The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 15, 1906, Page 36

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CA! SUNDAY., APRIL 15, 1906. - %’;‘ T ~ FURNITUR & Farewell to Lent and Penitence; Joyous Easter suggests balmy airs. Easter lilies, pealing church bells, glad anthems and Easter brides. Easter brides and all housewives are cordially invited to Friedman's, where new stocks are displayed on our nine great floors in a manner becoming the season. You will see the fairest prices ever put on good house furnishings. New furni ture, new carpsts, new lace curtains and draperies. Liberal credit on a dignified plan. " FURNITURE = = Beautiful birdseve In cream and gold; in 1, Chiffonier Ienit“hieny por; 9» Metal Bed 1 creqm ana 0152 French bevel mirror, 14 by 20 white and gold. A real art_pattern. Top 81 inches wide. Exactly as The bed looks better than A regular 330 the picture. A regular $16 5 value. This week, only.. . value. This week only..... ] ses it Weathered oak, 2. Dressi Table Mabhosany or 6' wmms finely finished. 26 s ng golden oak, inches wide.” Opened, the writing desk ndsomely finished. French beveled is 27% inches deep. Roomy drawer and rror, y 26 inches. A very desira- paper shelf. An exact pic- ble piece. Exactly as pic- ture. Regular price $15.00. 9 65 tured. %Hregulakr $17.50 "I 5 This week, Only ........... [ value. This week, only.. Mahogany with 3 Parlor Tahle Rich mabogany 7' Parlor R saddle seat, ’ finigh, with 24 highly polished. Selected wood in the back panels. Very strong leg construc- ich pattern top, curved legs and dain- tion. "Exactly as pictured. leg shelf. Exactly as pic- 1«1 Akregulhr $12 value. s7|85 Rég'\:lar ]prlce $12.50. This e el ks - - < . o L 'y 4, Princess Dresser Maioziny 8, Dining Table Y 53ti° ol o ITTLE GIRLS Prize Contest “Ten Reasons Why" Look_ for the ad. in to- day's Examiner and in the Bulletin and Examiner next week. See the prizes in our window. inches across when closed. Extends to six feet. Large legs and paw feet. Ex- actly as pictured. A regu- sl' 8 .85 or quartered golden oak. French rror, 18 by 26 inches. Two large CARPETS The capabilities of our carpet store were never greater than now. Thousands of rolls on display. Carpets suitable for any room in any house and prices to fitany purse. lar $17.50 value. This week, only ........c..... s The cleanest and best- of sanitary s Recent Spring arrivals of high- binoleum 3 Cotertics . Muds of pulverized Axminsters Seaks Bovhn. . New Gestna in Ort- cork and linseed oil. Good patterns; quality ental and scroll patterns and beautiful combinations _in solid tones. An ideal lor carpet. By the yard Body Brussels Pattern surprises the sea- son’s smartest style N ing wears better, mor looks well longer, nor reguires le: 7 Noth- % labor to keep it clean than this grade of carpet. The yard. $|I35 ( Tapestry Rugs ¢ , They are 8 by 12 feet, Ori- dozen patterns, ' guaranteed. A fine value. he square Yyar 65¢ ew Oriental and floral copies of high- riced patterns. and stairs to match, with or without borders. The yard. They come with hall ........... 15¢ hoice patterns, w and fresh from Satisfacto service guaranteed. Velvets fo the loom. Soft color blends, suitable ental and floral designs, in a for they are a remarkable value at this hall, living room er parlor. - With or sl Iu You should see them, s ............. . SR R Sy thout border. You will find this a sat- isfactory carpet. The yard A compbe stock of theseason’s newest fancies in everything that pertains to draperies, and hangings. Whatever your needs are you will find our drapery stock adequate. DRAPERIES Table Covers odd cum‘m‘ Imitation Arabians, Irish Points, Nottinghams, French Bobbinets, all in 1-pair lots and ex- $7.50 to B N A v Brussels, 85¢ All are 5 to 6 feet square. Varfous shades of two-tone i , green 95¢ apd ily fringed. Extra quality. A week. Each ......... SeEicasnecnan PACIFIC COAST = 233-235-237 POST ST avy expresses its heartfelt sympathy to ! were recelved from Admiral Evans. ed and wishes for & speedy re-| The first feeling of the officers at the time the cablegram was sent, did not be- long to the company of the Kearsarge. | home in this city. | has held ever since. Yealso proudof the fact that women of Ne | Hudgine® widow resides at her parents’ ! NEW ZEALAND " GREATEST OF PR TEELS OF IT W. ATACK Head of News Associ- ation Visits San Francisco. Many Newspapers Are Printed in Colony, He Says. Among the recent arrivals