Brief Summary of Most
i mportant Events
n f p; *' aCn . ~ Uay
*
-
Atlanta celebration of IaJepend j
d9 r thlS year pram,ses tQ be
ths most successful ever held i a the>
City, and will set a new precedent to
the observance of the holiday. !
_ Sprlng water glven a „ ay frjm j j
sprinkling oarts in Columbus, Ga.. the
to <w *»•*“ -*•«
,TO “ t0e nver -
—Recorder's sentences in Macon * *
G &ie "• A1Q , d rc> b oe illegal and . a case „ j
will be carried to the supreme court
of the state. i
—Miss M«ta Canning, ! j
of Gainesville,
receives serious fall from the
Southern “ Railway Ka, '* a> train tram near near Chart* ChAtta
® ' i
—Bay Minette Ala secures new ) |
ra ra.i-ii.Au iiroad frem in.m that tnat nolm poiiio to to Pen Bon L<e r „
Lour. !
__ gt Tu H r\,„ Duaa h nm m „ co Alwa ‘ ored ,] char „ k4 „ 8' i
- -
ed , Wlth onmma • I a£SA »lt at Europa,
Mi®3., was hanged in the public square
i Ky f. Vf> hi, n .] " r ^ au " man '
At Manchester, England, a pause in
the downward ronr^p> ^ of thft nrir-,p of :
“
aud the more reasonable figures j
demanded by sellers facilitated the i
traa&actlon of business in several di
rectKns in the 4 iv. cloth i ,, market . . last
week.
-Ion Inn PunUmrit Berdleans, the ilia American,
captured by the Moroean bandit, Ran
small, and released last week in an in
tervlew tells of his capture ' and hiG
iiih in the retreat of „ the outlaws. _
—Threatened with starvation and
with her husband hopelessly insane in
the asylum at Kankekee, Mrs. Anna
Kelseyzick ’ of Chicago, ’ gave up y the
struggle for existence, killed- her three
small children and then ended her
own life.
—Both Japanese armies in south
ern Manchuria are now pushing stead
ily forward. The outposts are constant
ly engaged in fighting, but nothing im
portant has resulted.
Viceroy Alexieff’s report on the
battle of the Port Arthur squadron
with the Japanese stops at the time
the fleets joined battle, nothing hav
ing been learned by him as to the
Russian losses.
—Pushed by the converging armies
of General Kuroki and Oku, General
Kuropatkin Is believed to be about to
abandon the entire Liao Tung penin
sula to the invading Japanese. The
complete retirement of the Russians
from the peninsula will mean the fall
of Niuehwang, and will leave the
Tor-int p ° O. frpp tn nrrwpinitp * the
siege . of fort Anhui . , without ... f t *
of being interrupted by an army of
relief.
—Ed Spivey shoots and kills Charles
Pilton during a picnic at Adrian, Ga.,
Wu bocause ,. lo . i it . is , alleged „n oirc m tup the latter latter occn- octu
pied a seat vacated by the former.
—The city water is unfit for the
people of Columbus, G-a., to use, ac
cording to a notice sent them by the
receiver of the water works com
pany.
—Thomas Y r oun, -a white man, of
Augusta, sues the city directory peo
ple for damages because he was list
ed as a colored man.
—Georgia Agricultural Society
meets at Hawkinsville Augusta 17-
18 .
—Operators in Alabama are said to
consider the scale offered by the Unit
ed Mine Workers too high. Confer
ences- wall be held.
—Railroads in Atnhnmfl are lavin» “
supplies ot . coal, and . imi ,,
in full
may be a strike July 1 of the mine
“
—North Carolina delegation goes
St Louis uninstructed. Glenn nonii
'
nated icA as candidate canaiaa G for io governor g
—Old Confederate capitol at
KUI1 pvimerv will be repaired soon at
expens© ot
_Charles / Swayze, insurance
of Detroit, shoots young wnmaT1 won ,
leaps, from eleventh story window
and is killed The woman will
cover.
_Fire at the Louisiana
Exposition Friday destroyed the
of Hoo-Hoo and menaced the
and German buildings.
IEXAS INSTRUCTS FOR JUDGE PARTE *.
State Democratic Convention in San Anto
nia Selects Strong Delegation.
The Texas state democratic conven
tion finished its business at San
tonio Wednesday. One of the strong
est delegation ever ejected in the
eras cliosen and instructed to vote
Judge Parker and to vote as a unit
on all questions. unanimity and
A feeling of party
earnestness ruled throughout,
platform adopted Avas short
Ing merely an enunciation of
cratic fundamental principles.
