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20, 1904. ADVERTISEMENTS. EB ON THE L Has there ever before been an offer to equal tude; there’s a reason why we are even now adding of customers speak for the honesty of our names on our RO .9 GGEST FURNITURE HousE PACIFIC COAST. * AND YOU MAKE YOUR OWN TERMS WHEN YOU BUY. this? Thee'sanuonforourngfi- three more floors. Two generations We have had ninety-one thousand books. We have trusted thsvmople and our confidence has never been abused. ou look over this great establishment? The holidays ou let us put. you on our books? YOUR owfi TERMS. are here. bl ene | ‘. g Our Picture for hall room Dispia; or den. usic d frames, While they last. dining room, lke the above, Y, s Dainty for A little 26¢C UP. $25.00 SHERATION BUFFET. A ‘perfect beauty; rich, finely grained quartered oak; golden or cark weathered finish; $l7 50 th's week for i HCLIDAY GIST PIECES— Chairs and Rock- comiort from the legs to the back. oak pieces of Mission and Roy- { will last a generation, all redgced ion Sale. Rocker like pictur Spanish leather; $19°59-w $3000; now . . design ENAMEL and ERASS EED— A beautiful design; heavy angle irons; deep cut chills, rounded curves and brass ornaments; full 4-4 size. We have one whole floor of artistic metal beds. This $16.00 BUREAU ch royal oak, 3 large draw- | $10.00 MUSIC CABI- | | | { ers, quartered; bulged | NET - Sometbing you top; be b || 2%l need. Mahsgany fin- $3.00 COBBLER ROCKER murror; icgs. f| ifhld: shelf arrangexent Sl0.0J’RUMA(uN CHAIR —Mahog- Oak or mahogany finish; Special | for sheet music. g4 @ | any finick=d; tufted, silk- =~ | firmly made. $i | Special - . . &693 covere? scat. Special $5.5<fi Special el i i AT BIG this week, per p air. . . LACE CURTAIN $3.50 Motifany Curtains. The latest novelty in window drapiny. They are three yards long, of good Arab net, nicely taped. They have a Batten- berg edge on the sides and ends; and as the name implies, each pair of curtains have their in- dividual motif.See them; $1.85 DINERS. | 3 Golden oak, rush ‘wi seat; six to 4 ¢ B customer. 95¢ STHE-CREDIT. HOUSE™ ™" 3195 233-235-237: POST ST, $7.50 Ladies” Writing Desk — oak finish, apart- ment interior. Special, $5.25 Trouble Brewing in Honduras. The tug was purchased recen T ssengers who arrived yester- |2 local fishing firm and is to Peru from Ancon and | 107 towing coffee barg T ama carried an unusually "ber of pdssengers and a ful Among those who left Ed H. t signs of a coming Hon- ons of 21,480. neluded = eridge, mining men, O e . George F. Montell mont, Bessie de Clau- | Panied them, Al s o g Picture Frames. Arthur de Loyer, prge Harrison, Mrs. Josie Girard, John W. Grau- a, Mrs. Rosa de An immense variety of moul framing pictures to order; frames every tint and color of binding paper made. | Co., 741 Market street | BERARCL S DTN DR There are 44,000 hotels United States, representing mat Is Towing Tug to Guatemala. The Pacific Mail Company's steam- on the Hoag and George bound for also n all the new shapes and board and Sanborn, Vail & tly from be used he Pan- Jarge num- 1 cargo. liner F. accom- dings for ready- the in- in an ship of Panama. Captain Sand- | vested capital of over $6,000,000,000. berg ed yesterday for the isthmus These establishments employ 3,500,000 | witk tug Alexander Volta in tow. | persons. OF i THE ARISTOCRA Very soon the people all over the world will be sending each other holiday presents of Sorosis Two cents mails a Sorosis certificate that is good in any Sorosis shop. Everywhere the fall styles of Sorosis and the new Sorosis Health leather, “the secret of cool, dry feet,” are the reigning favorites in footwear. shoes. It is th's great popularity, this - tremendous volume of sales, that makes the low price po: sible. X $3.50% e $ 3.50 | GRAV TROUSERS NOW CREASED | BY USE OF A MACHINE Even Overcoats in London Are Pressed Stiff in Place of a Seam. | LONDON, Nov. 19—A machine has been invented to crease trousers you wait.” “‘while It looks like a large pair of scissors, with two small rollers at one end. The latter are heated in a spirit lamp and then the center of the trousers leg, where the crease should | be, is placed between ,the rollers and | the machine run down toward the foot. | The advantage of this contrivance i3 that jt can be used while crease-re-| quiring garments are being worn. The | disadvantage is that in the hands of| the inexpert it may burn holes in the trousers and raise blisters under them. | But g0 consuming is the present crszrz‘ for creases that this wouldn't be deem- | ed too great if ultimate} success were b { Hitherto the crease has been confined to trousers. but on the authority of| tiie Tailor and Cutter, it is now spread- | ing to overcoats, where it is supersed- | ing the seam. To wear 'a seamless ! ick with a crease down each side and one down the back is to proclaim one's | self absolutely up to date in this mat- ter. —_———— OF THE DOGS WERE NOT OVERLOOKED Canines Included in the Decoration Day Ceremonies in French Cadital. PARIS, Nov. 19.—Paris recently cele- brated the “Journee des Morts,” which is France's Decoration day. The cemeteries were visited by hun- dreds of thousands. All the famous graves were decorated with wreaths. A curious feature is that the Dogs" Cemetery, at Clichy, was not forgotten, The monument there by Barye, repre- senting a St. Bernard dog at his work of rescue, was profusely adorned with chrysanthemums and other flowers. g ——— EAMES SINGS FOR 3 PENSION FUND IN. PARIS “La Tosca” Matinee Brings in Nearly ¥our Thousand Dollars for Opera Comique. PARIS, Nov. 18.—The matinee pers formance of “La Tosca,” with Mme. Emma Eames in the title role, bene- fited the Opera Comique's pension fund to the extent of 18,400f ($3680). Mile. Yvette Guilbert will make her debut on the legitimate stage in a piece by M. Maurice Bonkay and Edouard. Franklin, bringing into the play artists at the time of the Revolution. ————— It's-hard to be “a good fellow” and | a model husband too. { i | | | i { EMMA | came the First Sea Lord of Great Brit- {link between England’s old wooden ! Sir John | kniows, i sceing; | brusqueness of speech there is a deal | |around men | any way, regardless of condition of MUCH IS EXPECTED FROM BRITAIN'S NEW SEA LORD Sir John Fusher a Fighter and Diplomat ADVERTISEMENTS. G 9_l: D Rewards @Eah Miners Every Day Uncovers More Wealth in This Wonderful District---The Greatest on Earth. Frank Everett, one of the most suc-| the general p Special Dispatch to The Call. LONDON, Nov. 19.—It is a notable coincidence thdt on the eve of the an- niversary of Trafalgar the last mid- shipman received into the royal navy by the last of Nelson's captains be- am. ~Admiral Sir John Fisher, this walls and her modern steel-clad | leviathans, was born in 1841, and| when as a boy of 13 he stepped on board the old Victory at Portsmouth he toliched his cap to Admiral Sir Wil- liam Parker, whose chief claim to fame lies in the fact that he was the last of the men who commanded a ship under the greatest of England’s sea fighters. H Great hopes are entertained of what Fisher will accomplish at Whitehall—that museum of hearty of- | ficlal traditions, circumlocution and | red tape. A cheerful feeling pervades | the country that he is the right man ADMIRAL SIR JOHN FISHER, THE in the right place there—the man who | NEW HEAD OF THE NAVY OF knows what ought to be done and! GREAT BF IN too, how to get it dome. As/| ¥ naelovsness In much the.same way as | norities on the subject, which, -he knew from experience would be tedi- ous and futile, he invited the Lords of dces the physiognomy of our own Fighting” Bob Evans. The nose 18| 4. Aqmiraity to visit him at Malta and take a little cruise with him. shoft, the eyvés large, round and far- They came and he laid his ideas be- the ‘mouth ' full-lipped and strong and the chin miasterful. " The |z, . " her” “They aldn’t see the n cessity for making any changes; thin face is dominated' by a broad, high forehead, crowned by thick, stubby : . i o 5 5 , ie | Were jogging along very satisfacteril hair. It is the head of & man who 18| e “wag no likelthood of war bre: ing out, and if it did why the British a deep thinker as well as a hard fighter—a master of craft and stra- | o lfg_‘, no less than of bulldog pugnacity | VY would come out on top some- and daring. ,In fact, with all m’"pl‘:.