wis The Dryad. Within these dells A dryad dwells A wid the wind-blown pimpernels ; Yet none have seen Her trip between T'ke glimmering vistas’ silvery green, Though many feel her mystic spells. May it be mine Some morn divine To see her fluttering garments shine, And hear the beat Of hurrying feet Upon the ferns and grasses swoet, And catch her laughter, airy fine, For whose sees Amid the trees form that iike a phantom flees, To him alone There shall be shown Deep secrets to no mortal known, 411 Nature's subtle mysteries— der What rushes say At dusk of day ; Lhe perfect prayer that lilies pray ; The amorous ars To win a heart Jnfolding rosebuds might impart ; Where hides the will-o’-the-wisp away ; Why fire-flies light Their lanterns bright Jn each serene midsummer night; The words that float On every note That wells from out a feathered throat ; \V here insect armies take their flight. All this, and more, Shall be has store ho sees her foot the forest floor Then be it mine Some morn divine T'o meet her ‘neath a hoary pine And learn the symbols of her lore. B — — a hl hi at AR RIBAUD, THE MISER. he 29th day of WwW For five years up to Paris. He was a little hunchback old man and a miser, hoardings were nearly a million francs, terribly beaten that his life for a time was despaired of. The robbers got nothing for their pains. He then re- solved to live no longer alone, rirl from Rainey as a house servant. Unknown to him the girl, Fanchette, 1ad a lover— Adolphe, a student—whom nce a week she was in the habit of sly- v meeting at the post-house, Once a ponth she had a holiday and passed it with her lover at Rainey. Ribaud, he neighbors said, had once been a rag- vicker in Paris, On the morning of December 29 Fanchette had ber usual woliday and went to Rainey, retur her miser’s house at night- Ali, During the night two of yf the post-house, who by the li antern were playing cards in one stables, heard a wild cry of agony, as of yne in mortal terror. t seemed to pro- from the direction of Ribaud’s They laid down their cards then went All the cottage; not another hey hear. Th 80 ning oO master : the hostlers htof a f 1} oii Oi Lhe r at eed Lage, v iat eno id listened, outside, ned to the morning y g 1of what they i In rex ts Tart + U Nos RO 1 there ane ir surprise found © miser was ay A arly riser. They knocked and called udly, bu answer tried the doc It was the front room they beheld a horrible ghastly spectacle. They saw Ribaud lying in the middle of the floor, hi throat cut and his head beaten with a heavy bludgeon. Blood attered and clotted on the floor, on walls and on the bed, In m they heard a woman’s voice faint- crying, as if smothered: *‘‘Help! There they Fanchette, eagged and bound, hand and foot, face lownward, he two men ran out and gave the larm. The girl Fanchette was releas- «1 and when sufficiently recovered, told «x story. It was brief. She did not lie old man murdered. She only knew that just as she was preparing to » 1 ndress always cae, 1 unl 1 WUILOG REN, oo as Ww a 3 thie Help!" saw ith; she was then thrown violently fainted and knew no she came to consrious- backwar 1 re. When she mn was silent as a tomb. She knew 12 about his hidden hoards, age was searched, but no wero discovered. The police were at fault; they could only vaguely surmise, ‘The miser was buried, the cottage razed Ab 1 about The cot- to the ground, to Rainey, murder papers, On the third a shabby old man caine to the prefect of the Seine. “*Monsieur,” he said, “I am a rag- picker, I knew this poor Ribaud, the miser. We worked together until he left Paris.” “But what has that to do with the wurder? Why come to me!” ‘Because, Monsieur, 1 may aid in the finding his murderers, You see, he had one treasure of which only he and my- self knew, You remember that ten vears ago a jeweler of the Rue Biron lost and set the police in search of two magnificent diamonds, the largest ever seen in Paris, except those im the em- peror's possession. They were intend- ed for the Due 'd Aumale.” “Well, ragman ?”° “They were never found, for Riband had them safely hidden, He had them in his cottage.” “Nonsense !