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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25. 1903. 39 , BERKELEY EASILY DEFEATS THE CHEMAWA INDIANS; ~f 7. i LT T T W ATHLETIC FOOTBALL GOODS. BOXING GLOVES. STRIKING BAGS. Open Saturdays Till 10 p. M. Jerseys - - $2:30 Formerly $3. Sweaters - $3.2 Formerly $3.50. Gymnasium Suits, From $3.50 to $7.00. SUPPLIES. 60 Geary St., San Francisco 3 A SRR | i o | 5 et - | ey O | | | | 17 | | s il CAPTAIN OF VISITING ELEVEN | AND AN INCIDENT OF THE | GAME AT STANFORD. 11 |Stanford Plays Ragged . Game, Disappointing | | Its Admirers. . | ANAGAN'S huskies and the Uni- | > _versity of Nevada team had a merry eget-to yesterday afternoon | Jon the Stanford University grid- | : iron. The timekeeper announced | ! end of the second half before efther | “sM had put the pigskin on the green- | | sward beyond the enemy’'s goal line. | Friezell, one of the halfbacks from the | sagebrush State, sent the hearts of the | Stanford rooters into their mouths by | nearly kicking a fleld goal just before the | close of thc last half. That the only | time when there seemed any immeJiat: | possibillty of scoring by either team. | 5 . > The game demonstrated clearly that the | o : | Cardiaxi eleven will have > Lustle con- | siderably in the next three wecks if they want 10 cuiry off any coast champ'i- . | shipe | Quarter ¥ | nicrd kicked to the goal line on e | ® oo Shan e b y |start and 2 Nevada man carried the ball | = second half: Gar: t |to the twenty-yard line. The Cardinal | . * How tackle; , | fecured tne ball on downs afier thely cp- | Cl r Muther and | ponents had made some slight gaains. A " r, right half; Risley and Cottrell, | few line plunges and an end run netted | ' Eliot and Stern, full; Boothe, | about ten yards and Nevada - railled. . g Chemawa _substituted Smith, | Stanford tried a_fake kick and lost ten welg 1 s ; 1t end; Payne, left | vards and the ball e The Nevadans found some weak Spols - : e T L | on the right of the Jine and Friezell and o s s g ) P s S O ji}v”tm( did some good bucking and hur- w it “of RESULT IN sURPRISES} Stanford held for downs in the center | e ng oy ‘m the fleld. Then there were a couple | = beating | The fourth round of the Scottish bowl- | 9f rushes, followed by a twenty-yard run | . > nament at Golden Gate Park was | (}4 se around the enemy's left end by | . Sctive oft tRooE the =i | Chalmers. The rooters with the cardinal : Ve of two of the greate banners cheered lustily. The lads from - of the season in bowling [ across the border got together a few rin- were the defeat of James Mc: ter and dropped the next four line | n McLaren. James Gr | the same degree of latitude. | easily, the score | s could not make the dis- | - =i : \ was able to get but one | {ANCe on three downs and had to punt. | - ¥ 4 ook, Tr. |One of the Cardinals made a fair catch. = oot A k. The | The next scene was a horrible fluke on : s the part of I. Steckle of Nevada in at- | ,~ et (2 tournament 1 it | tempting to catch the ball. The whistle | sidered almost a certainty | Sounded at the end of the first half with . t and McLaren would meet | (he ball in Stanford’s hands on their op- | Tven Colign: K doteateq | PODENts’ thirty-five yard line. ! s | Coach Lane ve his pupils a grill- ck bowler, by e-sided | jng in the intermission and started the the wise one 11 picked : If with three new men in the game. in chances | a kicked over the line. Stanford re- . were o | the compliment from the twenty- ; of Gray Mec- | ot and Friezell caught the . we ers were undoubted- | ball and ran fifteen yards. The Cardinal ray and Cook. | held for three downs and blocked a kick. | bowled, could | anford was soon penalized for an off- . s s0 easl | side play. I Steckle of Nevada carried | it J. C. Moffat bea the pigskin around the enemy's right end £asily score | for a fifteen-yard gain, but his team was Only one r match held for two more downs in the same be played in place in attempting to find a hole in the n Joseph Gray an McLachlan. | left of Stanford’s line. Sprott of Stanford o following practice games were | made a splendid break through the line o |and blocked a place kick. When the e and James Mearns beat | eighty-eight limbs were untangled tha R. Christy_ 21 to 5 | children of the desert had the ball. . Robert Parke bes | The Nevadans kept pounding away at I cNair and A. Wilkie to 14 | the Cardinal right guard and right tackle, | - & enter beat H. K. Tickner, 21 to making good gains three times out of | = Miller beat R. J. McBean, 21 to 1 | four. Stanford got the ball on downs on | .