Sept. 17, 1904.] 
FOREST AND STREAM. 
248 
Atlantic Y. C 
Sea Gate, L. I.— Monday, Sept. 5. 
The last of the series of four races arranged by the Atlantic 
Y. C. was sailed on the afternoon of Labor Day, Sept. 5. lwenty- 
three boats started in the different classes. The winners were 
Vivian II., Bobtail, Naiad, Miss Judy, Delta, Kelpie and Colleen. 
Prizes for the best showing on points for the series were won 
by Maydic, Bobtail, Naiad and Ogeemah. Prizes were also offered 
for each individual regatta. Regardless of two protests yet to be 
decided, the records of the different boats for the entire series 
were as follows: 
Maydic, 3 firsts; Red Wing, 2 seconds; Bobtail, 3 firsts; 
Bagheera, 1 first; Naiad, 2 firsts, 1 second; Lizana, 2 firsts, 1 
second; Bonito, 2 seconds; Ogeemah, 2 firsts, 2 seconds; Miss 
Judy, 2 firsts; Spots, 1 second; Mary, 1 second; Karma, 1 third; 
Delta, 1 firs'; Kelpie, 1 first; Colleen, 1 first. 
The closing race was held in a light fluky breeze, which blew 
from the N.W. Starters in Classes M and N went once over 
a 12-mile course. It was a close reach from the start off Sea 
Gate to West Bank Light. Then came a dead beat to Old 
Orchard Shoal Light and a reach home. The other boats sailed 
twice over the Association course. It was close hauled work to 
Fort Hamilton, a run to the Marine and Field Club, a broad reach 
to the mark off Ulmer Park and a close reach home to the start 
off Sea Gate. 
Naiad led the smaller boats from start to finish. Miss Judy 
also sailed well. Of the craft going outside, Maydic and Bagheera- 
got becalmed off the second mark and were very late in finishing. 
Vivian II. was the first boat home. The whole series was a suc- 
cess, and is likely to become an annual feature. The summaries 
follow: 
Sloops— Class M— Start, 3:00. 
Finish. Elapsed. Corrected. 
Vivian II., S. E. Vernon..... 6 24 12 3 24 12 3 22 02 
Red Wing, J. B. O'Donohue 6 38 00 3 38 00 3 35 11 
Maydic, W. H. Childs 7 00 58 4 00 58 4 00 58 
Sloops— Class N— Start, 3:03. 
Bobtail, E. F. Luckenbach 6 43 03 3 40 03 3 40 03 
Bagheera, Hendon Chubb 7 00 11 3 57 11 3 56 20 
Sloops— ClassP— Start, 3:05. 
Naiad, Dr. J. B. Palmer 4 43 51 1 38 51 1 37 57 
Lizana, D. ' S. Wylie 4 48 50 1 43 50 1 41 40 
Smoke, L. H. Dyer 4 55 31 1 50 31 1 50 31 
Bonito, Haviland Bros Did not finish. 
Sloops— Class Q— Start, 3:05. 
Miss Judy, D. D. Allerton 4 48 24 1 43 34 1 43 17 
Ogeemah. Alfred Mackay 4 57 06 1 52 06 1 46 16 
Karma, J. C. Erskine 5 07 45 2 02 45 1 57 58 
Mary, Max Grundner 5 04 43 1 59 43 1 58 09 
Careless, F. J. Havens 5 07 51 2 02 51 2 02 47 
Trouble, W. A. Barstow 5 15 30 2 10 30 2 10 30 
Spots, R. C. Veit 5 21 18 2 16 18 2 14 53 
Sloops— Class RR— Start, 3:15. 
Delta, J. J. Mahoney 5 29 39 2 14 39 . .. .. 
Beta, Snedeker & Camp 5 33 53 2 18 53 
Alpha, Holcombe & Howell 5 37 32 2 22 32 
Marine and Field Special — Start, 3:20. 
Kelpie, M. K. Brown 5 35 11 2 15 11 
Esperance, T. A. Hamilton 5 38 21 2 18 21 . .. .. 
Catboats— Class V— Start, 3:20. 
Colleen, W. F. Remmey 5 27 03 2 07 03 
Rascal, D. G. Whitlock.... 5 32 59 2 12 59 . 
Ocean Race— Sept. 3-5—240 Miles. 
