The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 12, 1903, Page 26

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

26 iy HE SAN FRANCISCO, CALL, SUN DAY. APRIL 12, 1903 ADVERTISEMENTS. FOUR NEW PIAND CLUBS New Method of Piano Buying on the Co-operativ: Plan. Lerge Savins in Price Effec’ed---Exhibi ion end Delivery cf Pianos fo Com- mencz To-Morrow---Fazel- fon, Decker, Kimbali, Les-| fer, Victor and Schimann Fianos included---The Best $225 ani §250 Pianos for $137; $5 at join'ng and $1.25 per week---1he Finest $325 ani $372 Medium Grade Fiznos at $187 and $218; $7.50 at _joining and then $1.50 2 ., week---High Erode $400 and £500 Fiznos at $265 and $297; $12 at jo-ing and then $2 a wzek---3he Artistic <600 and $7C0 Piancs at $318, $336 and 'AMERICA’'S CUP DEFENDER RELIANCE { | { | | { | ! { [ | i | | | | §352; $21 at johning end $2.50 2 veék.r eted twelve O Wash. pes piano clubs— and five & our sixth pianc to, ubs to ctly > pric nigh pric on this alone depends The numerous ex- d by Pommer- al buving, ship- g of pianos are further mention we take advantage g fac The idea delphia re 1y and it re aim\ of every rou g, too ‘well k » planos Thou: een so0ld on this ne w timated that the h by in i’OMMER-EILERS PIANO CLUBS NOS. 6, 7. 8 AND 9, simply the application of princivle to the retafl de- know we can sel we sell a single a ¢ an joining one of our r are limited strictly to 100 . ¥ou are placed in exac jon and the same esessed by largest re- Join whichever club best enience. Make your ini- nd receive you no at 1 there is to it; no extras, no red te 0 dues, no waiting AMERICA’S FINEST PIANOS INCLUDED. use the payments are because the prices are iingly low that these i re not of the highest order. d in the club sche; is nd every instrument is fully r warranted both as to to price. Money ba & to every instru- high priced or low priced, that s our ho Various = of the world renowned Hazelton, the great artistic favorite Deck- er, the now famous Kimball, as well as some new instruments made by Lester. Pease, Bush & Gerts, Victor and Schu- m are included in these Pommer-Eil- clubs. THESE ARE THE PAYMENTS: Members joining our sixth eclub will ob- tain a fine new piano upon payment of $5 down and weekly payments of $1.25. Club 6 is limited to only 100 members. Members of our seventh club pay $7.50 upon delivery of plano and then at the rate of $1.50 per we in club § members pa balance in ents of $2 weekly. Members of our ninth club will be asked vy $20 down and payments of $2.50 v $12 down and the —Payments may be ssponding monthly basis it desired. mbers making larger payments than bove will effect an additional saving in interest. HERE ARE THE PRICES: A1l regular $22 styles will be turned over to members now for $137. $275 pianos at $164. All $300 planos at $187, and the very finest medium grade ipstruments that could not be sold under regular retafl con- ditions for less than $35 will go to club members for 3218. The most beautiful, regular 30, highest grade fancy hand- carved plano will go for $297, and all $400 styles for $26. Corresponding reductions are made on every one of the 400 fine new planos included in this sale. Do not wait; ou to join first thing to-mor- . The sooner you call and m your selection the surer you are of being perfectly suited in an instrument. Bear in mind that an unconditional guar- antee accompanies every instrument sold, which guarantee is countersigned by our- selves, thus making all purchasers doubly | sure. All instruments are kept in tune for club members free of charge for one year from date of delivery. o Old pianos and organs will be accepted from club members at falr value toward payment of any new piano, : Pommer-Eilers Music Co . 653 Market -tgeet San- Francisco, Cal. Other stores at Sacraimento, Cal., Port- ‘and, Ore., Spokane, Wash, rranged on a | | i i | { IS LAUNCHED AT BRISTOL WAYS The First Trial of the New Shamrock Under Actual Racing Co Disappointing to Her' Many Admirers| RISTOL, R. L, April 11.—With an American eagle at her bow, the cup defender Rellance was launched at the Herreshoff works to-day just before sun- down. Five hundred percons stood beside the glistening underbody of the yacht when, at 5:31 o'clock this afternoon, Miss Cora Iselin, daughter of C. Oliver Iselin, managing cwner of the'boat, broke, with a silver hammer, the traditional bottle of champagne, saying at tne time: “I christen thee Reliance, and may God bless thee.