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10 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, MAY 3, 1897 CYCLERS CROSS TH AUBICON They Race on Sunday! and Defy the League. i PECULIAR POSITION OF THE RIDERS. 1 Barred Now Frcm A!ll Sanc tioned Eastern Race- Meets. ALL WERE WILLING TO TAKE THE STEP. A Large Crowd Attends the Opening | of the California Associa- tion’s Venture. Sunday bicycle racing was inaugurated at the Velodrome track yesterday and it proved an undoubted success. Not only were the contests fast and exciting, butan mmense throng of people crowded the siands and cheered their favorites on to victory. It was the largest crowd the V lodrome had ever beld, and the stands were taxed to th utmost capacity. It was a *‘swell” crowd, too, and the large number of laaies present added color to the scene, for in the grand stanc they predominated. It was just such a crowd as artended theraces last Christmas and New Year's, only there were about aree times as many yesterday as at any revious meet. From a racing point of view the success of this meet, the first attempt of the Cali- fornia Associated Cycling Clubs 10 hold a meet on_Sunday, in defiance of the rules of the League of American Wheelmen, was assured when the entry list was given out the midale of last week, for with but few exceptions all the cracks of the State were entered, and as the prize list was rood, they could ba depended upon to ride for all there was in them, This open violation of the L. mandate against Sunday track-racing did not mean so much to the amateurs, who never ride outside their own State, as it did to the professionals, and particularly the speedier ones, who might be likely at an me 10 want a race on Eastern tracks, and would be debarred by their particip tion in any meet here not sanctioned by the league. To a man with hopes of an Eastern career it was a serious step, for if the California Association make a failure of the new move they will be out of the racing business for good. But the support of ail the clubs in the State and of everybody prominentin the sport is behind the veature, and from ap- pearances vesterday it will succeed. So the racing men who had the courage of their convictions and were willing to risk all and stand or fall by the result are feeling highly elated. Ziegler, Jones and Coulter risked more than the otners, for Ziegler and Coulter | particularly have beretofore done all their riding in the East,and Jones was eligible at any time by reason of his phenomenai | | and passed. RING UP TH Scenss at the Bicyc'e Rzces at the Velod:ome Track. E AMBULANCE - PLEASE. peed. y are debarred now forever, but will find enough meets in this State to | keep them from growixg stale. If the meets continue to be successful, California will gradually become the Mecca of cyclers from the East as well as | the West. The public likes short, snappy races as | arule, and the card yesterdav made up to suit, there being nothing at a fur- ther distance than a mile. | The mo:t interest in the races was cen- | tered on the professional events, and par- ularly in the riding of Otto Z:egler Jr., | d to be the greatest racer this State has | ever produced, and who has a National | reputation by reason of his wonderful performances on Eastern tra He bas not been seen in competition here in three years, although he has ridden an oceasional paced exhibition. Clinton Coulter, another National circuit champion, big drawi { d, particularly to those who remem: bered his periormances of a couple of | years ago in_ competition with Bald, Cooper and other Eastern cracks. ‘ There were two pr ional and two amateur events on the pro ramme, the | many preliminary and final heats furnish- | ing a fine afterncon’s sport. The first of the professional races was a handicap at two-thirds of a mile, run in two heats and a tinal. In the first heat Coulter, Allan Jones, A. M. Boyden, Frank Byroe and M. Bleu- ler, the latter recently from France, | started, Bleuler being the limit man wit seventy-five yards handicap, which was | none 100 much, as he was *oon caught Coulter and Jones from the | scratch mark alternated pace and soon made up their bhandicaps, passing their fi | Boyden was third. Ziegler appeared for the second