The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 5, 1903, Page 8

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8 THE €fAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1903. AUTOMOBILISTS OF THE COAST T NDTED JOCKEYS | WILL RIOE HERE Thompson, Van Dusen and Others Expected to Accept Mounts. | RSP I i “Doc” Kyle's String of Racers Among Those to Perfcrm in Celifornia. of th eting many been on ean »ckey, is in for the state- nounce t he visiting s as a rider sco. He in the Harlem e East this sea- a goc Steve East Higgins from Chicago. been riding a weel e leaders in the jockey an accident, in which he entage would remarkably close to Lawlor in- also Hig- . tless b tk f the win g list Higgins is t B addle again an riding with - erness he displayed earlier. f the present lightwelight ne booked for CLEVER ke e contract held t an of- " s bee He has kes his any other 4 : e 8 made over $100,000 this e d almost as S the eolored - ther w! } g lot booked for < who will not be on hand e Zimmer, will race a sta Orleans a vast ma- = who have put New York tracks ther at San Fran- he 2 tring for the season. Jockey | ” iring from will return with him, after a N Yisit the Far|go0q Eastern season. Mackey Dwyer will . B has gro be one of the stars of the McNaughton and he can x string. das. ¥ % S ral bookmakers have recently been recetvon & Sotten | 86ded to the list who will make the trip brother informing hie | 2CT0SS the continent, and the ring of r ook 1o nis laurely | O2kland will have much the flavor of an im in the saddie | E@stern inclosure when the “Mets” put kid as he calls| p their s . The difference will be st-class jockey, and | (DAt there will not be the little hand r shows promise this | S1AteS, and the high stools that adorn X rn betting rings, to satisfy a law ancisco winter meet- m East next sprin i TR ek NOTES OF THE TURF. them The nominations to the stakes of the AHUMADA IN KYLE'S STRING. |California Jockey Club this year surpass hen “Doc” Kyle ships his good stake | & PrVious years in point of numbers, erformer Ahumada to San Pranese 1 | They will be ready for publication prob- e % - ably on Saturda; and show an increase eral hors, - < 1 is about the bes Van Ness was recent! Smart Set has been some di I season. be taken to the coast. 1 lot Regan will take will be the ear-old Dick Turpin, Others Nevermore, Namtor highly tried yearlings. Jockey J. Jomes a couple draw at Reveille Wins Babylon Handicap at | | good account of himself in the light- | weight division, will do the riding for the | it r:_"’r":'l;"'vc“':"” Among the stables arriving at Oakland ) will be added 1o | 1ast night were those of Johnny Schorr, e M. Rogers and D. 8. Fountain, The on the same|latter horseman will be deprived of the o= to have at | Services of Jockey Adkins the coming to race. Toth | Season, as he recently disposed of the ve stake per- | blonde rider’s contract to Tichenor and in fact there | ©f Chicago at the reported price of . or the coast with. | Frank Phillips, looking hale and hearty, even to|1s back from Chicago, after a prosperous most part | Season. There won't be many workouts other hand | miss Frank these mornings from now on booked for | to the opening of racing. well de.| James Scanlan, the energetic press 4 seconds pro- | agent of the California Jockey Club, is hy of .,,,,;i,a.,,.d”,,n]a recent arrival from New York. “Jim- -0ld fixtures my” says O'Neil, Higgins, Michaels, ) has only met with | Bullman, Burns, Redfern and the pick ring the metropolitan | of the lesser lights will be seen in the try at San Francisco. | saddle at Oakland and Ingleside. the services of Arthur Redfern, and as | Yaeger will race his horses here, Red- He has | fern’s efforts will not be confined entirely g somewhat recently, how- | to the Los Angeles game, as has been are to be released as soon as arrange- ments can be made for thelr return to who has been giving a | their homes. ANNOUNGE DATE OF RICH STAKE John Grace Cup to Be Run fcr Early in Dec mber. It Is Expected to Reach a Vaiue cf Nearly $4000 - John Grace challenge hounds