™ The laurel wreaths and bunches pinks tied with red and black ribbons, the racing colors of Mr. Iselin, were fes tooned forward, and as the yacht slowly drew out of the shop the Amerféfn yacht en: n was raised at the stern, with Mr. lin’s private signal amidships and the colors of the New York Yacht Club at the bow. Three thousand spectators in steam yachts, rowboats and on the two plers and back on the street hehind the shop greeted the plunge of the Reliance with lusty cheers, while a bugler on a ne: pedo boat played Star-S; of gled the yachts anchored off the works was the Constitution, the unsuc- cessful candidate for cup honors for two years and this year designed to be one Of the keenest rivass of the Re- liance. The Constitution was gayly be- dec flags and as the Reliance lay few moments alongside her sis: *ht some comparison of the lines of the two boats could be made. It was seen that the bow of the Rellance h d with a for turns out of the water more sharply, that her stern is lower and flatter and at she has a trifle less free board. WILL BE TRIED SOON. It is expected she will have her trial in in about ten days, after which she | b minutes. sufficient under club top: fast s preparatory signal was given at 9:| just before the starting gun 10 o’clock both y mark boats weather of t w nditions Is Distinctly EYMOUTH, Eng., April 11.— The first contest of the chal- lenger for the America’s cup under actual racing condi- tions to-day was distinctly dis- appointing to those who exulted so much at the result of the preliminary trials. The Shamrock I won on her handicap allow- ance, the new craft only beating her six and a half minutes over a course thirty- ! four miles long. On the first half of the | course the challenger outsailed the older | boat handsomely, but in tne fresher wind | on the second turn she little more than | held her own. This was only partially ex- | plained by a fluke of wind which favored Shamrock 1 and enabled her to gain con- siderable ground on the second beat. | nado swept over the coun | and GtEK GHELTER IN STORM GAVE Armour’s Family in Dan- ger of Wrath of a Tornado. Mr. M. S. Kohlberg has retired from gloves, tailor-made suits, waists, fancy goods, more are daily arriving, while the shelves stil street store have we served so many people. doors. Extra dales folks in all departments t can. First Floor—DRESS GUODS. |l | 75c OXFORD ALPACAS 49c—Some in the new Oxford checks, some in the Alpaca checks; both desitable this season for shirt waist suits etc. 27 and 38 inches wide, in navy and white and in black and white. Shown in large, small or broken check effects. These are the 7sc grade. During Dissolution Sale ...49¢ soc SATIN STRIPED CHALLIES 20c—A fine wool challie, shown in tan, sky blue, college red, reseda, silver gray and black, in the solid colors, and Persian patterns. on cream grounds in the fancy ecffects. Both lines have the new fancy satin stripes, a grand 50c challie. During Dis- Fierce Hurricanes Do Dam- age in Iowa, Michigan and Indiana. —_— FORT DODGE, Towa. April 1L.—A tor try west of West | Dodge this afternoon. At Twin Lakes the house of P. D. Armour gnd one othe were wrecked. Th: Armour family and | others sought shelter In storm caves. | Much damage was done to farm property | livestock. At Joilet several casual- | ties were reported. Telephone avnd tele- graph wires are down. GRAND RAPIDS, Mich.. April 11.—A The course for the first real contest be- tween the two Shamrocks under strict | conditjons was -altered to one of | ~four miles instead of forty-two | miles. as announced yesterday. The start- ing line was off Portland, thence easterly to a mark off Lulworth Cove and back | across the mouth of Weymouth Bay to a mark-boat off Portland, and thence home, twice around. The handicdp allowance of Shamrock T | was not officlally ‘declared prior to the | start, but it was understood to be ten| A fin fresh west-southwest breeze of | strength to cause the yachts Is to heel over and make iling was blowing as the two Sham- | maneuvered, for position. During | eying Shamrock 111 proved both nd handjer, and Captain Wringe | asily the better of the start. The | ,"and | as fired