The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, October 20, 1901, Page 25

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TV LIUrary,+++4 , — @all, i L4 b4 : Pages 25 10 30 L hanaasss ] SAN FRANCISCO, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1901. = | RELIANGE TEAM Paul Tarpey Kicks a Field Goal and Karney of Nevada Runs| Sixty-Five Yards for Touchdown. The Score of the Winners Is Eleven to Nothing for Visitors. ersity of Ne- he Rellance E or a touch- half"Keddie kicked ar Nevada e’'s territory the game. Nearly defeat of consid- Lowell Defeats Lick. rack f sven of Lowell High 3 ecam yesterday eets grounds Was sent ' STANFORD FRESHMEN OUTPLAY BERKELEY OPPONENTS IN MOST SPECTACULAR GAME ’ l nia’s Brilliant Individual Play. Graves Wins Glory by a 67-Yard Run. HE Stanford freshman foofball team fairly outplayed its Califor- nia opponent in the annual cham- plonship game yesterday, win- ning by a score of 11 to 5. The game was the greatest of all since the | bedecked lihe windihg Into serpentine S's + played as if every man felt himself a Creatore, and the Stanford contingent that followed across to Market street and down into the busiest part of the slotted thoroughfare the cardinal- FRESHMEN CHAMPIONSHIP 1894. California 6...........Stanford © 1895. California 44...........Stanford 0 1896. California 4........... Stanford 14 1897. California 8...........Stanford 16 1398. California 21..... <es...Stanford © California +..Stanford 6 Californin ...Stanforda & | | alifornia 3...........Stanford 11 | 0 a | Tle wmerenere_ | NINETY-YARD RUN . INCORNELL GAME Carlisle Indians Lose at the Buffalo Exposi- tion. | Teach the Men From Ithaca a Few Points on the @ridiron. BUFFALO, N. Y., Oct. 19.—Fully 15,000 | people thronged the Pan-American sta- | dium this afternocn to see the footdall | game between the Carlisle Indians and ! the Cornell University. Cornell won—I7 to 0—but it was a .game that taxed all the resources of the crimson and white, for the' Indian ends got over the ground | tast and showed the Ithacans a few | things in the way of playing. The Cor- nell team was the heavier. Hunt made a | touchdown in the first half and Coffin | kicked the goal. Hunt made a ninety- | yard run for a touchdown In the second | | half and Coffin again kicked goal. Tters was an exchange of punts and then Cof- | | fin stole around Carlisie’s right end and made a run of seventy yards for the third anG last touchdown. He was tackled so hard behind the line that he was wobbly and missed the goal. The line-up: T ™ = + baby classes of the two universities first ' began meeting in annual contest—the best x ? football, the most replete In | and in thrills and heart- | he audience. Agalnst a team | able courage and with many re- | markable first year players In its line- up, the Stanford eleven played a snappy, consistent and at times meteoric game : that achleved complete and unquestioned | . victory. | > Paul Ta ¥, the stocky little Stanford captain, ¢ » out of the glory. First he kici: rettiest field goal ever made on a California gridiron Then he picked up a blocked ball after st _Polytecknic. ,noiner try at a field goal, ran 30 yards 4 St Matthew's with it and made & ‘ouchdown, and imme- 8 ! the Polytech- qiately afterward kicked the goal. Those cleven points were Stanford’s winning total. Between times Capiain Tarpey his team with excellent judgmeat, | | did all the pu g—and creditable punt- ing it was—a w2snhed the line repeat- ds' gain, the longest irds after hurdiing alifornia was not without its hero, | | & @ though he discovered 0 late in the game that he alm missed the laure: wreath. Grave th slender, swarthy | end-runnin tute half-back, put into : 4 coaches as a gambier ate throw of the ord end Itke a thor- Steamer Goddard Meets Disaster on Lake the homestretch time after once when the Stanford Cap- 7ing too close up gave Y he circled the end and skirted down the side line, on and on and on, with the Stanford backs straining il had footed - the 67 rting-point and the ad placed the ball squarely | tord. | punting thirty y | tory.” On th V.. PauL TARPEY 2 WHO DID EXCELLENT WORK TOR. S TANFORL ! Paul Tarpey seized it at the thirty-yurd Une. circled the bunch of California play- ers behind Stillman’s incerference, which bowled the backs over, and sprinted the uarely 1 | behind the goal posts. His try fo | ereased to 11 for Sta {tlon that greeted Tarpey this time