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St. Paul daily globe (Saint Paul, Minn.) 1890-09-01 [p...

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8 AMONG THE HORSES. Sheepshead Bay Presents the Greatest Schedule of Races of the Year. Saivator, Tenny and Other Cracks to Ran for the La- bor Stakes. Jockey Murphy's Shameful Exhibition on Firenzi the Talk of Turfites. Peerless Saivator, King- of the Milers— Gossip of the Track. The greatest set of.races ever sched- uled for one day by any jockey club in this country is on the Sheepshead Bay card for Monday. There are seven races in all, two being stakes, with a total of 115 entries. For the Dash stakes there is a field of twenty-six youngsters of the first class, including all the West- ern cracks. Tor the Labor Day stakes there are ten entries, including the peerless Saivator and his stable mate, Firenzi, the little sway-back Tenny, the Dwyer's Kingston, Senator Hearst's Rhono, Ruperta and others. All in all, the entries are of the highest class. First race, Futurity corse— Shotover, 104; Bluerock, 104; Volunteer 11., 104; Forest King, 104 G. W. Cook, 104; Madstone. 104; Tipstaff, 104; James, 104;Kingstou,104; Mike Watson. 104; Ocvpete, 10:5; Gloaming,. 103; Nelly 111v, !*3; Princess Bowling, Ifl ; KiltyVan. 101: Punster Jr., 106 second race. Dash stacks, live-eighths of a mile— Strategeni, 1»4; Masher, 101; Silas, 101; Keyser, 101; Cerebus, 104; WiJroy, lv-1: Orion. 104: Oscar, 101; Alias, 104; Blaculock, 104; Bellevue, 104; Richard K. Fox, l<>4; Eclipse, 115; Homer, 115; Ber- muda. 115; Lady Olrsgow filly. 101; Emma J, 101; Wendawav, lul; Barthena, l*'l; Maid of Thrift, loi; Priscilla, IUI;Esper- auza, 101; Key \Vest,llo; Sircco, 110; Capt. "Wagner, 107; Early Blossom, 107. Tliird race, one mile— Buddhist, 107; King Ciab, 107; Strideaway, 107; Fitzroy. 107; "Wilfred, 107; Tannei, 107; Beck, lo7: Al Farrow, 107, Niagara, 107; Monita Hardy, 104; Irene, 104; Puzzle, I'M; Meriden, 104; Pearl Set, 00: Badge, 117; Kyrle B, 10: i; Joe Blackburn, 115. Fourth race, Futurity course— Jennie R, 101; Phoehe, 101; Lady Agnes, 101; Mabel Glen, 101; Bruiaess, 101; Veronica, tin 1; Mamie B. 101: Rosette, 101: .cocas. 104: Drizzle, 104; iago, 10-1; Bobby Beach, V 4; Worth, 104: Punster Jr, 104; "Wrestler, 301: Unpens, 111. Fifth race. Labor Day «take*pi, mile and a Quarter— Al Farrow, 112; Come-to-Taw. 112; Judge Morrow, 112; lthono, 11*2; Ruperta, 104; Prince Royal, 122; Kingston, 12*_; Sai- vator. ISO; i'iitiizi, lit); Tenny, 126. Sixth race, mile, selling—Hemet, 82; Don- ley, B*J: Drumstick, 10:2 ; FireHy, 1*_; Brus- sels, loS; Sam Wood, iu*~; m. Paris, IOS; Frank Ward, IOS; Ben Harrison, lOo; Casta- way, l«(i; lago, 'J2; Mary J, SO; Bertha Campbell, 8*1; Genie v. -7; Tattler, 110; Penzance, bo: Eminence, Ua; Lela May, t*o; Vivid, lu3. Seventh race, mile and three-sixteenths ou the turf—Macbeth 11.. i 3B: St. Luke. 1:8; Philosophy, 138; Urbuna, liS; Mastertode, 121 : Lord of the Uaiem,_l2l: Kern, I*2-3; Philander. 125; Bella B. 135; Laviuia Belle, 135: Clio, 135. Selections: first race, Kingston and Vol- unteer: second race, Bartholin and Esper- nnza; third rate, Badge and King Crab; fourth race, Ruperta anl Kancocas; fifth race, Saivator (if lie starts), otherwise 'fenny and blrenzi; sixth race, Bertha Campbell and Ben Harrison; seventh race, Laviuia Belle and Philosophy. SELLING PLATERS GALORE. Six' Races on Ed Corrigan's Card 81-B for To-day. Chicago, Aug. 31.—Following are the entries for the races at West Side park Moiutay: flßH9__S[ First race, two-year-olds, selling, five f ur- lougSr-r-sirßodney, H>9; Willow, 100; Col- lector, loo; Cornie Buckingham, 102; JJ, If-; Ed bell, 10:!; lvauhoe, 99; Ithaca, 90; Ella -Mack, DO; Plunger, 00; James V, 90; Katie J, 93; Vulcan, D 3; Grateful, 03. Second race, one mile ßankrupt 119; Khafton, no; Churchill Clark, lo9; Jed, 10*_; Vattel, li**.; Amelia, 90; Lady Lea, 94; Beo Leo, 94. Third race, handicap, mile and one fur- Ernest Race, 120; Riley, 111; Horn- pipe. loO; bilver Lake, 9.; I'akir, 90; Gov Haidin, *J4. fourth race, selling, six furlongs.—Creole, 100; Heck Wick, 100; Packhorse, 1«'5; Tom Stevei's, 105; Imogene, 97; Bootjack, 'J/; Uaramboure. 97: Pearl Jennings, loO; Vex- ator, 100 Fifth race, selling, six furlongs.—Gray fel- low. 109: Skobeioff, 103; Mamie C.ii'l; John lied, 100; Barney o'Dare, 100: May Hart, '*'<: Cassandra," 07; Buck Thorn, 97; Billy V*. , 5.4. Sixth race, steeplechase, short course- Bob Thomas. 102; Winslow, 155; Evange- line. 149; Coy. Hardin, 147; FlipFlap, 144. Selections: First race, Willow and A ulcan; second race. Bankrupt and Khafian: third race, Ernest liace and Fakir; fourth race, Creole and Bootjack; fifth race, Buckthorn and Skobeioff; sixth race, 3ob Thomas and Winslow. . JOCKEY MURPHY'S JAG. Disgrace of the Premier Equine Pilot of America. The sensation at Monmouth Park last Tuesday was the riding of Isaac Mur- phy, the well-known colored jockey, on the crack mare Firenzi in the rich Mon- mouth handicap. lie disgraced himself in the most shameful manner, He was so drunk that he reeled and rolled in the saddle. He jerked Firenzi all about the track in his wild lurching and tumbling aboul on her back, ruined all her chances of winning or getting a place, came in last with her, and when he pulled her up after the race had so completely lost control of all his nerves and muscles that he fairly rolled out of the saddle to the erouud. He was helped back into the saddle and rode Firenzi into the paddock, dismounted without the per- mission of the dismounting judge and started to stagger to the scales to be weighed out. He. was reminded of his omission to get consent to dismount, was hoisted into the s iddle once more, received the nod cT the dismounting judge, got down, wavered and wobbled his way to the scales, could hardly stand on the scales, was weighed out, and then slunk away with the assistance of his friends. Col. Simmons, presiding judge, noticed his condition," as did every careful obse ver on the track. He reported the matter to Mr. Withers, and Murphy was suspended for investi- gation. The race was won by Tea Tray, who covered the mile and a half in 2:3*4, * with Rhono a close second. It was re- ported that one bookmaker won over §(50,000 on Tea Tray, and a story was circulated to the effect that he had purposely gotten Murphy drunk so as to insure Firenzi's defeat. Nothing that has occurred on the turf in recent years has created so much comment as Isaac Murphy's riding of Firenzi. Murphy's position has been so high and his reputation has been so good that the news of his susneusion was received everywhere with surprise. At Monmouth it was more talked about than the races, and there was great curiosity to know. what the executive committee would do. The men who had bet ou Frienzi and lost were loud .in their denunciations, but people gen- erally felt sorry for the great jockey and expressions of sympathy and re- « gret were often heard. Murphy; drove over to Monmouth track from Redbauk with his wifein the middle of the after- noon and at . once went before the ex-, ecutive committee. A -secret -meeting was held, at which Mr. Withers pre-, sided. After the *- meeting was over Murphy drove back to Redbank, where he is spending : the summer. Before" leaving he was asked for an explana- tion of his conduct. "1 have made my; explanation to the . executive committee,": said he, "and I am going to leave the ; matter in their hands. 1was not drunk, nor did I drink any ' champagne. lam confident that I will be exonerated when all .the facts are known. 1 do not care to say. any- thing further until Mr. Withers is through with the investigation." ys 7:'~:Ss After Murphy left Mr.. Withers sent for Murphy's valet and several waiters in the restaurant. They were all ques- tioned at length. l ''''flilf' l '_M : "We have discovered; that Murphy was not drugged," said . Mr. Withers. "We have made a searching investiga- tion and we have discovered* that all Murphy had to drink while he was on this track was one bottle of Apollinaris and one bottle of ginger' ale. We ex- amined the waiter who served him and the restaurant man who sold it. The bottles were hot drugged unless they, were drugged in Belfast, or wherever they were put up, for they were not; opened until they were in Murphy's presence. E^ig'n^H---dß_tafeU--*S>_--l "Now as to the drunkenness. Murphy says he drank several milk punches at home before he came. over to the track.: He did not feel the effects of them, how- ever, and says he was not in the least intoxicated. After he came here he drank a bottle of Apollinaris and a bot- tle of ginger ale. This is all he did drink, and whatever his condition was it was brought about by the mixture of those drinks. My opinion is that in his reduced condition all this mixture would affect him. I am thoroughly convinced that he had no wine here and that there is nothing whatever. in the drug theory." Mr. Withers declined to say what the committee would do * withMurphy, but if itjentertain sthe same views as he does Murphy will be reinstated to-day. "1 am of the opinion that Murphy's condition could easily have been brought about by such a mixture of drinks as he had," said David Pulsifer, owner of Tenny, and a man of wide ex- perience in all "matters relating to jock- eys, "lf you consider his weakened condition and then think of what he drank it will make his story seem alto- gether plausible." "I have known him since he was a child," said Bookmaker Cheppu," "and I am just as sorry for him as ifit had hap- pened to myself. Isaac Murphy is one of our greatest jockeys, and it is a pity that his career should end in this way." lt is about sixteen years ago that Isaac Murphy, then a lad of fourteen, began his career in the saddle. His mother was a slave belonging to Hunt Reynolds, and Isaac owes his good man- ners" and his success in life to Mrs. Reynolds' careful instruction. The men whose nuin *ries go back to the days when two-mile heat races were being run, recall the slender lad with a face like carved mahogany who rode Bob Wooley to victory on the old Nash- ville track. It was in a two-mile heat race, and the boy rode so well that he leaned at once into popularity. This was Isaac Murphy's first notable vic- tory, His has been a brilliant record since that time. In many a famous race has Murphy carried the winner past the judges while thousands in the grand stand cheered themselves hoarse. He is a master in the saddle. * Never be- fore on the American turf was there a jockey whose judgement of pace wasso good. "1need no watch when Isaac is up," said old Eli Jorden, trainer for Hunt Reynolds. "Tlie boy can tell pace bet- ter* than the watch." His fame increased year by year, and when the turf grew so that the old-fash- ioned stables like the Fleetwood . be- came too small to pay the great price Murphy's services were worth, he en- gaged himself to Millionaire "Lucky" Baldwin. Ile rode all of Baldwin's famous horses from Moliie McCarthy to Los Angeles, and itis a matter of his- tory how well lie rode them. Before Murphy signed his contract with Bald- win be inserted in it a clause that when- ever Mrs. Reynolds wanted him to ride one of the Fleetwood horses he would be allowed to ride. He has had this same proviso in all his other contracts. After he left Baldwin, Murphy rode for Ed Corrlsan, but he did not like Cor- rigans methods, and lett him. Since then he has been riding for Mr. Haggin. During all these years Isaac Murphy was the model jockey. He was never in the paddock except when he was preparing to ride. He had no race- track associates, he declined the friend- shin of the bookmakers, and was never known to gamble. He was courteous lo every one, and when he left the race track he went home. It became a proverb among racing men "as honest a jockey a Isaac Murphy," and to all other good qualities was added in- tegrity. As the years went by Murphy began to accumulate money. He first bought himself a handsome home in Lexing- ton, Ky., and then put his money into other property. He now owns nearly an entire block in Lexington, and has other property in Central Kentucky. He is worth perhaps *5100,000. He mar- ried one of his own race several years ago, and is a good husband. He rode Proctor Knott in the Omnibus stakes at Monmouth last year, and Mr. Scoggan, Proctor Knott's owner, openly charged him with being drunk. Murphy ex- plained to his friends at the time that he was constantly troubled with faint- ness caused by reducing. His mother weighs nearly two hundred and fifty oounds, and all his family are big peo- ple. He said the family tendency was strongly marked in him, and that he became so exhausted . from training down that he had to resort to some kind of stimulant. Since then there have been intimations that :he " was drinking 100 much, but they have not been gen- erally credited. Among the great horses Murphy has ridden have been Saivator, Kingston, Fordham, Hanover, Proctor Knott, Falsetto, Buchanan— in fact, there is hardly a horse of the first class that has appeared during the past ten years that he has not guided to victory. It is universally believed by those who watched Tuesday's race tiiat Fir- enzi could have wou if she had been properly ridden, as Firenzi was the hot favorite, not only at Monmouth Park, but in pool rooms all over the country, lt is hard to estimate