heat and was given a splendid reception, the applause lasting for severai minutes. and sprinted on the third, having | the inside. d and finishing iu the order named. | caleniated and thinking it was the end of the race, when in fact he shou!d have ridden four. After passing the tape in the | lead on the third lap be stopped working and sat up, and before he realized it the i vent by him like a shot and_he was McCrea won, Davis and Chapman ng him closely. rought Coulter, Jones, McCrea, Boyden and Davis into the fin: MeCrea and Beyden ou the long distance marks set such a hot clip the others could not overtake them, though they did not ap- pear to try very hard until the last lap. McCrea won, Boyden second, and Jones beat out Coulter and Davis for third money. In the first heat of the mile open, pro- fessional, Ziegler, Jones, Siater, Chapman and Davis started. By alternating the pace-setting they moved alongz at quite a lively clip for five laps, when Jones jumped for the lead, closely followed by Davis, Ziegler being neatly pocketed on This order was unchanged at eld w 3 the tape. Coulter was by long 0dds the best man in the other heat against McCrea, Boy- den, Elford anda Bleuler, and won with room to spare; Eiford, the new profes- sional, who was recently a star amateur, getting second vlace, Bieuler third. By being third in the fastest heat Zieg- ler qualified for the final, the others be- ing the winners ana seconds, Jones, Coulter, Davis and Elford. To muke it | fast Chapman was put in to pace, and by a pretiy play for the position Zicgler got | tirst place behind him, Davis next, then Elford, Coulter, Jones. On the fifth lap Davis got bumped somehow and went down throwing Elford, who turned a com- plete somersauit over him. Neither was | hurt. He sterted from scratch, of course, the | others, Davis, Siater, McCrea, Chapman |and Elford, being on various marks | ahead, Elford, the iimit man, having eightv-five yards handicap. By a splendid iide Ziegler caught the field in two laps The pacer dropped ont at the end of the | ent by fitth and Jones and Coulter Ziegler, but the “Littie Demon there 10 be beaten without a hard fight, and, with his nose almost pressed against the bandle-bars ot his machine, he started such a sprint as has seldom been seen on a California track. Round the back turn they flew, Jones siill leading, Coulter mis- | was not | second and Ziegler on the outside, even with Coulter. As they rounded into the | homestretch he put forth a tinal effort and | went by Jones as though the latter was standing etill, winning & mognificent race | by three open lengths in 2:15 2-5, very fast, | considering the gale which opposed them | on the backstretch, Ziegler was givenan ovation when he dismounted. Two amateur races, each With over thirty starters, furnished some_good run- C. A. Kraft, y City, C. liance, C. Goo win and Ralph Robinson, San Francisco Road Club, and A. B. Johnson of Red- wood City each qualified for the ftinals of the half-mile handicap. The limit men naturally made all the running, and Russ, on the scratch mark, | had to work hard to catch them, but it was “all off”” when he did at the begin- ning of tne third lap, for be was never headed once he assumed the lead. Gooch | ran second and Kraft third. | For the two-thirds mile open, amateur, | five winners of preliminary heats and the second in the fastest heat qualified. They Russ and Wing, Oiympic; Barton | Fresno, Williamson of Santa Rosa, D. E. Francis, Road Ciub, and Mott, Re- liance. Kraft was put in to pace, and ground out a lively gait for them. Russ was first off and again demonstrated his superior speed over the others, taking ret place easily, Wing and Barton being behind, th: h not dangerously so. ime was 1:26 3-5. | " Russ is quite popular with the audiences | that atiend cycle meets here and was | liberally applauded for both his victories, The following is the summary : rds of a mile, handicap, professional, —C. R. Coulter, San Francisco fir Jones, Olympic, second, scratch; third; 60 yards. | i | » t | | | | | i | Alamcda, E. McCres, Los Angeles, Davis, San Jose, sec: pman, Napa, third, 60 1 cond heat—H. fiist 0 | yards. Time, 1 | Finel neat—H. E. McCrea, Los Angeles, firat, A. M. Boyden, Alameds, second, 