| The diamonds were lost not stolen,” **Not stolen? That depends, I know Ribaud had them, Monsieur, you will see me again. The person who now has the diamonds is the murderer of Ribaud and knew where to find them.” The rag picker left the office, but at the corner of the street he was arrested by an officer of the prefect, “This fellow knows more than he will disclose. I'll keep him a while in secret.” During the following month of Feb- ruary Paris bad a sensatian in the ap- pearance of a dashing couple. The Count and Countess De Trouville, as they reported, had just returned from a continental tour, on their way to their chateau near Malines, They hired magnificent apartments in the Fau- bourg St, Germain, and astonished even the ancient noblesse with the extrava- gance of their style. At the opera, the theaters, on the boulevards, among the shopkeepers and tradesmen they became notorious, Evidently the count's wealth was inexhaustible, In their apartments at times they held high revel, and the count and the friends he had made had the wildest orgies. The police kept a wary eye upon them, for they could gather no information as to where the count obtained his funds, July came, with the heat. Mean- while the rag picker was released, but still kept in surveillance. Jacquard, one of the keenest of Parisian detec tives, was sent to Raincy by the pre- fect to endeavor to find a clue to the murderer of Ribaud the miser., The girl, Fanchette, had disappeared, Her lover, the student, it wassaid, had gone off with her. She asserted that she had received a large legacy from an aunt in Normandy. scription of Fanchette and her lover. One day he saw the Count and Count- { ess De Trouville on the boulevard in an | open carriage. To the prefect he said: {| ‘‘The student lover and Fanchette, | the servant of the miser, are in Paris, They are now called the Count Countess De Trouville,” “Suppose they are. That does not { connect them with the murder of Ri- | baud.” | “Monsieur, you | rag picker’s | monds?” “Well? “Yesterday one of them was offered in pawn at Monte de | i | { do not forget story of the lost dia- and wearing shabby clothes, him. That was one of the solitaires of the Due d’ Aumale. The official’s scription of the man leads me to believe it was the count.” **Then he is not likely to return for “Wit hin self, If it was then he has the other solitaire, and we have a clue to the murderers.” The went to work hope- fully. Dressed with faultless elegance he looked every inch the Parisian swell, In two days he made the acquaintance ot the Count. On the third he contriv- ed to obtain an invitation to his apart- ments, The Count received him in $ 4 he he, 1 Fier detective and half burned coals, was unscreened with the usual cover. **Ah, everybody notices that grate, It is my fancy to have it exposed, a contrast which, surroundings appear all the richer. | d Besides you for cigar ends and px in Wi tered. Yiohte deligh £44 § Ai ie 3 1 * 0 not permit the servants to disturb it, 80 8 Was of The i8 new friend, turned the with h ly the detective tion upon diamon« $ male's solitaires. the same, “By the way,” sai cial, ‘those diamons ry large—too | of them 1 * (here the detective the coals in the grate) piece of half burned to the grate he ing down to a large ashen took up fingers. Like a madman the count sprang to grasp the piece from the detective’s and and his face became almost livid, **No, no! throw it back. It—it will soil-—" “I beg your pardon, monsieur,” said the detective, coolly, “*but really this is the lightest piece of coal for its size.” Why”—brushing the ashes from it What Are you ill ? is the matter count ¥ : 3 he eount sat glaring, trembling. I'be detective saw that the bit of coal was somehow leading him to the end of He examined the lump carefully, but only for a moment. Then he quietly placed it in his pocket. “I will keep this, count, as a souvenir my visit, An odd souvenir, is it With one bound the Count de Trou- ville sprang between his visitor and the ‘Monsieur, your words are an insult Either toss that bit of coal back the grate, or I will make you,” The detective took out the lump. Suddenly dropping it upon the carpet, he placed his heel heavily upon it. cracked apart beneath the pressure like the wood, and there as he stepped back, lay the other lost diamond. “You may keep the coal, I wil take the diamond and you." the movement the detective, Ly an adroit trick peculior to his profession, sprang upon him, dashed the pistol from his hand and held him at his mercy. “You are my prisoner, Adolphe, alias the Count de Trouville, as Fanchette will be within an hour, Iarrest you as the murderer of Ribaud, the miser of Rainey, and she as your accomplice, An hour later the woman Fanchette resplendent in silks returned from her drive, was put under arrest and with her companion was sent on her way to prison, That night she sent for the prefect and with tears and lamentations con- fessed her guilt as an accomplice to the murder of her old master, Ribaud, the miser, Briefly, her story was this: While in his service she one day came upon him unawares, and unseen by him saw him remove a brick from the jam of the fire-place in his room and take out two large diamonds, and after ex- amining them replace them in their concealment, After this she was stimulated to watch him closer, and she at last found where ha