at the _Pil- ace Hotel from New Zealand is W. H. Atack, manager of the United Press As- sociation of New Zealand, who is tour- ing the world on pleasure bent. After | thirty years spent continuously in the | newspaper harness Mr. Atack has taken the opportunity of an eight months’ va- cation to girdie the world. He expects to stay in California two weeks and during that time wi!l visit the southern part of the State, Catalina Island and the Yosemite Valley as the guest of the Southern Pacific Raflroad. ! The news organization that Mr. Atack manages corzesponds with the Asso- In New Zealand 1S EXJOTING ISPERITY papers. Many of them are dailies, while in almost every town in the bush country there are weeklies or tri-weeklies. While hand- ling the 1sland news through the United Press Association, the papers depend ! for their foreign dispatches on the| Australian Cable Association. Mr. Atack entered newspaper work ago. He served his apprenticeship in every department for ten years and then assumed the managership of the New Zealand news service, which he The headquarters of the service is in Wellington, and from the similarity of the rules with those of the Associated Press it is ap- parent that the work of handling graphic dispatches is the same through- out the world. | Mr. Atack says that New Zealand is| periencing unprecedented prosperity. | Last year'’s surplus was over three- quarters of a million pounds. He Zealand vote and that this does away with rowdyism at the polls. The plan | of pensioning the inhabitants at the| age of 65 years and over by allowing them £52 a year, urider certain require- | ments, has been several years in opera- | tion and is a complete success. ! From California Mf. Atack will go | East and thence across the Atlantic to the Old World. i CHURCH PRESENTED WITH A NEW ALTAR | Bishop Nichols Officiates at Consecration of the Gift. | The already pretty little church of Holy | Innocents’ Parish (Episcopal) on Fair Oaks street has been further beautified by the instaliment of a new altar, pre-| sented as a thank offering for escape | from injury in an accident. The new ak | chureh hes also received from a friend of the rector as memorials two hand- | some carndlesticks for the aitar, as weil | as mew chancel rails, which are the gift of Mr. and Mrs. Coefield. ! On Monday evening last Right Rev. | William Ford Nichols, Bishop of the dio- | | cese of California, visited Holy Inno- | cents’ for the comsecration of these gifts | | and to administer the right of confirma- | | tion to a class of seventeen persons, who | had been Instructed for that rite by the | rector, Rev. Henry B. Coiller. v Nichols preached the sermon. clergy present and who assisted in the services were Rev. Mardon B. Wilsom, secretary of the diocese: Rev. S. J. Lee, | rector of St. James' Parish, and Rew: J. | F. Trivett, rector of the Church of thé Advent, East Oakiand. The Bishop exppessed his appreciation of the many indiéatiens of progress he noted in this growing parish, and of the gifts received from the rector's friends. | Thers has also been added to the fur-| nishings of the church as an Easter e | & new brass Jectern. } —_——————— Settlement Association Meets. The San Francisco Settlement Asso ciation held its thirteenth annual meet in the clubhouse, 36 South Park, v. X short history of the past | s business was read by Mrs. Mary | rts Smith, acting head worker of | the association. The needs and plans | of the coming.year were also outlined and provisions made to carry them out. The trcasurer's report showed an ex- penditure of $2426.62 and a dalance of | 05 in the bank and $3433.03 in the | James Finlayson fund. | _—e—————— ASKS HEAVY DAMAGES. i OAKLAND, Aprfl 14—Claiming that | | at Christchurch, Australia, thirty years | | { both political an@ tar is of oak and of pleasing design. The | Fotten one dox cw EXCLUSION LEAGUE ADOPTS CONSTITUTION AND BY-LAWS Executive Committee Loses Much Power Hitherto Invested In It to Becide Important Questions. The executive coms ee of the Jap- and Korean Exclusio ecT by th the leagu. been goveraed in the i d, ich has stitution takes some the board and gives the league right to consider many questions t have been hitherto denied it - The ! ¥ aws provide that omnly American cifi- e ns shall g be allowed membership ‘In o ADYERTISEMENTS. PILES QUICKLY CURED _éT HOME Instant Relief, Permanent Cure Trial Package Mailed Free to All in Plain Wrapper. Piles is a fearful disease, but eady cure if you go at it right An operation with the knifs is dan- gerous, cruel and rarely a permanen: to | success. There is just one other s be cured—pa vacy of your Pi%_ Cure. e mail a trial packa SR Se free to all It will give you instant relfef. you the harmiess, painless nnur.eh.