how much Mur- phy's ridingcost betting men. In an ordinary race a bookmaker will stand to lose* $2,000 on a single horse. As there are about ninety bookmakers, this would make $180,000 in the most commonplace selling race, where the masses of the publicare not interested. In Firenzi's race the public were deeply interested, and they probably bet $350,- --000 Tuesday at Monmouth Park alone. Inaddition to this there are a score of rooms in New York, Chicago, Louisville, St. Louis,Covington,Albany, Philadelphia, Boston, San Francisco and other cities. These rooms will bet almost as much as the bookmakers at Monmouth. There are probably 150 of them, all told, and it is a low estimate to put the money they took in from the public at *?250,000. The total amount of money lost on Firenzi could not have been far from ei»00,000. KING OF THE MILERS. Salvator's Performance Stamps Him the Best Horse in America. Saivator is "Kingof the Milers," and if there is anything in blood and the transmission of sterling qualities from father to son, it is only right and proper that he should be. Salvator's sire, Prince Charlie, was . the fastest mile horse in England, earned the title of "Prince of the T. Y. C," the letters standing for a course of tnat name at Newmarket over which two-year-olds run. Prince Charlie's sire was Blair Athol, a sou of ' Stockwell, who sired Blink Bonny, Lord Lyon and Doncaster, all Derby winners, the last named being the sire of Bend Or, a Derby* winner, who in tur.. sired Ormonde, winner of the two thousand . guineas, Derby and St. Ledger. On" his sire's side, there- fore, Saivator is of the bluest blood in England, while his dam, Salina, is a daughter of : Lexington, her dam being Lightsome, by imported Glencoe, a strain second to ; none. Sal- vator's own career on the turf has been a brilliant one, and. even . before this performance he had fairly earned, by his victory in the Suburban and his two defeats of 'fenny, the title of king of the turf for 1890,. and is. undoubtedly .one of the best- horses of ~ : the ."century .' Saivator, was foaled in 1886, and his first appearance on the turf -.was. as a two- year-old in the Junior Champion stakes, ': at Monmouth, in '*" 1888, when;** carrying '15 pounds, he was fourth, being beaten a' short head by his stable ~ companion, Fresno, for thirdplace. ..' Proctor , Knott won the luce, and the ; Faverdale -colt second. He next started in the , Futur- ity at Sheepshead Bay, and was beaten 7 half a length by; Proctor Knott.* '\u25a0-". Time, 1:15 1-5. A few days*af terward he won the Flatbush stakes at seven furlongs in a canter,; beating Madstone, '*-. Fresno, Eric, Champagne Charlie and Heron. Time, 1:30 4-5. He was next seen- in the Maple ' stakes, Brooklyn, which he won, carrying a five pound penalty, in a canter from Senorlta and Maastone. Time, : 1:17%*. At Jerome ' Park he'* won the Tuckahoe stakes over the Titan course in1:24, and a few days later won the Titan stakes, carrying 117 pounds, in the very good time of 1:22%. The opinions expressed in the early part of the summer were fully corrob- orated by the general verdict in the fall, which was that Saivator was the : best two-year-old of the year. During the winter of '88-'B9 the colt was much talked about, and unusual interest taken in his development. He began his ca- reer as a three-year-old by winning the Tidal stakes at Sheepshead from a good field, including Reporter, the Faverdale colt and Diablo. A few days later saw the beginning of the contest for su- premacy between Saivator and Tenny. They met for the first time in the Real- ization stakes, at a mile and fivefur- longs, for which i Saivator carried the top-weight at 122 pounds; Tenny car- ried 109 pounds.'There were seven other starters. Saivator was the favorite in -the betting at 9 to 5, and Tenny second choice at 13 to 5. In the stretch Mc- Laughlin took the lead with Saivator and appeared to have the race at his' mercy, but Tenny, coming with a tre- mendous burst of speed, almost nipped him on the post. The judges gave the race to Saivator by a nose. He next placed Monmouth's rich Lorillard stakes to his credit, winning from Long- street in a canter, Fay rdale colt third. Time, 2:37^. In the Omnibus stakes, for which he carried a seven-pound penalty, he met his only defeat. The race was won by Longstieet, Proctor Knott second, Saivator third. Time, 2:36%. For the Jersey handicap at a mile and a quarter he carried 124 pounds and beat a good field of the best three- year-olds in training. He was not seen out again until near the close of the September meeting, when, carrying 129 pounds.he won the September stakes at a mile and three-quarters from JAB and Sorrento. At Jerome Park he won a sweepstakes at a mile and a sixteenth, carrying 127 pounds, and a few days later a purse at the same distance. Salvator's four-year-old form is a mat- ter of recent history and hardly" needs repeating. His first appearance was in the * Suburban, for ; which he and Tenny were equal favor- ites. Saivator carried 127 pound.;, and Tenny. 126, while Cassius, who finished second, carried 107. Saivator won the race by a neck from Cassius, three lengths before Tenny; time, 2:06 4-5. Mr. Pulsifer was dissatisfied with the showing made by.his horse in the race, and as a result a match was arranged between Saivator and Tenny at a mile and a quarter, both colls to carry 122. The contest, as is well known, attracted an immense crowd to the Sheepshead Bay course, and resulted in Saivator winning handily by a short head; time, 2:05, the best ever made over a circular track for the distance. The half was run in 0:49)£, three-quar- ters in 1:14%. mile in -1:39%, milt* and an eighth in 1:52%. Still the partisans of Tenny were not satisfied, and when the two met again in the Champion stakes at Monmouth excitement; was again at fever heat. Both horses were strongly supported in the betting. The race was in doubt until an eighth of a mile from home, when Saivator drew away and won very easily by four lengths. Saivator is the best horse seen on the American turf in twenty years. All old timers agree on that point, and it is only natural to suppose that his like will not be seen again in a decade, and itis probable that nobody who saw his record-breaking performance on last Thursday willlive to see it eclipsed un- less by the same horse. Matt Byrnes, his trainer, was probably the most ex- cited man at the track when he saw the time. Of course he knew the record had been broken. The time for the first half indicated that. He looked carefully after the details of the king's dressing, and then said: "He would have gone two seconds faster had the track been in its best condition. The track was a trifle dead, but it's a great performance anyway." MONMOUTH IN BAD REPUTE. The Public Gets the Worst ofIt on All Sides. The Monmouth course has this season ; been a perfect Waterloo for the public, and when it is considered tbat this means heavy losses to the class which pays all the bills it cannot be treated as lightly as some profess to do. The American racing public is nothing if not philosophical, and ever disposed to take the bitter with the sweet, but wheu a great racing association such as Mon- mouth Park seems to manifest an utter disregard for its patrons and an ever-in- creasing solicitude for tlie bookmakers itis small wonder that discontent is not only felt but uttered. And now Mr. Withers announces that $200,000 will bo spent on this track before July, 1891. Far better that he first revolutionize his methods, for if he does not the racing public willgive Monmouth a Wide berth before another year rolls round. At no other track in the East has there been so many ever-recurring causes'of dissatis- faction as at the Monmouth course, which willclose Its gates Thursday. None of its innovations have proven successful. The straight course has been a conspic- uous public bugbear; from the start. The scheme of running the horses the reverse way of the track has in many cases worked to the" marked disadvan- tage of certain horses. No track con- structor in his senses would have laid out the paddock in its present place, a hundred yards from the finish, on the natural inference that horses would swerve at this point, as occurs almost daily. And multifarious other instances could be cited of the unprovided-for angular vision of the judges when view- ing finishes over the straight course and the unprotected space at the finish, which is a constant inducement to swerving horses and a menace to their jockeys. Early Blosso n was disquali- fied for an adjudged foul here, caused solely by the fault of the association in not providing a temporary fence about fiftyfeet long to obviate such swerv- ing. And in the betting ring the bookmakers hold high carnival in' every way, increasing in impudence and arrogance as their wallets grow larger." In the West a rule*, is in force compell- ing bookmakers -to lay against the sta- ble where . two .or more horses in the same ownership start. This protects the public to a degree, but at Monmouth Park the public has to take care of itself. And while we are on this topic of bookmakers versus public the time has come when the associations through- out the country should take a decided stand, and make a rule prohibiting, uu- der ' the sternest penalties, all book- makers : from owning race horses and making books as well. As at present constituted bookmakers every day will lay odds against and take; money in on their horses when they know or arrange it so that they, cannot win. Latterly in many cases this has been painfully ap- parent at Monmouth Park, Saratoga, Brighton Beach and Guttenberg, , and the people have no redress what- ever from what is nothing but legalized robbery, pure ; and . simple. Of course the establishment of . a rule debarring any bookmaker who owns or controls, either directly or indirectly, a whole or part Interest in a race horse would not at once break Xup : this nefarious side; of the business of racing.. Bookmakers would continue to own horses proxy, but as soon as a few.wrongdoers had been ferreted out, whoWere thus attempting to evade the rule, the others would generally get out of the role of owner, not caring to risk greater . opportunities .with - the chalk, blackboard and rubber.' ; At Monmouth these methods of bookmakers who own horses ? have flourished with impunity - on the straight" track, and the officials have either failed to see or did not care- to. With so much* money Invested in racing as now, itis high time that the interests of the public,* which : pays all the bills, be regarded with a more jeal- TTmnwi ii-> i \u25a0\u25a0„\u25a0\u25a0 -ill \u25a0liimMHnwiWiWli 1 \4i .1 '' li ous eye than has been .*the case at Mon- mouth; where the patrons of J the track have been game, for ; the ..unscrupulous members of the ring, to be plucked at will or be thrown down at pleasure.; It Is time that bookmakers were debarred from owning horses, and only a question of time for it to come.' In the face then of so many well-grounded causes of public dis- satisfaction with the protection of race- goers at Monmouth it was most unfortu- nate for the judges there to make such an egregious error. of judgment as was shown by them in the Chesapeake-Ven- detta disqualification on Thursday last. This was a case which happens r so - fre- quently in the course of ; a season as to be generally dismisseed as frivolous if* a jockey makes complaint— that of two horses "bumping" in a race to the hin- drance .' of neither. And yet, tbrough the clamorings and howlings of a few hundred disappointed betters on the loser, the judges allowed themselves to be fairly "bulldozed" into rendering a decision that will ever be regarded as a travesty on racing justice to be placed side by side with the. ridiculous Hidal- go-Irish . Pat disqualification at La- tonia some years ago. Had the Monmouth judges acted .on ; the '"..*'..'