A SERM0N FQR g UN1)AI
*N eloquent discourse entitled
“THE UNIVERSAL IN RELIGION/*
i;ev ^ p |m i>irect-s Attention i
* *• * er I
to Certain Forms or Oortrines Com- ;
,i,OB *® AU-JUary Sy»tem of Keli S io»
H*s Soma Conception ot God.
Kingston. X. Y.-Tn the Reformed ! i
Church of the Comforter on Sunday morn- I
ir f th ? X V? V - <-• L - ■ preaened a ,
,
sal ' in Relig m‘Primitive : on
Tylor, Culture, says: “He
who only knows one religion can no more
understand that religion, than he who only
understands one language can master that
isr»de,s,fh 3£h lTpSiol h, s P SiSS;t P t i r”, e fime s ;,f^s KowT
edge of of the history, doctrines and customs
systems other than his own. any more
.i,„ n n u- _ af -
without any knowledge of its cognates.
It is undeniable that a study of the various
evstems diselnap* •, rolio-iAnc aututratnm
' phenomena
a n d of which deprived ro intelligent “
student is willing to be
The population of t he world is estimated
at 1,392,000,009. Of this number 100.000,000
are pagan lowest or grade heathen, which represents the
very supposed be of humanity. Tl.|re The are
nominal and to 175,0°0,000 Brahmans. Buddah
and Confucius professed followers of
are estimated at 420,000,000.
Mohammedans number more than 200.000,
000. Christians, including Roman Oath
olie, Greek Church and Protestant, are
computed at 400,000,000. The whole of
Eastern Asia is occupied by the Buddhists,
India by the Brahmans, Africa, Australia
and the South Sea islands by the pagan
tribes. Parts ot Europe, Asia and Africa
by the Mohammedans, the largest part of
Europe and America by Christians.
The conservative classifications of the re
of the world were such as these
true ural, and false religions, revealed, natural spiritual and super- and
nat pagan and
superstitious. Such a classification is not
oniy - confusing s but to the student of corupara
tiy religions is unjust> for every
system contains some truth. A better
classification is: 1. Tribal. 2. Ethnic.
?' Catholic. The tribal includes all sys
terns which have no ritual, priesthood,
creed, sacred writings, architecture or
music. The ethnic religions are confined
to one nation; such, which for example, thousand was the
religion of Egypt, national for a
years was limited to its borders,
The system of Assyria was confined to
Assyria; the Hellenic religion of Greece that was of con
fined to the race; Rome
to the Romans; of Confucius to China;
Brahmanism is confined to India, and the
faith of the Eddas was limited to the
Scandinavian or Teutonic races. The
Catholic systems, in spirit and method,
know no limit in either time or ter
ritory. They aspire to conquer the
world. Such were Moses, Zoroaster, Bud
dah, Mohammed and Jesus. Ethnic relig
ions were evolved out of their own life.
j | Catholic clueed systems promulgated were formulated, by inspired intro
and an
j prophet. ..
It is not my purpose to trace , the origin
' of religion, the evolution development,
or
! or to compare the merits of each, but to
! very briefly direct attention to certain
I forms or doctrines common to all.
Such conception is either just or unjust,
true or false, right or wrong, degraded, though no
faith, even among the most is en
tirely destitute of some truth concerning
God. Christianity is the one system which
has an adequate' Jehovah, disclosure Jesus of became the attri- in
butes of because
carnate the reveal the Father. “He that
hath seen Me hath seen the Father.” And
even Christianity cannot condense in a
single definition 'a comprehensive descrip
tion of the Supreme Being, for the idea is
not simple but complex. The lowest con
j ception ls belief of in God spiritual is known as animism, opposed which to
! powers unformulated as
i materialism. It is the no
j Eon of the most undeveloped tribes, and
I has no place in the Christian system ex
cept i as clarified and perfected in angel
o] gy ftnd denionologv . Polytheism is
found principally in the ethnic systems,
In Egypt the divine elements were seen
dwelling in nature. The Greek deities
were not personifications, but persons, di
vine men and women. In the Vedie
Hymns of India tlm forces of nature are
spiritualized into objects of reverence and
love. The most marked form of pantheism
appears in the Hindu religion, wdiicli is
in its extreme development, that the uni
verse is God, and God is the universe,
Christian science savors of it. The doc
trine of the divine imminence may be so
foreed as to eliminate the personality of
God. Ditheism is belief in two hostile
powers which was a tenet of Zoroastrian
ism. Triads appear in the ethnic and Cath
olic systems. The Christian doctrine of the
trinity is a necessary and natural concern
tion or God, and becomes clear if it is
understood to represent Him as one in es
sence but three in form. Monotheism .is
principally characteristic of the Catholic
i systems, though traces are found in the
j pagan and ethnic. Deeply imbedded in
j mighty ever y heart personality, is the and eonvit.,on that such of person- an Al
ality is back of all forms and images, and
that the latter becomes efficacious because
0 f the power of God.
yy, possible theories about the origin
the universe are reducible to four.
