Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, April 23, 1913, Image 1

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jkezzi I THE WEATHER. Forecast—Showers late to-mght or to morrow; warmer to-morrow. Temper atures—5 a. m., 60; 10 a. m., 67; 12 m., 71; 2 p. m., 74; sunrise, 4:66; sunset, 6:16. The Atlanta Georgian T~ VOL. XI. NO. 224. Read For Profit-GEORGIAN WANT ADS Use For Results ATLANTA, GA„ WEDNESDAY. APRIL 23, 1913. 2 CENTS EVERYWHERE ML DEIS 6 HELPS SE W i d o w Accused of Slaying Husband Calmly Aids Counsel Pick Men Who Will Decide Her Fate. M RS. CALLIE SCOTT AP- charged with' slaying hus band. She aided Counsel to pick jury. Repudiates Youth Claiming To Be Son Mrs. Dixie Jarrett Haygood, on Wit ness Stand, Disowns Young Man She Is Suing. MACON. GA., April 23.—A dramatic scene was enacted in Superior Court to-day when Mrs. Dixie Jarrett Hay- good repudiated Fred H. Haygood as her son. She declared that she adopted him when he was an infant. Haygood. weeping, asked Mrs. Hay* good, who was on the witness stand, to retract the statement. “1 am your son. mamma," he cried. Judge Matthews had to restore or der. Mrs. Haygood is suing the young man for jewels and household articles worth several thousand dollars, which, she claims, he took from her. He says j she gave them to him. Alderman Denies Alleged Official Corruption and Makes Serious Counter Charges "Georgia Peach” Didn't Say So, but Facts Show Magnates Are in Panic. INVITES A SUIT FOR LIBEL HOLD-OUT GOING TO DETROIT Case, Halted 2 Hours by Absence of Wit ness f o r Defense, Taken Up This Af-> noon at 1 o’Clock. I-lad in black, veiled and slightly peifi, but cool and almost eager to as- nst her attorneys in every turn of her defense. Mrs. Callie Scot* Appelbaum, accused of the slaying of her husband, .1 erome A. Appelbaum, In the Dakota Hotel February 25. faced a jury in runinal division of Superior Court to-day and entered a plea of not guilty at 1 o'clock. After one witness had been examined court adjourned until 3:30 p. m. The trial began at 1:30 o'clock and five panels were exhausted. Two veniremen, George W. McCarthy and .1 J. Osborn, toll* the court they were opposed to capital punishment where a woman was involved, and were ex- cused. The jurymen drawn were W. j H O'Rear, T. J. Butler, D. P. Donehoo, H. W. Reese, L. J- Bentlet. F. C. Wilkinson. E. E. Gilliland. W. H. Foster. G. W. Manning, W. E. Heard, s H. Marcus and H. G. Hackney. Defendant Takes Notes, lrs Appelbaum took notes con-j stantly while the jury was being drawn and time and time again in structed her lawyers to object to cer tain selections. G. Cohen, main witness for the de fense. whose failure to appear at 9 ! o’clock delayed the trial for two hours. I said he would tell on the stand the I story that he refused to affirm under j oath before the grand jury a month ago. Upon Cohen's testimony, which will attempt to establish that Mrs. Appel- | baum left her husband’s room after the first shot and was running in the hallway of the hotel when the second shot was fired, will hinge the de fense's theory of suicide. Son Defends Mother. Claude Henderson, 16-year-old son of Mrs. Appelbaum. sat in the court room with his mother and John Moore and James Branch, attorneys for the defense, signified their intention of sending him to the stand in his mother’s behalf. Fallowing the selection of the jury Solicitor Dorsey asked for a rule of j court segregating the w itnesses. This was done preparatory to the introduc- I 'ion of testimony by the prosecution j Detective J. D. Doyle appeared in the role of prosecutor. Mrs. Appelbaum entered her plea of lot guilty shortly after 1 o’clock. As j 'he stood before the court in answer 10 Superior Judge Roan’s summons, spoke clearly and without hesita tion. Her voice was audible in the | farthest corner of the little court room. T. R. Thomason, clerk of the Dako- ! a Hotel, on duty the morning of, the I shooting, was the first witness to take the stand. He went up for the prose- ition. but upon rigid cross-examina- !i ° n proved a capable aid to the de fense. Doctor to Testify. 