The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, February 5, 1901, Page 9

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 35, 1901, (o} SON OF THE WHEAT KING TAKES UNTO HIMSELF A FAIR BRIDE John Albert McNear and Miss Julia Noy Are Joined in the Holy England Bonds of Wedlock and Will Make Their Future Home in OPPOSE A STATE /INDEMAITY BOND After an Extended Tour of the United States. father QUARKATINE LAY L s IPervisors 2 r1Q prove this ¥ ure Not to Pass Measure. M B I i la nt Trainer Setured. "‘ \\" L. arrive here GRAPE-NUT: CAN FOOD DO IT? nce of the Food Cure. will cure a isend ner- Mrs rty-first street that ery remarkable =: *“About twelve carriage w king was bowels, chanical for hours, caused by of the that at and It I fainted a half snable to isclous 2s Providence directed box of Grape-Nuts food since eaten twice a day ovement in health has been and digest food, and regularly, arrh moderated, n weight and am read and think, brain felt too 1 can walk a long my air cushion ¢ no further need now 1 can e nat s better I can sed lemonstration of the < food surely does re- matter in the brain nd any depleted per- One cgnnot get roubles without the right ebuild this curfous sub- found in the brain. and be rebuilt from the food. Grape ¢ especially for the pur- s JoHN A BRIT IN ALBERT McNEAR. THE TERDAY AND WHO IVERPOOI AND. NG1 OR HIG ———— NCES ers to Protect Public From Injury. Memorializa | Ordinance to Compel Own- | [ ons own: s or Aamage falling ust superv and to the 1 of Works. g the main- 1d requiring the own- | h sanitary laws aling opposed the ise he claimed it the mercy of the cubic afr Auditor to audit demands for the refunding of poll taxes paid in cate only on condition that the Assessor pays into the city treas- ury the commb collected by him was adopted. Heretofore the Auditor has re- fused to sign such demands as the As- =essor has deducted 15 per cent from each pay nt. which percentage has er een pald into the treasur The poll tax mmissions, amou yme $15.000. held in reserve by Treasurer Brooks g decisi of the Supreme as to whether Assessor Dodge is entitled to the commissions The ordinance to prevent the sale or manu »f any food adulterant or preservative was postponed for one week representatives of packing com- opportunity to be heard in cp- ) the measure )t Works was directed to in- g plant in the Hall of t of $350. inspec- apor engines once The sum of $500 was set aside out of the fund for the purpose of tate Beard of Trade to a_ properly at the Pan- xhibition in Buffalo next M various city departments were ¢ i to furnish the board with a sched- so that bids required invited for the ensuing be The r ition urging an appropriation f £3000 to fit up the Mission police station was withdrawn by its author, Supervisor bing gen- tions fo; aspt bitumen and basalt s for street and: sidewalk wol assed to ! The ordinance in its present shape . tes all reference to wooden pave- 1ts provisions..and provides for tee of not less than five years on stre On unaccepted streets may exact a bond or the | re specifications to keep repalr ompany was granted a per- mit to construct a_tunnel of concrete un- accepted propert ity m der Tenth avenue from C to D. street The Board of Works was directed to tuminize the gore lot the corner of Bush and Battery streets preparatory to the erection thereon of the drinking foun- tain dedicated to the mechanics of Ban Francisco, the gife of the late Peter Don. ahue. The resolution directing the Board of Works to remove the fence around the old Baldwin Hotel site was rescinded, as gress is about to be made in the im- provement of the site. he offer of $200 for the Widber orchard at Mountain View made by J. 8. Mackbee was accepted, provided the ab. stract of title shall not cost more than $2 The board adjourned to meet Sature y at 2 p. m, to continue the water rate in- vestigation. ERROR IN ONE FIGURE NEARLY SPOILS A WILL Document Purported to Have Been Drawn at the Close of Twen- H tieth Century. . | OAKLAND, Feb, 4.