Arthur F. Luke's schooner, Corona, won the ocean race of the 
Atlantic Y. C, which started on Saturday, Sept. 3. Geo. Lauder's 
Endymion, the other contestant, was defeated by 7h. 10m. 5s 
elapsed time, and 7h. 13m. 36s. corrected time. The course 
led from Scotland Lightship to Fire Island Lightship, thence to 
the North East End Lightship off Cape May and back to the 
starting point. 
Each competitor took her own finishing time when Scotland 
Lightship bore due E., magnetic. Corona finished at 8:27:43 
Sunday night, averaging 7.6 knots for the course. Endymion was 
becalmed off Sea Bright, N. J., at about the same time her 
opponent passed the lightship. She finished at 3:38:48 Monday 
morning, having averaged 6.3 knots. The summary follows: 
Ocean Race for Schooners. 
Start. Finish. 
Sept. 3. Sept. 4. Elapsed. Corrected. 
Corona 1 03 00 8 27 43 31 23 43 31 20 12 
Endymion 1 05 00 *3 38 48 38 33 48 38 33 48 
♦September 5, A. M. 
Lynn Y. C. 
Lynn, Mass. — Monday, Sept. 5. 
The annual Y. R. A. open race of the Lynn Y. C. was sailed 
off Bass Point, Nahant, on Monday, Sept. 5, in very light 
and fluky breezes. For the greater part of the time the yachts 
did little more than drift. In the 22ft. class Clotho had the best 
of the start, but Opitsah V. went out ahead on the windward leg 
and led to the finish. In the 18ft. class Bat had the best of the 
start, but on the windward leg Moslem II. took the lead. Bat 
passed Moslem II. again before they reached the starting line 
and led on the second round of the course. Winniahdin got the 
start in the Lynn Y. C. one-design 15-footers and led all around 
the course. L'Aiglon led from the start in the handicap class. 
Vera II. took a sailover in the Y. R. A. 15ft. class. The summary: 
Class E — 22-footers. 
Elapsed. 
Opitsah V., S. H. & H. I. Foster 3 20 10 
Clotho, Cheney & Lanning 3 20 19 
Medric, H. H. White 3 34 05 
Class I — 18-footers. 
Bat, C. F. Adams 2d 2 15 30 
Arrow, E. A. Boardman 2 27 18 
Moslem II., B. C. Barker 2 31 22 
Arbeka II., F. P. Bowden 2 32 11 
Boo Hoo, Reginald Boardman 2 32 50 
Hugi, A. E. Chase 2 36 36 
Privateer II., Alden & Carlton 2 50 42 
Moslem, J. T. Eustis 2 52 58 
Napier, B. S. Permar 2 57 13 
"Class T — 15-footers. 
Vera II., H. Lundberg .2 59 50 
L. Y. C. 15-footers. . 
Winniahdin, Spratt & Watson 2 08 27 
San Toy, W. H. Redlon 2 31 55 
Haymaker, W. S. Johnson 2 43 43 
Hinkey Dee, C. H. Crowell 3 00 34 
Handicap Class. 
, , . . . _ ,„ TT , Elapsed. Corrected. 
L'Aiglon, E. W. Hodgson 2 23 59 2 10 53 
Toss, Fred Ford 2 34 28 2 13 38 
Hattie, L. T. Harrington 2 41 37 2 18 23 • 
Enigma, G. W. Sargent ....3 21 50 3 04 10 
Hope, W. S. Johnson 3 29 45 3 05 45 
Hermes, C. A. Heney Withdrew. 
Gladys, C. H. Porter Withdrew! 
Helen, Twombly Bros Withdrew. 
Janice, W. N. Jenkins Withdrew". 
Caper, Benjamin Keeping Withdrew. 
Red Wing, Landers & Pendergast Withdrew! 
Rhody and Priscilla and Julacoa, and these had the same luck 
that attended the rest of the fleet, and did not finish. The third 
class had the Micaboo, Alice and Procryon. The fourth class 
had Oriana and Redwing, the latter being caught in the tide m 
addition to being becalmed. None of the five cats that started 
were able to finish. . 
The only sailing race that was finished was the 15ft. one-design 
class, in which Minnow, sailed by Miss Frances Lippitt, finished 
half the regular course 27s. ahead of Wenonah. With the launches, 
Nat Herreshoff Jr.'s Neon finished more than 20m. ahead of Dr. 
Church's Dixie. The summary: 
First Class— Start, 1:40. . 
Lady Mary Did not finish. 
Cornelia Did not finish. 
Hera J->id not finish. 
Second Class — Start, 1:43. 
