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LATONIA FORM CHART. LATONIA, KY., November 12, 1903. Seventeenth day. Latonia Jockey Club. Fall Meeting. Weather clear, track heavy. Presiding Judge, Charles F. Price. Starter, J. J. Holtman. Secretary, E. C. Hopper. Racing starts at 2:03 p. m. No recall flag used. W indicates whip, S spurs, B blinkers. FIRST RACE 3-4 Mile. Purse 00. 4-year-olds and upward. Selling. dL2 7 X 3 Ind Horses A Wt St and StrFln Jockeys Owners O H C P 424533JOHN YERKESwsb 6 96 5 4 410 l1 1 Bchamp W H Robinson 1 8-5 6-5 1-2 425523QI7IZ w 5 104 3 32 1" 2? 2 D Austin C C McCafferty 3 3 21 7-10 42044MISS GLIGHTLYw 5 105 1 2" 31 33 31! B Davis L G Tate and Co 3 6 6 8-5 42697 LOVABLE w 6 105 2 lh 2nt 41 4h AW BkrG Rowe 6 8 8 2 42673 FLEURON wsb 6 100 4 53 510 520 52 J Hicks J J Zurborg and Co8 12 12 3 397S5GALLAGHER W4 95 6 6666 Paul J B Respess 20 60 60 20 Apprentice allowance. Time, 25$, 50, 1:18$. Winner B. h, by Scorpion Credora trained by W. H. Robinson. Went to post at 2:07. At post 5 minutes. Start good. Won handily; second easily. John Yerkes began slowly and had to go all around his field to get up, but outgamed Quiz in a sharp stretch drive and was going away at the end. The winner pulled up lame. Quiz was much used in racing with Lovable and Miss Golightly and tired when the pinch came. Miss Golightly saved ground at the turn into the homestretch, but tired in the last sixteenth. Fleuron could not extend herself in the going. John Yerkes, entered to be sold for 00, .was run up to 00 by C. C. McCafferty and bid in. Scratched-42697 The Boer, 105; 42649 Jim Hale, 105; 42685 Frivol, 97; 42692 Angea, 97; 42273 Charlie Grainger, 97; 4260S Haidee, 92. Overweights Fleuron, 3 pounds. John Yerkes, show, out. Quiz, show, out. Miss Golightly, show, 1 to 2. SEC-ND RACE 3-4 Mile. Purse 00. 2year-olds. Allowances. dL2 T 1 7 , ind Horses A Wt St and and StrFin Jockeys Owners O H C P 42693-SANETOMO w 112 1 1- 1 1 l5 Minder WdfrdandEvman 3-2 S-513-10out 42645RAINLAND w 112 3 3 35 310 2 H PhillipsMrs M Goldblatt 3-5 7-107-10out 42600 HENRY LYONS w 97 2 23 2a 2 315 D Austin D N PrewittandCo 20 20 20 3 42672 H. LHRMANN, JR.wb 100 4 4 4 4 4 H Wilson J Fay 30 60 60 12 ! Time, 24, 49, 1:16. Winner B. c, by Satsuma Catharine the First trained by J. Everman. I Went to post at 2:35. At post 2 minutes. Start good. W"on in a canter; second easily. Sanetomo took kindly to the going, showed much the most speed and, opening a winning lead while rounding the far turn, vas under restraint all of the last furlong. Rainland did his best, but was outrun all the way. He is a slow beginner. Henry Lyons showed speed, but tired in the stretch run. Scratched 4270S3Rough and Tumble, 106; 426SlProof Reader, 104; 42575 Prince of Pilsen, 100; 42623 J. P. Mayberry, 100. Henry Lyons, show, 3 to 10. ,1 l f7 1 O THIRD RACE 1 Mile and 70 Yards. Purse 00. 3-year-olds and upward. tfc I JLO Selling. Ind Horses A Wt St StrFln Jockeys Owners O H C P 426S5ANTOLEE w 5 100 2 2 l1! I5 l3 l3 D Austin C C McCafferty 7-5 2 9-5 3-6 426S5CHICKADEE w 4 104 1 l1! 2- 23 23 2"k Crawfrd T Hatfield 3 4i 4 6-5 421373TROCADERO wsb 4 105 4 4h 3h 41 31 38 Hodgson V Hughes and Co 4 4 4 7-6 42621KILMORIE WB 3 102 3 5 4 3" 4" 4 Hoffier J W Pugh 5 5 4 7-5 425813SID. SABATH W 3 97 5 31 5 5 5 5 J MclntreM Sabath 6 8 7 2 I Apprentice allowance. Time, 26, 51, 1:17. 1:45, 1:50. Winner B. m, by Lettoon Anvolee trained by C. C. McCafferty. I Went to post at 3:01. At post 2 minutes. Start good. Won easily; second all out. Antolee showed the most speed for the entire trip, made all her own pace and had plenty left at the end. Chickadee finished fast and outgamed Trocadero in the final drive. Troca-dero was messed about all the way, was in a pocket for the first half and finished next to the inner rail in the deep going. He might have won with a good ride. The others were never dangerous. The winner, entered to be sold for 00, was run up to 00 by T. C. McDowell, but was bid in. C. C. McCafferty claimed Chickadee for ,125. Scratched 42709Haviland, 109; 425S0:Boaster, 108; 426S53Adelante, 103; 42697 Bud Embry, 101; 42637 Flora Willoughby, 99; 4266S John J. Regan, S9. I Overweights Trocadero, 1 pound; Kilmorie, 2. j Antolee. show, 1 to. 3. Chickadee, show, 11 to 20. Trocadero, show, 3 to 5. Kilmorie, show. 3 to 5. I FOURTH RACE 5 1-2 Furlongs. Purse 00. 2-year-olds. Fillies. Allow- jy " Ind Horses A Wt St and StrFin Jockeys Owners O H C P 426S4 KATIE POWERS 106 2 3l 3l 33 1" H PhillipsW P Reardon 15 25 25 5 426693LIDA LEIB W 109 1 1 Is 1 21 D Austin G H Whitney 2 3 11-51-2 426692ALMA DUFOUR WB 109 3 5" 21 2" 3s T Knight E Corrigan 7-107-1011-20out 42684 VOILA W 103 6 6ll 41 4 410 A W BkrJ W Fuller 10 10 10 2 42660 RACHAEL WARD W 100 5 41 6l 7 5 H Wilson J Fay 50 100 100 30 41558 BRIDE w 106 7 7 7 5 68 B Davis A H Pendleton 20 50 40 12 42660 HINDILENE w 100 4 2" 51 61 7 Pirrman F J Hall 20 100 100 30 Time, 23, 49. 1:10. Winner B. f, by Longstreet Miss Modish trained by M. Reardon. Went to post at 3:26. At post 3 minutes. Start good. Won driving; second easily. Katie Powers saved ground at the turn into the homestretch and wore Lida Leib down in the stretch run, but took a tired swerve over toward the inside in the last twenty yards and only got up in the last stride. Lida Leib showed the most early speed, but tired under pressure in the last sixteenth. Alma Dufour lost ground at all the turns by going wide and finished very fast when the race was practically over. Voila ran fairly well. Scratched 42575 Jehane, 103. Katie Powers, show, evens. Lida Leib, show, out. a 61 rr L1f FIFTH RACE 1 1-8 Miles. Purse 00. 3-year-olds and upward. Han- Qb I JjVJ dicap. ; Ind Horses A Wt St St- StrFin Jockeys Owners O H C P 426462RESVTION wsb 3 112 5 5 5 4 21! 26 l1 Munro G Hendrie 7-5 7-5 7-5 1-2 426953BARDOLPH wb 3 100 1 Is l3 l1! I1! ll 210 A W BkrGorman and Bauer 12 15 15 5 42670FONSOLUCA w 4 107 2 33 32 3nt 32 32 3 Hoffier J W Pugh 4 41 4 6-5" 426822THANE w 4 108 3 2l 21 2h 4 4 410 D Austin S LHommedleu 2 2 9-5 3-6 42581 TANCRED wsb 3 97 4 4s 42 5 5 5 5 H PhillipsV Hughes and Co 8 9 9 21 Winner B. c, by Cayuga Arragon trained by J. Walters. Went to post at 3:55. At post 4 minutes. Start good. Won handily; second easily. : " Continu GOSSIP OF THE TURF. Continued from first page. a two-year-old and made no better showing at three. "Webb got hold of him at four years old and made up his mind to make haste slowly with him. At five years old he is now about as fine a specimen of racehorse, in his proper class, as can be found in this state or elsewhere. He won a race at Agricultural Park last "Wednesday at a mile and seventy yards, covering the distance in 1:42, the last mile being run in 1:39J. Solon is by the Australian stallion Clieveden, imported hither by the late Bruce Lowe and sent back again Xo that far-off land a year or two later for want of patronage. Mr. Webbs horse is certainly a good one up to a mile and a "half, if not farther." Speaking about Dick Welles remarkable six furlongs race at Washington Park last summer, jockey Tommy Knight recently said: "I was set down for three days for being left at the post with Dick Welles that day, but it was not my fault. Dick and Runnels ran into the barrier and Runnels got turned around before I did. My horse was looking at the grain elevators outside of the track when the barrier went up. The field must have been fifteen lengths in front of me when I set down and took a hold of Dick. He was full of run that day and I just skinned the iail with him. He was not running at top speed down the backstretch and around the turn and yet I could see myself gaining at every stride. When the field swung a bit wide into the stretch I saw my chance and sat down on Dick and rode. He went from under me like a bird and I have never ridden so fast. He fairly flew and when we were an eighth of a mile out I felt confident that I could win if Dick did not stop. Dick, you know, is no stopping horse. When about fifty yards from the wire I struck him once with the whip and Ill swear I thought he would run from under me. It was the first time he had ever been struck with the bat, and he responded. When I once got up to Runnels there was nothing to it, for Dick kept looking him right in the eye and then shot his head under the wire first. I never will forget that race. The people went wild, but I was set down for three days for being left at the post. The day Dick broke the mile record we had a lucky escape. Just as I brought him back to the judges stand Dick spit the bit out of his mouth in two pieces. The bit lasted just I. long enough or he would have run away and might have killed himself, for Dick, while he is a smart horse, is a kind of a fool when he gets to running." P. J. Dwyer, manager of the Metropolitan Jockey Club since its advent as an active racing concern, resigned from office Wednesday. When asked whether his resignation was inspired by threatened trouble between the Jockey Club and the McCarren-Sullivan interests over 1904 dates, Dwyer declared that such was not the case. John Fay has decided to sell all of the horses he has in training with the exception of Ed Tierney. He wants to get rid of Rachael Ward, Barney Dreyfuss and Henry Luehrmann Jr., so that he can devote all of his attention to the yearlings which he has in training at Louisville.