60 o Jones, Olympic, thira, seraic. , open, professional, first heat. Won by Allan Jones, Olympic, time, 2:33 4-5; | Redwood. sccond, C. L. Davis, San Jose; third, Oito Zi_lerJr., San Jose. Second heat—Won by C. R. Coulter, San | Fruucisco, time, 2:36 2-5; second, B. H. Ei- | ford. Reliance; _ Bleuler, Paris, v Otto Zitgler Jr., San f , Allan Jones !vmpic; third, C. R. Coulter, San Franeiscs D, amuteur, first he: Hulla inile, handica E. F. Russ, Olympic, first, scrateh; Ralph Rob- on, Road “Club,’ second, 45 yards. Time, 2 35 Second heat—C. A. Kraft, Bay City, first, vards; D. E. Francis, Road Club, second, 40 yurds. Time, 1:04 3 Third heat—C. D. Guoch, Reliance, first, 20 yards; M. G. Francis, Road Club, second, 45 yards. Time, 1:04 45, Fourth heat—C. Goodwin, Road Club, first, 40 yaras; R. C. Barion, Fresno, second, 10 yards. Time, 3.5 Fifth heat—A. B. Johnson, Redwood, first, 35 yards; A, T. Smith, Enst Oakiand, second, 45 yards” “Time, 1:04 2-5. Final heai—E. F. Russ, Olympie, first, seratch; ‘C. D. Gooch, Reliance, second, 20 yards; C. A. Kraft, Bay City, third, 25 yards. Time,'1:10. Tywo-thirds of & mile, open, amateur: First heat won by E. F. Russ, Oiympic; time, 1:42: econd, P. A. Deacon, Reliance. d heat won P.'R. Mott, Reliance; time, 1:31 3-5; second, D. E. Francis, Road Club. _Third heat won by J. E. Wing, Olympic; time, 1:36 4-5; second, Goocn, Reliance, Fourth heat—Won by . Barton, Frosno; time, 1:354-5. Second, C. J. Birdsall, Cali® tornfa. Fifth heat—Won by J. C. Williamson, Bay ty; time, 1:411-5.° Second, A. B. Johnson, i Final heat—E. F. Ru Wing, Olympic, secon third; time, 1:26 8-5. There will be another meet at the Velo- drome next Sunday, ana it is expected there will be larger fields and therefore better contests. e Ui Gl A VOICE FROM THE PULPIT. , Olympic, first; J. E. . G. Barton, Fresno, 'Dr. Dllle Preaches a Sermon on Sunday Desecratlon, and Re- fers to Bicycle- Racing. Last evening Dr. Dille of the Central M. E. Church presched on the subject, ‘The Babbath—a Holy Day or a Hon- day?” and in his sermon he took occasion to refer to the action of the California Association in seceding from the League | of American Wheelmen and in adding | more to the influences which are robbing Sunday of much of its religious character. | In_reference to Sunday desecration, he said: After all the kind of desecration we have | most to fear is not Sunday labor, but Sunday | revels—the Sunday of Continental Europe, the gay and godless Parisian Sunday, with it sports and aissoluteness and vice. I am not pleading for the Puritan Sabbath. The conditious are different now, and we sim. ply could not have such a Sabbath as theirs Their life wus simpler; the feverish hurry a grind of our industrial Jife was unknown. But in our day, and especially in our large cities, Sunday is about the only day many wage- workers have a chance to breathe the fresh a1r of heaven. We must remember that the Sabbath was made for man, for the whole man—body, soul and spirit. Let no workingman who is confined every working day in close hot foundry or factory or mill or stuffy store or cffice say that I ob- ject to his taking the air with wife and family on the Sabbath 80 loug as his outing does not lead him to join the throng of Sabbath-break- ers, who turn the day of Test into a day of reveling, and so long as it does not lesd him struction of his children. Let no one look | upon the Sabbath as a yoke, but as a delight, a joy, a benediction—ihe best and brightest day of the week. But with how many is the Sunday instesa of the best day the worst duy? [ know itissaid tnat the civilization of the nineteenth century requires that Sunday ob- servance should be relaxed. For reply I point to Toronto, which has grown faster in the last twenty years than any other American city, save Chicago, and there are no Sunday mails, Sunday ssioons, Sunday cars, sunday srlrfl or Sunday papers there. Thle fact is the Sunday bicycle, the Sunday bout and train and Sunday amusements are the index and the source of & corruption of morals, & dep: for sncred things thet must fill every thought- ful mind with alarm and with foreboding. Reverence for God’s day. and by the same token for all things sacred and holy, is drop- ping out of our young