—An error of one fig- | ure in the date of a will, making it appear 10 have been drawn a century later than | its real date, would have invalidated the | will of ‘the late Ludger Pinsonneault had not Judge Hall ruled that it was a cleri- cal error. The document, which disposes of prop- erty valued at §15,000, was dated July 1 The deceased was employed as gardener | at the Sacred Heart Convent, and left a bequest to the work of thaf instituth Most of the property goes to relatives ing In Carada. e Arrangements for Carnot Debate. BERKELEY, Feb. 4—The joint Califor- nia-Stanford debating committee has made final arrangements for the annual Carnot contest. California will select the question and Stanford will have the choice of sides. The subject for debate must be submitted by February 2. i | kins, ALAMEDA WILL MAK E, WHO BECAME FUTU HOME | e ) SUPERYISORS FIX FRANCHISE TERMS Grant Entrance to City to Bay and Coast Read Under Conditions. | PIDREER EADS HI LIFE BY HANGIAG Strange Suicide of H. H. Lawrence, an Aged East Oaklander. Kisses Young Grandson and Then Disappears — Daughter Finds Body Suspended From Rafters in Barn. i Oakland Office San Francisco Call, 1118 Boardway, February 4. After kissing his little grandson . fare- | well, aged H. H. Lawrence, father of | former Justice L. Lawrence, went to |a shed at the rear of his residence, 562 | | East Fourteenth street, this afternoon | | She | the street, | | son, 2nd hanged himself. The old gentleman wife, and a daughter, was missed by Hi Mrs. Harriet Drummond, went in search of her father. found the body dangling from a rafter in the barn. Rushing back to the house she summoned another sister, Mrs Mabel A. Post, and the women cut the body down with a pair of shears. Dr. W. J. Wilcox, whose office is acros hurried to house in re- sponse to a call, but dead before relief could be The body was discovered giver him, the aged man was | 4 o'clock. | Half an hour before the old man had | been conversing with his wife and daugh- ters easily and naturally. There was not ¥ the slightest indication that he contem- plated suicide. Just before he started out of the house he called his young gran:- Warren Lawrence, to his side and affectionately kissed the little fellow, | making_ some inaudible expressions. This | action did not c te an impression upon the observers. They knew of the grani- father’s strong attachment for the boy and his frequent anifestations of lo were too common for this more than a passing notic After he had been oat of the house for some time Mrs. Lawrence’s attention w. called to hiz prolonged absence. “Sea what has become of papa,” sald to M JDrummond. The daughfer could not find him in the ne to excite | house and then went out to the shed oniy | suicide. !ion | Before i s c€ granting the Bay and ter wenty-fourth and Illinots streets under certain conditions, was passed print by the Board of Super- sors yvesterday The conditions are that the company, in return for the franchise, | shall exp 000 in construetion work before next June; that it shall pave the streets over which the privilege is grant- from curb to curb; that other roads must be allowed the use of the franchise; whatever other conditions the charter specifically imposes must be strictly ad hered to; the road mst be completed with in two vear be transferred to another company. The City Attorney was directed to give his opinion as to the legality of the ordi- nance and whether the board has the authority to grant the franchise Curtis explained that the ordinance came from the Street Committee without recommendation, as the responsibility of the promoters was involved in some doub* Fontana said that the requirement of only $25.000 for construction work was <00 small and should be Increased to $250,000 for a road which would run to Santa Cruz. Attorney Baggett, representing the com- pany, argued that the $25.000 guarantes wa sufficient, as it would be a substan tial begi 1 ng in the utmost good Baggett “and the mone ad is ready, though only far been subscribed. We et acquired all the right of way other countics. The first important to the money and then we get right to enter the city or of no value. After that get material and bonuses ‘from countles. [ cannot divulge the of the promoters of the road, as I them myself.” . r explained that were eager to acquire the legal ges before promoting the project. s Honor argued t the road would be a good thing for 1 Francisco, as it would invite comp n Braunhart introduced a which was refe bufld th has to $11,000 have not in step, sho! the road will be we will other name resolution 1 to the Judiciary Com- for the transfer frbm ment to the trustees of Public ibrary the easterly sev- feet of the 10? at the northwest cor- of Clara and I'ourth streets, and to the Police Department the westerly elghty feet of the lot. Brounhg d that as expressed his intentic A tion of a branch librar t. The westerly portion will ult;] mately be used as a site for the Souther Police Station. An ordinance granting permission to tha railway mittee and provide the School Dep: the B3 enty street company contracting o convey street sweepings to Golden Gs Park, to construet tracks from the bunk. ers at Bryant and tain ignated locations, print The board adopted a resolution memo- nd the franchise must not | ing of