was announced Union Coursing Park n Castle. The stake, which is the richest coursing e t in America, will be run on Decembs 5 and 6. It will be limited t s, with an rance fea of § 1 amount of purse will be With the f the Waterloo meeting at Okla- the crack kennels of the Mid- ome to this coast for the and some lively competi- cup st last ake was drawn for this The grey- y-four-dog open s Pythian le ntries—Brilliancy ve s. Tralee Boy; Gun- Reckless Acrobat Apache vs. Tricksy; Minnie Horgan vs. Red Rock; Cubanola on ve. The Referee; Ant Temple; Blue Craig vs. SIr i vs. Rich Argosy: Tone Anchor vs. Rock and McHenry; Charter Mem- Johnny Rex vz. Game ve. Rapid Water; empronius va. Belle : Mike Rice Thelma America: iarrison: Bonnie Pasha vs. White | : Luxury vs. Gold Ore; Rural Artist vs, air Glen e e RACES IN THE EAST. New York—Latonia Results. | YORK, Nov. 4.—Aqueduct results: ace, six and a half furlopgs—Athlana d Orange second, Counterpoise 1:22. six , Aznes NEW won, Time, furlongs—Grenade Breslan third. one mile and a furlong, selling— won, Ethics second, Wild Pirate Babylon handi- second. Time, furlongs, Dimple “selling—Demurrer_won, Oclawaha third. Time, second, one mile, handicap—Tribes Hill s2cond, Mabel Richardson third race. e L ATI Nov. 4.—Latonia results: rst race, six furlongs—Fair Lady Anna | Rossmond eecond, Amorous third. Time, five furlongs—Oneiss _won, Bugle Horn third. Time, one mile—Antolee won, Nearest adee third’ Time, 1:456% steeplechase, short course—Cey- Car second, Faraday Jr. third five and a half furlongs—Domino Eleata second, Geranium third one mile and a quarter—Never- Curate second, Googoo third. Time, table Sandy hton delayed his depart- Francisco, He is gathering | »iting pool selling. f more than 400 over last season, Plunger Joe Yaeger has first call on ntimated, ————— All political prisoners in Cape Colony ADVERTISEMENTS. ALWAYS TIRED To be tired out from hard work or bodily exercise is natural and rest is the remedy, but \\ | 1 3 physical exer- tion and a tired, never-rested feeling—a weari- natural and shows z there is an exhaustjon without mess without work that is un: some serious disorder is threatening th that “‘Always-tired, never-rested condif lation. Unless the body is nourished with nervous force, the mus- vousness, SSS: i, ch causes of s impure blood and bad circu- rich, pure blood there is lack of e health. One of the ion”’ L pr-si e weak, the di- Porm{mnmlmmnmnldm A gestion impaired, and Sousiny who had been bencnied by 8 B k2 !Zz general disorder occurs Somiea & 58 "0l Syevind e, £ bebrily 552 throughout the system. thoroughly good biood tomc - yiool the need'of & Debility, insomnia, ner- uw.xmn.,cumu.,'gou. e 5 s indi?stmn! dyspepsia, loss of appetite, strength and energy, and the hundreds of little ailments veo(tmhaveueduedixealyto:hudeon- dition of the blood and circulation, and Most Brilliant Spectacle of Its Kind Ever ' Seen in the West. S oy 5 i + | k . | | | | . : | , | ‘ | i . f 113 ”» 4 | Ham” lberg Pitches Wonderful Ball|| i After the First Inning. ONE OF THE CARS wHICH AT INGLESIDE. STANDING OF THE» CLUBS, | :‘av\!:"dndmil(‘)!TnGnr:o“ 2‘ T\ml“()l; 0::?}241 | i - w. W. L. Pet e ik % 5 :‘ffii‘fi‘"fi::\i 83 412 g'%:r':‘i:gn 96 94 477 | fapIB D9 SMUT OvE Hll:e ;‘:‘2“3}! U?ldic;’r:x&?lk a:l:;?]’: HE Portland ball tossers, undfl'l the chaperonage of Mr. “Bones” E their new adviser, could not win yesterday at Recrea- tion Park. In the first place, their bats did not have power enough to knock the offerings of Ham Tberg far enough to get past the mitts of the ever-waliting flelders. For all that, the errors of Un- cle's dilapidated gathering nearly proved fatal, and were it not for a lucky hit it | would have been all over with them. | Score, 4 to 3 | The field was in bad condition after the | heavy rain of the night before and it was | with difficulty the fielders traveled over | the ground. With this handicap six fast double plays were pulled off, four by the visitors and two by the natives. All of | these helped to keep runs away from the rubber, especially for the