lasted | | cal | rific line-smashing b | & viace kick for a field goul. The ball Iposts, making the only | o his team. It was a great Le Bar e, y made, and what with his SCENES AT THE EIGHTH ANNUAL CALIFORNIA-STANFORD FRESH- ge. e i e et arount and amastiiig MAN FOOTBALL GAME, AND THE STANFORD CAPTAIN TO WHOSE | possible to gain, Graves made a name for | | BRILLIANT PLAYING THE VICTORY OF HIS TEAM WAS DUE. D e s e e | himeelf that will last beyond his four ] Dispatch to The Call years in college g Oct —Another dis- Thousands Saw the Game g e thaivias the inland waters | The d: afforded perfect football ::,‘:;,_mld the may e whoss A thevio | elght yards across thrée more names | weather, d more than %00 people saw | Sianford won the toss and took the tvest | Berkeley territory. roll, which | the contest. California partisans were In | goal, with the light wind in their favor. first turned ;hw, rm.\w‘:lv r.<hr:’v‘)u;”n'- ]"rm‘;n-rs“ California kicked off 35 yards, un;i Bln{:- ondike. | bad the and un ay began | ford jmmediately began hammering the | i< b . gl .flr,:”;y and the performances of ‘the Stanford | line, but after several galhs was forced | (NG #-yord line was renched, y freshman players electrificd the Palo Alto | to kick, and “‘alifornia had the ball on ¥ medwfl* their sympathizers into | the H0-yard line. On the first buck they ' whdly vociferous enthusiasm. “Then: fumbled and Stanford got the ball in th "o forth the Berkeléy boys had little cha. center of the fleld, Then frllowed terrific « lives we 1ost to exhibit their superior yelllng capacity | lfne smashing by Paul Tarpey, Dole, Bar- was recelved in tele- | until Gra runs set them screeching | tell, Dave Tarpey and Sefton. The right ing by mecans with a wild joy that knew not yeil lead- | side of the Ca'ifornia line was found to iee. ol -1 - e e Bchool recelved from LSRN | GAME FULL OF OPPORTUNITIES. AR o Emoamn 1o e et Sita it TANFORD was quicker to seize opportunities. It was a game of erott 1 mer Goddard wrecked on | | opportunities and the Stanford men were alw: there, while too Lake Le Barg ee men drowned. Charles often our men were standing around. Our offense wax somewhat Edward among the lost ? SDONALD ed by the passing. Stroud was taken from the guard posi- The name mentioned in the telexram is ) putiin at center to.das Sor the Grst tms ana he Souldifiot (e ram plioned fn the telexzam is be expected to do better than he did. Baeltzer played a good captain steamer. No particulars game, but the ball came to him 8o hard from center that fumbles were given as 1o the manner in which the inevitable. When Morehead's shoulder was dislocated last week it was £t met her doom, and the names of the ' too late to develop another cemter, and the boys are not to be blamed for ® wWho were Ao!lharle u';'llla;\d. Ar \l‘h]- the fumbling. 3 egram addressed to the local officer o o | .o 3 e Company, however, states that the God- The freshmen played for all there was In them—there was no quitting. dard was lost on Sunday last and that | ' The better team won, but the losers lost with honor.”—James Hopper, she was a total wreck. It is quite prob- California assistant coach, in an inteview afte the game. able that the three who were drowned comprised all who were aboard her. The steamer Goddard was & sister boat Kilbourne, which, with another ers nor rhythmic yells. During the inter- | be vulnerable, and Stanford never stopped steamer, has been employed by the | Mission between the halfs the demonstra- | till the ball was eighteen yards from in_towing logs and scows for | tion was all Btanford's, and at the end of | touchdown, when California got the ball The Kilbourne was operated | the game it was the Stanford band that | on a fumble. Bush punted, the ball going 3 towing logs and * the other end and to Califo halt for Australia. | cotton mill operatives of this city and the the lake Hoth boat bullt at Ben- nia Asp Dett in 15w They are sbout sixty feet| 1LOS ANGELES, Oct. 19.—Fourteen o Soutive comiiey ;"‘ela‘h"m“";“hfl“f' long and have iron hulls. loads of especially prepared asphalt fBr s afternoon, lasting nearly three hours, duri street paving purposes was shipped Lhis | time t‘he den’x’ud for & per e.fiz"fafl‘r'.i'.