The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 20, 1904, Page 28

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28 THE N FRANCISCO CALL IBER 20. 190 PIANO WAR STILL WAGING ‘What Pommer-Eilers Can Do Now. Ebonized case, largesize yused, ers esk $450 1 it Payments down and ILERS EEMOVAL SALE, t. Between Palace Hotel Philadelphia Shoe Co. 10 THiRD TR-ET, SAN FRANCISI Adjcining Call Building. JUST OUTSIDE THE HIGH- EENT DISTRICT. 0 THANKSGIVING SPECIALS. ii‘tli).\‘ INDUCEM - NTS. g at the lowest prices PPTOF ncing Wiat 2% PmicE REDUCED POR WEEK ONLY 8$1.15 @ NE AT REDUCED PRICES 'rxxs WEEK ONLY: bo PATENT LEATHER LACE, FULL FOXED VAVIPS. To prove that we pe undersell all others, we place on 1l sale this week one of the the season: Patent made Perfect er Kid L dull mat tops, o 1 straight vamps and hig Jesigned for dressy street wear. gular -grade value t!uc!:n HOLIDAY PRICE £1.60 Sizes 2% to 7%. Widths C to E. WHITE TOPS — P&TE’\! VAMPS, with =p¢ abd hesl foxings, neat plain toes band-turned soles.” The prettiestand best style made for children. Widths C to E. SPECIAL THANKSGIVING PRICES: Infants’ sizes; 13 to 6§ i Children’s sizes, spring heel 4% to 8... B. KATSCHINSKI 10 THIRD ST. ‘San Prancisco, United WASHINGTON, Nov. 19.—Hailed by a military blare of twenty trumpets, bronze statue of Frederick the Great, presented to the American peo- ple by Emperor William, was unveiled this afternoon by the Baroness Speck von Sternburg, the wife of the German Embassador. * The ceremony was mark- | ed by great military and official dis-| play. The statue was presented on be- half of the Emperor by his personal envoy, the Germ nbassador, who brief address. The President le the chief address of the day and pted the gift on behalf the American people. Lieutenant General Chaffee, ff 1 staff, utenant Gene: one of the special of Remarks were made chief Major General Gillespie of the master of ceremonies; | al von Loewenfeld, commissioners sent mperor, and rerican Embas to the unveiling by the Charlemagne Tower, o An sador to Germany. m has the national capital wit- ed a more brilliant and distin assemblage than was gathe: the grand esplanade of the Army College around the pedestal of the statue. Immediat back of the statue on the President’s stand, which was' ompletely covered with red, white and e buntin and decorated with er sat the President and rman Embassador Speck von Sternburg, ' l ieutenant Lv( nrral von Loewemfeid and Count von Schmettow, the Em- r's special commissioners to the un- iling, and the entire diplomatie corps, in full uniform. On stands to the| and left of the statue were of-| [ the army and navy in full yrm, the members of the Su- s of Congress and Directly the statue rs of German >us parts of the country. ATTENDANCE, gates of the Army War the line of march were stationed roops Formed in li 0 west road the Barrack e foot rony st Court, membe invited gues d 1 of in front were | ies TROOPS IN Within the along to ed in the the arriva ral grous atteries of field: artillery south battery of the post, | at the gates of the fired the prescribed tioy President’s salute ba firing of the twenty-one guns had rely fin- ished when his carriage reached the west stairway of the War College ter- race. e entire asseniblage ended the grand esplanade re master of e al Gillespie, 1 5 eat in the front row ident’s stand. The official programme began with the invocation by the Right Rev. Dr. terlee, the Bishop of Washington. ral Gillespie then ad- man or. As his addre: neral sadr scorted her where were attached to an flags, in Gripping the hand, the e one tug spi> turned to the offering her his to the edge of the s fastened the silken cord an and_( was shrouded. firmly, one in each sadress had but to gi the silken folds loosened from figure of Freder the twenty trumpet- wn up in front of the Am h i the I d ied a mili- blare of welcome, prolonged and as the flags slowly parted, American to the right and the German to the 1:ft, the Marine Band up the German n anthem. Instead of falling t pedestal, the gs by an ingeniou vice, were hoisted to the top of f poles on either side of the statue and unfur] to the b id the in- s meiody of man hymn. T nt dres: gowned in gray velvet and wore a hat of chin- chilla SPECIAL COMMISSIONER. enant General von Loewenfeld 1 presented by the master of as the special com- Ge Imperor, man TISEMENTS. THE VALUE OF CHARCOAL. Few People Know How