The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, March 4, 1904, Page 7

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, MARCH 4, 1904. . U ELDERLY WOMAN IS FOUND LEGACY FALLS mzxxmwmfimmr:uwmmzmmm DEAD FROM ASPHYXIATION Mrs. Julia Crawford, Who Is Supposed to Have Been Slightly Demented, Was a Relative of Victim of the Maine — > when the bat s blown up in the har- an February 15, r room in a house at She bed was found t that the morning to € her habit g the h was ADVEBTISEHENT& THEY ACTUALLY DO THE WORK Is Worthless Unless Di- Stomachs Must Help. stomach whic i Eaten gested—Some Have h, They ause argu their rk given b the ss work; in starved. It for a busi to do al his business to lowr speps actually ssigned to them. They « and overburdened stom- f a great portion of . digestive r eir nt parts ar < the digesti the stomach the grind and me as a rach would art’s natural Dyspepsia in ir violent disturbance 1s. They them- e food and supply the nourishment con- is eaten and carry out for the sustenance and f the body. more seneible Iis this employed by many veak stomachs. By this rain get all the good, they need and the man shed and equipped to k and perform his du- t possibly be in proper ion b, arving himself me new fangled, in- that does not contain tment for a year-old baby. doing strong work must and this applies to the the body. Tablets by reliev- work enable it »gain its normal Nature repairs the worn and ed tissues just as she heals and knits the bone of a brok- 1b, which is of course not used of repair. Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets are for rale by all druggists at 50 cents a box hev are the one article that the ist does not try to sell something he place of that's “just as good.” Their unqualified merit and success and the universal demand for them has placed them within the reach of every one DIRECTORY OF RESPONSIBLE HOUSES. (aialogue and Price Lists Mallei ‘on Applieation. m!. AND SALT MEATS. !ASLWYE__‘ w’- Shipping Butchers. 108 C,l.y,' Tél. Main 1204, OILS. LUBRICATING ou.» LEONARD & ELLIS, 415 Front =t Phone Main 1719. Bi1 Sansome st., 8 W be properly fe as wel rt's Dyspep ing the stomach of and ¥ h. wa ¥ 1898, | v asphyxiated yesterday | in her| letters from clairvoyants, mediums and | spi lists, directing her how to gain | to the buried treasure which she t to recover. 7 do not cause | the | | | great practical progress that has al- | | | { EA l AGED WOMAN, WHO “’AS ACCIDENTALLY ATED BY GAS. allowing the deadly freely from the hose. Mrs. Crawford 4, to all appearances, returned to bed wth her clothes on, to lie down after | she had lit the gas stove. While lhcre‘ she fell asleep and was asphyxiated. At about 10 a. m. yesterday Miss Viola Presho. the landlady’s daugh- ter, to Mrs. Crawford’s room to | arouse her, and merely pushing the open enough to see into the room her lying on the bed, and supposed was awake. Later in the day Mrs. berts, a roomer in the same lled the gas and Miss Presho to the room and then found that went aged woman was dead. a mining man of . fnrmvrl\ lived on Allegheny City, Pa E avenu n Der and ver, Colo. She is supposed to have been slightly demented. Nu- merous letters in regard to| supposed buried treasure near St. Petersburg, at a place known | as Lone Oak, on Tampa Bay, Fla., were found in her room. She al had a number of plats and diagrams of the ground in the vieinity of the place where the treasure she expected to find | was supposed to have been buried in | early days by the crew of a pirate | ship, which was wrecked on the north | shore of Tampa Bay. Among the dead | it Will Show Marconi System. At the San Francisco Board Trade rooms a demonstration of wire- less telegraphy with standard Marconi apparatus will be given this after- noon at 3:30 o'clock, to which members of the various commercial bodies of this city have been