at{ chts stayed by the outer | mrock I, being to the | e challenger, drew out and | s two or three lengths ahcad as they bore away for the run. will have a thorough trying-out, meet- | NEW BOAT INCREASES LEAD. ing both the Constitution and the.Co- [ The yachts quickly squared away. lumbia in a series of races inLONg | spinnakers and the new boat immediately Island Sound, off Sandy Hook @md &\ |opened out, constantly increasing her lead | Newport. Should she prove superiorto | from her opponent as they ran toward | her two rivals she will meet the Sham- | Lulworth Cove. The wind remained fresh | on 4 on rock III in the first of the cup rac August 21 The Reliance is a decided departur i and steady and the racers made e sailing as of the course. ellent | first leg | wed dead | they ran across the Shamrock I follo n the wake of the cup challe the part of Herreshoff from his other Y ger, but cup defendens and is an excellent ex- | Was quite unable to hold her, Shamrock ample of the American flat-fioored, fin- | 11 spinning out a bigger lead all the | keeled boats.. She is not such an ex-|tme In twenty minutes’ running the | c :d dish as was the T treme skimming kee Independence, but she sembles the Crownin: than she does any of built here. Her lines are easy, with few hard places nd a graceful, sweeping. curve from the vertheless re- eld boat more her predecessors 1 t 1 boat continued to prove she was faster than the old boat down the wind. challenger gained two minutes, Throughout the rest of the run the new ! much Dropping their spinnakers, the boats uffed and came on the wind for the beat o windward across the bay toward Pori- and. A couple of long boards were safled | sMiges into the garboards. Her sterh iS|,nq the challenger, going handsomely, flat, s0 she will leave but lttle wake, | jifted to windward through ‘the smooth while her bow, hough not quite SO | water Before they had gone half-way to rcad and flat as that of the Indepen- | tho mark Shamrock 11 can a mnerers | s still different from l?kj bow of | and dead to windward. The breeze fresh- Constitution or the Columbia. | ened 4 little and both yachts traveled at long keel, but owing to am does not carry so much I : bulb as the other cup defender bow rd the end is quite while her taffrall measures scarcely .|t v | 1 teet. Her greatest beam is well up in the shoulders and iz carried aft many feet. At the water iine forward she l.l:l curved like the inside of a saucer. iz believed that her strongest point o! H be ing will with started sheets in a comparati mooth sea. She likely to go fast down the wind, her long keel holding her well on her course. ller weakest point will be on the wind and | = Tre har : x flattened sheets, -a polnt on which the | aroung ‘.”Tf.','}{,‘]e “‘f?dl,u}‘,‘:,‘?‘*’;h"\i dz‘:“f mrock IIl is sald to be fast. The|Shamrock I the only fluke of tHe “iog with her lines and her (rc- | She was far down to leowerd b ouclls salls_spread out over 15000 | the fuvoring breese Wisen it ipundor feet L be e driven. Tt|.ble of the new boat's lead. Wringe then the unanimous opinion of those vachtsmen who saw her to-day that she would prove the fastest vessel ever built. LAUNCHING A SUCCESS. The launching w a success. The weather was perfect, with a light breeze biowing off shore. The doors of the south were opened to ticket holders at 5 | ! a i reveling in the stronger wind. When the | on less than twelve miles’ sailing. Thence a broad, | home, and on this point of Captain Wringe did not appear to drive | hig boat so keenly as he had done. | képt pinching her into every eye of the wind, while Shamrock I, although -drop- | at the markboat off P a minute and a half of her previous lead. had held her even .dyring the first round on Shamrock I fine pace, the challenger apparent urned the mark off Portland Shamrock | I had a lead of more than six minutes | easy reach brought the boats | sailing Sham- ock I held her own. In beating for the mark off"Portiand He ing to leeward, gained distinctly. ve the allenger again, but rtland she had lost On the three-mile reach home the chal.