‘- Bousa and the Grenadiers. afternoon for Ban Francisco, for tran-|in w,-‘.e- was renewed and again declined Oct. 19—Sousa, who ia prov- | Bipment to Melbourne, ‘The shipment is | by the manufacturers, leaving the situa- s . made by the People’s Ofl Producing Com- | tion practically unchanged, :nx ]n great ‘l trn‘funn at Glasgow, returns | pany and the “fi'""m 18 derived from ——— ' o london In November and will give il from th B 5 - twelve concerts at Covent Garden nd | Lomtion o vo. satasiois T h.»'r,n‘;-l‘znv Sulphite Manufacturers Combine. afterno ne r“r*:x':’rdf‘mngd pmp.r‘ed lllphnilt n::] Ite_h."wmr,!;l 18 ndow BOSTON, Oct. 19.—The understanding < er G extensively employed in coating the cedat | that yesterday's meetin, - Iy 1-'r.urm|n[. but no ri-| hlocks used In paving the streets of, the | yfacture o(yg).. unu.fj f,..'g".,l.’h.',:: 'cn:x_ countries .u':y‘:l.lxll;,.:d(‘nm? "r":flt‘::; Australian clly.—.__ ada here for the purpose of combin- < They were photographed in one| ut ing their interests was confirmed to-day. §roup and Sousy's men gave the Grena- 0 Concessions by Manufacturers. | Tye new company s to bs known as the jers @ complimentary supper, the Grena-| FALL RIVER, Mass., Oct..10.—~A con- | United Box, Board and Paj dlers returning the compliment. ference between the representatives of the | and will be capitalized at .&ffic%‘?&% i)l‘_nrm: from center in California territory. out of bounds, and Btanford had the pig- centes i | ford the ball on the thirty-five vard line. Tarpey Kicks Field Goal. Line bucking netted gains again until Caltffornia liwe braced, and two downs se- dropped tack for a pla‘e kick. The bail came true, Sullman piaced it with ma- | chine-like precislon and Tarpey scnt the oval salllng stralyht and swift squarely between the posts and a few f the bar as pisttily as a baseball pitcher throws a stra{ght bai over the plate. The suddenncss of the achievement and it« brillarcy took the breath of the spec- | tators for a moment. and then the Stan- | d broke fn.o fia i +his great run for a touchdown. | Joy. Eneltzer, however. falled to Kick the ! PO oo Fullback . cct above | pia 5. With but six minutes left to play | Referee—d. F. Lanagan: umpire, Percy Hall; Wi 3 Was one the | acen in the | , In spite: of the col smallrces of the crowd. H Ten minutes only of the first half was rone and the score was: Bartell ran the kickoff in five yards, but Btlllman was thrown back by D-meritt wase forced to punt. the ball 35 vards, Berkeley fumbled tho punt and Taylor fell on the baii. ord’'s ball 12 yards across center into After several bucks Tarpey punted 36 yards agaln, and Sefton dropped Saeltzar with the from the_goal line. Berkeley territory. ball six yards unted out of into the air ut five yards' gain and Berkeley had its first opportunity to show Its mettle a | on the offensive, with the ball eight yards | into Btanford | through for two yards, . 2 | ar ue the White Horse Rapids. @ defefuioiofrieimirrmotetofodef shelotfotododefoioptofododeinfrdofed. dofe [osfeofoofoofeaforfrefectosioorfoofo uld be picked up by the God o + Gastuch “wen Risley clrcled e e e o o e T e e e ST Y represented by preferred be glven to owners of the several paying plants. The valuation Is to be based upon the average earning city of the mills for the 5 Unproductive mills wi or in common stock. Denies Reported Oil Land Deal. LOS ANGELES, Oct. 19.—The published story of a gigantic oll and mineral land deal, In which the United States Steel Sorreodnlt'lon_rll fi"'o"fi,'f,., to bl' & factor, is en! . B vice enetal Gounsel Of the Bals Lake Lo es’ and San Ral Gibbon to-ni, to him and tive. ‘This will be stock, which wil fn W. L. May & Co.'s wholesale grocery b7 ntare, at Howard and Eleventh streets,| Kansas “Jointists” Are Convicted. Qid $100;,000 damage to the concern and ad- | WINFIELD, Kans., Oct. 19.—Two joint- T Foundry, which, on building ard ltm will a 4 $40, are W. o8| ers, 35000 {d the story was news was purely imagina- PUHTJ,‘ | + | | right end for elght yards, Kittrell, who Stanford kicked off and Saeltzer ran the | | had taken Kealsey's pl b 2 | the other | such smashing playing the ball wgs car- went around nd for six yards' gam. By ball in 1o the Z-yard line. Graves an- exed 4 yards and tnen made another at end run 2 yards long. He took 7| ore, and Evans, who had gone in | alf, jolned the procession with 18 | ( the other end. Graves was rds on the next play. | <s. Tarpey's punt was ried to the-30-yard line and thert fum- bled, Sefton geiting the pigskin for Stan- Tarpey punted ¥'s ball the cent e bucking ‘cck_the ball wn | bi ved the ball on nu.