the construction of the to make the horrifying discovery of tha Mr. Lawrence had placed a lad- der against the side of the barn, climbed to the rafter, and after fastening a rope to the beams, noosed it and jumped off. The distracted family cannot’ account for the tragic deed, except on the grouni that it resulted from the old man's de- mented condition rrence was 75 ves a 3 more he had of‘an unbalanced mind. Dr. Sill, the ily physician, was authority for the opin- t his patient, whom he had treated for a year, was insane. The Coroner took charge of the c The deceased was a native of New Yor He had lived in this eity for many his retirement because of awrence had been failing in the health real ¢ LEAGUE OF THE CROSS CADETS AS MINSTRELS Entertainment to Be Given for Bene- fit of Sacred Heart Parish To-Night. OAKLAND, Feb. 4 —~The League of the Cross Cadets will zive an entertainment at Sacred Heart Hall on Forty-first and Grove str morrow evening for the benefit of tk hildren of Mary Societs of the pari here is every indication that the entertainment will be a great o the best talent to be ecured. The programme success, for son found has been will be as foll she | around his neck | AT DEAD PRINCE WALTERS BIER THE PALMERS WATCH AND MOURN In Splendid Casket, Surrounded by Swarthy Members of His Tribe, Lie the Remains of Beloved One of Gypsies Awaiting Solemn Procession to Nomads’ Plat at Mountain View. RICHARD PP22Z0 ZMMCO | ROSWELL. WALTER BOSWELL | | | | PPl £ e SR Lol S R > 2 { THE LATE PRINCE WALTER OF THE PALMERS, SCION OF THE BOSWELL LINE | EN GYPSY KING AND QUEEN, WHO IN AT THE ONE CONTAININ | REMAINS GIVE VENT TO THEIR GRIEF. G THE ALSO THE GRIEF-STRICK- AKLAND, Feb dark and swarthy members of a mourning tribe of wanderers, the body of Walter Boswell, prince of 4.—Guarded the Palmer gypsies, rests in a | rich and elegant casket that would grace | a nabob’s bier. In strangi con- | y tents, their can- | trasted group of fii Vi sides barely shedding the dripping 2 picture of wildness is presented to | » eves of those who pass the nomads' | camp at Spring and Adeline streets. In spite of every evidence of poverty and | lowly habitation, the funeral of the dead tribe: n wiil be conducted with = the ceremonial of the highest rit of the Church of England. They gypsy followers of the departed leader will fol- | low the remarkable customs of their or- zive a burial which best of undertakers the solemn services nization, and will represents the very art, combined with | for the dead. | Overtur opening chorus. com peny You," Chatles J. Pag ker; “Miste , Don't Get Gay,” J. H Sheehan; ba selected, Frank Flgona ST Ain't > More,” J. H. Long: CWait “Linah. Ohi Do You Love M Hynes: 1 Once Had a Swestheart,”” Theodore Jacobus: - Lam! | Lam! Lam!' Steve Douglas: closing chorus, cempany; (eorge Clarke, monologue: George Lamb. 1 solo. selected: Fred Jacobus, hobo A. Pierre, tenor solo; George o @ities; R E. Maddern, bacytone ] rlocutor, John J. Burke; ends Steve Douglas, Henry g, tambos: Marty Hynes, Henry Sheehan, bones; musical di- Mearns; stage chorus, O. H. Valliere, orge English, Henry Moo strange, M. Noone, J. Dutte, J Moore, J. Enos, P. Mulligan, F. James Ready, H. McGuinn, L. L. L. Roberts, E. Cullen ONE HUNDRED CANDLES BURN FOR BIRTHDAY Miss Lavina Wheeler, Centenarian, Receives the Congratulations of Host of Friends. OAKLAND, Feéb. 4.—The hundredth | birthday anniversary of = Mi Lavi Wheeler was made notable to-day by the Eastern | centenarian’'s friends, who celebrated the event with much attention. Scores of peo- ple paid thelr respeets to the aged woman Presents and other tokens arrived from all sections of the United State As greet- ings from friends and relatives The birthday receptioni was h of Mrs. O. C the noteworthy feature of the affair was the immense birthday cake, which was | adorned with one hundred ornamented and lighted candles. The cake will be cut and sent to Miss Wheeler's friends as a remembrance of the day Rev. 0O, ( Wheeler, the deceased brother of the aged woman, ina the First F Church_of juently he re | local trains and that all of the gatem e | will soon be dispensed with abroad in Wi cisco in 1864, Sub the ministry and enterod the Southern F cific Company’s employ, having been a general baggage master for many years. Gatemen All Right. OAKLAND, Feb. 4—The story has gore st Oakiand t the South- ern Pacific Comp: experimenting with an automatic ressed air appar- atus for the operation of the gates on the This is a0t .2 e - |'likely to occur until the company secures | leventh streets to cer- | some automatic compressed air method of was passed to | collecting the tickets that the gateman The extra fares secured the expenses of the sy now gather. the gatemen pay i g i Fire Destroys Hay Warehouse. °b. 4—George Beck & Altamont. contalning rializing the United States Senate and | tem, House of Representatives on behalf «f | California to p‘a‘flshw]lx(hnnrl delay the bill | now before said bodleg for Government el 210 for the exposition. to be held in| ,OAKLAND. I Charleston. 