Portlanders. . | Ham Iberg was in great form through- | out. It was none of his business if the | Portlands did make a bunch of three runs and all in the first inning. He had them | under the spell of his magic slow float- ers in every round, but the errors piled up by the flelders were the salvation of McFarlan pitched a good game, but he was slapped about in a real saucy man- ner part of the time. He had compara- tively good backing up, Uncle's followers making most of their runs by hitting the ball squarely when hits were the things that were nseded most of all. The score San Francisco— | Portland— AB.R. H. P. A, AB. R. H. P. A. S 4 11 2 4VBurnctd 0 6 1 0 rf4 0 1 1 O{Andsn2b4 0 0 4 3| b. 4 1 2 0 ¢/Nadeulf 3 1 1 3 0/ Krugef. 5 1 2 4 OFremnib3 1 114 2| Lynchif. 4 0 1 3 oBlake,rt. 4 1 0 0 0, Pabst,1b 3 0 2 11 0|Frnei b3 0 1 0 3 Delms, 4 01 2 2Holgwh,s3 0 1 3 8| Zearfos,c 0 0 4 3Shea,c 3002 2 Tberg.p 10 0 iMFarinp3 0 0 0 1 Totals 34 4 10 27 16 Totals 30 3 4 27 19 RUNS AND HITS BY INNINGS. San Francisco ..2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0,0— 4 Base hits — 3 00120 010 Portland 0 00000 0-3 Base hits . 10100 0-4| SUMMARY, PBrrors—Irwin, Lynch. Anderson, Zearfoss, Nadeau, Pabst Sacrifice hit—Meany. First base on errors—San Francisco 2, Portland 2. First base on called balls—Off 'Iberg 2, oft McFarlan 3. Left on bases—San Francisco 8. Struck out—By Iberg 1. by McFarlan 2. Hit by pitcher. Pabst, Zearfoss. Double plays— McFarlan to Holllngsworth to Freeman; Fran- cis to Andersor to Freeman; Zearfoss to Shay to Zearfoss; Irwin to Deimas to Pabst: Free. man to Hollingsworth to Freeman: Freeman to Hollingsworth. Time of game—1:35, Um- pire—Levy, e T B i SCORES TWO HOME RUNS. Cravath Accomplishes the Unusual Feat on Los Angeles Diamond. LOS ANGELES, Nov. 4.—Oakland and Los Angeles opened.to-day in the last period of the baseball season. Los An- gelés won by better fielding and batting by the score of 7 to 2. ine flelding of the home team was perfect, while only one error marred the record of the vis- itors. Gray was effective throughout the game, but Cooper nad a period of weak- ness in the seventh, when the locals bat- ted out six runs. Cravath accomplished the extraordinary feat of batting the ball over the fence twice for home runs. Ray- mond and Eager made their first appear- ance or the home grounds and both cap- tured the fans by their splendid work. Raymond did some particularly spectacu- lar fielding at short and was on one end of a snappy double play. Score: Los Angek Oakland— . R.H. P. AB.R.H.P.A. Hoy,cf.. 2 1 0 1 0lOHaract3 0 1 1.0 Wheir,2b 3 1 1 2 2{Mskmns 4 0 0 1 3 Smith3b 4 1 2 0 1|Murdkecf 4 0 2 8 0 Dillon,1b 4 0 113 1[Schwz2b4 1 1 2 4 Crayth,rf 4 2 3 1 O/Krugrif 4 0 3 0 0 Raymds 4 0 0 3 4/ Msriv,1b 4 0 016 1 Ross, 1f.. 3 1 1 2 O/Devrx3b 2 0 0 0 4 0 2 4 4lGorton,c3 1 1 1 0 110 0003 Sacramento Wins a Fast, Exciting Game on the Home Grounds. SACRAMENTO, Nov. 4.—Accorded per- fect support by the men behind him, Bob- by Keefe, the youngest pitcher in the California league, went up against the veteran, Jay Hughes, to-day and the re- sult was a shutout for the Seattle team. The game was one of the best and fast- est of the season. It was a game In which it was easily to be discerned that both teams were out for blood and the second place. As a pitcher's contest, hon- ors were about even, although there was perhaps a trifie more polish on the de- livery of Hughes. His team mates could not hit Keefe when hits were needed and the Senators gained a victory. Score: Sacramento— Seattle— AB. R. H. P.A, AB. R. H. P.A 11 1 2Lum'y,ct 4 0 0 0 1 1 4 OMohler,2b3 0 5 McLau,rf 4 0 1 4 O/Bmith, rf 4 1 0 Doyle, ct 4 0 1 3 1/Bras'rlb 4 0 3 Tow'd,1b 3 0 0 & 0Zinssar,lt 4 0 0 fh'han,3b2 0 1 0 1/Jans'g,3b 4 0 1 Graham,c2 0 0 7 0Dolan, ss3 0 2 togan, ss 4 0 O 0 3 Byers, c. 4 O 1 Keefe, p 3 1 0 0 1 Hughesp 2 0 4 Totals.29 3 5 27 RUNS AND HITS Sacramento . 