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'HE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, 'SUNDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1898. DEDICATED THE NEW HOME OF MEDICINE Opening of Affiliated Colleges. A THRONG IN ATTENDANCE ADDRESSES BY DR. BEVERLY COLE AND DR. ROWELL. New Center of the Medical Depart- ment, University of California, Is Most Modern in Ap- pointments. Ak 1 hoped on for th t to urge the you know gned by to show be- mpathy ive great the 1 now we were at of the value rst it was ster Rowell was then introduced part of the Board of Regents the follo | Plans for the New Music Stand 3 ftresseery 778 for G Midwinter Fair Grounds. NEW MUSIC STAND FOR GOLDEN GATE PARK. olden Gate Park Have Been Completed. It Will Be Located in What Was the Grand Court of the| of the I 2 > of the gift of t college by the late benefit g as a precedent for who have already g | the right to a place among of honor. And so I might Hopkins, and Milis, and it is proper to me with gratitud r of the Sutro. and discuss g the un a great and unique i mmon people of San where all preciate in its beautiful spot. epartment of our in- al attention ay esion_has ical d 1 aracter al to equip and e subport to upon their ton Dodge, who made the address for the faculty of the medical department. Dr. Dodge sald in At As this ocea PETE SMITH ON THE SIDE LINES. ¢ » 1/ r THE cOST =/ 5 oF MEAT WiTH =0 Grape-Nuts 17 charming dish. Stanfords 5, Olympics O. HREE times the Oly damp, lime-washed esterday, but they | * and therefore they pics smelled the nford goal line did not cross It, have a round zero VALUE OF CREAM for their score, and their hearts blue | with the tincture of indigo. nford | passed the line but once, v suf- As Comparsd With:Meat. { ficent to give the five points and the vie- One of the most valuable items in | tory in the second football game with the ene’s dietary is good, rich cream. The | Olymplcs . The game vesterday was full of excite- remark ls frequently made that “cream | ment and good playing, although at times 1s too expensive to use freely.” Some [ it was ragged to an abnormal degree. In ople think they must have meat | the first half the Olymplcs were twice on ery v at 10 and 25 cents per pound | the Stanford five rd line, and lost 1d do not realize that 5 cents’ worth | ball by unfair holding. It was the deci- e | sion of Umpire Cochran that took the pufe cream for bresifast will 40 | ball from the clubmen and put it in the more to put on flesh than 25 or 30 cents’ |y, 44 of the collegians just when it meant th of meat. | Victory to one and defeat to the other An ideal portion of breakfast is that | The holding of the Olympic center ruined obtained from say, four teaspoons of | the chances of the club men to wipe out Grape-Nuts a: | a little, pure thick | the stain of the three preceding defeats ream, either cold or hot. Jirit to do things. The This s one of the most delfcious | ’t’;‘r’&e’fi;:"(gfi"_q':,‘.nfi.mvs goal was in or dishes imaginable and is served With- | g.nger was during the second half, after o ookin or troubl by Perc: orse. But three ut cooking or uble of any kind | g prilliant run b3 y ol itk oo yards to go and three trial the coveted distance. First the center was tri sides of the line. Wilson went and cannot be equaled in point of rood< value for the human body. | th Made by the Postum Co., at Battle | ed and then bo against_the STANFORD WINS A | up for the last chance to send the ball over. Sheehy, mighty of strength and ability in line play, was selected to save the | | and left the red and white cohorts devotd | | ways there, making runs of fifty yards’ Creek, Mich. ) against the e, which suddenly seem The' Grape-Nuts, conslisting largely | Siiffes and fold like steel girders. The | of grape-sugar, have passed through | Olymplcs were surprised, ut satisfled t assault would prove " %orse, the sritty haif-back, who til an_eleven is pyramid- it ht Blgz of the procesges simil. T to the first act of di- gestion and are therefore most easily digested, and In combination with cream, they render the cream itself easy of digestion, Grocers sell Grape-Nuts, that fruttrul, Morse, oes not stop ed on his back, tried the rig! tanford repuls s thso necessary distance was between the Olympics and a touchdown. Dum- 1 attack, and | and punts that sailed with the wind for SN TORSE DOING HIS LITTLE RUN = COCHRAN founded and confused, the ciub men lined his team. The signal was given, and the revolving wedge was started against the right side of the Stanford line, but Sheehy was held and buried underneath a heap ¢ squirming red-shirted Stanfordites just d from the goal posts. Tt was work of the day and the best game played in this city for a t seen in many years. Altogether the game was far and away better than anything this season has given ue. The score—b to O—tells a tale of one touchdown, but it does not give a pleture of the laboring Olympians