invited. Professor Albert Van der Naillen, president of the Van der Naillen chool of Engineering, will deliver a rief discourse on the subject, setting forth the principles of the system, the ready mercial possibilities that lie befo.e it in the future. The occasion will prove one of live interest to all who look to constant commercial development and im- provements, especially on the Pacific Coast, and it is expected that a large attendance of business men generally will be had. e eee May Lose His Eyecs. C. McClellan, a laborer employed at Buckman's grading camp in the Sun- set district, met with an accident yes- terday which may cost him the sight of both eyes. McClellan was prepar- ing charges of blasting powder when one of the packages exploded, just as he was stooping over the recep- tacle. his face and was taken to the Park Emergency Hospital, where the at- tending physician found that not only was his face severely burned, but his | eyes were so seriously injured that it is doubtful if he will ever regain his sight. e e—— Want Cow Limits Extended. The joint committee on Health, Po- lice and Streets yesterday postponed action for one week on the petition of residents and taxpayers that the limits within which it is prohibited to have more than two cows be ex- tended from its present boundaries. Henry Stafford and G. Roundley urged the passage of the ordinance. Super- visor Payot’s motion that the limits be extended to the county line receiv- ed no second. A postponement was ordered to give the dairymen in the district affected a chance to be heard in their own behalf. monoxide to flow | Crawford was the divorced wife | of | the | been made and the vast com- | He received the full charge in | T0 CREDITORS Mellen L. Doe Delays Filing of a Bankruptey Petition and So Sacrifices $40,000 { FAILS IN SPECULATIONS! | Total Indebtedness Placed 130,625, of Which the Bulk Is for Borrowed Coin AL L Mellen L. Doe, formerly a member of the firm of Charles F. Doe & Co. of this city, filled a petition in bank- ruptey in the United States District Court yesterday. The indebtedness amounts to $130,625 12, of which $11,725 is interest on borrowed money. Among the assets is $40,000, the esti- mated value of a legacy to Mellen F. | Doe by will of the late Charles F. Doe. The largest creditors are Mel- | len F. Doe’s brothers, F. P. Doe, in | the amount of $61,713, and C. W. Doe, for $28,080. The petition was filed by Attorney Bert Schlesinger. | Five years ago the interest of Mel- | len F. Doe was bought out by the | other members of the firm of Charles | F. Doe & Co. MeHen L. Doe was en- | gaged in speculating in various ways | and this is alleged to have led to the dissolution of partnership. Mellen L. | Doe is a nephew of Bartlett and J. s. | Doe, who have been noted for con- | servat've business methods. Since he retired from business, Mellen has re- sided Monterey and has not been very actively engaged. Tte indebtedness that at included \\nh the petition in bankruptc old, and | consists principally of borru\\od money. The notes evidencing most | of the debt have been renewed from time to time. Among the debts was one for margins on stocks purchased | by a broker. Some time ago an offer was made by Mellen L. Doe's attorney | for a settlement of this claim. The proposition was not accepted. Friends of Mellen L. Doe say that this refusal might have been due to a belief that! family pride would be too strong to | permit Mellen L. Doe to come into court as a voluntary bankrupt; that | other members of the family “ouldw prevent it. Mellen L. is in the schedule filed \e‘alerda) is PRRRRRRY RERRE RERR KRRy, uniz-&nnmu PRERR ERREY RREEY ERRER VLR RRRER RRRER RERER RRRRRERERY, RRRRE KRR RRRRR RRRRY Doe has, however, disap- pointed this expectation, if it ever | really existed. Had the petition in | bankruptcy been filed on the day be- | fore Charles F. Doe died, the legacy | of $40,000 would not have been in- cluded in the assets and Mellen L.