The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, September 28, 1903, Page 6

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6 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1903. BICEGOERS TURN |LELAND PAOIES | ~ 10 MORRIS PARK Welcome the Change to Straight-Away Courses. Westchester’s Autumn Season to Open With Fine Prospects. Diepateh to The Call Special Sept. 2T.—Met- the advent Park, which was much meeting at MORRIS PARK, N. J, lcome acegoers w excuse was made that rec: Gravesend and th the se was to blame. Large fie to run around the tur bed to preci; ac ply a plausible de- fer charged with unfair affairs will not pres se ob- lipse co ) to one mile and a does so close on the Gravesend meeting, rst day’s sport are expected. Witn ful weather which was umn season at phenomenally riding Burns of Odom, who, a great h MORRIS PARK ENTRIES. year-olds re 104, 64, ian 1 Ventworth 99, berg 95, Bay 7. Duchess Ocean 100, ). Durbar 100, Tribu Chicago Centen- 107 vards, , Montana ake 94, Tony Lepping 99, hus-93, Bird Siayer » Peat 99, The removing polsonous acld can natic and neuraigic troubles be Uric acid finds its way into the blood because the Kidneys are weakeneq and do not throw it off from the system. Restore the Xidneys and you restore tne power that will force the uric acid from the body. That is just what McBurney's Kidney and Bladder Cure does. It drives the deadly uric acld from the blood. It rustains the organs that sustain life and the forces that make blood. McBurney's Kidney and Bladder cure, $1 50, Al druggists. Booklet with aworn atate. ments of cures free. W. F. McBurney, Sole MIr., 226 S. Spring st.. Los Angeles’ —_— Ty Vim, ¥ ligor, Witality for Men, MORMON BISH/ S Bave been du uee over i use uflenu:f N ‘and followers. Fouitively cure o o cases in old and Soung eing from effects 4 abuse, dieeipa oses o tion, excesses smoking. St 1m Back, Nervous Debility, Headache, Unfitness to Mar- 1y, Loss of Semen, Varicoeele or Con- stipationStop Ner 50 vous Twitching of Eyelids. Zficcts are Smmediate. Impar: £ Sdbess BISHOP REMEDY CO.. 40 Eills £an Francieco, Cal GRANT b Gl DBRUG CO., and €0 Third st There is but ope | heels | er part of the | A CLEVER SHOT Naval Militia Surgeon Makes Perfect Score With Revolver. Record Breaking Attendance at the Shell Mound Ranges. The crack of the rifie was heard throughout the day yesterday at Shell Mound Park. The occasion was a record | breaker as far as the number of marks- 1 participating. The National Guard out in force. It was represented by the first and second divisions of the Naval Militia, Comptnies A, G and ¥ of the st Infantry Regiment. The Indepen- dent Rifies turned out strongly. The San Francisco Schuetzen Verein, Golden Gate Rifle and Pistol Club, Red Men's Schuetzen, Germania Club and | Norddeutscher Schuetzen Club all held monthly contests. The staff of Naval Militia shot at the regulation military target, being the fig- ure of a man, at a di:’;nce of 50 yards. Lieutenant Commande: nd Chief Sur- geon Dr. T. B. W. Leland did great work, striking the figure twenty consecutive times, thereby making the “‘possibie.” He made 1% points out of a possible 20 In his forty shots, one of best scores on rec- ord with the revolver. The scores of the different organiza- tions participating follow: annual prize shoot—G ), Sergeant C. Andrews hardt 26, J. 8. Jones . Kublke 24, P. midt 19, ¥. Shohay 18, | Moenning 18, Sergeant C. Kornbeck 18, J. | S st Tuck Chief Petty Offic: tty Officer Hilton i Second I rbarl, Ba Sutt medal s L. Grah Sergeant 40, Sergeant t Steadman 41, Corporal L. Isaacs 31, 5 piliman 44, S. B. Milis n 48, M. J. Lyons 42, Benjamin dward Nicholl 34, Leon Ayhens , James Dolan 32, Willam , H. C. Barrows Sergeant F. L. Owens J. Harvey 33, Me- Infantry Regiment, Captain J. F. G. Stindt 43, Ser- Sergeant L. Rey 41, J. Bruckner 28, L De- 41, rporal G. i Infantry Regiment, Na- monthly med; 3. Mu ly 36, Sergeant J. Br Dunigan Corporal M. J al J. Murdock 28, L. Maxon Martin 15, O. Welk . Taylor 30, P. Johnson 42, Markowitz 18, C. McKeon J. Opeashaw 34, F. H. monthly Mason ub, contest: > 19, n SIS, M n Franciseo K d’ Brandt 44 Huber 535, J. La B. Faktor 92 lliam Ehrenp- arles Thierbach 973, D. Dunker 1 1120, Captain John Thode J Gefkin 1293, Re- Club. ap (military). 77. Becker 91, G. E Pistol club trophy 89, J. Kullmann 87, Dr. D Armstrong 84, W. F. Blasse 83, Re-entry match—G. strone, : G E. Frahm, Kullmann 83, 84, 82, 85; F. King- S4 C. Cap, 83, 78; T. W. Lyons, 70; D' Smith, 84 Re-entry expert class, A. Gehret 221, 227: C. M. Henderson Second class Chib Henderson b Medal bars—M. Blasse 2 221 08; M. Kolander 210, 201. Redmen’s Schuetzen Company, monthly medal shoot, champion class—John D. Felder- first class, J. K ; sec- John Steiner 34 D. Tamke ; fourth class, C. G. Strippel 335: first best shot, John D Feldermann 22 best shot, John Schmidt 22. Bullseyes — Charles “Oldag, Captain Siebe's medal, 110; Jobn D. Feldermann 188, John Steiner 245, H. Nicolai 1765, John Schmidt 1840, Norddeutscher Schuetzen Club monthly champion class—F. P. medal shoot, first Schuster 430; second champion class, Her. ; second mann Huber 429; first class not won class, J Lankenau 376; third class, Charles Oldag 366 fourth class. F. G. Thode 384; best firstshot. 'George H. Bahrs 25; best last shot, David Salfield ST. LOUIS SELECTIONS. By the New York Telegraph. First race—Kiowa Chief, Judge Denton, Launay. ? Second race—Maghoni, Lady Idris, Zirl. Third race—Forehand, Wreath of Ivy, Folies Bergeres. ~ Fourth race—Monsieur Beaucaire, Taby Tosa, Dan McKenna. Fifth race — Silurian, Montapa Peeress, Light Opera. Sixth race—The Bobby, Kunja, El ey, last — Says Martin Struck the Fatal Blow. NEW YORK, Sept. 21.—Joseph M: who was arrested yesterday, ch‘:l"afl':;lllnh' murderously assaulting Detective. Frag: erick A. Verdu, was arraigned to-day be: fore the Coromer. Joseph Hanson who was. with Verdu at the time, testified that Martin struck the fatal blow. At the,re. quest of the police the Inquest was post. poned until October 12 to secure further evidence. Martin was released in $5000 bail. ——— s CHICAGO, Sept tary of Armour & . 27.—C. F. Langdon, secre- b /g i Co., died to-day of apoplexy, l SLOOP QUEEN BEATS ALL COMPETITORS IN SAN FRANCISCO YACHT CLUB RACE Mistral Is Winner in 21-Foot Class and Royal First Among 30-Foot- ers—-Vincent’s Yawlylola Wins Handicap Regatta of the Cali- fornias, Gypsie Taking Second and Thelma Third Place YACHTS WHICH FIGURED IN THE SAN FRANCISCO CLUB REGATTA YESTERDAY. S E HE annual regatta of the San Francisco Yacht Club was held vesterday over a course estimated at nine and one-sixteenth miles for the small boats and at four- teen miles for the craft in the larger classes. Hill and Welch's sloop Queen, salled by Dr. Thomas L. Hill, made faster time over the fourteen-mile course than any of the fleet, beating the big sloop Annie by 14 minutes 25 seconds actual sail- ing time, and the sloop Ariel by 19 minutes 31 seconds elapsed time. As the Ariel has a racing length nearly five feet greater than the Queen and the Annie nearly twelve feet greater, the cor- rected times would largely increase the margin of victory. The crew of the Queen inciluded A. R. Haskins, H. Gingg, H. Toll, Frank A. Bartlett, R. C. Gingg, Dr. and Mrs. T. L. Hill and two others. Be- sides winning the prize in Class D the crew of the Queen also won a dinner from the captain and crew of the sloop Ariel. This will take place on Thursday week. The race was to have started at 11:30 a. m., but at that hour none of the fleet | i 4 1 Gn | e‘; : DALY o DRI AGAAL FLIGIHIF THETIS. e . 4 was on hand, so the regatta was post- poned for one hour. At 12:30 a gun was fired from the launch Rob Roy, which served as a committee boat, as a starting signal for the yachts in all the classes. As the yawl Royal had no competitor in the speclal yawl class, she sailed with the | 30-foot sloops Surprise and Curlew. The sloop Annie, having no competitor in her class, safled with the 40-footers. In class A, for small yachts, Mistral won and Witch was second. In class C the yawl Royal won with Curlew second. In the large class the sloop Queen won easily. ‘W. G. Morrow's sloop Challenger served as the leeward stakeboat, being anchored three miles to the north of Blossom Rock | | buoy. The boats in the 30-foot and large | classes, after going around the course, | beat out a second time to Presidio Shoal | buoy and ran back to the finishing line. The regatta committee in charge of the | race consisted of George E. Smith, chair- man; W. L. Spencer and J. B. Levensaler. Owing to the fact that no time allowances | were computed, it is impossible to give | any but the actual sailing times of the yacht The details are. shown in the i table: ANNUAL REGATTA OF SAN FRANCISCO YACHT CLUB. Racing | YACHT. Length, | Starting ?Flninhlng Elapsed | Position. Feet. Time. Time. ime. Class A; under 21 feet— HMS. Dewey 19.55 3:41:5 Mistral 19.08 2 First. Alice . 19.02 3 Witch 20.49 *3 Second. Clase C; under 30 feet— Surprise .. .| 27.85 4 Curlew . I| 2siss 4 Second. Royal . 29.60 4 First. Class over 30 feet— Thetis 33.31 4 Queen . 34.66 3 First. Ariel 39.05 3 Annge 46.09 3 Second. YAWL IOLA IS FIRST. Captures Vincent Tmph‘ in the Cali- fornia Yacht Club'Race. Eight boats sailed in the race of the California Yacht Club yesterday for the Vincent trophy, the winner being Robert Vincent's yawl Iola, which takes the cup and a prize flag. Charles E. Clark’s yawl Gypsle won the second flag. Tle sloop Thelma, sailed by Sidney 8. Mar- shall, took third place and flag. The yachts received handicaps accord- ing to their previous performances, the sloop Flirt, sailed by Louis Ward, receiv- ing 60 minutes and starting at 12 noon; the yawl Pilgrim, sailed by Julian Alten- MORRIS PARK RELECTIONS. By the New York Telegraph. First race — Brigand, Castalian, Cottage Maid. Second race—Madden entry, Hip- pocrates, Blytheness. Third race—Whitney entry, Lady Amelia, Belmont entry. Fourth race—Eugenia Burch, High Chancellor, Grey Friar. Fifth race—The Southerner, Bur- dette, Moharib. Sixth race—Gold Van, Highlander, Past. French Steamship Runs Ashore. KOBE, Japan, Sept. 2.—The French steamship Australian, belonging to the | Conaty to-day laid the cornerstone of the Messageries line, outw; bound, has ashore at Imaharu on the north coast of the Island of Shikobu. -All the passengers are safe. Lundy the hest diamonds. 3a :&hlx‘nfl u‘mm‘ e SR R R Y dorf, receiving 2¢ minutes and starting at 12:36 p. m.; the yawl Idler, sailed by George M. Shaw, recelving 20 minutes, and starting at 12:40 p. m.; the sloop Hazel S., sailed by Fred Walker, recelving 18 minutes and starting at 12:42 p. m.; the sloop Secret, sailed by Lee Gale, receiving 16 minutes and starting at 12:44 p. m.; the yawl Gypsle, recelving 8 minutes and starting at 12:52 p. m.; the sloop Thelma and the yawl Iola belng at scratch and starting at 1 p. m. The finishing times of the yachts were as follows: Iola, 3:: 8:50 p. m.; Thelma, 3:21:48 grim, 07 p. m.; Flirt, Idler, 3:42:15 p. m.; Secret, 3: Hazel 8., 3:53:4 p. m. HARLEM SELECTIONS. By the Chicago Inter Ocean. t race—The Kentuckian, Stem- winder, Orfeo. g Second race—Paulaker, Falella, Mr. Rose. Third race—Dick Welles, Beau Ormonde, Delagoa. Fourth race—Don Domo, Clifton Forge, Dick Bernard. Fifth race — Six Shooter, Beau Ormonde, Linguist. . VENTURA, Sept. 27. Bishop Thomas J. Santa Clara Catholic Church with impressive ceremonies. g&fi Eujol and Laubachor assisted. Two hun- dred Knights of Columbus came by spe- fll'l-ht.u.ln flo:l Los Angeles to participate ‘the ceremo The church I~ pleted will M-'l‘lm.u e b AR, FITZ MATCHED 10 FIGHT HERE George Gardner Will Be Cornishman’s Next Opponent. NEW YORK, Sept. 27.—At a conference held at Bath Beach to-day between Bob Fitzsimmons, Willlam Pierce of Boston, manager for George Gardner, the light- heavy-weight champion of the world, and James C. Kennedy, representing the Yo- semite Athletic Club of San Francisco, Fitzsimmons and Gardner were matched to fight before the Yosemite Club the lat- ter part of November for the title held by Gardner. The contest will be for twenty rounds at 163 pounds, the men to welgh in at 3 o'clock on the afternoon of the day of the battle. The purse wiil te divided, 75 per cent going to the winner and 2 per cent to the loser. Edward Graney of San Francisco was chosen referee and forfeit holder. It was stated at the conference that Fitzsimmons will leave for San Francisco early in October and go into active train- ing for the fight. Gardner, who is in | Texas with a theatrical enterprise, will cancel his engagement and proceed to the coast as soon as possible. The finals of the open and consolation stakes and the run off of the Veteran event at Ingleside yesterday resulted in as fine a day's sport as has been wit- nessed at that park since its reopening. Hardly a course was run that did not put the hounds to a test and many of the trials went the limit of time. Pure Pearl won the open event, beat- ing Special in the deciding course. In three of her trials she was on the short end, Pasha Pleasant, Black Coon and Special being the victims. J E H, a courser belonging to Dr. Van Hummel of Eastern fame, beat Co- sette for honors in the consolation stake. In this event Miss Wilson beat three fa- vorites before she went out to the stake ‘winner. Jerry O'Shea’'s Young America ran in fine style and took first money from Royal Flush in the Veteran Stake. Following are the day's results with Judge Thomas Tierney's official scores: Doreen beat Medley 7-2: Whisper beat Octo- ber Lad 5-0; Roy Hughie beat Pepper Jack 3-0; Hesper beat Rockefeller 6-3; Pure Peari beat Laughing Water 3-2; Pasha Pleasant beat Royal Friend 6-5; Doc Burn 26-T; Wedgwood beat Onward Maid 5-0; Maid of the Glen beat Little Plunger 13-8; Jerry Wright beat Commercial Traveler 4-2: Topsy Turvy beat Thetis 10-2; Sulu Girl beat Conroy 5-3; Belfast beat Bob R 7-6; Special beat Homer Boy 4-0; Tom Hurlick beat Black Flush 8-6; Reta S beat Flora Bird 7-5; Black Coon beat Idaho Boy 9-4; Gold Lily beat Sofala 7-4; Young Buck beat General DeWet 7-3; Pepper Hill beat Clafice 5-0. Third round—Whisper beat Doreen 6-4; Roy Hughle beat Hesper 4-2; Pure Pearl beat Pasha Pleasant 6-4; Doc Burns beat Wedgwood 3-1; Jerry Wright beat Maid of the Glen 4-2; Topsy Turvy beat Lulu Girl 8-7; Special beat Belfast 5-0; Reta cfn Deat "Torz l;urhel 8-4; Black Coon beat : Young Bu beat Pepper Hill 9-5. . by Fourth round—Roy Hughie beat Whisper 12-3; Pure Pearl beat Doc Burns 9-2; Jerry Wright beat Topsy Turvy 5-3; Speclal beat Reta § 4-2; Black Coon beat Young Buck 12-5. Fifth round—Pure Pearl beat Roy Hughie 3-0; Special beat Jerry Wright 5-4; Black Coon a bye. Sixth round—Pure Pearl beat Black Coon 19-1; Special a bye. u%."‘dm‘ course—Pure Pearl beat Special Consolation stake: Second round—Miss Wil- son beat Shadow 7-5; Una beat Orsina 6-4; Yoyng Johnnie Rex beat Haddington 3-0; Equa. tor’ beat Rienzi 11-8: Lady Menlo beat Little Lucy 7-2; Rock and Rye beat Marguerits 4-3. Cosettc a bye: Greenball a bye; J E H beat !—'0“0'".“ 5-2; Fannie Hughle beat Our Myra Third _round—NMiss Wilson beat Una 10-4; Young Johnnie Rex beat Lady T-4; Cosette beat Greenhall 4-0; J E H beat Fannie Hughie 5-1. 3 Fourth round—Miss Wilson beat Young John- Rex Rye nfe Rex 6-4; Cosette beat Rock : T H a bye. e Fifth round—J E H beat Miss Wilson 6-2; Cosette a bye. . ng SPORTS OF THE RUNNING TURF, THE PRIZE RING AND COURSING FIELD UTURITY STAKE ~ (VIGTORY AGAIN GOES T0 HORGAN Up Country Leashman Wins With Irving- ton Tralee. Pocatelli and Rector Each Take a Course in a Special Match. o i A greyhound from the kennel of P. J. Horgan of Concord carried off the high- | est honors in the - California Funmtyi Stake yesterday at Union Coursing Park. Irvington Tralee, a brindle and white, daughter of Cronin's Wild Tralee, won the first prize of $400, defeating F. A. Mc- Comb’s Manhattan King in the deciding course. The trial was a short one, Irving- ton Tralee running up a score of 5 to L The winner defeated in turn Homestead Boy, Amandan, Cubanola, Rocker Arm and Manhattan King. Rocker Arm was one of the herbes of the stake. The big son of Rocker won a course lasting two minutes and fourteen seconds in the third round and then succumbed to the ultimate winner in the semi-final round. The deciding course in the handicap coursing committee stake left over from last week was won - by Pocatelll, which defeated Rector. This victory also count- ed in a special match. In the second trial of this the greyhounds scored an equal number of points. At the third attempt Rector led and won. The owners of the greyhounds refused to run them again and divided the stake. With Pocatelll’s victory in the commit- tee stake, he equals the record held joint- ly by Palo Alto and Sacramento Boy of eight stakes in one year. Pocatelli has three months in which to increase this record. Red Rock beat Barge in the open stake and Tralee Boy beat Renegade Apache in the consolation. Silver Cloud defeated Sea Lion in the open stake left over from last week. The results in detall with Judge Andrew Dean's official scores fol- low: California Futurity—Cubanola beat Wild Bill,_7-2; Rocklin Boy beat Boots, 4-3; Irving- ton Tralee beat Homestead Boy, 5-1; Amandan beat Duhollow, 6-2; Rocker Arm beat Fancy Free, 6-4; Sweet Virginia beat Fre From Flaw, 8-3; Cremo beat Donneybrook, 3-1; Man- Merry ;" McVey Racing Auto beat Rag- beat Fair Tralee, 9-5: s Motto a bye. ‘ubanola beat Rocklin Bog. 8-5; Irvington Tralee beat Amandan, 14-2; Rocker Arm beat Sweet Virginia, 4-0; Cremo beat Merry Go Round, 4-2; Manhattan King beat McVey, 1-2; Queen's Motto beat Racing Auto, 8-5. Third round—Irvington Tralee beat Cubanola, 5-0; Rocker Arm beat Cremo, 25-6; Manhattan King beat Queen’s Motto, 12-10. Fourth round—Irvington Tralee beat Rocker Arm, 5-1: Manhattan King a by Deciding course—P. J 's Irvington Tralce (Cronin’s Wild Tralee-Manila) beat F. A. McComb's Manhattan King (Fetter Free Tmp.-Motto), 5-1, Open_stake—Dear_Gaston beat Red Pepper, 15-8; Cluster beat Wattles, 5-4; Vandal beat Frisky Barbara, 5-0; Honest John beat Algy | McDonald, 4-0; Presidio Boy beat Game Boy, | 4-1; Palo ‘Alto beat Full Moon, 6-0; beat Gambit, 13-7; Liberator beat Articulate, 12-3; Fenii beat hazard, 15-11; Red Rock a bye, Mickey Free withdrawn: Honnie Pasha beat Consort, 5-3; Ragged Actor beat Flora Belle, 9-4: Barge beat False Alarm, 11-10; Dorothy M. beat Menlo Prince, 6-0. Second round—Cluster a bye, Dear Gaston witbdrawn: Vandal beat Honest John, 4-0; Palo Alto beat Presidio_Boy. 3-2: Liberator beat Belle Free. 12.5: Red Rock beat Fenil, 3-2; Bonnie Pasha beat Ragged Actor, 13-6; Barge beat Dorothy M, 6-1 Third round—Vandal beat Cluster, 4-2: Lib- erator beat Palo_Alto, 26-12; Red Rock beat Bonnie Pasha. 3- Barge a b Fourth round—Red Rock be: Vandal, Barge a bye, Libcrator withdrawn. Declding course—Red Rock beat Barge, 19-13. Consolation stake—America a bye, Reckless Acrobat withdrawn: Vina beat Yankee Boy. 5-4:-Reno beat Ruby Sankey, 20-0; Tralee Boy beat Lord Granard, 18-11: Melrose beat St. Conn, 8-5: Remisso Animo beat Precita Mald, ; Concord Boy beat Tone Hill, 6-5; Renegade pache beat Ella May, 6-4. Second round—Vina beat America, 19-4; Tra- lee Boy, a bye. Reno withdrawn; Melrose beat Remisso Animo. 12-9; Renegade Apache beat Concord Boy, 4-3. Third round—Tralee Boy beat Vina, 4-0; Renegade Apaghe beat Melrose, 21-14. Declding_course—Tralce Boy beat Renegade Apache. 8-5. Deciding course in California Coursing Com- mittee stake and a match race—Pocatelll beat Rector, 5-1; Rector beat Pocatelll, 5-0. Deciding cource in California Coursing Com- mittee open stake—Siiver Cloud beat Sea Lion, 8-2. —_————— OWNER OF LOU DILLON MAKES ANNOUNCEMENT Says Trotting Queen Will Not Go Into Contest With Another Horse. CLEVELAND, Ohio, Seot. 27.—C. K. G. Billings, owner of Lou Dillon, has an- nounced that she will not be allowed to go into a contest with another horse in a trial for supremacy. Billings says that Lou Dillon is only 5 years old and com- paratively inexperienced and untrained. The mare will be shipped with the other members of the Billings string to> Lexing- ton on Wednesday, where she has two en- gagements. After the Lexington meeting Lou Dillon will be shipped to Memphis, where she is scheduled to go against the world’s trotting record, a trial against time, which will probably be her last for this season. As at Lexington, two starts against the watch will be made at Mem- phis. ¢ 11-4; ——————————— Trunks and Suit Cases. We give you the best value in trunks, suit-cascs and traveling supplies in the city. Look over our leather goods de- partment and De convi... .. nborn, Vail & Co., 741 Market strect. . @ i ‘Washington Shootover beat Miss Grizale 8-3: Royal Flush beat Beauty Spot 5-1; Morn- ing Glory a bye. Second round—Young America beat Lot M 3-1; Royal Flush a bye; Morning Glory a bye. Third round—Young America & bye: Royal Flush beat Morning Glory 7-2. Declfllr;( course—Young America beat Royal Flush 6-1. IN THITEENTH UncleHenry’'s Followers Win Another Great Struggle. Senators Have Little Diff- culty in Landing on Oak- land Field. —_— Four special rounds were tacked on the struggle at Recreation Park yesterday afternoon, just as on the previous day. Strange as it may seem, Uncle and his tossers got away with it. Stranger still, the score was the same. All iaese things combined made some baseball history. Score—San Francisco 3, Sacramento 2. The morning game was a ple for the Senators, and they ate it up 9 to 4 The series stood three and three when the two teams lined up for the decisive battle. The natives won it, so they finished ahead on the week, winning four games out of a total of seven played. Both Iberg and Knell pitched ball that was really wonderful. Neither ever wav< ered. They were well supported except in the final round, when two errors lost the game for the veteran southpaw just when he was beginning to get more ef- fective, if anything. San Francisco opened up strongly, but after the first'inning they scored no mora runs till Lynch rushed home in the thir. teenth. In the first Meany was passed, and Ir- win responded with a drive to the score board for two bases. This set the crowd going, and when Krug hit to Egan and Meany beat the throw to the plate their enthusiasm was beyond control. Then Zearfoss lined a torrid one direct at Knell, and while he was hooking it up with his left mytt and delivering it to the first bag Irwin landed with the only runs the home team made in twelve rounds. Graham opened hostilities in the fourth spasm with a drive over first, good for two bases. While the excitement was in full bloom Casey came through with another of the same caliber to the re board, and Graham raced to the finish The game was practically over and the crowd was ready to depart in the first half of the ninth when the Senators sud- denly tled up the result. With one gone, Truck Egan pasted one at Irwin that nearly lifted him up bodily. Then Truck stole second. Bang! went Townsend's bat against the leather. When the noise had stilled Egan was home and the score was a tle. Then the struggle commenced in real earnest. It was one fast battle for the next four rounds. No one seemed to be equal to the emergency, and the several chances that offered themselves were simply passed up. Finally the tense strain was loosened in the luckless thirteenth. Lynch opened it with a drive far out to left field that net- ted him two cushions. Meany lald down a bunt and Townsend in the mixup fum- bled it, allowing Lynch to reach third. All was over then. Charley Irwin sim- ply popped up a little fly to right fleld. Lynch bounded home, beating the throw of McLaughiin by many feet and ending it all then and there. Charley Graham began to kick at a de- cision in the tenth inning and was put out of the game, Hogan taking his place behind the bat. The score: Sacramento— San Francisco— AB. R. H. P.4 AB. R. H. P.A. Casey. 266 0 2 5 R A Hildba,it 6 0 0 2 1120 013 i11a 11 4 0110 0 212 007 1 013 0 1180 o1 2 21 3 1.1 1 0027 023 06103 QO BR e = ————— 3 8317 Totals.49 2 11°37 *One out when winning run was scored. RUNS AND HITS BY INNINGS. Sacramento 0010000010000 2 Base hits .0120010121120-11 San Framcisco... 2000000000001 3 Base hits......1101010110101— 3 SUMMARY. Stolen bases—Egan. Knell. _ Errors—Ray- mond, Egan, Casey, Townsend, Sheehan. Two- base hits—Irwin, Graham, Casey, Iberg, Town= send, Lynch. Sacrifice hits—Irwin, First base on errors—San Franeisco 3. base on called balls—Off Iberg. off Knell, 2. Left on bases—San Francisco Sacramento 9. Struck out—By lberg. 6: by Knell, 2. Doubie plays—Casey to Town Egan to Townsend, Balk—Knell. Ttme of game—Two hours and thirty minutes. Umpire—MeDonald oo gt Lindsey in Poor Form. Little Lindsey of the home team was in poor form during the morning game. He walked eleven men. Then his support was something awful. The team made eight errors behind him, so the Senators had a pipe all the time. The home team out- hit them, but the best they secured was four runs for their trouble. The score: San Francisco— o Sacramento— MR OD e LT T ) PP 0 Rapmd, 5.4 0|Lindsy’ p.1 Totals.31 *Game called before close of ninth inning. RUNS AND HITS BY INNINGS. Sacramento . Errors Stoen bases—Egan, Sheehan, Doyle. —Raymond (2). Pabst (2),_Irwin (2); 3 Three-base hit—Egan. Two-base hits—Del- mas, Egan. Sacrifice hits—Hildebrand (3), Hogan. First base on errors—Sacramento & Left oa bases—Sacramento 14, San Francise® 7. Struck out—by Keefe 1 by Lindsey Double plays, Casey to Egan to Townse Casey to Townsend. Passed ball—Hogan. First base on called balls—Off Keefs 4. off Lindsey 11. Hit by pitcher—Casey. Time of game—2 hours. ' Umpire—MecDonald. ADVERTISEMENTS. HAVANA CIGARS i

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