The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, May 1, 1903, Page 16

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16 FRANCISCO . CALL, FRIDAY. MAY 190 SLEUTH WATCHES fOUNG GOLDMAN Gay Drummer Is Author| of Many Worthless Drafts. Eastern Firm Repudiates Pa- per Given by Its Rep- resentative. - g commer- n houses Goldmas, & gay you . e s e police thig W money knig d drafts on e paper has not been . ses whose wares he ) warning prospective ag Us wiles & the losers. They ac- s afts in good y forwarded them red that the firms Telegrams se mmediately to the after the matter ha ain of Detectives rummer ised that inder the a Arm. 1t has been Pacific. Coast hile here ) regarded pent his “on the went well atest trip a short ¥ had friends the EXCURSION. Russian River Redwoods. ext at § a. m a Bausalit e said earned t his money on li dren to sup d g wit e sper t, she = isband had not a which she had ed a jarce 0 had been toes and pair. Count dren’s, shoes at sale h»g)rc Sat Civil Service Examinations. city May 26 for a salary of $1000 per and engineer, $100 nimum age limit, 20 mmission at Wash- retary, of Service E : ckson street, this city. ——— you ask for “Jesse Moore” Whisky be ' get #t. Don't ‘Fave sometbing just as good. ———— Insolvent Teamster. teamster of San etition in insolvency ited States District and has no assets —— e the way of undergar- arc shown here. Made in ctory, which is a pos- e of better quali- and workmanship rocurable elsewhere. Ik uwaud above is a popu- rment made of nainsook; arm-holes and fitted josie with Valenciennes lace; of lace insertion to h across front; embroidery beading around nrnksl 5 and waist, with ad ting ribbons. . styles, equally neatly trimmed 25¢ and up <~///J[fl/ b’ 018,022 Mdarket St. edged rows Other made as er service examina- | let any ome tell you | | - dietta *‘Good-by,” and AMATEURS TREAD BOARDS AND MAKE GOOD IMPRESSION Young Misses of High ‘School. Dlstlrlgmsh Themselves in the Come- in an Exceedingly = Clever and . Well-Constructed : Adaptatnon of Mrs. Gaskell’s “Cranford” £ —_—— e 5 [ 2 OUNG lady pupils of the Girls' X : : “Th} Lades of Cranford.”” - 3 ’ Miss. Matilda Jenkyns, the rectar’s da High Wokof);; Sty Al Hoott i P Ellen Stadtmuiler streets, appeared. in plays last | Miss ‘Masy Smith, her Visitor. .. .. Georgle Mel night in the hall ofthe school, | | Miss Jessie Brown. a ‘new resident which was fiiled with a thorough- - | i AR o 1y well-pleased audience. The first item on ! £ e — = * - BRIGHT PUPILS :OF -THE TION OF THE FARCE, “THE THE SCHOOL ‘LAST: NiGHT comedietia; delightfully “inter- Woodward programme -was a Reed isitor in ladies ‘o the: Not - on 1id - the ng school who “toak’ -pari’ in. 'the dramatig portions of ‘the:evening’s-‘entértainment prove that they ‘weré possessed. of-arti uridergoiie training a alike to 1y - were t the orchestra position in re in raiser and the he Ladies of Craziford;” | prominent between the that ! upon tc mentalists. ‘were called | themseives, ‘and. theif | led:| such Ja amoyint |the Dm(nr‘m piece;| r musical ability and that they ceeded was evidenced by .the| storm of applause that followed the vari- aus selections i Naturally a good deal of interest had been worked up in anticipation. of pr ation of “The Ladiés of Cranfor whikh had been adapted for stage pur- poses from Mrs. Gaskell's novel,. “‘Cran- ford.” The staging of the work was good. the scenery' appropriate and -the old-fashioned costumes, of the style worn | by our great ndmothers, most_inter- | esting BRIGHT YOUNG AMATEURS. There were no less than twelve acters and in each instance a surprising stage intelligence was revealed, the young amateurs possessing not only confidence, but ‘good stage presence and easy demeanor. Act 1 was devoted to afternoon tea in | Miss Matty's parlor and Y ERRERRRERRRRRERLREI S | SALVATION ARMY WILL WELCOME ITS COMMANDER char- | L necessary | | of course with | Elaborate Pro;ummeiArrnnged and | Exercises Will Cover Period | of Five Days. The local division of theSalvation Army has about completed its final arrarge- ments for the exercises to'be held in’this city beginihing on May 2 and lasting for five days in honor of the arrival of Com- mander Booth-Tucker in' this city. | celebration will.also mark the twentieth anniversary of the founding of the. order in this_ city, and therefore it will really be a double event. On “Tuesday, May 5, there will be a big | mass-meeting, held in the Alhalfibra Tne- ater. - Mayor Schmitz -will preside‘and on the stage with-him will.be Major ‘Gencral Shafter, Chief of Police Wittman and a score of other prominent; citizens, includ ing-a large number of prominent clery- | men of all denominations.,. The following is the order of the exercises during the five days of tho celebration: Saturday, May 2-8:56 