\; this great remedy and start you weyl on the way toward a perfect eure. Then you can get a fuli-sfzed bex from any drugg for 58 cents aad If the druggist tries to sell you some- thiog just as good, it is because Be makes more money on the substitute. Insist on havifg what you call for. The cure begins at once and contifi ves rapidly until it is complete and per- manent. You can go right ahead ‘with your work and de casy and comfortable sil the time. It is well worth tryiag. Just send your mame and address to Co.. 2438 Pyramid Build- re way t ss, safe and in the pei. wn home—it is Fyramid Pyramid ing, Mar . Mich. and receive free by retura mail the trial ma plain’ wrapper. COIDENT DCEURS ON WARHIP WHILE N CUBIN WHTERS Continued from Page 31, Column 6. A ariver in t 1 | Thousamds have déem cured in ¢ Lieutenant Graeme was appointed to | & reckless drive: be edploy of the | SROTEm e B etpensive “";g A the Naval Academy from Pennsylvania | Oakland Carriage and Implement Com- | - on September &, 1% He served at the |pany knocked her down on Broadway. | “"SJ Aaite et Its torture. Washington navy vard from November | near Fourteenth street. and inflicted | No doctor and his bilis 10, 102, until April 17, 1905, when he was | Severe injuries, Melissa I Nevins, a| All druggists, 50 cents Write today assigned to the cruiser Maryland. He | nurse, has brought suit for damages in | for a free package. is & mon of Thomas Graeme of Wilkes- | the amount of §5,320 against the com-~ |~ — barre, Pa. He is married and his wife, | pany. She Siates that her skull was according to the department’s informa- | fractured and that she has lost the Perfect Fitting Bye Glasses om their wounds. Spare no effort | Navy Department after reading the cable- the sufferings of the injured in | gram was one of surprise that the acci- - possible manner, and show every | dent Bad resuited in so little loss of life. | of an umpire to check off and record the 6 the dead.” The Kearsarge's forward turret, where it | performance of the gunners, a necessa: PRESIDENT INFORMED. occurred, Is of the superposed type—in | function in view of the keen spirit of riv- Immediately on receiving the cablegram | Other words, an eight-inch gun turret sat | alry obtaining between the crews of the from Admiral Evans, Acting Secretary | Oft the top of the thirteen-inch gun turret. | big battleships in the mattér of efficiency v carried it to the President at| Ib the lower turret were twenty-four | at target practice. he White House and was authorized to | ™en, and in the upper turret sixteen. An| Naval regulations prescribe exactly what gend the foregoing expressions of sympa- | Smmunition hoist connected the two, and. s to be done in a case of this kind. The He also communicated the sad news | had the powder in the lower holet expiod- | gamiral in command orders immediately a Secretary Bonaparte at his home in | ®d probably every man in the two turrets | court of inquiry to ascertain the cause more over the long-distance tele- | Would have been killed. The full charge of | of the accident and place the responsibil- ne. powder for a thirteen-inch gun is 100 | jty therefor, and a court-martial will fol- Meanwhile, by direction of Admiral Con- | Jarge to be handled by any one man, 80 it | jow if any one is found at fault. verse, chief of the mavigation bureau,|ls divided into sections in canvas bags.| ty. Kearsarge, while not one of the | Captain Potter and Commander Wilson | &nd it was three of these, probably JUst| o req:. ig regarded a¢ ome of the best bat- were busily engaged in looking up the | *NOUER o fll one compartment in the M- | yieenins in the American fleet. She is com- Sadresses of the relatives of the victims | Munition hoist, which ignited. manded by Captain Winslow, is of 150 end sending t-legrams acquainting them | NATURE OF ACCIDENT. tons displacement, is 375 feet in length, 72 with the news. Nothing more could be| As the cablegram states. the cause of | febt in breadth and 3% feet in draught. done in Washington until further detalls | 1, jenition was not known, but the be- | With a speed record of 1682 knots and & many of them deplore the lief at the Navy Department -is that in | Dattery of twenty-two guns four inches = clegning up the turret and throwing open | @nd more in caliber and twenty-four guns loss of their girlisb forms w after marriage. The bearing the breeches of the big gun after the last | Delow that size. She was launched in 158 of chiidren is often destructive bowever, by the use of Mother's Friend before baby comes, as this round had been fired some small bit of | 80d commissioned in 1500. t;nlald(u’!n( ?