- enger was sailed for all she was worth ind on . the leg on which Shamrock [ the occasion gained | storm did_gres | in this city and to-night has been a period | terrific storm struck this clty at 665 this i o Tl domiban e et Tl 29¢ evening. n twenty minutes two inch of rain fell and hailstones as large “as 75¢ MERCERIZED DAMASK CHEVIOTS for walnuts broke thousands of dollars’ worth | of glass. The house of J. A. Brummler was struck by lightning and M Brumm- | 48c—These ‘are the new white Oxford Cheviots in stripe, polka dot, honeycomb and satin dam- ask effects, decidedly pretty for shirt waists or :,,'n.iw F:“Ii’f"u‘”.,::‘v:'lf‘;l‘.rz"fi,“';,"“ pas summer suits, highly mercerized, in light and awed Bekne M - ‘. heavy weight styles This fabric washes per- MARION, Ind., April 1L—A terrific fect It is a great bargain. While it lasts.48¢ once. Already thousands of dollars’ worth of this spring’s newest creat LN TR S e ADVARTTANNENER. i P IS L et Dissolution of Partnership Sale Continues. the stock must be sold at jons in dress goods, Asilks, n sold; yet many f our Post- to close the this firm and one-third of curtains, draperies, etc., have bee 1 remain crowded. Never in the history 0 Sometimes it seemed almost necessary g o-morrow. Come in the morning if you possibly WONDERF UL DISSOLUTION SALE. BARGAINS AT THE | SILK COUNTER. FOUR DISTINCT LOTS—Sale to be conducted on the main floor, left of entrance. LOT 1—Pongee, with circle dot in w or natural shades; 28 inches wide; one season’s greatest novelties. LOT 2—Embroidered Crepe turquoise, white and black. elty, 28 inches wide. LOT 3—Silk striped Grenadine; white grm‘md» with eolored stripes of light biue, maize, black or pink. Exceptionally popular this year; 28 inches wide. ; LOT 4—Striped Novelty, in lace and ribbon stripe effests of red, Nile, black, cream or black and white. An'imported fabric, 36 inches wide. All of the above have beem selling at our 49€ counter at 75 Your pick to-morrow hite, green, of the Novelty, in blue, An imported nov- damage in the gas belt to-day. Sev valuable stock barns were burned by lightning, and in South | Mazion nineteen persons were stunned by a bolt that tore aw art of the roof | of a dwelling. ccurred on the Big Four and Clov af, a senger train h. THE SECOw iriOUR style with postilion back. in either black or gray. make tor ¢50.00. Dissolution Sale Price $1.50 CHEVIOT WAISTS FOR gs5c—With black tucked vest effect with large pouch sleeves. a | FRESNO CARNIVAL ENDS I IN LIGHT AND HILARITY | Two Thousand Children Make Men‘yf on Last Day of the Fete. FRESNO, April 11.—The reign of Queen | hine is at an end. To-day was prac- | 1y the last of the labor carnival that b week | Lace C rtains THIRD FLOOR wre met, an English Curtain, with fancy borders and plain centers white, and _cham A $% cur- tic has been in progress for the past : Kohlbera $2.75 pair of great hilarity in the midway on Ven- | tura avenue. On account of threatening | weatker the proposed masked carnival the prettiest little waists our counters have shown this season -Sirauss § Frohman - 105-107-109 Posk St - —TWO BIG RcDUCTION = L i i i i louse .00 BROADCLOTH SUIT FOR $22.50—Trimmed with fancy braid and finjshed in the new b e The nine-gore flare skirt is trimmed to match the jacket, and the suits come Fit elegantly, and.they are as good as any dressmaker in San Francisco can ................................. £22.50 or navy stripes on white g-ound, finished with the new Also a fine white lawn trimmed with insertion. - One of Dissolution Sale Price ..95¢ | A Doylie Sa e THIRD FLOOR. A pretty little hand-made Doylle. Drawn embrofdered. neat. The SPECIAL, 21ec each ANOTHER PIONEER GOES TO JOIN GREAT MAJORITY In Death of James N. Suydam San had to be abandoned and there was con- cquently much disappointment among the citizens, who had anticipated the event with much pleasure. But the larg- est crowd of the week was at the grounds FIRES T0 KiLL CEREMONY WILL MARK A CORNERSTONE LAYING First Work on crmegle Library at to-night and there was probably more 2 - real H(‘njoymvnl than there been at Francisco Loses an Es- Santa Rosa to Begin any time during the progress of the car- teemed Citizen. To-Morrow. nival. To-day was children’s day and | 1, the death of James Suydam, SANTA ROSA, April 11.