a. m.., Commander { Booth-Tucker arrives from Portland:; 8 p. m., united soldiers’ council, Congress Hall, 115¥ Market strest Sun: May 3-9 a. m., commander anl party jeave for San Quentin penitentiars: o and § p. m.. evangelistic services in the Ai- hambra Theater | Monday, May 4—4 p. m., address to Univer- sity of California students, Stiles Hall, Berke- dey: & p. m., meeting for Chinese only, Baptist Chinese Church, Sa Tuesday, May 1 p. e Rerd officers’ council i Central Metho- dist Episcopal Church; 8 p. m., twentieth an- niversary mass-meeting in Alhambra Theater. Mayor Schmitz will preside. The commander will give his lectuye, ““The Sides of the Salvation Ar 3 posal for the erection of a central hall and provincial headquarters in San Francisco will be_launched Wednesday, May 6—3 and § p. m.. big de- monstrations in the Army Temple, Oakland. Thursday, Ma, ford University mento street. m. and 2 Retired Real Estate Dealer Dies. Daniei Hedges, a retired real estate agent, aged 65 years, who came to this city two years ago, was found dying last evening in a bathtub at his residence, 1114 Larkin street. He expired soon after- ward. Heart disease was the cause of death. 1 The | acters -in’ both. play CAST “OF CHARACTERS." “The. following - ~cast. Df th sodwari: . Langley 3 uby ‘Ree ny Motley And. Tired, Frenéd' Mothers Find Comfortin Cuticura Svoapv- ' and flmtmant When All l]ther fiemedles and-." Physlcmns Fail. ' Instant relief and refreshing sleep for skin-tortured bables and rest for tired, worried mothers in warm baths with Cuticura Soap, and gentle anoint- ings with Cuticura Ointment, purest of emollient skin cures, to be followed in severe cases by mild doses of Cuticura Resolvent. This ig-the purest, sweet- est, most “speedy, permanent and eco- nomical treatment for torturing, dis- figuring, itching, burning, blceding, scaly, crusted and pimply skin and scalp humours, with loss of hair, of infants and children, as well as adults, and is sure to succeed when all other remedies and the best physicians fail. The agonizing itch: and burning of the skin, as in eczema; the frightful scaling, as in psoriasis ; the loss of hair and crusting of the scalp, as in scalled head; the facial disfizurement, as in acne afd ringworm; the awful suffer- Ing of Q@fnns, and unxietv of worn-out parents, as in milk crust, tetter and salt rheam, —all demand a remedy of almost superhuman virtues to success- fully cope with them. That Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Resolvent are such stands proven heyond all doubt. No statement is made regarding them that is not justified by the strongest evi- dence. The purity and sweetness, the power to afford immediate relief, the certainty of speedy and permanent cure, the absolute safety and great economy have made them the standard skin cures and humour remedies of the civilized world. e >..‘m..'nl-£g|- xmmMAw Potter Druz & Chem. Corp., Sol -rl—m“l-n.vnmm"n { | I’apcr 3 7 Ibs - Fine }'eaches 40 " 1bs . Good - French Prunes .. 20 Ibs Table Rice.. .. ‘We ship goods everywhere. Send for our lo-ps:c catalogue, free. Country or- ders solicited. G. T, JONES & CO. 2 and 4 Call'ornia St., Por. Market, . SAN FRANCISCO. Phone Bush 659. One Blook-from the Ferry Chickering | § PIANOS| / [ 4 neglec(ful delmle her anlesll and fflll"d | #fort. {“dered-Woerner to pay her $330 for coun- _ against C. E. Corbley for infidelity, and - Irene Perri ~_eruelty. FLORODORN GIRL BETS A DIVORCE Tells. Her Troubles to Judge Graham, Who ' Sets Her Free. Her Marriage to L. G. Martin, f a Railroad“Man, Is an Unhappy One. Ann Elizabeth Martin, better known as “Nan Randolph,” one of the original Flo= rodora girls, was granted a divorce by Judge Graham yesterday from Leon ,Gaines Martin, assistant general passen- | ger agent in New York of the Michigan | and West Shore Railroad Company. The | décree was awarded .on the grounds of | { desertion and failure to provide. It ap- |pears that in 1388, when she was a Miss [ Patterson, the plaintiff. met Martin and | | became enamored of him. The meeting \ook place in Baltimore and in that city | | she -became his wife. “The wedding took | | place In \memfier. ls.fls' ‘For some months | d- happ'l) l(‘g!lher ‘and :then, ac ording fo Mrs. Martin’s s, testimony, her 1 ind," who fs* al§o 'a member of the'| k Stock Exchange, commenced | Then' hei grew | 16_keep J her supplied with means of sup-- It was then she determyned to util- ize*hgr.vocal POWers and fine presence as 5 means’ of, obtaining the sustenance het 3 hiisband denieg_her. Edna Wal- | Hopper's Florodora €ompan Cinfeljcities the.