The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, March 21, 1904, Page 7

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, MARCH 21, 1904. CONFIRMATION AT ST. CHARLES Boys and Girls Assemble at the Sanctuary and Assume Spiritual EXERCISES IMPRESSIVE Archbishop Montgomery Warns Against Doubtful Papers and Evil Societ3" —— Seldom has a more impressive scene n witnessed in any sacred edifice of city than the confirmation of boys irls by his Grace Archbishop ymery in the Borromo, yesterday. chiidren were appropriately at- the boys in black suits with rib- T white satin on their breasts and Misses in pure white frocks and hanging gracefully from ace vells, y at 4 o’clock his Grace the ), attended by the Rev. Fath- Jonald, pastor of St. Charles; h ev. T. Moran, the Rev. Father ¥ p O'Ryan and the Rev. Father E. Looney, entered the sanctuary and the exer were begun with profound evotional exercises, gomery expressed his delight S0 many youths present for ich showed, he said, of the parents of the chil- the church and to their pas- Archbish- ce directed pertinent remarks inger ones in the assemblage re conduct and spoke i the sacredness of the and Al.u duty that it owes to the g the description of litera- 1 n should be given to rded that par- vSpapers I and not of a doubt- With regard to night , he wished that ained in years continued ge issed nd esy > disc th th power cially ad- , reminded inated, was ces of par- 2 as tenderly a prayer for the newly confirm- with offering y given him which exercis who re- the hands of Patrick Eveiyn Anna Isa- Anastasia K Caliaghan, Virginia Lillian Rose McDonald, Theresa Gertrude ( rancis Horan, Marie Pleiffe Cecilia Marie W A Catherine Loretta ( Jeftries, Alice V ghini. Katherine Frances 1 a Marxey. Mary Rose G en Walters, Julia El r Gertrude Culligan, . Ethel Mary Rose Gramel, ———— USE COFFEE without dangerous harm to the body > Quit for 10 days to prove for yourself, meantime use POSTUM = 0 g B Church of St. | WILLIAM H. MACY ARRIVES, | BATTERED BY FURIOUS GALE After Thrilling Encounter and Terrible Battle With Storm and Leaping Seas That Washed Her Decks and Threw Her on Her Beam Ends, She Finally Enters Port | | <Zrans I rEy pe/-2- 24 A mET WRLED OVERE QD TWICE,. - AMERICAN VE AWAY H. SHIFTED T ARRIVED AND RE: “CARGO D D OFFICER IN PORT YE RED HER HEL THAT NE AFTER FIERCE ENCOUN " THAT WORKED ER WITH GALE THAT TORE NIGHT AND DAY TO READJUST The storm beaten ship William H. Macy came into port yesterday. Her eppearance more than verified the re- orts la y of Puc ¥ hat the steamship Ci had brought in concerning her. She had a heavy to starboard and her whole nce showed the effects of the encounters with the seas had suffered. She was a woeful looking spectacle. How she weathered the gale and lived through the fury of the storm that threw her on her beam ends is a cle to both officers and crew. At rate, she has managed to get into port, and a more battered looking object has rarely crossed in over the bar. She left this port on January 30, bound north for Lady- smith. On the second day out she en- countered a storm tha hook her up > hard that the main yard came mmbling down with a great crash. The balance of the voyage north was a sec- cession of gales and storms. On the return trip from Oyster Bay, from which port she sailed on March 1, the voyage was uneventful until March 10, when she ran into a terrific gale, which washed over her decks from stem to nd threw her on her beam ends, lay for hours entirely at the | | | | | { f the sea and almost entirely ed by the .mountainous waves swept over her. To add to the ible predicament she was in her shifted. > crew was ordered below and for twenty-four hours worked with mu.m and main to try to readjust her and finally succeeded in getting into shape so that sh man- geable. The great wav t stru for her battered in the stle and & r.all the stock of beef and ored there. The carpen- | ter, nd steward had all th be- longings washed overboard. At times while the storm was at its height there seemed to be at least a hundred tons of water on the deck When the storm had somewhat abat- ed and the ship had righted it was found that the rudder head had sprung ! and it became necessary to rig a jury rudder. Consequently the spanker boom was taken down and lashed across the poop deck from rail to rail and with the aid of relieving tackle the captain was able to guide her on her | boara twice, but man | MOURNS LOSS OF SAILORS England Is Sorrowful Over Fate of the Men Who Died in the Submarine Boat VESSEL IS NOT RAISED IR Captain of the Berwick Cas- tle Says His Ship Did Not Strike the Little Craft PORTSMOUTH, March 20.