close to the posts of their emnemy. There was kicking and running enough to satisfy the most ardent shouter for open play, and fumbling In such goodly quantities that the man who likes sudden changes was likewise made happy. Every varfety of play was used with good and poor results, and the officials kept the specta- tors guessing as to which side had the ball at the end of every play. The off- side plays and the holding recelved prompt penalties from Umpire Cochran and Referee Cross. Individually some very good football was seen. Sheehy would tear holes through the Stanford line until large draughts would rush down the fleld. Sexton and Erskine were in evidence, and now and | then McNutt was found in the heap do- ing good service. Percy Morse was al- distance and using a stralght arm on Murphy that leveled the latter in the Qust. Wilson and MeNevin proved a| great power to the Olympics, better on | the offensive than on the defensive. Mur- hy, for the Cardinals, played his nauull ast game, making runs of varied lengths its | the care of | at valuable | isms | ned n marks something more than | WAT(HED WITH A CRITICAL EYE. the simple opening of the mew home of the Affillated Colleges, as it marks the passing of the control of the medical department very largely medical fac- ulty into it is but fliting that to the Regents mi Id be directed these thoughts a or with them will largely r future of th out of the hands of the the hands of the Regents, e particu- d lar! and thought the world kr add Il Americans may and shall it the art and jorating pain women 80 well equipped may exult in for their life wor their ability and yers of the State 1d gl selves In the tact i is_their dotng which made medical reel Sha or. for things, o actual artment, then with , and at their me or the money of woat use will all And the answer largely the future of ment and per{ on the Not alone t upon th, system of the to the city and . t will ha n the sani conditions of the State 1 the research a go a Iine of general ead of knowl- jonal stand- to the medical profes- through the medical gic and pathological ¢ work directly af- and disease.” Un- ical department of be the conduction in all cases ce of the law lucted, by an offi- rsity, all examinations aith; here should be edical practitioners of the for certain knowledge and iformation which thelr patients, the people the State, whose taxes have bullt and will h of the university, will Situated s these bulldings are, here on'the With advances in the | nd the diffusion of | | phy Americans, it may be understood that af- hed a critical | and | . the_directions of | | | proceeded ing the broad Pacific, on the farther shores o ing its very commencement, land overlooking the city ism and hurry, in the mind always and forever, o slowly creeping into the pract should here be lost sight of and forgotten. Sutro. she presented the portrait to ulty, and requested that it be hung conspicuous’ place in the building. Cole accepted the and sald that it would be so hung. Sherman, and Jones, of the faculty and Sullivan of the dental and among the invited guests stage, William Carey Jones, Wadsworth and Aver. AMERICAN COMMISSION on the Protest Against the Right to Do So. Herald don Bennett. cal clash between Spaniards fairs in Havana have re: stage. _Acting under General Blanco, the censor last night pro hiblted any reference in cable dispatches to the difil, ing almost entirely destroyed. The trouble followed the serv Hammel. Th ers for delivery. is reached of the Ameri uniform to the Maestranza de Artilleira done. His presence was objected to by tain Brooks that he took orders Thrice Scent Touch- downs. Z in every play, and Parker distinguished himself :z right end. The Olympies played a much better game, displaying some show of Interference and cohesive work. Stanford’s center was weak and their piay lacked concentration of effort. The officials were Garrett Cochran, um- ire; Harry P. Cross, referee; Code and unt, linesmen. The teams lined up as follows: Olymptel Posttions. Btantord, half the distance of the gridiron. Fisher, who suffered from a spralned hand, was | Tomlipson. R—End—L....... McFadden or McNuti WHEN MURPHY MAKES MORE 'THAN FOOTPRINTS A RUN HE LEAVES BEHIND, . Emerson Blanchard or Calrny seeee. Gitman or Blglow Murphy Robinson or Clinton Flsher +HI very vergs of the American continent, overlook- | from the American Commission, to whom which civilization first had its birth and learn- and on the high- with 1ts toils and tumults, its cares and worries, its commercial- the one fact should be borne that this is | an fnstitution of learning, of research, of study, | and the commercial spirit which seems to be of medicine | the President, Miss R. L. Ash, a graduate of Berke- ley and a student of the medical depart- | tion of the commission the S ment, then presented a portrait of Adolph | be On behalf of the women students | the fac- | tives of the navy in a Dr. ift