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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1903 I BOXERS ATTELL AND HANLON FIGHT TWENTY ROUNDS TO A DRAW SHAW FINISHES FIRST ON S AND WILL NOW HAVE ELECTED A FOLLOWING Greyfeld at 15 to 1 Gets the Decision in a Three-Head Finish With Frank Woods and St. Sever- Form, and All Six Favorites Meet Wi rider, gain winning his ng on Se- the bet- On Sat e public a taste OAKLAND RACETRACK, Thur 4216, FIRST RACE Futurity c sellin L % iorse and Owner. Heavy Going Causes Shifting th Defeat at Oakland “ - THE CALLS RACING FORM CHART. her fine. | g; 4-year-olds and up; value to fire R N handiing of time he s favorable weather condi- ridden by Tommy Burns, the betting, but showed got Selected aw 4, tiptoelng his fita and Floriana er Iy rom o s empestuous afternoon, st 2 t ite withstood the ava- Fallon- Ethel. (Trained by F, McMahon e down to defeat. Hil A hard. H mped away in the lead as 5 trouble. First five or six the only Bill Massfe, E4 Lilburn and fair race. Myrtle H qu W. Trahern OND RACE—Th unexpected arrivals at as slow and cuppy 1W. Waldo.. Minder b 1‘: 6115 9 10 Knapp Wilkers L. Jackson.| \ Adxins ... 2:1S. Hilary, plac alior, show Winner, ch. g by ) Start bal. Won easily. Next two driving it thrown from & catapult, and was never in s that had a chance. Phil Archibald ran a closed well on minutes havoc with form. orse and Owner. mile and a « rnish the most Splers) Covy « g day, Greyfe 1 (R, D. Miller) : nnings & Co.) < Midway (Burns & Wat Emil (J. D. M Winne! very e ita. tire Midwa Burrows)) S ing and was-nicely 1, did not better his positier RACE 11 * Futurity THIRI nd tongs to “Horse and Owner. 2 Kelly 5 |Burns T, (Trained asily. 2 two handily. Winner had clear d last sixteenth. Punctillo a none too y could do nothing in the going. ng; 4-vear-olds and up; value to first, . %. %. Su, Fin. | Jockey. the wire g"” Kelly, on Grey- o e o5 K n Y J. Daly. i 1 received the verdict Adkins 10 X favorite second, a “IL. Jackson 8 Dr. Rowell's hoi (Connell . 12 about the winner. i b1 s and Birkenruth 12 )n and |Bonner 30 & beat the W. Waido. 20 ng sprin 15 et S . Homad o fuir 4 Lwin 1 narked @ x ury - 10 4 € » marked advantage Brissac, 4 J 40 SRR e ucR 10 . At post % minute. Off at 3:06%. Max, place. 1 sth. The win- 8 . ce 2 w, 8 Winner, b, m. by Maximo-Annie vas as g 5 » the bettin 5 Tra ) ched—Saintly, Kickumbob. Start good. Won grane’s old horse, Handpr Y. 3 ard. Winner received excellent handling. Berendos was e mark e second event t of e He ran a nice ra e ran better to-day. Hand- = 3 E Oavoiite. e re ngled up at th Young Morello ran poorly. Brissac threw rider. *Fell. led to the stretch 7 RACE s and up; value to first, $325. I - 3‘"‘X m Irdex| Horse and Owner. Jockey. 1 outsider, ) (Bill Mal Minder ... © blar Burns ...0l| 8 e L Wilson. .| 2 & 7 w [ e B3 100 200 : . place, 2; show, & by Traverse. Jack Richeliew Jr., ng to the lmit. _Biil @ on back stretch by v Buliman now 4144 v Lilburr — 3 > o rinute. Off at Lilburn, place, : show, 1. b Stunts, .show, b Winner, ch. c. by Bright Phoebus. et e s Magrane.) Scratched —Lady Gallantrie art fair. Won . ing t ¢ Mr. Dingle contributed to the defeat of Modicum by chasing out : wit favor Bullman saved ground with Lilburn by a short turn: into b t at the close. Adirondack was outfoote S0 was Seize, VOTES OF e SSS PEES PEE S L ST IO WS itteoted. S0 was Belse . selling; four-year-olds and value to first WUSL . %. %. Str. Fin. | Jockey. | O 1in Kflll;'— E 10 ;‘l ns |Bullman 8-5 11-10 oon 333 |Waterbury 4 215 48 'Bums .....| 3.2 3 510 L. Jackson.| = 6 10 6 |Bredin 30 300 Off at ¢ e, ¢ place, 4; show, 2.5, Ch. f. by , Won in_a drive of three. Fop rd 4 g wi ank Woods. Greyfeld outstaysd both drive. Sunello carried off the assistant start. 