} 1o the Jin the | the 2 . arpey plunged stle blew for the end of the half. and the whistle blew, the second half Stanfcrd had the the ball in Stanford’s possession. and i r the gaume Dr. Frank Simpson, the rnia head coach, sald the best team won and no other expianation of the re- sult was nccessary. all, the umpire of the game, s old captain and redoubtable yar teen yards from third down with rpey hurdled over tackle an made twenty-five vards before he was downed by Sueltzer. S8clton and Tarpey each anncxed four yards. Then the bail was fumbled the Californig p ercd it for Stanford. - California_braced and held and on the third down Tarpey decided to try another piace kick for a fleid goal. The ball sklinmed a Mttle low and was blocked by California iineman. As it rebounded gain, Paul T as clean and good and no dirty work, both rtsmanlike spirit ne for California Wweak at the tackle posi- m some way did not get vas particulariy fatal, too, used car:ier and that | ‘s weaknesses were not | istant Protessor Lewers of Stanford, isted In ccaching the victorious st noticeable thing in the game etter team work of the Stanford Aguain, the Stanford men were al- g e ball. Those two fea- thirty yards for a touchdown was also successful and the score wa: ford to Berke! 0. That feat was done four min; | piay began in the secord half. The ova- e credit for his accurate ess. Tarpey ran the am with excedeat judgment. Stanford's end piays wi “ul because | the halfbacks the oppos s properly. er V' nia’s ball on the Mfty-yard fine in | o a: iy b SR g nia territory. Then began some ter- | Van Sickle Broke through and ey, Kittrell and ckled ne or by = P e e Niley. mncen? tackled behind the line or broke up inter- 1 €| ference. No gains wi 4 Finally Stanford held on- the twen- | b S T et ey s rd line and California presared for | more fumbied bails than any man on the | field. Jartell played the best defensive | game of any of the backs.” The teams lined up as follows: Stanford. Positions. California. s.n.u; and...c.cc... L. E. Ro... several minutes. Californfa Kicked off. Stanford punted Califo went w of the mark and low. Stanford kicked from its twenty-five yards' vantage. California’s ball ~ four ‘hen Graves, Stililman and Evans, who | | | { had taken Risley's ‘vlncr. made four and | five yard gains, until a fumble gave Slnn-l Dole went into the line for an eight-yard im'f.??fl-. galn. Tarpey went around the right end for five yards. A fumble forced Stanford to punt, Tarpey kicking thirty yards. Cal- | Kehrlein. ifornia’s ball twelve yards from center in | Taylor. California territory. P, Tarpey. It was from this point that Graves mlu]fl‘ Monzingo ands. Crothers. Stillman.... «..Kelsey, Kittrell and Graves. -Risley and The Cali- | Bartell. ornfa_ccn'ingent went Into a frenzy of | The score was S*anford 11. Califor The officlals_were as follows: | TEAM WORK WON THE VICTORY. i HE game was won by team work and the abllity to recover fum- Taussig. Luediger. Warner,captain. T I Hunt..... Cornell. Position. Carlisle. Yale Meets a Strong Team. NEW HAVEN, Conn., Oct. 19.—The Yale football eleven met its strongest advers- ary of the season thus far in the game with the Pennsylvania State College on Yale field this afternoon. Yale wom by the score of 22 to 0, but the figures of the score do not represent the quality of offensive and strength of defensive which the Pennsylvania State team put up. A number of times they pushed their backs through the Yale line, though inability to sustain the attack as Yale did prevent- ed their ‘scoring. Yale’s players were al- most used up before the second half ended and two of the Pennsylvania State team were taken out or shifted. PRINCETON, N. J., Oct. 19.—Princeton defeated Brown here to-day by a score of 35 to 0. Twenty-three points were made in the first half and tweive in the second. Brown was unable) to stop Princeton’s backs, who repeatedly went through her line for big gains. Princeton showed up stronger than in any previous game in her general work. Her backs fumbled frequently and followed their interference well —_— Games on Various Fields. ANNAPOLIS, Md.. Oct. 19.—The naval | eadet football eleven defeated the team of Lehigh University by a score of 18 to 0. Nichols was shoved over the line for the first touchdown in the first half, after about ten minutes’ play. In the second haif Adams and Strassburger each made a touchdown Strassburger kicked all three goals. Ann Arbor—Michigan, 29 Northwest- ern, 0. Newton—Dartmouth. 