‘:{s ‘{‘;‘;'{‘_h‘:grgfll"“; if"";]':_';]-] ;;Emf;;!_ breeziness of manner and sailor-like | B 0% TACCS WERE, OIS 00 (RO DISSOUC safely trust them to do whatever might be necessary should the emer- gency arise, and so on. Sir John re- plied by quoting an inscription dis- played in a saloon somewhere out West: | -+ of Oriental subtlety in his mental make-up. BEast and West are blended in him, for his mother was a Singhal- ese woman and he was born in Ceylon. So he knows other ways of getting than by riding rough- shod over their opinions. CONVINCING ARGUMENT. Of this he gave striking example when he was in command of the Medi- terranean squadron. He believed that England should at all times have a strong fleet there in the ll\ixhest state of efficiency, ready for instant war, 5 i e prove no match for old parliamenta- with the plans in hand. Instead of Tiani in & tmtths of wolda ‘ B FIFTY YEARS AT SEA. | He has been at sea for fifty years, | but he has keot himself free of the barnacles that are apt to cling to salts of the old school. None reglize better than he the changes which have taken place which render so many of the old traditions ot the service obsolete and that new conditions must be met by new methods. ‘‘Our great amm in the British navy,” he said recenzly, ‘must be to reduce our crews by introducing labor-saving appliances. In our fu- ture sea fights with destroyers haunt- The trouble with Dyspepties is that |ing us bv night and submarines dog- they are continually dieting, starving|&ng us by day, the chief requisites themselves, or going to opposite ex-4 Will be endurance and nerves. A ma- treme, or else deluging the already |chine has no nerves and never gets overburdened stomach with “bitters,” | tired. In the Nelsonic days they could “after-dinner pills,” ete., which inva- | 80 to sleep at nights. When the de- riably increase the difficulty even if | stroyer arrived we settled o go to in some cases they do give a slight, |sleep by day. Now the submarin: has temporary relief. Such treatment of | come, you can sleep neither by day nor the stomach simply makes matters|night!” worse. What the stomach wants is| Sir John Fisher is a great admirer a rest. Now, how can the stomach|and profound student of Captain Ma- become rested, recuperated rnd at the | han’s works on sea power. Indeed he same time the body nourished and |once said that if he could echoos: a sustained? motto for his countrymen that should This is the great secret and this is.| serve to keep them alive to the su- also the secret of the uniform success ' preme importance of a powerful and of Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets. This|efficient navy, he would select these is a comparatively new remedy, ‘but|words from one of the American its success and popularity leave no | writer's books; in which he tells how doubt as to its merit. Nelson thwarted Napoleon's ambition. The Tablets will digest the “Nelson's far-distant, storm-beaten ships, upon which the Grand Army never looked, stood between it and the dominion of the world.” { “If we have a supreme fleet,” he said in explaining the present day ap- plication of this utterance, “supreine beyond argument—no twaddle about the two-power standard or the three- power ‘pause’—supreme as with Nel- son in the confidence of victory begot by efficiency—and remember, above all remembrances, that supremacy doesn't consist in types or numbers, it's the grains of meat, eggs or ordinary|men and the spirit! Then, and then food and place it in a temperature of | only, no hand can touch us, no combi- 98 degrees, and put with it one of| nation can overwhelm us, no invasion Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets, it will di- | of our shores Is possible, and no finger gest the meat or eggs almost as pér-|can be lifted if we say ‘No!" The fectly jas if the meat was Inelosed | frontiers of Emgland are the coasts of yithin’the stomsach. : the enemy, and we have got to be thre The stomach may be ever so weéak, ctly five minut %, vet these tablets will perform the | ciaved > i i e work of digestion and the body and . brain will be properly nourished, and NAVY GAR"-‘F-S ARMY. These are the ideas to which, as’ at the same time a radical, lasting cure of Dyspepsia will be made, be- | the head of the navy, Sir John Fisher cause the much abused stomach will | will endeavor to give shape and sub- be given, to some extent, a much |stance. And he will see to it that the needed rest. Your druggist will tell | fleet is not allowed to suffer while you that of all the many remedies | England is striving to remodel her advertised to cure, Dyspepsia none -of | army. Only last year at a banquet them have given so complete and gen- | he upset a decanter of wine and sent eral satisfaction as Stuart’s Dyspep- | the red flood flowing toward St. John | sia Tablets, and not least in impor- | Brodrick, then the Minister responsi- tance to these hard times is the fact| ble for the army, as he vehemently that they are also the cheapest and |declared, “On the British navy rests give the most good for the least|fthe British empire. No soldier of ours money. can go anywhere unless a salior car- In God we trust, And in no other; Ta trust is to bust, And to bust is h On this text he expatlated so force- fully and convincingly that he carried his points much to the amazemen: of his shore friends who had imagined that the sailor-bred “Jackey” would | ISEMENTS, PUTTING IT STRONG. But Doesn't It Look Reasonable? This may read as though we were putting it a little strong, because it is generally thought by the majority of people that Dyspepsia in its chronie form 1s incurable or practically so. But we have long since shown that Dyspepsia is curable, nor is it such a difficuit matter as at first appears. food stomach. The sufferer from Dyspepsia, : ac- cording to directions, is to eat an abundance of good, wholesome food and use the tablets. before and after each meal, and the result will be that the food will be digested, no matter how bad your Dyspeépsia may be, be- cause. 4s before stated, the tablets will digest the food even if the stom- ach is wholly inactive. #To illustrate our meaning plainly, if you take 1800 { camps, the Gold Moun le- cessful mining men of Nevada and at| tunity to sec present superintendent Gold B of the Tonopah | t Mining Company property, is ;- from that famous _district. . in speakin the future of ys Tonopah and its tributary gitimate sectio , never has enjo at it is experiencing to-day. strikes are being made | and each day e wonderful future ed the prosper- N at tate of N v rice. , contri more 00 2 present supp the ' United 00 00 States than any other camp in th 00 9.00 within the same short period. From 00 2.00 howling wilders four years ago it has 00 5.00 g ety of 10,000 pre 00 and it is growing rapidly nine g the world famous discovery for atchless Mizpah mine by the ntinue to prospector, James L. pr ¢ leaped from thg ranks property of the pgor to a position of wealth and 1some and steady power aimost in a day, came hundreds of ckholder. other rich strikes in the s ineral Jutely non-assessa belt, each one of which contributes its i the directors have cised appiness of the world. ection all n first to follow Diseoverer >ubtedly s the tler into t} ldern, »f wealth, ent for small known a snopah, Nev., were a 1 in one of the best mines in the party of honest prospectors who had the st mineral district in the world to- courage and endurance to brave the dis-| day comforts and hardships of a mining c fles from a railroad and eiviliza-| DEVELOPMENT WORK tic Arriving on the ground early, the relopment work has already course had the choicest claims in the trict to select from, and they im-! proved the opportunity is evidenced by {the fact that they were the locators ot g men in the St the only other group of clalms in the | and a ploneer of Tonopah, wh district then discovered where the rich des s the formatfon of the dis re bodies crop out of the lava-covered the Gold Moun- s of the earth; all the subsequent Everett belleves mines discovered were found after the section of 1 ah, where lava covering had been penetrated, some is situated, is a second of them to a depth of several hundred and the richest portion of the To feet. nopah district. Ma: other competent These claims, however, they concluded | miners agre. withi