—The ceremony probably 2000 little ones were at the| ;. ¢ ok place last week, California of laying the cornmerstone of the new grounds. i 2 . b other of her old ploneer founders. bufding of the Santa Rosa Free Public , As a whole this, Fresno's first carnival e L s T (5 e e it s peo. as been a 2 v in the early fifties and immediately o :D,m;',,:?: it “',,\"?',].:;r ity the merchandising business in g g b Sof ars later he forme: cecds are to be used by the ozganzation | Colusa. Some ten years later he formed for the starting of a fund to erect a tem- | & partnership w an es rd then came to San Francisco ple of labor to be occupied by the various e ShatE thE: astine Duvtimie Freano anians. | manager from this point. In 1570 the firnt = through Santa Rosa Lodge, F. ar o i om s Grand Master Orrin S. Hend 2 3 s dissolved and a few vears later he Q pE b ra : Californians in New York. opened an office in the Stock Exchange Special Dispatel to The Calk conduct the ceremony and many of NEW YORK, April 1L—The following | huilding, where, as a stock broker, ht| FRESNO. April 1l—John Lindsey, ari. | §720d officers will be in attendance Californians are registered at the ho-|did a lucrative business. About eleven | “oo= "o o SOt SIORE CHC | ceding the laying s “rancisco: M C .ars apo his wife died and soon after s there will be a par tels o Erampiseg: M O O B N ctive busices. AUl Des) OpiTAlreatiNrynt gi Fresuostiet (| N of ik city, headed by lins, at. the St Denls; W. i;;;: Yin r"‘l depressed state of mind spent | Dight and fired a shot from a revolver at | ta Rosa Band, and participated i Alfs, at the Belvidere; W. W. Davis He visited | Fred R. Fanning; a groceryman, who.was | county and municipal author most of his time in traveling. at the Grand Union; Miss B. Mack, J. J. A8 imads Retiaal: trhie aTNOES. Honoluiu Fresno Husband Shoots| at Man Dining With His Wife. in a private box with Lindsey's wife. Ac- vided by Andrew Carnegie, will take place Monday afternoon at 2 o'clock. The cere- monies will be conducted by Grand Lodge of California, to do so having been extended the Lodge by the board-of iibrary tr the marshalship of Cot \Xu'rlk :;nnldv,-!!':'11uvdeA.‘x\\'.P.\X:lx:‘kl;\( the | pis Jast visit belng during the Paris EX: | cording to the waiters in the restaurant, ;?‘171‘1'{?:‘11 S:::app:q‘;nr‘:' will 1 Netherlands; Miss C, M. Pratt a e} o attion Ao =) sl ms ag incipa s s city he pr Continental; M. Bauer and Mrs. Bauer | Yo} "V censed was of modest mein, of | *IFS: Lindsey has met Fanning there fre- | gramme at the locatfon of the building . | e . 3 quently of late. « | corner of Fourth and E stre will be at the Manhattan; 8. T. Britten and H. | gne upright character, highly respected 1 €7 B 1 S. Purdy at the Astor; S. S. Fis at | and esteemed by all with whom he came This evening about 5 o'clock the woman | under the directlon of W. D. Reynolds, the Herald Square. Los Angeles P.|in contact. entered the restaurant and was jolned "’»*""*"'!l_flbf the day and president of the Bartlett at the Metropole. * | The funeral took place on Thursday | within a few minutes by Fanning. \'1‘::””.- . ;';"z“:l-[uv‘:;—‘fl :{::r»-:ihr .;'1::!, he residence of his son James at| had scarcely seated themselves SIS SIIVEY trowel S AT s O : hington street. The remains | Lindsey came in along the hallwa | 8. Henderson, .on behalf of Santa Rost were laid to rest beside those of his wifc | suddenly parted the curtains in front of | Logge. F. and A M o S e o lenger had still two and a half minutes | in Laurel Hill Cemetery. Two sons and | the box and stepped in. Mrs. Lindsey e, A D h nst her. The yachts had a nd some sea during the beat to their one «daughter survive, Charles H. and James H. Suydam and Mrs. Frank D.| Bates. handicap a: hard wind and they lay down handsomely work, with lee rails under. Shamrock I was fouled by a steam yacht when half way through the second run to “My God, Fred, ———e——————— Mrs. Mills Will Lecture. A lecture will be given under the aus- pices of the Business Woman's Club by Mrs. Benjamin Fay Mills at the Academy of Sciences Hall, §19 Market street, on Tuesday evening, April 14, at 8 o'clock. moment, out of the box an toward the rear o sey whipped out the hallway and the latter darted into the kitchen, Lulworth C the steam y ried awhy. jury and continued ve. Her spinnaker boom and cht’'s bowsprit were both car- Shamrock I escaped other in- the race. The acci- screamed and cried: Fanning grappled with Lindsey for a then broke strument the cement will be spread, unit- ing the upper and lower stones. ooy Japan Immigrants in Canada. VANCOUVER, B. C., April 1L.