- x R. Eaton and R. Parke beat A. ) her own thirty-yard line and after buck- | ) and J. W. Stoutt, 21 to 13; J. McDonald | irg the center for gains made two more | e - and B. Maguire beat H. K. Tickner | disastrous and inexcusable fumbles. Tt ' Dr. Hamilton and | was Nevada’s ball on downs and a Stan- | Crowe and Dr. | ford man got overanxious on the Arst tia & 2 Duncan and J. | play, with the result that his team was | u e - Overait | Mearns beat Joseph Gray and R..Christy, | pushed back five yards nearer the danger | A ackle—L.. H.M Howard 21 to 9 point. | [ R | (The visitors were on the right side of | nford’s field, twenty yards from the ADVERTISEMENTS. goal line. Friezell tried a place kick, E which almost won the game. The ball 3 under the cross bar and the cardinal got out of danger by making a touch-back and kicking. The game end- ed with a struggle for the ball in the mid- | dle of the field The result was a distinct disappointme to Stanford. The opposing lea‘:: Wx:..nrolt unusually strong and did not have the ability to stop end runs. Stanford's right was extremely weak and the Nevadans made stupendous openings on that side between center and guard, guard ' and tackle and tackle and end. The home team had the best of it from a scientific standpoint and the interfer- ence was splendid. The line players, how- ever, will appear to better advantage if they iearn to get low. The visitors show- ed best in bucking the line. Neither side ADVERTISEMENTS. uiet Talk With Weak Men WANT TO TALK TO MEN WHO HAVE PAINS AND ACHES. who feel run down physically, who realize that the old “fire” and energv which was so evident in youth is absent now; men who can’t stand the amount of exertion they could years ago. I want you—if that means you—to see what I have done for others who were iust as bad off. “That's my introduction. Ii a friend in whom you had confidence presented some one to you and said, “Jack, here’s Brown; he has made good with me, and I trust him.” wouldn't you trust him, too? I have always wanted to talk to weak men, talk to them quietly and in earnest, because I know how they feel znd I know that I can do more for them than any other man living. and I only want a fair chance to prove it. I want ‘to talk to men who feel old and slow; who don’t have that soright- liness, that old courage and “go” that they used to have; those men who al- ways have the feeling as if they had suddenly grown oM; who have lost inter- est in life and its pleasures, There are several kinds of weak men, but every man knows his own symp- toms. He knows that he has lost his “steam,” and my object is not so much to talk of how he has lost it as to show him what human “steam” is and how he can get it back. Professor Loeb, the noted scientist, says that human vitality is based upon electricity. Great athletes and trainers of athletes are now using electricity to develop physical strength and endurance. Doctors who want to cure their patients now apply electricity in nearly all cases showing a want of vitalitn. The day of the stimulating drug is-past. You see they are all coming to it. They wouldn’t recommend my belt— still a few of the good doctors do recommend it when they care more for a man’s health than they do for his dollars—but most of them call me a quack be- cause I pay for my advertising. But they all admit that electricity. will increase strength. That is all I claim for it. That’s all you want ,any way. If you have enough strength