California life, and if the present tendency Continues the Native Sons and Daughters who hear me will live tosce the fine gold o the Golden West become dim and her luster fade. As to the bicvcle I believe in it and I believe in 1t on Sunday. Ithink every church ought to nave its bicycle stall; for it is better to*'ride afoot,” as the Indian_charecterized wheeling, than to walk aioot. But all Sunday pleasure riding comes under the ban of God's word against sceking our pleasme on_his holy day. Itis the shame of California thatour wheel- men in their associated capacity have seceded from the National League of Wheelmen be- cause that noble body forbids Sunday racing. | ground of the congress just closed—that | is, the ladies who sssumed the maonage- | ment, are very much shocked and grieved | in a smiling way over the affair of Satur- ) day night which came so near terminat- DON'T TREAD O HIS COATTAILS The Hindoo Brahmacharin Considers It a Grave Discourtesy. He Gives His Version of the Rumpus at the Woman’s Congress. Mrs. John F Swift Savs the Man Is a Lunatic and Is Sorry That He Came. In future, should you chance to come into contact with a Brahmin, don’t jerk bis coattails, or his gown, or robe, or whatever he wears. He'll get hot you do. It was just such a trifie as this that caused the big row and that dreadful | scene at the Woman's Congress Saturday night, At least, he Hindoo Brahmacharin, who claims he was grossiy insulted by the women in congress, says that was the cause of it, and he certainly must have had some rea- son—whether imaginary or otherwise— for rising up in his robes that night and making the atmosphere of Golden Gate Hail blue with his almost hysterical de- nunciation of the whole show. So keep vour bands off his clothes if you would keep out of trouble. The ladies who have been in the fore- —_— NEW TO-DAY. ECZEMA Most Torturing, Desfiguring, Humiliating 01 itching, burning, bleeding, scaly skin and scalp humors is instantly relieved by & warm bath with Curicura Soae, a single application of CUTICURA (oint~ ment), the great skin cure, and a full dose of CuTICURA RESOLVENT, greatest of blood purifiers and humor cures. (Uticura ReMEDIES speedily, permanently, and economically cure, when all else fails. PorTR DRUG AXD CrEw. CoRr., Sole Props. 29~ How to Cure Every Skin and Biood Ham PIMPLY FACES Ferfidsod Besstited oy CUTICURA BOAP. , Boston. or,” tres. if | ing _their meeting in a riot. And | the Brahmacharin, too, is still indignant, | for he is unable to see yet why he should | have been subjected to discourtesy, par- | ticularly as he ‘is a stranger in our City | | and unaccustomed to our ways and man- ners. While regretting the incident, he | still adheres to the belief that an apology | may be due him, and the ladies, on tne | other hand, say that the name'of this | | Hindoo p will be expunged from | their recora and denied the privilege of | going_down into history as a participant | in their congress unless he squares him- | self in some emphatic and abject manner. | In searching for an_explanation of that | big rumpus one will find two ver | and as distinct as day from night. Whe | the Brahmacharin ~delivered himeelf of | his *‘roast’ * on the congiess Saturday, he | simply vouchsafed that he had been in- | sulted and wisned to resent ir. He went no further. | n | Some people wondered what | | bad riled him, and others who knew held | their peace. But yesterday everybody was willing to talk, and did so. The Hindoo had com- pletely recovered from his fervor, but was none the less positive that he was right in what he did. “In some respects 1 am sorry that it happened,”’ he said last evening, after his return from Palo Alto, whers he had been lecturing to the Stanford students. “But again I am not. The leaders who had the congress in charge have only themselves to blame for the scene. Idid not wish to come here in the first place, but they coaxed me. 1 was sojourning in Los Angeles, and they wrote me letters telling me how delightea they would be | to have me come and tell them something | about Oriental philosophy. were serious—that they really w be enlightened and instructe came. I have found, however, that I was only called to talk to'a lot of society folks who neither