| | Doe would have been cleared of his | indebtedness. The estimate of the | value of the legacy is based on the | | fact that Mellen L. Doe inherited by | the will of Charles F. Doe two per | | cent of an estate that is worth about | $2,000,000. Of this share one per | cent is payable at once and the other | | one per cent, or $20,000, at the di | cretion of the trustees. It was said | vesterday that by sacrificing his leg- acy to his creditors, Mellen L. Doe will have little left. | Unfortunate speculations supply the | sole expl ion for Mellen L. Doe's | failure. He was concerned in mining | stocks and also in Eastern invest- | { ments. In addition to the creditors {named in the foregoing, the schedule ! | discloses that there is owing to J. E., | W. H. and J. C. Adams $5 The Adamses are the owners of the Adams | | building on Sutter street. There is due to J. B. Bocarde $2820; to J. Knowland $4860, E. Kittredge & Co. $656; F. M. Smith of Elmhurst, $36 8. H. th of Monterey, $1100; M. | Lewis, $500; Mutual Life Insurance Company, $736; Phoenix Mutual Life | Insurance Company, $509; D. Roder- $4080; M. Marks, |ick of Monterey, {$1092; and to L. Smith, $100 in total. | GEORGE M. PINNEY FAILS | FOR A HFAVY AMOU | | woman's effects was a large package of | Mining Promoter S ates That He Owes ‘ CARMEN ARE OPPOSED ! More Than Ninety-Three Thousand | Dollars, Money and Notes. ! | George M. Pinney, mining promoter, | filed a petition in insolvency yester- | | day in the United States Dislrictl Court. His liabilities are $93,128 and | | his assets $37,000. His heaviest d-[ itors are as follows: George M. I’xn-‘ | ney Jr., New York, $20,000; Delia G. Mahoney of San Francisco, $18,895; S. T. Hauser of Helena, Mont., $836 E. J. F. B. Hartson of London, Eng- | land, legal services, $5000; Gaston &| Snow, Boston, legal services, $5000; | Hugh Babbetts, London, England, | money loaned, $5000; Matilda Del | desheimer, money loaned, $5605; | Colonel Ellis, London, Eng- | land, money loaned, $400; Harry | T. Creswell, legal services, $5000; es-| tate of Eugene Garber, deceased, le-| gal services, $33 Henry I. Kowal- | sky, note, $1410; Isaac Frohman, San ‘Franclsro, legal services, $1350; H. C. | Callahan, San Francisco, note, $1210; | Lyman 1. Mowry, San Francisco, legal | | services, $1125; John R. Aitken, | $1100; Frederick L. Esola, San Fran- ! cisco, note, $1000. | Among Pinney's assets is a claim | against Homer Wilson for commis- sions, $40,000. Pinney sued for this |sum and recovered judgment in the | State courts for $7500 and the case is mow on appeal. There is also an Lundnlded half interest in the Socrates | placer claim in Sierra County with De- | lia G. Mahoney, valued at $500; wear- ing apparel $400; debts due him, | $400. Carter, Ricketts & Dolph are his attorneys. —_— e Jury Secured for Mining Case. A jury was secured in Judge Mu- rasky's court yesterday to try the case of George E. Riley and J. W. Relley against the North Star Mining Com- pany. The suit is for $800,000 damages alleged by the plaintiffs to be due them for an alleged infringement of their rights in the ptemises known as the Massachusetts Hill Mine Com- pany. The case will come up for trial March 8. We Need the Coin. Bring a few dollars and shoe your entire family. Shoes go at any price, from 35c up. Remember, this is no fak we must positively have the coin. La. dies' shoes 35c; gents' shoes 85c; boys’ shoes 75c; babies’ shoes 15c. To-morrow, Saturday,’ 9 o’clock. Massachusetts Shoe .. 