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’ THE SAN- FRANCISCO CALL. SATURDAY, JULY 1! P omising young grey- ning on the Cali- , owned by coursing he bhas shown a deal A upon as a watched his few trials. e and black puppy, UPPY EXP A PHENOMENAL COURSER. | | | PHAL e e 3 1905, COAST TOURNEY [DENVER MEET CREAT SPORT| ~ ARRANCE RACE| NEXT ON CARD| A BIG SUCCESS COMES OF BLUE BLOODED STOCK AND IS WELL MARKED 1y 5o e Mountain Streams and Sloughs Con- tinues: to Hold Out Good TROUT TAKE THE FLIES Black and Striped Bass, Sal- Fishermen all over the State are hav- ing the time of their lives this season. Reports from every river, creek and slough indicate that trout, steclhead and black bass are biting for a fare-ye-well and everything points to good times for the anglers for several weeks to come. During the week, large numbers of en- thusiastic anglers hied themselves to mountain stream and seashore. * () B {1 11 Con Roman and Dr. Sylvester are en- joying themselves on the Kiamath. They say the. sport was never better than it has been during the last week. Trout rise to the fly readily and lots of them are in sight. Roman and Sylvester re- port they are getting in the neighborhood of thirty good-sized ones c¢ach morning. Sam Wells has shifted his camp to the Big Meadows. He writes that the fly Fourth Annual Regatta at Tiburon To-Morrow Will Be Viewed With Interest YACHTS WELL MATCHED Victorions Boat Is to Re- To-morrow will be a great day at Ti- buron. For the last three years the Cor- inthian Yacht Club has held one regatta in which the boats of the fleet have re- celved handicaps according to their per- formances in previous races. The mem- bers of the regatta committee endeavor- ed to allot such time allowances as would bring about the closest possible finishes. | They succeeded remarkably well, for in W) % S SN Tennis, Cracks Will Enjoy Frank Graham, a California Rest Till the Big Event| Rider, Becomes 2 Gretf.t ~Across Bay in September| Favorite With the Publie MISS SUTTON MAY PLAY|FLYING FOX A WONDER Little Champion and Clever |Oklahoma Flier Unbeatable Sprinting - Distance. e JIERS' N\ .mon and 'Steelhead Are| ceive the Handsome Elks’'| Sisters Are Expected to| at v ”;;ut,‘;d:l V78 Reported to Be Running| Silver Cup as a Reward| Represent the Southland Wentworth Stable Leads BY FRED E. MULHOLLAND. The race meeting which was brought to a close at Overland Park, Denver, on the past, these tournaments will be play- ; Saturday last was such an exmordlnar? ed at San Rafael. Play will commence | successful one that the city “a mile high™ on Saturday and end the fulluv!v!ng Sat- | is booked for a thirty-day slege of sport urday. The coast champloaship events),..; summer. Twelve layers chalked up i ke 2 * 77" ! with the game to the end of the nineteen ~# | qgays. Competition proved so keen that it was difficult to establish a market, and the ring did not salt away muchb of the public’s coin. California horsemen and pencilers were liberally represented and all spoke in highest terms of the meeting and its manégement. George Wentworth headed the list of winning owners with $3660, the principal breadwinners of his string being Sal- able, Red Cross Nurse, Ishlana, Dora and old Moeorito. Both Ishiana and Sal- able shattered track records, in com- memoration of which Seeretary G. A. ‘Wahlgreen presented Owner Wentworth with u fob and handsome diamond locket. Next on the list came C. C. Christle, the wealthy Kansas City turfman, whose horses earned $16%. George Burger, | | handling the Gaylora & _Co. ‘stable, | | plcked up $1300 and Prince Brutus drew down $600 for Don Cameron. Likewise were Coast riders strongly in evidence. Apprentice Frank Graham of the Burger stable and O. Chaundler, the Wentworth jockey, at once becoming prime favorites with the public. Jonnny Sullivan, another California boy, ap- peared to have turned dveF a new leaf, displaying more than a flash of past abil- ity. Following Is the record made by the leading pilots: There will be no tennis tournaments of any Iimportance until September 2, when the