listen nor think, and I am sorry that I came. “But I will tell you how it happened. I was specially invited to be present last ed to | Thursday afternoon because a paper on | ‘Heredity’ was to be read by Mrs. Helen Gardener, and I was supposed to reply to i1t. 1did reply and that is what cavsed all the trouble. Mrs. Gardener’s theories were diamerrically opposed to mine on | that subject and I supposed I would be | allowed the right to say so. | “Well, I got up and talked, and what | was the resuli ? “Why, despite my earnestness—beca use I was saying what I had been taught to believe—a lot of them began to snicker in my face, and I could hear whispered com- ments all around me. | “I was speaking of our reincarnation belief and our opposition to heredity,when one of those women began to deliber- ately Tk my gown from behind, doubtless meaning that 1 . shouid desist. Such an insult I never had thrust upon me before in my life, and I hope I never shall again. Why, it they wanied me to stop talking, why'did they not say s0, instead of exhibiting such discourtesy ? But at all events 1 kept my temper and had my say. I was resolvea, however, to tell them something before thai congress was over. My opportunity came Saturday night. I wasdown on the programme to read a paper, and when my turn came I simply arose and said I would read no paper and explained why I would not. I was per- fectly cool and calm and had no idea of raising a disturbance. In fact I did not. It was they whodid it all. “I simply told them that I had been treated discourteously —I said nothing about their having stepped upon the head I permitted myself to believe that they | and 1| of a rattlesnake—and then everybody went mad. “I'do not recede one inch from my posi- tion. I was their guest, and had arignt to expect at least decent treatment. I did not expect them to believe in my philos- ophy, but they certainly should have been ladies enough to listen to me, even though I was opposing one of their pet theories.” The Brahmacharin would have said more for be was in the humor, but the inter- view was necessarily cut short because he | was compelled to hurry away to Native Sons’ Hall, where he was scheduled to deliver a lecture. Then the other side. The ladies zssert stoutly that the Hindoo's grievance is all 7 | 1maginary. Nobody pulled his robe, no- | body attempted to jam him into a cha or chioke off his spesch, and everybod they say, listened to him patientiy evi though he was abusing them and every- | thing that they held dear as regards Chris- | tian belief. In short, they declare that | they were too lenient with him, and are | sorry now that they invited him to the | coneress at all. *‘Why, that man’s a lunatic—nothing short of the word will express it.” That’s the way Mrs. John F. Swift put wher: seen yesterday. Mrs. Swift was the presiding officer of the late lamented congress. “The way be carried on at our closing | | “and it would not | have been tolerated anywhere else in the world _except at & Woman's Congress. Hac he attem nted to da anything of the kind atthe Pure Food Congress or any meeting composed of men he would have been uncere- moniously thrown out into the street on Ms head. By a spe- cial dispensation of our rules we nermitted this Hindoo to speak after Mrs. Gardener had read bher very excellent pa- per on ‘Heredity.” The time allotted for these discussions is ten minutes for every- body, the average rule being that each person consume about three minutes. But what did this man do? Why, he talked session was something disgraceful,” she for thirty minutes, and such a tirade of A TOUCH LEADS A h i 7 S TO:A T IFF. It is Dot probable that the little contretemps of Saturdsy night will at all injure the recognized good results of the Woman’s Congress. Indeed, that the discreet touch of a lady’s hand on the Brahmacharin’s robe, when the Oriental showed symptoms of exceeding the limits of discretion, may have averted greater discord is generally thought possible. At any Tats, the learned Hindoo has expressed regret for his dramatic burst of an, and the ladies are merely smiling. to neglect the house of God and the proper in- | aved taste and au irreverence | NEW TO-DAY — DOMESTICD DRY GOODS. EPARTMENT EXTRAORDINA RY OFFERING —OFE" FINE TAPESTRY TABLE (OVERS! Greatest Values Ever Shown in San Francisco. 