1 nder fire from Attorney Moore, | Thomason admitted that he met Mrs. j A PPelbaum at the foot of the hotel stairway not ten seconds after he | had hung up the telephone upon receiving the call that there had been | a shooting in room 213. He had bare ly crossed the fifteen feet of the hotel '°hby, he asserted, when Mrs. Appel- haum garbed in a kimono and hys- | 'Tieal, fainted in his arms. | S j. Liebman and the police officers will follow' Thomason to the j >Fan d at 3:30 o’clock, when the trial ’ turned. G. Cohen an 1 Alvin Rob- L ns tWo men who occupied rooms in I hotel, and J. T. Lindsay and J. J ^wrence Jones will appear as char- | ter witnesses for the woman. I h ^PP^lbaum. before the 1 trial I *gan. said she had prayed c’onsiant- she added, "I do not rely I purely on prayers. The facts, when I oy are pat before a jury, will dear I, innocent and I have no | “ir of the outcome." ^ r ’ difficulty was expected in finding ,rv . toeording to Mrs. Appelbaum’s Women Tell Social Work Sex Has Done Health Problems Also Topic at Fed erated Club’s Convention in Washington. WASHINGTON, April 23.—Worn an’s part in the national health move ment and some of the problems being solved by her activity in social lines were discussed by Mrs. S. S. Crockett to-day before the Council of Feder ated Women’s Clubs, in session here. This idea was further emphasized by Miss Helen Louise Johnson in an address on “The Meaning of Home Economies." The biennial council to be held in Chicago next year was discussed by Mra George Bass and Mrs. Samuel B. Sneath. Mrs. Philip N. Moore and Mrs. Harriet Bishop Waters also spoke. Doesn’t Like Opera; He Can’t Whistle It Alderman Candler Disappointed and Attorney Luther Z. Rosser Much Prefers His Sleep. Criticisms of grand opera are uni versal this week, of course, but few comments have the punch of thoso made by Alderman John S. Candler and Attorney Luther Z. Rosser Just before the convening of the council- manic graft investigating committee yesterday. "I heard Alanon Lescaut.’” said Al derman Candler, "and I must admtl that 1 was disappointed. I can’t whistle a single bar of it.’’ ‘I have reached two very positive conclusions about life,” said Mr. Rosser. "No preacher in the world can outpreach sunshine and no singer can outsing sleep.” Fire Threatens 70 Entombed in Mine Explosion Wrecks Shaft at Finley- ville. Pa., and Flames Add to Peril—Three Dead. F1NLEYVILLE, PA., April 23.— Three men are known to have been killed and 70 were entombed in the Cincinnati mine of the Monongahela Consolidated Coal and Coke Company here by an explosion this afternocgi. Twenty men escaped by means of a fan. Rescuers are endeavoring to reach the entombed men. The mine is on fire and it Is now believed that all the entombed men will be overcome before they can be rescued. ‘King of Forgers,” Held in San Francisco, Will Be Tried There Before Atlanta Gets Him. A modest income of $200,000 in the last two years was netted Benjamin W. Brumby, of Marietta, by the handicraft of his clever forgeries, if the substance of his confession tele graphed to-day from San Francisco, where he is under arrest, to Atlanta, is true. Local Pinkertons have been on the trail of the “king of the forgers’’ since last December, when he broke jail ; n Montgomery, and they would like to get him back here, where he is want ed for three forgeries, two on one bank, but the San Francisco authori ties wired Chief Heavers to-day they have two strong cases against him there. He will be prosecuted there, and when the Western authorities are through with him he will be held for the Atlanta police. Far from being reticent when ho was arrested in the West, Brumby was talkative, even boastful. He re lated at length and with a showing of considerable pride the forgeries he had made and the money he had collected. He declared that he had forged checks aggregating more than $200,000 in the last two years and that he never had failed to cash them. James B, Duke Sails For Home in England Believed He and Wife, Former Fa mous Atlanta Beauty, Will Entertain Extensively. NEW YORK, April 23.