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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1895. BUTTE DOWNS OLYMPIC, Hard, Smashing Football, With Many Close Calls on Goals. GILLIS' SEVENTY-YARD RUN. First Half Olympic Ahead—Butte's Bucking Won in the Second. | Josh Hayseed may be seen complacently A reporter put the question to a dealer the : other day. | “A few were converted into pneumatics | and cushions and are still on the streets,” | he said, “and some were taken by the deal- | ers as part payment on new machines, and are still stowed away in their shops, there being no sale for solid tires. The second- | hand dealers and repairers bought a great many of them up, dissected them, so to speak, and are now utilizing the parts in repair work. The balis, hubs, spokes, axles, bolts and nuts are all useful, and at the last the old frames and rims can be broken up and sold as scrap iron. *‘Some have gone to the country, and pedaling down to the mill for a bag of Machinists use them for making models, occasionally a push-cart will be seen mounted on two rusty old wheels, and even the boys on the street take the small wheels for the making of express wagons. And the balance, I suppost Butte defeated Olympic yesterday E 3 at | and Central Park in a close and exciting strug- | use in the world. A you'll find stowed away in the cellars and woodsheds of their possessors. Once true stanch friends, they are now of no bandoned ‘A Meteorological ~Observatory to cobwebs | lofty aims is wanted, that there may be a WANTED FOR TAMALPAIS That Waits for a Phi- lanthropist. i GREAT THINGS IT COULD DO. Would Look Down on Fogs, Measure the Air Tides and Reach a Mile With Its Kites. A meteorological philanthropist with JiM H2QOPER wHQ SCRAP PED wWITH ST‘VER5 WITH 1y OATH= UVARDED LOLKS | AND ARTiIFicIAL ! [ l & ) FLOWERS' and it¢ islands and shores are spread out in a beautiful panorama, and you can see Mount Hamilton, and then bevond the snows in the Sierras. You look down into the Sonoma Valley and over into Napa Valley, and the panorama presents a picture indescribably charming and grand. We saw but little of San Franeisco ving to the cloud of smoke about the ci Then Mr. Hammon told why meteorolo- gists would like to get at the upper air from that summit. If an observatory were established there, at a height of 2600 feet, the observers, by standing on tiptoe and flying kites and baloons, could get at the air for a mile above the sea. All ob- servations are now confined to the ordi- nary ground level. Ai the same time things are working quite differently a half mile or 2 mile above, and what is going on up there is really more im- portant to a forecaster than Lis ground ob- servations. So a vertical section of the air to the height of a mile or so, supplied two or three times a day and used in con- nection with the horizontal section now made quite complete over the whole coun- try by the great number of observers, would vastly increase the certainty and value of a forecaster's predictions. ~Such a vertical section, gained frrm omne or several elevated stations and balloons and kites regularly sent up, would show the temperature, barometrical pressure, hu- midity and currents of the upper air. Mr. Hammon states some novel things that could be done with such an observa- tory. From the top of Tamalpais an ob- server looks down on the foe® banks when they upbear, as on the clouds from Shasta’s top. open areas here and there over the ocean, and vessels can be seen coming out of fog banks into the sunshine and running into dense fogs or being enveloped by them. An observer up there could report vessel going into the fog with their location, an nouncing their arrivai on the bar, and often giving directions for tugs to find them. Tamalpais is an exceptionally valuable location for such a station, much surpass- ing Pike’s Peak for two main reasons. It is close to the great harbor to which weather is so important, and then it is right 1n the big gap in the Coast Range, through which air currents pour in and out as the waters do through the Golden Gate. In discussing the observatory idea yes- terday Mr. Hammon said: A good observatory, adequately