1101 Market st, cor. Beventh. Odd Fellows' building, * Kaufman and J. R. | ¥ | upder the laws of the State, the cor- | west of the Rockies. | ington, James J. Kearns, E. J. Paquil- | s S = == Closes Saturday Night. Yes, this most instruc- tive and most interest- ing exhibit positively closes at 10 o’clock to- morrow night. If you ‘ have not already visited The Emporium’s big Pure Food Show in the specially constructed booths in rear of main So to- More than 50 kinds of good things to eat and drink are being demon- strated by experts. Free samples of everything. Valuabte hints on what to eat and H I3 foods. Among the many articles being demon- strated and sampled are: Pettijohn’s Breakfast Gem American Maito Cocoa Isleton Creamery Butter ,l‘f Braunhardt’s Tropical Sauce § W. G. M. Tamales, Beans, etc. H - Tipo Chianti Wines Cudahy’s Rex Beef Extract 3 S Canned Goods Emporium Baking Powder 53 Emporium Family Flour Long’s Preserves, Jellies, etc. M. J. B. Coifee, in tins Lily Pure Sterilized Cream California Home Brand Pickles Etc., etc., etc. rian ocks 50¢, 75¢ The pewest fad in Neck- wear—linen crash, Bulgarian embroidery, in cross stitch, ornamented with pearl but- tons; very stylish. Sale Men’s Goods Shirts 45c; Underwear 73c Also Boys® Stiff Bosom Shkirts, Men's Hosiery, etc.—To-day and Saturday. Men's Golf and Stiff Bosom . Shirts—In madras, percales, Bedford cords and other good materials, in stsipes, figured effects, etc.; and boys® stiff bosom shires in percales and madras; bwoken lots of 75¢, $1.00 and $1.50 shirts, to-day and Saturday . ‘45¢ Men’s Derby Ribbed Undm..—w-v 0 popular make, handsome garments in dark tan color, regularly $1.00, 73c Little Ruches for the Neck Are te'ng worn again. A wo- man’s toilet will not be complete without one of these little neck pieces. Chiffon, with point &esprit edge, and Crepe Lisse — white, pink and blue, with b'ack dots . - 8i Accounts can be opened by responsible parties. Apply at our Credit Bureau. CALIFORNIA'S LARGEST- AMERICA'S GRANDEST STORE Coke’s Dandruftf Cure Forty. ~-Three Cenis And many other good bargains in Toilet Articles To-day and Saturday. For Fridav and Saturday we will place on sale 1000 bottles of Coke’s Dandruff Cure, fresh from the factory; each bottle guaranteed genuine and the regular $1 kind, for the 2 daly's43c soc size Wakelee Cameline. 350 35¢ ise Lyon's Tooth Powder. . . . 180 | soc size Imported Perfumes. 380 for the two das, special. s- 20 sise Newbro's Herpicide. . ;: 00 size Dr. Charles® Flesh Food Men’s 50c Half Hose 20c—Fancy cotton, s E 760 3 ‘oc German and French makes, high.grade 1.00 size Lambert ine. . |15¢ sze Prepared Toilet Magnesia goods, with striped and lace e R e P S today ad Sutuday, pa. . .29¢ o size Calder’s Dentine - 350 | soc Rubber Massage Brushes . Men's Fancy Half Hose—Fine imported French and German Sincy 25¢ Mennen's Taleum . . 50 QR e T ud; and jancy cotton half hose—stripes, fi;nun and dotsg th\ln 7 By g i ki ize Toilet Waters . . - § singie pairs . . . Sc 75¢ M. & L. Florida Water. 8@ | 50¢ size Toilet Waters . . 35 e 0400" [ Aol gl lwm‘ o Pm‘l“ e $1.00 size Hoyt's Cologne.. 6850 soc size Hoyt's Cologn=. . 38¢ 15c size 4711 White Rose Toilet 25¢ size Cuticura Scap. . . 150 $1.c0 size Muhlen's and Kropff Res'stine . . 850 cords; opencd last week; fine high grade goods, each. $1.00 High Grade Spring Neckwear—In tecks, fon;-m-hmd-, Imp:ruh. 25¢ Packer's Tar Sosp - - 1850 Soap, 2 for. . . ..230 and folded bow ties in plaids, steel gray, wine colu, brown and cin- soc size La Blache Face Powder | soc size Marchand’s Peroxide... namon browns.. . . <in 500 e . 40¢ Madras Pl]nmu—Good ymmu. “well made, suit. . $1.25 ;':Ic Beginning To-Day, 10,000 Yards Black and White Ribbons A phenomenal offering of rich, black taffeta ribbons, high luster, in widths from No. 5 to No. 60, not the flimsy kind, but a ribbon which will stand out well in bows for the hair, for beits, for hat trims and for neck bows; for the two days about half regular prices. 4-inch, yard . . . . §@ 2Y-inch,yard . . . J@@ 3%%-inch, yard, . . 14c 2-inch, yard. . . . Z14@ 2Y%-inch, yud.. . .12¢ 3¥-inch,yard .. . . 