8. C., from December, 1901, to | C0.'s warehous June, 1 tons of The City the b d Works to award private contracts for street work; also as to the power of the Supervisors to grant a lot on O'Farrell street for State Normal Schocl purposes. A _resolution directing the Board of Pub- 1le Works not to remove the fences in the Unifersity Mound District was referred to the Street Committee. e WARRANTS ISSUE FOR ARREST OF HAMILTON Two Complaints on Fils in Police Court Against Missing Clerk of Metropole.: OAKLAND, Feb. 4.—Complaints have been filed in the Police Court against Henry E. Hamilton, the absconding night clerk of the Hotel Metropole, accusing him of embezzlement and grand larceny. The complainants are R. M. Briare, pro- prietor of the hotel, who lost $3%, and Andrew A. Oliver, another clerk, who suf- fered the loss of $260, which he had placed in the hotel safe. The police have taken | the warrants of arrest which have been | issued, but they clalm to have no trace of the missing clerk’s whereabouts. Chief of Police Hodgkins declares his opinion to be that Hamilton is a professional ho- tel thief, Aged Woman’s Sudden Death. OAKLAND, Feb. 4. —Mrs. Mary A. Per. 6 years of age, died suddenly to-day from heart discase at her residence at Laurel Grove Park on the Redwood rgml. o' 8he was a widow. The Coroner will an inquest. To Curs the Grip in Two Days Laxative Bromo-Quinine removes the cause,® Attorney was asked to inform | burned at 4 o'clock to the right of the Board of | boxcar. loaded with ha | { | ! | | | | | mograph. ‘Clerk’s office to-day: ay, valued at $15000, was vesterday morning. A -, standing on the railroad tracks alongside of the ware- house, was also destroved. The Insurance will reach $12,000. The fire appears to have been of incendiary origin. This fs the third warehou at has e Altamont during the past few v s L Bl | Claims She Is Irresponsible. ALAMEDA. Feb. 4—The trial of Mrs. Sarah Jaujou for stealing two pairs. shoes from a Park-street shoe store Sat- urday night will be held to-morrow be- fore Justice Morris. The husband of the accused woman claims because of a recent sickness. An. effort was made to settle the case, but the vie- tim of the theft would not agree to db so, s g e Neimes Guilty of Assault. yo OAKLAND, Feb. 4—The jury in the case of N. W. Neimes, the Haywards sewing machine agent charged with at- | tempted criminal assault upon Mrs. Neilie Carroll of Livermore, brought in a - ver- dict of guilty of simple assault to-night, | The jury was out seven hours, —————— Earthquake at Berkeley. BERKELEY. Feb. 4—A slight earth- quake was felt in the western part of this city this evening at 5:45 o’clock. The vibrations lasted but a few scconds. No record was made on the university sefs- - Licensed to-Wed. OAKLAND, Feb. 4. —The following mar- riage licenses were issued by the County H. L. Hooker of San Francisco, aged 20, to Antonfd Heix of Tacoma, Wash. McNear of Liverpiol, Ann Noy of Alameds Gaffney of San England. to Julia aged 25; Willlam G. rancisco, aged 36, to aged 20; John Albert | | { upon the The funeral will be held to-morrow afternoon at 10 o’clock, and the officlating | clergyman will bé the Rev. Martin N. | v, reetor of St John's Episcopal | wurch of this city. For years the| Palmer tribe have made r head- quarters in Oakland, no ter where they roamed. Out In Mountain View | Cemetery there is a large plat bought | many vears ago by the Palmers. Here were 1aid at rest the king, Hameline, and his queen, and the dead prince’s grand- | parents, with others of the tribe who have | long since passed away. Here also will | be buried the body that now awalts the | last rites. | Strange customs mark the gypsy life | of these wanderers upon the face of the | earth. The half a dozen tents where the | B olls make their home are tightly | closed against all comers to-day. In the | Esther Gaffney of San Francisco 38; F. E. Gilbert of San Francisc 3. to Mrs. Emma Gilman of San cisco, aged 41 ———————— COTS AND BLANKETS [ FOR USE OF JURYMEN | ‘Will No Longer Be Compelled t> Sleep on Benches and Tables. OAKLAND, Feb. 4. —Hereafter the jury men confined in the County Courthouse | over night will not be compelled to sleep on | the benches and tables in the jury-roor The Board of Supervisors have