&:’u h-u‘lnvau blown YOUNG OFFICERS VICTIMS. Block was swune. around. oaly. o fai | jaeutenant Johu M. Hudglas, the only great liniment always prepares the body for the strain upon it, and preserves the symmetry of her form. Mother’s Friend overcomes all the danger of child-birth, end carries the expectant mother safely through this critical period without pain. It is woman's blessing. upon the ammunition holst, where the Sluer who Jugtin Jiou Wy LB surplus powder was being returned to the | O Thousands gratefully tell of the benefit and relief derived from the use of this wonderful He was attached to the Maryland and was aboard the Kearsarge in the capacity tlon, is with his father. | sense of smell and taste through injury | Following is a copy of the telegraphic | to the nerve centers. The driver, she | message sent to next of kin of each of |asserts. violated the ordinance against the victims of the disaster: fast driving over crossings. ““The department regrets to inform you that died from results of in- juries caused by an explosion of paw- der on the United States steamship Kearsarge on the afternoon of April 13 His body has been buried at Guantana- mo. You have the sincere sympathy of the department.™ ——— e ATLANTIC FLEET'S COAST SQUADRON TO BE ABOLISHED Rear Admiral Dickens to Be Detached From and Given ! POOR HEALTH 1 makes you irritabdle, nervous | lent, but there is no need u‘;‘” n in such a condition. We offer you | a true medicine that will not only re- | Store your health, but will keep you so, TR Hostetter’s | Stamach Bitters Every woman covets a shapely, pretty figure, and Walting Orders. WASHINGTON, April 14.—The coast squadron of the Atlantic fleet will be abolished on April 21. This action was decided upon in order that the battle- shif Texas may be placed in reserve, magazines below. Had the remainder of L0S ANGELES TIMES to the mother's shapeliness, |this powder exploded there might have so her officers and men may be avail- For 53 ® All of thi be ided, bien a repetition of the Missouri disaster, able for the commission of new ships ‘has Non,lm.-‘n. b - 2vo! v | when twenty-six men were killed in the that are boing turned over to the Gov- strating its abil- SAN FRANCISCO OFFICH ernment from the builders and because m Sure such | turret and in the magazines below. &i It may be noted, however, that the especial interest in subject o cause of the accident in the case of mume‘: "lqtgo'hy and D:.l-! flvfl: Missouri was entirely different from that |in that line. He was personally identi- in the case of the Kearsarge, for the Mis- | fied with the development of the wire- sour! turret breech block was SWuNg open | less sysiem as now in use by the navy, before the burning powder had escaped, | having been attached to the bureau of resulting in the ignition of the powder in the turret. Tie orEhancs u.;‘ equipment during the experiments and in- H the three monitors of the command are to be utilized as training ships for the midshipmen. Rear Admiral Dickens will be de- tached from the command of the squad- ron and placed temporarily on waiting orders. It is probable that ‘Admiral Dickens will be given another impor- tant assignment to round out his ser- |’ EOCM 41, CHRONICLE BLDS. Telephone Mala 147X Artbur L. Fish, Represzauatin: 7 i i il were remedy. Sold by all quick to guard against a repetition The Times is the el IVl Other’s =555 st SORRRRE S s big turret guns in the battleships with == bottle. Our little automatic spraying devices and air | SAN QUENTIN Aprit 14—4n sing. 2 i blasts, book, telling all about which made it fmpossible to have a “flare- sentence for larceny, committed suicide ; this liniment, will be sent free. o Friday night by hanging himself 1 also F’-i n s Sl He was sent ere from Batte Sont " streagthened The Bradficid Regeiater Ca, Afiarta, G mentioned County and with credits his term would &= being in & very critical state at the e N e .,

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