The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, March 9, 1904, Page 6

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ARCH 9, 1904. WHEELER TALKS 'KNAPP MAKES ABOUT CHANGES - LIBEL CHARGE s i President of U'niversity Out-| Declares He Has Been Ser lines Policy of Improve-| ously Maligned by One ment furl\mlhpartnwmn of Oakland’s Physicians GREETS ki\ll{ % III‘I.\I{.\"[‘RH\\' IN GERMAN COLONY Newspapers of the East Dis- cuss Remarkable Combina-| H. Rozsas Warned Decent tion for Summer Session Women to Beware of Him | aieal co Call Oakland Office San Francisco Call, ch 8. | 1118 Broadway, March S. to the William Knapp, importer of German v y after | goods and formerly a Deputy City As- t, devoted ssor, who fell heir to a fortune from he ground | his parents’ estate in the fatherland, & of the | has caused the arrest of Dr. H. Rozsas, be improved prominent member of the local Ger- has been much trouble brewing among of com-|the German residents. Knapp quotes its, leg- | the alleged libelous circular to show Flood en- | that Rozsas objected because Knapp » be reorganized. | had been made one of a reception said commitiee at a rquet which the n nd Turn Verein gave February to the officers and cadets of. the the heads rman schoolship then in the har- Dr. women of the Oakland Turn Verein away from the banquet, say- h ation (morally considered) of W s such that a lady or decent woman ares anything for ber honor, character espect can not aliow herself catherings or at public e as pointing out one Hejnrich Feldman met \h‘ as in the sam® category with Knapp. Phoebe Hearst. who is veturning from R as released by giving a He was ban- 0 bond, fur-x ed by Albert Curr- in and Henry Gloy. ",JEVEms iN SOCIETY ally pleasant place the president, the ladles were e gue were m slwter clubs ac this city a Francieco comtribut h foliowed the iuncheon both splendid critical iadies of Ebefl o showing their appreciation cf musical treat. The song numbers follows ) “Widmung” (Franz), (b) ‘“Tend (Delbruck), (c) *“Where 'the Lindens (Buck), Mr. Young; song, ‘“f'wo Indian Lyrice” "(Amy Woodt inden), Mrs sonks, (a) “‘Ruhe der Liebe’” (b) he Liebe’ (A. Dietrich), Mrs. Strat- oune G. Paimanteer was the presiding Ber receiving party including Mrs. R. Osgood. Miss Eljzabeth Charles Palmer, Mrs, J. harles Parcells, Mrs. J. {acan Perc; Mr w. Phelan Playter. _Powell, Miss he had ob- s in the now than during m last nmer. t at the luncheon ty, he believes, I wn convalescent preside: ng of the ols Mabel Thayer Gray; Mrs. Jullus Kahn, e 5 he finan ,” Gent Philomath Club! Mrs. Henry Payot, - the stock market Club; M. C. Mason Kinne, s ain. president Papyrus Club; Mrs. J. C. Me —_———— president O and L \m» MACDONALD PAYS OVER BALANCE ON Mrs. E. H. Kittredge and her two daugh- ters, Mrs. Frank Baidwin of Honolulu and Mrs. Edmund Baker of San Francisco, will be at home to-morrow from 3 to 5 at the Kit- | tredze home on Grove street. Although a largs number of guests—about 200—have been HIS Bll) Opponecnt of Oakland Traasit Consoli- dated Completes Financial End of i e | Invited, the affair is to be quite informal, be- Fight for Franchises. ing, in fact, a telephone tea. Mrs. Baldwin OAKLAND. b Rl ac- | Arrived in Oakiand recently for a visit to her KLA ! H. Mac- | Ll ots and will peobably not eturn. to her donal who id the Oakland | island home before the latter part of April. Transit Consolidated last night in a Lo | “Califernia Missions ailroa chises | were pleasantly and f: railroad franchises | d_at the meeting of the r he, eil, paid over a | Jub Yt the residence of Mr. Bihiare o . the Siy B. § Hrbbard on Vernon Helghts. The pro- . o g oo £ oy Nif | | eed construction of a -royal highway: Dt bond of 5 to the City Clerk this | will connect the various missions of California | afternoor 'he payment was in the | Wax brought before the club and given consid- wingge o I erable attention. The members are in favor F!.,,m o B tified check on the | tne proposed scheme and discussed plans Tnion o Bank. Macdonald | whereby public interest in the matter might 186 agree a ¢ | be_stimul =l egreement to -allow | g Bt o isghitet it touss Francisco, TUnit States letter-carriers to ride | and Mrs. E. J. Jolly. vocalist, contributed free on the cars over the roads that -.