—James B. Duke, formerly known as the Tobac co King of America, and his w’ife sailed on the Mauretania to-day for England, where they are to make their home. Recently Mr. Duke purchased Dor chester House, which has been the scene of many notable gatherings, and it is believed that he and Mrs. Duke, who w’as Mrs. William Ininan, of Atlanta. Ga., famous throughout the South for her beauty, will enter tain extensively. Car Company's Tax Returns Reected Comptroller General William A. Wright to-day refused to accept the tax returns of $13,134,685 made bv the Georgia Railway and Power Com pany of Atlanta, although this figure Is in excess of last year’s returns by $879,188. It is the belief of the comp troller that they should be still high er and he will have a conference within a few days with President P 8. Arkwright, of the company. Divided into the separate companies of the corporation the returns are: Georgia Railway and Power Com pany, $1,164,985; Georgia Railway and Electric Company, $9,865,000; At lanta Gas Light Company, $1,820,- 000: Atlanta Northern Railway Com pany. $360,000: Decatur Electric and Po\ier Company, $16,500; Carrollton dmrtc Ci El Company, $19,200, Intimates Close Relations With Big Corporations, Brewers and Crooks. Alderman James W. Maddox re plied to Aldetman John E. McClel land’s charges of corruption with a violent attack to-day. The reply was in the form of a letter to Alderman McClelland, asking a number of pointed questions reflecting on Al derman McClelland’s character anJ official conduct. The investigating committee of council met this afternoon, filed the Maddox letter and adjourned until next Tuesday on account of McClel land’s Illness. Alderman Maddox denied that he was legally or morally guilty of mis conduct in having sub-contracts with the city. He said he would not pre sent counter charges before the Council investigating committee this afternoon on account of Alderman McClelland’s mental and physical condition, but resorts to McClelland’s own tactics and invites a suit for libel. Maddox Asks Questions. The questions, introduced by the statement that Alderman McClelland is being used by designing men for political purposes, follow. 1. Why were you so viciously op posed to anything like a contract with the Georgia Railway and Power Com pany last year, and so vehement in denouncing all members of Council who supported it, as being improperly influenced, and even "charged thaueor- ruption existed and insisted that the city build r c competing plant, and then this year suddenly changed to equally violent opposition to the same com peting plant, and even voted at all times to repudiate the city’s previous ly made contract, for which you had voted? Is it possible that you have accepted ihe “thirty pieces of silver” so frequently mentioned by you-last year as well as the hundred places you have recently so brazenly admit ted receiving? 2. Why did you appear in court as an attorney at law in a suit against the city of Atlanta, when you knew that this appearance was in direct violation of the laws of the city? Counsel for Pickpockets? 3. Why do you represent, to the extent of consultation at least, nearly all of the worst pickpockets who are arrested in this city? How much fees do you get for appearing for them in violation of the law' of the citv and your oath of office? 4. Why did you appear in the Su perior Court of Fulton County this morning, as counsel for the defend ant in the case of State vs. E. T. Darden, charged with murder, and un der indictment therefor, with the prosecutor therein set out us W. A. Chewning, a member of the police* force of the city of Atlanta? Why did you state in your place as such attorney, that you were his leading counsel, and ask for a checking of the case because of your physical disa bility, and thus delay justice and violate the laws? Represents Brewers. 5. Why do brewers appear in your office and go into your private sanc tum, behind closed doors, while they have applications pending before the Police Committee of Council, of which you are a member? 6. Why do you give legal advice to brewing agents touching the validity and effect of a lease on a place of business for which an application is then pending before the Police Com mittee of which you are a member? 7. How many clubs have paid fees to your firm to represent them in le gal matters, while they had applica tions pending before the Police Com mittee of w’hich you were a member; what services were to be performed and how much was paid” 8. How many women of the under world do you represent in "civil mat ters” other than Eva Clarke? What case of a civil nature did you*plead for her, anyway? Personal Conduct Questioned. 