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THE €AN FRANCISCO CALL SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1903 FOOTBALL GIANTS USHER IN o O Lk 421 (SESS . . R IRO7TT CARDINAL TO OPPOSE Interesting Game Is Expected To-Day on Stanford | Campus---Few Changes in Berkeley Team. | S g B sity of California this week gave | the uslasts their first chance see of what material the varsity team will be made. Taking it altogether, there does not seem to be any great difference this ar's team and last. The 1 with the names of men who rsity last year and with those ERKELEY 18.—The line-up of the foo 1l men at the Univer- | Sept er th = who nearly did so. A number of really | men will be kept out of the team te this year for this reason a8 brought with it | many old-timers left over to give any- else a chance. ter; Ove right guard: rd, and Howard, left tackle » positions are already as- | ve had the experience th intercollegiate playing a men and clever. Howard | ttute last year. He | ntercollegiate game after »een Injured early in the as a rule 2 to ma 11 there being lno‘ speec Dol up" r right between Heitmuller tackle. Heitmuller, fident that he would d not begin prac- of this week h a good head and ear had he been 1 Fe owever. ticing Forse w wa ple un is th: Wednesd 2 big man wi 1d have played 1 is a candidate for his old posi- | t end, but as he has been ill | o week with malarial fever he may ented from playing altogether. In lace the coaches have been trying 1s men of the second eleven. | + station will probably go 2 gh he has a sturdy op- who is playir st nd eleven. Demeritt was Graves pi got out when her, ved for a tim the game early other matters en- n men—M . Risley_and Snedi- out for left’ half. Muther and - were varsity substitutes last yvea i the advantage of plaving in preliminary th games. Snedigar is play- 3 ing a good, stiff game now on the second eleve | s Boynton and Ster are rivals for full | | back, with the chances leaning toward | haltback. has | BoYAton. Boynton was full back and cap- | t Guild Hosital 1o | taln of last year's freshmen team. By | - Guild Hospltal in | some of the critics he is considered a | < amie Cfam the Te | better player in that difficult position than even Whipple was last year. More finally got into the game again Wednesday after flirting around for it thought he gridiron in few | sidered thi es al i many can. | Week or so making up his mind whether | positions. e he would play or not. He has played three vears with the varsity and knows the game thoroughly. Belknap, who has yved with Dartmouth and last Year's alumni team, and Geary, who was a var- | sity substitute and captain of the second eleven last %year, are More's opponents. 1t is hard to tell just how the fresh- man team will line up. There are cighty freshmen on the field every day, all de- termined to win a place on the team by ing tournament will commence this after. | ©Xhibiting an immense amount of dash | and fight. so that it is no easy job to no n Golden Gate P e noon ot - »—n“: Park rinks. The | iy out o team, round closes October 3, by which time all | * Barton is the freshman most likely to of the matches must be played. The com- | play center. He i a big. fellow, weigh- petition of the first round last Saturday | Ing something like 230 pounds and with —_———— SCOTTISH BOWLERS READY FOR TOURNAMENT PLAY | Will Commence the _Second Round This Afternoon on Golden Gate | Park Green. The second round of the Scottish bowl- | Jeaves thirty-two out of the original six- | considerable speed notwithstanding the ty-fo players entered to compete for | avoirdupois. Allen will probably play final honors. In the opening round there | 1eft guard. His weight is 205 pounds. t one default and three byes, twen- | Jackson, another big man, will play left | ight of the matches being actually |guard. The candidates with the best | | chances of making the team are: Cen- | ter—Barton, Haley: guards—Allen, Allison, Lawson, the winner of the las | Killian, Jackson; tackles—Eggers, Swee- | best bowler in the club, was beaten in | Dey, Clark Lachman; euds—Camanett!, | e first round by a one-sided score, | Gillis, Kileinschmidt, ‘Stevens, Millard; | g won the previous tournament | half-backs—Tweedie, Kern, Taylor, Crow wson wished to stay out of this | fullbacks — Gabriel, Booth, ~Schaufele; give another man a chance to | JUarter-backs—Sell, Hanna. He was finally persuaded to play, | The first freshmar game will be played did not exert himself and was beaten | to-morrow, the Oakland High School team lining up against Berkeley. —_———— Lacrosse Teams in Action. considered not nearly so clever now are of the opinion that ‘ “2-6” mark aught and John McLaren| The California Lacrosse Assoclation is = = together in the final round. | creating interest in the popular Canadian | nin Diovs, Sangerous Dl Toae Lawson o{ul]ni it, the honors | pastime in this city. A return match has | jyotehkiss brothers 3il have a chance. o one of these two men. . been arranged between the Huron and | the Tecumseh teams to take place at Na- turday afternoons. No matches | tional Park, Ninth and Bryant streets, played on Sunday. Many of the bowl- | to-morrow at 2 o'clock. ve near the patk get out for a| These teams are evenly matched. Much actice after working hours. | rivalry exists between them and a close | llowing matches will be played in | and exciting game is expectéd when they the tournament games are second round. | come together on the fleld. They will James G D. E. Collins, A. B. McGuire | line up as follows: Alex ( Thomas McNaught vs. Jobn | Huron—A. W. Jomes, J. G. Brennan, F. Jam hinson vs. D. Daiziel, Joseph | A, Burden, F. Beardman, F. H. Lynch, J. A. _Dr. Hamilton ve._Thomas G. Alt- | Wilson, F. B. Minto, Willlams, W. E. L 5 ve. Jumes” Hutchinson. | Judge, J. T. Darragh, J. E. Crilly, L. Keith. | Crawford, D. L. Dunn vs. | Captain, Dr. J. A. McNaushton. 5 | players can be accommodated. All of the | playing are Routh and Dunlap and Whit- CONT THE ESTS, WHICH COMM RELIANCE CLUB FOOTBALL PLAYERS OF STANFORD UNIVERSITY WHO ARE EX- iCTED TO PLAY A PROMINENT P/ b0} % RT 1 VCE v THE SEASON'S GRID- TO-DAY WITH A MATCH | | | 80} TENNIS MEN WILL MEET IN DOUBLES Record Entry Shows the Strides Game Is Mak- ing in Public Favor ENNIS is increasing ‘in popularity at the public courts in Golden Gate Park every day. Although new courts are being built, not half the ground adjacent to the courts has been utilized and if more courts are laid out it must be in some other part of the park. When thirty-two teams enter a doubles tournament it is evident the game has made glant strides in public favor. The tournament to-morrow will be a handicap doubles for the silver loving cup: which must be won three times. Many new teams are in the tournament and it is expected two new names will be in- scribed on the trophies. Homer and Marius Hotchkiss were in the iead with two victorles to their credit. The former has left town and his place will be taken by his brother, Miller. The only teams which have won the cups and are ney and Brady. Smith and Allen and Church and McKay, one-time winners, will not compete in future. The Baker brothers of Oakland will play from scratch and with the handicaps allowed stand a good chance of winning. They play a steady, safe game and the handicaps should not bother them. Routh and Dunlap, the other scratch players, are in the opposite half and the chances are they will meet the Baker brothers in the finals. Some of the teams on the The Long brothers, wi will be hard to beat. The women of the club will meet to-day on the public courts. Play will be in doubles and will be confined to the second and third classes. In the second class all the six teams entered are closely matched. Miss Allberger and Miss K. | Lindstrom are favorites, but will have to play their best to win. e, Only three teams are in the third class. It is expected Miss Vera Beyfuss and Miss Hazel Naylor, the holders, will again prove victorious. There will be no tournaments on the odds of “151-6, HOME TEAM IS ON THE | TOBOGGAN| Uncle Henry Will Have to Strengthen in Order to Make Fast Finish I may give Uncle Henry and his bush leaguers a run for second money. Mike Fisher's team has been on the slide 80 long that it is just about due to get busy and come through with a little sprint. If Fisher's tossers begin on San Francisco they may keep up the spurt, and then perhaps make a strong showing against the northern clubs. Any old kind of a ball team that plays ball at all could easily get in and rout the home bunch in their present condition. Such a patched up ball nine does not look good In a big city like San Francisco, and consequently the home talent does not draw the crowds it would with any kind of a half decent line-up. 5 There is hardly a sound man in Harris' line-up at the present time. It is a pitiful | sight to see Zearfoss, Pabst and Iberg hobble about the field when they begin to Play ball; it is just about the Hmit. There is but one man now on the pitch- ing staff who {s competent to win games, and that {s Mr. Whalen. The others do not seem to have the goods that baffle the opposing batsmen, and consequently no difficulty is experienced in beating San Francisco when the club goes up against any team that is in condition to play ball. The chase for the pennant is about set- tled. Los Angeles has the flag copped, ard in a walk. Interest'is now centered in the race for last place and the race for second honors. At present the home team is second—a badgsecond, to be sure, but still it holds th# position. How long it will be there remains to be seen. It seems Oakland's sudden burst of speed will be stopped by the Los Angeles aggregation. The southern club-wielders are in the game at all times, and if they do not win one week they make up for lost time the next. If Oakland can possi- bly get away with a majority of the games of the present meeting Peter and | his crowd will be rated as dangerous enemies to the other clubs of the league. If Mike Fisher can make Phil Knell and HE Senators are beginning to come strongly now, and it seems they SEASON AT STANFORD SAN'RAFAEL | GOLFERS IN LAST ROUND| o | Winner of Second Eight| Cup Will Be Decided on Happy Valley Links | round, over thirty-six holes, for the second eight trophy of the San Rafael Golf Club, between W. J. Casey and Douglas Hardy. The winner will hold the trophy until the next competition for it takes place. | The golfers of the San Francisco Cluhi are engaged In another before-breakfast handicap tournament, the five matches in which must be played before 9 o’cloek in | the morning. The entry list closes to- morrow, and the five rounds of nine holes each, of which the tourmament consists, must be completed before October 10. The APPY VALLEY golf course will be the scene to-day of the final | handicaps will be allotted by Robert Johnstone, the professional of the San | Francisco Golf Club, who is thoroughly | familiar with the strength of the players. A similar handicap of ten rounds was completed recently, Dr. and Mrs. J. R. Clark tying for the two prizes with net | scores of 418 each. L. B. wards was third, with a net score of 4l In the | coming tournament, which is a handicap | against “bogey,” there will be a prize | for the winner. | C. E. Maud, formerly of the Riverside | Polo and Golf Club and holder of the | amateur champlonship of the }nu»m_i Coast Golf 2 ociation, intends to make his home in Northern California. He will join the San Francisco Golf Club. As| Mr. Maud is generally regarded as the strongest amateur in the West, his com- ing will be a welcome addition to the | strength of the Presidio team. | W. E. Falrlie, the brother of Frank Fairlie, the Scotch amateur, is a fine golfer also. Recently on the North Ber- wick links he made a score of 71, which is a brilliant one. At the top of his game he Is equal to the best amateur or pro- fessional golfers. He is the inventor of a patent iron club with which it is im- possible to send a ball off at a tangent through striking it with the “hose,” or | neck, as the blade is set on in front. These irons are extremely useful when a ball is in a bad lie, but hardly a bad enough one to call for the niblick. A British newspaper is offering $1000 for competition among professional golf- ers. Only members of the Professional Golfers' Association are to be permitted to take part and the competitors are lim- ited to thirty-two. Preliminary qualify- ing rounds over thirty-six holes will de- termine the selection of the players. The final tournament is to be held on Octo- ber 13 and succeeding days at Sunning- dale, under match rules, over eighteen holes, except that the final round will be over thirty-six holes. All the eight com- petitors who remain in at the close of the first day’s play will recelve prizes as follows: Winner, $500; second, $150; third and fourth, $75 each; next four, $50 each. DS o R SAN FRANCISCO OARSMEN ARE TAKING LIFE EASILY No Competitions Are in Sight for the Rowing Clubs of Bay or Estuary. Affairs are cuiet among the oarsmen of San Francisco and neighborhood, the | annual championships being settled and the Astoria regatta over. The Ariel and South End Rowing clubs are busy about their new quarters near the oil works. The members of the Olympic Boat Club seem to be taking more interest in ca- noe sailing than in barge and skiff row- ing. Many members of the Alameda Boating Club go out in the evenings and on Sun- days on Oakland Estuary, but only for purposes of rgereation. No contests are in sight. Theé Mackie challenge cup for four-oared parges is in the custody of N. Lattimer vs. Wallace A. Cook, A. A car ve. Willlam R. Eaton. ————— Petitions in Insolvency. ctitions in insoivency were flled ves- | terdsy in the United States District Cour! as follows George Lochner, boiler- | makers’ apprentice, Oakland, liabilities 3200, assets $31: Eliza M. Powell of San | Francisco, boarding-house keeper, liabili- ties 31344, assets S8 | | Beckwith, A. E. Kenny. | Blackwell. M. L. Crowe vs. Robert Park, | Tecumseh—M. J. Tansey, Charjes Car- F- gle ve. J. Stott, R. Foreman ve. J. | roll, Willlam Degan, W. P. Scofield, €. E. Ren- n, John McLaren vs. A. R. Patter- | wick, 8. A. Wilson, P. T. Lyons, H. W J. D. McGilvray vs. James 8. Webster, | 1 Coutts, A. Q. Heberge, M. J. Lyons, H. G. Captain, Willlam A B S Swallows Carbolic Acid. Leo Ellis, a young man aged 18 years, swallowed a quantity of carbolic acid in a room at 454 Minna street yesterday. He was taken to the Emergency Hospital where Dr. Boskowitz administered suf- ficient alcohol to counteract the effects of the poison. Ellis will recover California Club courts for some time. ‘The annual election of officers will be held next Saturday. There will be no radical changes. —_———— | Are Arrested for Cruelty. ‘I G. Goete, a vegetable peddler, and Harry Crummv of 101 Fillmore street were arrested by Assistant Secretary Mec- Youngey Johnson pitch ball he may have the Alameda Boating Club, but there are a chance to do something. It would be ! no signs of a challenge for it. funny, indeed, if the twc old men got i It is reported that next spring there and pitched Mike's team into second | will be a regatta between the universi- place. Had Fisher a formidable pitching | ties of California, Stanford and Wash- staff his team might be a headliner, but ington. The boating men of the univer- those youngsters are not there when they | sities of California and Stanford are in are needed. - correspondence with the rowing assocla- Tke Walters, Eddie Householder and Bill | tion of the-University of Washington, Gannon are still ““bush leaguing” down in | and also with the experts at Cornell Uni- Cutrie and Officer Unger of the Humane Society vesterday for driving horses unfit for service. | the Santa Barbara district. This is quite | versity. The graduate manager of row- a come-down to men who were rated as | ing at Cornell has made an offer to build stars a few short months ago. three cedar four-oared racing shells for TARS SAIL UP THE BAY men Will Enjoy Clam- bake and Other Sports T HIS evening the fleet of the San Francisco Yacht Club, with the ex ception of the sloop Ariel, will leave its moorings at Sausalito and | will cruise to Paradise Cove. At1l o'clock to-night hot frankfurter sausages and ac- cessorfes will be serveq the yachtsmen on the shore. To-morrow morning the sloop Ariel, chartered by the Haley brothers, will sail from Sausalito, bringing up to the cove non-owners and yachtsmen who are not able to make the trip this evening. When all the yachtsmen and :heir guests are | assembled to-morrow morning a big cook- be constructed on shore | ing range will from the bricks abounding in that region and clam chowder, with other good thin; will be pre red under the able supervision of “Jim" Logan, the chowder chef of the San Franecisco Yacht Club. After a suitable interval the nautical games and sports will begin. The first ent will be a swimming race for a suit- ably engraved cup a yachts' yawls for a similar There will be a race in which testants, in a skiff, hands to a yacht. at which a prize will be trophy. the con- paddle with their the crosstrees of hung. The man who climbs the mast and succeeds in de- | taching the yrize keeps it will be a sack Then there ce, the winner receiving a silver key ring, and a foot race for a matchbox; also a three-legged race and a nership race. In the last event one partner carrles the other for half the rce and then Is carried for the re- mainder, The prizes will be leather belts. This is the last event of this kind the San Francisco Yacht Club will hold during the present season and no efforts will be spared to make it as sqccessful as possible. Next week busy preparin, regatta of the San Franc Il take place on Sunday, the 27th & over the channel course. This event will | be under the management of the regatta | committee, which consists of George E. Smith, chairman; J. B. Levensaler and W. L. Spencer. The start will be off Powell | street wharf, Presidio shoal buoy and the | dredger at Blossom Rock being used as | marks. This afternoon the | thian fleet will leave Tiburon Cove and | will make Vallejo to-night. As it is high water at San Francisco harbor entrance at 10:14 to-night, the tide serves favorably for a run up to Mare Island. To-morrow | the fleet will sail back to its moorings at Tiburon, The handicap regatta cf the California | Yacht Club for the cup presented by ex- | Vice Commodore Robert Vincent, owner of the yawl Iola, will not take place to- morrow, as set down on the schedule, but on Sunday, the 27th. Percy Bun of the yawl Kittiwake, to which the regatta committee of the Pa- | cific Inter-club Yacht Association award- | eq the second flag in the 20-foof special | race salled on Admission day, has notified | a member of the committee that she | fouled one of the stakeboats anchored at the starting line off Powell-street whart. This disqualifies the yawl and gives the | second flag to the gloop Mistral of the San Francisco Yacht*Club. Last Sunday, the wind being light in th- upper bay, many of the yachts cruised in | the channel. Among them were the flag- ship Thetis of the San Francisco Yacht Club, the sloops Challenger and Annie and the yawl Wave. The sloops Queen, | Ariel, Curlew and Halcyon, with the yawl | Royal. sailed to Paradise Cove. The sehooners Chispa and White Wings went out last Saturday afternoon, returning on Sunday. The yawl Gypsie, the sloops Jessib and other boats of the Califor- | nia fiet were also crulsing in the channel on Sunday. | ————— Reliance Eleven a Strong Team. Manager “Pete” Smith of the Reliance Club will take a formidable eleven to Palo Alto to-day to play the Stanford the yacht owners will be | g their craft for the annual o Club, wnich chts of the Corin- varsity in the first big game of the sea- | son. The team will be picked from the following players: Cavanagh, center; Gaffey, Smack and Fleck, guards; McDonough, Hamilton and | have an excellent chance. C. C Lewett, Gochen, Thomas, | Mi Amigo must also be T Martin, tackles St. John and Whitman, ends: Evans and Holt, quarters; Geisler, Mueller, Magee and Woolridge, halfbacks; Dave Atkinson and Graham, fullbacks, and Erwin, Ba- con and Beckett, substitutes. R e e o Y ) the universities at a cost of $250 each. The universities of California and Wash- | ington are desirous .of purchasing the boats and await an answer from the Stanford Universfty. The shells will be made on the model of those in use at Cornell University. When each of the three Western universies owns one the crews representing them will ‘be placed nd a rowing race in | | Townsend |1 iirs FINE FIELD TO MEET IN |+ BIG STAKE | jBest Twenty-Four Grey- hounds in California to Start at Union Park | | run in 4 The oc coursing [ | ve Many out of | make a pilgrimag | the running of t delegation, Sacra » Walsh will | include N Condrey, Raught Denny Healy a deleg: o ing of so atte - geles w mer ( m, Lyon ar eg Gasag John Heen- an, T. C i Dan Maloney of pe- > W Dr. F. P. Clark of ockton will come down to see his nom- ination run. stuc nts of form have figured that Palo Alto @ will fight it out at the top eard, with Rector and Silver H best two at the bottom:. Palo Alto @ Pocatelll are expected to meet in the third round, which will be run about the middle of the afterncon. The winner at the bottom of the card in the third round will enjoy a “bye” course in the fourth round. This will place it the all important deciding | round. Complimentary tickets of Union Park Ingleside and of all the parks represented on the committee will be accepted at the gate. Special trains will leave Third and streets at 10:15, 11, 12 and 1 o'clock. The likely winners look to be: “ommittee stake—Van- California Cou dal, Palo 4 Ii, Lord Brazen, Hap- hazard, Be Free, Gambit, Rector, acramento Boy l«, Mount Rose. Open stake—I Otto, Reckless Ac- robat, Fontenoy, M, Firm Fellow, Yankee E Gene Silveriand, Homer Boy, Red Boy, Red k, Master Rocket, John, Ruby Sa 8t. Cann, Luxury, Pomona, Bonnie Pasha, Wedgewood, America, False Alarm. An eighty-dog open stake will be the teature of the card at Ingleside Park to- day and to-morrow. The running ‘wiil commence to-day at 11 o'clock and to- morrow at 10:30. The likely winners look to be: Silver Lass, Doreen, Roval Friend, Jingle Bells, Maid b n der. 0dd E Tunger, Una, Old Tronsid: oy Hug Doc Burns, Fannie Hughte, Menlo Prince, dley, Articulate, Pure Pearl, Fain Glen, Sofala, Hesper, Irving- ton Tralee, McHenry, Bonnie Hughle, Roxana, Kittleman, Flower of Kerry, Gold Lily, Young Buck, Yukon, Haddington, Imperious. Rock and Rye, Rienzi, Topeey Turvey, Harlean Gladys, Intruder, Y hnny Rex, Wattles. One week from to-day the California be run at Union will Park. This is the richest event of the Coursing Futurity year for young greyhounds. It bears an unusually open look, no greyhound stand- ing out above his fellows. T. J. Cronin’s Fair Tralee, which was thought to have the Futurity at his mer- v,'will hardly be able to start owing to an injured foot. He had the speed over everything in the stake, being particular- fast out of slips. If he does pot start in the Futurity Mr. Cronin offers to match bim against the winner for $500 a side. Tommy Hall of Merced ha candidate in Wild Bill. M. C. McVey. which will be one of the youns- est dogs In the stake, is considered the fastest greyhound of his age in America. With Fair Tralee out he is considered to Griswold's ckoned with, he | having done all that has beea asked of b up to this tim Frank McComb has bought Manhattan King from Victor Noble. T gives him {he entire Fetter Free-Motto litter except Mi Amigo W. H. Kocher has bought Fancy Free from M. Dillon | promising Delano’'s | A Study ‘- Piiney. | One © ! Josephine Dodge Daskam's Stories complete in the Next Sunday Call. on an absolute equanty as regards their boats —_—