\uall pleasing ;"*rr'flw-r.:n and added much to might be buiit under the franchises. »‘en o T o n(lz-rnoon, Miss Jane R-wnnn entertained the Tues- | These documents were prepared by At- | A | day Afternoon 500 i‘luh to-day. McKee. ¥s Macdonald Wit will | “Mrs. Grace Moret Dn-km-n formerly con- have to file a $5000 bond to fulfill the | tralto of the First Presbyterian Church choir of this city, has secursd ing position in provisions of the franchises. Dr. Robert Mackenzie’s ehurch in New York Much speculation concerning the | This Is oneof the richest and most influentiai ca 8 .8 s _ | churches in New York and the engagement— behind Macdonald in the pur-| hich beging May I—of Mrs. Dicktnen 1o a e of these franchises has been | rorccnition of the abllity of that well-known indulged. The theory that the South- | California singer. = ern Pacific’s hand is in the deal is ac-| Mr and Mrs. Willard F. Williamson are cepted by a few. but the most of the | pow established in the artistic rasidence on street talk points to prominent bank- | Gereer ,‘,"‘,',.’,‘,::’,,\,""”"'” Sooipied My the ers and holders of large realty inter- e Much interest lr ing manifested in the <ty rd the real persons concerned In | . pronching recital by Misa Besste Yt which she is to give at Wendte Hall Thursday evening under the auspices of the Starr-King Fraternity. —_————— Marriage Licenses. OAKLAND, March 8.—The follow- ing marriage -licenses were issued by the County Clerk to-day: Paul Kra- mer, 35, San Francisco, and Mrs, Liz- lzle Kniffer, 34, Los Angeles; Christo- pher W. Chapman, 23, and Ethel M. Barker, 22, both of Alameda; Orson H. Miller, 21, and ‘Mary E. Douglas, 24, both of Berkeley. —_——— Clerk Newton Retained. OAKLAND, March 8,—Harry New- ton, who resigned as chief clerk in the Superintendent of Streets’ office, has been retained in the office as assistant clerk -under a resolution adopted last night by the City Council, which creates the new position. re. Tr-l-, . “.‘!_"."—— OAKLAND, March s—councllmnn Baccus has requested the City Coun- cil to consider a resolution to include $85.000 in'the bond issue for improve- ments in the Fire Department. The committee of the whole will act. Dyspepsna and other stomach troubles quickly relieved and in mostcases surely cured by the use of Shoomy | Used and recommended by lead siinas. -r.u-.-uu'" 3 o0, -Ldm“i-.l 'w' Qf chttazt=s 610 Prince St. New York., Send for Booliet How to Treat Discases. ilnumru-r Claims That Dr.| .partments re- man colony, on a charge of criminal Romanic | libel. Knapp declares the physician both de- |wrote and circulated a printed com- | tion in order | munication which declared that he, The | Knapp, was not fit for the society of { decent women. According to the complaint there Rozsas, it is charged, warned the | long as an indi- | dvai as member of such | rcular further declared that Knapp had been appointed to the | comn e, notwithstanding that Knapp had in a public place boxed the ears of the man that appointed him. The complaint quotes the circular as also 'POLICEMAN. HALL SAYS HIS COAT PREVENTED HIM DRAWING PISTOL —_——— Burglars Who Shot at Prostrate Patrolman as He Lay on Sidewalk for Protection Are Still at Large and Several Crimes Are Charged to Them OAKLAND POLICEMAN WHO FOUGHT A PISTOL DUEL WITH TWO BURGLARS WHOM HE SURPRISED IN INTO THE RESIDENCE OF HENRY HERR. THE ACT OF BREAKING OAKLAND, March 8.