annual events for the cham- pionship of the coast commence. As in First. Second. Third. Unpl. 20 T k-1 n Grabam . Chandler Singleton F. Kelly R, Taylor 3. Sullivan Bozeman On June 26 Chandler reached the wire first astride three winners and once fin- ished third. A few days later Grabham went this one better by putting four winners over the plate. Johnny Sullivan is an older brother of Apprentice F. Sul- livan, now in the saddle at Seattle. Singleton, who is an ofd timer, rides with all the vim and dash of youth and may be seen at the coming Portland meeting. Ed Corrigan once gave a big price for the contract on his services. He left Denver for Winnipeg, where he will ride Flying Fox in races, where the Oklahoma fller may be a starter. SewEe f\ TH DS X n fishing is especially good. Last week, 3 be g . he sent several boxes to friends in this; ! Weight prevented ‘‘Handriding” Kelly = city. Trolling continues 'good at Lake | X from .accepting . many meounis. He bad T Tahoe. Charles Sutro has beén fishing s sturdy following, though, and his splendid record speaks for itself. H 2 there all week with great success. He d e 3 . 3 says the trout také a Wilson spoon Bookmaker Frank Bain started off loser - . & e M, number 3. to the extent of 3$3000. He gradually re- MAKES DEMAND FOR ADDITIONAL TEAMS Works Board 1 Vill Is Tt Fred Bonn returned on Thursday from a very successful trip to Ballard Lake. He revorts all kinds of black bass run- ning loose there and says that many fish- ermen are having great sport. Bonn brcught back ten bass that weighed two pounds and over. & couped his losses, quitting the season a comfortable winner. Associated with him in the book were Jobnny Gagliardo and Al Coney, two more Californians. Johnny Humphrey beat the game both from the block and ground. Togethex, with Lew MecArthur he deparied for Portland, at which meeting be will juggle E. Gregory left yesterday for a fishing Sotalites. Talk M orht . I trip along the slough: f the Sa t Take Eight Days to Re- e el bl ey “Western A" Smith had the misfor- move Sweepings. s yester- by the B couple of weeks. The sport has been reporied good in that vicinity for many days past. Fishermen returning say that black and striped bass are running good along the small sloughs. Salmon fishing at Monterey, Santa Cruz ard Capitola was never better than at the present time. Fishermen there are mak- tune to have Orchan go amiss. Al then took Egg Shell and Copthedough to train for a Glenwood Springs man and started oft for the jungles. Fred Baird intended shipping Free- sias and the others of his stable to Portland. George Burger sold Atoka to J. V. Armour, an Indaho horseman, the pur- Sy s ing all kinds of phenomenal catches. The | | cart aw: | | fish are running larger than in years and chase price being $400. sweeping the supp.y seems to be inexhaustible. ! | Doc Street did not pick up many city. of sweep have siready accumulated. The streets are becoming filthier Last week, large parties left this city for the scasnore, lured on by the good re- ports of their brethren. Ail the fishermen who have been along the Truckee River this season agree that the sport there is better than it has been for years. Fly fishing there is especially fine. Colonel Young and Archie Roos are still busy hauling the speckled beauties in and intend to stick for some days longer. E. Meyer of Antioch left for purses with his fifteen runners. With the exception of the two-year-olds, Kiss and St. Columb, all showed the effects of severe campaigning. Subtle, a winner on the last day, was shipped to New York to fulfill some stake en- gagements and “Doc” sald he would linger at Denver for a month or so and freshen up the others. Trainer Dick Benson made Jockey J. Sullivan a proposition to go with the Christie stable and ride over th every day nd unless Clute fulfills his | | Boca on Thursday and will fish along the contract by removing the dirt the street | | > river for several weeks. Texas eircuit. Sulllvan will give Port- sweeping operations will have to be | 4~ Bass fishing seems to be