Little Rhody Did not finish. 
Priscilla Did not finish. 
Julacoa Did not finish. 
Third Class— Start, 1:46. 
Micaboo Did not finish. 
Alice Did not finish. 
Procryon Did not finish. 
Fourth Class— Start, 1:49. 
Corrected. 
Oriana, F. Pardee 4 12 05 
Redwing, J. M. Garland Did not finish. 
15ft. One-Design Class — Start, 1:55. 
Minnow, Miss F. Lippitt 3 35 15 
Wenonah, S. Wetherill 3 35 42 
Eaglet, Miss C. Grosvenor 3 40 57 
Hope, R. C. Colt Did not finish. 
First Class Cats— Start, 2:00. 
Nobska Did not finish. 
Mae Hope Did not finish. 
Jane E , Did not finish. 
Thrysa Did not finish. 
Fifth Class Cats— Start, 2:12. 
Hesper Did not finish. 
Launches — Start, 2:20. 
Finish. 
Neon, N. Herreshoff, Jr 2 55 26 
Dixie, Dr. H. W. Church 3 15 55 
Peggy, J. B. Herreshoff Did not finish. 
F. H. Young. 
Newport and Conanfcut Y. C» 
Narragansett Bay, R. I. — Monday, Sept. 5. 
The Newport Y. C. and Conanicut Y. C. held a joint regatta 
on Labor Day for prizes offered by Commodore Scannevin, of the 
former club, and it proved one of the most interesting events of 
the season for small boats. There was a fair N. W. wind, enough 
to make good racing, and there was a good number of entries 
in each of the four classes. The winners were Skraeling, 
Wenonah, Thrysa and Vesper II. 
The race in the cat class was very good, the two Vespers, be- 
tween which there has been a great rivalry all summer, being 
very close in the first part, but Vesper II. winning out by a good 
margin. The 15-footers also put up a good race. Miss Grosvenor, 
of Providence, sailed her boat, Eaglet, but while she is generally 
among the leaders, on this occasion she was the last in her class 
to cross the line, young Mr. Wetherell's Wenonah finishing first, 
with a 4m. lead over Mr. E. D. Morgan's Whisper. The prettiest 
race of the day was between the knockabouts, several of which 
came over from Jamestown. Mr. Willoughby's Skraeling had an 
easy victory, coming in over 8m. ahead of her nearest competitor, 
the little 15ft. Wenonah making the next best time over the 
course. 
The course was from the starting line off Goat Island at the N., 
to and around the dolphin at the S. end of the island, thence to 
and around a mark y 2 mile N. of Taylor's Point, passing S. and 
W. of Rose Island, thence back to starting point. Distance, 6 
miles. The summary was as follows: 
Class for Knockabouts — Start, 10:50. 
Finished. Corrected. 
Skraeling. Willoughby 12 23 50 1 33 50 
Rowdy, Smith 12 32 10 1 42 10 
Theresa, Powell 12 33 45 1 43 45 
Grace, Catlin 12 45 14 1 53 26 
Tacow, Walbridge 12 43 44 1 53 44 
Helen, Scannevin 12 46 30 1 56 30 
One-Design 15-footers — Start, 10:53. 
Wenonah, H. Wetherill 12 32 45 1 39 45 
Whisper, E. D. Morgan 12 36 55 1 43 55 
Minnow, H. Lippitt 12 44 05 1 41 05 
Eaglet, Miss Grosvenor 12 44 14 1 51 14 
First Class Cats — Start, 10:56. 
Thrysa, Kimber 12 45 16 1 49 16 
Falconita, Kerr 12 54 57 1 58 27 
Madge 1 06 14 2 09 59 
Caroline, McCloud Did not finish. 
Second Class Cats — Start, 10:59. 
Vesper II., Plummer 12 47 04 1 46 43 
Vesper, Fraser 12 54 47 1 54 53 
Wabun, Chandler 1 07 32 2 06 59 
Restless, Peckham 1 15 20 2 16 20 
Shark, Moon 1 26 05 2 23 02 
Ellida, Chase Did not finish. 
Ida May, Battey Did not finish. 
Y. H. Young. 
Bristol Y. C 
Narragansett Bay, R. I.— Saturday, Sept. 10. 
