The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, March 27, 1904, Page 31

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THE SAN' FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, MARCH 27, 1904. 31 R ——— P U NP RS e e ——————p———— ADVER IISEKENTS. - The WHITE flOUSE ...Is Now Showing in the... Cloak and Suil Departments SECOND FLOOR=——— New Spring and Summer Styles IN Misses’ Suits and Costumes in ian creations in fancy effects. its for reception, t h ater and street wear, a ma nificent assortment of C ats, Jackets and Pale- ace, Pongee, Tuscar styles exclusive o the gn and D\me tic $30, $45, $55, $65, $75 to $150 Silk Lmed Dress Sults DR and Brown; © $35.00 collection exc ede'xt Ladies’ WalKing Sul_ts m Tallor Made Svits for Misses .q of Wool Heather Mixtures, cotch Homespuns, in the new cts of light and medium $22.50 4,16 2 nlex::m Special 7 Waleg Serts Of Scotch Mixtures )qfi. Cheviots, excsl- Scparz;lc Dress SKirls ti.nine > adcloth and Cheviot. Models »>h\\\n elsewhere; a rich pro- Walking f heavy taffeta; the latest models in Black, Blue, H"I“v’q' Green and Gun 545.00 - $95.00 Met One lot of Sllk Shirl Waisl Suils 50 suits in ilards and Check Silks, in figured and plain Big values. ‘Spe- $]5.00and$25.00 Covert Cloth Coats =4 JacKets In exclusive styles, custom tailored and lined. $16.50, $18.50, $20.00, $25.00, $30.00 We ; epared abundantly for the enormous popu- larity of the Covert Coat this season, which we had f) esezn. We have almost unlimited varieties *o select from and the values are unapproached anywhere. T il G oo | Post x Keapny 518 - —— DEVISES PLAY FOR FRUIT MEN Committee of Opinion That One Central AgencyShould Have the Making of Prices —— ARRANGE TO ADVERTISE B Provide for Forming Local Associations to Consist of | Producers of the State Lo At the twenty-ninth annual conven- tiom of the fruit growers of this State‘ a committee of fifteen was appointed to e and put into effect a plan or| to promote co-operation among ! s of dried fruits| Of this commit- 'Io“lng have been considering A. R. Sprague of Sacra- , F. H. Babb of San Jose, S. G. DEEP DEVOTION FOR NOLY WEEK Churches Prepare Special and Solemn Services to Commemorate the Passion DISTRIBUTION OF PALMS Ceremony To-Day in Catho- lie Houses of Worship. Next Sunday Is Easter TR AN calendar, begins to-morrow and in all Catholic and Episcopal places of wor- increase in the penitential character of hymn and prayers. Never before in observed with greater rigor. Among deck of Campbell, Arthur R. Briges | Episcopalians Lent of 1904 has been an of San Francisco, H. P. Stebler of Yuba | active religious revival in which all A. D. Bishop of or&nge W. P. | ening of spiritual life and large addi- tions to the m bership. For Holy Week each of clergy will confine | of the committee. | himself to his own parish and at all has unanimously | the houses of worship a series of devo- ing resolutions as the | tions will be conducted almost without intermission in churches whose doors, | opening with the rising of the sun, will not close until the last faint trace of | daylight disapp Easter Sunday, which occurs o served with spe |ing so late In he | of floral offerings available for church ‘e | display will be greatly increased. The { altars of all churches on Sunday next | will be adorned with a display possible nowhere else than in California. Services at the Episcopal churches in | Passion Week will be as follows: urch, for the first four days of the have evening prayers with ad- with additional ser- Good Friday's the State, hen con- y to n and last for three | conduct and preach =8 services at 11 and y. On Good Friday at 12 o'clock, three s excent arist at 7:45 a. evening praver will be said elist—On Monday at 4 Tuesday at 11 a. m. m. Good Friday at ck. Confirmation will ). m. Saturday even- Daily masses at 7. evening prayer at 'Tuesday, Wednesday and on Thursday d Friday morning, viday at 9. Saturday at 10 ch—Monday and Wednes- communion at eucharist at 2 to 3. at first | | s the Virgin gt d prayer at 4:30 p.m.. to unan- | &, Friday, when morning service will be ent in support of the plan | at 10 o clock and the way af the cross at 7:45 | | B ol | The following services will be held | to-day at the Emanuel Evangelical | | Church: ‘Morning—Organ voluntary: ture. Matthew, 21:1-11; hymn. DEEP SNOWS. Yosemite Waterfalls Will Be Grand | This Year. reading of Scrip- How Shall I examinations of catechumens; song by ong, ‘‘Hoslanna, Son of David"; bene- organ postlude. re at 641 Market | . jem Corneu), Mra T Mot The (J. Faure and mpanied by ‘Jesus, and Shail Adames) filed a suit | Charles or " | 1t Ever from Lizzie M. Don- e i PHae M e will of the late Thn money postiude. 0. | the First English Lutheran Church to- day: Confirmation and morning service—Anthem, “Blessed Is He Who Cometh™ (Le Prev of- “O For the Wings of a Do San Fr: -isco Veterinary C ; sermon, “Equipment for n XY Goliens grimage of Life”’; rite of confirmation; t session will begin June 6th. Catalogues | 36 298 415. by applying to Dr. E. J. Creely, 510 G. G. ave.® | Ewening service—Out of the Deep'” e sten): offertory. Further Time for Davis. | T Thomas Davis, indicted for fa!nni-l In the Paulist church, on California ulting Mrs. A. H. Ames on |street, part of the beautiful office of | , was yesterday allowed | tenebrae of the Catholic church will aturday to plead. The as- |be given. The Gregorian chant for | id to have taken place on | Holy Week is exceptionally impressive mer Alliance on October | and the arrangement used will be the | | same as that sung by the famous sanc- tiff's favor by Donovan a to his death in 1899. —————— (Mar “When the Son of Man™ | “Palm Branches’’; hymns ously as: the high s until S ADVERTISEMENTS. Allffl! AT Parlor Suits and Odd Pieces The most complete line on the coast. Everything to make your parlor look bright and comfortable at prices to suit every purse. Just received two carloads of carpets and rugs in the latest patterns, a great many - in Persian and Oriental designs. We have two acres of floor space covered with Bed Sets—brass and enamel beds—Dining-room Sets, s Stoves, etc., to make your selection from. We are not com- pelled to advertise special sales, as ‘every day is bargain day with us. Visit our immense store and see the regular bar- gains we have to offer. We don't pay rent; all other furni- ture houses do; that’s why we sell so much lower. The J. Noonan Furniture Co. 1017-1023 Mission St., y.iF momommom. ABOVE SIXTH. New Postoffice. Passion Week, hollest in the churches’ | San Francisco has the Lenten fast been | ship outward and visible evidences of | the season will be displayed'in the ton- | ing down of all elaborate ritual and an | the churches and clergy have united | and the result has been a great quick- | celebrate holy com- | devotion, | | Thv Bread Upon the Waters'; | ): prayer; hymn, { benediction; organ | | is | The following services will be held at | | be read. ADVERTISEMENTS. TheWide-Awake Man Is the man who KNOWS about things, instead of GUESS- ING at them. When he hears an unfamiliar subject spoken of, he makes it his business to find out about it. When he reads, it is with open mind, ready to seize upon every new fact and make it his own. He knows that the watchword of the Twentieth Century is Alertness, and that he can only succeed by ng ready for success, profiting by the mistakes and successes of those who have gone before. And so he keeps by his side that greatest of all repositories of human experience and wisdom, The Encyclopaedia Britannica Whether in the home, store, factory or office, BRI- TANNICA has long since come to be a necessity. There are actually millions of these volumes now open to answer every question and meet every need. The school boy and girl turn to BRITANNICA to find out further facts in the history of some country they are studying, or for interesting -data about Botany, or Geology, or Astronomy, or P The man of business places it among his office necessities, with his telephone or typewriter. The reason for this universal demand for BRITAN- NICA is that it is The Onc WorK Thal Tells All Here you do not get the smattering of a subject. You get a complete survey of it, written by the greatest author- ity. ‘There were 1100 specialists engaged upon the work, and as high as ten thousand dollars was paid for a single ar- ticle. No less than fiity-seven of these articles have been reprinted in book form for use in schools. The new Twentieth Century Edition represents the high-water mark of Encyclopaedia making. It is not a mat- ter of afew volumes; but with the American Supplement and Index consists of 31 MASSIVE VOLUMES, aggregating 25,000 large pages, fully illustrated, and cov g the entire progress of the world to the present year. . Low Prices---Easy Paymenls There is now no reason why any one should do without this king of reference works. An entire edition is being dis- tributed direct to readers at one-half the former cost and on i | be rendered by the choir under the di- | George C. Adams will deliver an ad- | the choir will repeat Spohr’s oratorio, | address there will be an informal re- easy terms, amounting to ONLY TEN CENTS A DAY. But when this Edition is exhausted The Price Will Advance On account of the increased cost of material and labor, the price of this Encyclopaedia must be advanced at an early date. We have, however, arranged that this increase in price shall not go into effect until the present printing is exhausted. But prompt action is needed to obtain a set on the pres- ent advantageous terms. Cut out the INQUIRY COUPON before you lay aside this paper, and send it in AT ONCE! WHAT IS SAID OF IT: “It is without a peer in the whole noble army dias.”—LYMAN ABBOTT. D. D. “The Encyclopaedia Britannica Is king of its DAVID SWING. “If all other books were destroyed, th B world would lose but little of its lr‘f)rmd‘ S BOOKCASE FREE A limited number of bookcases will be given free of charxe to The Call readers who respond promptly. The Coupon below will be known as the Bookcase Coupon, and should be malled at once. 58 Cut Out and Mail This Coupon To-Day For Particulars of Our Great Offer to Call Readers. 37704 The American Newspaper Association. of encyclopae- tribe."—PROF. le excepted, PURGEON. the 31 Massi Weight e Volumes. ver 200 Pounds 31 Volumes in All. 25 Volumes Ninth Bdition. 5 Volumes American Additions. 1 Volume Guide to Systematic. Readings of the Whole Work. Please send me free of charge samp pages and fu ticulars of your Encyclopaedia offer (B s 1il par- Secures this entire set of th . New 20th Century Edition You can pay the balance at the rate of only 1l0c a day for a short time. Name .... sen: Street, . ROOMING-HOUSE ESCAPED PRISONER MUCH EXCITE.\IE\'T tuary choir in the Paulist church in New York City. On Wednesday, Thurs- day and Friday evenings a sermon will be given. Rev. Patrick S. Butler will preach this evening in St. Ignatius Church. There will be no sermon in the morn- ing, but the passion of our Lord wil FIRE IN CAU Crossed Wires Start a Small- sned' Joseph Stark. Who Threatened Life of Blaze in the Columbus, but It Is H. E. Huntington in Los Angeles, Quickly Extinguished. Is Returned to Custody. Fire broke out in the rear of the| Joseph Stark, top floor of the Columbus rooming- [ County Jail .?0. 2 l;ln January house, formerly the Dunlap, on O'Far- | Was returnec fhst fnstitut rell street, near Powell. yesterday ‘”::‘frkb*“a'f‘“ 2 _JNogan Wirn afternoon shortly after 4 o'clock. The | o " J0C, i Thran o A inmates of the place ran hither and |yod S70 T OO EATEAts Seate thither as soon as the alarm was turned in and great excitement pre-| vailed for a short time. | The blaze was quickly extinguished and little damage was done. The fire | was the result of crossed wires. The streets were crowded for several blocks in the vieinity of the place and the This evening in the Holy Cross Church Rev. Father Harvey will preach on “Man's Weakness.” The Most Rev. Archbishop Riordan will bless the palms at the 11 o’clock mass in St. Mary's Cathedral this | morning. The Lenten devotions of the Calvarian Society will be held at 3 o'clock this afternoon. The palms will be blessed and dis- tributed at the 11 o'clock mass this morning in St. Francis Church. The from this city. Wittman thereupon turned | prisoner over to Sheriff Curtis, he escaped more pastor, Rev. T. Caraher, will preach | police experienced much dimc_ulty in | Stark had three months.of his original in lhe evening on “Christ and Cai- | keeping the throng at a safe distance. d - - phas.” The loss will probably reach $1500, | jercntce 10 serve when he escaped which is fully covered by insurance, | Tom the institution. —_—————— | The perfume woods and plants of The regular monthly service will be held this evening in the First Congre- gational Church. Choice selections will of Samuel D. Mayer. Rev. P at the World's Fair in a special collec- tion. dress on “The Beauty of Holiness.” At the Trinity Church this evening T BACK TO JAIL who escaped from 1903, n yes- The Chief of Police of Los Angeles finally turned Stark over to Chief Wittman, having ascertained that Stark was an escape who sent him back to the jail from which than a year ago. The last surviving soldier of the ‘War of the Revolution was Daniel F. the Philippine Islands will be shown | Blakeman, who died in Freedom, N. | Y. In 1869, at the age of over 109 “Calvary,” and Wednesday, March 30, Stainer’s will be given. This afternoon at 3 o’clock Henry W. Davis, the new religious work director of the San Francisco Young Men's Christian Association, will address the great mass meeting for men only at the Association Auditorium, Mason and Ellis streets. Miss Charlotte White of Madison, Wis., will sing and there will be special music by the Robson Or- chestra. At the close of Mr. Dayis’ ception and collation and Bible class instruction. A number of boys and girls will be confirmed this morning in St. Paul’'s German Lutheran Church. The pastor, Rev. Paul Branke, will officiate. —_———— Gets Goods on Worthless Check. A. Semenza, fruit dealer, 1506 Gold- en Gate avenue, notified the police yesterday that a man had bought from him on Thursday a box of or- anges and sack of potatoes, which he ordered sent to 1736 Golden Gate ave- nue. The man gave in payment a check for $8 75 on the Crocker-Wool- worth Bank signed “Morrison Lum- ber Co.” and received $4 90 change. The check was worthless and the oc- cupants of 1736 Golden Gate avenue had not ordered the articles. The police are searching for the culprit. — ee———— Charges Dierssen With Fodgery. The answer of Fritz Lang to the suit of George Dierssen, as assignee of Anna Dierssen, for $800 due on a promissory note alleged to have been made by Lang in October, 1903, in favor of Mrs. Dierssen was filed yes- terday. It is a complete denial of the charges made by Dierssen in his com- plaint, and as a defense against the suit Lang charges that the note, if it exists, is a fol He says he never at any time a his signature to a document containing a promise to pay 2rs. Dierssen §800 or any other sum. or New York. CANDY CATHARTIC

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