good at San | o land a trial first and later on may ac- THE ROMAN A YOUNG GREYHOUND OF GREAT PROMISEs ECTED TO BECOMEIIGLERS EN/OY - [CORINTHIANS -« stopped. Unless Jlute does good work | Pablo every day save Sunday. Large JACK DENNIS' cept the offer. sion to employ the teams and wagons by Monday the Board of Works will | sppeal to the Supervisors for permis- | d formerly employed, which have double the capeacity of Clute's. Commissioner Began says he, for one, will refuse to accept Clute's teams in that event and that & writ of man- damus will be sued out against the Boerd of Supervisors to compel it to pess the demands of other contraotors who will furnish teams able to handle the street sweepings. Eeagan says he realizes that the streets are dirtier now than they ever were before, but la the blame on the-Supervisors for ha ing ewarded a contract on defective specifications. Commissioner Maestretti will go be- fore the Street Comm'ttee this morning to sk permission to hire eleven teams at $6 40 each, against the $4 68 charged by Clute. Maestrett! says the eleven teams will do more than twice the work of Ciute's teams. Supervisor Braunhart stated that Clute would be forced to supply adequate teams or give up his contract. e TRAVELING SALESMEN ARR VICTIMS OF WOMEN’S WILES Cella Fay snd Belle Henderson are Placed Under Arrest on Charges of Grand Larceny. Celia Fay, a woman of the half- world, and her friend Belle Henderson were errested yesterday by Detectives Wren and Reynolds and booked at the City Prison on a charge of grand lar- | ceny. Later another charge of a sim- flar nature was booked against the ¥Fay woman. On Thursday night the Fay woman met John Williams, tray- eling salesman for a silk house in China, and at the Higgins Apartment- house, 233 O'Farrell street, she told Miss Henderson, who rooms there, that Williams had money, and Miss Hen- derson i alleged to have stolen $135; from him. Phillip Bauer, traveling salesman for & whisky-house, is another victim of the Fay woman. He met her on the night of July 9 and after they had sev- eral drinks together they engaged a back and drove to the Richmond House, Fulton-street and Eighth ave- nue. When the woman left bim Bauer discovered that she had taken $265 from him, muum-rrl-dvorann. 21 years of age. FOR VETERMNS To-morrow being an open date on the schedule of the California Cricket Assoclation, the veterans will take the opportunity of playing a match on the ground at Webster street, Alameda. Henry Ward and Charles Banner will be the two captains apd will choose thelr teams by lot from the following: A, B. Altken, A Acklom, J. Addison, | coptain Autd, J. U, Bird, H. E. Bou | Marsh-Browne, | Charles B. Hill, | R. C. Jones, Norman Logan, J. | McNaughton, H. F. Pepys,'J. Ramsey, Captain Rogers, J. . G. Bloman, W. R. " J. A. Tiedemann, H. Warren, Wiseman and Captain Wilding. Bert Kortlang, who is well remem- bered here as & former member of, the | Pacific and San Francisco County | Cricket clubs end who contributed ship of 102 by the Pacific Club, is now playing for the Hamilton Cricket Club | of Bermuda. At Livingston, Staten Isl- ‘and, for Hamilton against All New | York, Kortlang did not come off, scor- {Ang 1 in the first innings, 5 in the sec- ond and bowling one wicket at a cost {of 89 runs. Hamilton scored 42 and | 146 against the All New York team's 252 for four wickets. A well-known authority writes: The reliubles, J. R. Conyers and B. Kortlang, put @ different complexion on the game and While they were together there was at least { hope for_their side that they would stave off | deteat. They gave as good a batting display {as any seen in the match, both men combin- ing good defense with hard hitting. Kort- lang wee dismi by & good catch in_the @eep fleld when three short- of _his - fifty. Kortleng_was the most successtul bowler. His leg-breaks stuck the batsmen quite @ lot and he got plenty of work on_ the ball, The July issue of ““The American Cricketer” contains the full scores of the matches played st Alameda on 28, May 80 and June 11. ‘When demands