2 Bese hits 3 Seattle .. o Base hits.. 1 ¢ SUMMARY. Stolen base—Mohler. Errors—Jansing (2), Brashear. Two-base hits—Hlldebrand, Jansing, Dolan. Sacrifice hits—Graham, Hildebrand, Sheehan (2). First base on errors—Sacramento 3. First base on called balls—Off Keefe, 2; off Hughes, 4. Left on bases—Sacramento 8, Se- attle 8. Struck out—By Keefe, 4; by Hughes, 3. HIit by pitched ball—Keefe, Mohler. Dou- ble plays—Brashear (unassisted); Doyle to Graham. Wild pitch—Keefe. Time of game —One hour and forty-five minutes. Umpires— Sample and Knell. —_—e—e—————— SPECIMEN OF COPPER ORE TO BE SENT TO ST. LOUIS | Piece Weighing Nearly One Thou- sand Pounds Will Be Exhibited by Shasta County. REDDING, Nov. 4—The Mountain Cop- per Company will send to St. Louis what will undoubtedly be the largest and rich- est single plece of copper ore sent to the exposition from this State. The chunk weighs almost 1000 pounds. It was taken from the mine Tuesday and shipped to Keswick Thursday. It shows native cop- per in large quantities and mining men who have seen It state that it is the finest specimen ever produced in California. A large iron stand is now being made on which the specimen will be set. It will be shipped in a few days to the Califor- nia World’s Fair Commission at San Francisco. Many smaller pleces of cop- per ore will be shipped with the piece and this exhibit will occupy a corner in the mineral exhibit from California. UNITED PRESBYTERIANS MEET IN ANNUAL SESSION Delegates From Washington, Oregon * and Idaho Are Holding Con- ference at Whatcom. WHATCOM, Wash., Nov. 4—The an- nual synod of the Columbia conference of the United Presbyterian Church, com- prising the States of Washington, Oregon -and Idaho, commenced its work here to- day. Rev. M. E. Dunn of Spokane was chosen moderator and Rev. J. O. Ashen- hurst of Simnasho, Or., clerk. The com- mission appointed at the last synod to devise ways and means for maintaining the synodical school at Waitsburg, Or., reported that the school had been en- dowed to the extent of $20,000 by Miss Robertson, its former principal, who re- cently inherited a fortune. The session will be continued to-mor- row. ———————— Jury Fixes the Penalty at Death. EVERETT, Wash., Nov. 4—Angus Mc- Phall, a saloon-keeper, who killed a busi- ness rival last May, was to-day convicted of murder in the first degree, the jury fix- ing hanging as the penalty for the crime. McPhail will appeal. Hunters and Amnglers. Soortsmen’s specia train for Tomales Bay, Point Reyes, Camp or leaves at 7 p. m. Sunday evening. round trip. Tickets North Shore office, 626 Market street, or at SR R 1l | hard as a billiard table. luminated automobiles, under the ausplces of the Automobile Club of California, will start from the rendezvous at the corner of Van Ness and Golden Gate avenues. The self-propelled vehicles will proceed down Van Ness avenue to Market street, to Montgomery, to Bush, to Kearny, to Market, and thence to the point of start- | ing. More than one hundred automobiles | Will be in line, the local vehicles being Jjoined by the contingents from Oakland, Alameda, Berkeley, San Jose, Los An- geles and other cities. Silver cups of the value of $100, $50 and 325 are offered for the three most handsomely and tastefully decorated automobiles. The local gar- ages will stable free of charge the ma- chines that join the parade from other cities. Tickets of admission to the automobile races on the Ingleside track on Friday and Saturday will be on sale at Sherman & Clay’s on the mornings of those two days. A special train will leave Third and Townsend streets at 12:30 p. m. on both days for the race track. Additional elec- tric_cars will be put on the Ingleside line on Friday and Saturday. The Ingleside track has been most care- fully prepared for the races and is sald to be in superb condition, as smooth and All the condi- tions will be favorable to making fast time, and it is confidently believed that many records will be broken. 