*divorce | Yésterday she filed a suit for.di- | Against Wright, alldging that since marriages tq_him last Jupe. a.few Tter she had secy fed a di he eves -And d.abused " het ‘and tHld hi%{iciinatidns She’ allegés also lhal he sfited-ciga; ntjtled -to_ that much; qf . her .husband's R tew wgeks-after, the djvorcé. |a.lm| was tffected f. réunited l'lapp\ .and ‘oubles which resulted in the A ond compiaint for divorce: ght -avers thai het huisband ‘ap..income -of $130 - arket street,” treet* and* Oa to award il 8 Uaghun buil y ~and -that ‘of Joseph Carton, ‘shéwed narrjage to . Reading in nad treated;lHer both not.aboye telling his sorted witlt- other’ women | t e had told hér in a gost hrutal 1. that he. preferred the -society of and.the dfssolute to-<hat testified “also- e (hal his kno drugs put_ her. oui- of the world. She said th when he ‘so informed-her he- remarke: t'Great- heavens!.’ You might liy s.old; and 1 'could mever stand_you rnmptl\' “granted -by | Judge Muyrasky, also awarded Mrs. Reading 3% a- month alimony. oerner, who a short time ago “decured a divopce’ from Adolph Woerner, 1, order trom Judge oerner to pay her The cgurt. also or- y M 4, month alimony. sel fees and $30 to defray the. cost of her | divorce proceedings. "Fhe- marriage of Irenc C. Shippey to | Reglus- Shippey was annulled by Judge | Graham for statutory reasons. Graham | also granted a divorce to Ida Goodwin | from Charles Goodwin because he was convicted of a felony. He is serving a| sear sentence -for betrayal under | promise of marriage, the crime occurring | the day following the wedding. | FEVER REACHES CHINESE. | The: divorce fever, whieh, since the change in the law. which governed the ad- | justment of matrimonial affairs has per- | meated San Francisco to 1ts utmost lim- its, has at last reached Chinatown. A | suit for divorce was filed yesterday by | Sun Choie against Lem Hand. Cruelty | is alleged in the complaint. They were | married in September, 1885. Sun Choie charges that her husband has been bru-! tal to her, alleging that he once assaulted her with a chair and again struck her on | the head with “a large, heavy opium | pipe.” She alleges also that he threat- | ened her life with A pistol and that he | has compelled her to live in a house of | ill-fame. o Suits for divorcel were also filed by La- | venia G. Blythe against S. A. Blythe m’ desertion: Mary M. Hanke against C. H. | Hanke for desertiop; Alice E. Feld against | Joseph Feld for cri elty Maud F. Lyman | against A. W. Lyman for neglect; Della | Tracy against Thomas Tracy for neglect: | Lena L. Furlong against Arthur Furlong | for desertion; Elizabeth Muenz ugaln-tl Frederick Muenz for neglect; Mary White against F. F. White for neglect; | Helen C. Dixon against John 8. Dixon for | neglect; Annie C. Tripp against Edward A. Tripp for desertion; Nellie Corbley against Antonio Perri for Divorces were granted to Sophia Cory from H. R. Cory, F. P. Pinkham from | Clara C. Pinkham,| Daniel -G. Mahony from Elizabeth -Mahony, ' Louis Simpsen from Laura Simpson, Sarah A. Schroder from Herman Schroder. Anna C. Walcott from E. I. Walcott, Mary E. Pattridge from R. K. Pattridge, Oscar Foley from Ida Foley and Thomas Hickler from The- resa Hickler, for desertion; Gabrielle J. Gres§ from Almeron ‘Gress, Gabrielle G. Traynor froem John Traynor and Henry Hussey from Hattie Hussey, for cruelty, and Louise Cole Mrp Jason Cole for in- . temperancs. month” from . - ADVERTISEMENTS. Totners el us that we aave the nappy knack of making saca smart \ocoking Sailors — sweet, gou «now, and Theyg must know, becaunse taey are the ones we aim to pleass and Wt _\s a pretiy nam- Yer that we snow Wm the picturs opposite in Blue, three different stgles of braid treatment and in Gxford Sray with Black Braiding quite a jeteaing color and effect. A swell \ittle sammer Sailor for gour \ittle fellow will oo special to-dagat 9198 the suit. RAges 3 o 0 Pears. s - 'Bo\},s S,m\g Arouser Suits Some Real Smart numbers in Jmeeds, the newest Spring colorings, made as gou see in tae picture, clean cut and vefined in stule, ages 12 Yo 19 gears. DU\ be to-day 9%.00 the suit. 1 > dne S\m\me\' Sad Vnat Suit you see intne picture in the brigatest and pretiiest of Secotenes. You will notice the clever \ines of this Suit. Dae picture gioes Jou an \dea of aow c\lean cut our Sarments are made. For \ads between the ages of 6 and \A years. Some smart numbers amMong ‘em. Do-day at the suit - S dne Sofer Single-Breasted Sacket and Drous- ers witn Separate Welt made of the ame matenial as the Suit. Dais is one e evftest and cleverest summer ideas for \ads between the ages of & and 1A gears that we have introduced this sea- son. Om the pretiiest and smartest of Aomespun Fabrics. You know those colors away from the ordinary. Dif- ferent from angtning seen in the town. Sarments that are exquisitely cut and tallored. Taxes gour \ittle caap \ook remarkably smart and jaunty. Do-day, %00 sait.

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