—A spe- cial dispateh from Montreal sa Hon. T. Nosee, Consul General for Japan, made the following statement this morning: “I cabled. my Government twe weeks ago, advising It to pursue Its policy of run for your life! from him, dashed d fled down the hallway of the restaurant. Lind- a revolver, gtepped into | fired at FanMing just as through the back docr | The bullet missed its | and within a few minutes the | half a minute g;m w sku‘rxi%uk» ;lisaavanmzn} to h:\]x‘* S g i - e g b rllmrklll_v & margin of pern?lp.c six inches. I tr(:zk»nT.l:‘r emigration of Japanese to th the boat was filled, while| CHA amroc s spinnaker was immediate- The subjec e = ‘Mils | FAnDIng escaped into an wdjoining street | Canada. e reply I received was thap had taken places of vantage on the | , LLENGER -DISAPPOINTE. {1y doused in ofder to make the conditions Greatest Prophet of France.” Mrs. MUIS | hrough’ an undertaking parior. the Government of Japan was not desir- The burnished wunderbods of the| The challenger's showing on tie reach |even. The mage to Shamrock [ is thoroughly conversant with lhe.hulx['ur)rw The Lindseys' domestlc troubles are of | ous of forcing its emigranty i ooy, e as she stood propped up In her | WS disavpointing. On the second run | amounted to $500. The spar was. of hollow | of the people of France and especlally ‘of | ;ng <tanding, but have never been given | country against the wishes of the people cradle arouscd much admiration. 1t glis- | 9097 the wind to the Lulworth Cove mark | wood and some time will be needed to re- | its great writers. She s an able and in- | much publicity before. Fanning fs one jof that province, but was willing te, ‘en. tened like old gold and so weil had it | the old boat had somewhat of an ad-|place it, but in the meantime the trials | teresting speaker and has met With much | o the best-known young business men | (er INto s aereomors with Canada bond- been rubbed down by the sailors that it | LAntage by bringing up a fresher breeze. | will be continued without spinnakers. The = succe: a lecturer in this and the cities | of Fresno. He has a wife and two chil- | ing itself not to allow the members of th seeme if the bolts must ve been | Shamrock III w only able to make | trouble was caused by the steam yacht across the bay. The committee in charge | gren. The affair is the talk of the city, |Japanese colony in th Dominion to in Shrin of he Dlate The . mbams ek | r‘nmlux-- and a half between the marks. | misjudging the pace of the racer. A se- for the evening will hf;‘ the l;m’\f!"bt‘fl?l ":’ _— | crease numerically dufing the next ten <eheadoys d|'urx|l,l‘:h Shifle the v was | With only a beat to the mark off Port- ' rious accident was narrowly averted. :l'n‘« = 'u:)l’\“( h;:r:::l“;;{r:‘ P;ll:s . 0t Would Work for the City. years. a mgriel of workmanship. nee L ; sident; : - s K IR 2 S e gl 0 vl A B AN Hoeber, vice president; Mrs. M. E. Ha he first application for a position oa 5 e eI e i swve i ADVERTISZMENTS. | secretary; Mrs. G. A. Hubbell, treasurer: | the Geary-street railway in case It fo Cigar Manufacturers Quarrel. L0 = A tam | A A A A A i shers, Miss Lottie Spaulding. Miss Lola | . G HAVAN April IL.—As a result of dif- a e mounted the little stagi ich A A Ao menreorennsean | Ushers, Miss T uired by the city was flled with Lhe . o, Gt ROwRE e sLiiBhTh Phr of (b Britt, Miss Georgie Braun,.Miss Mana | Cyyi} Service Commission by C. Thomsen | piaencss orich have arisen between the =y oward the y ow of the . ik > v ~ avana Commercial Cor ; -. vacht. Suspendéd by a wire from the side fleld Everett, Miss Katherine Knapps Mis< | 5 1 Hojlis street. Thomsen wants to be | ompany and the Ci- of the bows was a quart bottle of cham- gowned in ue velvet and wore a picture hat, was accompanied by her father and New- bury Thorne, Captain Woodbury Kane, Colonel Willlam Goddard, Mr. Iselin's father-in-law, and her sister, Miss Fan- nie Iselin. In the meantime N. G. Herreshoff, Cap- tain Barr, who will command the boat, and a dozen of the saflors had mounted the deck. At 5:31 o'clock there came the tinkling of a bell and immediately the boat began to move. As soon as she was fairly started Miss Iselin smashed the bottie of champagne with a silver ham- mer. As she did so she