you'll never be weak, nor suffer a pain. It used to be considered sensible to take drugs to “wake up” sluggish circulation, to stimulate weak nerves. to make the stomach take food that it was too weak to digest, and then another drug to drive this food through the intestines which were too weak to do their work. Men would take drugs to make them sleep and an eye-opener in the morning to make them feel as if they had rested—all dope. ; It is well known now that nearly every drug contains from one-half to nine-tenths alcohol, and the rest poison. I'm no advocate of the intemperate use of alcohol, but if you have to take it, why can’t you take it without the poison? It is proven that in thirty minutes after a drug is taken the physical vi- tality is five per cent lower than before taking the drug—that is after the stimulation has passed off. N Taking stimulants is like borrowing money for half an hour at five per cent interest—you borrow a_dollar and pay back a dollar five in half an hour. If that scheme kept up would break your bank account it will just as surely break you down physically. Wouldn't it? Nature will stand a good deal of punishment, but she will not stand it always. She gives you a strong body to start with, and demands an counting My method is to, help nature—to add artificial vitality to that you already have. Every one of us has a certain amount, according to our strength, because vitality is strength. When you lose some of this vitality you are weak—a weak man. My appliance pours a fresh supply into your body while you sleep. It generates electricity and pumps that into your nerv Professor Loeb says that it is the basis of vitality. and my cures prove it. Mr. Emile Dore, Ivy, ‘Modoc County, Cal, writes me: *“I have had no indication of my old weakness since I have worn your Belt, and the varicocels is yielding nicely. 1 am well pleased.” Now if you don’t feel right I can cure you with my Electric Belt. If you are full of rheumatic pains I can knock them out. I can pour oil into your joints and limber them up. I have often said that pain and electricity can’t live in the same house, and I prove it every day. Mr. L. J. Barnett of Tillamook, Or., writes: “Your treatment certainly does what no other can, for it has cured me. I cannot praise the Belt too highly, and gladly recommend it in any case ofvital weakn If it were not for the prejudice due to the great number of fakes in the land I would not be able to handle the business that would come to me. The “Free Belt” fraud and the “Free Drug” scheme, which are not free at all, have made every one skeptical, but I know that I have a good thing, and I'll hammer away until you know it. One thing every man ought to know is this: Your body is a machine. It is run by the steam in your blood and break down in any way you are out of steam. . That’s just what I want to give you back. Mr. A. Hubbs of Calistoga, Cal.,, says: ‘“My rheumatism has entirely disappeared, my digestion is perfect, I have galned eight pounds In weight and all the symptoms of weakness are gone, which is remarkable, considering my age.” ac- nerves, When you begin to ! to play ball again. | errors in that I have a cure in every town. Tell me where you live and I will give you the name of a man I've cured. you honestly whether I can cure you or not. business 22 years, and I am the biggest man in it to-day by long odds. and I am growing yet, because I give every riving appliance while vou sleep every night, and feel its giowing warmth pouring into you, and feel your- self taking on a new lease of life with each application, than to clog vour intestines up with a lot of nauseous drugs? y “I am cured of all my former ailments, and you have my heartfelt gratitude for what your treatment Tell me vour trouble and T will tell Now, wouldn’t you rather wear my life-giv Mr. Abraham Spady of Alcatraz, Cal, writes: has done for me.” If you will come and see me I'll explain it to you. courage. Free if you send this ad. Dr. M. C. I'cLaughlin, If you can't call let Office Hours—8 a. m. to If T can’t cure vou I don't want your money. I have been in this n all he pays f Surely! Try me, me send you my book, full of the things a man finds inspiring to strength and 906 MARKET ST., Above Ellis, San Francisco. 