The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 9, 1906, Page 3

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Magnificent Spec-| tacle Afforded | by Vesuvius. lew Craters Spew Forth Molten Masses. < S Continued From Page 1, Column 1. LAVA STREAM NEARS POMPEIL Destroyed by Feet Wide. Some Houses Already Lake of Fire 500 | | | | | : vAQTZ /4 TS renn;;* + LODGE'S SECRETARY FACES GRAVE CHARGE Is Accused of Embezzling Money Given as Campaign Contribution. B. Proctor, | of the Re- | and that it urns of HAVANA STRIKE ASSUMES ALARMING PROPORTIONS Mounted Police Mass- Meeting composed of a arrested the who was en-| ing end con- THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, APRIL 9, 1906. LAVA STREAMS BLOT 0UT ITALIAN VILLAGES © ———— — =l P turn here and remain until he goes to 4 his Cleveland estate for the summer. | | great change that will eccur. } e ROCKEFELLER SEES YOUNG GRANDCHILD Enthusiastie Over the Babe That Is to Inherit His Wealth. SPECIAL DISPATCH TO THB CALL NEW YORK. April 8—With no attempt at secrecy, John D. Rockefeller came to New York last Wednesday morning from Lekewood, N. J. He went directly to the home of his son, John D. Rockefeller Jr., and greeted With much enthusiasm and show of affection his grandson, John D. Rockefeller IIL 2 Rocketeller spent most of the time in | the home of his son, but did not keep himself in seclusion. He walked along the sunny side of Fifth avenue and was | greeted by many persons. He spent the day putting his house at Fifty-fourth street and Fifth avenue in order for his ) | occupancy, and on Saturday returned to | I Lakewood. It 1s expected he will re- o+ 5 -+ NOBLE-HEARTED WOMAN WHO IS DOING HER UTMOST FOR THE RELIEF OF THE HOMELESS ON THE SLOPES OF VESUVIUS, AND A SCENE IN THE LAVA THREATENED DISTRICT. < | representatives of each trade met and; He said he was in splendid health. erated their Intentlon of calling out their workmen tomorrow morning. The ader: assert that the workers in more than twerity trades will go on strike temorrow. —_— e one was Mrs. a streets las The loss w in the b DESTROYED BY FIRE.—Fire de- I night Gritfin The { he gat to the house bis firsg’ greeting was ' cooed with it. Rockefeller's first sight of his newly arrived grandchild was of great interest to him. He arrived early, having taken the firsf train from Lakewood, and when for the child. He fondled and caressed the babe with an affectiop that bordered on enthusiasm, held it in his arms, re- marked how heavy it was and how well it looked and stroken its fat cheeks and | WASHINGTON, i Roosevelt received today the pleasing but | whole people. | mitted to own more than 100 acres POVERTY T0 BE |SINPLE FOQD THING OF PAST Pacific Coast Man Notifies| Expert Wiley Says Beef, Gra- the President of a Plan to Hasten the Millenium HOLDS BACK DETAILS Mr. Roosevelt Is Anxiously Awaiting Crank’s Solution of the Problems of Life SPECIAL DISPATCH TO THE CALL CALL BURBEAU, POST BUILDING, April 8 — President startling information that poverty is to be abolished and universal health and happiness to be produced aimost instant- ly by an attorney residing on the Pacific Coast. The information came in a letter notifying the President to be on his| guard and to watch carefully for the Unfortunately for humanity the lawyer does not state how he will bring about | this miraculous change, but he promises | | to disclose the great secret in his next| communication to Mr. Roosevelt. i The first great step in the great re-| form will be to deprive the “rich au-| tocracy” of America of its enormous | wealth and to divide it equally among | all the people. All public utilities and | | the wealth produced from mines and for- | est wili be used for the bemefit of the | Homes will be provided | for every family, rent free, and there will | be no’ taxes. The hours of labor will be reduced to six a day and the wages will be increased threefold. ! AlL homes will be furnished with re- | frigerating plants, electric fans, electric | cooking apparatus and swimming pools; | esch will have a garage and an auto- | moblle will be part of each man’s outfit. There will be @ news service for every- body and the servant question will be | solved. Every home will be a palace | and every one will have all the funds | required to gratify his every wish. About | the only limit that will be placed on the | | indfvidual is that he will mot be per-| of | land, and even the despised rich will not be allowed to hold that much land. Other wonderful reforms are promised. The writer declares he is neither a So- clalist nor an anarchist. | The solution of all these problems of | life is anxiously awaited by the Presi-| dent. —_———————— FRENCH G | CAPTAIN OF BRITISH SHIP Skipper of English Vessel Decides Not to Enter Papecte With Sick- ness Aboard. PAPEETE, Tahiti, March 27.—The | British ship Talca, Captain Willlamson, | | bound for Sydney, from Iquique, Chile, | | appeared off Papeete on March 25. The pilot, noticing that her bill of health indicated smallpox aboard, refused to | bring her in without the sanction of | | the quarantine station, despite the cap- | tain’s assertion that the sickness | abgard was typhoid fever. The captain | | threatened to- enter the harbor under | right of international law within six hours. Perceiving the French gunboat Zele In the harbor the master of the Taleca sailed away, leaving his bill of health with the authorities. —_—e—e————— PORTLAND, April 8.