are made and arbitra. tion réfused at the same time the ques- tion becomes very one-sided. These are the facts in the present “Rainier” stri yet Rainier Beer is called “unfair,” e |iargely to the winning of the champion- | NAPS, PREPARED FOR MOTORISTS The button-hole badge of the Auto- mobile Club of California is now ob- tainable from A. J. Frey, assistant sec- retary. It consists of a winged wheel, above which are the letters C. A. C. and below which on a light green enamel band are the words “Good | Roa The istant secretary of the Auto- mobile Club of California has two maps for free distribution to automobilists. One of these shows the roads from San Francisco to Los Gatos and Morgan Hill and is issued by the San Jose Hotel with the idea of encouraging automo- biling in Santa Clara Valley. The ond shows the roads from Oakland to Byron Hot Springs, by way of Walnut Creek, Concord and Antloch to the north and through Haywards and Livermore to the south, the distance by the northerly route being 66 miles and by the southerly route 55 miles. A local firm has presented a neat car to the Youths’ Directory festival, to be held in the fail, and it will-be awarded as ong of the prizes. It is a.two-cylin- der car. # § . LURLINE IS READY FOR NAPA RIVER TRIP —_— New Steam Launch Owned by A. B. Spreckely Will Start on Initia)} Voyage To-Day. A A. B. Spreckels’ new steam launch Lurline will make her initial trip up the Napa River to-day, leaving Folsom- stregt wharf No. 1 shortly after, the noon hour. The "craft will be com- manded by Captain Aspilene. The party aboard will consist of John D. Spreckels, M. F. Tarpey, Grove P. Ayer|. Caj and Alex Swanson. The creek which empties into the Napa River near the Spreckels ranch has been dredged so that the n may asocend the stream to.a’ point nof more than three blocks distant the owner’r house. numbers of city anglers made the trip last Sunday and were disappointed. A high wind was blowing and there was nbt ‘@ thing doing for any of, Striped bass are reported to be running ere but the Sunday §shérmen will have be shown after this. Reports from the Rogue River say that steelhead fishing will commence there in the early part of next month. The fish may be had with a fly. They are re- ported to be running all the way from four to ten pounds. 7 Rock cod may be had in plenty at Angel Island. Fishing parties have been making the pilgrimage there ughout the week and all rcturned with well filled baskets. Smelt are running good at Sau- salito and Tiburon. o them. . annual handicap race will be held. It is exciting the greatest interest among the yacht owners and it is likely that nearly thirty boats will cross the starting line. The regatta committee, consisting of T. J. Kavanagh, Douglas Erskine and Stewart Middlemas, has done a good deal of hard thinking and calculating and it will not be their fault if the race Is not foum f'that a handicap race has ea t a handicaj Paper Mill Creek continues to produce m;n{cef it 18 the first antaut fat the exceilent trout. W. Stevens made a trip ed to the handsome sliver cup present 0 there last Sunday and returned with | corinthian Yacht Club by the Elks as a bunch of good sized ones. Stevens camped perpetual trophy. The right to have his out with Joe Url along the stream and | e and . that of boat engraved on the latter made a great hit as a chef, the cup and to hold the trophy for a treating Stevens to a feed that was a from i wonder. - % ——— FRESNO’S WRATH APPEASED BY BRIGGS, EXPLANATION to Be a Shipping Point of Large Importance. Arthur R. Briggs, manager |of the State Board of Trade, returned from a visit to Fresno yesterday. He. went there to confer with the trustees of the Fresno Chamber of Commerce in respect to what was deemed to be an injustice to Fresno County in publish- ing a table of: nts of California products from terminal points. . . by Briggs on was entirely satisfactory to the cham- ber, which had been greatly exercised year will go to the owner of the yacht first. place in to-mofrow’s contest. *The best feeling has sibsisted for a long time between the Corinthian Yacht Club and the order of Elks, and it is the in- tention of the Elks to make the race an excuse for a grand outing. They have hired a steamer and a band of music nd will make the trip from San Fran- cisco to Tiburon in grand style. The first yachts to start will cross the line at 11:15 and the last at noon, and it is expected that the boats will finish be- | tween 9:30 and 3. The starting line be- tween Blanding Point, Belvedere and a stakeboat will be arranged to suit the weather. The great interest felt in the racc comes from the fact that it is impossible ho'vf-diet the winner. The first handicap i was won by Paul Biber's sloop , a thirty-footer; the second by Brickell and Bowes' sloop Genesta, a thirty-six- {;cn mu.'%,“" mtfi' .,F:;-.:o,m footer, and last year's % the sloop Ruby, 'M: t‘“’:‘pfi::u g heny Ao forme -v-nfcwmr = A e matter of L1t on the pa A 2 list of fruit shipments for the State. may get a el‘w w and sail th y R P ‘The San Yacht Club fleet will start to-day on a week's cruise up the Sacramento . The fleet of the Cal- FLEET YOUNG GREYHOUND, WHICH 18 LOOKED UPON BY LEASHMEN AS ONE OF MOST LIKELY PUPPIES SEEN ON THE SWARD IN THIS CITY FOR A LONG TIME. some instances the boats came across the the Southern California players journeyed finishing line so close together that the north and participated in the various judges and timers had hard work to tournaments they have been much more separate them. To-morrow the fourth | interesting than previously. 1 I | Though this is the| Frank McMahon, former' owner of Pat Morrissey, and his partner, Pat Sul- The Southern California players lost both champlonship titles last year and wiil probably make a great effort to re- gain them. Of course the Sutton sisters won everything in sight and will do so again this year if they compete. It is to be hoped they will, as the local cracks are anxious to see just how much May, the little world's champion, has im- roved. Many persons whe have never een a tennis match will probably cross the bay on Beptember 9 to watch her ‘wield the racket. This part of the State will not be as well represented as in the past, and If the Los Angeles delegation is anything like as formidable as it has been, the honors should go south. The strongest livan, started for. Salt Lake, where a limited meeting was to be held. Port- land was their ultimate destination. As Salable and Ishlana had displayed such superb form, George Wentworth had about decided to ship the pair to New York. Unfortunately, the former was not entered in the Colorado Derby. which would have been a cakewalk for him, especially as Celeres happened to be on the shelf from a slight ailment. George Burger sald he would race a couple of his horses at Salt Lake City and Colorado Springs and would then rest up at Denver for a couple of months, Celeres is finishing into a grand looking three-year-old and will e a hard rut to crack at Oakland this com! fall. Jockey F. Graham left for Arizona om a visit to his parents’ home. If the Portland management had de- cided on an open ring at least half = dozen bookmakers doing business at 1coal players will be Percy Murdock, Fred | Den- ve made th grimage. Adams, Reuben Hunt and Carl Gardner. w;:w.‘::nmu:! Jofle;.‘usunh-n. Hunt is in the East at present, but in- | “Handriding” Keily and Chandler were tends participating in the coast touru-'m the Portland rate schedule. ments. He has been quite’ successful away Beyond question the sensation of the !mll:\"home. lI'n.ltm::l'l.l'lse !oluy has fafled | meeting was the sensational chestnut to € up to reputation when per- | sprinter Fox, ‘hich forming at San Rafael. oy b Should player out-of the tournaments this year. Hal Braley is sald to be putting up i _stronger game tham any other player the | south. Braley, Overton, Sinsabaugh and Hendrick should prove a strong combination. ’ Both of the men's championships will go by default. Drummond McGavin, the singles champlon, will not be here to de- fend and his- title will go to the tourna- fis gs : i g i BETRIE 3| st