«rh a j it had no beginning, but ha;:
existed either in its present or
form. While tlie eternity of has matter
been advocated by some it never
come a popular belief, and it does not
peal to modern science. But among
primitive R. tha j tribes ii we ]- presume, f God without many
;anc wor 0
mencemenfc and culmination. 2. That
came by a process of evolution. This
orv had been modified in recent years
Biblical scholars and philosophical hearty
ers, with the result of a most
ceptance on the part of some
studenas and devoted scientists. 3.
other view is that it came by a
of emanation. The difference between
lution and emanation seems to be, that
former is a growth up to and including
certain completeness, while the latter
g an “with the dark abyss of infinite
and by means of a series of emanations
fallings away from this inconceivable
essence, and gradually intelligent reached creation.” an
Creator an
theory is Oriental in its origin,
first in the cosmogony of the Hindus.
Conservative Christian scholars arc
vided on this doctrine. Some hold
God created, that is, actually
brought into existence, the material
of which all things were fortned.
hold that He simply cut, carved and
ioned the universe out of pre-existing
terial. It is difficult to say iust what
is acceptable to the majority of
scholars. Evolution as w-e now
' it is certainly accepted question by and men whose whose
cerity we commands cannot universal admiration.
arship spirit in and the
There is a man
an
’
tion ot the Almighty gj t b uauers and
ing. The lowest and m ’O' want ]).
and the most intell at Gan is b
in p on or i jie nvfictii
human family from the - nr >n tin ns
:he itement. LIT 1C >i man
;oetji up; •d.” in a spi
vorid and that act had to m I
travel. Men pray cither b use tney o - j
tain what t pii for a use the act I
is u "—‘ ble rig in Use he s oux Indians '
p, us.” Spirits of the dead nave mercy on
The Zulus ot Afric l 1> y to their
it oar ho i€ »p.e of j
\- WlU »>, op.e o; HI ou>e, |
good l k ffi ,
uc u i D ar In* :
dian prayed t!u:s-“0 < ‘Cat Si ■e
“* c 1( ‘ m > children ami my wife.
them not . for Let
moirni me. me sue'
? t cea } lru *. m n * safety u ? ^’’-terprige, to my januiy s*ay in> and eneniy, lrieuas, rs
T,ult ' Vt s4«p,3J!*tafcrs: n, f. v n l m ™ together. Have pity
s ss
*~J*y ™* *»«} I^t ™ me be brisk and ^ *i ft.”
d ne Karens of Burniah pray to the harvest
goddess thus— Grandmother! thou guara
Sf m v tield \°. ok shal ;P £ ° v thieves.
, 1C V come bind . them with this . rope. I ■
ouch Y are - a few forms used by the childlike
races; the. ethnic systems disclose a higher
* nd more enlightened Yedic conception of invo
™ Uo P- ^he hymns are tilled with
adoring homage-Of which God now ot
which ol die immortals, shall we invoke
the amiab.e name. Letiisimoke ihe aini
able name of Aditi. Agm, die god of lire,
is addressed as the Divine Monarch. In
China the worship of ancestors is con
stantly practiced. On an Assyrian tablet
are found these words: “May I never feel
the anger and wrath of God. The ancient
Mexicans addressed God, "The God by
whom we live, l liou omnipresent, \Vho
knoweth all out thoughts, and giveth ail
g£ts. rhey baptized chi dren with t his
tormina, ijet these ho.> uiops wash away
^he sin that it received before tne iounda
tion of the world so that the child may ha
new horn. In the Latholic religions we
discover an element less conspicuous than
in the others. It is pardon for past sins,
reconciliation with God and growth in
grace. It wouM be interesting to trace
tinder this division the practice ot sacrifice,
hymnology and other forms that enter into
worship, but we pass on.