\u25a0 two glaring fouls -last month that happened "right under : their very noses, the Longstreet-Diablo and Eurus-Cynosure cases, not so much ex- ception could have been taken with the one under discussion. Judges; some-" times, with more, partisan feeling. at times than good judgment, disqualify for a "bump," as M.Lewis Clark did at Louisville to the Dwyers' Quito some seven or eight years ago, and the Brook- lyn owners never ran a horse on that track since. But as noticed, these same judges at Monmouth adjudged "no foul" when, on July 8, Longstreet nearly knocked Diablo down, and when, four days later, Eurus fouled Cynosure and two others in a close finish between- live horses. Itis the recollection of such a glaring inconsistency of rulings that has caused so much hard feel- ing on the Chesapeake-Vendetta race. The whole question resolved itself into this; Vendetta was not impeded in the least by the bump, and yet Chesa- peake, who beat him, was disqualified. Of all the myriad of fouls that have oc- curred at Monmouth this season, of which at least a score have been claimed, the only two that have been allowed looked erroneous— the Early Blossom-Flavilla case, through a swerve of the former at the finish of the straight, caused by the association's failure to erect a temporary fence there, and this Chesapeake-Vendetta affair. One well-known turfman said: "Why, if I was Belmont Iwould make; those, judges sick. A criminal court might just as well acquit a man of mur- der when premeditation was clear, and the next day sentence to be hung a roan who had only- taken a life to save his own. If Belmont had quit the turf then and there I would not have blamed him." Northwestern Minnesota Circuit. The Northwestern Minnesota Circuit races begin with the state fair speed trials and close with the meeting at Morris. Following are the dates of the several meetings, with the amount hung up by each and the secretaries: State fair, Hamline, Sept. 8 to 13, purses $6,900; W. 11. Ligget, secretary St. Cloud. Sept. 16 to 19. purses $1,400 ; L. R. Swift, secretary. Long Prairie. Sept." 23 to 25, purses $1,000; M. F. Can field, secretary racing committee. Alexandria, Oct. 1 too, purses $1,500. Morris, Oct. 6, 7 and 8,purses, §1,000. WHIPS AND TIPS. Gossip About Horses, Horsemen and Their Doings. Axtell, the holder of the world's stall- ion record, will not be seen on the turf this season. The exacting campaign and the severe training he went through last season left a slight injury which necessitates a cautious course with the great stallion. The injury has been subjected to examination by -the best veterinary skill in Chicago, and the opinion given is that it is not of a per- manent nature, but that its 'successful' treatment and' ultimate cure' absolutely demand entire immunity from training, and comparative rest. The owners of Axtell have therefore reluctantly con- cluded not to train the champion stall- ion this fall, wisely preferring to follow professional advice, that the effects of the harsh canipaingn of last season may be thoroughly eradicated before he be asked to essay the gigantic task of train- ing on to still further reduce the stallion record. Henry W. Putnam, of New York city, owner ot the famous team, Aubine and Lady Wellington, 2:16 to pole, is a great lover of good horses, and seems deter- mined to have more than one crack team for his own pleasure driving. With this object in view his agent, Isaac W. Fleming, visited Chicago, and purchased from Budd Doble the six- year-old bay maiy Lady Bullion. 2:10%, by Pilot Medium, dam by Bullion, and she will be driven to pole withthe chest- nut mare Lady Benton, by General Ben- ton. Lady Bullion is a fine-going, steady, easy driver, with a natural trot- ting gait, no weights or boots; and, if Lady Benton is as fast and good as we have been informed, they should make a most desirable road team. Mr. Flem- ing shipped his new purchase to Mr. Putnam's summer residence at Ben- nington, Vt., where his other flyers are summering.' The horses heretofore running in the name and colors of George Forbes were sold at auction at Monmouth Park track on Aug.. 21. Twenty-five head sold for §20,000, an average of SbOO per head. Arab, four, went to J. Campbell for $3,000; Register, two, to J. E. McDon- ald, 13,600; Brussels, four, to G. Wal- baum, $3,150; bay fillyby Sensation, to W. C. Daly. $1,650; bay colt by Sensa- tion, to ,1. Nathan, 81,550; Vardee, four, to M.T. Donovan, $1,500; bay filly by Sensation, to J. H. McCormick, 81.150. Intraining sensitive horses very few trainers have the patience and forbear- ance to break them in without resorting to treatment that wiil induce bad hab- its. Gentleness is the prime requisite for the horse trainer. And even after the animal has passed out of the train- er's hands gentle means must be used by the owner in handling. the horse. Blinds are almost a necessity to such sensitive herses, for, in the words of the old horseman "they see too much." Mr. Warnke is finding by experience that a - man does not, as a rule, strike such a bargain in a yearling as he did in Reclare. Of the half-dozen or so which he purchased last year it is doubful whether he can lay' his finger on one and say: "That colt pays its feed bill." Rce'are has .to pay for all his stable at present. Maid of Clay, the famous old mare, died at Palo Alto a few days : ago from old age, she being over thirty-one years old; She was presented to Senator Stanford by his brother in New York over seventeen years ago. Her fame rests upon her record as a matron, she being the dam of four with records from 2:24 to 2:29. p3@Bg The negro jockeys are outriding their white rivals in races for great turf prizes this season. McLaughlin* is the only white jockey that ever rode the winner of the Champion and . Junior Champion in the same year. " This year Murphy rode the winner of the Subur- ban, the Champion and Junior Cham- pion. During no year in the . history of the American running turf liave so many records been beaten as during the pres- ent season. ' From seven-eighths of 5 a mile to one aud one-half miles all former performances have been cast in the shade by the equine heroes and heroines of 1890. gSfStaSHSB '\u0084 Hon. Oden Bowie, of Baltimore, has sold his . entire stable of - race horses .to the Sire Bros. The governor has re- tired from racing, but willstill continue to breed. He has only disposed of the running qualities of. Belle dOr and Alarm*8e11. ._:-...'\u25a0. ; Maj. Dickinson, who owns Ed Annan, will present the game little pacer to his : sister for a road horse. When hooked * to a wagon and driven oh the road Ed Annan sticks closely to the trot. He re- tires from circuit battles with a weak leg. -- :* ""* :>- ';; Labold Bros, have decided to join the list of ovjums wi» intend to quit --the fhrf, -,*. and have ordered all of their, horses to be sold by William Easton,' of ; New York \ : city, * ; during .' the 7- coming autumn, the exact time not yet selected. The stud of the late T. J. Megibb'eh, 1 of Lexington, one of Kentucky's .*- most noted turfmen,' has been offered at pri- vate sale. It consists of forty-six brood mares and ' three b stallions— Springbok, imp. Moccasin and Audrain. . '&. Neither Johnston nor Brown Hal has started this season on account of .: lame- ness. Both :horses - are ou the p mend, ; and there are a good many people who : would like to see' them meet on the track in a race. |B____SB_| 1 If performance and looks go for any- thing, Miss Belle ought to . be returned a winner before many days go by. - She invariably runs > -well, but has been a trifle outclassed in most of her recent \u25a0 races. ? Hanover, the great son of Hindoo. Is \u25a0walking and trotting about Hue. an every-day horse, but walking and trot- ting is about as much as will be asked of- him until he finds a fresh home in the stud. IHSSBSHI I It is now said that Jimmy McLaugh- linwill train for Mike Dwyer next year. The latter and McLaughlin. always got along together better than did the ex- jockey and the other brother. Jack Chirm, the Kentucky horseman and a former resident of St. Paul, who cut George McCabe at Nicholasville last week; has been indicted, charged with assault with intent to kill. Hypocrite pulled up lame in her work a few days since, and it is rumored that she is broken down, but her lameness is probably only temporary, and she will soon be all right again. Count Dudley, otherwise known as the VVah-ta-wah gelding, is liable to be- come quite as distinguished for his anility to win races as he formerly was for his remantic name. •• .„ Bergen leads the jockeys of this coun- try with 143 winning mounts to his credit this season. Hamilton is second with 100 wins, followed by Taylor with 76 and Magee with 71. Reporter will hardly be dished up a red hot favorite the next time he starts in any sort of fair company. Inhis case itis likely more a matter of lost speed than of sulking. More squabbles between bookmakers and backers have occurred at Mon- mouth over bets made this season than for any three meetings in the past com- bined. Trainers and owners complain that a large numuer of jockeys are afflicted withbig-head the season. Itis an awful disease, and totally unfits them for their work. P, Mack has sold to Warnke & Son the three-year-old filly Lizzie Fonso, by King Alfonso, dam Lizzie Billet. Price $1,500. * Cousin Jc-ems has arrived at the Gravesend track from his successful tour in the West. **^t_^— New York, Via Washington. Northwestern Congregational ist. One of the most delightful routes be- tween Chicago and the East is over the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad to New York, by the way of Washington. The trip possesses many peculiar charms, especially to one whose journeyings have never taKen him to the borders of the sunny Southland. The ride through the Monongahela valley, across . the mountains of West Virginia, and then along, the gently, flowing Potomac, awakens a keen interest in the lover of natural scenery. Much of tin— '-'nd traversed has unique historic! ' associa- tions. A large part of thb ...i was debatable laud at the time of the civil war. Across these fields and down along these .dusty roads once marched now the Blue and now the Gray. These valleys once rang with cheers, now for the Stars and Stripes, and now, for the Stars and Bars. These mountainous heights more than once echoed the sounds of deadly conflict. Here General Lee's army •crossed the Potomac, on that carefully planned invasion of Maryland and Pennsylvania .which ended so disas- trously at Gettysburg. Here Stonewall \u25a0 Jackson directed his forces on , that '-"grand hunting excursion" by which he corralled the. Federal forces in Har- per's Ferry, and compelled them to sur- render. And here at Harper's Ferry is still seen the old brick fort where John Brown took his stand in defiance of the slaveholding power. To one who re- members when these names were first written in blood, what an excitement of feeling the mention, of them arouses; Antietam, Sharpsburg, South Mount- ain, Shenandoah, Harper's Ferry, Ball's Bluff. Itis no ordinary experience to pass through a region fraught with such tragic memories. The train hurries on; and soon" there is seen dimly in the distance a white marble shaft, and then a great white dome, and then other pinnacles and spires, and Washington is reached. liven the most cursory glance at the city is sure to be profoundly impressive. A half-hour's drive through the streets will reveal more clearly than any de- tailed description possibly can, those features which have given the city its reputation and made it,in one sense, the Mecca of all patriotic citizens of this country. The capitol building, that embodiment of national majesty; the Washington monument,'., with its lofty reach heavenward, the White house, with its deply interesting associations; the several department buildings in their massive stateliness; the Smithsonian Institute, the Soldiers' Home, the broad avenues and beautiful parks—it does not take long to view these, outwardly, at least; and the view- ing of them for the first time by one who recalls what these public buildings stand for and the scenes which they have witnessed is attended with emo- tions not easily described. New York is about six hours' ride from Washington, and the road . runs through a very interesting stretch of country, touching at Baltimore, Wil- mington and Philadelphia. This is one of the finest sections of railroad in the world,' the. speed of the trains often reaching over sixty miles an hour. FACTS AND FANCIES. Bright eyes, healthy complexion and vigorous system result from using An- gostura Bitters. Sole Manufacturers, Dr. J. .G. B. Siegert & Sous. At all druggists. * mEP. DIENER—In St. Paul, Charles H. Diener, aged : forty-one .' years and rive mouths, at his residence, corner Fuller and Jay.* Funeral Tuesday, Sept. 2, at 2 p. m., to Oakland cemetery, ' MaKRETT— In St. Paul, Minn.. »Aug. 31, 189', Thomas 11. Marrett. Notice of fu- neral hereafter. "Wilmington, Del., and Bal- timore, Md., . papers please copy. * . : REMMITTER— In St. Paul, at 9 o'clock p. m., Aug. 29, Mary, daughter of Lorenz Remmitier, aged twenty years. Funeral at 9 a.' m., Monday, Sept-1, from the Assump- tion church. Friends of the family invited. . Interment at Catholic cemetery. i : : AI!OOU3CEI-EjyrS. . \ THE ANNUAL, 3IEETI*N"Cx of the stock I holders of i the St. Paul, Minneapolis & 'Manitoba Railway Company, for the election iof a Board of Directors and.* transaction .of \u25a0 .' such other business •as may * come before it, j will be held at the general office of the eom- panv, inp St. Paul, on Thursday,* Sept. 11, . 1890. at 11 o'clock in the forenoon. Edward Sawyer, Secretary. St. Paul, Aug. 30, 1890. "Stratford" (2980) By Strathmore (408).sire of 37 in 2:30 class: first dam by .'.'Woodford Mambrino,". sire of ', 1 1 in 2 :3U; second dam by "Alexander's Ab-: ' dallah,'! sire of "Goldsmith Maid,'.' 2:14, and . fiveothers in 2:30; third *dam, by i'Cceur de - Leon," thoroughbred, r. For terms of service apply to Richard . Price,' 169 West . Fourth : street, St. Paul, Minn. - ; ;; ~r ;;-' si. N Best Physicians Have Prescribed \u25a0;" POND'S EXTRACT For Nearly; Fifty Years. .T I i-wmn_*«*_i-__B-_B___B___B____p THEPUftE ____________________ BAKING POWDER. Has Broken the Record. Dr. Bennett F. Davenport, the State Ana- lyst of Massachusetts, at the request of the ""New England Grocer," analyzed the three leading Baking Powders now on the market —The Royal, Cleveland's and Thepure. Inspite of the trumpeted claims of the two .former,- it was found ; that Thepure was ahead in all qualities that make Baking Pow- der valuable. "WBnii iitiiiW/i 1 ii iißog*i!inii_flroiii With regard to strength and keeping qualities. Dr. Davenport's report rsays: "When flrst opened, Tuepcrb was found to be the strongest, yielding 8.33 per cent more leavening gas than the IJoyal. aud 3.62 per cent more than . Cleveland's," and again; "after exposure to light and air in my office window and re-tested at intervals of one, two and three weeks, they were found to stillrank in the same order. At the last test, however, " Thepure was 13.39 per cent stronger than the Royal, and 2.92 per cent stronger than Cleveland's." To be further convinced of its ex- cellence— it. AMUSEMENTS. GRAND OPERA HOUSE. Corner Sixth and St. Peter Streets. JACOB LITT, - PRO-PR AND MANAGER InitialPerformance , To-Night. The Seats on Sale Favoiite Comedian To-Day MR. M. B. AT DYER BROS. C UJrCTIo, Tuesday Morning all -. >. _\u25a0- , Seats" on Sale at Assisted by Box office. Mr. Frank Mordaunt _ \u25a0- *_.