9. Why did the officers of the city, when endeavoring to round up a gang of lawbreakers in a certain hotel of this city, find you in a rodm there in. when the said hotel was within fifteen minutes’ walk, ten minutes by car and five minutes by automobile ride from your home? 10. Why d»i you act In such man ner as to cautie a certain prominent minister of the gospel of this city ;o state from his puipR that a member of the General Council of this city had been guilty of such conduct s to bring reproach to himself and shame upon the city? 11. Why are your friend*, or rep resentatives engaged now in seeintf men who know things concerning your conduct, and who may be sub- penaed as witnesses, and asking these men either to forget that they know anything or to evade the ques tions when asked? Tigers’ Owner Burns Wires to Summon Star After Senator Calls for Contract. Deluge Sweeping Over Mississippi Break in Rolling Fork Levee One Mile Wide—Thousand* Home less— Fifty Towns Suffer. MEMPHIS. TENN . April 23 A break more than a mile wide near Rolling Fork, Miss., to-day permitted water 30 feet deep to overflow val uable lands in Mississippi. Several lives were reported lost. Government officers at river points below Memphis to-day began dis tributing 150,000 rations to destitute families. Thousands in the flooded district *are homeless. Heavy damage was done to Grace. Miss., a town of 1,500 inhabitants. More than 60 towns suffered slight damage. The levee at Pala Alto, La., was reported caving to-day. A high wind was sending the waves against the dikes, making repair work dan gerous. More than 200 refugees on board the steamer Alice Miller reached Vicksburg to-day. Small boats con tinued patrolling the overflowed sec tions. picking up hundreds. BY PERCY H. WHITING. That President Frank Navin, of the Detroit Baseball Club, wired Ty Cobb to go to Detroit just six hours after Senator Hoke Smith made his threat of a Federal investigation of the al leged Baseball Trust— That this threat has the leaders of organized baseball thoroughly fright ened— That they will force Navin to sign Cobb, in the hope of quieting the fiery Georgia Senators and Representa tives. who are explosively irate at w'hnt they consider the rough treat ment of their favorite ball player. That the so-called Baseball Trust fears an investigation— These are the facts gleaned from an hour’s talk with Ty Cobb. But he did not say them, hint them, sug gest them or even mean that such conclusions should be drawn. Begs Privilege of 8il«nce. "What about it, Ty?” 1 asked him. All he said was, "Being a hold-out is h—1.” "Don’t ask me to talk," said he, "and I’ll tell you why. Frank Navin asked me not to discuss things any more and I promised him yesterday by wire 1 wouldn’t." "Now, here's my attitude.’’ contin ued Ty, refusing with one breath a shampoo, massage and hair tonic, “I’m To play ball. TUfclifeve that President Navin and I can get to gether. I am going there at his request. He asks me not to talk any until the thing is settled one way or the other. It may mean—well, I'm not saying 1 lie sum. but it may mean a lot of money to me." ‘Let’s see. when did you get the telegram?" Ty was asked. The "Peach" produced the yellow document. The day and hour of its arrival was learly marked. A little arithmetic told the story. It was sent Just six hours after Senator Hoke Smith an nounced to the press that he had wired Cobb for a copy of his contract, and that he and others of the Geor gia delegation were considering whether to have the alleged Baseball Trust investigated by Congress or whether to have the Department of Justice proceed against it. Here's the Present Status. Now consider the situation: Cobb's contract ran out last fall. He saw President Navin before he left Detroit at the end of last sea son and stated what his terms would be for this season. President Navin made no decision then. Cobb all along has refused to state for publication what he asked for. Newspapers at the time said $15,000 a year, and doubtless that is not far wrong. This spring Navin sent Cobb a contract calling for a