Inspiration implies that man must have
a capacity to be inspired, which makes it
a human faculty and therefore common
to all. Inspiration inward truth, in its largest truth which sen^e is is
the sight of a
seen within the mind. A thought will
come while one is walking, conversing,
reading or meditating. It is a kind of
inspiration. Poets have been have inspired to
write poetry. Scientists been in
spired to formulate the sciences, musicians
to compose music, Columbus to discover,
Newton and Edison to both discover and
invent. quality, Inspiration religious differs being the in quantity highest.
and
The Vedas and Zend Avesta are considered
inspired by their cult. The Mohammedans
believe the Koran is inspired of God and
therefore infallible, and Christians make
the same contentions for the Scriptures,
There is a low and crude form of inspira
j tion among the undeveloped races, which
; is not committed to writing. The Samoieds
of Liberia have diviners who work them*
. into frenzy be to delivering
selves a re ora
cles. The notion of inspiration Pythian appeared
in the insanity of the priestess
and the Greek diviners who fell into
trances. In the religion of Greece it ap
peared as an alien element. The wild
dances of the Bacchantes, the shrieks and
self-lacerations of the Corybtantes were
considered form^ of inspiration. In the
Hindu religion seeks it appears God in withdrawing the Yoga,
that is one who by
from the things of sense. Painful posi
tion.; are assumed, contortions of the limbs,
suppression mortifications. of breath The and Greenlander other incred
ible has
his prophets, who abandon the converse of
men and remain in fixed intensity of
thought Balaam until they hear and see the spirits, invol
was compelled to utter an
untary pro .hecy, and tne priests of Baal
cut themselves with lances. Sometimes in
out- own have country, “jerks.” at protracted Shakers meetings, dance,
men the The
the Mohammedans whirl. These seem ab
sul d to us, but they disclose this, that all
mankind would ascertain the will of God.
From time immemorial the human race
has had some intimation of an endless
life. The most degraded savages and the
most conviction enlightened that death philosophers share the all.
does not end
The Hottentot, and the Fiji Islander agree
with Plato and Aristotle. The Esquimaux
in. the Arctic circle, the native of Siberia,
the that Australians, the is tue Patagonians cradle believe
grave the of another
life. All the religions of antiquity believe
in immortality, Greece, Rome, Egypt, Mexico, China, Peru, India, the Tar- Per
gia,
tar tribes of Central Asia, the negroes of
Central and Western Africa and the isl
ands of the Pacific, all contend that while
the body returns to dust, the spirit goes
to God, Indian Who gave it. The North Arner
fi-an believes in duplicate souls,
one departing remaining during with the body, the other
sleep. It has been
claimed by some that Buddhism is an ex
ception, but it is not. The teaching of
Buddh : sm is to annihilate by the destruc
tion of desire. It is not claimed that this
j s successful, but that the spirit becomes
incarnate in one form or another until it
rests in Nirvana, 'ihe transmigration of
souls was taught by the religion of Egypt,
hence found they embalmed their dead. Greek It is
in Brahmanism, among the
philosophers—Pythagoras, Plato. By the Neo-Piatonists, Empedocles Jewish and
Cabbala, Arab philosophers, by origin and
other church fathers. Also by the Gnos
tics, Manicheans, times by Druids and Christianity in more re
cent Fourier. be
h.-ves in eternal life, and that Jesus be
came flesh, not oniy to disclose God, but
to bring life and immortality to light,
Man is a moral being, because he has a
moral nature. He has a moral sentiment,
moral ideas and a moral power. The
moral sentiment is the sense of right and
wrong, and obligation. winch produces Moral ideas a feeling of duty tbe
consist in
belief that certain acts are right, others
wrong. Moral power is the ability to do
the thought right and will not the wrong. Feeling,
and cannot be elimin
mated from any moral test. Event
the childlike races have some conception
of much right below and wrong, the Christian though often standard; very
enough, who however, to be classed among
those are not without God. But
few, if any, have been discovered without
enough and moral ability the to say yes to the
right no to wrong. It-is i:o. de
nied that the moral standard is different
in each system, and that what may be
right in one may be -wrong in another,
The temples of India and China encourage
vices which are too low to mention. The
underlying principle of Brahmanism is to
gratitv every desire, The test of Chris
tiamty is the type of life it produces, The
liberal, consistent, devoted business man,
father, brother, son, the position of
mother, school, sister, hospital daugnter, and the; Christian
home, They the the National
fl a 8- are re.i»lt of the code of
ethics—the Bible. One has only to read
any of the standard works on the life of
the nations in order to be convinced thit
Christianity ideal That is capable of producing the
life. while every svst :i con*
tains some truth, Christian .it v .3 the truth.
The religious world is pc iLi£ through h
great change. To just v.iiac we are eorri
ing no one is confideu . though the indi
cations encircle are the tn globe. OhnsGaaity is destined
to
1. Christie ity is the one system that
is making en iizalion. We lament the in
difference and aoathy o:i the part of Chris s -
i mils, but it i.~ not to he compared with
the lethargy of hcatht iism.
3. Christianity the destined to spread,
because it has Bible, church. Sabbath,
aiul that has satisfies produced a type of civilization
the enlightened mind and
renewed heart.
3. Vll the aggressive systems have the
inspiiation of an inspired. them prophet. We
have the greatest of ail. Christ is
seeking ihe nations, uu they are seeking
Him.
4. Christianity not only contain? all
the truth of all other systems, but much
not possessed by others.
Be not anxious about to-morrow. Do to
day’s duty, tight to-day's temptation and
do not weaken and distrust yourself by
looking forward and could to things which you can
not see not understand if >ou
saw them.—Charles Kingsley.
DINGLY RATES TO BE ENEORCED.
Tariff Arranqements for Paname tonal
Strip Announced By Tuft.
Secretary Taft issued an order at
Washington Friday making the terms
of the Dingley act in regard to tariff
rates applicable to the canal strip on
the Isthmus of Panama.
He also issued an order providing
for the establishment of postoffice on
the canal strip. *
NEWSY GLEANINGS.
Every saloon in St. Joseph, Mo., was
closed the other day for the first time
iu fifty years.
Paris offers prizes for window gar
dening. *
Servian railroads are being extended.
English cotton workers are rushing
to Canada.
The fourth hole through the Alps has
been made with the final piercing of
tlie Simplon tunnel.
A combined steam, trolley and cable
railway lias recently been built in
Southern Tyrol, Austria.
The New York Court of Appeals de
c-bled that a private detective lias the
right to “shadow” persons.
General Miles still clings to his plan
for employing United States soldiers in
roadmaking during peace time.
The locust has become a plague in
Spain and tin* Minister of Agriculture
has been authorized to light the pest.
Three electric shocks were required
to kill Michael Schiller, a wife mur
derer. at the Ohio State Penitentiary.
The steamship Nebraskan, burnin !*• :■>
oil as fuel, arrived in San Francisco
four days ahead of time, after a run
from Now York.
Germany has been buying her horses
from Russia for some years past, but
may now be compelled to seek tbe
American market again.
Fishermen oil the coast of Rhode
Island complain that-the firing of the
Government’s big guns in that vicinity
has ruined their industry.
The wealth of Russia in furs is being
rapidly sapped, it is said, by the wan
ton destruction of wild animals in the
course of the hunting expeditions.
For the benefit of the lake commerce
the West Neebish channel will be
opened at a cost of $5,000,000. The
work will require four years’ time.
Police Justice Higgins, of Jersey
City, decided he had no authority to
order the killing of Nellie, a blnck-and
tau terrier, accused of having bitten
a letter carrier.
SPORTING BREVITIES.
Edmond Blanc’s Ajax won the Grand
Prix of $10,000 at Paris.
Jack (“Twin”) Sullivan got tlie de
cision over Alike Schreck in a ten-round
bout at Indianapolis. *
Miss Miriam Hall, of San Francis
co, won the women’s metropolitan ten
nis championship in singles;
L. L. Kellogg, Jr., of Fox Hills, beat
Ihe field in the golf tournament at
Tuxedo with a ore of 151.
Tlie well known New England stal
lion, Sir Walter, Jr., foaled In 1882,
died a short time ago at Biddeford,
Mo.
Captain E. J. Clapp, of flic Yale
track team, announced that Yale would
meet the English universities in Lon
don.
The .Suburban, at Sheepshead Bay
(Brooklyn, N. Y.), was Avon by Her
mis, with The Picket second, and
Irish Lad third.
E. It. Thomas’ St. Bella ne won tlie
Daisy stakes and T. L. Watt’s Lady
tineas won the June handicap at the
Sheepshead Bay track.
J. A. Drake’s Ort Wells won the
$20,000 Tidal stakes and J. E. Mad
den's Flyback the Foam stakes, at the
Sheepshead Bay race track.
C. G. ItoAvc, of the New York Golf
Club, at Van Oortlandt Park defeated
W. 0. Carnegie on the thirty-seventh
green in the final for the chief cup at
Knoll wood.
Robert Wrenn and George L. Wrenn
defeated William Earned and Malcolm
1). Whitman in the round robin lawn
tenuis tournament of the Iiackaway
Hunt Club.
Willie Hoppe, the young American
billiard player, arrived from home
from Paris, where lie recently com
pleted one of the most suceess/ul sea
sons of his career, both financially and
from a standpoint of play.