„„.-.- And an Efficient Com- RESERVED SEATS, pany; in the Latest NIGHTS,. New York 5, 35, 50 and 75 Comedy Success. Cents, THE Gallery, 15 cts. SHATCHEN Wednesday and Sat- Sept. 7, For One .'„ "^ay. Week, Reserved Seats, The Reigning Success, 20, 25, 35 and. 50 The Stowaway ,aff A HARRIS -:- THEATER. Matinee 2:30, Labor Day. Matinee 2:30. h WILBUR OPERA CO. s£k* and the " _ , ~]^r~Z _ _ and the usual NANON usual Standing l~* I~*KJ l~* . Standing Room 25 Cents All Parts of Room sign out the House. sign out BASE BALL ATHLETIC PARK. ST. PAUL vs. OMAHA Game called at 3:30 p. m. Motor trains leave foot of Jackson street at 3 and 3:15. ST. FA-XJIj IvdXJSEXJ TV /f Kohl &Middleton. IVI 110 Cis. I " Week of Sept. 1. 1 10 Cts. |" Theater No. 1, THREE Theater No. 2, Master MAMMOTH Tableau Edwards, SHOWS, in Boy Magician. \ TheaterNo3 Mid- Air. 10 Cts—Al Emerson's Bismarkonians—lo Cts SCHOOLS ANP COLLEGES. ST. CATHERINE'S SCHOOL FOR GIRLS, 139 Pleasant Ay., St.Paul, 71inn.. Wiil reopen September 10, 1890. A limited number of boarders received. Experienced teachers in every department. Native teach- ers of French and German. Classes in these languages may be formed for ladies and chil- dren not attending the school. M. S. Dusinberre, Principal. Office hours from 10 a. m. to 3 p. m., ex- cept on Mondays and Saturdays. MACALESTER -:- COLLEGE FOR YOUNG MEN. Between Minneapolis and -St. Paul. Easy access by cable,electric and steam cars. Expenses low. Preparatory and collegiate courses. Fall term opens Sept. 17th. Send for catalogue to D. E. Platter, Treasurer, 13 Giliillan Block, St. Paul. BFW Church of the Good Shepherd For the development of the tripartite nature Corner Twelfth and Cedar streets. Special attention paid to Languages. Eighteenth year begins September Bth. Send for circulars. WILLIAM C. POPE. M. A., Principal. METROPOLITAN HOTEL, NEW YORK, \u25a0- Cor. Broadway and Prince St. New Management. European Plan. HILDRETHA ALLEN. D. M, HILDRETH, I F. J. ALLEN, of WALTER E. HILDRETH, | the Astor House, "West f End Hotel.L. Branch. ! New York. -v- ,r,w*=^ ; *.*"-\u25a0*-, -\u25a0 v -\u25a0* •/*••' - v \u25a0 -'\u25a0' \u25a0'•=- \u25a0-•'-- •"• ""iC-i; v fS.oir4(r>To^uV*A>AiF?'.o^, ; -% ios (it 4* sf. if PS W$P&- WOOD'S PHOSPHODINE. THE GREAT ENGLISH REMEDY. Used for .35 '^ —^T - Emis sions, years by thou- /Sp*Mi^^ Spe rma tor- sands sue- *©\u25a0*&* rhea, Impo- cessfully. jfiidrM'^ lency. and all Guaranteed jP^?^S^3t * the effects of to cure all .\u2666g^ft^fesj*?*^ Youthful fol- forms Of Bef ore and After fr and the cx * X c r v ons *&£%£?££• cesses oflater Weakness, » years. Gives immediate ' strength and vigor. Ask drug- gists for Wood's Phosphodine; take no sub- stitute. One package, Sl ; six, S3, by mail. Write for pamphlet. Address The Wood Chemical Co., 131 Woodward avenue, Detroit. Mich. Sold byL. &W. A.Mussetter,Druggistsand Chemists, St. Paul, Minn. ST. PAUL Foundry Company, MANUFACTURERS OF Architectural Iron Work! -. Founders," Machinists, Blacksmiths and Pattern Makers. Send for cuts of col- : umns. Works on St.P„ M, &M. R. R., i near Ooipo avenue. Office 102 E. Fourth street, St. Paul. 0. M^O^SB, Secre- ,; t-pry and Treasure* . : _ : __-._. _. f^gjg^fl THEßE IS NO EXCUSE 'tTaßliiililiaßlirsKWiiwffe . FOR NOT HAVING A Fine Baß? ii§f Writing Desk and Book Gasa |f^^m!^S| A^SBEa In every home. Just Think of It. Thia j^aaEaa* r^^^^^ ' '''\u25a0***' W handsome Antique Oak Case for iwkbib vpo.ooi 'IwlflMii'PnW^lyf f^C To every one bringing this advertisement -\u25a0...,. with them - \u25a0 AUkiuds of ''Jllil i^^^^^^^^ Furniture, Carpets, Stoves, Crockery ii^ifffli^R^» aDd Draperies Equally Cheap. .^^^S[ J smith Harwell, s^^zzz_j£7"~~ ~-^- \>^ 339-341-343 E. Seventh St. T±i__ SAINT PAUL, I)AILY QIjOBE : MO.NX>AT MOKI^G, SEPTEMBER 1, *1890: * The Firms Mentionea in This List Embrace the Most Representa- tive Houses of St. Paul in Their Respective Lines. BOOTS ANDSHOES. FOOT, SCHULZE &CO., Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers In ' Boots and Shoes. 233, 235 and 237 East Third Street. C. GOTZIAN & CO., Proprietors Minnesota Shoe Company, 187 and 189 East Third Street. CIGARS AND TOBACCO. W. S. CONRAD, mpo rter, Manufacturer and Jobber in Ci- gars. 221 East Third Street. CLOTHING. KH. C. BURBANK & CO., Manufacturers of Clothing. 220, 222 and 224 East Third Street. COAL. NORTHWEST'N FUEL CO Edward N. Saunders, President and Treasurer. National American Bank Building. CARRIAGES AND BUGGIES. J. H. MAHLER CARRIAGE CO. IMPROVED DAISY BUGGIES, Carriages, Harness, &c. 359-309 East Third Street. DRUGS. NOYES BROS. & CUTLER, Importers and Wholesale Druggists, 400, 402, 404, 406, 403 aud 410 Sibley St. RYAN DRUG CO., Importers and Jobbers in Drugs and Drug- gists' Sundries, 225, 2*27 and 229 East Third Street. PRY GOODS AND NOTIONS. LINDEKES, WARNER & SCHURMEIER, Dry Goods and Notions. Miners' and Lum- . bermen's Suits a Specialty. Corner Fourth and Sibley Streets. DAIRYSUPPLIES. CORNISH, CURTIS & GREENE CO., Creamery and Dairy Supplies. BUTTER TUBS, SALT. BUTTER COLOR, ETC. GROCERS. ALLEN, MOON & CO., Wholesale Grocers, 201, 203, 205, 207 and 209 East Third St GRIGGS, COOPER &CO., Importers and Wholesale Grocers, 242-252 East Third Street. MAXFIELD & SEABURY, Wholesale Grocers, 195 to 199 East Third Street. GRAIN AND COMMISSION. WM. A. VANSLYKE &CO., Grain and Produce, ' \u25a0' \u25a0. 316 Sibley Street. GRAIN, BALEDHAY, MILL FEED, FIELDAND GRASS SEED. GRIGGS BEOS., GRAIN, MILL FEED, BALED HAY, SEEDS. 365 and 367 Robert Street IRON AND HEAVY HARDWARE. NICOLS&DEAN, } Iron, Steel, Wagon and Carriage Hardware- Corner Sibley and FifthStreets. LUMBER, BUILDING MATERIAL ROHN MANUFACTURING CO*' Factory and Lumber Yard, Arcade, Wells and Forest Streets. City Office, Lumbermen aud Builders' Ej> ! change, Cor. Seventh and Cedar Sts. * C E. KELLER & CO., ' Dealers in Lumber and Building Material. Estimates furnished on short notice. ; Rooms 301 and 3* "2 Lumbermen & Builder's ' Exchange, Cor. Seventh and Cedar Sts j Telephone Call. 1160-2. St. Paul. Minn.' LEATHER, SHOE FINDINGS AND SADDLERY HARDWARE. SCHEFFER & ROSSUM, 1 : Saddlery Hardware, Leather and Findings. : , Manufacturers of Horse Collars, Fly Nets* i Sweat Pads and Hoot and Shoe Uppers. 1/4. 176 and 178 E. Fourth St.. St. Paul, t. MEATS. j MINNESOTA PACKING ' AND PROVISION CO.; Pork and Beef Packers and Lard Refiners, / * Chicago Avenue, Cor. Starkey Street. JOHN J. O'LEARY & SONS, Pork Packers', 60 to 64 West Tenth Street. " a : PAPER AND STATIONERY. i HENRY E. WEDELSTAEDT & CO,, Stationers and Engravers. Fullline of Typewriter Paper and Ribbon*. 05 East Third Street. "~ -. =* \u25a0 RUBBER GOODS. 1 GOODYEAR RUBBER CO., Rubber Goods, Gold Seal Belting, nose, Etf* 131 East Third Street. ; -1 , * SEEDS. SEEDSMEN. ' L. L. MAY & CO. City Store 5 West Third Street. Wholesale Warehouse, Como Avenue v STAINED GLASS. BEVELED PLATE, FRENCH > *o- T ™,,„. AND GERMAN MIRRORS WINDOW GLASS & PLATE GLASS i ST. PAUL STAINEDGLASS CO 181-183 East Sixth Street. . STOVES. FAVORITE STOVE "" Fmt& & RANGE Co< A. K. PRUDEN, Manager. 409 and 411 SibleyStreet*-, J TINWARE. THE HORNE & DANZ COj Shipping Cans, Lard Pails, Oil Tanks and Dairy Goods. 51 to 57 East Fillmore Avenue. ~ - 3*l WINES AND LIQUORS. V GEO. BENZ & SONS, j Importers and Wholesale Dealers in Foreimi and Domestic Wines and Liquors. 217 and 219 East Third Street ! P. J. BOWLIN & CO., Wholesale Liquors, 314 Sibley Street DR. FELLER, 856 Jackson Street, PAUL, i__ MINN. Speedily cores all private, nervous.chronla Ind blood and skin diseases of both sexeo toi thout the use ofmercury or hindrance from business. NO CURB. NO PAY. Prf- fate diseases and all old, lingering cases, here the blood has become poisoned. c*us. Ing ulcers, blotches, sore throat and mouth ' f.ai isin the head and bones, and all dis- i teases of the kidneys and bladder, are cured forlife.. Men of all ages who are suffering from the result of youthful indiscretion of excesses ofmature years, producing nervous, ness, indigestion, constipation, loss of mem* ory, etc, are thoroughly and permanently lured. i jmu'lli'WUiiii 'Hi ftiiMTialWi'iWM'HH \ Dr. Feller, who has had many years of ex perience in this specialty, is a graduate Irom cne of the leading medical colleges of tha Country. He has never failedin curing and rases . that he has undertaken. Cases and correspondence sacredly confidential. Call rr write for list of questions. Medicines sent fc j-mail and express everywhere free fron liskAnd exposure. ' THE ST.P A.UIj TRUST COM PANT Offices Cor.'*. •Fourth and Jackson streets— acts as executor, admin- istrator, guardian, trustee, as- signee, receiver, etc. VJTATE OF MINNESOTA, COUNTY OF O Ramsev— ss. . IvProbate Court, Special . Term, August 22, 18*90. \u25a0 /. In . the matter of the guardianship of Cath- erine E., Edward J., Thomas F., Lucie E. and Frances J. Donagh, minors. On reading and filing the petition of The St. Paul Trust Company, guardian : of Baid above-named persons, praying that the advances heretofore made by it for the sup port," maintenance and education of said wards may be approved and confirmed, and for such other and further, order, judgment and decree as may be just and proper in the premises;?':^; It is ordered, that said petition be heard by the judge of this court, oil Tuesday, the ,16th day of ; September. A. D. 1890. at ten o'clock a. m.,* at the probate court room in i the court house In St. Paul, in said county. - Anit is further ordered that notice' thereof be given to all persons interested by publish- ing a copy of this order for three successive weeks, on Monday of : each week, prior to . said; day; of bearing, in the St. Paul Daily I Globe, a' daily : uewstiaper . printed and pub- lished at St. Paul, in said county. \u25a0 s By the court. SAMUEL MORRISON, fug.] judge of Probate. J DR. SAN DEN'S ELMpc HIIT AN E VER^AIL^NQaJRE FOR ALLPERSDNALWpNESS IN MEIt 3IERVOUS DEBILITY, -2j*VS VITAL "LOSSES, BHKVBATUa, PAINS IXBit** and LIMBS KIUNI-V and BLADDER COJIJ-lIIKTS, KXIUrsTIO.N, ITKAKXESS. IIYSI'EI'SIA, COSSTIPATIOX, SPINAL AFFECTIdSS. NKI'KALGIA, rle., ITKKDwithoutDiedleliie. tlie current* i ire under complete controlof wearer and bo powerful tbe* eed only be v. three hours dalley,and are instantly fell | *>y the wearer or we forfeit $5,000. Great improve- nents over all others. Especially recommended to YOUNC MEN r-iF^UrrnM I VITAL WEAKNESS of a personal nature and their eft i 'cct9,wholacki**ltal force nerve energy and muscular powe* nd have failed to attain strength and Perfect MunhnotL, A II Sfya CEM w'po thinkIhelr waning ki fas .VI bil Ity the natural results of th* progress of old age and decay, when itis simply want *\ -mimat or natural electricity and the power to produce it. We have Belts and Suspensories specially for these cases, Worst cases guaranteed permanently cured in 3 monthi* A Good Cnre of Nervous Mobility, - Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. tl, 1690, Tint SiNnsxELiecTßic Co.:— lt gives me great pleasure 1* Inform you, and for the honeflt of oilier sufferers as I was, that your wonderful Electric Belt has been of the greatest possible service to me, and has done more than you clalu*-* ed it would. I have worn your belt a fewmonths, and I am to-day just as healthy a man as I ever was. I suffered frogs nervous debility, weak back, kidney oomplalnt, and gener- ally broken down inhealth, not able to work.I went to tv best doctorswithout the least benefit, but got worse. It last I made up my mind to see you. I bought a $20.00 bea and amnow a wellman. I recommend your belts toall SOI* ferers, especially of nervous debility, for Iknow 11 wtjjj cure them. Yours m*--* sincerely, CHARLES FISHER, 800 Clifton Art. , \u25a0 Our Illustrated book, giving full Information and t<*;*ts« mouials fromprominent men Inevery State who have bjm cured will be sent for 4c. postage. Consultation at omce Tree and Invited. Open Saturdays till Bp. m.; Sundays; .rom 10 a. m. to12 m. wn' mil,.;-—- -; j, THE SAN DEN ELECTRIC CO. :.':* Journal Building, Minneapolis, Minn. . . _____ ___ ___ __ . ___ NTPHTtfPW -D " Anaytica \u25a0 JjIJIII.J--iijaiidTechiiicalChem ist;\u25a0 Office Lab. > No. -133 E. 'Fifth*. 6treet, St. ran.— Minn. Personal attea tion given to all kinds of Assaying.Ana- : . yizing and Testug.\ Chemistry applied for all arts and manufactures.
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Page 1: St. Paul daily globe (Saint Paul, Minn.) 1890-09-01 [p 8]chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn90059522/1890-09-01/ed-1/seq-8.pdfPeerless Saivator, King-of the Milers ...