—The funeral services over the body of Right Rev. B. Wistar Mor- ris, Protestant Episcopal Bishop of Oregon. who died here today, will take place Tuesday at Trinity Church. WILL RESTORE TISSUES Especially Good for Those| | brown bread and other nutritious foods, | | sary for such persons to return to a sim- | NATURE'S DIET ham Bread and Potatoes Are Best for Everybody, | | | ‘Who Have Very Weak% Organs of Digestion| SPECIAL DISPATCH TO THE CALL. | ‘WASHINGTON, April §—“It is not only | necessary for millionaires to live on but for the poor as well,” said Professor | Harvey Wiley, the Government chemist | and food expert, tonight, when requestad | to discuss this subject in connection with the fact that J. Plerpont Morgan, Lord | Miiner and Alfred Beit dlet upon brown | bréad, fish and vegetables in London. He | continued: | “It is not necessary from a health ! standpoint, but because such simple fare | is good for a man and will make him | healthy. Al of these foods are mutri- | tious and supply the body with the fuel necessary to prolong life and promote | health. They contain the simple nutri- | ment necessary to replenish the tissues which waste away. “Beef, graham bread and potatoes pro- | vide a diet which is good for the million- | aire and the pauper. This is compara- | tively a cheap and well-balanced ration, | containing all the elements of nutrition | necessary to sustain life. This diet does | not recommend itself because of its cheap- | ness, but because it is wholesome. It is | especially good for persons who, by | reason of having eaten great varieties of | feods and drunk too much wine, have | worn .out their digestive apparatus and | do not assimilate their food. It is neces- } ple diet and it does not matter whether the person is J. P. Morgan or a beggar— | the food I have recommended will put him into good physical condition. ] It was simple food that was Intended | by nature that man should eat. Of course | fish could be substituted for beef, as has | been done in Morgan's case, but, in my judgment, beef is better. Fish is not so palatable as beef. and, while it contains | a great deal of nutrition it is not so good | for a weak stomach, and beef is better because it keeps away hunger longer than will fish.” \ —_——————— ILLNESS AND BAD WEATHER DELAY AN OIL VESSEL Italian Ship From Philadelphia Towed Into Nagasaki by a Ger- | mnn Steamer. | TOKIO, April $.—The Italian ship Erasmo, Captain Amelio, which sailed from Philadelphia on September 3 for Nagasaki, with a cargo of oil, was towed Into Nagasakl last Friday by the German steamer Seigovivar, which | found the Erasmo off Kagoshima in a miserable condition. The Erasmo ex- | perienced bad weather for sevem months, during which time the entir crew of twenty-four was successiv attacked by illness until all were di abled. One of the crew died. —_— e————— FRENCH OFFICER CHALLENGES AN AMERICAN NEWSPAPER MAN Proposes to Fight a Duel, but Friends | of the Two Men Arrange a Scttlement. PAPEETE, March — Richard | Adams, correspondent of -a San Fran- | clsco newspaper, was challenged re- | 2 $1.20 ORIENTAL COUCH COVERS HANDSOME DESIGNS 60 Inches Wide Quality Counts in FURNITURE, CARPETS and DRAPERIES just as much as in anything eise. When you can get our Guaranteed Goods at prices as Low as Cheap goods it pays to TRADE AT THE— BIG South of Market Street Store with the Little Prices— OUR FAMOUS SOUTH of MARKET STREET LOW PRICES INDIANAPOLIS FURNITURE 0. T70 MISSION STREET Bstween 3rd and 4th Sts. cently to a duel by Monsieur Gelice, ex-~ ecutive officer of the French gumboat Zele, for statements published in a San Francisco paper aseribing cowardice to the officers and crew of the Zele for failing to ke an attempt to rescue the guardian of the quarantine station. J. Lamb Doty, American Vice Consul, and Harry J. Edwards met two officers of the gunboat in conference, and a.set- tiement honorable to both parties was | inally reached and a serious encounter avoided. —_— Rescued From Ship. YARMOUTH, Nova Scotia, April 8.— Five survivors of the coasting schooner W. E. and W. L Tuck., which they abandoned off Cape Sable last Thurs- day, were landed here today by the American steam trawler Spray, together with the body of Charles Wilstead, the steward of the vessel, who perished in the ship’s long boat after many hours of exposure. The others also suffered Intensely, as they were all thinly clad because of their hasty escape from the vessel. —_———————— Dynamite In Fremeh Strike. LENS, France, April 3.—The strik- ing eoal miners, although outwardly calm, today gave evidence of their hos- tiMty to the men who refused to go on strike by dynamiting the house oe- cupied by one of them. No ome was in- jured. The miners today unsuccess- fully attempted to prevent the dis- charge of the cargoes of British coal at Dunkirk. The T Mail / Filled. ‘Orders ailoring woolen Every garment is made in our own workshops under our personal supervision. We do not give work out by contract, but insist that every garment shall be made by our own clever tailors, insuring a uni- formity of work and perfection of detail that cannot otherwise be accomplished. In every detail the leading establishment west of Chicago. The Fabrics Thoroughly reliable : s—up to the highest standard in every way. The pat- terns are the prettiest that this season has brought forth. Excellent woven worsteds of high, lustrous finish, snappy Scotches and soft silky tweeds. The S corporated. follow fashion’s latest dictates. garment turned out in our establishment is a testimonial of excellence and beauty. Our Guarantee prices as being positively the lowest and our values the greatest, but every suit we build must wear well and must give ser- vice and satisfaction. may be explained in six words, *‘Your satisfaction or your money back.” tyle 740 Market Street. TWO Large Stores Market, Powell & Ellis. . - g Webuilda suitexactly to your liking, with every little kink that you may suggest in- Our cutters and designers Not only do we stand back of our Our broad policy Send for : Samples. Every NS

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