named the boat. . There was cheering and a general dash for pieces of the broken bottle as sou- venirs, while the foaming wine, after drenching the bow of the boat, splashed on the iloor below. The Reliance has been built by a syndi- cate of nine members of the New York Yacht Club. They are: Judge E. H. Gary, | one of the directors of the United States 6leel Company; Clement A. Griscom of Philadelphia, president of the Interna- tional Mercantile Marine Company; Hen- ry Walters of Baltimore, president of the Atlantic Coast Line; Cornellus Vanderbilt of New York, P. A. B. Widener of Phila- phia; Willlam Rockefeller of New York, vice-president of the Standard Oil Company: James J. Hill of St. Paul, pres- ident of the Great Northern Raflroad Company: Norman B. Ream of Chicago and W. B. Leeds of Pittsburg. FRANCEISE IS GIVEN FOR ELECTRIC RAILWAY Supervisors of Tulare Readily Grant the Application of J. Hays Hammond. TULARE, April 11.—At the meeting of the Board of Supervisors to-day the franchise applied for by J. Hays Ham- mond for an electric railway between Vi- szlia and Lemon Cove was unanimously granted and the road is assured. Ac- cording to the franchise the work must begin within four months and be com- pleted within three years. The next road to be built by the same company will be from Tulare toLindsay end Porterville, which will mean a great Gcal to this part of the country. J. Hays Hammond is the head of the Mount Whit- ney Power Company, which furnishes power. for lighting and pumping for Tu- lare, Visalia, Portervil e, Lindsay and the surrounding country. e & Liverpool expects a profit of $350,000 on iast year's working of its municipal tram- Wway system., How to Get We!l Without Risking a Penny. = clair that no written order was sent by A COMPLETE D VARI.OCELE 5 the Judge and besides \;w “'lsun:r was ru!lrnlrcuu e a C;'RE ANY Casm 3 ox sh 1 <toring ! cce This is how more than half a million sick ones got wells i S e o ol g P Wednat I accept in one They wrote me and told me which bhook they wanted. '! Edith Barnard Not Sentenced. 'l“runu"{m ;}:_;r;“‘mfi Nm}":n:;r:m:mi’- i sent each an order on his druggist for six bottles Dr. Shoop's When Edith Barnard, manicurist promutly end com- most instances the pa- Restorative. Each took it a month at my risk. If it succceded, £ vith the Titlan pietely without the use tient need not be de. {and leswoman = witl 55 of_internal remedies. tained a single da the cost was $5.30. If it failed, I paid the druggist myself. And hair, appeared for sentence before W et & a from bustness . Trors the sick one’s mere word decided it. | Police Judge Mogan yesterday on jocal one entirely. it Is no doubt or guess- I have done that with nearly 550,000 sick ones—all chronie | the charge of rmbr:zl{r.g two shire wasts :rfi urg_ln:l ahnd s(‘"’en- ;‘;":',"“', absolute cer. cases—most of them difficult—scme of them desperate. Yet 30 | from e proven absolutely et and Jasting eure wn L 2ny on A ist 1, A featin - v " out of each & have pald for ‘the aedisine gindly, betause ey -~ . R SRS iad s motlons for e cnew st Qlsenie s Saree ot e e were cured. trial on the ground that the transaction I am convinced that Tigor that existed be 1 make the same offer to you. was a sale. The Judge put the matter e fore the disease began. If you will simply write me, and try for a month to get over till Tuesday for *{"B}‘x‘mf_g" as As- hent restoration | of e well, T will take all the risk; T will pay if T fail = 5‘_:6';& District Attorney Harris was not 32:3:;?;;22 viger be| DR, 0. C. JOSLEN, CONTRACTED You cannot be just to yourself and neglect an offer like that, s - The Leading Spectalist DISORDERS My Restorative succeeds because it strengthens the inside Scarenski’s Joke Serious. L URE o E YERY case or nerves. It brings back the only power that operates all vital £ bt T wha AR R R a MY, JhzaruexT | Cerser Kearny and Market I ontracted _ disease organs. It gives the weak organ power to do its duty, and that rested Friday night on a charge of rob- solutely painless, and Strests. oughly. My sateoe is all that is needed. The resuit is like glving a weak engine bery as a joke, was around the Hall of perfect results can be Y WORK IS UNLIKE |Pave no relapses. When l more steam. Some of you have doctored In couraged. and the results at best are but ed—that which must be done—is power to act. CUT OUT THIS COUPON, For we all resolve to send get. Mark the book desired name and address to Dr. £hoop, Box 630, Facine, Wis. Book 4 for Women, Book 5 for Men (sealed) Book 6 on Rheumatism. Dyspepsia. Heart. Book 1 on Hook 2 on the Book 3 on the Kidneys. ot i two h\r&mf . are al But common treatments merely doctor the My restorative always does that. It prevents lit- tle troubles from becoming deep-seated; and in chronic diseases it does what no other remedy can do. Louise Codding, Mrs. E. S. skinner; door- keeper, Miss Helen Entzman. 