8

AMONG THE HORSES.Sheepshead Bay Presents the

Greatest Schedule of Racesof the Year.

Saivator, Tenny and OtherCracks to Ran for the La-

bor Stakes.

Jockey Murphy's ShamefulExhibition on Firenzi the

Talk of Turfites.

Peerless Saivator, King-of theMilers—Gossip of the

Track.

The greatest set of.races ever sched-uled for one day by any jockey club inthis country is on the Sheepshead Baycard for Monday. There are sevenraces in all, two being stakes, with atotal of 115 entries. For the Dash stakesthere is a field of twenty-six youngsters

of the first class, including all the West-ern cracks. Tor the Labor Day stakesthere are ten entries, including thepeerless Saivator and his stable mate,Firenzi, the little sway-back Tenny, theDwyer's Kingston, Senator Hearst'sRhono, Ruperta and others. Allin all,the entries are of the highest class.

First race, Futurity corse— Shotover, 104;Bluerock, 104; Volunteer 11., 104; ForestKing,104 G. W. Cook, 104; Madstone. 104;Tipstaff, 104; James, 104;Kingstou,104;Mike Watson. 104; Ocvpete, 10:5; Gloaming,.103; Nelly 111v, !*3; Princess Bowling,Ifl;KiltyVan. 101: Punster Jr., 106

second race. Dash stacks, live-eighths ofamile—Strategeni, 1»4; Masher, 101; Silas,101; Keyser, 101; Cerebus, 104; WiJroy,lv-1: Orion. 104: Oscar, 101; Alias, 104;

Blaculock, 104; Bellevue, 104; Richard K.Fox, l<>4; Eclipse, 115; Homer, 115; Ber-muda. 115; Lady Olrsgow filly.101; EmmaJ, 101; Wendawav, lul; Barthena, l*'l;Maid of Thrift, loi; Priscilla, IUI;Esper-auza, 101; Key \Vest,llo; Sircco, 110; Capt."Wagner, 107; Early Blossom, 107.

Tliirdrace, one mile—Buddhist, 107; KingCiab, 107; Strideaway, 107; Fitzroy. 107;"Wilfred,107; Tannei, 107; Beck, lo7: AlFarrow, 107, Niagara, 107; Monita Hardy,104; Irene, 104; Puzzle, I'M;Meriden, 104;

Pearl Set, 00: Badge, 117; Kyrle B, 10:i;Joe Blackburn, 115.

Fourth race, Futurity course— JennieR, 101; Phoehe, 101; Lady Agnes,101; Mabel Glen, 101; Bruiaess, 101;Veronica, tin1; Mamie B. 101: Rosette,101: .cocas. 104: Drizzle, 104; iago, 10-1;Bobby Beach, V4; Worth, 104: Punster Jr,104; "Wrestler, 301: Unpens, 111.

Fifthrace. Labor Day «take*pi, mile and aQuarter— AlFarrow, 112; Come-to-Taw. 112;Judge Morrow, 112; lthono, 11*2; Ruperta,104; Prince Royal, 122; Kingston, 12*_; Sai-vator. ISO; i'iitiizi, lit);Tenny, 126.

Sixth race, mile, selling—Hemet, 82; Don-ley, B*J: Drumstick, 10:2 ;FireHy, 1*_; Brus-sels, loS; Sam Wood, iu*~; m. Paris, IOS;Frank Ward, IOS; Ben Harrison, lOo; Casta-way, l«(i; lago, 'J2; Mary J, SO; BerthaCampbell, 8*1; Genie v. -7; Tattler, 110;Penzance, bo: Eminence, Ua; Lela May, t*o;Vivid,lu3.

Seventh race, mile and three-sixteenths outhe turf—Macbeth 11.. i3B: St. Luke. 1:8;Philosophy, 138; Urbuna, liS; Mastertode,121:Lord of the Uaiem,_l2l: Kern, I*2-3;Philander. 125; Bella B.135; Laviuia Belle,135: Clio, 135.

Selections: first race, Kingston and Vol-unteer: second race, Bartholin and Esper-nnza; third rate, Badge and King Crab;fourthrace, Ruperta anl Kancocas; fifthrace, Saivator (iflie starts), otherwise 'fennyand blrenzi; sixth race, Bertha Campbelland Ben Harrison; seventh race, LaviuiaBelle and Philosophy.

SELLING PLATERS GALORE.

Six'Races on Ed Corrigan's Card81-B for To-day.Chicago, Aug. 31.—Followingare the

entries for the races at West Side parkMoiutay: flßH9__S[

First race, two-year-olds, selling, fivefur-lougSr-r-sirßodney, H>9; Willow, 100; Col-lector, loo; Cornie Buckingham, 102; JJ,If-;Ed bell, 10:!; lvauhoe, 99; Ithaca, 90;Ella -Mack, DO; Plunger, 00; James V, 90;Katie J, 93; Vulcan, D3; Grateful, 03.

Second race, one mile ßankrupt 119;Khafton, no; Churchill Clark, lo9; Jed,10*_; Vattel, li**.;Amelia, 90; Lady Lea,94; Beo Leo, 94.

Third race, handicap, mile and one fur-Ernest Race, 120; Riley, 111; Horn-

pipe. loO; bilver Lake, 9.; I'akir, 90; GovHaidin, *J4.

fourth race, selling, six furlongs.—Creole,100; Heck Wick, 100; Packhorse, 1«'5; TomStevei's, 105; Imogene, 97;Bootjack, 'J/;Uaramboure. 97: Pearl Jennings, loO; Vex-ator, 100

Fifthrace, selling, six furlongs.—Grayfel-low. 109: Skobeioff, 103; Mamie C.ii'l;John lied, 100; Barney o'Dare, 100: MayHart, '*'<: Cassandra," 07;Buck Thorn, 97;BillyV*.,5.4.

Sixth race, steeplechase, short course-Bob Thomas. 102; Winslow, 155; Evange-line. 149; Coy. Hardin, 147; FlipFlap, 144.

Selections: First race, Willow and A ulcan;second race. Bankrupt and Khafian: thirdrace, Ernest liace and Fakir; fourth race,Creole and Bootjack; fifth race, Buckthornand Skobeioff; sixth race, 3ob Thomas andWinslow. .

JOCKEY MURPHY'S JAG.Disgrace of the Premier Equine

Pilot ofAmerica.The sensation at Monmouth Park last

Tuesday was the riding of Isaac Mur-phy, the well-known colored jockey, onthe crack mare Firenzi in the rich Mon-mouth handicap. lie disgraced himselfin the most shameful manner, He wasso drunk that he reeled and rolled inthe saddle. He jerked Firenzi all aboutthe track in his wild lurching andtumbling aboul on her back, ruined allher chances of winning or getting aplace, came in last with her, and whenhe pulled her up after the race had socompletely lost control of all hisnerves and muscles that he fairlyrolled out of the saddle to theerouud. He was helped back intothe saddle and rode Firenzi into thepaddock, dismounted without the per-mission of the dismounting judge andstarted to stagger to the scales to beweighed out. He. was reminded of hisomission to get consent to dismount,was hoisted into the s iddle once more,received the nod cT the dismountingjudge, got down, wavered and wobbledhis wayto the scales, could hardly standon the scales, was weighed out, andthen slunk away with the assistance ofhis friends. Col. Simmons, presidingjudge, noticed his condition," as didevery careful obse ver on the track.He reported the matter to Mr. Withers,and Murphy was suspended for investi-gation. The race was won by Tea Tray,who covered the mile and ahalf in 2:3*4, *

with Rhono a close second. Itwas re-ported that one bookmaker won over§(50,000 on Tea Tray, and a story wascirculated to the effect that hehad purposely gotten Murphy drunkso as to insure Firenzi's defeat.Nothing that has occurred on the turfin recent years has created so muchcomment as Isaac Murphy's riding ofFirenzi. Murphy's position has beenso highand his reputation has been sogood that the news of his susneusionwas received everywhere with surprise.AtMonmouth itwas more talked aboutthan the races, and there was greatcuriosity to know.what the executivecommittee would do. The men whohad bet ou Frienzi and lost were loud

.in their denunciations, but people gen-erally felt sorry for the great jockeyand expressions of sympathy and re- «gret were often heard. Murphy;droveover to Monmouth track from Redbaukwith his wifein the middle of the after-noon and at .once went before the ex-,

ecutive committee. A -secret -meetingwas held, at which Mr. Withers pre-,sided. After the *- meeting was overMurphy drove back to Redbank, wherehe is spending : the summer. Before"leaving he was asked for an explana-tion of his conduct.

"1have made my;explanation to the.executive committee,": said he, "andIam going to leave the ;matter in theirhands. 1was not drunk, nor didIdrinkany'

champagne. lam confident thatIwillbe exonerated when all.the factsare known. 1 do not care to say. any-thing further until Mr. Withers isthrough with the investigation." ys7:'~:Ss

After Murphy left Mr..Withers sent

for Murphy's valet and several waitersin the restaurant. They were all ques-tioned at length. l''''flilf'l'_M: "We have discovered; that Murphywas not drugged," said .Mr. Withers."We have made a searching investiga-tion and we have discovered* that allMurphy had to drink while he was onthis track was one bottle ofApollinarisand one bottle of ginger' ale. We ex-amined the waiter who served him andthe restaurant man who sold it. Thebottles were hot drugged unless they,were drugged in Belfast, or whereverthey were put up, for they were not;opened until they were in Murphy'spresence. E^ig'n^H---dß_tafeU--*S>_--l

"Now as to the drunkenness. Murphysays he drank several milk punches athome before he came. over to the track.:He did not feel the effects of them, how-ever, and says he was not in the leastintoxicated. After• he came here hedrank a bottle of Apollinaris and a bot-tle of ginger ale. This is allhe diddrink, and whatever his condition wasit was brought about by the mixture ofthose drinks. My opinion is that in hisreduced condition all this mixturewould affect him. Iam thoroughlyconvinced that he had no wine hereand that there is nothing whatever. inthe drug theory." Mr. Withers declinedto say what the committee would do

* withMurphy, but if itjentertain sthesame views as he does Murphy will bereinstated to-day.

"1 am of the opinion that Murphy'scondition could easily have beenbrought about by such a mixture ofdrinks as he had," said David Pulsifer,owner of Tenny, and a man of wide ex-perience in all "matters relating to jock-eys, "lf you consider his weakenedcondition and then think of what hedrank itwillmake his story seem alto-gether plausible.""Ihave known him since he was a

child," said Bookmaker Cheppu," "andIam just as sorry for him as ifithad hap-pened to myself. Isaac Murphy is oneof our greatest jockeys, and it is a pitythat his career should end in this way."lt is about sixteen years ago that

Isaac Murphy, then a lad of fourteen,began his career in the saddle. Hismother was a slave belonging to HuntReynolds, and Isaac owes his good man-ners" and his success in life to Mrs.Reynolds' careful instruction. Themen whose nuin *ries go back to thedays when two-mile heat races werebeing run, recall the slender lad with aface like carved mahogany who rodeBob Wooley to victory on the old Nash-ville track. It was ina two-mile heatrace, and the boy rode so well that heleaned at once into popularity. Thiswas Isaac Murphy's first notable vic-tory, His has been a brilliant recordsince that time. Inmany a famous racehas Murphy carried the winner past thejudges while thousands in the grandstand cheered themselves hoarse. Heis a master in the saddle. * Never be-fore on the American turf was there ajockey whose judgement of pace wassogood.

"1need no watch when Isaac is up,"said old Eli Jorden, trainer for HuntReynolds. "Tlie boy can tell pace bet-ter*than the watch."

His fame increased year by year, andwhen the turf grew so that the old-fash-ioned stables like the Fleetwood .be-came too small to pay the great priceMurphy's services were worth, he en-gaged himself to Millionaire "Lucky"Baldwin. Ile rode all of Baldwin'sfamous horses from Moliie McCarthy toLos Angeles, and itis a matter of his-tory how well lie rode them. BeforeMurphy signed his contract with Bald-win be inserted init a clause that when-ever Mrs. Reynolds wanted him to rideone of the Fleetwood horses he wouldbe allowed to ride. He has had thissame proviso in allhis other contracts.After he leftBaldwin, Murphy rode forEd Corrlsan, but he did not like Cor-rigans methods, and lett him. Sincethen he has been riding for Mr. Haggin.During all these years Isaac Murphywas the model jockey. He was neverin the paddock except when he waspreparing to ride. He had no race-track associates, he declined the friend-shin of the bookmakers, and was neverknown to gamble. He was courteous loevery one, and when he left the racetrack he went home. It became aproverb among racing men "as honest ajockey a Isaac Murphy," and to allother good qualities was added in-tegrity.

As the years went by Murphy beganto accumulate money. He first bought

himself a handsome home in Lexing-ton, Ky., and then put his money intoother property. He now owns nearlyan entire block in Lexington, and hasother property in Central Kentucky.He is worth perhaps *5100,000. He mar-ried one of his own race several yearsago, and is a good husband. He rodeProctor Knottin the Omnibus stakes atMonmouth last year, and Mr. Scoggan,Proctor Knott's owner, openly chargedhim with being drunk. Murphy ex-plained to his friends at the time thathe was constantly troubled with faint-ness caused by reducing. His motherweighs nearly two hundred and fiftyoounds, and all his family are big peo-ple. He said the family tendency wasstrongly marked in him, and that hebecame so exhausted .from trainingdown that he had to resort tosome kindof stimulant. Since then there havebeen intimations that :he

"was drinking

100 much, but they have not been gen-erally credited.

Among the great horses Murphy hasridden have been Saivator, Kingston,Fordham, Hanover, Proctor Knott,Falsetto, Buchanan— in fact, there ishardly a horse of the first class that hasappeared during the past ten years thathe has not guided to victory.Itis universally believed by those

who watched Tuesday's race tiiat Fir-enzi could have wou if she had beenproperly ridden, as Firenzi was the hotfavorite, not only at Monmouth Park,but in pool rooms all over the country,lt is hard to estimate how much Mur-phy's ridingcost betting men. In anordinary race a bookmaker will standto lose* $2,000 on a single horse. Asthere are about ninety bookmakers,this would make $180,000 in the mostcommonplace selling race, where themasses of the publicare not interested.InFirenzi's race the public were deeplyinterested, and they probably bet $350,---000 Tuesday at Monmouth Park alone.Inaddition to this there are a score of

rooms in New York, Chicago,Louisville, St. Louis,Covington,Albany,Philadelphia, Boston, San Franciscoand other cities. These rooms will betalmost as much as the bookmakers atMonmouth. There are probably 150 ofthem, all told, and itis a low estimatetoput the money they took in from thepublic at *?250,000. The total amount ofmoney lost on Firenzi could not havebeen far from ei»00,000.