—Detectives have been busy to-day in an effort to trace the pair of desperate housebreakers who tried last night to kill Policeman | Alfred J. Hall when he surprised them | trying to force an entrance to Henry { Herr's residence, 1062 Fifty-fourth | street. That the men are responsible for the large number of recent bur- glaries that have occurred in that sec- tion of the city the police have no doubt, hence they have double cause to | capture the murderous prowlers, Unfortunately, Policeman Hall was | unable to get a fair sight of the men. As soon as they saw him both burglars commenced shooting from the front | porch of the Herr place. They jumped down and separated at Hall dropped to [ the ground to avoid the bullets. One | burglar ran around the east sice of the | Herr place and the other started west. | This burglar was within four feet of Hall and he fired a shot at the pros- trate patrolman. Thea the fugitive ran through an alley on the west gide of Herr's house, Hall sending one shot after the fleeing man. The patrolman pursued, but both burglars had disappeared over back fences into Fifty-fifth street, and there wasn’t a sign of them by the time the | | | { { | | policeman was well started after the | thuge. The shooting aroused the | neighborhood. Mrs. Charles L. Hede- mark, residing at 1604 Fifty-fourth street, was awakened and she rushed to a front window, just in time to see | Hall prone on the sidewalk and firing Schwartzes Know Little of Wiley. ALAMEDA, March the family of Willlam M. Schv\arll of 1306 Ninth street had known Louis B. ‘Wiley, who was found nphyxln!ed by illuminating gas at 41 Oectavia street, San Francisco, yesterday, for a vear, they learned but little of his life prior to the time of making his ac- quaifitance. They believed him single. Mrs. Schwartz said: “We had known Mr. Wiley about a year, but for the last eight months we had not seen him. He was acquainted with my sister, Miss Wilson, and apparently took a fancy to her, but the relatioh was only of a friendly nature. He did not give us the impression that he had a wife. He was a traveling man and had friends but no relatives in Smartsville that we ever heard him speak of. He once mentioned his mother, who, I We do not know what business Wiley was engaged in at the time of his death.” et t—— ‘War Against San Rafael Mosquito. BERKELEY, March 8. — The | Woman’s Improvement Club of San Rafael has appealed to the college of agriculture of the University of Cali- fornia to help it fight the San Rafael mosquito and the college has dispatch- ed a man to make war on the insect. The work will be carried on by A. L. Ashman, a local naturalist, un- der the direction of Professor W. C. Woodworth, the entomologist. It is proposed to sprinkie petroleum on the surface of the ponds in the marshes, where the nests breed, and thus smother them. —_———— Appoints Census Marshal, OAKLAND, March 8.—The Board of Education has elected Mailler Searles as school census marshal, with Charles Quayle and J. McGovern as chief assistants. 8.—Although | think he said, lived in New York State. | { his pistol. 2 4| At the Herr residence Mrs. Herr and two daughters, occupying a irnom the window of which opened on the porch, heard the burglars at work, but she said to-day she thought the noise was made by a dog on the porch. Mrs. Herr paid no attention to the dis- turbance until the shooting startled her and she went to the window, but saw nothing, the burglars having dis- appeared, with the policeman after them. Earl Hedemark, a boy, found bul- lets to-day imbedded in the earth near where Hall dropped. They were turned over to the police. —Concerning the attack, Patrolman Hall said to-day: “I was walking east on Fifty-fourth street and was directly in front of the Herr place, before I saw the two men working at the front bay window. They must have seen me first, because both of them commenced to shoot at me. I dropped to the ground and tried to draw my pistol, but my long uniform coat obstructed my pocket 8o much that I did not get my weapon into ac- tion until after one of the burglars had run by me into the alley between the Herr and Hedemark houses. *“This burglar took a shot at me that was 80 close it powder-burned my face. T managed to get one shot at him, but it evidently didn’t hit him, be- cause he kept on running. Both men were out of sight by the time I got back of the houses behind which they disappeared.” —_— CLAIM A RICH _ PIECE OF LAND Oakland Office San Francisco Call, 1118 Broadway, March 8. A new tack was taken to-day by the