1 appeared to bother him. 4154 & SELECTIONS FOR TO-DAY’S RACES AT OAKLAND. = First race—St. Winifride, Isabel- | Fourth race—Princess Titania, - lita, Pure Dale. Stuyve, Lady Kent. Restrve. 108 Second race—Ed Adack, Nellle | Fifth race—Warte Nicht, Evan- > !\, 4 Forest, Harry Thatcher. der, Mr. Parnum. 9> | Third race—Duke of York, Poor- Sixth race — Autolight, Dupont, % | 1ands, Mike Rice. Mission. . Third race . = and a quarter, hurd ' 3 a2 Fa e Bios .16 | - —k iin; Blue Lake lande. . 1is TOURING AUTOMOBILES | HOLDS ANNUAL MEETING s & cnd ON TRIP TO CLIFF HOUSE AND ELECTS OFFICERS a n nai- = . . e £ it | Life Insurance Managers Will View | German General Benevolent Society 4 | the Park and Ocean From i Returns “Regular” Ticket f Goldl03 Horseless Carriages. Against Opposition. | The targest gathering of heavy tou .p{ The German General Benevolent So- z P AR | automobiles ever seen here will take | r'!rl\: held its annual election for officers . 4r-| place to-day at the Hayward buflding at|at Union Square Hall from noon yester- r. Farnum..101 |1 o'clock, when the coast ma rs at-)day untl late in the evening. THis year T i“)] | tending the convention of the Metrop there were two tickets in the field. The ) mpagne 104 | tan Life Insurance Company start on a|tctal number of votes cast was (41 Warte Nioht. 104 | 111 through the Presidio reservation to | which 232 were cast straight for the reg- “*|the cilft House. The coast managers' | viar ticket, while 165 were cast straight vous at the corner of Van Ness and Gold- en Gate avenues at 1:30 p. m. We Claim io Be Strictly Reliable and the Lsading Specialists = Men All our patients, rich and poor alike, ceive the same impartial attention, fees are exceedingzly low. for the e they receive. It ix poor economy to employ a cheap doctor with cheap ability We require no written agreéement, and when we accept a patient we do so trusting in his honesty and good faith, with the under- standing that our fee is to be paid when not only o_selves, but our patients, declare that a cure is effected. Dr. Talcott & Co. 1t certainly can be stated without fear of contradiction that previous to our an- nouncement of the importance of urethral inflammations and chronic prostatic affec- tions as factors in disorders of men, that tréatment was conducted in an impracticg. blé and unsuccessful manner. Our brilliant cures and the adoption of our methods by others is proof of its correctness. given to Varicocele, Rupture, Piles, Hydrocele, Contagious cases and Acute and Chronic Urethral and Prostatic Inflammation. 1140 Marke: Street. e reind Hale's F. L. TALCOTT, M. D. Special attent) Blood D le and a sixteenth, sclling | party consists of forty-five persons and | for the opposition and sixty-one were SRRy 10| the whole number of people on the trip, | “scratch” tickets. % 433 Mismien % | including the chauffeurs who will have | mpo‘vo. oo 94 4104 King 104 | charge of the machines, will be nearly aj;"”‘ tng on the regular ticket was W 4214 Autolight 110 | gixty. These will be carried in ten auto- | 2° follows: C. Ewaid Grunsky, for pres- - | woblies, chlefly heavy touring cars, | 1dent, both on the regular and opposition 3 { Among the private cars that will be out | ticket, 461; H. Gutzeit, first vice prest. ngs a Big Sum. to-day are those of Andrew Weich, J. A. | dent, 2 TL. Danker, second vice ]pr(-!l- n. 20.