salary, so the rumor said, of $9,000 a year. This was sent back. Since that time neither Cobb nor Navin has done much nor said much, though the papers have been full of the case. A week or so ago it became evident that the magnates of the American and National Leagues had banded to gether to make an example of Ty Cobb. In fact, they as much as said that. Navin, in particular, talked a lot about disciplining Ty. At the start he had alleged that he Just couldn’t afford to pay Cobb $15,000 a year. Delegation Gets Busy. Then the Georgia delegation start- ed something noisy in the halls of Congress. Six hours later Cobb re ceived his message to come to De troit. The conclusion is obvious. What evidently happened was this: The heads of the baseball organiza tion read their evening papers. The story that the United States would at once move against the alleged Base ball Trust spurred them to action. They forgot about disciplining Cobb They thought only of saving their own skins. They must have consulted by phone or wire. There was one course. To quirt tlie Georgia delegation they must get Cobb signed and get it done immediately. They can be imagined clashing to the telegraph office and wiring. “Sign Cobb at any cost." Before the ink was well dried on the papers carrying the story of the investigation of the Baseball Trust, Cobb had hi® first invitation to go to Detroit. He will be there to-morrow. He will be signed before the week is out. It isn’t that Detroit needs him Therefore It mUst be that the Base ball Trust wafcta the investigation hushed up. -c Wife’s Plea Frees ‘Blind Tiger King’ Governor Brown Commutes Dan Shaw’s Sentence to Present Service and $700 Fine. A heartbroken atid almost penniless wife succeeded In gaining the clem ency of Governor Brown to-day for Dan Shaw, the Atlanta "blind tiger king." wffiere scores of his friends, many of them influential, had failed. Shaw, who was sentenced to a term of two years and a fine of $200 for persistent violation of the liquor laws, was granted a commutation to present service on the payment of a fine of $700. Friends have had the money for weeks, but it was not until Governor Brown teceived a letter from Mrs. Shaw that he consented to the com mutation. Mrs. Shaw wrote that she had obtained a position for her hus band in Richmond, Va. Visitor Lauds Chief For Vice Campaign New Mexico Man Tells Beavers Eyes of the Nation Are on Atlanta in Approval. S. M. Johnson, of Roswell, N. Mer., in the city on his way to attend the National Good Roads Convention in Birmingham, to-day called at the po lice station to pay his respects to Chief Beavers and congratulate him on his vice war. "The eyes of the whole country are on Atlanta, and the people of all sections are with Chief Beaver.*,’’ said Johnson. "The closing of these vice houses here Is toe greatest move for the betterment of a community that has ever beer, made by any city in this country. Atlanta is now the object of admiration for the whole nation All Decatur Joins In Spring Cleaning School Children Collect Bottles and Cans to Win Prizes Offered by Board of Trade. By Friday of this week thousands of bottles and old tin cans will be plied up in Decatur school yards Children of the town or vying with each other for the honor of collecting the greatest number. It is clean-up week In Decatur. The Board of Trade, the Woman’s Club and the Sanitary’ Committee of the City Council have inaugurated a campaign similar to that of last year. Last spring more than 17.000 cans and bottles were collected by school chil dren. Prizes are offered. Grand Operagoers Warned of Showers Weather Man Predicts Slight Rain For To-night or Early To morrow Morning. Operagoers are warned of possible light shower** late to-night, the pre diction being a slight precipitation during the night or early to-morrow. Otherwise the fair weather of the week will continue. There will be a moderate rise in temperature to-morrow. The ther mometer registered 76 at 2 o’clock to-day. Pope Again Able to Sit by His Window ROME, April 23.