Usefual It Is in Preserving IHealth and Beauty. Nearly everybody knows that char- ceal is the safest and most efficient disinfectant and purifier in nature, but few realize its value when taken into the human system for the same cleans- ing purpose. Charcoal is a remedy that the more you take of it the better; it is not a drug at all, but simply absorbs the gases and impurities always present in the stomach and intestines and carries them out of the system. Charcoal sweetens the breath after smoking, drinking or after eating onions and other odorous vegetables. Charcoal effectually clears and im- proves the complexion, it whitens the tecth and further acts as a natural and | eminently safe cathartic. It absorbs the injurious gases which collect in the stomach and bowels; it disinfects 1the mouth and throat from the poison of catarrh. All druggists sell charcoal in one { form or another, but probably the best | charcoal and the most for the money is in Stuart’s Charcoal Lozenges; they | are composed of the finest powdered willow charcoal and other harmless antiseptics in tablet form or rather In the fo of large, pleasant tasting lozenges, the charcoal being mixed | with horiey. | The Gally use of these lozenges will !soon tell in a much improved condi- | tion of the general health, better com- plexion, sweeter breath and purer blood, and the beauty of it is that no possible harm can result from their continued use, but on the contrary, great benefit. A Buffalo physic'~n, in speaking of the benefits of charcoal, says: T ad. | vise Stuart’s Charcoal Lozenges to all | patients suffering from gas in stomach and bowels, and to clear the com- ‘plexlon nnd purify the breath, mouth | and throat; I also believe the liver ig! | greatly benefited by the daily use of | them; they cost but twenty-five cents |a box at drug stores, and, though | in. some sense a patent preparation, yet | I believe I get more and better char- coal in Stuart’s Charcoal Lozenges than in an— of the ordinary charcoal tablets.” MAUVAIS MUSIC CO. 833 MARKET ST., OPP. MASON. | commissioner, TALKING MACHINES AND RECORDS. TOUCH OF FAIR HANDS - UNVEILS GERMANY'S GIFT J'tatue of Frederick the Great Is Formally Presenied to the States. Army War College Scene of Brilliant Military Display | ADVERTISEMENTS. Your cliedlt transferred the statue to the custody | [§ of his Majesty’'s personal envoy, Baron Sternburg, the German Embassador. The lieutenant general briefly ad- dressed the Embassador, saying: The Emperor is confident that, God being willing, this monument will re- r tinuance of the friendly relations be- tween America and Germany—rela- tions whose foundation was laid in the i time of King Frederick “In this city, equally distinguished for its magnificent beauty.and for bundance of its historical memories, I hereby fulfill the honorable mission of imperial master and #give over to you, Mr. Embassador, the statue of Frederick the Great.” Baron Sternburg, the German Em- bassador, was introduced by Major eneral Gillespie and. accepting the custody of the statue from the special formally presented the behalf of the Emperoy to the 1 people through their Presi- whom the Embassador thus ad- gift Ame President: The hearty ncere welcome which Prince of Prussia met with througt out lhe 1 nited States during his visit , 1902, has left a deen and ion on the German Em- he German people. The United States showed tr true manner of American hospitality and where he appeared he received a greeting which did not merely come from the lips, but which had the true ring of heart. FRIEND OF AMERICA, ‘In many addresses with which the I‘vinve was honored the name ¢ Frederick the Gi t was conspicuou lx was emphasized that the Prince’ ancestor had shown himself a stanch and true friend of those peovle who * now welcoming the descendant on own soil. It was pointed out Frederick the Great had proved America’s friend at a time when the republic in the course of ormation, weathering many nd peri s it was this Hohenzollern, the father of who which the iaid the cornerstone friendshin between s might securely rest William “Emperor followed with the movement of h in America and was pro- undly touched by the attitude of un- disguised friendship and good wiil which characterized every step of the Prince, who returned to Germany as true interpreter of the true Amer- ican soir! “In order to give this visit, which had terminated under such happy au pices, a last memorial, Emperor Wil- in a lasting' pledge for the con-| the | and’ the | § on the genius of Ge renowned sculpture to ancestor. This | ent across the seas as a gift of friendship to the American people. We now behold it on the pedestal from which it is destined to watch the men who in the magnificent lding soon to adorn these grounds instructed in those sciences e military genius of Prussia’s - King so marvelously perfected. the spirit of this hero inspire se men who are to stand as the pil- rs of the future 1 army of the United States with those qualities which made the iron Hohenzollern great amonsg leaders and which alone render armies mighty and invincible | “Mr. ident, by order of the Ger- man Emperor T have the honor of asking vou to accept this statue as a token of his Majesty's and the German people’s sincer ple of Americ OVATION FOR PRESIDENT. 3 last 5 of "Die Wacht am we wned in the enthu- greeting given the President as arose and a h the stand to deliver dvanced to the edge of his address of a ceptance. The President’s address fol- lows ‘Mr. wish on United the Ge of G which Embassador: Through you I behalf of the people of the States to thfnk his Majesty, Emperor, and the people / for thagift to the nation have just formally deliv- I accept it with deep ap- of the friendly’ regard vou ered to me. preciation which it typifies for the people of this republic, both on the rt of the Em- peror and on the part of the German ple. I zccept it not merely as the > of one of the half-dozen gres soldiers of all time, and therefore 1y propriate for placing in ar ‘College, but I accept it as ue of a great man, whose life was devoted to the service of a great people and whose deeds hastened the approach of the day when a united | Germany should spring into being. “As a soldier Frederick the Great ranks in that very, very small group friendship for the peo- | CHINA CLOSET—Quarter- 1 sawed oak. golden finish Top de ted with bevel pi mmor swelled sid highly polish ed Price a full ot ne Pric each New designs arriving daily. @ minsters, Body Brussels, | Ingrain and Fiber Cafpets. igns at absolute low prices. DINING CHAIR, seat, golder ter Wiltons, Tapestry Brussels box solld oak, finish, ban- back and Ax- clusive de- ECONOMY SALESROOM A Department where all odd pieces arc placed at from one-quarter to one-third re- duction. PEDESAL DINING TABLE— golden finish, highly polished. tox top, A masterpiece of mechanical ingenu- of the ¢ ity nary lutely 1 one-half t for >. Terms $1 Down and $1 a Week. 6-foot draw, Price, each. . he co; part Solid oak, $18.00 —So'id oak, golden brace bub 5105 finish, cane seat; tional value. Price, each.. COMBINATION SIDE- BOARD — Quarter-sawed oak, olden finish, beautifully flaked modious china closet, well arranged buffet, a beau- tiful design. Price . A department where the most fastidious aste can be satisfied. lace curtains, sets. table covers and cut drapes. An immense line of couch covers, bed Not a portieres, design but bears the stamp of quality. rai abso- ., and “found URNITURE 2451259 co GEARYST RENTING DEPARTMENT Hundreds of Service absolutely free houses and flats listed ed might of Europe, yet rose again aud by an exhibftion’ of €kill, tenacity, ergy and daring such as had never fore been seen -united in one person finally wrested triumph from defeat. | Not only must the military scholar al- ways turn to the er of Frederick and 1t for lessons in strategy not only must the mil turn to h not 1d the long as mankind cares for heroic deeds even those who are not attrac the valor of the soldier must yet, the . of the greatness of the man, ponder and admire the lessons taught his launted resolution, tenacity of purpose, of lofty possibilit! unflinching, unyielding dete in following the path he ked out. It is emine@tly fittin tatue of this iron soldier, this born leader of men, should find a place in this War College; for when soldierly geniu 1d soldierly heroism reach the highest noint of achievement the man in whom they d grows to belong not merely to the na- tion from which he sp: . but to all nations capable of sho ind there- fore capable of appreciating, the virile and masterful virtues which alone ake victors in those dread struggles where resort i¢ at last had to the | arbitrament of arms. i SYMBOL OF GOOD WILL. { “But, Mr. Embassador, in accepting |~ mina- had that the | the statue given us to-day through )uu\ A from the German Emperor, I accept it | not merely because it is the statue of | a mighty and terrible soldier, but T ac-| cept it as a symbol of the ties of friend- | ! ship and good will which I trust as;| which includes Alexander, Caesar and | Hannibal in antiquity, and Napoleon, | and, possibly, Gustavus Adolphus, in modern times. He belonged to the an- cient and illustrious house of Hohen- zollern, which, after playing a strong like the most famous Princes of their time, founded the royal house of Prussia two centuries ago, and at last in our own day,established the mighty Ger- | man empire as among the foremost of world powers. We receive this gift now at the hands of the present Em- peror, himself a man who has mark- edly added to the luster of his great house and his great nation, a man who has devoted his life to the wel- fare of his people, and who, while keeping ever ready to defend the rights of that people, has also made it evident in emphatic fashion that he and they desire peace and friendship with the other nations of the earth. GREATER THAN HANNIBAL. “It is not my purpose here to dis- cuss at length the career of the mighty King and mighty general whose statue we have just received. In all history ro other great commander save oniy Hannibal fought so long against such terrible odds, and while Hannibal finally failed, Frederick finally tri- uvmphed. In almost every battle he fought against great odds and he al- most always won the victory. When defeated he rose to an even greater altitude than when victorious. The memory of the Seven Years’ War will last as long as their lives in mankind the love of heroism, and its operations will be studied to the minutest deta1l as long as the world sees a soldier worthy of the name. It is difficult to know whether to admire most the vlc. tories of Leuthen and Prague, R bach and Zorndorf, or the hur! breaking campaign after Kunersdorf, when the great King, | v t we have the 2nd virile part in the miadle aees and | 17, 0r Which e foel tha | after producing some men great Elector who were among the | the yvears go on will bind ever closer | together the American and the Ger-| man peoples. There is kinship of blood | between the two nations. We of the| United States are of mixed stock. In our veins runs the blood of almost all the peoples of middle, northern and west- | ern Europe. We already have a his-| right to be legitimately proud, and yet our nationality is still in the formative period. Nearly three centuries have lapsed since the landing of the Eng- lish at Jamestown marked the begin- | ning of what has since grown into the United States. “During these three centuries streams of newcomers from many different| countries abroad have in each genera- tion contributed to swell the increase/| of our people. Soon after the English settled in Virginia and New England, R ——— e ADVERTISEMENTS. Scrofula It is commaonly inherited. Few are entirely free from it. Pale, weak, puny children are affiict- ed with it in nine cases out of ten, and many adults suffer from it. Common indications are bunches in; the neck, abscesses, cutaneous erup-| tions, inflamed eyelids, sore ears, rick- ets, catarrh, wasting and general de- bility. Hood’s Sarsaparilla and Pills Bradicate it, positively and absolutely. This statement is based on the thou- sands of permanent cures these medi- cines have wrought. Testimonials of remarkable cures after having | mailed on request. C. L. HOOD CQ., been beaten to the ground by the band- ' Lowell, Mass. the Hollander the Hudson mouth lonial beco! days the very Irish elemen foothills Huguenots time of the dence gone on ever since was well under settled at and of the Delaware. trong arts was the were Declaration that process of fusion which has, mouth of ede at the en in co- element had people 3.3 n th French By the Indepen- the the German among our of this countr predominant Alleghanies numerous. of way. From the beginning of our national his- tory American among the ame to aid us one inent was the German, Steub: was the House of Representatives; tle which in the valley of the Moh: lenberg men of German origin or parentage played a disting in the affairs both of peacs In the Revolutionary leading generals of German « soldiers from German hed part w uhlenberg, an cent, just as abroad who most prom- was of the n. Muh- first Speaker of the and the bat- Revolution saved the wk to the American cause was fought under the lead of the German, Herkimer. As all the different races here tend rapidly to fuse to- gether, it is rarely possible after one »r two generations to draw a sharp line between the there is no student of our nat has invaluable composite stock the platform, ditions who what an on this various elements; but al con- failed to appreciate element in our German is. Here Mr. Embassador, among those present to-day are many men partl $50 EXTENSION TABLE —Solid oak—well fin- ished. Reg. $15.00; spe- cial or wholly of German blood, | BRIGHTEN UP Our ! you k. i See Carpet Cleaning Columns. rpet, make the room look riul. advertisers will ces. quote j and and navy there u grandfathers and saw not the AT F among are ma light ACE ach nation has its allotted te each nation has its peculiar diffi< to encounter; the who office have 1 ned to bt were born few there. WITH NATIONS. and as the d the army you nd who now join with me in greeting whose fathers or in Germany, who themselves first ks to peo- ples of the world tend to become more closely portant to per; knit and for evil, for: the prosperi it becomes ever mure all that each shoul of one Is nur together alike for good 1m- mally not a sign of menace but a sign of hope for the rest.” Here on this continent where it is absolutely essen- tial that the different peoples coming to our shores should not remain sepa- rate but should fuse into one, our un- ceasing effort is to strive to keep and profit by the good that each race brings to our shores, and at the same time to| dn away with all racial and religious | " Continued on Page 29, Column 2. ADVERTISEMENT! Worth of Furniture Or Carpets :: $ 5 CASH $1 per Week —One Piece or Twenty Piecs. DlNlNG...____———TABLES —Like 6-inch sha EXTENSION TABLE cut—beautiful ped legs— quartered oak. Regu- lar $28; special $7.00 CEINA SCLOSET — Quartered oak — piano finish— French plate glass. Reg. $30.00; spe- clal . $10.00 PICTURE! —All beau- tiful sub- jects for dining room, parlor or bedroom, with oxi- dized oa k— gilt and w eathered oak frames. Reg. $2.50; special ..... NSION TABLE —RQuarter-sawed oak top—heavy 5-inch lell‘ like cut. Reg. $27. special Fine Woob Blankets—6-Ib. weight— just fine for these cold mghtS' rec. $8. Special $3.50 T.Brillant Furniture COMPANY 338-342 Post, Street.. J’Zo&u/amm;b Perfect Fittin 2 fyeglasses k1 Moderate Cost ¥Y642 "MARKETST = FRENCH SAVINGS BANK 315 Montgomery Street. Capital paidup . . .. . $ 600,000 Cividends paid to depositors . 1,656,226 CHAS. CARPY. President. ARTHUR LEGALLE LEON BOCQUER JOHN GINTY. Aw DIRECTORS: Dr.E. Artigues. Chas. Carpy. Leon Kautfma ©. Boato, J.B.Clot, ' A. Roos, - Leon Bocqueraz. J. M. Dugas. A Legailet, JUA. Bergerot. J. S. Godeau. J. . Mack. Interest paid on deposits. Loans made on Real Estate and approved securities. WEAK MEN DR. HALL'S REINVIGORATOR fl stops all losses and unnatural dis- charges in 24 hours. You feel an improvement from the first dose. We have so much confidence in our treatment that we offer Five Hu: dred reward for any case we caa- not cure. This secret remedy cures nightly emissions, wasted o gleet, strictures, lost power, varicocele, memory, drains in the urine, ease of the prostate glands and all other terri- ble effects of self-abuse or sxcesses, which lead on to consumption and death. Positively cures the worst cases in old or young of that morti fying condition, quickness of the discharge, and wanting to do, and you can't. Sent sealed, §3 per bottle; three bottles, $5. Guaranteed cure any case. Call or address orders HALL'S MEDICAL | INSTITUTE, 855 Broadway, Oakiand, Cal, Also for sale at 1073% Market st., S. F. Send for free book. 13 tnterested 2.4 should M et Cor Cou'-hng . Row, Now York. 152 New Montgomery, San Franctacs, Willam Hatteroth (Ladi Union Drug Co. D mi-n 400 Sutter and 7th and 100 Stockton, Efld Brothers. FOR BARBERS, BAK- g, bootblacks. ' bath- BRUSHES =725z s brewers. bookbinders, un.l) makers, canners, dyers, flour mills, foundries, laundrfes, paper- hangers, printers, painters, shos factories, stablemen, tar-roofers, tanmers, tallors, ete. BUCHANAN ROS., Brush Manufacturers, 609 Sacramento St. JASTHMANOLA] Is the only cure for Nervous and Your Druggist or at 598 HAIGHT ST, San Francisco. Cal. Weak Men and Women SHQULD USE DAMIANA BI THE Great Mexican Remedy; gives and sirength to sexual organs. Depot, 323 Market.

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