——Attempts were made to-day without success to raise the British submarine boat No. 1 | A, which was run down by the Donald | Currie line steamer Berwick Castle Fri- day afternoon. The principal damage { appears to have been done to the con- { marine’'s hull was also plerced. ning tower, which shows the marks of the collision. The hull of the vessel ap- | pears to be intact. It has been ascertained that the s’}‘: e boat will be salvaged first by repairing | and then filling it with compressed air, | the position in which she lies and the | currents having compelled a suspension of the attempts to lift her. The divers | report that it is impossible to see inside | the submarine. The opinion is that the | boat filled with water immediately. The disaster to the No. 1 A has cre- | | ated a most painful impression in all classes. Queen Alexandra, the Duke of | ! Connaught and the chiefs of the Ad- | | | 1 1 i | | | | died in action. | miralty have sent messages of sympa- | thy to the relatives of the victims. Ad- { miral Fisher, in an official signal to the | fleet expressing sorrow, says: “Practically our gallant comrades Thelr lives were not thrown away, if we consider their splendid example of cheerful and en- thusiastic performance of duty, volving all the risks of war.” HAMBURG, March 20.—The Don- ald Currie line steamship Berwick Castle, which ran down the British | submarine boat No. 1 A, near Ports- | mouth, Friday afternoon, arrived here | to-day undamaged. The officers of the vessel declined to give anyinformation concerning the matter, pending an of- ficial statement. LONDON, March 21.—The Daily { Mail's Hamburg correspondent says | that the captain of the Berwick Castle is persistent in the assertion that it is impossible that his ship could have collided with the submarine boat No. 1 A, as the shock would have been much more violent. He says he felt {only two very siight shocks and that | the atmosphere was clear and that he ,saw no submarine boat. —_————————— PRESIDENT ELIOT CELEBRATES BIRTHDAY | Head of Harvard University Is Re- membered on Occasion of Seven- tieth Anniversary. CAMBRIDGE, Mass., March 20.—Sur- rounded by members of his family and of the college faculty, who brought | many tokens of their love and esteem, | University, Charles W. Eliot, president of Harvard celebrated his seventieth L anniversary to-day. . | This afternoon President Eliot was - they tested the pumps they foung there | was seven feet of water in the hold. The windmill was set going and all pumps working, and by this means | she was kept afloat. Second Mate Albert Maas had a ter-l rible experience. He was washed over- on board both times, and, although badly bruised, did not suffer otherwise, in speaking of the storm he sald: ““The gale struck us just as though it | had been fired from a gun. There was no warning about it at all. Tt hit us in a bunch, ends and whirled trouzh of the sea. re entirely gutted out. The waves struck the petitions between the rooms | us around threw the ship on her beam | by feeding the germs which in the with Cantharides, Our forward *~uses | and similar invited to University Hall, where he | met the faculty and was presented with a loving cup, in accepting which Dr. Eliot sald: “I have recelved many tributes affection, but none so from the departments of the faculty. I owe to the university all that I have accomplished and am myself a product of the university and the influence of the two governing boards.” ————————————————— | le ADVEBTISEMINTI of WASHING wfl:ovr WATER aged to scramble 14 yixe Trying to Get Rid of Dandruff ‘Without Herpicide. Did you ever see any one trying to | wash themselves without soap or water? If you did what would you say of him? It is every bit as foolish to try to get rid of dandruff and to prevent baldness cause it, Vaseline, Glycerine substances which form the gredients of most so-called principal in Hair Vigors. Newbro's Herpicide is successful be- and smashed them as though they were | cause it attacks and kills the parasitic paper boxe: twice, and as I went over the first time | I caught the starboard when suddenly the ship gave a tremen- dous piteh and rolled me back again. Before I could grab hold of anything I | was washed overboard a second time ! and the sea threw me back against the | main hatch, and from there I was| washed to the bilge pump. This I grasped and managed to clamber to | U \l()\\ FOR WOME National Union Lcazue win Delegate Throughout Country to Promote Organization. BOSTON, March of promoting wom the United States, of the Woman's National Trades U League at ite annual meeting here day voted to send a general organizer s trades unions in ion and secretary throughout the country | who will act as a business agent, or- ,anmn; trades unions among women, s and strikes. ann‘h rs of the board present were Miss Jane Addams of Hullhouse, Chicago, president; Mrs. Gertrude Barnum, State retary of the Womal Trades Unions of Illinois, Among the of th~ College Settlement of New York. Anita Madeline Flahaven, Marguerite line Horun, Mary Madell ary abeth Thoney, Alice Carm X Gertrude Barrett, Grace Catherine Barrett, | Regina Vibjana Landiin, dred Bettannler, Mary Elizabeth Hel- , Anastasia Grace Lucas, Margarei Mary Rose Elizabeth Heim, Lucy Madeline ie, Florence Cecilia Gormi orence Ce- Hurley, Sarah Lucille Bl Ellen An- tonie Ehm, Margaret Bernadette Savage, Anita Hart, Rose Agnes Frunz, Johanna Ce- Frunz, Vietoria Amelia Cunio, Mary Catherine Tully, Mary Isabelle Cummings, | Adeie Mary Ratto, Henrietta Theresa Uniried, Aline Ann Collins, Ruth Helen May, Margaret Irene Jackson, Cecila Louise Grandoiti, Anna Theresa Lemon, Mary Catherine Dacol, Mabel Gertrude Pratt, Evelyn Veronica Rosett!, Ger- | trude Loretto Foss, Alice Veronica Foss, Mary Marguerite Murphy, Catherinc Alousie Kii- Aneelus Claire Price, Lucy Mary Gear- hit. Clementia ' Cummins, Harrlet | Agnes . Helen Theresa Dawson, | Eleanor Elizabeth Dalley, Margaret Agnes | Grant, Josevhine Cecelia Grant, _ Lena Josephine Fitzpatrick, Anna Gertrude Pfluger, Ethel Imelda Kelling, Agnes Bridget Hanni- van, Josephine Claire Anderson, Antoinette | Clementia McMahon. — e ——— “Why,” asks Dr. Spalding of Chi- cago's Health Department, “shouldn’t the law require parents to have their children vaccinated before the age of 6 lyeu-* Certainly these babies have as | much right to live as children at the school age.” Send | Heads —With the object | the executive board, »d Miss Lillian B. Wald, head worker | FORM NEW ORGANIZATION of Different Orders in Their Brotherhood Comprise Member- ship in Association. CHICAGO, March 20.—A general chairmen’s association was formed here to-day at a meeting of the ohairmenl of the orders of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers of all the sys- tems of the country. M. D. Cadle of the Missouri Pacific system was made chairman and A. M. Rodgers of the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Rail- road was named as secretary. The purpose of the organization, it is said, is to bring about uniform condi- tions on all the railroad systemas in so far as the engineers are affected and to enable the brotherhood to megt the | General Managers' Association with a corresponding body of men who will be | constantly in touch with the engineers | i | Disastrous prairie in all parts of the country. | —_———————— i Prairie Fire Sweeps Nebraska. ! HEMINGFORD, Nebr., March 20.— | fires have swept | the range country. The ground being | dry, the fire burned the roots of the . grass in the ground, destroying it for | grazing for three years. One strip burned is six by twelye miles, another ; more than twenty miles long and very wide, while another strip, still burn- ing, north of the Niobrara River, seems to have been more extensive. | Ranch sheds, barns, groves on tim- ber claims' and property along the railroad has been destroved. Several narrow escapes from death are re- ported from the ranches. l —————— Coming to California. I Thousends in the East are crating| household goods and taking a team to | the train, a train to the Santa Fe and the Santa Fe to California. Are your friends coming? ! There are cheap colonist rates on the Santa Fe in March and April. You can | deposit the money here and have the | ticket telegraphed Kast. If inferested, ask about it at 641 Market street, San Trancisco. l came upon her without any warning | course. In the meantime from the ter- | safety. Unless the ship had been and carried away her sails, her main | rible strain under which she was labor- | mighty stanch she never scould have mizzen topsail and stay salls. The seas | ing her seams had opened and her hold | weathered the awful hurricane she struck her with tremendous fury, | commenced to fill with water, and when | passed through.” o e - % WILL FORM TRADES LOCOMOTIVE INEERS ENGINE AND STREET CAR COLLIDE Four Out of the Seven Passengers on4 the Dummy Are Injured. SPOKANE, March 20 bound for Hillyard, a Severely A street car motive this morning while the car was cro: ern part of the city. Aboard the street car were seven passengers, four of whem were injured, as follows: George Jenkins, Spokane, head crushed and hurt internally; G. Nickee, Spokane, Jacob M Bess, bruise badly bruised. The electric car was badly smashed. The blame for the accident is not yet fixed as the street car company order- ed that all information be suppressed and it has not yet been possible to get intelligent explanations from the pas- residence unknown, |'sengers who were aboard the car. The | | street car was on the crossing before the loccmotive was obgerved to be com- ing down the hill. Whether the con- ductor went ahead to see If the track was clear is not known. ey e Ship Beautshire Is Floated. SAN RAFAEL, March 20.—The English merchant ship Beautshire, which was driven on the beach in upper Richardson Bay during the! storm on March 9, has at last been floated. The Beautshire is a 2400-ton ship and was at anchor off Sausalito awaiting cargo. During the storm she was driven over a mile from her an- chorage. The ship settled in 7 feet of mud. The damage done was consid- erable. ——— e GIBRALTAR, March 20.—Vice Ad- | miral Lord Charies Beresford, com- manding the channel squadron, enter- tained Emperor William- at dinner on board his flagship to-night, the squad- ron meanwhile displaying brilliant il- luminations and searchlights. e e ta—— China raises and conswmes more ducks than any other country in the world. I was washed overboard | germ which feeds on the hair roots. It is the original and only genuine fore sheet, ‘srflp germicide manufactured. Sold by leading druggists. Send 10c in | stamps for sample to The Herpldde Co., Detroit, Mich. in- | dear as those | PATTOSIEN'S. PATTOSIEN'S 3 This is the most popular Furniture. Carpet and Drapery House on the Pacific Coast. where the people are every day | enjoying the advantages of buying their goods cheaper by from 25 to 40 per cent than they can elsewhere. | The doors of this grand Establishment | will close Saturday, April 30, FOREVER. The great Retiring Sale now In progress is the attraction that draws the multi- tude. Buying is brisk and the buyers are delighted. People are just picking | up the bargains in Curtains, Draperies, | Carpets, Rugs and beautiful Bedroom | | Suits in solid mahogany, birdseye maple | and oak, and magnificent brass and iron beds at one-half price. | .G6reat Furniture Exposition Building. COR. SIXTEENTH AND MISSION STS. The two great Sales Floors are the grandest in America and for the last three years a iness of over a half million has been done on these two floors. After the first of May this ‘monstrous Building will be altered Into an immense Apartment-House, with stores under- neath. o HOW TO GET THERE Take any Misstion-Street Car direct; Thke any Fllimore-Street Car direct; Take any Valencia-Street or Blue Mar- ket-Street Car to Sixteenth Street, or take y car which transfers you to any of these lines. The polite conductors will assist you to get to the GREAT RE- TIRING SALE. AHUSBIENTI. COLUMBIA 25 | Two WeeKs, Tvo Weeks, T, Night! Mary Mannering (Management FRANK McKEE.) Presenting a New Modern Comedy, by Leo Ditrichstein, entitled Harrict’s Honeymoon Nightly, Except Sunday. ~ Matinee Saturday. La Belle uerrero: Taflary's Dogs; Billy Clifford; Adelina | Roattino and Clara Stevens; Montell | Brothers; EMMETT CORRIGAN | COMPANY, Presenting -'Jmkey; Jones”; Nichols