equipped, could be built for about $10,000. The mzin thing would te its maintenan To do its Dest work it ought to have about 6000 a year. The Weather Bureau may do something to- ward establishing a station up there, but the observatory ought to have its permanercy as- sured, and, besides, have scope to purs purely scientitic investigations and exp ments. The work of the Weather Bureau necessarily very practical. Under the bure it would have varying fortun appropriations and policies. station, not a very valuable one, perha discontinued several times aud closed a li according Pike's Peak e generally sees the banks leaving | AN OVERWORKED BRAIN iLamentable Condition of the Rev. Joseph Cook of Boston. STRICKEN DOWN BY VERTIGO. The Eminent Divine and Lecturer Must Cease Work and Rest at Clifton Springs. { The Rey. Joseph Cook, one of the fore- most divines and lecturers of America, is | a guest at the Palace Hotel. A little over | ayear ago he passed through this City on | bis way to the Australian colonies, for the | | purpose of lecturing there, and on to India, ultimately taking in England before re- turning to his home in Boston. His itinerary was suddenly interrupted in September last at Melbourne, where he was stricken with an attack of vertigo, which almost completely shattered his | former magnificent constitution. | Mr. Cook is as big a man physically as he is in the calling he has pursued for the past forty years. Mentally, however, at | the present time he is only a wreck of his former self. The news of Mr. Cook’s affliction reached his wife by cablegram and she immedi- ately set out to join him. As he was also anxious to return to the States he joined her in Jupan, and they reached here on the steamer China Tuesday iast. Yesterday the Rev. Dr. James L. Bar- ton and a number of others in the same party endeavored to obtain the attend- | ance of some of the leading physicians of | the City, so as to get their opinion as to the | advisability of taking the great divine through to New York, where they believe | he may get the rest he so much needs. | A representative of THE CALL was per- | mitted a brief interview with Mr. Cook, | | who declared that he s too ill to say much and that his physicians in Australia | had forbidden bim to t | “They tell me,” be said, “that I am | overworked and that I have been so for the past twenty year: they must be right, for I feel . f it is possible to go on to Clifton (reat 3 Days’ Sacrifice Sale OF ALL Holiday JAPANESE SILK TIDIES, JAPANESE SILK METAL JEWEL BOXES, CELLULOID (Goods! LR R To-day and during the balance of the week we will hold a GREAT CLOSING-OUT SALE of the entire remainder of our STOCK, which inciudes the following and an endless variety of other attractive articles, all to be offered AT FORCING-OUT PRICES! PEERLESS HOLIDAY TABLE SCARFS, PHOTOGRAPH FRAMES, CELLULOID GLOVE BOXES, HANDKERCHIEF BOXES, CHILDREN’S PICTURE BOOKS, SILK EMBROIDERED SUSPENDERS, SILK HANDKERCHIEFS, SILK MUFFLERS, NECKTIES, GENTLEMEN’S BATH ROBES, MACKINTOSHES, UMBRELLAS, Springs, N. Y., immediately I shall do so, | although I feel very tired after the jour- | ney I have just ta HARTZELL . over a year ago. The vertical gradients such an observatory wonld give us would be ex- tremely valuable in forecasting. Gy o HI§ =~ 10 YARD SPRINT il o SKETCHES AT THE FOOTBALL GAME AT WV s CENTRAL PARK YESTERDAY. and ashes, with no company but ratsand | dream away their few remain- Once again they stand in full ittering nickel. admired, caressed | and praised by all beholders; again they are on the road, bearing their masters in safety down long rough hills and through sand and mud. Once again they see the smooth, hard track respond to the efforts | Bureay and the commerce of this | of the riders as they throw every ounce of | .. e effort into the last sprint, and hear the | Uity, so much concerned with the | shouts of the excited crowds as they whiz | Weather. They are jointly preparing a | across the tape. Abandoned and alone, eating out their hearts with rust, they gradually drop to pieces, too proud of their vanished prestige to give one thought of envy to the modern pneumatic.””—Wash- ington Star. sl T Perforated Sails. Yachtsmen will be interested in the dis- covery of an Italian sea captain, George Batta Vasalio, of Genoa, that additional | his assistant, speed can be secured by making a number | meteorological observatory on the top of Mount Tamalp: Forecast Official W. H. Hammon and lexander McAdle, have launched the idea of this enterprise and announced its need in behalf of the great science they serve, the practical Weather paper on the subject, which will be read at the annual meeting of the California Science Association, in Oakland, January 6. A few days ago Messrs. Hammon and McAdie made a trip to the top of the mountain which they had so long been looking at with wistful eyes from their tenth-story Mills-building windows. Me- Adie is especially eazer to set flying from there his big kites carrying self- registering instruments. The agitation of The station would be valuable in several iweys to the commerce of this port and its | work mignt be of great value from a purel scientific standpoint. Tamalpais is an e tionally valuable location for such an observu- tory aud it would, if properly equipped and used, undoubtedly become famous and accom- plisli very valuable work. Meteorologists are just tackling the | | off the forward deck. “I came by what is called the long route, and we encountered terrific storms. On | one occasion eighteen horses were carried | Such a storm would | be hard on a well man, let alonean inv lid. | “No.Idonot propose to lecture again | for many months to come. I must get Hte.... ; Murphy Market and --Btc. Building, Jones Stregts. IS ssasr i as STATEMENT of small roles in the sails. | the subject1s a result of that trip. OF THE T ton ‘ ; W hatever is done in the way of keep: The contention is that the force of wind | ‘Whatever1s cone In the way of, feep'ng CONDITION AND = o | R : S k he weather among and above cannot fully take effect in a sail since the | gjou4g will follow sooner or later the com- i OF THE gle on the gridiron, the score standing 14 to 12. So it is Zoolicum, zoolicum, hi away ho: ‘Tamnarack, tamnarack, boom, bah bo; Laggita, laggita. hah, hah, hah; Butte City, Montana, rah’ rab, rah. The visitors played & hard, smashing game, characterized in the first half by the repeated line-bucking of Laswell, and in the second by phenomenal work of the same nature by Hartzell, who was used many times in succession for rushes through the Olympic line between guards and tackles or through the center trio, the effective massing and crowding of the Butte men being a great aid in helping their man forward. of the game air in front of it cannot properly circulate in the inflated part; that it is stagnant and isin effect a cushion, which acts like a a spring mattress, decreasing the actual | pressure of the wind against the canvas. Trials made by the captain in various | weathers have seemingly proved the util- | ity of this innovatior ew York World . Onion juice is the simplest symoathetic ink; it writes colorless, but turns yellow when heated. A weak infusion of galis writes colorless and may be turned black | ¥ moistening with weak copperas water. A solution of nitro-muriate of cobalt turns green when heated and disappears again when cooling. pletion of the projected railway to the top of the mountain. Our observation needs would require a whole scientific expedi- tion. The railway will give Tamalpais to science as well as to sight-seers. “I don’t think that people here realize alpais,” said Mr. Hammon yesterday. kuow of no city in America that bas any- thing of the kind approuching it. The trip is a delightful one the whote way, and the view from the summit on a ftine, clear day is grand beyond aescription. To the west you louk overa great stretch of ocean, and Point Reyes on the mnorth and Point San Pedro on the south are seen plainly | and appear close by. In the east the bay what they have richt at their side in Tnm-1 - REV. JOSEPH COOK. . {From a photograph.] upper air which is_practically unexplored | well again before I attempt resuming my duties.” OVERSTOCKE —oN— UNION CASUALTY AND SURETY COMPANY F ST. LOULS, IN THE STATE OF MISSOURT, on the 31st day of December, A. D. 1894, and | for the year ending on that day, as