The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 13, 1903, Page 4

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R - . 4 BRANCH OFFICES OF THE CALL IN ,ALAMEDA COUNTY, MAKE PROGRESS WITH BOULEVERD Right of Way Commit- tee Has a Report in Preparation. Suparvisors Are Planning That Work Shall Begin in the Spring BUSINESS DONE BY NEW FERRY Statement of Earnings of First Week of Operation. R L Second Order of Cars’lIs Placed for Oakland Service. & Ozkland Office San Francisco!Call, 1118 Broadway, Nov. 12. The San Francisco, Oakland and San Jose Rallroad, which is the cumbersome official title of the new ferry system, has issued a statement of the earnings of the new line for the first week of its operation. During this week only hourly trips were made and only single tickets were sold. The commutation service will not be inaugurated until December since this statement was issued a half-hourly ferry service has been in- | — OakBand Office San Fran 118 Broad: Such prog boen by the committee in charge of selecting the route through the foothi for c boulevand from Fyuit rds that the three a. rey 1 subm riy 1 of Supervisors, BE22SASERSSO0 ———— LIVE WIRE MENACES | ¢ PASSING PEDESTRIANS Dangles and Sputters in Street, Im. peding Traffic and Causing Gen- eral Consternation. ALAMEDA 1 T peded | — REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS. Alameda County. Ma 1o Y - o end_Aibert van, Louise Sub | fennig Jr._and Loutse and Fred- t same, B na: 31 Iroad avenue 331 3 § 140, Alameda; 3 MeKeon (bus- har S line of Ala- . t street, W 50 b b prop- ert on, Alameda; L nd Eleanor J ustin (singie) Davis (truetee) to t on E line of z to Carrie Trahan, line of Eagle av . W 34:7 by N all_in- Baker (wife) to J. L. eorner of Alcatraz avenue 3 by E 60, bel of lot 128, block 1, lands Regent-Street Home- Stead Aesociation, Berkeley: §10 Sk | Abbie L. and Joel W. Crocker to Carolyn | &nd Ellis street L. Huntoon (single), lot 11, block 21, Daley's .s“m» Park, deed and agreement, Berkeley; | J. A and Emily V. Marshall to Irens 7. | Hemblin (married), 1ot on N lime of Carieton | street, 201 E of Dana, E 85 by N 134:5, por- tion ote 1, 2 8 and 16, block L, Leonard Tract, Berkeley: $10. Same to Lengdon Ansley, S 40 feet of lot 1. block 3. property Jobn Kearney, etc., Gced and agreement Berkeley; $10. H P ura B. Nelson to Adeline de Wait olds (wife of F. A), lot on 8 line of Cariton street, 137.90 W of Grove, W 85 by § 130, lot 7, and B 35 feet of lot 6, block H. Crystal Spring Tract, Berkeley: $10. Mae E. and e ¥. Hargy to A. D, Wilson, Jot beginning at a point on B line of Jot 5, 136 8 of University avemue, W 52 by £ 136, being pertion lot 5, block 1, Shaw Tract, Berkeley; $10. P. H. Anderson to Peter Bacher, lot on W line of Park street 58:2 S of Blanding S augurated. The statement s as follows: October $326 40; October 27, 2 80;, October 28, $423 70; October | , $427 75; October 30, $429 39; Octo- ber, 31, $660 November 1, §1443 40. Total for seven da $4153 10. This represents almost exclusively a travel t was impelled by curiosity. ittle that travel, whic came from be considered regular, akland was of the the large amount Novem! 1, shows. w system will do | ined until commu- | sale on De- | ne on ng evident that re the regular system will be e keley. The Oakland 1g car only, and the have not yet been - new Be largely by the lack | al order of the com- to be es to Berkeley C at it has been | second order ¥ duplicated the first that til th d order of Berkeley servl will be over that from EVENTS IN SOCIETY spite of the rain | assemadled pspect ave- the receptial brill Davis, has one feel ek, ts were which was also a who was then Miss her engagement bursday has been the bride. On rsday ehe be- rsday she an- ursday she was her formal debut y were many of the Burrell, her- D and Jooked lace gown. Her sister, ite point d'esprit. Miss white—a cream sil lace gown, Miss Bess crepe and Miss Ed- wearing white. Miss ore & pink sllk gown coverea nt d'esprit, and Miss Edith Beck , soft silk with white spangled “hase, Who has just re- ed ' visit East, wore a ce over pale blue silk. d the skirt and on e avere bands and knots of narrow lvet. handsofne white gowns were worn among them being a white 1 trimmed with fur, worn by Mrs. A. G. Freeman, with a white hat, and a gray crepe de Paris worn by Mrs. D. B. Hunter. Mrs. Merrill was & guest