—Pope Pius X again was able to leave his bed to day and sat for a short time in his armchair by a window' The Pontiff was not so depressed as he wan yesterday, his weakened condition being improved. Upon leaving the Vatican after his morning call. Dr. Marchiafava said that Hie Holiness was showing satis factory improvement. Missing Woman, Found in Mari etta, Returns to Atlanta Home With Her Husband. H. H. Oates membei of a well known Augusta family, but a resident of Atlanta for some time, returned this noon from Marietta with his young and pretty wife, with whom he declared he had become entirely rec onciled. Mrs. Oates’ mysterious flight last Saturday afternoon from the Peach tree Inn. where she and her husband were staying. led to sensational stories of an elopement, but the hus band to-day was most positive in his assertions that no other man was in volved In the case. It was a faintly quarrel, pure und simple, lie said. His wife had become angered over a do mestic difference and had left him to go to Chicago. Aa the police had it, and a* an ad vertisement inserted by Oates him self read. Mrs. Oates left the city with a decorator named Quintus De- lolons, and was traced through Delo- lon’s Scotch collie, also mentioned In ihe police alarm. Oates bounded off the 12 o'clock car from Marietta before it had come to a stop at the Walton Street Station of the line. In his hand was a small suitcase. When he spied the crowd of curious person#, the questioning group of reporters and the battery of cameras confronting him. he jumped back on the car more quickly than he had alighted. One of the reporters, by a sharp sprint, overtook the reconciled pair. "It is a lie that any other man was concerned,” the reporter was told by the breathless husband. “Of that I am confident. I am satisfied that my wife was on her way to Chicago to see her brother, who is studying medicine there. She intended to take up vocal music. "When she is able we will leave Atlanta and try to forget the whole deplorable affair. We will never come back. It was most unjust that such a disgraceful construction was put upon her disappearunCe." Blames Grand Opera. To grand opera Oates ascribes the greater part of his domestic trouble and the flight of his wife. He be lieves that his wife's head was turn ed by the overwhelming desire to emulate the success of the beautiful ..ucrezia Bori, whose coming to At lanta was heralded by the most flat tering press notices and the kindest >rds of the critics. Her mother sent her a clipping a week or so ago," he said, "telling of the scholarship in voice training won by a girl in Jackson, Miss., and one in Atlanta. “The girl in Jackson was at one time my wife's schoolmate and at that time my wife’s voice was con sidered every bit as good as the oth er girl’s. Offer Turned Her Head. "Then came an offer from the book ing agent of a small opera company, and 1 could persuade Mrs. Oates to talk of nothing else. "She wanted to go on the stage, but objected. 1 thought she had for gotten it, but the coming of grand opera to Atlanta aroused her longings in this respect with increased force. She read every word of the ad vance notices. She raved over the success of Lucrezia Bori and wept that she hod not had the opportunity to make a name for herself on the operatic stage. "Then came our little quarrel, and I think she decided then to start out for Chicago to study vocal music with the ultimate idea of supporting her self.” Nearly everybody in Atlanta reads The Sunday American. YQUR ad vertisement in the next issue, will sell goods. Try it! Buck Weaver and Bill Chappelle Twirl the. Opener at Pone v. Neither Team Scores in First Innng. PONCE DE LF;0N PARK. April 23. The i'rackers opened their second home series here this afternoon with Kid Elberfeld’s Lookouts. Buck Weaver went on the mound for Bill Smith’s ag gregation with Graham catching. Chap pelle did the twirling for the Lookout*. Gabby Street was on the receiving end Two thousand spectators turned out to witness the battle. About fifty members of the Grand Opera Company were present as guests of the baseball asso ciation. Neither team scored in the first in-. ning. Elston and Street hit home runs In the second inning THE GAME FIRST INNING. Coyle went out, Dobard to Agler. Mick fanned. King out. Weaver to Agler. NO HITS, NO RUNS. Chappelle walked Agler. The fourth ball was so wild it got by Street, but Gabby recovered it and held Joe at first Alperman grounded