had hiddan his monev-nnder the cellar. Three francs in coin; be- sides in the oak chest were 100,000 francs in notes, All this he had amas- sed while in Paris a rag-picker, and by the purchase of a lucky ticket in the lottery, She told her lover all, He was poor, unscrupulous, He proposed to murder him and make way with the body, She was to admit him, and the horrible work being done and the robbery ac- complished, he was to gag and bind her, and leave her there to ward off sus- picion. All worked well, barrel in thousand a water hundred came to Paris. I'he ery that the host. death-shriek of the miser, aiamond at the Monte de Plete. Fear- ing that—being tracked by the bank officials and the house searched-—the re- maining diamond would be devised the idea of concealing it ina Stage Rant, We were speaking to a other day respecting the merits of a celebrated tragedlan, when we had oc- casion to comment on the rant of the stage-—the loud mouthing, the outrage- eyes, the stride, swords that rattle in the hilt, and all the “pomp and circum- stance’’ of the modern drama. Fancy this style carried into real life, say, throwing yourself into a splendid attitude :— **Most gracious madam, on my knees right hand upon your heart. To a creditor who would not pay,— | payest thou me “Fraudulent knave | not? By yonder sun, that blazes in locked. Adolphe was hanged and was sent to a penal settlement for life, To Jacquard the Duc 4’ Aumale On the morn- ing following Fanchetle's confession the rag-picker came to the prefect, The diamonds and the murderer “How came Ribaud to have them?” “Ah! he found them in they were dropped by the ass of a jew- them from the Duc in his carriage. them until the jeweler entered his shop and then he made way with the prize. That's all.” —- o_O — - The Heart of Islam, soon forget the old Tunis, widest throughfares hardly One does not admit the These streets and the dim many sun, Jews t the places with planks, to keep ou are thronged with Moslems and Craunt Arabs of plain stalk by, brushing with the skirts of their flowing HOUSES, A Moorish gentleman against and BE VR AT F pPayYeinenis, damage hrough the mud of the ¢ aohtn ghlest his way daintily t accumulated fi without the sli ' ly « } 3 ws spotless white stockings 3 $y dud ther on progress is bloc kneeling at the d shop, the burden or wall to wall, h great aggregation of workshops ; In the pigeot street the oT y i as booths, sng tha ODE Lik } y ’ v } 1s and toe nails, and movement gaurded, 3 that you meet u town, gliding white yashmak usually those of circumstances, before old women The wi hile sich gigher AA ’ in huml veil indi than the Je i cast we call style. But it is uncommon to yunter a velled woman in the street whom one can reasonably suspect of youth or comeliness, The elder women of the lower classes go afoot to the suks, or bazaars, to do their shopping; but thorough is the discipline of a superflu- ous jealousy, that the wrinkled creatures will often dodge into a doorway or off down some alley, to avoid meeting a man in European clothes, There are said to be thousands of women in Tunis whose only walk abroad during the whole course of their lives, is the wed- ding promenade from parents’ house to husband's; unless, indeed, one is so un- fortunate upon her arrival as to fail to please the bridgeroom, who has never before seen her face, and is consequently ence BO) 3 siue manson SAAD AI 5 A Beautiful Lake. One of the beautiful sights along this owes its existence to voleanie action, traces of which may be seen in the wild scenery along a portion of its shore. Some of the mountains that form the background are covered with the richest vegetation, while others are barren and rugged, with strange, grotesque out- lines, The lake is studded with little islands, none of them inhabited. The only living creatures which break the silence which broods over the surface of its placid waters are great flocks of wild fowls of many kinds, Ciutzeo is phere and medicinal springs being con- sidered an infallible cure for diseases of the digestive organs. The salt extract- ed from the water of this lake is of a fine quality, and is used to quite a large extent as an article of commerce. The industry is carried on in the most primitive style, and the land near the shore of the lake presents a curious as- pect, covered with mounds of earth varying in size from an ant, hill to baby mountains, aud looking somewhat like a settioment of prairie dogs, with their dwellings nified considerably. The rich and varied hues of sunset lend an additional beauty to this charming lake, which we follow for some eigh'een miles, ‘=A black silk lining fa much pre- ferred; it 1s more tical and in bet. ter taste for walkging tollets, 139 on posters huge | At dinner : est hopes, those beans are royal. Were I Jupiter, beans should grace each royal banquet, What ho! waiter, hither more beans !”