and wore an elegant biack lace dress lined with pale blue silk ley Mrs, was attired in a h, and another at- ive gown was that worn by Mrs. Cotton— &n imported gown of dark silk, trimmed with white applique lace. One of the handsomest costumes, a_rich, white silk, Mrs. James Moffiit ley ‘wore a black and white striped Dresden silk. Mrs. George Meredith's dress of brown nd white brocade silk, with a big black hat f_chiff d plumes, most becoming. afternoon several delig! J. T. Carothers of Beri white gown of French ci t voice with Mrs. R. W. Gorrill entertained a few friends at & luncheon to-day, given in honor of Mrs. Covers were laid for H. Kittredge, Mrs, T. as Creliin, Mrs. Henry 3% Coogan, Mrs. Minor Pedar Sather, Mrs. Q. A. Chase, 8. Goodfellow and 'Mrs. Paul Lohse, . . be the hostess Mrs | to-morTow at a large card party in honor of Charles Parcells will her sister, Miss Elsie Kimble. £he will be assisted by Mise Ada Kenna, Miss Marietta Havens, Miss Noelle de Golla, Miss Charlot Lohse. Miss Besale Fillmore, Miss Helen Chase, Miss May Young, Miss Margaret Sinclair, Miss Florence Hush, Mrs Henry Dutton of San “ranc Miss Bessie Reed, Miss Flsle Ben- pett, Miss Jane Rawlings, Mrs, Willlam B. Watt Mrs. Montell Taylor and Miss Emma ahoney. The luncheon given by Mre. Frank C. Wat- son yesterday in honor of the Misses Dunphy was a charming affalr. Her guests were: Mrs, Wickham Havens, Mrs. BEdward Engs, Miss Carrie Nicholson, 'Miss Belle Nicholsog, Mrs. Roy Mauvals, Mrs. James Tyson, Mrs. Albert Long, Miss Marguerite Dunphy, Miss Alice Dunphy, Miss Noelle de Golia and Mrs. Henry Ros ALAMEDA, Nov. 12—Mr, and Mre. Pdward Randlett announce the engagement of thelr Charles Albert Randlett, and Miss Anna ither of Sacramento. The wedding 1 occur in the German Lutheran Church of that city at noon on Wednesday, the 25th of this month. President Joseph F. Forderer of the City Trustees s In Los Angeles, where he will spend & week on business and pleasure, Miss nate Jollymour, secretary of Branch 8 of the Catholic Ladies’ Aid Soclety, was nted with a fraternal jewel by the or- tion last evening in appreciation of four- teen years of falthful service in the position A con she still occupfes in the soclety, and Mrs. J. A. Burton, who will leave fday for 1Los Angeles, where they will in the future were the guests of the Misses Martin of 1413 Paru street yesterday at a farewell whist party. Among those invited 10 meet Mr. and Mrs. Burton were: Mrs. H, M. Pond, Miss Pond, Mrs. Weeden, Mrs, W. B. Stephens. Mrs. De Witt, “ Farrar, Mrs, Walton Farrar, Mrs, ber, Mrs. Joseph Durne Mrs. Herm ter, Mrs. Frank n Dex- James Hambly, Misses Bessie and Maude Turrell, Mrs, George Hansbrow, Mrs. J, from Otis, Mrs. J. Tobin of this city; and Francisco, Mrs. Joseph Marshall, race Marshall, Mrs. John bin, Mrs. Redmond Payne, Miss Glass, Mrs, Gaston Bacon, Miss Tessa Semple, Mrs. L. R, El- lert, Mrs. Harry Baehr, Miss Gwendolin O'Brien. Mrs. Douglas Crane, Mrs. Charles Craig, Mrs. M. Babin. Mrs. George Little, Miss Ora Williams and Miss Perkins. —_——— San Louis Glass, B7:2% W 104:9% N B 107, block 48, Min- turn Tract, quitciaim deed, Alameda; $5. Hibernia Bavings and Loan Society to J. H. Young, § 10 feet of jot 144 and N 25 foet of Mot 146 biock 194, Encina! Park Tract, claim deed; §1. e The largest gas engine in the world, having 3000-horsepower, will be sent by a Belgian nufacturer to supply part of thé motive power of th vorld” . powe he world's fair THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1903. 2 NEWS OF THE COUNTY' OF GERMAN LADIES WILL GIVE IMPORTANT CHARITY BALL v Oakland Relief Society Abandons Germania Quarters and Will Hold Its Twenty-Fifth ‘Annual Dance at Maple Hall, Which Will Hereafter Be the Home of the Old and Popular Organization MRS ADSLPH SCHLUETER, AN e BIBY STRANGLED B h CUMDROP Sweetmeat Lodges Throat of the Infant, Causing Death. in Oakland Office San Francisco Call, 1118 Broadwav, Nov. 12. Btrangled to death by a gumdrop that lodged in her tiny throat was the fate to-night of little Dorothy Deck, ten months old, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Q. Deck, residing at $22 Eight- eenth street. The baby had been given one of the| sweets and was sucking tne bit of con- fectionery when the plece of gum was.