KINGOF THE MILERS.

Salvator's Performance StampsHim the Best Horse inAmerica.Saivator is "Kingof the Milers," and

ifthere is anything in blood and thetransmission ofsterling qualities fromfather to son, itis onlyright and properthat he should be. Salvator's sire,Prince Charlie, was . the fastest milehorse in England, earned the title of"Prince of the T. Y. C," the lettersstanding for a course of tnat name atNewmarket over which two-year-oldsrun. Prince Charlie's sire was BlairAthol, a sou of

'Stockwell, who siredBlinkBonny, Lord Lyon and Doncaster,all Derby winners, the last named beingthe sire of Bend Or, a Derby* winner,who in tur.. sired Ormonde, winner ofthe two thousand .guineas, Derby andSt. Ledger. On" his sire's side, there-fore, Saivator is of the bluest bloodin England, while his dam, Salina,is a daughter of :Lexington, herdam being Lightsome, by importedGlencoe, a strain second to ;none. Sal-vator's own career on the turf has beena brilliant one, and. even .before thisperformance he had fairlyearned, byhis victory in the Suburban and his twodefeats of • 'fenny, the title of king ofthe turf for 1890,. and is. undoubtedly.one of the best- horses of~:the ."century .'Saivator, was foaled in 1886, and his firstappearance on the turf-.was. as a two-year-old in the Junior Champion stakes,

':at Monmouth, in'*"1888, when;** carrying

'15 pounds, he was fourth, being beatena' short head by his stable ~ companion,Fresno, for thirdplace. ..' Proctor ,Knottwon the luce, and the ;Faverdale -colt

second. He next started in the ,Futur-ityat Sheepshead Bay, and was beaten 7

half a length by;Proctor Knott.*'\u25a0-". Time,1:15 1-5. A few days*af terward he wonthe Flatbush stakes at seven furlongs ina canter,; beating Madstone, '*-.Fresno,Eric, Champagne Charlie and Heron.Time, 1:30 4-5. He was next seen-in the Maple '

stakes, Brooklyn,which he won, carrying a five poundpenalty, ina canter from Senorlta andMaastone. Time, :1:17%*. At Jerome'Park he'*won the Tuckahoe stakes overthe Titan course in1:24, and a few dayslater won the Titan stakes, carrying 117pounds, in the very good time of1:22%.The opinions expressed in the earlypart of the summer were fully corrob-orated by the general verdict in thefall, which was that Saivator was the:best two-year-old of the year. Duringthe winter of '88-'B9 the colt was muchtalked about, and unusual interest takeninhis development. He began his ca-reer as a three-year-old by winning theTidal stakes at Sheepshead from a goodfield, including Reporter, the Faverdalecolt and Diablo. A few days later sawthe beginning of the contest for su-premacy between Saivator and Tenny.They met for the first time in the Real-ization stakes, at a mile and fivefur-longs, for which iSaivator carried thetop-weight at 122 pounds; Tenny car-ried 109 pounds.'There were seven otherstarters. Saivator was the favorite in-the betting at 9 to 5, and Tenny secondchoice at 13 to 5. In the stretch Mc-Laughlin took the lead withSaivatorand appeared to have the race at his'mercy, but Tenny, coming with a tre-mendous burst of speed, almost nippedhim on the post. The judges gave therace to Saivator by a nose. He nextplaced Monmouth's rich Lorillardstakes to his credit, winning from Long-street in a canter, Fay rdale colt third.Time, 2:37^. In the Omnibus stakes,for which he carried a seven-poundpenalty, he met his only defeat. Therace was won by Longstieet, ProctorKnott second, Saivator third. Time,2:36%. For the Jersey handicap at amile and a quarter he carried 124 poundsand beat a good field of the best three-year-olds in training. He was not seenout again until near the close of theSeptember meeting, when, carrying 129pounds.he won the September stakes ata mile and three-quarters from JABand Sorrento. At Jerome Park he wona sweepstakes at a mile and a sixteenth,carrying 127 pounds, and a few dayslater a purse at the same distance.Salvator's four-year-old form is a mat-ter of recent history and hardly" needsrepeating. His first appearance wasin the

*Suburban, for ; which

he and Tenny were equal favor-ites. Saivator carried 127 pound.;,and Tenny. 126, while Cassius, whofinished second, carried 107. Saivatorwon the race by a neck from Cassius,three lengths before Tenny; time,2:06 4-5. Mr. Pulsifer was dissatisfiedwith the showing made by.his horse inthe race, and as a result a match wasarranged between Saivator and Tennyat a mile and a quarter, both colls tocarry122. The contest, as is wellknown,attracted an immense crowd to theSheepshead Bay course, and resulted inSaivator winning handily by a shorthead; time, 2:05, the best ever madeover a circular track for the distance.The half was run in 0:49)£, three-quar-ters in1:14%. mile in -1:39%, milt*andan eighth in1:52%. Still the partisansof Tenny were not satisfied, and whenthe two met again in the Championstakes at Monmouth excitement; wasagain at fever heat. Both horses werestrongly supported in the betting. Therace was in doubt until an eighth of amile from home, when Saivator drewaway and won very easily by fourlengths.

Saivator is the best horse seen on theAmerican turf in twenty years. Allold timers agree on that point, and it isonly natural to suppose that his likewillnot be seen again in a decade, anditis probable that nobody who saw hisrecord-breaking performance on lastThursday willlive tosee iteclipsed un-less by the same horse. Matt Byrnes,his trainer, was probably the most ex-cited man at the track when he saw thetime. Of course he knew the recordhad been broken. The time for the firsthalf indicated that. He looked carefullyafter the details of the king's dressing,and then said: "He would have gonetwo seconds faster had the track beenin its best condition. The track was atrifle dead, but it's a great performanceanyway."

MONMOUTH IN BADREPUTE.

The Public Gets the Worst ofIton All Sides.

The Monmouth course has this season;been a perfect Waterloo for the public,and when it is considered tbat thismeans heavy losses to the class whichpays all the bills itcannot be treated aslightly as some profess to do. TheAmerican racing public is nothing ifnot philosophical, and ever disposed totake the bitter with the sweet, but wheua great racing association such as Mon-mouth Park seems to manifest an utterdisregard for its patrons and an ever-in-creasing solicitude for tlie bookmakersitis small wonder that discontent is notonly felt but uttered. And now Mr.Withers announces that $200,000 willbospent on this track before July, 1891.Far better that he first revolutionize hismethods, for if he does not the racingpublic willgive Monmouth aWide berthbefore another year rolls round. Atnoother track in the East has there been somany ever-recurring causes'of dissatis-factionas at the Monmouth course, whichwillclose Its gates Thursday. None ofitsinnovations have proven successful.The straight course has been a conspic-uous public bugbear; from the start.The scheme of running the horses thereverse way of the track has in manycases worked to the" marked disadvan-tage of certain horses. No track con-structor in his senses would have laidout the paddock in its present place, ahundred yards from the finish, on thenatural inference that horses wouldswerve at this point, as occurs almostdaily. And multifarious other instancescould be cited of the unprovided-forangular vision of the judges when view-ing finishes over the straight course andthe unprotected space at the finish,which is a constant inducement toswerving horses and a menace to theirjockeys. Early Blosso n was disquali-fied for an adjudged foulhere, causedsolely by the fault of the association innot providing a temporary fence aboutfiftyfeet long to obviate such swerv-ing. And in the betting ring thebookmakers hold high carnival in'every way,increasing inimpudence andarrogance as their wallets grow larger."In the West arule*, is inforce compell-ing bookmakers -to lay against the sta-ble where . two.or more horses inthesame ownership start. This protectsthe public to a degree, but at MonmouthPark the public has to take care ofitself. And while we are on this topicof bookmakers versus public the timehas come when the associations through-out the country should take a decidedstand, and make a rule prohibiting, uu-der

'the sternest penalties, all book-

makers :from owning race horses andmaking books as well. As at presentconstituted bookmakers every day willlayodds against and take; money in ontheir horses when they know or arrangeitso that they, cannot win. Latterly inmany cases this has been painfully ap-parent at Monmouth Park, Saratoga,Brighton Beach and Guttenberg, ,andthe people have no redress what-ever from what is nothing but legalizedrobbery, pure ;and . simple. Ofcourse the establishment of . arule debarring any bookmakerwhoowns orcontrols, either directly orindirectly, a whole or part Interest inarace horse would not at once break Xup:this nefarious side; of the business ofracing.. Bookmakers would continue toown horses proxy, but as soon as afew.wrongdoers had been ferreted out,whoWere thus attempting to evade therule, the others would generally get outof the role of owner, not caring to riskgreater . opportunities .with - the chalk,blackboard and rubber.' ;AtMonmouththese methods of bookmakers who ownhorses ?have • flourished with impunity -on the straight" track, and the officialshave either failed to see or did not care-to. With so much* money Invested inracing as now, itis high time that theinterests of the public,* which:pays allthe bills, be regarded witha more jeal-

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li

ous eye than has been .*the case at Mon-mouth; where the patrons ofJ the trackhave been game, for ;the ..unscrupulousmembers of the ring, to be plucked atwillor be thrown down at pleasure.; ItIs time that bookmakers were debarredfrom owning horses, and only aquestion of time for it to come.'In the face then of so manywell-grounded causes of public dis-satisfaction with the protection of race-goers at Monmouth itwas most unfortu-nate for the judges there to make suchan egregious error.of judgment as wasshown by them in the Chesapeake-Ven-detta disqualification on Thursday last.This was a case which happens r so -

fre-quently in the course of;a season as tobe generally dismisseed as frivolous if*a jockey makes complaint— that of twohorses "bumping" ina race to the hin-drance .'of neither. And yet, tbroughthe clamorings and howlings of a fewhundred disappointed betters on theloser, the judges allowed themselves tobe fairly "bulldozed" into rendering adecision that willever be regarded as atravesty on racing justice to be placedside by side with the. ridiculous Hidal-go-Irish .Pat disqualification at La-tonia some years ago. Had theMonmouth judges acted .on;the '"..*'..'\u25a0 two glaring fouls -lastmonth that happened "right under :theirvery noses, the Longstreet-Diablo andEurus-Cynosure cases, not so much ex-ception could have been taken with theone under discussion. Judges; some-"times, with more, partisan feeling. attimes than good judgment, disqualifyfor a "bump," as M.Lewis Clark didatLouisville to the Dwyers' Quito someseven or eight years ago, and the Brook-lyn owners never ran a horse on thattrack since. But as noticed, these samejudges at Monmouth adjudged "nofoul" when, on July 8, Longstreetnearly knocked Diablo down, and when,four days later, Eurus fouled Cynosureand two others in a close finish between-live horses. Itis the recollection ofsuch a glaring inconsistency of rulingsthat has caused so much hard feel-ing on the Chesapeake-Vendetta race.The whole question resolved itselfinto this; Vendetta wasnot impeded inthe least by the bump, and yet Chesa-peake, who beat him, was disqualified.Of all the myriad of fouls that have oc-curred at Monmouth this season, ofwhich at least a score have beenclaimed, the only two that have beenallowed looked erroneous— the EarlyBlossom-Flavilla case, through a swerveof the former at the finish of thestraight, caused by the association'sfailure toerect a temporary fence there,and this Chesapeake-Vendetta affair.One well-known turfman said: "Why,if Iwas Belmont Iwould make;those, judges sick. A criminal courtmight just as well acquit a man of mur-der when premeditation was clear, andthe next day sentence to be hung a roanwho had only- taken a life to save hisown. IfBelmont had quit the turfthen and there Iwould not have blamedhim."

Northwestern Minnesota Circuit.The Northwestern Minnesota Circuit

races begin with the state fair speedtrials and close with the meeting atMorris. Following are the dates of theseveral meetings, with the amounthung up by each and the secretaries:

State fair,Hamline, Sept. 8 to 13, purses$6,900; W. 11. Ligget, secretary

St. Cloud. Sept. 16 to 19. purses $1,400 ;L. R. Swift, secretary.

LongPrairie. Sept." 23 to25, purses $1,000;M.F.Can field, secretary racing committee.

Alexandria, Oct. 1 too, purses $1,500.Morris,Oct. 6, 7 and 8,purses, §1,000.

WHIPS AND TIPS.

Gossip About Horses, Horsemenand Their Doings.

Axtell, the holder of the world's stall-ion record, willnot be seen on the turfthis season. The exacting campaignand the severe training he went throughlast season left a slight injury whichnecessitates a cautious course with thegreat stallion. The injury has beensubjected to examination by -the bestveterinary skill in Chicago, and theopinion given is that it is not of a per-manent nature, but that its 'successful'treatment and' ultimate cure' absolutelydemand entire immunity from training,and comparative rest. The owners ofAxtell have therefore reluctantly con-cluded not to train the champion stall-ion this fall, wisely preferring to followprofessional advice, that the effects ofthe harsh canipaingn of last season maybe thoroughly eradicated before he beasked to essay the gigantic task of train-ing on tostill further reduce the stallionrecord.

Henry W. Putnam, of New Yorkcity,owner ot the famous team, Aubine andLady Wellington, 2:16 to pole, is a greatlover of good horses, and seems deter-mined to have more than one crackteam for his own pleasure driving.With this object in view his agent,Isaac W. Fleming, visited Chicago, andpurchased from Budd Doble the six-year-old bay maiy Lady Bullion. 2:10%,by Pilot Medium, dam by Bullion, andshe willbe driven to pole withthe chest-nut mare Lady Benton, by General Ben-ton. Lady Bullion is a fine-going,steady, easy driver, witha natural trot-ting gait, no weights or boots; and, ifLady Benton is as fast and good as wehave been informed, they should makea most desirable road team. Mr. Flem-ing shipped his new purchase to Mr.Putnam's summer residence at Ben-nington, Vt., where his other flyers aresummering.'