3 Barney Oldfield, the most sensational motorist in America, is due this morning from Denver, where he performed some record-breaking feats on the track. A novelty race has been added to the programme as already published. Passen- ger motor cars will be ready at the start- ing line and at the signal the passengers will jump into the cars, which will race over a distance of two miles. A representative entry list has been re- cefved for the various events. The en- tries for to-morrow’s events follow: Two miles, gasoline cars only 6% horse- power and under—Buckboard, W. H. Kellogg: Rambler, F. C. Keck; Oldsmébile, Pioneer Au tomobile’ Company; Rambler, National Auto. mobile Company. Five miles, cars weighing 1200 pounds and under—Buckboard, W. H. Kellogg; Franklin, George E. Middieton; St. Louls, Pacific Mo tor Car Compahy; Cadillac, O. D. McNabb; White, White Sewing Machine Company; Ram- bler, National Automobile Company; Frank- lin, C. Ford and F. A. Jacobs. Five-mile Handicap for motorcycles—Ram- | bler, Thomas A. White; Rambler, A. H. Samp- Indian, Charles L. . E. M. Coffin: California, Leavitt Hercuies, California_Motor Company California, Leavitt & Bill; California, Leavitt & Bill; California, Leavitt & Bill. Five miles, for gasoline cars only 24 horse- power and under—Franklin, George E. Middle- ton; Peerless, J. L. Easiland; Toledo, Na« tlonal Automobile Company; Franklin, B, C. Ford and F. A. Jacobs. Five miles, for cars 1800 pounds and under— St. Louls, Pacific Motor Car Company; White, ite Sewing Machine Company; White, White Sewing Machine Company; Mors, George Whittell Jr.; Franklin, E. C. Ford and F. A, Jacobs; Winton, Barney Oldfleld. Five miles, open event for cars irrespective of power or welght; cars must be legitimately owned in_California—White, F. A. Garbutt White, White Sewing Machine Company; Mors, George Whittell Jr.; Toledo, National Auto: mobile Company; Franklin, E, C. Ford and F. A, Jacobs. Teri-mile race, open, for cars irrespective of power or welght—White, White Sewing Ma- chine Company; White, White Sewing Machine Company; Mors, George Whittell Jr.; Toledo, National 'Automobile Company; Franklin, E. C. Ford and F. A. Jacobs; Winton, Willlam Graham, Five-mile handicap. open to all cars that have taken part in any of the previous events and that are legitimately owned in Califor- nia—Buckboard. W. H, Kellogg: Rambler, F. C. Keck; Franklin. George E. Middleto Lows_ Pacific Motor Car Company; Oldsmo bile—Ploneer Automobile Company: White, White Sewing Machine Company; Cadillac, O. D, McNabb; White, White Sewing Machine Company: Peerless, J. L. Eastland; Mors, George Whittell Jr.; Rambler, National Auto- mobile Company; Toledo, National Automobite Company; Franklin, E. C. Ford and F. A. "'sp.o(mh-' 1 race for cars carrying passengers— al race White, J. D. Spreckels; White, Leon Roos; White, F. A Hyde; White, W. F. Gorham: White, C. H Geldert, —————— American Greyhound Derby. * OKLAHOMA, Okla., Nov. 4—In the de- ciding course for the American Coursing Derby to-day Tattle B, owned by G. H. MacDougal of Butte, Mont., beat Com- stock, also a Montana greyhound. The next events of the meet will be held on Saturday and Sunday, when the all-age akes will be run, —————— Justin McCarthy has just passed his seventy-second birthday. He has appar- ently abandoned novel writing and is de- voting himself exclusively to history. o+ O PARADE IN GAYLY DECORATED CARS GOAST FANCIER HIGHLY HONORED Charles K Harley's Fox Terriers Win Many Prizes. LA Prove the Best in the Great Show at Mad'son £quare r | | Garden. RESTASA RN Private advices received from New York Harley, master most noted | , carried off | fn that | indicate that Charles K. of Wandee Kennels and the fox terrier fancier of this cit the principal honors yesterday class at the Ladies’ Kennel Association | show in Madison Square Garden. i | Raby Coastguard, renamed Coastguard, won in all the which he was entered and also in the win- ners’ class. This stamps him as the best terrier in the show. ‘Wandee Manilla won the reserve class for terriers of her sex. Wandee Seabreeze was third in the limit and open classes. Mr. Harley also won the special prize for the best kennel of wire-haired fox terriers. The terrier class was the larg- | est in the show, which is one of the most classes representative held in this country. ° Mrs. Harley’s great