| swallowed. It was too large to pass into the stomach end lodged in the throat, at the windpipe. Mrs. Deck tried to start the obstruction, but could not move it. Dr. W. W. Kergan and Dr. Miller were summoned, but thelr services were of no avail. The infant was slowly suffocated to death despite every effort that could be made to save the little one, who dled ghortly after 6 o'clock. Owing to the nature of the case it was reported to Coroner Mehrmann, who took charge. An inquest will be held. I SASEE e RATE McCARTHY SETTLES WITH ¢ THE SANTA FE FOR $400 Sells Disputed Stretch of Land at Figure Far Below What He Originally Demanded. OAKLAND, Nov. 12—Dennis McCarthy, the aged man who was written up a few months ago by a morning paper as hav- ing defied the Santa Fe Raliroad Com- pany with an armed force of men, has sold to the company a small strip of land on San Pablo avenue for $400. The trouble arose over the property. McCarthy was reported to have wanted $10,000 for the property and the railroad refused to pay. Then the story got about that McCarthy and a number of his friends, armed to the teeth, were standing guard over the land and threatening to shoot any of the rafl- road laborers who approached the place. The story was given much prominence in a local daily, but it proved to be without foundation. McCarthy did demand an ex- orbitant price for the land when he learned that the raliroad company was anxious to acquire it, but he at last con- cluded to sell it for $400 and now admlits that the land was worth no more. —————— Husband Wants Divorce. OAKLAND, Nov. 12—H. T. Lally has begun a suit for divorce against Mary E. Lally on the grounds cf intemperance and crueity. They were married in San Francisco in 1902, ————— Halt Sole for Men, 500 Up. Chinese shoe store, 539 Eleventh st. Phone Franklin 89, e s L N | * FOUR MEMBERS OF THE COMMITTEE THAT HAS CHARGE OF THE ARRANGEMENTS FOR THE TWENTY-FIFTH A ‘AL BALL OF | THE GERMAN LADIES' RELIEF SOCIETY. | e, % MAKES BOOTLES HUNT FOR 0L Friedlander Finds De- ceased Wife Left No Estate. Oakland Office San Francisco Call, 1118 Broadway, Nov. 12. | Filled with disappointment at learning that the supposed rich estate left by his deceased wife did not exist, Harry Fried- lander, a vlano salesman, has returned from a fruitless journey to New York. His failure to realize has been reported to I. H. Herold, a jeweler at 62 East Twelfth street, a brother of the dead wife, Bessie Herold Friedlander, who was mys- teriously drowned from the steamer Arc- tic last April while on her wedding trip. At the time of her marriage the young woman was an heiress, it was sald, to a share In her father's estate, which was valued at $30,000. After her marriage to Friedlander, which was decidedly dis- tasteful to the young bride’s Oakland rel- ative, the brother made much ado about it and was serfously unstrung when the news of the strange death reached him. The girl disappeared from the steamer and was not missed for several hours. Neither the suddenly bereft husband nor any of the ghip's company could find a trace of her. Subsequently Herold made a fight in the Probate Court against Friedlander's petition to be appointed administrator of his wife's estate, but the brother lost and the husband was appointed. According to Herold the husband obtained $300 or $400 and some jewelry that had belonged to Mrs. Friendlander and then went to New York City to claim the remainder of the estate. There another brother met the widower with a showing that Mrs. Friedlander's share in her father’s estate had long since been paid to her and that there was noth- ing due her estate, as a pro rata division had been made. That ended the search. Herold still feels bitterly toward "his brother-in-law and exults in the failure of the Eastern journey. —_—————— Hermann'’s Sons’ Masquerade Ball. OAKLAND, Nov. 12.—California Lodge No. 2, Hermann's Sons, will give a prize masquerade ball at Germania Hall next Saturday evenin, November 14. The prizes are for patrons only, members of the lodge not being allowed to compete. The prizes will be drawn at midnight on the night of the ball. —————— Maccabees Give Ninth Annual Ball. OAKLAND, Nov. 12—Oakland Tent No. 17 and'Oakland Hive No. 14, Knights and Ladies of the Maccabees, gave their ninth annual ball this evening at Maple Hall, The grand march was led by State Com- mander and Mrs. 8. W. Hall and E. F. Garrison acted as floor manager. The members of the reception committee were Mrs. O. Whitney, Mrs. E. Earnest, J. 8. Carney and S. S. L. Relpe. AKLAND, Nov. 12.