17 4% -inch, yard Fat . &'4-inch Lovisinc and Taffela Ribbon— ‘In ltnpu and figures, white only; a ’ ’ 22c vaiue; on special sale Friday and Saturday, yard . . Children’s |Suit $22,50 Butter 37%c 50¢c Hose 23c New Mixture Runabout Friday and Saturday oy Th best Friday and Saturday Only | My chic ideas i e e e The best bargaia in Children’s Hosery ever 4 ot i 2 Py, 27 cffered by the big store—imported Herms- | 87¢ cXpressed to us rvong Sbpr=thmetiogc by z , 75¢ Kentucky Belle Bourbon, bottle, “c dorf black Lace Lisle Stockings—3 very | daily from New 60c qua'ity Hock White Wi . 4 pretty allover lace eff:cts —styles that have ne, gil. 450 ork? , never been cold in this c ty at less than soc | Y OT’s best makers of :lv‘g?":l:“{“;:: i‘:"k:r’\'x::(w::““ 980 a pair; all & 5to834; women’s suits. ust 7h g ol Sty o e | J 53 Bowbon or Rve Whiskien, pi. . 82,48 in—a pretty runabout pair . 51.50 Books 50c¢c Eton suit, in neat mixtures, style as Boys’ Clothing Pleasing Little Garmenis how to prepare good Coth-beund copyrighted books, most of them the kind we = ngulzrlv $1.08, £1.20; Fiiday and Saturd: only. 500 of Lion's Here are some of the tte:: David Harum Landlord The Last . of H Knickerbockers The Maid of Maiden ne Crimson Wing the ea, Patience Sparhawk In the Fog Great Stone of Sar- ais Tristram of Blent In Kedar's Tent \Quisant! A Dash for a Throne / Rlennerhassett “he Sowers Sea Ladles Checkers Outiaws Making of a Mar- Mill of the God chioness Baboo - Hurry - Rockhaven Bungsho Quest of the Golden An Imaginative Man Girl The Way of Escape By Right of Sword Farringdons Methods of Lady Herald of Empire ‘Walderhurst Janice Meredith Lachmi Bai Doc Horn Wages of Sin Tales of the Ex- ‘Prisoner of Zenda Tan| ‘anks Inlander Friend or Foe Damnation of The- Cinderella ron Ware Blindman's World Amor_Vietor Tone March For Freedom of the Curious Career of Sea R. Campbell Come With Me to Eternal City Babylon Miss Petticoats Secopd Thoughts of Hester Blair an Idle Fellow In_Connection With Unele Terry De Willoughby In the Name of a Claim ‘Woman Hounds of Basker- Three Men on ville Wheels Adventures Sherlock Senator North Holmes Quincy Adams Saw- Resurreetion yer The Gadfty Forty Modern Fables Truth. Zola Sentimental Tommy Tommy and Grizzel | Greatest Gift Wolfville Days Coast of Bohemia Graustark Castle Craneycrow Mississippl_Bubble he Midst of Alarms TO PROPOSED NEW LAW Object to Privilege of Using Stree\s} for Mass Meetings Being Denied | the Public. Carmen’s Union No. 205 has placed | itself on record as opposed to tie pro- | posed ordinance favored by the police prohibiting street meetiLgs within cer- tain limits. Resolutions denouncing the proposed measure were adopted and | will be forwarded to the Mayor and the | committee of the Board of Supervisors. As a result of the friction between factions of the Painters’ and Decor- ators’ Union it is proposed by the Rus- sell-Brundage facticn to incorporate porate body to control all the States A mass meeting will be held on the 9th of this month, when the matter will be fully discussed. Sheep Butchers’ Union, Branch 5, has appointed the following committee of arrangements for a ball to be given in South San Francisco: John M. Har- lan, William McHugh and George Bor- cenave. The nineteenth anniversary of the formation of the Sailors’ Union of the Pacific Coast will be celebrated by the members and their friends on next Monday at Sailors’ Union Hall on East street. Former Judge J. G. Maguire and Police Commissioner H. W. Hut- ton will be the principal speakers on this occasion. New quarters have been secured for the Waiters’ Union on Turk street, where a lease secures the union for a period of ten years. The place is fitted up with all medern improvements for the use of the members. The various labor unions have joined im calling a mass meeting at the Al- hambra Theater