for the faculty, Among those present were: Regents | Kellogg, Foote, Wallace, Houghton and Denicke; Drs. Cole, Powers, Kerr, Wil- liamson, Spencer, Levitt MAY USE FORCE AT HAVANA Spaniards Shipping Cannon Despite Special Dispatch to The Call and the New York | pi Copyrighted, 1585, by James Gors | HAVANA via Key West, Fla.), Oct. 22. | While there is little or no danger of a and | with different Archbishops as to the views nlty, my_last dispatches be- ing of the | written protests by the American Com- | Protestant churches to mission against_the sale of cannon to .F. | H. No attention was paid to | attention in the the protest by the Spaniards, who coolly to load the cannon on light- the ears Commissioners, who or- @ered Captain Brooks to proceed in full | there to take exact note of everything the officials, who were informed by Cap- only HARD-FOUGHT BATTLE. Olympics Play Good Ball and ADVERTISEMENTS. 000000&00000009000@0@“0@03 THE SALE Life-Saving Shoes INCREASES DAILY! EVERY LADY SHOULD HAVE 0®#0P0P04040P0H0P0P0L0P0POE0P0S0P0P0P0H0H0200090 a protest against his presence should be made. He remained until he had counted 150 cannon taken away and saw another Eun of many tons in weight placed aboard the Alfonso XII Captaln Brooks' report resulted in an immediate session of the commission, | when it was decided to send a cable t ask respect of its protes l If the administra & power to enforce »n upholds the posi- orpion will rought around from Matanzas, and believed that powerful representa- will be sent to Havana. 'ARCHBISHOP KEANE SUMMONED TO ROME it Montgomery, Goes to Discuss the Position of the Dodge, Green, Newmark, D'An- cona, Robertson, Swan, Lengfeid, Barbat Drs. Goddard department, the Drs. Dunn, Church in America’s New Possessions NEW YORK, Oct. 22.—Archbishop Keane's departure for Rome on the Werra to-day was a surprise to his friends in this country. He had not in- tended to sail until December, when Archbishop Ireland of St. Paul was to have gone with him. His hurried de- parture, a prominent Catholic clergyman | said, was due to the fact that he was summoned to Rome to make a report on | the state of feeling in America in regard | to the annexation of the Philippines and | the attitude of the American people to- ward the Catholic church in Cuba, Porto and other new American posses- sions. | Archbishop Keane attended a meeting of Archbishops-of the United States held in Washington a week ago and consulted of their dioceses as to the church taking ager eps toward Americanizing the new possessions, Another thing Archbishop Keane wants to Teport on is the step necessary on the part of the church to counteract the ag- gressive missionary work that has been begun by the Protestant churche large coilections taken up last S nd_mi > will n. Archbishop’s 2 ssiona escape report to to Cuba and Porto Ri; the Pope. i Sy SULTAN BANQUETS EMPEROR WILLIAM | |And Now the Police Renew Their Efforts to Protect the Travel- ing Sovereigns. CONSTANTINOPLE, Oct. 22.—At the grand farewell banquet here last night the Sultan was seated between the Em- peror and the Empress of Germany. At about 10 o'clock their imperial German Majesties withdrew to the Morassin Kiosk and the Emperor afterward returned the farewell s of the diplomatic In the meantime, the Prince Mehe ed the Empre ador and the maids of hor em, where they conversed with tne and other corps or William - x to the Turkish Minister of Foreign Affairs, Tewfik Pasha. The Emperor and Empress of Germany | left here for Pale 5:10 o'clock_this evening. They receiv vation from the crowds of people assembled to witness the departure BEYROUT. Syria. Oct In view of n Smperor and Empress of Germany to_this place. the | police are preventing all the Italian work- | men from landing, and G 1 Arme- ! | | | | nians are closely watel Ttalian who is believed to be an anarchist is sup- to bhave landed at a port on the coast CLAIRVILLE HOTEL'S DEAD. Mrs. Martin ox Oroville, a Waitress, the Fifth Victim. RENO, Nev., Oct. 22.—Charley Roberts, whose hotel was burned at Clairville yes- terday morning, arrived here to-night and Mrs. Corona where they will says he lost ever: the loss will aggreg The name of the w tin of Oroville, Cal. en route to Cars buried. Mr. Roberts hing he had and that te $5000; no insurance. itress was Mrs. Mar- —— e Advances made on furaiture and pianos, with | or without removal. J. Nocnan, 1617-1023 Mission, | Western Addition Democrats. | A meeting of Democrats was held last night in Phelps’ Hall, Devisadero and Page streets. Speeches were made by the following candidates now seeking the suf- frage of the people: John P. Dunn, | Rhodes Borden, Leonard Stone, George H. Cabaniss, L. Byington, Francls Polk, Dr. Clinton, William C. White, F. J. Burke, Judge Mogan, Willlam J. Burke, Finlay Cook, T. F. Bonnet, James Denman, John H. Grady, L. F. Bartlett, | ‘Washington Dodge and James D. 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