The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 8, 1903, Page 31

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SAN FRA THE NCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 8. 1903. SLUE AND GOLD FOOTBALL ELEVEN GOES DOWN TO DEFEAT + k) CLUB MEN California Is Much Stronger Than Visitors, but Loses on an Old Trick. Multnomah Team | Loses Great Game. —— i *D UNIVERSITY, Nov. 1. | | d duplicated C: | HE rooters with the banncrs cf ” # d I blue and gold 1 hardly realiz: large rds had happened as the rooters N ns of biv white | ere’ll CARDINAL ME after th ternoon be- the gridiron 1l around. surprise S ers th Ives had rsit y | me ed ct a victory. When the s1 s st | whis the end of the last ¥ 1 six points and Califor- ns were ell themselves most of it the rooters ionship con- A E d had tied n the part of as to the outcome the California team pponents for thirty- wutes of play. The ex- . was in the old. The LTIES. | TR OSE ON PENA seemed slippery to kick although ls. Neither the linemen rules of the game Califor: had at least four tc Necvadans played a hard and without either the weight r opponents le on the st et i center before California held for hed the ball down the | o vards of the enemy's took a brace and soon forced to art downs. after sect The Blue Gold easily advanced the pigskin | the 2-yard line, where Overall i place kick for goal ell punted back after Nevada had two ineffectuas attempts to find a the 1 Forse and Whip- | nt through tac , guard and cen- from four to seven yard gains. rnia had the pigskin on Ne- 1 line some one held as the | »ed and the visitors were ards from the danger point. Over- | ards on a fake kick and a whose 1 then forced. The ball went for by t and Friesell sent it back to the cen- Thar Travis, a clerk in ter from the rd line. amed to succeed Califo! rapid gains again, but THE OUTCROPPING SHIN DISEASES ™ ourcioeen And while not always painful are aggravating beyond expression. With few exceptions they are worse in spring and summer when the system begins tothawout and the skin ; : : I suffered with Eczema of t is reacting and making and face for over 8 yoar, it wuh:otz':’x‘g; extra efforts to throw off annoying and painful but very un- the poisons that ha;e :éx:-::‘a. -nla I du:kod to go out in the x ing the triedatloast a dozensoapsand salvs a.cru'n'ulelgid d‘é:,lg a and became very ‘much discouraged winter. en boi sand nn:fil I .r:-:l in v.hempn»or ot’ tshss oures 2 8 hrou, e use . 8. 8. pimples, rashes an B2 Tittie faith &t first but determined eruptions of every con- i £ to give it & month’s fair trial at least. I ceivable kind make am pleased to state that I soon noticed a : slight im nt, sufficient to decid their appearance, and me to keep it ul:‘ ¥ the use of six bottlos Ty skin Eczema andTetter—the was as smooth and soft as a baby’ 'his was a year sgo and I have never had any trouble since. discases —Nettlerash, 2,05, 7¢n 5t., Mizneapoits, 3 xa::nvg i Poison Oak and Ivy, 3 ! pe twin terrors of skin and such other skin troubles as usually remain quiet during cold weather, break out afresh to torment and distract by their fearful buming, itching and enrich the blood, reinforce and tone up the gen- eral system and stimulate the sluggish circulation, thus warding off the diseases common to spring and remains smooth and soft and free of all disfiguring eruptions. . Send for our free book on diseases of the skin and write us if you desire medical advice or agy special information. This will cost you nothing. ~ and stinging. A course of S. S. S. now will purify S S S summer. The skin, with good blood to nourish it, THE SWIFT SPEGIFIG CG.; ATLANTA, GA. ate universities | | | | AN EXCITING MOMENT IN THE NEVADA-CALIFORNIA GAME AT BERK ¥ AND THE CE FOOTBALL NTRAL FIGURE IN THE MOST SATIONAL PLAY OF THE DAY. | ' the Sagebr got the ball on a kick. | near the center of the field. After one play Nevada was set back 2 | ARE NOT DISHEARTENED. | d- Friesell was stand- 1 he punted. _The game was a great disappointment the blue and gold, but every rooter | bal The went outside near the 25-yard member of the team is confi- line. The Blue and Gold could easily have ord will go down to defeat next | r a touch- Many seemed to think it would | tin Overall was for California to be beaten | A d_goal, when as it will stimulate the week's | lines vélled “time,” Coaches Whipple and Hall | got into formation ! they thought the home eleven | blown i good a game yesterday as any | the half | this season. Others why ends and h Ne- | Stanford might not turn a trick as well | to- Snedigar, who comparatively weak Nevada Imost without in- Overall sald: then sent close | ication of uur stre nd for 10 yards | W ST T e | s penali out of ten. We shail from her | e the harder for this. Wait untll | urday and see what we will do tg | ed to get on the 's coach and a fam- | w o ous Michigan end, in comparing the Stan- | o] ford and California teams, said: | mmediately punted { I think the ens are evenly matehed. | the ball was down near the | Callfornia h ® ilronger lne_in. sensral | although the ends are rather weak. Stantord | : | has ‘much ‘the better of It in the bernor | where Nevada worked the old | She wili gain around the ends while Coliternis | Jt Michigan trick. The quar- | will advance it through the line, | the nd while nine of | particuiarly o side. Overall, T un ushers piled into California’s | oo b e left tackle the ball was given to I Steckle, hinic fornia sapasts. 105 who tan tackle without . We have defeated | molestation, The Nevadan dodged Stearns | California and tled Stanford, and T think. we | and came down th like a comet, | have a team better than either of them. 1 | apd_camo down th ke X oomets | wish we were to meet Stanford again, as we R Aridi e o sironger than when we'played her | e s hd when he dropped on the ground be the gos Nevada. to 10 yards aw ooters from the institution rder were frer with en- | » bleachers were quiet as | | s all were droop- 4 the goal, although | More. i pparen d with delight, while | Mint. S ‘his comrades gyrated back toward the | pvhiaPie Snediear. -Friesell | J. Hart | Head Halves—20 | center of the gridiron CALIFORNIA SCORES. Referee—Hamilton. Umplire linesman and timekeep N mock. 008, California kicked to Friesell, who got | Minutes. Score—Nevada, 6: California, 2. back 10 var gte M. was Znjed g Rain Prevents Sacramento Game. kle then went between ‘e and end for the ground. I the Blue and Gold left tac 7 yards. The next plunge resulted in a Joss and Friesell kicked. California buck- ed several times and kicked back, SACRAMENTO, Nov. 7.—The Sacramen- to-Seattle game was postponed on account of rain. | vania scored one touc | ana | to | out once losing 1t. A Mr. Roy Burks, McKittricks, Cal., where Penn:ylvania lost ground on a felt new life in every part of my bod - | tumble. C. Marshall trled a goal from able to do heavy work without ti the field. It was an easy chance, but a way could the money bring me so much plea | gave the crimson ! again got her line-bucking men in opera- last touchdown. C. Marshall missed an remedy which is as simple, as easy to 1 easy goal Reynolds and Bennett !T"'V R e s oach mibe gdis. The. Mg o try it now. Act this minute. Such a matter ot Rt Haztard It's as good for women as for men. Worn ket w1t Slotiies trouble. You feel the gentle, glowing hez s s no burning, as in old-style belts. Call | McCabe. ... Parkinson Send for my beautiful book, full of thi ase A. Macghall to be a strong man. I send it sealed free Metzger (C.)... R Bowditch, Montgomery & 906 M.\RKF"‘ STREET “ATBON. ....-.......Quarter...C. Marshall (C.) I >4 3 S e i el | 8 Dr. M. C. McLavghlin, * e ¥eShcaco. | Drake Right haif. Smith... . Fuliback ‘Touchdown! Schoelkohf, Goodhue, | Smith, Plekarsk! Coals from own-—Marshall (C.), 2 Referes—W. H. Edwards, Princeton. Um- - pire—Matthew McClung, Lehigh Lines 3 3 = {E. A. Whiting, Cornell. Time of halv nated as umpire and referee. The follow- | de minutes each. b g ing was the line-up of the two team | ight ADVERTISEMENTS. HARVARD DEFEATS Crimson an Easily Won Victory. ADELPHIA, Nov. 7.—Harvard cated the University of Penn- to-day in their annual to 10. Pennsyl- own In the first the while Harvard scored twice In the opening half and once I the final half. Penn one in second, Wi score all the outplayed at does not show marked superiority of the Harvard eleven. Only twice during the entire game were the Cuakers able to hold the crimson eleve Pennsylvania's defense e from any cau e for three mo man of his age I w to make a H by nature g and sturdy. he is; but the man who has b make 2s good as ke ever was. I can give back to any man ratura. I can stop all dra A man who is nervou: s more tired than when he w 1 to broed over imaginary kle hard problems, | t supplies. torce of vita was w while the offense was smashed the heavy crimson forwards ¥s would fairly get under minating the fumbles of Mar- the red and blue wouid never have within striking distance of the 1 al. while the latter's total would have been at leas autiful day for foctball and in the d stands was wind from the Harvard won cules of a man who was never that t hos t goal r b e west & electricity. When you lose that by a her back. Pen a it and will ‘cure off and on the first line up Le Jackson, Vi , ne sent the bal! far over the heads heart warm Who weirs pinvice eful to you. Alr paims. 1 wish you Letters like that tell a story wh v ure a beacon light less doctoring. I ge My Belt has a wonderful i ylvania. Pennsylvania nothing and Reynolds kicked /lvania's forty-five-yard Iine. From this point the Cambridge boys car- ried the ball over for a touchdown with- Harvard then secured 1 on her thirty- rd line and from this point the Quakers were pushed down the line to their forty-five-yard lins, could letter twenty years to perfecting it has failed are my best arguments smal failure. Give me a man with pains in his t Reynolds’ high kick was carried back by the wind and It was joints, “come-and-go” paths in his shou h card’s ball on Pennsylvania's sixty- hip, Lumbago, Rheumatism, or any ache or pa & saih s e aee e oil of life into his aching body and drive out eve can exist where my belt is worn. Mr. J. L. Baird of Orland, Cal., writes October and T would not take $100 for my belt if I could not on earth for a lame back come every day from everywhere. Ther country which has not cured by Dr. Mc Now, what does this mean to you, dear reader ought to be, can vou ask any better proof tc Quakers were swept back to their goal, Nichols scoring a_ touchdown. In the second half an exchange of punts the ball on Pennsyl- line and Harvard a town or lectric Be! s not vania's forty-five-yard tion, Goodhue being shoved over for their Knowlton Zigler-Torrey...... ichols, | Berkeley—Steel, left end; Solins | tzckle: K left guard; Peck, Witcher, right guard; Shues BERKELEY ELEVEN WINS. Defeats Polytechnic High School in center; right tackle; | LONDON Zangwill Becomes an Actor. T.