made to the In- | surance Commissioner of the'State of California, pursuant to the provisions of sections 610 and 611 of the Political Code, condensed as per blank fur- | nished by the Commissioner. CAPITAL. Capital Stock, paid up in Amount of [ TR LR S RN SR $250,000 00 ASSETS. $172,000 00 25,000 00 Bonds owned by Compan securities as collateral.. : pitad et and unknown. The Tams observa- 58 & g ; : Again, but th}s time near the beginning | | A I tory could do great things for science and The divine’s vdice was low and his words Amount of Loans secured by pledge of Gllis skirted the left end in S eflisst Ryn become highly appreciated by the Chamber | were uttered in a broken fashion that y Bonds, Stocks and other marketable one of his inimitable dashes, and gained forsy of Commerce. Now, won'tsome rich phi- | plainly told of his condition. He appeared Cash in Company’s Oflice. v yi re he was forced i . lanthropist erect for himself a monument | to hesitate in the middle of a sentence and Cash in Banks. g meventy; yards hefo o this peat of to-be- | to forget the subject on which he was taik- | [}1 Interest due and i i | on this peak of a soon-to-be-famous moun- | to forg he subject on Wi vas taik- ¥ 3 o e 1] ‘ E fain by the Golden Gate by building and | ing until the reporter suggested the word s ' | Premiums i due Cours 1he dlisk kick off-Bitile hac score oz endowing the Smith, or Jones, or Brown | that put him in line again. g : Tota Assets.... down. - S«:]megn:\z OfI the P”Slélem chlr- 5 i ] Meteorological Observatory ? “‘Yes, it was vertico with which I was acter of the Butte play ma e seen by | B! o v afflicted,” he said. *“It came on me sud- LIABILITIES. reference to the accotapanying diagram. _a__&’ - 2 = denly, and other complications followed. 3 i I 1 t Adi 7 Play was furious, and particularly when o | I BELONGED TO TILDEN ONCE. |y :xoxnach and my {xead are both sick A Special Discount of 10 PER D e eeres o S $38,726 65 several times each team stopped an ad- t?‘:,_“ ! + T T —_— | Aot 5 4 2 CENT on the Above Goods JLosses resisted. including expenses 763 87 vance very near its own goal and rushed i T l D Sale of Some of the Great Democrat’s | "iie Rey. Joseph Cook was born at Ti- 7 . bounans To e o | the ball back. 2 e i H Bomme Effects. g | conderoga, N. Y., on January 26, 1838. He for This Week Only. ance 50 per cent. . 344,118 35 f The first half eml‘ed by a _8081 lvuc.v by - > Tt ¢ Some of the property of the iate Samucl | is a graduate of Harvard, and was a_ stu- All other demands against the Com- , Morse that sent the ball way over into F] R 1 HF\ [__rF J. Tilden was sold at auction in New York | dent for four years at the Andover Theo- S pany. - Mission street, where some enterprising | . Ak last week. The property sold consisted | logical Seminary. His principal residence Total Liabi urfib\nj_mu;{e %?c:n;:ét.l)et" e ~ principally of household effects. Promi- | has l}ccn in Boston, where heldeh\'crcd ig Jim Hoop & ) | “ i i 5 e 2 R | the “Boston Monday Lectures’’ for over a INCOME. were pitted againsteach other, had a hand- | ey ( nent among the spegtators in the forenoon | veqr Through these noonday lectures Net Cash actually recelved for pre- y 3 3 y P - to-band contest, when things got very V was Secretary of War Lamont. for business men he first became noted. $568.766 05 lively, about the time of Olympic’s second The sale continued all day, and at its| Alter repeating them in_various large OF 18,551 touchdown. Smith threw a small Butte man down by dragging bim_through the Jine, and the red-headed Michigan giant had his revenge on_the instant. He erabbed the 200-pound Smith by the shoul- ders and hurled him at arms length io0 the close about $10.000 had been realized. One of the liveliest competitions was over a Steinway grand piano, which cost $1500. It was finally sold for §375. A large Ame can tlag, which floated over the Capito! Albany when Mr. Tilden was Governor cities of America he published them in book form under the titles of “Biclogy,” “Cons; * “Heredity,” “*Labor,” “Mar- riage,” “Orthodoxy,” *“Socialism,” **Trans- cendentalism,” “Occident,” “Orient” and “Current Religious Perils.” Holiday Goods! Total Income. .. EXPENDITURES. Net amount paid for Losses | Paid or allowed for C Brokerage.. Paid for $213,512 50 179,982 34 . Then there would have been | 5 - o Pl B0 'and bitter, but the other players was soid for §25. As @ Tule the articles | o L1503 Mr. Cook, with his wile, made peharges foroflicers. clerks. otc........ 52,885 26 interfered. The crowd burst its bounds | sold did not bring more than their actual | sophical and rel sious subjects. E CAEANL ERas o 1249890 value. Allother payments and expenditures. 