heirs of the estate of William Dove to gain possession of a valuable piece of real estate at Tenth street and Broadway held by the Blake-Moffitt estate. Willlam Dove, son of the man who originally owned the land, was granted letters of administration on his father’s estate to-day by Judge Greene, He thereupon instituted suits of eject- ment against the tenants of the prem- ises as the administrator of the es- tate. A fine legal point has been raised in regard to the ownership of the land. Mr. Dove Sr. died in 1862. His widow, without probating his estate, sold the property after her marriage to a man named Armstrong. There were four children, whose interest in their fath- er's estate was entirely overlooked, and it is the eldest son who has now asked to be appointed administrator of the estatg and seeks to assert title to a piece of realty valued at about $50,000 which has been an asset of the Blake estate for more than a quarter of a century. The point made by Colonel T. V. Eddy, attorney for Dove, is that no legal title could have passed from Mrs. Armstrong to the Blakes to this piece of property. Adverse possession, he says, could not cut any figure in the present case, as there 18 no adverse possession of a dead man’s estate. That' estate was never probated. Mrs. Arm- strong, as the widow, had an interest | BOSSES SEEM SATISFIED| | union from getting any supplies from | ANOTHER UNI0N SHOP CLOSES Robert Vincent Unable tol Get Meat From the Whole-| salers and Shuts Doors) PR AT Efforts Being Made by the! Men to Interest Eustern? Organizations in Fight| AL i Oakland Office San Francisco Call, | 1118 Broadway, March 8. | Another pro-union butcher-shop | closed its doors to-night because it was unable to get meat, but aside from this there was little change in | | employed by Fred o« NEWS OF THE COUNTY OF: ALAMEDAbO [KIND DOMESTIC | FREES BURGLAR .\‘urpnswl \[ill"‘lll(l?l"\‘ Hard- | Luck Yarn Wins Sympathy Break Into Home .md Ef- feets a Speedy Capture PP s Wl Oakland Office San Francisco Call, 1118 Broadway, March 8. Touched .by the plea of a bur; she saw in the house, a servant girl P. Cutting at 1420 Harrison street allowed the surprised the butchers’ strike. Robert Vincent, | on Washington street, near Seventh, | sold his last piece of meat to-night and not being able to replenish his| supply he was compelled to shut up shop. Neither Vincent nor Nevin, who closed yesterday for the same reason, has signed the employers’ agreement. | Paul Wuthe, East Oakland; Neuman | & Korn, corner of Sixth and Cla streets, and George H. Minall, corner of Twelfth and West streets, still have | supplies of meat and will run as union | markets. | The other butcher-shops in Oakland | are still in nearly full operation. The bosses are helping each other out i | every way. In some cases the deliv ery of meat has been delayed or stopped, but as a general rule the | bosses say that they are getting along | in first-class shape. Fred Becker, around whom is the main fight, said to-day that he could get forty non- union men, enough to stock every mar- ket in Oakiand. He added that the| bosses would never recognize the unjon. The Butchers’ Union held a meeting last night and it was decided to stand | by the fight. It is reported that every | member of the union has remained | loyal, despite the lockout, and that | not a man has deserted. Efforts of various kinds are being made by the union men to meet the conditions, but nothing has been ac-| complished as yet. An effort . was made to-day to get the slaughter. house men into the fight for the unio and to have them refuse to dress meat for the wholesalers. It is claimed that two-thirds of the stockvards men are members of the union. The effort to get the Cooks’ and Waiters’ Union into the fight for the butchers has| practically failed. Many of the res- taurant proprietors have agreed to stand by the boss butchers if their em- ployes support the union workmen. The most important effort that is being | made is to get the Eastern unions into | the fight and prevent the butchers here who refuse to recognize the| the big packing-houses. } gt 2 A S T PARISHIONERS WILL HONOR 1 MEMORY OF PATRON SAINT Members of St. Patrick’s Church Will Hold Fitting Celebration on Thursday, March 17. OAKLAND, March 8.