The horses heretofore running in thename and colors of George Forbes weresold at auction at Monmouth Park trackon Aug..21. Twenty-five head sold for§20,000, an average of SbOO per head.Arab, four, went to J. Campbell for$3,000; Register, two, to J. E. McDon-ald, 13,600; Brussels, four, to G. Wal-baum, $3,150; bay fillyby Sensation, toW. C. Daly. $1,650; bay colt by Sensa-tion, to ,1. Nathan, 81,550; Vardee, four,to M.T.Donovan, $1,500; bay filly bySensation, to J. H.McCormick, 81.150.

Intraining sensitive horses very fewtrainers have the patience and forbear-ance to break them in without resortingto treatment that wiilinduce bad hab-its. Gentleness is the prime requisitefor the horse trainer. And even afterthe animal has passed out of the train-er's hands gentle means must be usedby the owner in handling. the horse.Blinds are almost a necessity to suchsensitive herses, for, inthe words of theold horseman "they see too much."

Mr. Warnke is finding by experiencethat a

- man does not, as a rule, strikesuch a bargain ina yearling as he didin Reclare. Of the half-dozen or sowhich he purchased last year it isdoubful whether he can lay'his fingeron one and say: "That colt pays itsfeed bill." Rce'are has .to pay forallhis stable at present.

Maid of Clay, the famous old mare,died at Palo Altoa few days :ago fromold age, she being over thirty-one yearsold; She was presented to SenatorStanford by his brother in New Yorkover seventeen years ago. Her famerests upon her record as a matron, shebeing the dam of four withrecords from2:24 to 2:29. p3@Bg

The negro jockeys are outriding theirwhite rivals in races for great turfprizes this season. McLaughlin* is theonly white jockey that ever rode thewinner of the Champion and . JuniorChampion in the same year.

"This year

Murphy rode the winner of the Subur-ban, the Champion and Junior Cham-pion.

During no year in the .history of theAmerican running turf liave so manyrecords been beaten as during the pres-ent season.

'From seven-eighths of5 a

mile to one aud one-half miles allformer performances have been cast inthe shade by the equine heroes andheroines of 1890. gSfStaSHSB

'\u0084 Hon. Oden Bowie, of Baltimore, hassold his . entire stable of-race horses .tothe Sire Bros. The governor has re-tired from racing, but willstill continueto breed. He has only disposed of therunning qualities of. Belle dOr andAlarm*8e11. ._:-...'\u25a0.;Maj.Dickinson, who owns Ed Annan,willpresent the game little pacer to his:sister for a road horse. When hooked *

to a wagon and driven oh the road EdAnnan sticks closely to the trot. He re-tires from circuit battles with a weakleg. --

:*""* :>- ';;

Labold Bros, have decided to join thelist ofovjums wi» intend to quit --the

fhrf,-,*. and have ordered all of their,horses to be sold by William Easton,' of;New York\:city, *

;during .'• the 7- comingautumn, the exact time not yet selected.

The stud of the late T. J. Megibb'eh,1ofLexington, one of Kentucky's .*-mostnoted turfmen,' has been offered at pri-vate sale. Itconsists of forty-six broodmares and

'three bstallions— Springbok,

imp. Moccasin and Audrain. .'&.Neither Johnston nor Brown Hal hasstarted this season on account of.:lame-ness. Both :horses - are ou the p mend, ;and there are a good many people who:would like to •

see' them meet on thetrack in a race. |B____SB_|

1 Ifperformance and looks go for any-thing, Miss Belle ought to .be returneda winner before many days go by.

-She

invariably runs >-well, but has been atrifle outclassed inmost of her recent

\u25a0 races.? Hanover, the great son of Hindoo. Is\u25a0walking and trotting about Hue. anevery-day horse, but walking and trot-ting is about as much as willbe askedof- him until he finds a fresh home inthe stud. IHSSBSHIIItis now said that Jimmy McLaugh-linwill train for MikeDwyer next year.The latter and McLaughlin. always gotalong together better than did the ex-jockey and the other brother.

Jack Chirm, the Kentucky horsemanand a former resident of St. Paul, whocut George McCabe at Nicholasville lastweek; has been indicted, charged withassault with intent to kill.

Hypocrite pulled uplame inher worka few days since, and itis rumored thatshe is broken down, but her lameness isprobably only temporary, and she willsoon be all right again.

Count Dudley, otherwise known asthe VVah-ta-wah gelding, is liable to be-come quite as distinguished for hisanility to win races as he formerly wasfor his remantic name.••.„ Bergen leads the jockeys of this coun-try with 143 winning mounts to hiscredit this season. Hamilton is secondwith100 wins, followed by Taylor with76 and Magee with71.

Reporter willhardly be dished up ared hot favorite the next time he startsinany sort offair company. Inhis caseitis likely more a matter of lost speedthan ofsulking.

More squabbles between bookmakersand backers have occurred at Mon-mouth over bets made this season thanfor any three meetings in the past com-bined.

Trainers and owners complain that alarge numuer of jockeys are afflictedwithbig-head the season. Itis an awfuldisease, and totally unfits them for theirwork.

P, Mack has sold to Warnke &Sonthe three-year-old fillyLizzie Fonso, byKing Alfonso, dam Lizzie Billet. Price$1,500. *

Cousin Jc-ems has arrived at theGravesend track from his successfultour in the West.

**^t_^—

New York, Via Washington.Northwestern Congregational ist.

One of the most delightful routes be-tween Chicago and the East is over theBaltimore & Ohio Railroad to NewYork, by the way of Washington. Thetrip possesses many peculiar charms,especially to one whose journeyingshave never taKen him to the borders ofthe sunny Southland. The ride throughthe Monongahela valley, across . themountains of West Virginia, and thenalong, the gently, flowing Potomac,awakens a keen interest in the lover ofnatural scenery. Much of tin—'-'ndtraversed has unique historic!

'associa-

tions. A large part of thb ...iwas debatable laud at the timeof the civil war. Across these fieldsand down along these .dusty roadsonce marched now the Blue andnow the Gray. These valleys oncerang with cheers, now for the Stars andStripes, and now, for the Stars andBars. These mountainous heights morethan once echoed the sounds of deadlyconflict. Here General Lee's army

•crossed the Potomac, on that carefullyplanned invasion of Maryland andPennsylvania .which ended so disas-trously at Gettysburg. Here Stonewall

\u25a0 Jackson directed his forces on,that'-"grand hunting excursion" by whichhe corralled the. Federal forces in Har-per's Ferry, and compelled them to sur-render. And here at Harper's Ferry isstill seen the old brick fort where JohnBrown took his stand in defiance of theslaveholding power. To one who re-members when these names were firstwritten inblood, what an excitement offeeling the mention, of them arouses;Antietam, Sharpsburg, South Mount-ain, Shenandoah, Harper's Ferry, Ball'sBluff. Itis no ordinary experience topass through a region fraught with suchtragic memories.

The train hurries on; and soon" thereis seen dimly in the distance a whitemarble shaft, and then a great whitedome, and then other pinnacles andspires, and Washington is reached.

liven the most cursory glance at thecity is sure to be profoundly impressive.A half-hour's drive through the streetswill reveal more clearly than any de-tailed description possibly can, thosefeatures which have given the city itsreputation and made it,inone sense,the Mecca of all patriotic citizens ofthis country. The capitol building,that embodiment of national majesty;the Washington monument,'., with itslofty reach heavenward, the Whitehouse, with its deply interestingassociations; the several departmentbuildings in their massive stateliness;the Smithsonian Institute, the Soldiers'Home, the broad avenues and beautifulparks—it does not take long to viewthese, outwardly, at least; and the view-ing of them for the first time by onewho recalls what these public buildingsstand for and the scenes which theyhave witnessed is attended with emo-tions not easily described.

New York is about six hours' ridefrom Washington, and the road . runsthrough a very interesting stretch ofcountry, touching at Baltimore, Wil-mington and Philadelphia. This is oneof the finest sections of railroad in theworld,' the. speed of the trains oftenreaching over sixty miles an hour.

FACTS AND FANCIES.

Bright eyes, healthy complexion andvigorous system result from using An-gostura Bitters. Sole Manufacturers,Dr.J. .G. B. Siegert & Sous. At alldruggists. • *

mEP.DIENER—In St. Paul, Charles H. Diener,

aged :forty-one .' years and rive mouths, athis residence, corner Fuller • and Jay.*Funeral Tuesday, Sept. 2, at 2 p.m., toOakland cemetery,'MaKRETT—In St. Paul, Minn.. »Aug. 31,189', Thomas 11. Marrett. Notice of fu-neral hereafter. "Wilmington,Del., and Bal-timore, Md.,.papers please copy. *.

:REMMITTER—InSt. Paul, at 9 o'clock p.m., Aug. 29, Mary, daughter of LorenzRemmitier, aged twenty years. Funeral at9a.' m., Monday, Sept-1, from the Assump-tion church. Friends of the family invited..Interment at Catholic cemetery.

i ::AI!OOU3CEI-EjyrS. . \

THE ANNUAL,3IEETI*N"Cx of the stock Iholders of ithe St. Paul, Minneapolis &

'Manitoba Railway Company, for the electioniofaBoard of Directors and.* transaction .of \u25a0

.' such other business •as may *come before it,jwillbe held at the general office of the eom-panv, inp St.Paul, on Thursday,* Sept. 11,.1890. at 11o'clock inthe forenoon. EdwardSawyer, Secretary. St. Paul, Aug.30, 1890.

"Stratford" (2980)By Strathmore (408).sire of37 in2:30 class:first dam by.'.'Woodford Mambrino,". sire of

',11in 2:3U;second dam by "Alexander's Ab-:'dallah,'! sire of "Goldsmith Maid,'.' 2:14, and .fiveothers in 2:30; third *dam, byi'Cceur de-Leon," thoroughbred, r.For terms of serviceapply to Richard .Price,' 169 West .Fourth :street, St. Paul, Minn.

-;;; ~r ;;-'si.

NBest Physicians Have Prescribed \u25a0;"

POND'S EXTRACTFor Nearly;Fifty Years. .T

I i-wmn_*«*_i-__B-_B___B___B____p

THEPUftE____________________

BAKING POWDER.

Has Broken the Record.Dr. Bennett F.Davenport, the State Ana-

lyst of Massachusetts, at the request of the""New England Grocer," analyzed the threeleading Baking Powders now on the market—The Royal, Cleveland's and Thepure.Inspite of the trumpeted claims of the two

.former,- it was found ; that Thepure wasahead in all qualities that make BakingPow-der valuable. "WBniiiitiiiW/i1 iiiißog*i!inii_flroiii

With regard to strength and keepingqualities. Dr. Davenport's report rsays:"When flrst opened, Tuepcrb was found tobe the strongest, yielding8.33 per cent moreleavening gas than the IJoyal. aud 3.62 percent more than .Cleveland's," and again;"after exposure to light and air inmy officewindow and re-tested at intervals of one,two and three weeks, they were found tostillrank in the same order. At the last test,however,

"Thepure was 13.39 per cent

stronger than the Royal, and 2.92 per centstronger than Cleveland's."

To be further convinced of its ex-cellence— it.

AMUSEMENTS.

GRANDOPERA HOUSE.

Corner Sixth and St. Peter Streets.JACOB LITT,- PRO-PR AND MANAGER

InitialPerformance ,To-Night.The Seats on Sale

Favoiite Comedian To-Day

MR. M. B. AT DYER BROS.

CUJrCTIo, Tuesday Morning all-. >. _\u25a0- , Seats" on Sale at

Assisted by Box office.Mr.Frank Mordaunt

_\u25a0- *_.„„.-.-

And anEfficient Com- RESERVED SEATS,pany; in the Latest NIGHTS,.

New York 5, 35, 50 and 75Comedy Success. Cents,

THE Gallery, 15 cts.

SHATCHEN Wednesday and Sat-Sept. 7, For One .'„ "^ay.

Week, Reserved Seats,

The Reigning Success, 20, 25, 35 and. 50

The Stowaway ,affAHARRIS -:- THEATER.Matinee 2:30, Labor Day. Matinee 2:30.™

h WILBUR OPERA CO. s£k*and the " _ ,—~]^r~Z _ _

and theusual NANON usual

Standing l~* I~*KJl~*. StandingRoom 25 Cents AllParts of Room

sign out the House. sign out

BASE BALLATHLETICPARK.

ST. PAUL vs. OMAHAGame called at 3:30 p. m. Motor trains

leave foot ofJackson street at 3 and 3:15.

ST. FA-XJIj IvdXJSEXJ TV/fKohl &Middleton. IVI

110 Cis. I"

Week of Sept. 1. 1 10 Cts. |"

Theater No. 1, THREE Theater No. 2,Master MAMMOTH Tableau

Edwards, SHOWS, inBoy Magician. \TheaterNo3 Mid-Air.10 Cts—AlEmerson's Bismarkonians—lo Cts

SCHOOLS ANP COLLEGES.

ST. CATHERINE'S SCHOOL FOR GIRLS,139 Pleasant Ay.,St.Paul, 71inn..

Wiilreopen September 10, 1890. Alimitednumber of boarders received. Experiencedteachers in every department. Native teach-ers of French and German. Classes intheselanguages may be formed forladies and chil-dren notattending the school.

M.S. Dusinberre, Principal.Officehours from 10 a. m. to 3 p. m., ex-

cept on Mondays and Saturdays.

MACALESTER -:- COLLEGEFOR YOUNG MEN.