8 p. m.; Sundays, 10 to I. RIPPLES MAKE - ELEVEN ERRORS Martinke Piles Up Five and Devereaux Com- mits Three. STANDING OF THE CLUBS W. L. Pet| . L. Pet L. Angeles.113 o 85 f:l: 484 Sac'mento.. 9 85 % 4% San Fran.. 95 the Eighth-street afternoon was a It would be a The perfornfance at baseball lot yesterday sad and distressing one. crime to call it a ball game. Such an ex- hibition would not be allowed in the corn- cob league. The young gentleman who plays third for Oakland made only five and the rest of the team com- ; they played errors, mitted six more, so the can be more easily imagined than de- seribed. Score: Saeramento 10, Oak- land 3. Peter trotted one Cooney out on the glab to toss up a few, and it is to be; | hoped that this gentleman will never try He has had tries each and he gets worse as age creeps upon him. He began the game yesterday by walking three men in the first inning. Then he allowed a hit, and Martinke aldcd the good work by committing three round; so, in all, Senators started off with a lead of four tallies. - After the first period had passed, Peter banished Cooney. Young McKay came to the front and pitched good ball. Of course, he could not win the way the team was playing ball behind him, but he did the best he could. In addition to twirling a steady game, he boosted the leather over the right-field fence in the last spasm for a home run. Mike Fisher's latest, Killilea, went into the box for the first time, and he shone brightly nearly all the time. The Crip- ples did not make a run off his delivery. In the middle of the sixth inning he com- plained of a sore arm. There were a couple of men on the sacks at the time, and as soon as Phil Knell entered the box the Cripples got to him for three runs. In the seventh inning, with two on the sacks and as many gone, Sheehan hit one to the third base line that looked like a double; but, as luck willed it, the un- speakable Martinke grabbed the ball with one mitt and made a play that was a wonder. By winning yesterday's game the Sen- ators jumped into second place, as San Francisco wi beaten at Portland. It seems the native stickers will come home in fifth place. They have not won a game since they left here, and their chances {showed how well it could punt. Both |Oof one victory In the north are exceed- teams were slow in getting into form |ingly slim. The score: when the ball had been declared down.| Oaklahd— Sacramento— The playing was clean throughout. No AB. R. H. P. A. AB. R. H. P. A, one on either side was injured, although | Q'Hra.cf. 5 0 2 0 ( Casey.2b. 1 3 3 all the men were exhausted af Rektdlf, 4 0 0 8 1Hidbd1£. 5§ 1 0 2 1 austed at the end | Mrdck,rf. 5 1 1 3 CMLgnsL 5 1 0 0 0 as a result of the heat. The line-up: Schtz,2b. 4 1 2 4 1 Twsn1b. 5 2 010 0 Stanford. Mtke3b. 4 0 0 1 3Egens.. 5 2 3 1 7 Msrly,1b. 3 1 2 9 0 3hehndb. 4 0 0 2 1 verx,s. 4 0 1 1 1lDoyleif. 4 2 1 3 o Gorton,c. 4 0 1 6 1/Grabm,oc. 5 0 2 8 1 Coony,p. 0 0 0 0 O/Kililleap3 0 0 0 2 McKay,p. 4 1 1 0 8|Keellp..1 1 1 0 0 27 100 Totals 42 10 11 27 15 HITS BY INNINGS. 0003010 210 - Qua 0113010 Stott, M. Hyde... R. H. 000030 0 t’} - L. H.B. 0. F 8140 171510 , Weller Fullback. SUMMARY. Referee—W. Reed. Umpire—Major Col- | Hits—Off Cooney, 1; oft McKay, 10: off Kil- lins. Linesmen—T. McElroy. W. H. Blake | Mg, 8 0ff Knell 4. Seolen Sases "Dovle @) and P. Nathan. Halves—Twenty minutes. Ml (3), Devereaux (3), O'Hara, Gorton, Schwartz, Mike's | PRACTICE GAMES | ENGAGE PLAYERS Tennis Courts Thronged With the Racket Wielders. { - The California Club tennis courts were as well patronized yesterday as is usual on Saturday. In the afternoon it was a dif- ficult matter to get a court. The poorer players had the courts to themselves, as | most of the cracks did not appear. By far the best match was that between | Frank Mitchell and Sidney Salisbury. Each won a set, the score being 63, 3—6. Salisbury is improving steadily and has | one of the fastest drives in the city. He passed Mitchell repeatedly, but the latter stronger on overhead work. | Dr. Lovegrove, the most regular attend- | ant on the club courts, showed how rap- idly he has been improving. He gave Gus Lisser odds of “20” and played a tie with | him. The doctor’s pecullar service was | | hard for his younger opponent to I'Aandlt’.J Harry Haight and Herbert Long played | | four fast sets. Haight won all four, but | | the youngster crowded him and made him | play his best to do so. A. W. Worthington maintained his win- ning streak by taking W. F. Buil into camp. The wiuner has not lost a match | | in several months and seldom loses a set. | In doubles Worthington and Bull joined forces and proved too strong for Dr. No- | ble and R. B. Daggett, whom they beat in | straight sets. The matches played result- ed as follows: | A. W. Worthington beat W. F. Bull, 6 ; Herbert Long beat Melviile Long, 9-7, 6-3, 4-6; Harry McAfee beat A. Wilson, 6-0, 6-1; Robert Drolla tied Alden Ames, 6-4, 0-6, 3-6, 6-4; Frank Mitchell tied Sid- ney Salisbury, 6-3, 3-6; Worthington and Bull beat Dr. Noble and R. B. Daggett, 6-4, Harry Haight beat Herbert Long, 6-4, 6-4, 6-3, 6-4; M. Melrose and McAfee beat L, C, Bozarth and W, Murphy, Dr. Lovegrove tied Gus Lisser (30) 6-0, 6- 6-4; Bozarth beat Murphy, 6-3, 6-4, 9-7; Harry Gabriel and Ray Wolfson tied Drolla and McAfee, 4-6, Townsend, Killilea, Sheehan. Home run—: Devereaux, Messerly 'e on errors—Oakland, 2; base on_called balls—Of Sacramento, 8. Fi 8 off McKay, 2 Cocney, 3; oft Killilea, 1; oft Krpell, 1. Left on bases—Oakland, Sac- ramento, 11. Struck out—By McKay, 3; by Killilea, 2;' by Knell, 3. Passed ball—Goerton. Time of game—2 hours 15 minutes. Umpire— McDonald. —— | LOS ANGELES MEN QUIT. Dillon Ordered Out of the Game, Calls Off His uen. SEATTLE, Oct. 24.—With the score standing 6 to 2 In favor of Seattle in the sixth inning. two men out and two men on bases, Dillion took exception to one of Levy's decisions and protested =0 much that he was ordered out of the game, Dillon then ordered his men off the fleld and the game was declared forfeited to Seattle by 9 to 0. The actual score was: R. H. E. 2100126 10 2 0200002 5 3 Batteries—Barber and Byers; Corbett and Spies. PORTLAND, Oct. 24.—Hodson pitched maz- Umpire—Levy. nificent ball up to the eighth inning to-day, when Portland landed on him hard, scoring three runs. San Francisco made its only run in the first by a bunch of errors by Portland. Score: H. E. d . 00000013x—4% 8 6 g:.v:"‘l"l\nn el 000000001 6 1 Batteries—McFarlan and Shea; Hodson and Zearfoss. Umpire—0’Connell . + CORBETT AGREES TO MEET the day of the fight. Corbett wired that he would start West in the middle of No- HANLON IN DECEHBEB] vember to allow ample time for training. Young Corbett, the boxer, has accepted | B T g R the inevitable and has asreed to meet| Vallejo Club’s Suit Compromised. Eddie Hanlon in this city in December.| VALLEJO, Oct. 24—To-day the mana- The articles were prepared yesterday and | 8ers of the California Baseball League were signed by Hanlon and by Morris|compromised for a moneyed consideration Levy, representing the Hayes Valley Ath-|2 sult’which the Vallejo club brought letic Club. They were mailed at once to|against them for being expeiled from the Corbett. They call for a twenty-round |league several months ago. The Vallejos contest on Tuesday, December 29, the|are anxlous to play the Stocktons for the boxers to weigh 129 pounds at 6 o'clo;-k on ' championship. ADVERTISEMENTS. Marqustte braved the dangers of a long journey anad explored the great Mississippi and the territory through which it flows. Marquette Whisky is finding its way into the homes of the people of the great West and is finding great favor because of its purity. GROMMES & ULLRICH, Distillers, Chicago, Ilinois. W. J. KEARNEY, Representative, 400 Battery St., S. F. Phone Main 536.