to Chappelle who threw him out to Coyle Agler tried to make third on the out and was doubled out to Elberfeld, who covered third. Welchonce walked and was out trying to steal, Street to Elberfeld NO HITS, NO RUNS. SECOND INNING. Elberfeld bounded one into Dobard’s hands and went out to Agler. Elston slapped the ball for a home run over the row of signs in right field, if the ball had been a few feet lower it would have hit the bull In the head and netted Elston $50. Harrison hit a high foul n<»ar the Chattanooga bench, which Gra ham captured after a hard run. Massey walked and stole second. Street hit a home run against the left field fence, and he and Massey scored. It was a grounder that got by both Smith and Bailey Chappelle struck out TWO HITS, THREE RUNS. Bailey walked. Long hit a long three- haggof just, gmide -the, first base foul line and Bailey scored. Smith hit a single to center and Long scored. Do bard hunted and was out, Chappelle to Mick. Graham singled just short of Massey and Smith took third. Weaver grounded to Hardison and Smith was chased off third. Hardson tried to out run Smith and being unable to throw the ball at Smith’s back Just as he crossed the plate with the tying run. Kelting ran for Weaver. He stole second. Ag ler walked. Alperman hit a drive that got through King's legs. Graham, Keat- ln $- Agler and Alperman scored. Welchonce smashed a double to cen ter field. Chappelle put his glove in hla pocket and walked to the bench Bailey lined to Flick. Long singled to right and Welchonce scored. More took Chappelle’s place on the mound. Smith 10 F,lck SIX HITS. blurl I RUNS. RESULTS. HAVRE DE GRACE F irst—Selling, five and one-half fur* Jongs: Miss Moments 110 (Teahan), U 2 - 4-5, won; Moncrlef 115 (Mrfffbfra). 11-10, 1 -o. out, second: Schaller 10« (r alrbrother), 9, 5-2, even, third. Time U0< 1-5. Also ran: Island Queen, Hen- peck and Marie Talso. Second—Four-year-olds and up, six furlongs. Clem Beachey 110 (Nathan). B” 2 - won: Henry Hutchinson 102 7-2, 7-5, 4-5 second; Granla 04 (Montour), 25. 10, 15, third. Time: 1:14 2-5. Also ran: Nimbus. Eaton, < olonel Ashmeade, Adalante, Little Epp. Mlmlanette. ENTRIES. AT HAVRE DE GRACE. 1- IRST—Selling: three year olds and U F furlongs: Brynary 94. x Proms- *jve 94. Cowl 110, Battery 90, xHenrv 98 xCherry Seed 103, xSpeelbounij. k°1’ xI £. eo Co 2 k 101 - xUnion Jack 104* [Tim e Chap 108, xSpohn 104. xFred Levy SECOND—Two year olds; selling. 4>a furlongs: Charles Cannell 114, xEdn* Leska 98. xLennie D 106. Wanlta 107k ■ree Trade 1.06, xCarbureter 102. THIRD—Three year olds; handicap: 5 furlongs: Kleburne 112, Flying Fairy 106. Montressor 100, Barnegat 102, Palan quin 111. Fred Levy 103. FOURTH—Three year old* and up: Chester; 6 furlongs: Volthorpe 116, Jo* Knight 110, Azyalde 108. Discovery- 108. x Yellow Eyes 105, xtlherwood 112, xStri- ker 98, xPrince Ahmed 116, Spohn 115. Magazine 110. xTarts 91, xChucklee 99. FIFTH—Two year olds: conditions: 4^4 furlongs: Punch Bowl 1W, Enver Bey 109. Morin 104. Maxims Choice 100, Gal axy lv4, Stellata 97, Armament iuO. SIXTH -Three year olds and up; sell* ing; 5 furlongs: xBryn Limah 102. Mac aroni 107, Mohawk Boy 110, Lasainrelia 105. Mileage 113, xPiggie C 108 x Apprentice allowance. Weather clear. Track fast. AT COEUR D'ALENE IDAHO. FIRST—Three-year-olds and up, *eifa» ing. 5 furlongs (7): Abihu 110, Zink* und 1.10. Zwick 107, Abe SIupokey 10% Free 105, Kitty \V 94. Ruasella 9*4. SECOND—Three-year-olds and up* selling. 6 furlongs • 9): Galena Gale 112$ Wicket 110, Littleton 110, Fast os HtL Ben Greenleaf 110, Rosworth 106, Mead* 105, Harlem Mail 105. Ethel Wicks 105. THIRD—Three-y’ear-olds and up sel$» ing. 6 furlongs (8): Godfather 111, PhU Connor 114, Zulu 114. Gelico 114, Zool 112, Gift 111, Blondy 110, Phospatum 9M FOURTH—Four-year-olds and up* purse, 6t/i furlongs (5): Parlor Boy llfj Lackrose 113. Seneca 109, Dadidv Gtn 109. Meadow 101. * FIFTH—Three-year-oWe, purse. furlongs (6>: Truly 109, Vested Hightl 108. Okenight 104, Tommy Burn* 10« Platinum 104, Fitzgerald 104. SIXTH—Three-year-olds and up, selLi ing (7): Sidney Peters 117. G. W. Ken! non 114, Mike Molett 110, Hugh 1 Auto Girl 105. Holabtrd 103. 9.. I I I r Weather cleats traois g. w. K.en« l i \ imiiijjii * - 4, I