Sisters; Loney Has- kell and Orpheum Motion Pictures, Showing Young Corbett and Britt Training. | Reguldr Matinees every Wednesday, Thurs day, Saturday and Sunday. Prices, 10e, and 50c. CALIFORNIA TO-NIGHT, The Popular Comedian, 'CASTORIA AT CROSSING | uburban town, | was struck by a Great Northern loco- | ing the railroad tracks in the east- | For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought - Bears the %&a/a/uw@ Perfect Fitting Eyeglasses badly bruised; | James Linton, Pennsylvania, | At Mo_erate Cost | 642 HARK&T ST __HOTELS AND RESORTS (New) HOTELBUTLER SEATTLE. REMODELED AND REBUILT at expense of $260,000—New Management—ENTIRELY FIREPROOF. LOCATION—Very accessible to street car Jines, theaters, etc. EUROPEAN PLAN. 223 ROOMS with LUXURIOUS BATHS— Several private roofs in antique decorations, Turkish Baths in Hotel. UNSURPASSED RESTAURANT, De Stei. ger. Chef, formerly of Waldorf-Astoria and Chet to Prince of Wales. HOTEL PRCHESTRA: Telfphone Connec- tions in every room: lun‘ distance connections made with any part of the coast. Wire for reservations, at our expense. BUTLER HOTEL, Seattle. DON'T FAIL TO sec the beautiful COURT l"""“’iilaol the PALM ROOM, the LOUIS XV Ptx: A new play by Sidney R. Ellls. NEXT—The World's Greatest Marvel, ANNA EVA FAY. Special Matinees for Ladies Only Wednesday and Saturday. o . D. Pric | ALCAZAR F AT 8 TO-NIGHT— Mats. Sat. and Sun. | Wagner's Impressive Miracle Play, PARSIFAL.. SUPERB STAGE PICTURES. “People sit absorbed while the great legend | is enacted.”—Chronicle. “It is worth gny half dozen Lenten ser- vices.”" —Call The music by an orchestra of Twenty. | Evgs., 26c to $1. Mats. Sat. & Sun,, 25¢ to T50. GENTRAL* Market strest. near Eighth. Phone Soum 533. TO-NIGHT—ALL THIS WEEK. Belasco & Mayer, Proprietor sco uAvu\ MATINEES SATURDAY AND SUNDAY. | The Great Spectacular Sensation, ll perecrives I A MID-AIR RACE FOR LIFE. With Marvelousiy Realistic THE KING OF Magnificent Original Scenic Effect: BALLOON AND AIRSHIP SCENE. Melodramatic Masterplece of Twentieth | ntury. The Bamng &angz OAKLAND RACE TRACK! NEW CALIFORNIA JOCKEY CLUE, Racing Each Week Day, Rain or Shine. Six or More Races Daily. Races commence at 2:1 m. sharp 'or_special trains s At the track £ P, Ferry, { trains Jeave track at 4:10 and itely after the last race. THOMAS H. WILLIAMS, President. PERCY W. TREAT. Secretary. Weekly Call $1.00 perYear: [The Rounders | | DERIOU TIVOL OPERA HOUSE. TO-NIGHET AT ' 0’CLOCK. First Production in San Francisc Mr. Pickwick Based on A Musical Comedy in Two Charles Dickens' Acts, Ritia)” Appoarsnis Dora de Filllppe The Eminent Lyric Soprane. See All the Famous Characters of the Many Merry Moments of Mirth and Mel MATINEE SATURDAY Usual Popular Prices Pros OPERA G RA N HOUSE THEATER ENTIRELY RENOVATED. First Time To-Night at 8. MRS. FISKE Mary of)l-agdala Next Week—Seats Thursday MRS. FISKE in HEDDA GABLER Tl THE PLAY YOU LIKE Is the one that is of fun That is what everybody says of 25¢, 50c and enium and Mezzanine Box Seats....$1 0 full Brimful of FUN, § DA OURy“ALL STAR™ C/ including Richard P. Carroll, John P. Kenned Ben T. Helen Russell NEXT MONDAY —_———KISME T=———— A Funny Turkish Musical C now on First appearan DALY medy of Seats LIZZIB GILLO’S 'ARTESTO, SHOWING BRITT AND T TRAINING AND A SHOW Every Afternoon and Evening in the Theater. CABARET DE % LA XISCBLLA)IEO’UB AXUS“!NT!. Richard Wagner Lecture Recitals, Lyric Hall, by MRS. RAYMOND BROWN, Pianisi2 To-morrow night, “The Ring"; Thursday, “Tristan"'; Friday, “Meistersinger”; Satur- day matinee, ‘‘Parsifal.’ SEATS—0Cc, 75¢, $1. At Sherman, Clay & SPRING FLOWER SHOW. TWENTIETH EXHIBITION of the California State Floral Soclety Will be heid in the RIY BUILDING, | GRAND NAVE ot the San Francisco. THURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY. March 24, 25 and 25, 1004, Open from 10 a. m. to 10 p. m. Music Evenings. BAJA CALIFORNIA ‘Damiana Bitters 5 A GREAT RESTORATIVE, tor and Nervine. The most wonderful aphrodisiac and Special Tonie for the Sexual Organs, for both sexes. The Mexican Hemedy for Diseasos of the Kidneys and Bladder. Seils on its own merits. NABER, ALFS & BRUNE, Agent 323 Market st., S. F.—(Send for Circulars.) INVIGOKRA-

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