? “To your wife :— “Madam, beware thou dost harm. A 4 button on my shirt—see it in- Do it! Nor leave I do myself some here stantly performed, the task to me,” *“T'o your butcher : “Thou ensanguined unto me destroyer some mutton and burden, tenderer far than the Lee's rare would dine to-day.” To a friend : “Excuse a rash grace, but hast thou sSweelor For 1 lave wove, intrusion on in thy box a por- YOu i i ist among the genus nicotana ?”? Or this :~ “Most noble friend, wilt thou with me some strong Thou lockest dull to-day ; thy sinking heart.” The friend replies : “Oh, noble ! alas par- libation 7 '¢ wril twill cheer not all the could ease here! (left side struck Oh, what a fool I; the very sport of soul the sorrow here ! several Limes, arrant Knave am fortune !" This is scarcely more ridic three quarters of the stage nonsense, pr —- The Luxury of Table Linen. foreign coun- linen, and there the reporter. ‘Nearly all the tries manufacture t wl fierence elween aprice, whic tre and is sun One of the srs is the Hirondelles, The beautifully marked. : or Ira * f rocks out of broidersd, $14 or $15. IMONOZrams, sent Some out is embroid of the monograms, while others of the elder wk insist upon having their coat of arms embroidered thereon, The best French tablecloths and napkins are nearly all woven at Slerre in F.ance, The work entirely by hand. The flax from which the linens are woven comes mostly from the neighbor- hood of Contral in Flanders, where a fine variety is raised, It is so long and slender as to require support while 81s is done i I A The Conductor's Jaw Dropped. One of those smart Alexanders who travel on cheek and the inability of the public to change $20 bills for a glass of soda or four tobies got on a Penn avenue car the other aforesaid $20 for his fare. Of course This was re- peated until the conductor got tired of it and after the fourth or fifth time of its repetition he detarmined to get even with the fellow, houses, and by other means unknown, aged to scrape up $19 95 in pennies, Placing these in a little bucket he victim, having posted the driver and some other intimate friends who hap- When the un- suspecting young man with the plethoric pocketbook put in an appearance and promptly produced the **20° with many and produced his little bucket, and amid the grins of spectators presented it to his customer. The young man looked pretty cheap, and, alter feeling the helt of the bucket, thoughtfully got off the car and disappeared around a corner. Then the conductor took the bill from his pocket and proceeded to fold it up nicely, so that it would fit into a convenient corner of his pocket book. Something in the a rance of the bill caught his eye, and, as he ex- amined it a little closer, his jaw dropped about a foot, The bill was of the genus denominated by the sporting fraternity as “queer.” The young man had also been laying for the conductor. HR ——————— Ion 3 A diamond-edged crescent, show- {ng in the concave the profile of the old man in the moon in red gold, is a no- ticeable novelty in scarl-pins. RA EN FASHION NOTES, -A very popular scarf or bonnet-pin | 18 the horseshoe set with two rows of | gems, one of rubles or sapphires, the other of diamonds, ~=A tiny enameled arbutus or forget- me-not, the former set with a small { diamond and the latter with a small { pearl, are among the daintiest of scarf- plas, — A enuffed candle-end, with black- | ened wick, and grease dripping down { the sides and a rustic’s jack-knife with | two blades are novel forms for match. | boxes, ~French modistes are making full bishop sleeves of transparent materials ruffles beyond, —Muslin-delaines are in light colored stripes and checks; they drape very tunics, so pleasant to wear in warn weather, Moire silk 18 much used for the trimming and accessories of dresses | and tunles, ~The tallor-made jacket, matched to the costume, 18 exchanged this sea. {son for the tight-fitting jacket with a round basque, and its open collar with | revers showing the masculine-looking { plastron and the regatta cravat, with | ornamentel pin, ~—Surah and bengaline of some fash- fonable shade of color are the materials | most lady-like are browns of all kinds, | from dark seal-brown to the golden tint of the cockroach, iron gray, Sar- dinian gray, navy blue, and Sardinian blue are also fashionable tints, —libbons are in endless The new embossed ribbons are wonder- fully rich and effective, showing many old cashmere, broche, Persian and | geometric patterns in Oriental color combinations, Gauze ribbons, with cords, tufls, loops and picot edges, make one wonder how such compli- cated wearing is done, or velvet running through them. gives oply a very faint idea of the be- wildering variety which now make gorgeous the shop windows, Nothing like such cholee in ribbons have ever been seen before, from the bebe ribbons of a quarter of an inch to the ribbons which measure over yard in width, sash Some of the newest ’ansian tea- gowns for elegant summer wear are made of India silk gay but small Watteau designs, flower- stripe! crepes lisse, silk canvas goods, and fine, softly draping surah in =. | shades of primrose, heliotrope, EL peari-grgy, cafeau-lait and heige-rose pink. These are fashioned in princess style—that is to say, a glove-fitting gown, with skirt and bodice cut In one. These dresses open all the way down the front, and tacked to each side is a graceful crepe or lace boa, which reaches in many cases from throat to skirt-hem. A twisted crepe lisse rope also serves the same purpose, An airy finish of this kind was noted upon a tea-gown of peachblow surah, embroidered in delicately shaded peach blossoms. The fronts parted over a simulated peiticoat and blouse of white surah, sprinkled with pink moss rose- buds, and down each side ran a dainty coll of cream-white crepe lisse, with the same cloud-like twist around the throat and elbow sleeves, the latter having an additional garniture double frills of cream-colored Spanish bionde lace as a finish, ~For stylish summer evening gowns of tarlor-make are displayed silk can- vas goods in shades of primrose, cream, dove-gray, amber and ecru, ennched with small brilliant figures in raised velvet. There are also shown very handsome Persian brocaded stripes on pale-fawn and beige silk grenadine foundations, to be made up in conjunc tion with plain fabrics of like mixture. Many of the less expensive serges, mohairs, French cashmeres and like fabrics are striped with lines of vivid color. These lines are both wide and | narrow, to suit individual fancy. Fine summer camel's hair fabrics are brought out, with plain goods for the ory 0 of Jeen, the panels, vest, etc., or, for the lower skirt entire, tailor suit of fawn-colored cheviot, barred with green and Roman-red lines, is as follows: There is a waist. coat of dark moss-green cloth, with a shirt front of ecru silk, Lrier-stitched with green silk. The waistcoat 18 very ample, and has rounded fronts instead of points. An odd feature of this | gown consists of its having a polonaise posite side Is in short coat shape, with pannier drapery below, - Yachting gowns copied from cos- fumes now in preparation for the yachting season at Cowes are made of cream-white canvas cloths, navy blue serges and white linen. A stylish gown of white canvas is made with a box. plaited skirt with fans of sky-blue canvas cloth let in between the plaits, with short high draperies, short bodice with habit back and loose front show- ing a loose vest of sky-blue canvas, with rows of narrow white brad, These dresses are designed to be worn with narrow.brimmed sailor hats of white straw, trimmed with high clus. ters of loops and ends of white or blue ribbon. Extremely stylish sailor hats to wear with dark blug serge yachting dresses are trimmed with clusters of hanter red and navy blues ribbon com- bined. White linen is In special de- mand this season for yatching and lawn tennis dreeses, These costumes are made with plaited skirts edged with a band of dark blue dungaree ornamented with three rows of narrow linen braid. The full short draperies of the skirt are od around with blue and the full sallor waist is fin. ished with a wide collar and cuffs of blue ornamented with braid, Other yachting dresses are made with round waist drawn in to fit the re by clusters of back front, which are laid in plaits on the shoul. der, Blue collars apd shirt sleeves with tight band cuffs Naish the waist. # HORSE NOTES. ~The Rochester Driving Park As sociation cleared about $4000 on its cir. cuit meeting. ~Cridge & Co., have secured the betting privilege at the coming meeting at Niagara Falls. — Andy Welch, the bookmaker, has purchased James Goldsmith's half in. terest in the blk. 8. Atlantic for $2000, ~All jockeys drink champagne, It often forms their only stimulent of vic tuals and drink when they are reduce ing. —Mr, Strauss says the bay gelding Majolica is a little off, but he is still nxious to tackle either Clingstone om { Oliver K. | There 18 a great movement on foot to mecorporate a turf club for the pur- pose of holding spring meetings at San Francisco, Cal -In consequence of continued ill health Mr. Robert Steel has reluctantly concluded to sell all his horses except Epaulette and Great Hopes, —James Reilly, of Middletown, N. Y., has sold to A, B. Post, of Goshen his 5-year-old bay stallion by Bweep stakes, dam by Major Edsall, for $1000. — Bowerman Brothers, of Lexington, Ky., on the 26th ult, bought | of Ed. Closby, of Fayette { county in that State, the yearling filly by Bcherman Hambletonlan, dam by | American Clay, for $1400, ~Captain McGowan, troller, | John Stewart, Mattie Howard, Trustee (by imp. Trustee, thoroughbred), | Lady Fulton and Fanny Wickhan | (thoroughbred) are the horses that have trotted twenty miles-within ar { hour. ~~Domestic, James Goldsmith's fast young stallion, has been a very sick horse since the day succeeding his hare { contest in the 2.25 class. Ha is prob- ably out of immediate danger, but | be of no value for this season's cam paign, if ever. —Messrs. W,. Ehrich and Nathar | Strauss, of New York, are building & | third-of-a-mile track near Saranat { Lake, in Franklin county, N. Y Work is being pushed as fast as possi. ble, and if they can get it ready ir | time they will give a fall meeting, Con il id | ~The Gam of the famous pacer Lit tie Brown Jug, 2.11, and Brown Hal 2.174 foaled a strong bay filly, by Sid: puey, in California on July 31. 16 Wal { sold a year ago for $100 to J. F, Ma guire, and he has already refused an of fer of §250 for her foal. Her Director colt, which is now 2 years old, 18 a nat ural trotler, and has shown a quarte; in 41s. -—A new gentlemen's driving asso ciation was formed recently at Cleve land, which will be known as the “Roadside Club.” The incorporators are Colonel William Edwards, Messrs, W. D. Caldwell, Chatles A. Brayton, George W. Short and David McClasky. The capital stack 1s $25,000. A hand- some club-house will be erected near the Cleveland Driving Park entrance. The club now has fifty members, -— The Kissend farm, near Astoria, I.. 1, comprising several hundred acres, belonging to the Wo sey estate, bas been sold Wo a syndicate which ine ywverting it into arace-track, It is finely situated on the east bank of the East River, just above Hell Gate. It has an extensive river front, to which the grounds siope gently, The sale | covers some 200 or 223 acres, including | Berrian Island, but does not lude the large Woolsey homestead estate, | The proposition to baild a track there is not new, The ground was surveyed for a track two vears ago. “Lucky” Baldwin is said to be among those terested in the enterprise, — Kingstone was started for Omnibus with Hanovor for the obvious purpose of securing the second money, which is §1000 to the nomioator also. Had he secured the place, however, ithe Dwyers would not have obtained the $1000 to nominator, as, in the pur- | chase of the colt of Snedeker, they have overlooked the Omnibus engagement, which requires that the nominator shall make a transfer of his securel interest in the nomination to make it available | to the purchaser, —The only winner of two races dar- ing the meeting was the chestnut geld- ing Dwight, eutered and brought into Michigan by T. B. Parks, of Throups- burg, N. Y. The suspicions of horse- men were aroused during his first per- formance in the 3.00 race, and on his second appearance he was protested by William McLaughlin and others as the old Blue Bull gelding Chance, record 2,204, His owner put in a sworn an- | swer Lo the protest and was allowed to | start, his winnings being hung up | awaiting his identification, The same | course was pursusd the next week at | Jackson in both the races in which he | was entered, and, getting tired of that | sort of thing, Mr. Parks withdrew from the circuit and shipped himself | and horse back to New York, There {is litle doubt but this horse is an old | turf performer, and that he was being {entered and trotted out of his class, | Whether he is Chance or not remains | to be seen, ~The race for the Omnibus stakes was one of the most desperate in the history of Monmouth Park. lLaggard was sent out to make the pace, and thus make the weight tell on Hanover | in the mud, and Hayward did it to per | fection, never allowing Hanover to {pass him except in the third quarter, | going round the turn by the club | house, which being up hill Hayward very shrewdly eased his horse, while McLaughlin forced Hanover in front, with the result that he was so tired in the backstreteh that Laggard caught him, and after a bead-and-head race beat him home, as did Firenzi, who came very strong In the stretoh and, but for Garrison losing his whip, he baviog a sore hand, it is possible Firent would have won. As it was, the race was one of the closest magi nable, Laggard on the inside, Hanover in the middle and Firenzi ou It was a case of ‘‘three ” beating Firenzi a head, she beat Hanover the same, The exci when it was seen Hanover was defeated was vary great. MN tends. ine 44 “a dial 1. iid Hh Lae
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers