The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 27, 1903, Page 11

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'THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 27 1903. PART OF PACIFIC MOSQUITO'FLEET SAILS FOR SANTA BARBARA CHANNEL EH[SEENT E”Y Torpedc-Boat Destroyer Perry and Navy Tug Fortune Follow HAMNE HEG'NS Gunboat Petrel to Southern Rendezvous, Where the Diminu-{Irene Lindsay Winner tive War Vessels Will Participate in Trial of the Tacoma| ©f the Inaugural Handicap: Haviland Takes the Featurs of the Closing Day at Latonia. —_— NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 26.—The Cres- cent City Jockey Club was’ especially favored in the conditions for the open- ing of its winter-meeting to-day. - Sum- | mary: First race, one mile—Gregor K 'won, | Mauser second, Falernian thisrd. Time, 4245, Sécond race, five and a haif furlongs —Foresight won, Exclamati: second, | 08 2 seven furlongs—Sarah nca second, Hickory st Time, 1:29 3-5 uurlh race, Inaugural hardicap, six furlongs—Irene Lindsay won, Big Ben third. Time, 1:14. ne mile, handicap—Char- won, Levi Dorsey second, J. P. Mayberry third. Time, Third race, eeplechase—Gasgar won, “hie Time, second, Wool Gatherer ven furlongs—Conkling vish second, Prince Salm Time, 1:30. one and a sixteenth won, Flara seccnd, Nine { ne to an end to-day, after | vs of successful racing. o furlongs—Grand Mary R econd, Rossmond third. . five and a galf furlongs on, Idie second, Eleatea 1:08%. and a sixteenth miles —Pyrrho w ristine A second, Mel- bourne third. Time, 1:48. Fourth ra Thanksgiving handicap, | one and a quarter miles—Haviland won, Rese: tion nd, Sixshooter third. s = Time, 2:06%. Shipping Intelligence. Fifth race, six furiongs—Proofreader ARRIVED. won, Ocean Dream eecond, Autumn November 26. 14 hours from reday, Leaves third. Time, 1:14. Sixth race, ,one mile—Athena won, Annie Hastings second, Harfang third. Time, 1:42 e SCOTTISH BOWLERS MEET 34 bours from Ven- Contest on the Park Links. The return match between the Scot- tish bowlers of Oakland and those of , 46 hours from Coos from 72 hours |me total score gave them a victory by fourteen points. Rink No. 1, the skits | for which were: San Francisco, J. M Earsman, and for Oakiand, A. Proctd was won by the visitors. Score 21 to 1 No. 2 rink, with skits A. Foreman for ' San Francisco and H. Forgie for Oak- land, was won by the former, 21 to 14. | Rink No. 3, H. 8. Tickner, skit for San Francisco, and J. Patullo, skit for Oak- land, was won by San Francisco, 21 to 6. Rink No. 4, with skits W. R. Eaton | for San Francisco, and P. Spaulding for Oakland, was won by Oakland, 21 to 17. In this rink Oakland borrowed two crack bowlers from the San Fran- | cisco team, which aided them material- ly in winning it. rt & “a) Puns. New York . Seattle u“ 130 W, Br bark Largo | d Kingdom. . T _LFGRAPHI: 10 » m—Weather | ¥ 10 miles per hour. PORTS. DO—Arrived Nov 26—8Stmr Robert from Olympia; stmr Sequoia, from Grays Harbor PORT HARFORD—Sutled Nov 26—Stmr Bo- San_Francisco done yesterd which was use 1 as a pre wives and fam and appe ation for lazy «-ze!‘.u San Pedro & Wa Sen Diego & W G. Lindauer. . ppa t Now 26— 1 . ks where the working of cargo was ficke Tdnon, | Oty ot Para The match yesterday was much ed the day as a holiday, Z—Stmrs | Chehalis | closer than the first, and the Oakland- £ ihe Srews of tied- ers showed great improvement over their initial performance. Following is a summary of the match: Rink No. 1—San Francisco (17), TS vessels as remained on board spent liday taking life easily. The Jap- _steamship Hongkong Maru was | e B4 26—8chr Queen, for Port 25—Stmr Lyra, for R. Park, A. - i inting and the City of | Hongke Steamer, | | Sans.| | Mackie, P. L. Dunn. J. M. Earsman (skit). £ Amoggr ar Giplay ¢ 26—Schr A M Bax- e = Satie! Per. | Oakiani (1), R. Daizicl, Joseph Rankin, J. | S3 jbuted a simik ¥ sl B November 27, | i~ Moir, A, Proctor (skit) he Pacific Mail Company ov. 20-—#is Spac- [ Mendocino City .| 1 pmiPler 13 Bink No. o Francieco (20, ‘:) tévios, y from s- o 4 v~ Los Angeies Forts 13 ste alztel, A. Foreman (skit). - JE FEW. & S 26—Stmr Alca- Hombotgt e e e 2 iana (4). D. Moir, W. Keay, John Laing, H. calculation to prepara- | t Humboldt ...... 5 poiPler 19 | Forsie (skit). cure corns and | -| Grays Harbor | 4 pm(Pler 30 Rink No. 3—San Francisco (21), G. Petér. razors, make | Queen. -| Puget Sound Ports 11 amPler 9 =on. A Hay, W. Stewart. H. L. 'rmmer = 00S BAY—Sailed Nov 24—Schr Now | November 28, | 1 | (skit). Oakiand (6). P. McDousal, H entit SO0k TSN, } LS00 BTN Ney N-tos Py, Hamburg & Way..(12 m{Pier 19 | Thompson. J. P, Taylor, 3 Patullo mm) the bulkhead be- | © 20 00> ctmr Stgnal, hence Nov 24. | Humboldt | 9 amipier 3| “Rink No.4-San Franciico an. A Wilkie t Sved Rov 28— e ok Grays Harbor 4 pm|Pier 10 | J. Reid. J. §_Webster W. R Baton (skit) jon and Folsom streets and | i e At Nov 55 Los Angeles Poris |10 am Pier 10 S (31). 3. McLachlan, substitute; Geor Polnt Arena Center, substitute; T. M. Latimer, P. Spaui rtainment entertai Totai—San Francisco 16, Qak- ned | stmr Redonde, : o gl rowds that thronged the CLALLAM—In ba: \’“,M_sc)’ Commerce, ing (skit). = crowds tha | from Bazle H ,,_4;,‘ S M:; 5 &eyaney. | | land [ harves fied 26—Stm: utll T | River, for San Francisco | Alttance..... PAJAHAS BEATS CRICKET n.--u-n ian Beaches Port e e xS i IN RACE AT INGLESIDE EY | — Irm- | - . Haw Steamship Com- war stmr_Elba. | Columbia. .. | . tain Delano, ar Herzogin _ Sophte | 3 Vaqueros and cattlemen generally Yokohama: % for Sydney. s large | was v 26—Stmr Sonoma. | -| Humboidt .. - Humboldt December 1. hied themselves to the Ingleside race- | track yesterday afternoon to witness | 5 A 26—Stmr China, from Yoko- ? 1 aBN OF KAIGER AT DEDICATION AttendsServicesat New American Church at Berlin. Fresident Sends a Letter of Congratulation to the Pastor. BERLIN, Nov. 26.—The Crown Prince, Fredericy William, in behalf of Emperor William, took part to-day in the dedication of the new .\mer!ca-n' church. The Crown Prince, who .sat between Embassador Tewer and Mrs. | Tower, followed the service attentively, | occasionally - participating in the The Empress telegraphed to{ Dr. re- sponses. | thé pastor, the Rev. ting that she could be presept on account of her husband’s indisposition and sent the court chamberlain, Count von Muelinen, to represent her. Chan- Dickie, regret- | | cellor von Bulow was represented by | f Privy Councillor Conrad. The services were conducted by the Rev. Dr. Van Slyke and Professor A. W. Brown of| York. Dr. Dickle preached the| sermon. President Roosevelt wrote to the pas- tor as follow: “I am glad to learn that your church building is to be dedicated on Thanks- giving day. I congratilate you on this happy result of the persistent and seif- denying labors of yourself and your| associates, and wish you all many hap- | New Ben Chance third. Time, 1:41 1-5. Sixth race, one and an eighth miles— Medal w iza Dll]t-n second, Ivernia 4 third. 1: \\‘xtu]\‘.h v. 26.—Bennings summary | First ce, five furlongs—Totness won, Niskayuna second, Bronx third. | Time, 1:08 | Second race, seven furlongs, selling— ket won, Our Nugget second, Enue | py years of enjovment of the sanc- third. 2, 1:20%. i tuary you have thus secured.” | Third race, about two and a half | i miles lechase, selling—Conniver | 10,000 cans of W. G. M. Beans, with | won, ay second, Red Hawk 0. e and a quarter miles, cup — Carbuncle won, Rider second, Circus third. Chill Sauee, sold in 10 days. —————— —— ST. PETERSBURG' FLOOD CAUSES GREAT DAMAGE | Fully Twenty Thousand Persons Are | Latonia | IN INTER-CITY MATCH, San Francisco Team Wins in a Close | | [ | San Francisco resulted in another viec- | | | | g tory for the-:home talent. A large | ¢ e of nf"encg s ‘ng mean | crowd of spectators witnessed the i Jow Nnbers. | games, which were close from start to finish. Although each side won two rinks, the San Francisco players in each case won by a large margin, and | | ! | | | m New York ao bk r..;mh S Lk & camnllg-.i Grays Harbor . xo' the match race between Cricket and | y after lesving Ne AKAWELI—Asrived Nov —TItal ship | North Forl umboldt . v waiian encountered & | Agostino Terrizzomo, from Honolulu P | Matioasa: .| Domts Hire 2| Pajamas, two fast ponies usxd in driv wenty-four hours. EASTERN PORT. ecember 2. | ing cattle gn week days and for racing| e g o PHILADELPHIA—Arrived Nov 25—Stmr g,-fl'-"’,fl:;:; St 'A;n«;guullo amPler 2 on state occasions. Cricket is the horse | as wasbed from . e : x was broken ad { Al“(’oka’\rid ey 35 Sime Tsi, o Saa Fran- it Pectmber 3. ) l.m\l"ltr | that has won quarter-mile dashes ‘at | M cisco, via New York e R Coquilie River 4 pm|Pier z the annual butchers’ picnics for the et | FOREIGN PORTS. 5 % Mary ;mmfl | Jast ten years.. He captured the event | The Overdue List. W e s vyl December 4. | ] |last year by defeating Pajamas. | ™ECEZ catied Nov 8—Fr stmr Charies Tib- | G. W. Elder| Astorla & Portiandill am|Pier 24 | Since that race the merits of both T :"‘f,::,"; | ergnien. for Manila ecember 5. | | oter 25 | horses have been discussed in Butcher- in the rate of | STER { st of overdue vessels. The list ,,.,,& Norfolk, for Manfla. port Y. via Pi !Pier 40 | town and at last a match race was ar- s 2% 1 i | PR ATD—Arrived Nov 25—Br stmr Ty- | G-Lindauer | Aitoria & Portlang) 1 pm|Pier 28 ranged. William Harvey, owner of t 3 ys N b | 0! o™ Afv’ ‘3: f.“ rom Bunbury, for "'1“»‘0 YE.( m FI’::\::\,J:: Seattle. SR alab FROM SEATTLE. Crickes, and Henry Danz. owner of Lur daye from Liverpéol. for | srom Antwers, for Sen Francisco. s 1 For. g | Pajames, put up a side det of $250 and | i ys from Manila for New OCEAN STEAMERS. | : their friends wagered heavily on the ale oo 77 ] NEW YORK—Arrived Nov 26—Stmr Cedric, tage Clty..| Skagway & Way Porta.Nov. 27 | Tace. Par o rom Hamburg for Hopo- | from Liverpool and Queenstown; stmr Pretor | Exceiior....| Cooks Inlet & Way PraiDec. John Purceil, William Fanning and from Hamburg. etc. Safled Nov 26—Stmr Lauritian, for Glas- | san, | Skagway & Way Porte.|Dec. Skagway & Wa | James R. McElroy were selected judges dave &7 days from Newecastle, fogasta, 20 per cent. ays from lquique for Eu- daye from the Tyme for r cent. out 78 days from Naga- per cent. 4% days from Philadel- 0 per cent. el Bay Pirates Rob Restaurant.’ Bay pirates yesterday broke into the Equator from LiverPool for | gow: stmr La Bretagne, for Havre; stmr Gros- ser Kerfurst, for Bremes LIVERPOOL—Arrived “Nov 25—Stmr West- ernland, from Philadelphis. QUEENSTOWN—Sailed Nov 26—Stmr Fries- idnd. for Phiiadelphia. Nov 25—Stmr Arabia, from Liverpool, for New York. GLASGOW —Sailed Nov 26—Stmr gena, for St Johns, N F, and Philadeiphia HO:\GKOM}-—AMM Nov 20—Bf stmr Em- press of Japan, from Vancouver. = R Sm, luu and Tide. United ime and Helghts of High ang Low Watess eights w st Fort Polnt, entrance to San Francisco Cartha- ...-u— Valencia..... y Port Bertha. .| Cooks lnlet & Way Pts| Dea-_ Bailing of the Solace Delayed. WASHINGTON, Nov. 26.—The sailing of the Solace from Mare Island is de- layed until December 8, so that she can take out stores and meet Admiral Ev- ans’ fleet, due at Honolulu on Decem- ber 15. e . PARIS, Nov. mittee of inquiry appointed to investigate the Humbert affair led | T ttet 1o iy o | tained it to the finish, and both sides prepared for the event. The contest was brought off after the Gaelic games and was watched by hundreds of spectators. The start was a perfect one and the two horses, rid- den by their owners, dashed down the stretch at- a remarkably fast clip. Cricket led for a short distance and then Pajamas’ superior speed began to show and he took the lead and main- passing under the wire a length ahead of Cricket.- l Driven Into the Street in the i Factory Quarter. ST. PETERSBURG, Nov. 26.—The flood which has caused so much dam- age here was the biggest since 1824. The intense cold is causing much dis- tress among the homeless and the @wellers in celiars. In the factory quarter 20,000 persons have been driv- en int6 the street, many of them losing their all. The authorities are doing everything in their power to relieve the sufferers and there have been few fa- taliti A pathetic e was that of a parent hurrying home at the sound of warning guns, who found his child drowned. The destruction of propert was heavy, especially at The rafts and barges in the river were smashed and the live stock.in the en- virons was drowned. The strangest freak of the flood oc- curred at a cem where coffins | were washed out of gm\ec and floated | away. Those which were recovered were reinterred haphazard. IIO. has been instructed by | President Cronstadt. | PRESIDENT GIL Late Ruler of Santo Domingo Must Seek New Fields. PAAAHEREE United States Grants Recog- nition to the Jiminez Government. PR U Special Dispatch to Tke CALL BUREAU, 1406 G STREET, N. W., WASHINGTON, Nov. United States Minister Powell. at San Domin- | the State Department to recognize and enter into relations with the Government estab- | lished by General Jiminez, the revolu- tionist leader, Wos ¥ Gil as head of the Dominican republic. It is wunderstood Minister Fowell has already carried these in- structions into effect SAN DOMINGO, ov. 26.—The act | of capitulation, which was signed on | | Tussday by the Ministers of Belgium, President Wos y Gil and the United States, Hayti -and Spain, months and the installation of the new on February A decree issued yesteérday makes all duties pay- able in cash. Former Ministers Brache and Febles left this afternoon for Cuba. General Wos y Gil will, it is expected, leave in a few days for Curacao. Quiet prevails here. The warships have withdrawn their guards, with the | exeeption of the United States marine | | guard at the British consulate, where General Wos y Gil is a refugee. WASHINGTO the San Domingo revolution is officially recorded in a cablegram received at the State Department to-day from United | States Minister Powell, dated yester- day. The Minister re ted that all Was quiet and that President Wos y | Gil and the Cabinet were to go into exile. The Newport had withdrawn her marines from the city of San Do- mingo. The revolutionary party guar- anteed order and safety for all per sons. o -+ | | A FULL PAGE PICTURE | OF THE MOST STUNNING GIRL IN SAN FRANCISCO. 1 | NEXT SUNDAY CALL. | |} Bodies Washed Ashore From Wreck. | BRUNSBUETTELHAFEN, Prussia, Nov. 25.—The washing ashore of bodies and a cargo on Borkum Island (in the 8 of the Ems, Emden) con- wreck of the bound ffom twenty-six miles he report utch steamer glia, | Hamburg for Rotterdam. WILL BE EXILED who has just depmedx calls for | | the holding of elections within three | v. 26.—The end of | HUNGARIAN DIET IN ANGRY MOOD Scenes of Wild Tumult and Scuffling Attend Session. Free PFig! Is Threatened and President Suspends Mesting BUDAPEST, 26— Scenes of { marked to-day's of the lower house of the Diet. They originated in the proposal to hold two sessions daily. | The members of the extreme left vehe- { mently protested and several of them were suspended for disorderly conduct | by the President, who was the recipi ent of many insulting epithets. Final- {1y the Premier, Count Tisza, attempted | to speak. called attention to the | agreement between the different par- { tles on rules of procedure. | You have put all the advan | that agreement in your poecket, | ed Nicolas Bartha. “Better not speak of pockets,” retort- ed Count T whereupon Bartha | shouted, “I am not a broken bank di- rector.” | Deputy Garjary added to the disorder by jeeringly shouting to Count TisuA “You have b en ¢ A.Mr] a scoundrel.” scene of wild tumult and scuffling. As a free fight was threatened, the sitting was suspended On the resum n of business Count Tisza appealed to the patriotism of opposition, pointing out the dangers to the constitution in a policy of obstruc- tion Later w! House again men favor of two ses broke out again and the House mately adjourned amid scenes of the greatest excitement Count Albert Apponyi (leader of the national s n of the lower house of the Hungarian Diet) has sent a letter |to the chatrman ¢ the Liberal party ring he is obliged to sever his con- nection with the party because the pro- | posed doubi=> ting of the lower house of the Diet is contrary to his convic tions. It is stated that thirty of Count Apponyl's supporters will take a sim- ilar course | —_— e | Lord Mayor Ritchie a Baronet. LONDON. Nov. 2.—King Edward has conferred a barometcy on Lord Mayor Ritchie, in commemoration of his recent entertainment of King Victor | Emmanuel and Queen Helena of Italy at the Guildhall ———————— | Naveal Ensign Huessner Is Dismissed. | BERLIN, Nov. 26.—Naval Ensign Huessner, whose sentence for killing a soldier at Essen because he did not sa- lute him properly was quashed by the imperial court, has been dismissed from K the servi dogs have never setter, animal. DON'T DO AT WORK™ Free Synday, Nov. 29, 1903 - The publisher of The Call, in anticipating the tendency of the times in giving more time to recreation, hunting and fishing, has acguired for their exclusive a series of art pictures which wiil serve as reminders during the busy months of those delightful days passed in the field. “At Work,” the title of the next Sunday Call’s offering, is a reprodue- tion from an oil painting by J. M. Tracy, an artist whose paintings of been surpassed. ‘racy had for the subject of this study the celebrated Liewellyn ERIGO,” who became famous in this country by his clean sweep of bench and field events. “ This picture, while it appeals strongly to those who know every point in a dog, is perhaps jus: as interesting to the many who love the faithful In handling, color and action, “At Work™ is a most life-like study; picture that, when framed, could with difficulty be distinguished from the original oil painting. To overlook this is to miss one of the best’of the Sportsmen’s Series. ORDER THE CALL TO-DAY. IT. THE POPULARITY OF OUTDOOR SPORTS WAS NEVER MORE IN EVIDENGE THAN TO-DA

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