—The parish- ioners of St. Patrick’s Church in West Oakland, of which the Rev. J. B. McNally is pastor, will celebrate the natal day of St. Patrick with a religious and social programme, in which a number of the young people of the parish will participate. On the morning of March 17 a pat- ronal mass will be celebrated in the church, following which a panegyrlc‘ of the saint will be delivered. In the | evening the young folks will give a play founded on facts in the life of an Irish peasant, in which an eviction scene will be enacted. The cast has been so arranged as to enable Father McNally to appear in one of the scenes in his clerical character. The members of St. Columba’s par- ish in Golden Gate have also arranged to celebrate St. Patrick’'s day. They will give an entertainment at Klink- ner’'s Hall on Fifty-ninth street and San Pablo avenue. ———————— CLAIMS HORSE'S TONGUE WAS NEARLY TORN OUT Stablekeeper Makes Charge of Serious Cruelty Against H. K. Snow, Sewing Machine Agent. OAKLAND, March 8.—H. K. Snow, local manager of a sewing machine company, was arrested to-day on com- plaint of C. E. Uzafovage, proprietor of a llvery stable at 1318 San Pablo avenue, who charges that Snow hitch- ed a rope around a balky horse's tongue and nearly tore out the mem- ber in an attempt to force the stub- born animal to move. The stablekeeper claimed that he had rented the horse to a patron and that Snow had interfered with advice about making balky horses move, suggesting the rope and tongne process. It is charged that Snow assisted in the cruel deed. Uzafovage noticed the condition of the horse’s mouth after the animal had been re- turned to the stable. He complained to the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. Investigation and Snow's arrest followed. —_——— * Dole Will Contest. OAKLAND, March 8.—The hearing of the contest over the estate of the late Elbridge Dole of Haywards was begun this afternqon. He left prop- erty valued at $20,000 to a sister-in- law and grandson with whom he made his home for many years. East- ern relatives wish to have the will set aside, alleging that he was unduly in- fluenced. 5 L in the estate, but the most she could have done was to deed her interest, whatever it might have been. ‘The property is a piece with a 75-foot frontage on Broadway and 100 feet on Tenth street. The suits filed this aft- ernocn run against the California Oil Burner Company, Roberts & Tower, the Oakland Home Company, James A. Jones and Alexander Hirschberg, be- sides heirs of the Blake estate. son of Dove appointed administrator of the estate was denied by Judge Hall. | thief who had pack | tory | action last night, | commit ‘A former petition to have the grand- |/ intruder to depart before she realized that he, was a very daring daylight i up a lot of the Cuttings’ family silverware prepara- to fleeing with it. The meeting between girl and burglar occurred yes- terday afternoon. Not until to-day were the police notified. To the detectives the servant said the man had made such a plea she could not find the heart to call the police. He had said he was starving |and suffering from consumption and that arrest would kill him. The de- tectives took a description of the thief and said a few things mentally about the case. Quite different was Manuel Monreal's when he saw a man try to raise a window and enter the rear of the Monreal house at 269 Ninth | street. Though Manuel is only 12'y old, he pluckily called to his s who telephoned for the police. man, however, fled. ung Manuel rah after him and captured the fugitive with the help of Citizens T. A. Segdon |and F. Clark. The prisoner, WilMam Bond, was sent to the City Prison Patroiman Cockerton. Bond said was employed at the American He was identified by Monreal sister. he House. UNIVERSITY EVEI BERKEL Students TS March 8.