bulldog. Ivel Da- mon, was third in the limit and open classes in an entry of 150. The class was judged by Richard Croker Jr. in the ab- | sence of the English officlal who had been invited to act, but who was taken {ll and did not come to America —_——— FIGHT FOR THE CONTROL | OF A MINING COMPANY | Two Sets of Directors Are Trying to Manage the Affairs of the Three Peaks. REDDING, Nov. 4—Two sets of stock- holders are now in organized opposition in the Three Peaks Gold Mining Com- pany. There are two presidents of the company and also two sets of directors. One office of the company is located in St. Louis and the other in Redding. The Three Peaks Company was to have held | a meeting of stockholders last Tuesday, but Judge Rickel of St. Louis, who holds proxies representing 515,000 shares held by Eastern people, was refused admittance to the meeting because he was not a stockholder, On Thursday the new com- pany was formed. Rickel is the tempo- rary president of the new company and Judge Primm of Redding is the president of the old company. President Primm | and his followers are happy, as they hold the books and records. There promises to be interesting developments. —_———— Trial of Ross-Makin Suit Be!umed.‘ SAN RAFAEL, Nov. 4—The Ross-Ma- | kin suit was resumed to-day In the Su- perior Court of Marin County, after hav—‘ ing been postponed for more than two | months. Judge Lawlor of San Fran- cisco presided. Robert Makin, the| vouthful plaintiff in the litigation, was on the stand and testified as to his| grandmother’s affection for him. The pa- pers whereby young Makin was adopted by Mrs. Ross, the grandmother, were in- troduced and placed in evidence. The case will be taken up again to-morrow morning. —_—— Asphyxiated in a Wine Cellar. NAPA, Nov. 4—Coroner R. M. Kyser went to Calistoga this morning to Inves- tigate the death of Antone Rebbattaro, whose body was found on the edge of a wine tank. Rebbattaro was under the in- fluence of liquor Tuesday night and went to the tank, which was filled almost to the brim with pomace. He was trying to get through the pomace to the wine when the fumes overcame him and he was asphyx- iated. ——————— BUTTE, Mont.. No —A Miner special from Dillon, Mont.; says that Willlam H. Dudley was Instantly killed in the Indlan Queen mine_to-daf by a fall of rock. BERGER'S MPPEAL WILL BE HEARD His Amateur Standing May Be Restored by Officials. Boxing Promoter Is Cited to Appear Before the Board. —_— The case of Sam Berger, the crack heavyweight boxer of the Olympic Athletic Club, who w ofessionalized by the Amateur Athletic Union last year, will come up for a rehearing on the 16th inst, The amateur meeting of the union will be held in New York on that day, and Berger's case will be one of the most important to be considered, He was made a professional from boxing with Bob Fitzsimmons last year in the latter's play, the “Honest Blacksmith.” Berger claimed he was employed as an tor ad also that he would never have accepted the position had not the representative of the union on this coast toid him he was within their rules. The Olympic Club officials and those of the Pacific Athletic Associa have joined in asking that he be restored to standing as an amateur. L. R. Sharp and W. A. Woods, both Californians, now in New York, will rep- resent the Pacific Athletic Association at the New York meeting. They were ap- pointed last night at a meeting of the association held in the Emma Spreckels building. The Gaelic Association was granted a sanction to hold an athletic meeting at Ingleside track on Thanksgiving day. Manager Morris Levy of the Hayes Val- ley Athletic Club was cited to appear at the next meeting of the Pacific Athletic Association to explain why he permitted a suspended boxer to compete at one of his boxing tournaments, The association will promote a night of boxing on the 13th inst, to raise funds for the Olympian games meeting. A tryout will be held the first Saturday in May of next year to complete the list of men who will be sent to the Olympian games at St. Louts. The full Olympian games