The fall regatta of the Bristol Y. C, held Saturday afternoon, 
Sept, 10, proved a failure, owing to lack of wind. There were 
twenty-six boats en'.ered in the event, enough to have provided 
some very interesting sport in several of the classes. But only six 
boats finished, two of these were launches, while the four sailing 
boats given time covered only half of the two rounds with this 
unsatisfactory finish. The winners were the 15-footer Minnow the 
Herreshoff launch Neon and the knockabout Oriana, the latter 
getting a sailover prize. Most of the other boats drifted about 
the bay until the five hour time limit had expired, and about 
dark were towed home. 
In the 36ft. sloop class there were three entries, the Hera 
Senator Aldrich's Lady Mary and Commodore Comstock's Cor' 
ndift, Hera's owner, Mr. James M , Garland of .«» New York 
X° i 9 Jii»*!„.J°!l^:tel Re afternoon %M 
Arizona scored a victory over her only competitor, Chichioker, 
in the Manhasset Bay one-design class. Gloomy Gus pushed 
Cotton Tail hard for first place in the Horseshoe Harbor one- 
design class, but the latter won out by a small margin. Scud 
carried off first honors in the Hempstead Harbor one-design class. 
Wif Waf was lm. lis. behind. 
The big auxiliaries Atlantic and Vergemere were started at 1:30. 
Atlantic was first over the line, but Vergemere crossed with better 
heedway, and soon passed the black three-master. Atlantic re- 
covered her lead, however, and was ahead at the first mark. At- 
lantic made substantial gains on the, windward work on the 
second leg. She continued to increase her lead, and won by 
4m. 3s. Atlantic allowed Vergemere 3m. 3s. The summary: 
Sloops— Class H— Start 12:35— Course 15 Miles. 
Finish. Elapsed. 
Yankee, J. R. Maxwell 3 31 05 2 56 05 
Virginia, W. K. Vanderbilt, Jr 3 45 02 3 10 02 
Rainbow, Cornelius Vanderbilt 3 40 36 3 05 36 
Sloops — Class I — Start 12:40 — Course 15 Miles. 
Weetamoe, H, F. Lippitt 4 04 41 3 24 41 
Neola, George M. Pynchon 4 06 50 3 26 50 
Sloops— Class M— Start 12:45— Course 11 Miles. 
Anoatok, W. G. Brokaw 3 55 29 3 10 29 
Spasm, E. D. King 3 54 20 3 09 20 
Mimosa III., T. L. Park 4 06 40 3 21 40 
Yawls— Class M— Start, 12:45— Course 11 Miles. 
Tern, John Hyslop 4 05 15 3 20 15 
Escape, George Mathews 4 12 42 3 27 42 
Memory, H. M. Raborg 4 18 09 3 33 09 
Sloops— Class N— Start, 12:50— Course 11 Miles. 
Nike, V. L. Cumnock 4 13 34 3 23 34 
Alert, J. W. Alker 4 10 09 ' 3 20 09 
Raceabout Class — Start 12:55 — Course 11 Miles. 
Howdy, George Mercer, Jr 4 47 53 3 52 53 
Hobo, T. L, Park 4 51 00 3 56 CO 
Tartan, A. H. Pirie 4 47 04 3 52 04 
Rascal II., S. C. Hopkins 4 41 52 3 46 52 
Idler, O'Donnell Iselin..... 4 55 39 4 00 39 
Busy Bee, R. T. Wainwright 4 45 28 3 50 28 
Rana, Howard Willetts 4 47 35 3 52 35 
The Kid, Oliver Harriman 5 01 00 4 06 00 
Sloops— Class P— Start 1:00— Course 11 Miles. 
Grasshopper, H. C. Pryor 5 18 14 4 18 14 
Rogue, A. B. Alley 4 53 38 3 53 38 
Una, W. B. Duncan, Jr 4 49 10 3 49 10 
Heron, Philip Le Boutellier Did not finish. 
Larchmont 21ft. Class— Start 1:00— Course 11 Miles. 
Vaquero II., J. M. Marble 4 15 32 4 15 32 
Dorothy, L. G. Spence 5 00 23 4 00 23 
Adelaide, J. J. Dwyer Did not finish. 
Sloops— Class Q — Start 1:05— Course 5% Miles. 
Gazabo, H. T. Vulte , 3 33 26 2 28 26 
Luto II., F. D. Currier 3 44 20 2 39 20 
Jeebi, A. D. R. Brown 3 26 44 2 21 44 
Skip, C. M. Pinckney Did not finish. 
Sloops— Class R— Start, 1:10— Course 5% Miles. 