for next Sunday, at which time and place resolutions will be adopted condemning the proposed ordinance against street open air as- semblages for the discussion of public questions. Resoluticns in memory of W. W. Copeland were adopted by the Typo- graphical Union at its last meeting. The deceased had held the position of president of the Typographical Union for a number of years, during which he ranked very high in the good opin- ion of his associates, as is evidenced by their regret at his untimely death. At the last meeting of Photogra- TYPOGRAPHICAL UNION HONORS DEAD PRESIDENT Passes Resolutions of Respect for Memory of W. W. Copeland, late Local Head of Organization. At the regular meeting of San Fran- cisco Typographical, Union No. 21, held last Sunday, the fatal accident to President W. W. Copeland was feel- ingly referred to. A committee was appointed to draft suitable resolutions and reported the following: ‘Whereas, In the sudden death of W. W. Copeland on February 10, 184, San Francisco Typographical Union 21 nas lost its hon- ored ‘president, and organized labor in general an earnest advocate of trade unionism—one ever ready to advance the cause of the wage- earner; therefore, be it Resolved, That San Francisco Typographical Tnion No. 21 tenders to bereaved mother and relatives its deepest sympathy in the loss of the son and brother. Resolved, That in his long association with the printing craft our late president showed himself possessed of marked abllity, as evi- denced by the positions of trust and honor as- signed him by the unionists .of the Pacific Coast, and therefore his demise is our per- sonal ‘loss. Resolved, That these resolutions be spread in full upon ‘the minutes of the Typographical Union, forwarded to the relatives of the de- ceased, to the daily press, the Typographical Journal and the Labor Clarion, and that. the charter of the union be draped In mourning for a period of thirty days. J. FRENCH, WILL JOHN H. MARBLE, H. L. WHITE, 5 Commitiee. ————— Ewing’s Will Filed. The will of the late Charles Grey Ewing was filed for probate yester- day. It disvoses of an estate worth several thousand dollars. The devisees are Ellen Elizabeth G. Ewing, the widow, and the five daughters of the deceased. The widow gets the share allowed her by law and the daughters divide the residue share and share | alike. —_—————————— Lecture on Herbert Spencer. The Technical Society of the Pacific Coast, one of the affiliated societies of the Mechanics’ Institute, will hold the second of its present course of lectures at the Mechanics’ Institute Library this evening. The subject of the lecture will be “The Synthetic Philosophy of Herbert Spencer.” The lecture will be delivered by F. P. Medina. * BRI 022 e S R S A phers’ Union No. 11,038 six new mem- bers weére obligated and the .applica- tions of two- galleries for union certifi- cates granted. The leap year ball to | be given by the ladies has been post- poned until April 20. shown in picture. Has shoulder capesand finished with metal but- tons, giving double- breasted fect; unlin=d ef- At Pleasing Little Prices Washable Russian Blouse Svits—for ages 215 to 8 years, made of good madras fabrics in wash-defying col. orings, nothing prettier or better at the price . . - . .- $1.50 Boys' Separalc Russian Rlouses—for yoke skirt. ages 214 to 7 years, Cosmack style, picrar- $28.50 esque and useful . . 