2 conductor on t —— e Aristide Fails to Appear. George Aristide, the boy who had sen- for burglary suspended by Judge perience. tence and filled it out. Lawlor on the promise by his friends that at present empioyed by the United Rat roads and has fivi He was given a regular ap- plication blank for civil service positions gar Manufacturers’ Assoclation the com- pany has withdrawn its thirteen factories | from membership In the assoctation and will discontinue the use of assoctation la- bels. These labels purport to guarantee the legitimacy of cigars sold as having been made in Havana. he road and savs he is e and a half years’ ex | be sent to sea and was a few he would a ago es and the Judge issued a bench warrant for his arrest, fixing his bonds at $2000. When the Judge learned that Aristide had not gone to sea and had been arrested for petty larceny, he instructed the potice to bring him up for sentence. The police Justice yesterday morning trying to get T'lood released. Flood appeared before Poiice Judge Conlan and when the Judge was notified of the facts he reduced Flood's bail from $1000 cash to $100, which was deposited by Scarenski and Flood got his libertv. The case will be called again to-morrew morning. —————————— Holy Communion Service. The Rt. Rev. W. F. Nichols, D. D., instance. other ways until you are dis- organs, temporary. That which is need- to give the weak organ more PECTFIC POISON gerous interior. but dles | Bishop of California, will hold a service PAY ME solute correctness, fo warrant uncertain for something, but for- press Lawn Cemetery Monday, assisted 1 CURE YOU if T accept your case you are | thoSe cases that other and mail this with your by the Rev. Professor Lincoln of the - safe in expecting nothinz short tl(bn*tnr:a have been un- Church Divinity School. The service will ) °f & sPeedy and permanent cure, | 3ble to cure. begin after the arrival of the 10:3 train — from San Francisco. The street cars run to Cxpress Lawn In one hour. —————— ften cured b : oF by mail. My interesting . copyrich g ny Draseists-. v Dies of His Injurie: e Tsars & Man," will e msiled Trae) to those who. write: o s T Harris Tompkins, a carpenter who fell Dfi 0. C. . 0. C. from the fourth floor of a building in course of construction at the corner of McAllister and Octavia streets on Tues- day last, died yesterday afternoon at the City and County Hospltal. Deceased was a married man, forty-seven years of age and resiced at 7 Sunny court. WwWE KN depended upon in every I do no cut- ting or dilating what- ever, minerals drive the virus to the blood-cleansing that' remove 88t pojsonous taint. Tn consultati, to offer. and I invite person at my office or b \ PECIALIST , I pronounce & case cured_ there fs not a particle of infection or that of the average special. ist. and each case treated has added its mite to my store of knowledge regarding men's asl. | IMflammation remain. ments. I have striven toward | /8. and there jsn't absolute perfection in my meth. | the slightest danger Ods of treatment, and now be- | that the disease wiil o] Meve that I have practically ac- | T°turn in its orginal form or work its way into the general sys. tem. Some contract-q diseases are less seor- fous than others. but none are so trivial as tained the ltmit of medical pos- sibllities Pertaining to discases of men. My varjous forms of treatment are original and in many respects unique. and the Tesults T obtain prove their ab harmless reme. the CONSULTATION FR m always glad to re all afflicted men to on T a; EE mder such helpful advice as T may te consult me free at e any time, either in JOSLEN, c¢-rmer Kearny and Market streots, San Francisoo. Private entrance 702 Market Street,

Other pages from this issue: