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Parent Issue
Day
22
Month
June
Year
1892
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

Drunkermess or the Liquor Habit Posltlvely Cured by administerlng Dr. Haines' Colden Soecific. It is manufaetured as a powder, ■vhLch eau be given in a jtlass of beer, a cup of coffee or tca, or in food without the knowlegde of the patiënt. It is absolutely harmless. and wlll effect a permanent and epeedy cure, whether the patiënt is a moderate drinker or an alcohoiic wreek. It luis been iriven in thousands of cases, and in every instance a perfect cure has followed. It never fails. The system onee impregna ted with the Speciiic, it becomes an utter impossibllity for the liquor appetite to exist. Cures guaranteed . 45 page boo'k of particulars free. Address GOLDKN SPECIFIC Co., 1S5 Race st., Cmcinnati. O. THE GKEAT BLUE EIBBON MEETIi.l Of the Detroit Driving Club Will be held as usual on the Park Grounds of the club, in the city of Detroit, July 18th, 19th, iiOth, 21st and 22nd. One of the principal attractions of this most deservedly popular trotting and pacinff association is the Merchants' andManufacturers' Guaranteed Stake, $10,000, for the 2:24 class, trotting. Attractive as it has been in the past, it will prove still more so, at the ensuing Summer meeting. Aside f rom the large number af entries made, and the well-known sagacity of the nominators, a new and somewhat novel feature has been introduced whieh cannot fail to increasc the interest heretofore manifested in this greatest of all racing events. The Main Stake, 8S,000, is divided into three moneys, 84,500 to first, $2,000 to second, and 61,S0O to third horse. A Consolation Stake of 82,000, divided. 81,000 to first, $750 to second, and S25i! to third. The former will be trotted on Tuesday, and the latter on the Fri day following. The Consolation Stokt is open only to horses wkich start and f ai 1 to win any part of Main Stake.. Should less than three horses remain eligible to the Consolation Stake, tliat event will be declared off, and horsen that finish fourth and fifth in the Mail, Stake will reeeivü respeetively SI, 000 and $750, and the ramaining money belonging to the Consolation Stake will be divided pro-rata among the winners of the first, second and third money in the Main Stake. This new departure has much to commend it to public favor, and will be hailed as a pleasing innovation on established usages. There is scarcely a doubt but there will be a large field of starters in the Consolation Stake, and that it will be as hotly contested as the Main Stake itself; so that the vast crowds, always in attendance at a Blue Ribbon Meeting-, will be treated to two magnificent contests, for one of the greatest trotting events of the season. The following is a list of the nominators: Dwyer Bros., San Antonio, Tex.; The Kitchum Farm, Toledo, O.; John Dickerson, Terre Haute, Ind.; D. B. Anderson, Franklin, O.; "Crit" Davis, Harrodsburgh, Ky. ; O. F. Peddicord, Wilmington, O.; John Hamlin, Gravesend, L. 1., New York; Jacob Livingston, Carlisle, Pa.; Henry C. Jewett, Jewettville, N. Y.; J. L. Whitcomb, Battle Creek, Mich.; John E. Madden, Lexington, Ky.; George H. Hammond, Ypsilanti, Mich.; Du Bois Bros., Denver, Col.; F. H. Finley, Dallas, Tex.; Speed well Farm, Penn, Pa.; C. C. Harris, Findley, O. It will be observed that there are sixteen nominations for this stake, representing nine different states. It is almost absolutely certain that there will besixteen starters. The field will be large, and exceptionally good. It will take a "Seek-no-farther" to win this race, and if all the conditions are favorable on the day of the trot, the winner will have to be well up to the "free for all" mark. The literatii- Postmen.

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Subjects
Old News
Ann Arbor Courier