64,318 06 and came on to the field like a stampede of wild" cattle, and after that it was impos- | sible for the one lonely policeman to keep the field clear. v There was still a minute to play when the game ended, but it bad grown so dark that further play would not be fair for either side, so Captain Smith conceded Butte the game. 1t will be seen tbat there was compara- tively little fumbling by Butte, as the field was dry. y ;2 e e This makes Butte’ ls] third saccessive vm; tory over Olympic, the previous scores al Y aving been 24 to 0 and 12to 6, when Olympic had a less powerful aggregation. | The sale of paintings, photographs, | vases, etc., took place in the evening and | was well attended. Among the paintings | sold were: “The Deer Chase,” by Obor- vermiste, $40; ‘*Autumn in the Catskills,” by J. F. Crospey, $100; ‘A Hopeless Chase,” by A. Rotta, for which Mr, Tilden aid $5500, brought $725; *‘Scene—Gray's Glegy in & Country Churchyard,” by J. F. Crospey, $230, and “Marguerite,” by R. Grannetto, $180. Sixteen paintings brought $1830. A number of ltalian photographs were then sold at prices ranging from $36 down. Antique vases, clocks and carvings were then offered. Twenty-two pieces Gorgeous Parades. “In their processions to church,” says Timbs in his “Curiosities of London,” the companies were joined by the religious or- ders in their rich costumes, bearing wax torches and singing, and frequentiy at- tended by the Lord ilayor and great civic authorities in state. Funerals were as re- ligiously observed by them, and to cele- braje with becoming grandeur the obse- quies of deceased members almost the whole of these fraternities kept a state pall o1 hearse-cloth; members of superior rank were followed to interment by the Lord Mayor and civic authorities, and it was | Dalls, Toys, Wagons aud Velocipedss, Dimner Sets, Fine Carving Sets, Liquor Sets, Card Recaivers, Osirich Feather Fans, Platedware, Cutlery, Gold and Silver Headed Canes, Total Expenditures.... Losses incurred during the year... C. P. ELLERBE, President. 0. K. CLARDY, Secretary Subscribed and sworn to before me, this 2ith day of January, 1895. WILLIAM D, MURRAY, Notary Public. TARPEY & KRIGBAUM, GENERAL AGENTS, 208 Sansome Street, San Framcisco, Cal. Following are the players with their vis- | broucht $1994. The purchasers for the | ho'custom to provide funeral dinners with a-vis: most part were residents of New York. | gumg left by the deceased or sent aiter Leather Goods, Positions. Olympics. ST e 2 death by the relatives to their halls.” : ,;T;L'e.ls [Pedien, 1156 Our Picturesque High Buildings. The parades sometimes took placeon the Gold and Silver Headed U]]lhl‘flllfls, # The picturesque quality of the new high | river, where they had barges “‘ireshly fur- [] 7,‘:1-:?10}1?;1 - $ buildings has not failed to attract some | nished with banners and streamers of silk, Faunv Trmlmam MHT”PS Hooper, 198, 2 l l T “ _‘ lntem'mn. As t?ey r;}se above the,old sky- | richly baaten'w'at.n the arms and bndges:i oA GR D ham, 19 & i ne of our street so they are seen from the | their craftes.” here were pageantson the MeMillan, 17 7 S rivers which bound New York and from | return of the king after a foreign victory Pearl ODflTfl (lasses and Hfllflfl's, AND OPPORTUNITY ;‘I'"h"-rd = Quarer..... | Sharmatt, X "‘* the prairie fnnd the rlak‘e 5 Cmcnfo, m;; | and on his setting out for foreign conquesi. —FOR— tichards, .. : 1 Nahl, the towers of a gigantic fortress. Steeped | Coronation processions, though less fre- “aptain Brooks, 150..L. balt R. i et T ¥ WO [ooR wTw®n%|4 |in sunshine when the streets below are in | quent, came quite often enough, and were anfl PflflW Guflfls INVESTMENT. Gillis, ?;”1’-’0‘ -R. bal S 100 | shadow, catching the colored lizht of sun- | participated in by all the'crafts. At the Py ;m-:‘:eu'. L Full. eldon, | e set when the streets below know nothing | coronation of Henry IV, in 1399, Cheap- Uf EVGI'Y DGSGI’II]HD]]. OR SALE—A COMPLETE WELL-EQUIPPED ce, George B. Dygert, University B S L 0 PR of it, lost in fog or rain-cloud as to their | side, according to Froissert, had “seven PRINTING OFFICE, established for many 93, and ex-c-lplcfll':l ?