programme will be given, the dis- tances being measured by the metric sys- tem, as at St. Louis. —_——— RELIANCE CLUB MATCHES HERRERA AND CORDELL Likely Men Are to Be Brought To- gether in a Fifteen Round Contest. OAKLAND, Nov. 4—Aurelioc Herrera and Jack Cordell have been matched for a fifteen-round contest before Reli- ance Athletic Club on the g of November 17. Herrera, who Is at Butte has been wired transportation and w leave for the coast at once. Cordell fig! as a member of the Hayes Valley letic Club. Matchmaker George Mahone of the Rellance Club feels confident tha in view of the records of these men he can guarantee that a first-class contest will be given. —_——— Jeffries Refuses to Fight McVey. NEW YORK, Nov. 4—Efforts are being made to have Jim Jeffries fight in San Francisco before the summer comes again. Joe Egan, Jeffries’ secretary, ceived a dispatch to-day from the Colma Athletic Club offering a purse of 320,000 for a twenty-round bout between Jeffries and Sam McVey, the big California negro. Jeffries, without much hesitation, said he would not consider it. “I have made up my mind never to fight a negro again as long as there are white men the fleld,” he said. “Then again, McVe: is not to be regarded as a championship possibility. His last fight resulted in de- feat by Jack Johnson. The latter is a little fellow compared to McVey, so I don’t see where the latter figures at all.”™ You About and ard said chine. want to give you back. disappeared, my digestion is perfect. considering my age.” I have a cure in every you the name of & man I've you or not. If I can’t cure you I Now, wouldn't you rather wear clog your intestines up with a lot of former ailments, and you have m. treatment has done for me.” If you will come and see me I'l] strength and courage. Free if you Men, | Want to Talk to I want to talk to men who have pains ly, who realize that the old “fire” and energy which was so evident in youth is absent now; amount of exertion they could years ago. to see what I have done for others who were just as bad off. duction. confidence made good with me, and I trust him,™ wouldn’t you trust him, too? Now, if you don’t feel right, I can cure you with my Electric Belt. are full*of rheumatic pains, I can knock them out. joints and limber them up. I have oiten jdn the same house, and I prove it every ay. Mr. L. J. Barnett of Tillamook, Or., writes: what no other can, for it has cured me. I cannot praise the Belt too highly, gladly recommend it in any case of vital ‘weakness."” 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 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: It is run by the steam in your blood and nerves Whe gin to break down in any way you are out of steam. That's just what [ Mr. A. Hubbs of Calistoga, Cal., says: weight and all the symptoms of weakness are gone, which is remarkable, town. Tell me where you live and I will give cured. Tell me yon;ltmuble and I will tell you honestly whether I can cure f don’t want your money. in this 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 man all he pays for. sleep every night, and feel its glowing warmth pouring into you, and fegl yourself taking on a new lease of life with each application. than to Mr. Abraham Spady of Aleatraz, Cal. writes: y heartfelt gratitude for what your let me send you my book. full of the things a man finds Dr. M. C. McLaughlin, ADVERTISEMENTS. 09000000000002008000000 This Belt. aches, who feel run down physical- men who can’t stand the I want you—if that means you— : . That’s my intro- If a friend in whom you had resented some one to you he has said, “Jack, here’s Brown; If you can pour oil into your that pain and electricity can't live “Your treatment certainly does and Your body is a ma- When you be- “My rheumatism has entirely I have gained eight pounds in I have been my life-giving appliance while you nauseous drugs? Surely! Try me. “I am cured of all my If you can't call inspiring to explain it to you. A send this ad. 908 Market St., aaiove Ellis, ) «

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