175 FRINGED TAPESTRY T ERS, size 4-4x4-4 ABLE COV- price $1.25 cin 200 FRINGED TAPESTRY TABLE COV- ERS, size 6-4x6-4 75 FRINGED TAPESTRY TABLE COV- ERS, size 6-4x6-4 150 FRINGED TAPESTRY TABLE COV- ERS, size 8-4x8-4 275 FRINGED TAPESTRY TABLE COV- ERS, size 8-4x8-4 oie 125 FRINGED TAPESTRY TABLE COV- ERS, size 8-4x8-4 - - 175 FRINGED TAPESTRY TABLE COV- ERS, Silk Embossed, size 8-4x8-4 - price The above TABLE COVER LOOMS, are the very NEWES GANT DESIGNS. They have piice PELD cact $2.00 cacn $2.00 cicn $2.50 eucn $3.00 cucn $3.50 cacn S come to us direct from the T COLORINGS and all ELE- handsome KNOTTED price - - price - - price price FRINGES, and the public are invited to see our display of these goods. In addition to this sale of Table will sell this week 5 cases W COLORED SEILLES BEDSPREADS, fu! SATIN - FINISH Covers we HITE AND MAR- 1l size, price $2- 50 each Clornois ORPORAp, i 1892, 20 111, 113, 115, 117, 119, 121 POST STREEL abuse I never heard before. But we sat it out, and I am in a position to say that not one word of insult or discourtesy was oi- | fered him. “Did anybody jerk his robe? Isay no; emphatically no. The Brahmacharin stood right by my side all the time he was speak- ing and could have readily seen anybody who came near him, and nobodydid. It is barely poesible that some of the ladies in GOLDBERR passing to and tro on the platform might have brushed against him with their skirts, but I doubt even that. I know that nobody pulled his coat- tails. If any insults were handed out he was the donor. He insulted everybody in the congress. 1f he attempts to attend our meeting to-night be will be thrown out.” But the Brahmacharin did not attend the meeting last night, so there was no opportunity to see Mrs. Swift's threat carried out. A o b The Brahmacharin Preaches. The Brahmacharin Bodarhaskshu de- livered an elegant address to a large au- dience at Native Sons’ Hall last pight. It was given under the auspices of the Theo- sophical Society, and Secretary W. J. Walters introduced the speaker. His subject was “‘Religion as a Synonym for Eaucation,” and this lecture was pre- viously billed to be delivered at the Woman’s Congress, but owing to a mis- understaning which the Indian esavant had with some of the members of the con- gress on Saturday, he refused to carry out that part of the programme. In the address last night not the re- motest reference was made to the quarrel. In his talk the Brahmacharin explained that the true aim of education was the de- velopment of the divine, which lies latert in all men, and that this is accomplished through many reincarnations. SALVATIONISTS IN RIOT. Bedlam Broke Loose in the Merchant- Street Hall Last Evening. The gentle religious sentiment which usually permestes the souls of the Balva- tionists who nightly wage war against sin in a neat little hall at 639 Merchant street, was rudely suspended last evening by a lust for retribution for a Wwrong heaped apon them by three intoxicated frequent- ers of the water front. Asa result the room of worship was {ransformed into a den of irreligious riot and its tloor and tidy benches were spat- tered with the blood of half-frenzied com- batants. 4 The fight Iasted for over ten minutes. Benjamin Jobhannie was the leader of the rioters, the Salvationists say. He re- fused to leave the building when it was time to close and concentrated his forces, consisting of two muscular sailors, and n. m;'i?agr‘:‘:::twemy Salvationists in the room, and they proceeded to batter the in- stigators of the fight into submission. t was a hard task. Man after man went down under the powerful blows of who for some time remained Johannie’s cheek was finally laid open to the bone by Olaf Olafson, a friend of the Salvationists, and he went reeling into the street in a semi-conscious condi- tion. A police whistle was blown, but it only served to get the innocent into trouble. Jerry McGowan, an interested onlooker, was sent stumbling into the street by a swing from a policeman’s club, and Axel Schold, & man-o’-warsman, Who was at- tracted to the scene by the wail of strife, was arrested for beinz drunk. 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