—The refusal of the Affairs Committee to lay down defl- r the guidance of the students on nite r y promises a rupture between that thers of the senior class. In rated on Chart sen the stude lasses trouble over the rush Thelen, president of the eral much year that Max senjor class, and sev- other seniors asked the Students’ Affairs e to fix a definite rule of discipline for this vear. This the committee refused to do, saying that all it expected of the students was to act like gentlemen. Such & vague rule was not a able to Thelen and his friends, and an ultimatum will be deifvered to the comm!t- tee requesting something more definite or the senlors will refuse to assist the faculty on Charter day. The ground for the committee's tefusal to acquiesce in the demand of the seniors is that it is not academic to fix any ific rules for the disciplining of students. sident Wheeler, who arrived home to-day from a month’'s trip through the was banqueted on the evening of February 26 by thé New York Alumni Association. Among the graduates of the University of California pres- =p P | ent were the following named Harvey W. Co 93;.0. T. Wedemeyer, '98; R W. Tully, James Hopper, 08; W A. 'E. Woods, "04: ( vang. '08; E. C. Ste- ,'03; E. Flammer, Dr. Louis D. Mea i low, Tultus Gregory, '97 Tucker. '91; i R.F At a BT, Mothte, Practice In foot 1l len yesterday after- noon on the camp Suits were distributed, and most of last year's football squad turned | out to work. The exercises consisted in tavk- ling the dum men and punting and falling on the ball. This system of practice will be per- formed three times each week—on Mondays, ‘Wednesdays and Fridays. There are many ad- vantages to accrue from ring practice, and it was undertaken upon tl advice of Professor 5. C. Edwards of the athletic committee. Sam | of last year's varsity team is looking af- ter the meh. The freshmen class has installed the follow- | ing new officers: President, W. C. Davis; vies Mics Elva McCluban; secretary, Mi [ . Darling: se +3 “ )l&fl') vyell leader, F. D. e Y. M. C. A. has elected the fol- et to manage the affairs of the as- | Bible study committee, B. K. | chairman; missionary committee, | C. H. Brubaker, '06, chairman; membership | committee, E C. Baker, '06, chalman: relig- fous meetings committee, E. Riddeil, '08, | chalrman; 705, chairman: soclal service committee, Cooper, "06; soclal committee, W. B. Eastert *06; handbook committee, E. W. Rohrer, supervising leader, W. J. Musgrove, "0, Jackson Gregory will be the editor of the "06 | Blue and Gold, his unanimous election to that | office of honor and responsibility having been | made possible to-day by the withdrawal of the | thres other mominees for the position_Harey | L. Stoddard, Samuel Hellman and Olin Boyle. Gregory's three opponents despaired of being elected and £o withdrew from what they came to consider a hopeless fight. They w: be appointed to positions on the new editor's stafl. Gregory s a graduate of the Salinas | High School and has been an associate editor | on_the staff of the Occident lowing caby soctation: Strong, '06, finance committee, H. L. Stoddard, | 3. w. membership the following named new mem- of Credulous Hnnsemnul‘ —_—4 ALLOWS A THIEF TO (.1) Boy Sees a Man Trying tn‘ | created by 336 M. 13%): $10. | e | i e h | Cramwell The College of Commerce Club has elected to | { BRANCH OI"FI('I' ‘ OF THE CALL IN ] AL \\II:D\(U['.\T\ | | L D. 1118 Broadway. Telephone Main 1083. | BERKELEY. | 2148 Center Street. | Telephoune North ALAMEDA. 1435 Park Street. Telephone Eagle 7. 502. REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS. Alameda County. W. W. and derson, iot on § of Hopkins 136, N 65.18 ster Helghts Tra ship; $1¢ Nationa Jonn J. w Hon rmaby Association to Chapin stree and Investment Company t and Development 5 SE from Thirtes to East Eleven venth a fadius beginning Albert E. and Olegon to John H. Jr. and Mag, ts 7 to 9, block 20, man 1, M ot and Shoe Com pan T Lich Har 10 Rosa Io 3 f lot 12, k 2088, Rowland Traet, Oak land; $10. Cornelia B. and Henry L. Conklin to Theo- dore A. Schiuater, lot ¢ line of Elm (or Twenty-f 0 W of Telegraph avenue. srtion of lots 39 40, bl cks'O, P and L. Keisey . en Domovan (wite) 25 W of Fil- 42, map Homestead, Oak- Angel to W. D. Hunting. v T:Ir(ruh 1 street peint 158 from line at right angle to Delger 150, W 203:7 to beginning, Oakland £10. Hom=stead Central avenues, E 1817 80:10, jots 1. 2 and port son’s Golden Gate T Harry L. 142:8 W k B, $10 John akland de Lamater to and Polnt Hos Edgar A. and Jessie M. C. Waggott, lot on Nolan or Thirt third street J E SE to E line of lo S to 8 line 14, W 40, N 170, to begioning, por Collins Tract, Oakland; $10 James T. ind Detin Harney fo“qam marino, lot 28, block 2110, Alden Tra Tem Oakland: #10 Danjel E. Martin to NW corne: Adolph Bruenn, lot n ©of Eighteenth and Cypress streets, W 30 by N 104:9, block 605-B, Bagge Tract Oakland; 5. Thomas F. Dver (single) to Flizabeth & Morse, Iot on N Lee street. 80:08 SE of Adams, N SE 65, SW 143 87, NW 65.27. lot_14 map subdivisios No. 1, Adms Point property, Oakiand: $10. Joseph Wohifrom (widower) and Carrie Richardson (3ingle) to William J. Baccus, lot on S line of Thirtieth street, 127:08 W of Tel- egraph avenue. W 40, § 72, 'to § boundary line of Rowland E along sald last line to intersection by line drawn at right ang Through point beginning N 73.94 to beginning block 2020, Rowland Tract. Oakland: $10. Union Savings Bank to Mary and D. J. Me- Millan, lot on W line of Humboldt avenue, 46:-7 N of Oregon street. W 113:4, N 44:10. B 125:10, £ 16.61. lot 2, block G, Leonard Tract, Berk ley; $10. Charles A. Bailey his attorney) and Al Bailey to Ingri Olson (wife), lot on E line of Seventh street, 177.13 8 of Channing way, E 100 by 8 .42 portion lot 32, block 135, corrected map of Avery Tract, Berkeley: $10. (by Raymond C. Bailey, Philip G. and Julia B. Galpin and Joseph A Donohoe (as trustees) and the Donohoe-Keily Banking Company to Harriet L. Calkins, lot on E line of Prospect strest, 80 N of its intersec- tion with dividing line between lots 5 and 6, map University Terrace, N 50 by B 144:8, Berkeley (Donohoe-Kelly Banking Company hereby releases sald premises from all llens B. and Eff e Crane to Samuel Edgar, on W line of rove street, 80 S of Addisom, 30 by W 87:3, block 1, McGee Tract, Berkele; $100. Samuel and Sadie Edgar to Elizabeth ¥. Spitler (wife of E. B.), lot on E line of Mary strest. 200 8 of Allston way, S 40 by ® 130, lot 23, block 12, map Marshall's subdivision of block 12. McGee Tract, Berkeley: $100. Sanford W. Cartwright to 8. Luella Cart- wright, lot 8 Berkeley property, map No. 3 of Blake Tract, Berkeley: $10. John Donovan to Ellen and Jeremiah C. Donovan (wife and son), lot on W line of Shat- tuck avenue, 60 N of Cedar street, N 60 by W | 135, ot 17, block 8, Graves & Taylor Tract, Berkelegg gift. Mary ®. Vader (single) to Leverett T. Bow- ers, lot 1, block 5, amended map Sea View Park Tract, Berkeley: $1200. * bers: G. H. Brown, Samuel Evans, Galloway, W. B. Weston, 7. D. Wheeter, H. B, Nott: Carl Parker, W. E. Van Sant, Chester and C. E. Awalt. Carlos G. White has been elected to mem- bership in the Phi Beta Kappa fraternfty. ApverTIsSEMENTS. CANDY CATHARTIC ANNUAL SALE—TEN MILLION BOXES Greatest in the World A MILLION HALE OLD GRAND- DADS credit their healthy old age to CASCARETS Cendy Cathartic, and are telling younger folks how to stay young In spirit by using CASCAR- ETS. That's why the sale is OVER A MILLION BOXES A MONTH. The one who likes good eating and good drinking can always depend on CAS- CARETSto help digest his food, tone up his intestines, stimulate his liver, keep his bowels regular, his blood pure and active and his whole body Bealthy, clean and wholesome. “In time of peace prepare for war,” and have about the house a pleasant medicine for sour stomach, sick headache, furred tongue, lazy liver bad breath, bad taste—CASCARETS Candy Cathartic—a tablet at bed- time will fix you all fight by morn- ing. All druggists, 10c. 28¢, 50c. Never sold in bulk. The genuine tab- let stamped CCC. iple and book- let free. Address Remedy Co., Chicego or New York. o

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