—The annual ball of the German Ladies’ Rellef Soclety will be given on Wednes- day evening next at Maple Hall, and will be cne of the most im- portant of the charitable events of the winter jseason. ‘T4 ball always com- mands attention from the entire popula- tion upon this side of the bay, and not alone from the German colony, and this year it will be more attractive than ever. The ladies of the society have deter- mined upon a new move this year. Oid Germania Hall is to be abandoned, and the ball is to be held in an uptown hall, Germania Hall was for years the center of festivity in Oakland, but Oakland has grown beyond the old building, and the ladies of the German society finally de- termined that they would have to aban- don the locatiqq and go where soclety dictates. The result is that after a quar- ter ofa century of the existence of this coclety they have been compelled to aban- don their old home, and move uptown with the gencral trend of both scclety and busines; Mrs. A. M. Werum, president of the German Ladies’ Relief Society has ap- pointed a general committee of arrange- ments and this committee has charge of all of the details of the affair for next Wednesday night. This committee is com- posed of Mrs. Julius Seulberger, chair- man; Mrs. A. Schlueter, Mrs. C. G. Schmidt, Mrs. J. Many, Mrs, R. O. Gray, Mrs. C. Hesse and Miss M. Harding. —_———— BABE IS INTRODUCED IN BREACH OF PROMISE SUIT Miss Lanigan Presents Her Case Against Daniel Neeley, the Berke- ley Nurseryman. OAKLAND, Nov. 12.—The direct testi- mony against Daniel Neeley, the wealthy Berkeley nurseryman, who is being sued for $25,000 damages for the alleged break- ing of a promise to marry Mary Lanigan, was nearly completed to-day, and to-mor- row the defendant will probably take the stand in his own defense. Mary Lanigan, the plaintiff, was on the stand and told of Neeley's caresses and terms of affection by which she sald he won_her love. Her story was corrobo- rated in part by Mrs. Rose Davis, a sis- ter. Miss Lanigan’s eight-months-old baby was an exhibit In the case. Mrs. Doherty, the plaintiff’s mother, testified that she knew Neeley twenty-filve years ago, and that he then had hair of the same red shade as that adorning the babe’s head. The attorneys hope they will be able to submit the case to the jury by Monday afternoon. —_————— HEAD CONSUL WILL ADDRESS LOCAL CAMPS ‘Woodmen Will Hear F. A. Falken- burg at Woodmen Hall Next Monday Evening. SAY5 AR 13 BI6 FORGER THEW ~ CRES A HALT \T0 BOSSIPING Pastor Jones Stops the Wagging of Tongues in Church. Descriptionof New York Defaulter Fits Oak- land Tramp. | s s Man Serving Thirty Days for Vagrancy May Be Taken East. e e Oakland Office San Francisco Call 1118 Broadway, Nov. 12. George W. Carthew, a supposed tramp, now serving a thirty days’ sentence in the County Jall for vagrancy, suliciently | &, ) resembles the description of 4 man Want- | vy eeesent o roryis PUIDIC that he ed for mulcting a New York bank out of | a 7 S eesb o g $100,000 to make his return to that ecity |2 @8¢d parishioner, cauieq more than a to answer to the charge almost a cer- | Stif Sunday night a he colored folk, At | has deetded to any contem- Carthew was visited In the jail to-day | Plated action, ec or otherwise Matrimonial Question Finds Surcease After a Confer- ence o? Parties. Oakland Officy San Francisco Call, 1118 Rroadway, Nov. 12. | The Rev. O. E. Joes, pastor of the Afro-American Methodst Church, whose ng cles by men who have a photograph and a | that he might hav min minute description of the forger, and tley | Anderson, despite repeated avow say the prisoner is the man as neacly | $he was the afflanced of the stalwart ex- as anv one can teil from desecrintions. pounder of the gospels, has lixewise giv- In wandering through the town of Mar- | en her word that gossips will be no tinez about two months ago Carthew |longer regaled so far as she is concerned came face to face with E. Ericson, who That this conclu: reached re- s from a conferen has an office on Pine street in San Fran- | nas been cisco. Eriscon thought he reco d in | held between the vi pa the tramp a man with whom he had done | t es at the offices business through the wicket of a bank | cuting attorne; in New York City and who afterward, [ pastor attended by means of clever forgeries, swindied | With W. B. Bridg the bank out of a large Sum f mioney. | church, and ) There is a standing reward cf $500) for | Annie Hughes the capture of the forger, and learning | Mrs. E which way Carthew was going two days | derson later Ericson, in company with ¢ bla | cussion the p Ramage of Haywards, took Carthew into | ness to let t custody near that c It was Ericsen | phatic dental and a representative of a trusg « capacity. He in San Francisco who visited Carthew in | dent would be considered closed, provide jail to-day and who said they were satis- | Mrs. Anderson v fied he was the man they wanted matrimonial It is expected that a man will either | conference be sent out here from New Y | say the mat itively identify Carthew or el will be charged with the offonse and an officer with the necessary papers sent here after him. In the meantime Justice Prowse of Haywards Las tenced him to spend thirty lays in Mrs. Luecy Dizard and Mrs one that there He: on a charge of vagrancy preferred aguinst $20 1) 3 him in order that he may be heid for o o s s he arrival o New York officers. 3 AR e the arrival of the New York o | iast migne Burglars made an attempt to enter Sil va's 601 ian Pablo avenue, last UNIVERSITY EVENTS| BERKELEY, . 12.—Governor Pardee will not address the university meeting to- morrow in Harmon gymnasium, as angounced. 1 gh A. B, Nye, he in- 2 on ac would wer e ntly frightened Ea titor of the '03 Blue [ and Gold, and author of the senior ex travaganza, is recovering from an attack c I typhoid fever at the Harper Hospital in De- troit, Mich. H contracted the disease, which was prevalent. while preparing to take a grad- | uate course in engineering at Cornell Univer- disease manifested itself while he | ng on the train westward with his | Cached Derott. o o | Drops Out of Sight in Owl Creek Country ers’ institute at Redding was ad- yesterday by Professors W. J. Os- | terhout and E. C. Moore of California. The Republican Club organized last night by electing the following named officers: Presi- | i dent, Phil Carey, '04; vice president, G. C. | in Montana. Ringolsky, '04; secretary, C. G. White. The | meeting Was called to order in North fall by | P i he president of the old Roosevelt Club. Who | MISSOULA. Mont., N. - reel s Permanent. organization to take the | MISSOULA, Mont., Nov. 12.—Liéwellyn place of the ephemeral one that it has been | Rober brothe Wynne Roberts, the custom to call together just before elec- tions. After the assumption of the chair by the new president a resolution was passed | pledging the club to work for the renomination | of President Roosevelt. During the next cam- | palgn various Republican orators will be lnr‘ | prominently ide fled with a well-known bank concern of Hamilton, Mont., is wan- dertng through the mountains in the Owl Creek country, starving and possibly dy- ing of exposure and exhaustion. William Harlan, son of W. B. Harlan, a prominent resider of Come, was re cued by a searching party in a dying con- dition from exhaustion on the banks of | Horse Creek, along which they had tramped for two days and nights In a vain effort to find him. = disappearance of Young Roberts i a strikiag parallel to the disappearance of Superintendent Egan of the Northern. Pa- | cific, which occurred nearly a year ago. | Roberts and Harlan started on a hunting trip from here. As Roberts is wholly un- familiar with the mow ins and woods, there is no hope of finding his way out. Vited ddress the club, N anager Decoto has been authorized by the executive committee of the Associated Stu- dents to provide ten Eddy-street cars for the “‘rooters” on Saturday. —_——————— YOUTH'S MIND INJURED BY POWDER EXPLOSION Defensp of Imbecility Is Made for Frank Hartkop, Who Was Charged With Theft. OAKLAND, Nov. 12.—Rendered imbe- cile by the effects of a powder explosion was the successful defense made to-day before Justice James G. Quinn in the case of Frank Hartkop, 22 years old, charged with the theft of pigeons. In behalf of the unfortunate young pris- oner it was shown that a year ago he suftered from a severe shock that was caused by an explosion of powder near | his home in Berkeley. The young man's mind was affected, so his relatives claimed, and he had been in a hospital da ———— GUARDS PROTECT NEGRO FROM MOB OF LYNCHERS Prisones Is Accused of Having Made an Attack on a Young White Woman. NEW YORK, Nov. 12—Edward Green, a nexgro, notorious in Mount Vernon under treatment. The case Was dis-| ;.40 gpectal guard in the Bronxville fa missed. - | owing to fear that he will fall prey to PUNISHES THE DRIVER | tymehers. He Is charged with baving at- OF A JADED HORSE vate secretary (o Senator Isaac Police Judge Mortimer Smith Serves ‘Warning to Those Who Abuse | Dumb Animals. | OAKLAND, Nov. 12.—Henry Deitrich, convicted of cruelty in driving a horse | unfit for work, was fined $50 and sent to jall for five days by Police Judge | Sirl's shrieks for help. A posse quick Smith to-day. His Honor declared that | formed and after a long chase Green was the case was so aggravated that he wag | arrested. When the news spread the resi- impelled to impose a severe punishment. | dents of Bronxville became furious and Warning was given from the bench that | {NrSats of mob venfeahcs were freely persons convicted of cruelty to animals | {pa(: TOOFHE (SUSICEREE T (O might expect very severe sentences here- otected. He declares he is Innocent. after because of the numerous com- |7~ The_ victim the attack was on her wav home when a negro caught her by the throat and was strangling her wh she drew a hat pin and jabbed he screamed with paln. He lease his grip on until reseuers app answer to e fillnei:tu recently lodged with the author- Late Shipping Intelligence. 5 Fred Johns, secretary of the Soclety ARRIVED. Thursday, November 12. Stmr Geo W Elder, Randall, 90 hours from Portland, via Astoria 5615 hours. DOMESTIC PORT. for the Prevention of Cruelty to Ant- mals, has the prosecutions in hand. ———— . For Benefit of Taxpayers. ABERDEEN—Safled Nov 12—Stmr Corona- OAKLAND, Nov. 12.—Beginning Mon- | 40, for San Pedro. —_—ee———— Germany manufactures at present about $200,000,000 worth of cotton goods day the City Tax Collector’'s office at the City Hall will be open from 8:30 o’clock OAKLAND, Nov. 12—Head Consul F. A. Falkenburg of the Woodmen of the ‘World will address the members of local camps at Woodman Hall, 521 Twelfth street, on Monday evening, November 16. It is expected that a large audience will greet the head consul, On Monday evening, November 23, the nominations for camp officers will be held and the election will take place on De- cember 14. A prize whist tournament will be given Monday evening, November 30. —_——— ‘Want Bicycle Law Amended. OAKLAND, Nov. 12.—The Oakland Cycle Board of Trade purposes to request the City Council to amend the ordinance which regulates the riding of bicycles. In the first place the board will urge that the use of sidewalks be denied to cyclists except during the winter months. The Council will be urged to repeal that part of the ordinance which requires rid- ers to carry lighted lamps at night, —_————— Marriage Licenses. OAKLAND, Nov. 12.—The following marriage licenses were fssued by - the County Clerk to-day: Manuel King, 40, Ryde, Sacramento County, and Mary Figueiro, 35, Oakland: Samuel Estes, over 21, and Mamie A. Howe, over 18, both of Oakland; Frank M. Parcells, over 21, Oakland, and Mary 8. Shreve, over 18, Al- ameda; William F. Sipes, 23, and Rena B. Sipes, 22, both of San Francisco. 2. m. until 9 o’clock p. m. for the accom- modation of taxpayers. These hours will be followed until November 30. yearly, giving employment in its cotton industries of all kinds to over 1,000,000 workmen. ADVERTISEMENTS. Is the joy of the household, for without it no happiness can be complete. How sweet the picture of mother and babe, angels smile at and commend the thoughts and aspirations of the mother bending over the cradle. The ordeal through which the expectant miother must , how- volc[ ever, is so full of danger and suffering that she looks forward to the hour when she shall feel the exquisite thrill of motherhood with indescribable dread and fear. Every woman should know that the danger, pain and horror of child-birth can be entimly avoided by the use of h&:fll.’l Friend, a scientific liniment for external use only, which toughens and renders pliable all the parts, and work. By its aid thousands of women have passed this great crisis in perfect safety and without pain. Sold at $1.00 bottle by druggists. Ontbookefpicnfi: value to all women sent free. Address BRADFIELD REGULATOR ©O0., Atianta, Ga.

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