—At the horse | Marsh and G. W. Carmack. The last s | dent William Hermann, recording the not fthe car In which the owner and his w 216; M. A. Bertheau, 273 . | made their adventurous trip from Brune, treasurer, on hoth regular | to'San ¥rancisco. The cars will rendez- ib regujar and opposition tickets, 456; directors, for two years, F. W. Barkhaus, 276; A. H. Muller, 25, and Charles F. Thierbach, = both regular and opposition tickets, While the election was in progress the m.flnal meeting of the German General Behevolent Soclety was held in the Union Square Hall, when it was announced by President Grunsky that the membership | Qumbered 3300. The report showed a net £ain in funds for the year of $12.922, and stated also that the soclety’s hospital was meeting with great success. Mr. Grunsky said that it was contemplated | to build a new hospital on the present site and the most modern improvements | were to be adopted. ———————— Race Results at New Orleans. ‘:’E“‘ ORLEANS, Jan. 20. —Crescent City re First race, yne mile—Ben Chance won, Kilo- &ram second. Mixs Hume third. Time, Taaa s Second race, selling, six furlongs—Oy i o0 1 You Dare secoid, Bumn}e:"tfirr:i).p%"n::! ‘Third race. one mile—Sheriff Bell - ser second. Aurie B third, Time, 1:48 2.5, " i ourth race, seven furlongs, handicap—Ran- n won, Harry New second, g Stratton 11 third, ifth race, mile and an eighth, selling— Chickadee won, Sara Gamp se lon third, Time, 2:01, " o Bllza Dit- Sixth race, six_furlongs— Touchwood second, Epidemi Maxillo won, Lo o third. Time, 118, —_—————— Corbett Declines Jeffries’ Offer. DENVER, Colo., Jan. 20.—In repl message asking him if he woufdyl:::e.t Jim Corbett in a fight, James J. Jeffries made the following answer: “If Corbett will deposit $2500 T will sign articles to fight him to a finish for $10,- 000 a side at Carson City and show the public that he will quit like a cur the first good punch I hit him." Corbett has declined the proposition, 1 SENATE PASSES NEW CAME BILL Open Season for Ducks Is Extended to Feb- ruary 15. Opposition Expected in As- sembly Because of Other Provisions. o Sl P QU T CALL HEADQUAR S, MENTO, Jan. 20.—The committe tute game bill, making a number of radi- cal changes In the game laws of the State, finally passed the Senate this morn- ing, and for the benefit of the duck hunt: ers throughout the State the measure will be presented in the Assembly to-morrow and an effort made to rush it through the lower house. The reason for this haste that the open season for du will close Febru- ary 1, unless this measure becomes a law, but if it is passed by both houses and approved by the Governor it will give the duck hunters fifteen da more d One of its provisions is to extend the open season for ducks to February .15. If through any mishap or delay from any cause the bill should not become a law until after the pr sent open season clo there may be several days during wh it will be unlawful to kill ducks, but if afterward the bill is finally passed duck shooting will be legal up to February The intention is to rush it through tr week and the Gevernor will sign it with- out delay. It is not certain that the bill will have easy sailing in the Assembly, for the rea- son that it carries with it other provi- sions than that of extending the duck shooting season. The dove shooting sea- son, which is now from August 1 to Feb- ruary 1, is extended in this bill so as to make the season from July 1 to February 15, a difterence of forty-five day The open season for deer is also to be extended. It s now from August 1 to October 1, and if this bill becomes a law | it will be lawful to shoot deer from July 15 to November 1. Some of the members Fish and Game desire that the divided into fish and game districts provided by the constitutional amendment voted at the last general election. Others prefer to glve to the boards of Supervisors of the various counties the authority to make their own regulations as to the killing of game within their respective counties, of the Assembly Committee ate OF INTEREST TO PEOPLE OF THE PACIFIC COAST Number of Veterans Are Granted Pensions and Several New Postmasters Named. WASHINGTON, Jan. 20.—Postoffices tablished: Washington—Northstar, Thurs es- ton County. Postmasters commi: d: California ~Clement L. Jeffery, Cotati;- Alfred F. Underwood, Tres Pinos. Oregon—Cyrus D. Ballard, Milwaukee John J. Wasson, Alville; Char H. Briggs, Yankton Washington—Ralph T.. Weller, North- star. Fourth-class postmasters appointed: Californla—Angelo Genelly, Los Banos, Merced County, vice Charles F. Wade, resigned Pensions granted: California, original— Adam Weiss, Stockion, $8. Increase, re- ames Harris, Santa Cruz, $8 Oregon l—David K. Bill, Park Place, $6. Widow dependent rela- tive Joseph, $8. Washington, Samuel D. Kings- bury, Seattle, $6; William Woodburn, Se- attle, $8. Army orders—First Lieutenant J. H. Bradford Jr., Nineteenth Infantry, or- dered before board, San Fr: amination for promotion Charles "H. Whipple, deputy general, from Philippines to cisco for further orders neisco, for e Lieutenant paymaster San Fran- sl b ORI FUNSTON IS SILENT AT A KANSAS BANQUET General Declines to Speak and Leon- ard Wood Talks of Reci- procity. Kans., Jan. 20.—The feature t at the K s day cele- TOPEKA, of the banqu bration here to-night, celebrating the for- ty-second anniversary of the admission of Kansas into the Union, was the ad- dress by General Leonard Wood. His s “Reciprocity,” and the ad- sisted of an exposition of the uba and the duty of the United States toward the island. General Wood urged reciprocity because Cuba has been promised such treatment at the hands of this country, and beca help given to the island now at the inception of its government would go a long way toward removing the posgibility of all future complications General Frederick Funston, commander of the Department of the Colorado, was esent, but declined to make an ad- WILL BE PERMITTED TO XKEEP OUT CHINESE Premier Laurier Says Japanese Im- migratien Must Not Be Fro- hibited by Same Bill. VANCOUVER, B. C., Jan. Wwilfrid Laurier, Premier of Canada, has sugges ed to Colonel Prior, Premier of British Columbia, that no Federal objection would be taken to a provincial enactment re- stricting the immigration of Chinese, pro- viding that Japanese immigration not prohibited by the same act. Sir Wilfrid added that as long as the Province of British Columbia insisted on connecting Japanese with Chinese In im- migration legislation, just so long wowd the Federal authorities for imperial rela- tions insist upon disallowing those bills. Any legislation. he declared, which Brit- ish Columbia has 4 right to pass regard.ng the Chinese would, as a matter of fact, become law, but, he said, “the British Co- lumbia Legislature has hitherto been merely playing with the question.” - ey Brugere Gives Dinner to Miles. PARIS, Jan. 20.—Lieutenant General Miles was the guest of honor at a ain- ner given yesterday evening at the res- idence of General Brugere, commander in | chief of the French army. The American 'gereral and his party will leave Paris Sunday for London and will sal! for home February 7. The general says the re- ports that he compared the Dowager Em- press of China with the late Queen Vic- terfa during his audience with the Dow- ager is untrue, . Detroit Gets Forbes-Tokell Fight. CHICAGO, Jan. 20.—Harry Forbes and Andy Tokell of England, who have been matched to meet in a ten-round battle for the bantam-weight championship of the world, have accepted the offer of the Met- ropolitan Athletic Club of Detroit, the date to be February 27. HANLON THE AGGRESSOR IN STUBBORN CONTEST His Gameness More :l"han Counterbalances the Marvelous Cleverness of His Oppo- nent---The Decision Is Well Received | | | i AND AGGRESSIVE YOUNG ER WHO FORCED ALL THE FIGHTING LAST NIGHT. ! = - | [ent, it anything, white Attent aia to relish the body blows he receiv In the twelfth round Attell played for the heart and sent in some ard blows. | | Hanlon-kept Attell on the move through- { joutt thirteenth round. This wound up || with a slugging match. Hanlon rushed 2 | Attell dround the r in the fourteenth, and had him outside the ro; once. | ‘ | There was more slugging the fif- | [ 1 th. Hanlon punfshed Abe badly in | ‘l th, and the r showed an | | to stop. seventeent | | | elehteenth and nineteenih were ail in | | or of Hanlon. He punished Attell | | ly, never giving him a moment's re | spite.” Attell fought back, ! could | mot_stop Hanlon’s onslaughts. =T YAy SRR 4 “\\ hen the bell sent them together for | the twentieth and last round. Hanic | DDIE HANLON and Abe Attell rly ran across the et AR fought twenty fast rounds last Both fought as though their 1i¥es depe night in Woodward's Pavilion to [ €d on their efforts, ch™took a d a draw. The decision of Referee | Perate chance of being knocked out. g Jim McDonald was eminently | there yvas no attempt at suarding. & just and was well received by the spec- a seemed either: might S inmm peaivad . the. s | They went the entire three minutes at a s. | tremendous 1op; ' Beferee McDonald Attell proved one of the cleverest boX- | promptiy called 1t a dras ers that ever pulled on a glove inya | BURNS Queensherry contest. The superior | p. o oo “Amf“fm.f(”lu’ = gameness of his opponent asserted | Bumng in ten rounds. -The fight we itself early in the contest and it |of the most remarkable ever see was this that lost him a clean cut decis- | Burns is a comedian and his funny \ fon. The fighting blood in Hanlon's | tactics kept the specgators in .z veins kept him in action all the time. In |He was knocked down repea | the face of a terrific peppefing he kept | Sat for eight seconds each tir boring in continua and Tuots ut He claimed he iy clearly out- K | : al gamed the boxer who seemed for a time tim and whben he was final | struck a a veritable will-0'-the-wisp to 2 ard blow on the body the spe: S ey AT Do ot Han- | (410rs jeered at his grimaces. He had o e e O o oanc | cried “wolf” (oo often.. Both boxers blod with “Where {s he, Eddi This qid | Profusely. Spider Kelly, the referee, kept not deter Hanlon, who kept after his | @ toWel to wipe off the superfluous blood opponent in workmaniike manner and | Once Burns was down only two seconds, | gradually wore him down. Hanlon was n the bell rang signaling the end of the round to his di | amusement of the sgust g pectators ever ready to take a pi portunity of landing one. the evident *h for the op- cut, but these injuries did not take any | of the fight out of him. | ATTENDANCE IS ENORMOUS. The attendance was enormous, the various sections of the big building be- ing filled to their capacityr Hanlon's principal seconds were Harry Foley, To- N, Jan. 20.—The President and evelt entertained at the White House to-night in honor of the The guests included, in addition to members of the Senate and House C. on Judictary and other invited guests. mmittee From the start it was apparent there | Gus Saulsbhury box r hard rounds was no force behind the blows delivered |to a draw with Billy C: The deci- by Attell. He landed times without |sion was a fair one, as there was little | number on Hanlon's face and jaw, but he | to choose in the work of the men. Both cculd not stop the advance of the Irish were busy throughout each took a boy. The latter's eyes were discolored |lot of punishment. Saulsbury has a good and their usefulness was slightly im- |left, but he did not make as much us paired. His mouth and nose were also | of it as he should HIASES BAING 000 PAIGES Last String of Colts of | Palo Alto Farm Are Auctioned. o { James Coffin Pays $1300 for a Thoroughbred by Mendocino. i | | | | | rar-olds, Alto s splendid two-3 its of Palo | Forty-nine last of the noted ¢ | tarm, were sold at auction by Fred Cha | & co. at Market t i The place was crowded with horsemen | and the colts sold at high prices. Monroe Salisbury, th campaigner, boug several promising youngsters. James C W for a bay colt by Mendocir of the evening. F: e s, their sires, ti es paid: 3 cino, ing is a list of the hor: purchasers and the pr Berry. Salisbu Monr | chestnut | $1¢ SENATOR‘ SAYS BILL DOES NOT AFFECT COMMISSION Perkins Answers Chamber of Com-~ | merce Relating to the Scope of ! New Department. The Chamber of Com of San Fra pators Perki King’ them v 3 t « Ye: iay lowing answ a member fer of-the Ftéésta Committ tt Match Off. wired last night from Hot k., that he would meet Jimmy t 130 pounds ringside on Februdry claiming that he wou not e t ugh to train the match. He o meet either Attell anlon at 125 § s at 4 o'clock at near and ‘the match e | arrangec month. The B hletic Club wi its regul boxing exhibit 1131 Market bouts ha | \ | Burned by a Falling Rivet. By & p ar circumstance, Mrs. Kate | Ritter 3 L st received a severe n the side of the head yes terday was passing_on Market street in t of the new Flood build Powell. Just as she was pass- a hot rivet fell from one of the | stories, where the riveters were at | work on t cutting and burn- ing the sid She was taken to the Emp where Dr. Deardorit attended to her Ty by Irwin and Mike Short. Attell was | cleverly handled by Spider Kelly and Tim MecGrath. During the customary discus- sion in midring Kelly and Foley became engaged in a wordy dispute and squared off at one another. No damage was done. In the first round Attell was clearly puzzled by Hanlon's peculiar guard. This round was all Attell's, as he kept jab- bing Hanlon with right and let to the head. In the second round Hanlon com- menced the rushing tactics which ulti- mately gave him a draw decision. Attell started Hanlon's nose and mouth bleed- ing in this round. There was one fierce rally in which they stood up and ex- changed blow for_blow. The spectators seemed to concede the fight to Attell in the third round. He was taking matters easily and told Han- lon he could not whip one side f him. Attell sent several stifft blows up under Hanlon's guard, the last being a hard right. Hanlon continued his aggressive work | in the fourth, Attell doing a lot of run- ning away. Hanion seemed to be weak- eniug in the fifth. The sixth round found him in better shape. The pair of feather- welghts opened the round with a slugging | match. Hanlon kept rushing Abe, and the latter kept up his jabbing. Hanion walked into a hard left just before the hell and repaid the compliment with a hard left and right to the body. A WHIRLWIND ROUND. The seventh round was a whirlwind af- fair, such slugging seldom being seen in any ring. For a time Attell apparently let Hanlon hit him at will. Abe seemed rocking on his feet, and the house was in an uproar, scenting the end of the strug- gle in the air. Suddenly Attell turned on Hanlon and showered blows on him, nearly having him out at the bell. To the surprise of the spectators both boxers came up fresh in the eighth round, | Attell jabbed for a time and then cleverly worked the left shift. Attell would not let Hanlon get ‘‘set,” upsetting him re- peatedly as he was ready to deliver a low. b]'rhe spectators applauded Attell for his cleverness in the ninth. He kept up his jabbing, but did no appreciable damage. At the bell they were slugging. Attell claimed a foul in the tenth, but it was not allowed. He recovered too quickly. From the tenth round on Han- lon’s aggressiveness became more appar. | | | | | | | be worn in four styles. dents in the crown. was a better shape for all aroun We have the hats in several bias, Pashas and Tourists in the SNWO The hat to the right is called a four-in-one, because it At the same price also—Derbys, Hats Like These, $1.30 can It is pictured with two large dents making a single crease. It can also be worn as a Fedora or telescope or with four small The picture to the left is a Dunlap Crusher, and there never d everyday wea colors at $1.30. Fedoras, Graecos, popular shades. Colum- Out-of-town orders filled—write us. oD 718 Market Street.