Flim Flam, A. D. Prince 3 39 39 2 29 39 
Mystral, John P. Clarke 3 45 40 2 35 40 
Pandora, S. Towle 3 43 40 2 33 40 
Plover, Howard Place 3 45 41 2 35 4l 
Dod, J. Deely 4 08 07 2 58 07 
Manhasset Bay One-Design Class— Start 1:10— Course 5% Miles. 
Chichioker, J. P. Mohr 3 53 06 2 43 Cfi 
Arizona, George A. Corry 3 45 49 2 35 49 
Horseshoe Harbor Class— Start 1:15— Course 5% Miles. 
Gloomy Gus, L. H. Riley 4 07 20 2 52 20 
Cotton Tail, J. J. Courtney 4 06 41 2 51 41 
Hempstead Harbor Class— Start 1:15— Course 5% Miles. 
Wif Waf, H. E. Sayre 3 46 33 2 31 33 
Scud, Donald B. Abbott 3 45 22 2 30 22 
Gosling, M. T. Pratt 3 54 15 2 39 15 
Schooners— Class A— Start 1:30— Course 15 Miles. 
Atlantic, Wilson Marshall 5 54 39 4 24 39 
Vergemere, A. C. Bostwick 6 01 45 4 31 45 
Saturday, Sept. 10. 
The race at Oyster Bay proved to be such a strong attraction, 
that there were but five starters in the raees at Larchmont. The 
two sixties covered a 15-mile triangle. The first leg was a reach, 
the second a beat and the third a broad reach. The wind was 
N.E., and the Class I boats were sent away at 11:35. Weetamoe 
got on Neola's weather as the two boats came down to the 
starting line. Weetamoe got the better of the start, and Neo'a 
was handicapped. The wind was variable, but Weetamoe took 
advantage of all shifts and made substantial gains on each leg. 
Neola finally lost the wind entirely and had difficulty in finishing. 
Weetamoe won by 33m. 52s. 
The Larchmont one-design 21-footers covered a 5%-mile triangle. 
Vaquero II. won, beating Adelaide 12m. 40s. The summary: 
Sloops— Class I— Start, 11:35— Course, 15 Miles. 
Finish. Elapsed. 
Weetamoe, H. F. Lippitt 4 54 17 5 19 17 
Neola, G. M. Pynchon 5 28 09 5 53 C9 
Larchmont 21-footers— Start, 11 :50— Course, 5Y 2 MV.es. 
Vaquero, J. W. Marble 3 27 26 3 37 23 
Adelaide, J. J. Dwyer 3 40 06 3 50 03 
Dorothy, L. G. Spence 3 42 54 3 52 54 
Larchmont Y. C. 
Larchmont, L. I. Sound— Monday, Sept. 5. 
Forty-nine boats started in the fall regatta of the Larchmont 
Y. C, that took place on Labor Day. The breeze was light and 
variable from start to finish, and racing was hardly satisfactory 
or conclusive. The winners were Yankee, Weetamoe, Spasm, 
Tern, Alert, Rascal II., Una, Dorothy, Jeebi, Flim Flam, Arizona, 
Cotton Tail, Scud, and Atlantic. 
The Regatta Committee postponed the start 45m. in the hope 
that the wind would freshen. The preparatory was given at 12:30, 
and the 70-footers were sent away at 12:35. At this time the 
wind was E. of N. All three of the 70s were swinging their 
largest club topsails. Rainbow was first away. Yankee was next 
and Virginia was last. Soon after the start the wind veered to 
N.W., and some of the boats set spinnakers; but they were not 
carried long, as the wind soon shifted again. Yankee was favored 
by the fickle breeze, and drew into the lead. After the shift in 
the breeze, the first leg turned out to be a close reach after all. 
The second leg gave the boats a little windward work, and an- 
other shift of wind made the last a close reach. After Yankee 
took the lead she was never headed, and she beat Rainbow 
9m. 31s., and Virginia 13m. 57s. The boats were to have covered 
the 15-mile triangle twice, but were stopped at the end of the first 
round, as the breeze was so paltry. 
The sixties were the next boats to start at 12:40, and botn 
these craft raced with working gafftopsails. The strong ebb tide 
carried Neola over the line before the gun, and she was forced to 
return and recross. The boats had a 2m. interval to cross in, and 
Neola was handicapped 52s. This gave Weetamoe a good start, 
and she won. Neola made a very fair showing, as she finished 
only 2m. 9s. behind her rival. The sixties covered the 15-miie 
triangle once. 