50¢ would be Boys' 0dd Knee Pants—all-wool ma- cheap for terials, in a plentiful variety of patterns and this sut clsswhere; here it is only . . stoutly made, sizes for 3 to 15 years. SOQ English Corduroy Knce Pants—the stoutest and longest wearing pants made, sizes for 4 to 16 years; pair. . Men’s $10 Suits Spring 1904 Modeis Nove'ties in Scotch tweeds, fancy cheviots, homespuns and cassimeres. This season’s latest styles and fab- rics, Individuality predominates in every suit that we show. All are made with snug-fit:ing collars, cor- rect lapels and hand-padded should- ers, without that upholstered appear- $22.50 New Covert Coats— Radical y differsne from previous seasons. New thoughts cleverly adapt=d. Prices . . $6a75, $8.50, $12.75, $15, $16.75 and vowrd. Saie Wrappers and Kimonas Women's Flannclelte Wrappers— The »1.25 quality, in washabie col- ors, fu'l front, tight-fitting back, deep flounce on skirt, lined waist; to-day and Saturday enly. . ssc 98c German Flannel Kimonas— A pretty garment for morning wear, in blue, | ARCC. pnk, red, gray and lavender mixtures, In fine, the general run of suits trimmed with contrasting shadcs of plain | marked $12.50 will be found daisy flannel, to-day and Satur- to be inferior t> our new spring $'o day. only.. .59¢ | incs . : HAARE AAA A ARAAE ARAAA AR AAR AAA AR ARAAL ARAAA FARRL AAAAARARRE ARAAR RURAR AAAAR AR AR AR RARAR ARAAR AARAR AAAAARRAAA AR R ARAAR AAAEA AT ARAAARAA AR A AR AR AT R BANK COMMISSIONERS ISSUE FIVE LICENSES New Institutions Are Established in San Francisco, Sebastopol, Berke- ley and Sacramento. The Board of Bank Commissioners issued licenses for five new banks yes- terday. These institutions will all open their doors for business for the first | time to-day. The Analy Savings Bank is located in Sebastopol. Its capital is 350,000, which is half paid up. F. A. Brush is president of the bank and A. B. Swan cashier. The Oriental Commercial and Sav ings Bank comes to San Francisco. Its capital is $50,000, with $1900 subscribed, of which latter 20 per cent is paid up. The Central Exchange is a commer- [ cial bank, which will also dg business in San Francisco. Its capital is $100,000. i o: The Security Savings Bank is located sided over by John H. Robertson, the in Berkeley. It has a capital of $75,000, | president. The next leeture, which will of which 20 per cent is paid up. Its |Pe the last of the course, will be given president is M. P. W. Albee and its |on Thursday, May §, at § p. m., at ths WRITINGS OF CATHOLIC FATHERS Rev. W. B. L.mrml Delivers an Inter- esting Lecture Under Auspices of the Catholic Club. A’ lecture was delivered under auspices of the Cathelic ing at the Occidental Hotel by Rev Father W. H. Ratcliff on “The Writin of the Fathérs as One of the Sourc of Catholic Doctrine.” The lecture was followed by an interesting discussion which was participated in oy members }Of the clergy and laity, by whom the meeting was well attended. Among jother clergymen present were Rev. | Fathers Ratcliff, Gee, Parrish, Griffith and Monges. The arrangements were under the | charge of Newton H. Barry, vice presi- dent, and Edward Mills Adams, secrs- the Club last even- cashier is A. C. Richards. Occidental Hotel, by Rev. Father The Home Savings Bank goes to Sac- (‘.barlea W. Lathrop, on “The Litur- ramento. Its authorized capital is $25- | 8ies.” ————ee——i 000. The amount paid up so far is $5 in American coin.. Charles E. Wright is president of the institution and Nel- lie Wright treasurer. ) NEW YORK. March 3.—Baring. Magoun & Co. announce that they will ship $300,000 gold to' Buenos Ayres. This makes a total of $1,250,000 so far engaged. And many other painful and serious ailments from which most mothers mfier, can be avoided by the use of “Mother’s Friesd” This great remedy isa God send to women, mrryfi Bn[ AST them through their most criti ordeal with safety and no pain. No woman who uses *“Mother’s Friend” need fear the suffering and danger incident to birth; for it robs the ordeal of its horror and insures safety to life of mother and child, and leaves her in a condition more favorable to speedy recovery. The child is also healthy, strong and “Motherhood,” is worth » is its weight in gold toevery wnman,mds?.llbe sent free in plain envclopebyaddrumgtpphmw

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