6: Williams, 2. Chicago—Illinols, ; Chicago 0. Phila- elphia—Pennsylvania, §: Bushnell, 0. @ i O BOERS DECLIRE DEWET 1S DEAD Prisoners Say the Gen- eral Expired From Recent Wounds. DURBAN, Natal, Oct. 19.—General De- --.Demeritt | wet's recent inactivity has produced the impression among military men that he is either dead or incapacitated through fliness or wounds. According to a letter from Pretoria a prominent Boer recently | wrote a friend there relating the terrible hardships suffered by the Boers in the fleld, especially from a lack of surgeons. “Dewet for example,” wrote this Boer, “suffered the most terrible agony before Evane i | he died. He was wounded in the shoul- | der by a splinter from a shell, and the wound gangrened in consequence of its | belng dressed with dirty rags. ve Boers captured at different places | recently sald Dewet was dead, but gave a difterent version of his death. these reports is a statement of Plet Devil- liers, the fleld cornet recently taken pris- oner in the northeastern part of the Or- bled balls. California piayed great ball, too, and ¢he game was | ange River Colony, “s0 sald that on the the most interesting to spectators of any freshman match yet pluyed here, and few varsity games have excelled it in that re- spect. *“The Stanford men, lighter then their opponeats, got lower in | the line and held much better. Tarpy's work was beyond critielsnx except when he played in too close gnd let Graves past for his run and touch- down. - Bartell did good work on the cefensive and Stillman's interference for Tarpy after the Blocked kick was magnificent. Kehrlein played a good end, though Graves made his gains there. Boyles, at the other end, did remarkably well for his experience. He had practiced at the end position | but twice and never at left end."—Charles Fickett, Stanford coach, in an | Interview after the game. ¢ Berkeley lost hope of winning, as another | timekeepers, Everctt Brown and Dave Brown: touchdown and godl would only tle the | linemen, John Nourse and Clay, the former | score. (5 Berkeley tackle. | Severe Fire in Omaha. . rado and Santa Fq Rallway, vice Fred OMAHA, Oct. 19.—Fire which originated | M. Glibaugh, resigned. oining - wholesale houses. The greatest | Ists, Chad and Doc Lindsay, were con- oss was suffered by the Great Gltu'?l victed in the Police Court to-day of sell- ing liquor on forty counts. They were 0 i ther losets | sentenced ta six months in jall and fned ! ‘hemlical Company and | years'In jall and a fi egel & bl:nlng. wholesale &nt’a’udon- 'd a fine of $4000. kol For Three New Vessels. S SYRACUSE, N. Y., Oct. 19.—The Giobe Land and Tax wm“n Navigation Company of Sumt.. o a GALVESTON, Tex., ‘O¢t. 10.~C. L. meeting In this city to-day, voted to 3 on the Bacife in ad: 1. Ma s R, "fim ‘Carpenter ' Paper Company, | $100 on each count. This will mean twenty 000; Mercer eac] (.:ll‘:’rkuoxt cnmiu hln-." been appointed land | three vessels for use of the Gulf, Cole- | dition to two now under construction. 1 | morning of his capture he took breakfast with General Dewet..” Harvard Defeats West Point. WEST POINT, N. Y., Oct. 19.—At least 4000 people witnessed a hard fought foot- ball game between Harvard and West Point to-day. It was the most hotly con- tested and_evenly matched game ever played on West int's oval. It was by & mere scratch that Harvard scored against West Point, their only touchdown being made forty seconds before time was called. After a down and a scrimmage Kernan broke through the West Point. line and ran forty-flve yards for a touch- down, aided by the first good interference d had shown. Kutts then kicked . Score, § to 0. YORK, Oct. 19.—Columbia won to- | day’s football game with Hamilton by & score of 12 to . e —— Lipton Opposes Racing Machines. CHICAGO, Ock 19.—Sir Thomas Lipton to-day declared himself in favor of a change in the construction of challengers and defenders of the America's cup. “The yachts should be someth more than mere racing machines,” Str ‘Thomas. “The present yachts are not safe. Should the cup ever cross to the other side the challenger would have to be built according to Eritish ideas of R will leave to-night for New York. Dies While Playing Football. PANA, T, Oct. 19.—Robert McWard, instructor at Brush fell dead to- mvuhmm-xm-u-.

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