Between Minneapolis and -St. Paul.Easy access by cable,electric and steamcars. Expenses low. Preparatory andcollegiate courses. Fall term opensSept. 17th. Send for catalogue to D. E.Platter, Treasurer, 13 Giliillan Block,St. Paul. BFW

Church of the Good ShepherdFor the development of the tripartite

nature Corner Twelfth and Cedar streets.Special attention paid to Languages.Eighteenth year begins September Bth.Send for circulars.

WILLIAMC. POPE. M.A.,Principal.

METROPOLITAN HOTEL,NEW YORK,

\u25a0- Cor. Broadway and Prince St.

New Management. European Plan.HILDRETHA ALLEN.

D.M,HILDRETH, IF. J. ALLEN,ofWALTER E. HILDRETH,| the Astor House,"West fEnd Hotel.L. Branch. !New York.

-v-,r,w*=^ ;*.*"-\u25a0*-, -\u25a0 v -\u25a0* •/*••'-

v \u25a0 -'\u25a0' \u25a0'•=- \u25a0-•'-- •"• ""iC-i;v

fS.oir4(r>To^uV*A>AiF?'.o^,

;

-% ios (it4* sf.ifPS W$P&-

WOOD'S PHOSPHODINE.THE GREAT ENGLISH REMEDY.

Used for .35 '^ —^T-

Emis sions,years by thou- /Sp*Mi^^ Spe rma tor-sands sue- *©\u25a0*&* rhea, Impo-cessfully. jfiidrM'^ lency. and allGuaranteed jP^?^S^3t * the effects ofto cure all .\u2666g^ft^fesj*?*^ Youthful fol-forms Of Before and After fr and the cx*X c r v ons *&£%£?££• cesses oflaterWeakness, —

» years. Givesimmediate '

strength and vigor. Ask drug-gists for Wood's Phosphodine; take no sub-stitute. One package, Sl; six,S3, by mail.Write forpamphlet. Address The WoodChemical Co., 131 Woodward avenue,Detroit. Mich.

Sold byL. &W.A.Mussetter,DruggistsandChemists, St.Paul, Minn.

ST. PAULFoundry Company,

MANUFACTURERS OF

Architectural Iron Work!-. Founders," Machinists, Blacksmiths andPattern Makers. Send for cuts of col-:umns. Works on St.P„ M,&M.R. R.,inear Ooipo avenue. Office 102 E.Fourthstreet, St. Paul. 0.M^O^SB, Secre-

,; t-pry and Treasure* .:_:__-._. _.

f^gjg^flTHEßE IS NO EXCUSE'tTaßliiililiaßlirsKWiiwffe . FOR NOT HAVING A Fine

Baß? ii§fWriting Desk and Book Gasa|f^^m!^S| A^SBEa In every home. Just Think of It. Thiaj^aaEaa* r^^^^^

''''\u25a0***' W handsome Antique Oak Case for

iwkbib vpo.ooi'IwlflMii'PnW^lyff^C To every one bringing this advertisement

-\u25a0...,. with them-

\u25a0 AUkiuds of

''Jllil i^^^^^^^^ Furniture, Carpets, Stoves, Crockery

ii^ifffli^R^» aDd Draperies Equally Cheap.

.^^^S[ J smith Harwell,s^^zzz_j£7"~~ ~-^-\>^ 339-341-343 E. Seventh St.

T±i__ SAINT PAUL, I)AILY QIjOBE: MO.NX>AT MOKI^G, SEPTEMBER 1, *1890: *

The Firms Mentionea in This List Embrace the Most Representa-tiveHouses of St. Paul in Their Respective Lines.

BOOTS ANDSHOES.

FOOT, SCHULZE &CO.,Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers In' Boots and Shoes.

233, 235 and 237 East Third Street.

C. GOTZIAN& CO.,Proprietors Minnesota Shoe Company,

187 and 189 East Third Street.

CIGARS AND TOBACCO.

W. S. CONRAD,mpo rter, Manufacturer and Jobber in Ci-

gars.221 East Third Street.

CLOTHING.

KH. C. BURBANK & CO.,Manufacturers of Clothing.

220, 222 and 224 East ThirdStreet.

COAL.

NORTHWEST'N FUEL COEdward N. Saunders,

President and Treasurer.National American Bank Building.

CARRIAGES AND BUGGIES.

J.H.MAHLERCARRIAGE CO.IMPROVED DAISYBUGGIES,

Carriages, Harness, &c.359-309 East Third Street.

DRUGS.

NOYES BROS. &CUTLER,Importers and Wholesale Druggists,

400, 402, 404, 406, 403 aud 410 Sibley St.

RYANDRUG CO.,Importers and Jobbers in Drugs and Drug-

gists' Sundries,

225, 2*27 and 229 East Third Street.

PRY GOODS AND NOTIONS.

LINDEKES, WARNER& SCHURMEIER,

Dry Goods and Notions. Miners' and Lum-.bermen's Suits a Specialty.

Corner Fourth and Sibley Streets.

DAIRYSUPPLIES.

CORNISH, CURTIS & GREENE CO.,Creamery and Dairy Supplies.

BUTTER TUBS, SALT.BUTTER COLOR, ETC.

GROCERS.

ALLEN,MOON & CO.,Wholesale Grocers,

201, 203, 205, 207 and 209 East Third St

GRIGGS, COOPER &CO.,Importers and Wholesale Grocers,

242-252 East Third Street.

MAXFIELD & SEABURY,Wholesale Grocers,

195 to 199 East Third Street.

GRAINANDCOMMISSION.

WM. A.VANSLYKE &CO.,Grain and Produce,

'\u25a0' \u25a0. 316 Sibley Street.

GRAIN,BALEDHAY,MILLFEED,FIELDANDGRASS SEED.

GRIGGS BEOS.,GRAIN,MILLFEED, BALED HAY,SEEDS.

365 and 367 Robert Street

IRONAND HEAVYHARDWARE.

NICOLS&DEAN, }Iron, Steel, Wagon and Carriage Hardware-

Corner Sibley and FifthStreets.

LUMBER,BUILDING MATERIALROHN MANUFACTURING CO*'Factory and Lumber Yard, Arcade, Wells andForest Streets.City Office, Lumbermen aud Builders' Ej>!

change, Cor. Seventh and Cedar Sts. *

C E. KELLER & CO.,'

Dealers in Lumber and Building Material.Estimates furnished on short notice. ;Rooms 301and 3*"2Lumbermen &Builder's

'Exchange, Cor. Seventh and Cedar Sts j

Telephone Call. 1160-2. St. Paul. Minn.'LEATHER, SHOE FINDINGS AND

SADDLERY HARDWARE.

SCHEFFER & ROSSUM, 1

:Saddlery Hardware, Leather and Findings.:,Manufacturers of Horse Collars, Fly Nets*iSweat Pads and Hoot and Shoe Uppers.

1/4. 176 and 178 E. Fourth St.. St. Paul, t.MEATS. j

MINNESOTA PACKING'

ANDPROVISION CO.;Pork and Beef Packers and LardRefiners, /

* Chicago Avenue, Cor. Starkey Street.

JOHN J. O'LEARY & SONS,Pork Packers',

60 to 64 West Tenth Street."a

: PAPER AND STATIONERY.

iHENRY E. WEDELSTAEDT & CO,,Stationers and Engravers.

Fullline of Typewriter Paper and Ribbon*.05 East Third Street."~-. =*

\u25a0 RUBBER GOODS.1 GOODYEAR RUBBER CO.,

Rubber Goods, Gold Seal Belting, nose, Etf*131 East Third Street.

;-1

, * SEEDS.

SEEDSMEN.'

L.L.MAY& CO.City Store 5 West Third Street.

Wholesale Warehouse, Como Avenue v

STAINED GLASS.BEVELED PLATE, FRENCH >

*o-T™,,„.AND GERMAN MIRRORSWINDOW GLASS &PLATE GLASS •

i

ST.PAUL STAINEDGLASS CO181-183 East Sixth Street.

. STOVES.

FAVORITE STOVE""

Fmt& &RANGE Co<A.K. PRUDEN, Manager.

409 and 411 SibleyStreet*-,

JTINWARE.

THE HORNE &DANZCOjShipping Cans, Lard Pails, Oil Tanks andDairy Goods.

51 to 57 East Fillmore Avenue.~ -3*l

WINES ANDLIQUORS.V

GEO. BENZ & SONS, jImporters and Wholesale Dealers inForeimiand Domestic Wines and Liquors.

217 and 219 East Third Street !

P. J. BOWLIN & CO.,Wholesale Liquors,

314 Sibley Street

DR. FELLER,856 Jackson Street,

PAUL, i__ MINN.Speedily cores all private, nervous.chronla

Indblood and skin diseases of both sexeotoithout the use ofmercury orhindrance frombusiness. NO CURB. NO PAY. Prf-fate diseases and all old, lingering cases,

here the blood has become poisoned. c*us.Ing ulcers, blotches, sore throat and mouth'

f.ai isin the head and bones, and all dis-iteases of the kidneys and bladder, are cured

forlife..Men of all ages who are sufferingfrom the result of youthful indiscretion ofexcesses ofmature years, producing nervous,ness, indigestion, constipation, loss ofmem*ory,etc, are thoroughly and permanentlylured. ijmu'lli'WUiiii 'Hi ftiiMTialWi'iWM'HH \

Dr.Feller, who has had many years of experience in this specialty, is a graduate Iromcne of the leading medical colleges of thaCountry. He has never failedin curing andrases . that he has undertaken. Cases andcorrespondence sacredly confidential. Callrr write forlist of questions. Medicines sentfcj-mail and express everywhere free fronliskAndexposure. '

THE ST.P A.UIjTRUST COMPANT—

Offices Cor.'*.•Fourth and Jacksonstreets— acts as executor, admin-istrator, guardian, trustee, as-signee, receiver, etc.

VJTATE OF MINNESOTA, COUNTY OFO Ramsev— ss. .IvProbate Court, Special

.Term, August 22, 18*90. \u25a0 /.In. the matter of the guardianship of Cath-

erine E., Edward J., Thomas F., Lucie E.and Frances J. Donagh, minors.On reading and filing the petition of

The St. Paul Trust Company, guardian :ofBaid above-named persons, praying that theadvances heretofore made by it for the support," maintenance and education of saidwards may be approved and confirmed, andfor such other and further, order, judgmentand decree as may be just and proper in thepremises;?':^;Itis ordered, that said petition be heard

by the judgeof this court, oil Tuesday, the,16th day of;September. A.D. 1890. at teno'clock a. m.,* at the probate court room inithe court house InSt. Paul, insaid county.-

Anitis further ordered that notice' thereofbe given to all persons interested by publish-ing a copy of this order for three successiveweeks, on Monday of:each week, prior to.said; day; of bearing, in the St. Paul DailyIGlobe, a'daily :uewstiaper .printed and pub-lished at St.Paul, in said county. \u25a0 s

By the court. SAMUELMORRISON,fug.] judge of Probate. J

DR. SANDEN'SELMpcHIIT

ANEVER^AIL^NQaJRE FORALLPERSDNALWpNESS INMEIt

3IERVOUS DEBILITY, -2j*VS VITAL"LOSSES,BHKVBATUa,PAINS IXBit**and LIMBS KIUNI-V andBLADDER COJIJ-lIIKTS, KXIUrsTIO.N, ITKAKXESS.IIYSI'EI'SIA, COSSTIPATIOX, SPINAL AFFECTIdSS.NKI'KALGIA,rle., ITKKDwithoutDiedleliie. tlie current*iire under complete controlof wearer and bo powerful tbe*eed onlybe v. three hours dalley,and are instantly fell|*>y the wearer or we forfeit $5,000. Great improve-

nents over all others. Especially recommended to

YOUNC MENr-iF^UrrnMIVITALWEAKNESS of a personal nature and their efti'cct9,wholacki**ltal forcenerve energy and muscular powe*

nd have failed to attain strength and Perfect MunhnotL,

AII Sfya CEM w'po thinkIhelr waningkifas .VIbilItythe natural results of th*

progress ofold age and decay, when itis simply want *\-mimat or natural electricity and the power to produce it.Wehave Belts and Suspensories specially for these cases,Worst cases guaranteed permanently cured in 3 monthi*A Good Cnre of Nervous Mobility,-

Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. tl,1690,TintSiNnsxELiecTßic Co.:—ltgives me great pleasure 1*Inform you,and for the honeflt of oiliersufferers asIwas,

that your wonderful Electric Belt has been of the greatestpossible service to me, and has done more than you clalu*-*ed itwould. Ihave worn your belt a fewmonths, andIamto-day just as healthy aman as Iever was.Isuffered frogsnervous debility,weak back, kidney oomplalnt, and gener-ally broken down inhealth, not able to work.Iwent to tvbest doctorswithout the least benefit, but got worse. Itlast Imade up my mind to see you. Ibought a $20.00 beaand amnow a wellman.Irecommend your belts toallSOI*ferers, especially of nervousdebility, forIknow 11 wtjjjcure them. Yours m*--* sincerely,

CHARLES FISHER, 800 Clifton Art.,\u25a0 Our Illustrated book, giving fullInformation and t<*;*ts«

mouials fromprominent men Inevery State whohave bjmcured willbe sent for4c. postage. Consultation at omceTree and Invited. Open Saturdays tillBp. m.;Sundays;• .rom 10 a. m. to12 m. wn' mil,.;-—- -;j,THE SANDEN ELECTRIC CO.

:.':* Journal Building, Minneapolis, Minn. . ._____ ___ ___ __ .___

NTPHTtfPW -D" Anaytica\u25a0 JjIJIII.J--iijaiidTechiiicalChem

ist;\u25a0 Office Lab.> No. -133 E. 'Fifth*.6treet, St. ran.— Minn. Personal atteationgiven to allkinds of Assaying.Ana- :.yizing and Testug.\ Chemistry applied

• forall arts and manufactures.

Recommended