At 12:45 the three starters in the 30ft. class were sent off. Spasm 
found the light air to her liking, and beat Anoatok lm. 9s. 
Mimosa III. did not have her share of luck, and was beaten by 
12m. 20s. These boats covered the' smaller triangle of 11 miles once. 
In Class M for yawls, Tern sailed a remarkable race, and left 
her two competitors far astern. Tern is a full-bodied cruising ves- 
sel, yet her performances, particularly in light weather, are truly 
remarkable. Escape, another cruising boat, managed to defeat 
Memory, a racing craft, easily. 
Alert and Nike, the two starters in the 30ft. class, were both 
carried over the starting line by' the ebb tide before the gut,. 
Alert sailed a good race, and won by over 3m. 
Of the eight starters in the raceabout class, two were swept over 
before the starting signal. Rascal II. showed up to good ad- 
vantage in the fluky conditions, and won, beating Busy Bee by 
3m. 36s. Tartan was third. 
Una won, as usual, in the 25ft. sloop class. Rogue was among 
the number that were ahead of the gun, but she managed to 
finish in second place, Grasshopper was a poor third, and Heron 
withdrew, 
Bensonhurst Y. C. 
Bensonhurst, L. I.— Saturday, Sept. 10. 
r T -,nL Bens °nhurst Y. C. held its closing regatta of the season 
of 1904 on the afternoon of Saturday, Sept. 10. It was, the third 
of three club handicap events, with allowance based on actual 
work m races of the year. Commodore Arthur C. Bellows offered 
three cups for the series. Two were for craft finishing first and 
second on points in the sloop division and the other for the win- 
ning catboat. Alfred Mackay's Ogeemah and H. F.- Cunningham's 
Cayuga captured the respective sloop trophies, and VV. E. Kem- 
mey's Colleen was the winning catboat. 
There was a very light wind for the race; and the boats sailed 
only one round of the Association course. The wind shifted from 
the N. to the S. just after the starters had rounded the first mark 
Ihe course proved a reach to the Marine and Field c'ub mark 
another to Fort Hamilton, a beat across the bay to the Atlantic 
V. C. and a reach home. The boats were becalmed for half an 
hour between the first and second marks. The start was off 
Ulmer Park. The summaries follow: 
Sloops— Mixed Class— Start, 3:50. 
rv , '„ Finish. Corrected. Elapsed. 
Ogeemah Alfred Mackay 5 48 00 1 58 00 1 58 00 
Cayuga, H. F. Cunningham 6 13 00 2 26 00 2 08 20 
Dorothea, C. L. Dingens 6 24 00 2 34 00 2 30 06 
Indian, H. F. Menton Did not finish. 
Catboats— Class— Start, 3:55. 
Colleen, W. F. Remmey. 5 53 30 1 58 30 1 58 30 
Orient, Richard Rummell ......Did not finish 
mjtfwf in Pass ft, Myiiral WIS MbM; semi U, fife Mm 
Southern Y. C 
Lake Pontchartrain, New Orleans, La.— Sept. 3. 
The first "ladies' yacht race" ever sailed in the South was suc- 
cessfully pulled off by the Southern Y. C, Saturday, Sept 3 The 
yachts participating in the -event were the club's four ' one-design 
knockabouts. 
The weather was "made to. order," there being a nice, steady 
breeze. Ihe yachts filed twice around the 2%-mile triangular 
course in much the same fashion as if they had be?n handled by 
their regular masculine crews. The surprising feature of the 
affair was the really excellent manner in which all four of the 
knockabouts were steered. 
The crews were as follows: Sinner, Miss Carrie Wuescher 
sktoper; Miss Edna Byrnes jib; Miss Azzie Roach mainsheet. 
Juanita, Miss Stella Hyman skipper; Miss Eleanor Frith iib- 
Mrs. E. Harper mainsheet. Siren, Miss Hattie Dunn skinner- 
Miss Mabel Clark jib; Miss Lucie Whitcomb, mainshee RascaV 
Miss Maud Bowe skipper; Mrs. J. J. Clark jib; Miss Ethel lowe 
mainsheet. jjuwc 
There was a prize for the _ skipper of each fair yacht- a first 
a ™ *• cons °l at! °? P" z e- The first prize was of a 
value of $20 The innovation took to such an extent that neri 
year the club will have a ladies' race which will include all 
classes of racing boats , n thg gluh, ThJ mh,matyi 
j ifltii . ^iMikfceattmaft* pints, , V, , e U 11 
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