}Jfi?fi"fi"&m- L3 . highest bnrls——tlhey are _Imll)(ressive when | fountains running with lu-d gnd white St Jears: wil be soid at a Grea: Barsain: has four Stmmons, Col i “ , looked at from the town itself; but this is | wine, and the craftsmen, clothed in tueir vlinder Presses, ceven Job Presscs, Fioe’ men—G. H. Robinson,* Stanford University as nothing to their beauty when seen from | proper liveries, bore banners of their| Send for our ILLUSTRATED CAT- | Cutterand u larse assortment of daps sud Saces and "Oiyrapic A, C.iJ. K. Thompson, son of the r 0 a point a mile beyarl;giu:he hlouses. There | trades.” ALOGUE. Mailed free to any couns | time. Appiy to > Mayor of Butte. S is, of course, no architectural merit in all L R R R g, PALMER, chdow: ?:;‘ebf‘h':{m’:";:;l‘ofiw,’, - . \ this; it is as_buttes or other startling Making It Equai. Y aices Manager Aul:e.r::.nn Type Founders' Co e 1, by King: Olympic 2, by Morse. e 2 p O g0 A7 2 o fo o natural formation that we may look upon | Mamma—You should always take the SoniBandonie Sk 8 W P Score—Butte 14, Olymplo 13, 0 2o o8 game, 3 . T F r them.—January Scribner’s. % smaller piece of anything offered. You NOTE. = it hous dbmaluas Hajves—Thiriy-five minutes, '2900. 4 1] R (e T just took the largest piece of cake and left | _ f# Goods delivered free of charge to Sausalito, '$ REINVIGORATOR hours and 60 minutes. Atiendance, % Fire! the smaller piece for your elder brother, | Biithedale, Mill Valley, Tiburon, San Rafacl, Anti- e 24 HOURS: CURES WHAT BECOMES OF 0LD WHEELS. Once True and Stanch Friends Now Gone to Pieces. Have you ever wondered what has be- | come of the thousands of old solid tire wheels that were in such universal use be- fore pnuematics revolutionized th{nslr [The first play is at the top. umpire moved the ball. crosses show the Reliance downs. CHART OF THE Wavy lines show where the ball is kicked; straight lines where it is carried; dotted lines where it goes on a fumble; short parallel lines where the oppo- nents break through and force the runner back or dewn him behind the line; dash lines where Dots indicate points where Butte was in possession of the ball, and The initial of the runner is on the line of his progress, L. standing for Lasuell, B. for Brooks, G. for Giliis, H. for Hartzell, S. for Slates on Butte gains; on Oiympic gains, M. for McNear, S. for Smith, 0. for Oliver, Sex. for Sexton.] PLAY. Fire! That Dreadful Cry Is franght with import doubly dire to the unhappy man who bebolds his dwelling or bLis warehouse feeding the devouring elemen: uninsured. Hap- pily most people who can, insure—everything but health. Nine-tenths of us neglect the preservation of this when it is In palpable jeopardy. Incipient indigestion, liver complaint, la grippe, inaction of the kidneys snd bladder and malaria are all coun- teracted by Hostetter's Stomach Bitters. Tommy—But, mamma, as Willie is my elder, I think the plate should have been passed to him first.—Philadelphia Times. saERL e The largest gold coin in existence is said to be the gold ignot, or “loof,”” of Annam. 1t is a flat, round piece of gold worth about £63 in English money, having its value written upon it in Indian ink. och, Stock ton, Haywards, Vallejo, Napa, San_Lo- renzo, Melrose, San Leandro, Oakland, Alameda and Berkeley. 818-820 Market Street Phelan Building. Factory—30 First Street. LosT MAN00D, Nervous Debility, Prematureness, Emissions, Impot- Blency, Varicocele, Gleet, Fits, Kid- Ineys, and all _other wasfing Effects of Erron;(s\‘iflklia l‘l’ab. SEN 2] ), 3 Bottles FIVE Dollars, Guaranteed to CURE any case. “All PRIVATE DISEASES quickly cured. * Book for men mailed free, Hall’s Medical Institute 8656 BROADWAY. OAKLAND. CAL. HOPELESS