—Israel Shingle, right end; Shaffer, quarter; Pat- | played the pri Final Championship Game. ton (captain), full; Hackley, left half; |performan Berkeley High School won the Academic| 15y an. right half. ey dwn” Athle League football championship| polytechnic—Ashley. left end; Riordan, | Jerome yesterday by defeating Polytechnic High | left tackle; Weis, left guar Lau a score of 5 to 0. The game center; Bonifield, right guard: Sc was unable to be was played on the Presidio athletic | right tackle; Dausinger, right end; S grounds. A large representation from the B - two schools was present. | The only points scored were made in ! ADVERTISEMENTS. the first half. During this half Polytech- i3 . nic plainly played the better ball, al- though they were scored against. Their line bucking was good and their end runs netted them repeated gains. Berkeley seemed unable to withstand the on- slaugits made by the city players. | Once Polytechnic almost scored a field goal. Bonifield, the big right guard of the team, came within an ace of Kicking a goal from the forty-five-vard line. Had there been no wind he would have been successful. This was in the latter part of the first half, and after that the Poly- technic players seemed to lose strength and gave way before the heavier Berke- ley men. A few Men, Read This! $500.00 REWARD LOST POWER or IMPAIRED VIGOR that T. Lawrence's new Ferfected Vacuum Developer or for any case of Shrunl Debilitated or Weak Or- wonderful Perfected Vact nt fails to develop o ) Premature- for any case of D: Cannot_restore that this minutes before the end of the first half Polytechnic was forced to kick Peck, the Berkeley center, blocked the ball, and Shuey, right tackle for the same team, grabbed the ball and sped down the field forty yards for a touchdown. Dug- ga to nor s trial and approval. sestion the greatest INVIGORA- FEN T AND PLEASANT Tts effect is positive and scientific. It is beyond TOR the world has ever known. A SIMPLE, CO! HOME TREATMENT. = v d ok 6, N VLY, vin ale system and 4 Score, § - Call or write for jllustrated book 6, FOR MEN ONLY ng mal gan missed the goal. Score, 5 polnts for R N mt T s o UL DISEAS F M " dwards, fullback for Polytechric, made e T e »ow galns by bucking the line, a Cap- f Hours, a go ga ¥ 3 and ap- Coes UNTIE & in Marten and Ayers made lengthy around the ends, the Berkeley ends eming unable to break up their inter- ference. | Duggan, Berkeley's right half, was star player for his team du In the second half the Polytechnic team seemed to be demoraiized. They did not play together, and Berkeley was able to go through the line at will. Patton, the fullback, made some great gains, using the famous Kaarsburg hurdle. The light- er team was rushed down the field and Berkeley tried for a field goal from the | five-yard line. “Duggan missed it | Nevada was immediately set back to within a few feet of her goal line for holding. Friesell tried to kick out of dan- ger, but the pigskin went low and hit the line. It bounded back of the goal and | looked like anybody's ball, but when the | players were untangled Lawrence of Ne- vada had the down. It was a safety for the Blue and Gold. Nevada punted ten yards past center from the twenty-five vard line. Califor- nia gained at will through' the line for thirty yards. Snedigar then made twenty yards between Nevada's right tackle and end. Some one of the blue and gold had been holding, however, and Snedigar's gain, together with twenty yards more, were lost. Overall kicked and Friesell was downed within six feet of the goal he was de- fending. The last named kicked out of danger and Overall tried another field goal without success. Nevada kicked back from her twenty-five yard line. Heit- muller caught the ball and ran it thirty yards through a sea of outstretched arms. California gained five yards more. Over- all tried for another field goal, but missed it by a hair. After an exchange of punts Friesell caught the pigskin on the fly and went outside after galning meven yards. Ne- vada was forced to kick after falling to make her distance. California rushed the ball back a few yards and Overall tried for a goal from the forty-yard line. The ball went over and the sagebrushers kicked it back from the twenty-five yard line again. The blue and gold advanced the ball many yards and then Overall took an- other chance for a field goal. The kick blocked and a Nevada man had pos- session of the pigskin after the scrim- mage. The game ended with the ball, anteed to withstand OFEN SATURDAYS TILL 10 P. M. Wht Is “Kantshrink " Underwear ? It is an absolutely unshrinkable and _warranted pure wool underwear, guar- rank abuse; a comfort to the body and a delight to the sensitive skin. To introduce, we are making a special price of $1.50 per garment and wpward for women; $2.50 per garment and upward for men. 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