taken pity m and purchased cots, mattressa 7d blankets for the twelve men on the jury and the Deputy Sheriff who guards them. The gri ce thus provided for I= a long standing one in the county. Many tracted serious illness by the sleeping accommodations for their -use. | The only - provision formerly made for their comfort was the supply of spate | n burned a: | of | he is irresponsibie | blankets sent over to t the County Jail. e College Town Fire. SRKELEY, Feh. 1—A dwelling be- 14\:‘;:“]}:}\‘«‘ Mrs. C. C. Calhoun, at 24 Dwight way, was zurted by fire late las night. The place was occupied by th families of Dr. R. P. Whitlock and Mrs. | AP, ‘Sanborn. They lost a quantity of furniture. ing thei in their sorrow. liona The history of he Palmer tribe of | trad gypsles is shrouded in deep mystery. | ulator. More than three score years ago Hame- | ing .figure and line Palmer, the dead king, came from | turned over several hund England, a’descendant of those roving |1 .. rs t for hundreds of ars had t rs ago the fi 1 over the coun without any | Palmers died in Minne home but the spot n which they | by a renegade gypsy pitched their camp. Eventually the fore- | remains were brought t runners of the present gypsy tribe broke | terred in the cemeter up into various bands, scatterin View wa out the Un d States. They married ar nificen caske intermarried. The offspring was numer- ture. ous, but strange to relate the ties of | The caskst contair blood were strong enough to withs Prince Walter is almost all of the inducements of soci among which many born. record among those nomads the case of a single descendant of the old Palmers who has forsaken the tribal relatio tents of the famil mesticity haa dren doned t period covered by an ordinary life. The gypsy prides himself upon his sta- | Walter Be tion. be he vigil over the departed, while the { other members of the camp support them en was no exception | five making a manhood. &Y yea re his ancestors. musician a tribu town ted to Oakland Office 8an Franeisco Call, to town of a Turk. g conjugal | and t he courthouse from | Agnes Gillick. Mise Gillick's experfence as Mrs. ) bandain was interesting to a painful de- | gTee. Her American bliss received a | Oriental standards of her swarthy lover | show family disciplin Nalbandain was a_member of a troupe | of Turkish dancers that showed in ()a‘(-; winter. The fire started from a defective flue | gvrations of the supple dervish captivat- of little Miss Gillick. land o r ed last thems back of a lower floor grate. The flames | od the fancy were put out after they had burned | several roman: through to the roof. Mrs. Calhoun's 10ss | farformances was about §$1800, mostly covered by insur- nce. COMEDY IN THE AMBULANCE. A Doctor's Story of a Man and Woman Each With a Broken Leg. When I was an ambulance surgeon, id tne young family physician, “I used {0 start like a fire horse at the sound of the call. 1 was just as much interested in the work at the end of two vears as I was the way I began. It was the ex-| citement of the life that made me so fond of it. 1 had all sorts of experiences at all sort: of hours. There was an element of danger in it, too, but that only added o harm. ““(‘)t:; fMght T had a call from the West Side in the neighborhood %f Chelsea Square. It was for a drunkeh man who tell down and broke his leg. On the wey back to the hospital with him I picked up a drunken woman to whom a similar accident .1ad happened. There was noth- ing to do but put her in the ambulance along with the man. “After that the ride across town was exciting enough for a‘ cowboy. At first | the patients sympathized with each other. Then_they beran to cry in chorus. At Rroadway they fell to Kissing each other. | At Third avenue they were fighting like a walr of Kilkenny cats. and 1 had my hands full in keening them apart. The | woman -had scratched the man's face dreadfully. and he had nearly closed her ! eye with a_punch. When we struck the | asphalt in_Twenty-sixth street they were si= ing ‘We Have All Been There Befare. Many a Time,' and such singing! The uproar attracted a crowd. who evidently thought T had an ambulance full of luna- tics. When we reached the gate they swore eternal friendshin. and at the of. gvl they parted in tears”"—New York | un. e i | Half of the world is in ignorance of who | the other half is doi i land er's bride. land, Or. mended by 1y | amorato, she ago while temporary He was reared In the camp and grew to Blood told, sy blood, and Boswell was as true to the customs of his people as were any of The v and by that pursuit he con- | the support which he was a member. moved the gvpsy clans they ms a ude elves tic_ gir nightly. secure an tintroduction to her dusky and when the troupe left Oak- accompanied them as their lea From here they went to Po; and soon troubl a new Mrs. Nalbandain. Or was adjudged the proper thing to induce | Judge Ellsworth in which in her that spirit of submissiveness recom the prophet. thick with lash or staff or naked fist voung girl watched her chance te escape She was folled again and again. but final- slipped away and cast well, year of life as the wife oL a dancing dervish an Oakland girl has jurors have complained that they had con- | obtained the permission of the Alameda | 1 lack of | County Superior Court allegiance to Jacob Nalbandain me her mailden name of Annie years ago he was would have done | pointment The fatal illne about three mont of the chil- There is not of . or aban- during a sies returned to months of wandering. thing else prompted the dead prince, 't o He was born th'r slowly sank, oung man had talent | there ill be a stric of the camp of When the spirit | moved and from | have traveled these | until her | home in Oakland Judge Ellsworth fendant on lieved of her Turkish so ordered “orded a burial redit to a Lak 180 nizing that he was in a s the camp was broken ther Oakla gard for custom and habit much as a the move disease was 80 deeply rooted that Boswell dying within by | dingy canvas funéral hall the casket rests | many years pparently pre- in state. At the head of the bler is an | carious exist rse trading. improvised altar, upon which is a lighted | fortune telling anched candelabrum. Back of The Palme sies are reputed to have that in small annex, also canvas, are | wealth. Certain it is they have alwa the mourne The father, 81 years | been able to make a lavish display at old. with the Queen Onnar. 78 years of | funerals of their dead. When King Har age. parents of the dead prince, are hold- | eline dled suddenly in San Francisco seven that > mil- 1k he usand de A fhe. Her remains ¢ s elegant in ap e Prince at Tor fous ard nd _ after saperstiti 4 But th twelve ho the parents viere | after the trouble reached an acute stage camp at Stock.on.| At the funeral to-morrow as many of the gvosies as can be assembled will be even if it was | present. There are a number of bands throughout the State. but they are, for the most part. rémote. At the services adherence to the rit- ualistic order of the church. The gypsy of English descent maintains a strong re- gard for the religlon of hie forefathers and he appeals to the consolation of the church when death takes one of the tribe o5 iimininte dbeiniei e ieinieh deinieied deleleleink deieiniel defeieiel dejninieieini et @) # DNCING DERVISH LUSES HIS CHARM Oakland Girl Divorced AItor! a Hard Year as Wife | charity of strangers, who concealed her mi-barbarot troupe had left the place. her passage money to reach her mother s spouse and his Then they gava Proceedings were immediately begun for a divorce. which was granted to-day by default of the de- Excessive cruelty was the charge In the complaint and the plaintiff asied to be re- mame. It DR. JORDAN SPEAKS ON IDEALS OF EDUCATION Feb. & | BERKELEY, Starr Jordan, Stanford Jr. the To%n and G His subject was was introduced by chalrman of the He sald: Broadway Feb to renounce he- | E al- | take hold of any president University wn Club this commit Lectures Before the Town and Gown Club, a Berkeley Ladies’ Or- ganization. 4. —Professor David of the Leland lectured before fternoon. Dr. Jordan Ros n. ““The universities of to-day are ready to question and make {t go. There i< not the vanity among them ideas of marriel|as before when they were working en- shock as soon as the | tirely for ‘culture.’ We are coming to have a higher ideal of education here than % {in any other country. That ideal is to in his methods of | produce the best individual man; to tra The twistings and | and other grest . one cf 1s who attended the | She managed to I. Wright on the - | ration from Edward began for the ntal discipline Adam F. complaint sc It was lald en ‘The | married her. Cornelia Mahoney divorce from George T herself on the to show whether or not knew that his wife was insane when has_begun him for what he is best suited.” After the lecture the ladies of the Town and Gown Club served tea to the speaker —————— Oakland Divores Suits. OAKLAND, Feb. 4—Thomas R. Wright has been granted a divorce from Georgie ground of Sarah Perrine was given a similar sepa- cross-complaint was thrown out of cour Menges was given ten days hv desertion Perrine. whose to amend his suit fc Mahoney on the ground of willful neglect. GOLD DUST THE BEST Washing Powder

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