him; and results are t absolutely. | >ppings on the Tonopah Gold Belt C ¥'s property prove tha rich ore bod ath is amply dém- rated byRhe assay results of the fol- lowing samfes taken on the exyposed surface of tifs ledge. Only four lassays are given herewith, but we have flozens more at the office of a | fast provir That the to hold until the necessary capital ec 8 be socured to aid in their developm . being entirely isfled to take their pay for this valuable property out of the pro- fits of the rich ore bodies after their mineral treasure had been subjected to development and dividends were declared. This property includes five claims of , and it is situated | nearly 120 acr within four mil f ‘the greatest gold | the company; and we offer a reward of mine in the world, the “Tonopah Miz- | $500 to any ¢ siring to investigate If him a good ledge on this ing the same high value rrnished him herein or at we fail to sk pah,” and in the same mineral district, | property, showing the same ore cropping and the same mineral formation as the celebrat- ed Mizpah; and there are three veins on this property from two to six feet wide, | Sample. ‘Y.'n.t/fl_ carrying values from $40 to $175 per ton | No. 1.. $176.35 on the surface, which is a showing only ;W a7 led in this district by the one great 34 Mizpah mine, part of which was sold gn 82 a s of $10,000,000 One of ,< st ) person can rea at the most important matters I 1 any investment head of the e how hard it is|a for a prospector to se money to de- velop a property, no matter how rich it . rellable and . responsi may Dbe, unle tried. Proof of ter how rich a mine ma this difficulty éred by prospectors | if the manazement is dishonest it is 4l is the fact that some of the most valua- | ways wise t le: e it ne. In this con- ble properties ve been considered i his paper are assure worthless for ars until they pass into »m: Ny ate~re- the hands of capitalists,dike: the present | mpeachable honor readers of this pa esire to stand in with, the origi- s on the development of this advised to nformation owners of the great Mizpah, and they be- gin to yleld up millions in gold. Then | everybody is ready and willing to help | when help is no longer needed offers have been refused for write cludd at r are 1 onee for rty for the reason that it only | sworn state 1ents. maps, pictures an requires machinery and dev ment to | ports, to make it worth a million dollars more | TONOPAN GOLD BELT MINING CO. than the offers received, and the owners Suite 59, ( hrenicle Bu decided to give part of t beneflt to | San. F It ries him there on his b | handling ropes and trimming sails. at revolution To him is due that g that be mwight personally super- in the training of the personnel of the the pew college on the Selent fleet which went into t two years | where this training system has bee ago, which is to give to the navy in |adopted, that he became commander re engineers the future admirals who in chief at Portsmouth. And now as well as sea command and sea- | has undertaken the more difficult task men who will be mechanics as well | of reforming the Admiralty methods as sailors. It shows his keenness to|at Whitehall. Those who know him adapt means to ends—to meet be confident (hat he will: Guc- changed conditions with changed | canmot e tied ‘wp-hg el methods. Machinery has superseded | G e Riact 22 sails on warships and the sailor of the ing at 5 o’clo: future, he argues, should be as ca- as ruthless as Napoleon in | pable of -handling machinery as his | sistency on efficiency among his sub- predecessor of the old days was in |ordinates. San Francisco, Sunday, 20 November, 1904 A “‘money-back’ guarantee seems hardly necessary from & “‘quality’ house, yet that's your Drotection at Breumer's. WA T Striking! describes it best, $48.00 Oak, golden finish, with leaded glass doors to cabinet and gracefully shaped drawer fronts. Mirrer 12 by 40 inches and neatly carved ornamentation Measures 60 inches high and 47 inches wide. A bufie; that would command admiration anywhere, Fifty miles freight charges saved if you trade at Breuner’s, remember. (Formerly the California Furniture C « 261 to 281 Geary St., at Union Sq:;)re