The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 10, 1904, Page 40

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oaNEWS OF 'THE COUINTY OF A \HSI\L[J I[N |VOICES OF FIVE HUN ROB A STORE A. Grimes’ l‘lm-v in Frait-| vale Is Scene of a Rather| Hold-Up | ir Room of the New Carnegie Library Unremunerative DRED CHILDREN BLEND IN SON Concert of Tots for Benefit of the Fund for Furnishing Juvenile Unusual Success, the thtle Ones Smgmg With the Precnslon of Profess:onalsl ments_of Aged Incurables MONEY DRAWER RIFLED| Cus- ainst Clerk and Up Ag Highwaymen Proprietor, tomer Lined the Wall by The voices ¢ LADIES COMPROMISE in song this THEATER E FOLK WE FOR BENEFI THEIR DIFFICULTIES | . e Dr. Cara B. Scl -Aldrict Mrs, | M prn Er Settle Five ! but it scemed as if those little were only | a ster | ked | se ha i seats from the edge s0 ed that the b and the o - oices were blende harmoni- In the center there L st ector, Mrs. L. : N PR gy often this was occupied by tots in A . " & es, who presented pretty exer- i it b children w perfectly f\l OLIS l ]‘th - kGl i They !wen pro- X - for kne The s as the ¢ Southern ‘l';u'm(' lr\fhc % Managers Decide to Make | People Pay on the Trains Mrs pction ACCUSATION AGAIN in OLYMPIA DISMISSED T Sl Court Holds That Constables May Act B Office Francisco Call, | Judicially So Lon Their Judg- 2148 Center Street, April 9. ment Is Good Fres s on the € & Southern Pacific Cc 1 trains . L ”'E"" came to an end with this day. Gatemen s - PTO" | will go on duty on the trains to-mor- - - vl i row m and the system of free . x i s t € ted ever since the sing be s¢ service be; in twenty years ago will be forever abolished This step has long been contemplated Whethe ! by the railvoad people, and a few days g . ectiv ‘ . SOngs, chOYUS: | Lo, the {raffic management decided to . vmy t B . Linu, o rate a train-gate tem. The . hold e PR & Club. “The | gqteq have been on the cars for a long - . e iime, and all that is nec is to .. & ’ eamas scnping s i «supply them with gate Two sta- » 4 " . full of | Thy 1 Uit tions, Rerryman and Dwight way, | o . Olym ttor- | for the Peace™; primary s ed, and tickets will . by agents. After nger on the trains must purchage cetting on the train. “PUDDIN'HEAD WILSON" AT Bonnie Dunde: Whittler station no ticket office s o Club, *Styrian Song,” “Jolly School of ed just yet. No reason is THE LIBERTY THEATER Boys slumber nn‘uasl‘nn. but it is prob- Eves,” “1 tic songs, America ort was given for the fund for the furnishing room of the brary, now being built f Berkeley. Superintendent said this afternoon that sc 14 be cleared for this purpos e el i Colonel Irish Will Speak. OAKLAND, April 9.—Colonel John | address a men’s meeting the Young Men's ociation to-morrow after- ) o'clock. At the same arrie Brown Dexter will requ repeat the Easter ng by her at the First Presby- terfan Church. it of the small amount Passengers may get the conductor will ct their Fares have been charged for s time between Dwight and Lorin station, so these places - affected by the change, ex- engers must get tickets ¢ getting on trains, not afterward, Play Founded on Mark Twain's South- ern Story to Be Presented by the N A“ « traf n at nd bene- of Carnegie for the city Water- ompany. il new cept that p befc $600 kmm Division Superinendent | Baker confirmed the story of this iatest move of the railroad company to-night. He =aid that it had long been contem- plated by the traffic department of his | company and the final step did not sur- | prise him. The new order of things means a hardship for school children, who have | been in the habit of using trains to carry them to school. It is just pos- sible that there may be a contest in the courts over the change, for, ac- cording to the company's franchise, P at Christian noon Irish wil the room free. The Southern Pacific people, how- ever, seem to be willing to face the liti- gation. It does not demand any great study to discover why the railroad has un- | dertaken to charge fares. The Key Route has been cutting into its receipts ever since it was started and it is Walk a Block Save a Dollar Regular price all the time. Ca“ Pict s . l F . F { doubtful if it pays to run its fast ul e l‘b amed trains. The most galling thing, per S Sul y r rom haps, is the knowledge that its u:lns 30c Up. LARGEST STOCK OF PICTURE MOULDING IN OAKLAND . .... | all parts of town and feeding them to the company’s rival. ———— s Asks Heavy Damages. OAKLAND, April 9.—Mrs. Mary J. Robinson petitioned the courts to-day to be appointed guardian of Claude L. Assalena, a minor, in order that she may bring a suit for $20,000 damages against the Oakland Transit Consoli- dated and the People’s Express Com- pany. A collision occurred between a truck and a streetcar, in which the child was maimed for life. BARLOW 369 TWELFTH ST., Bet. Franklin and Webster. THE SIDE STREET STORE. riding within the city limits is to be | have been carrying people free from } ALAMEDA ARBOR - DAFIS CHOSEN Formal l‘,xm-msos and Tree Planting Will Characterize | | Second Annual Celebration | | ————— ALAMEDA, April 9.—This city hold its secord annual arbor day the twent econd of this month the exercises will b2 conducted will on on a re elaborate seale than that which characterized the first tree planting | celebration in Alameda. s will bc rendered at all bs ic schools, colamencing at ‘n the afternoon. Colonel John P. sh of Caklan d Piesident Frank Otis ¢f the Board of Education will address the assemblage at the Alame- High Schocl from the rear steps of the building. Invitations lLave been extended to the ladies of the Adelphian Club, who were chlefly instrumental in inaugurating arbor day here, to take part in the exercises and it that several of them will sdeliver brief talks. Trees and shrubs will be plant- d on the grounds of all of the public | scheols. | At the Haight, Mastick, Longf¢llow, | Wilson and Everett schools, the prin- | cipals will preside and explain to their i pupils the meaning and importance of {the occasion. Winancial aid has been | glven the arbor day mov:iment by the | Alameda Advancement Association, the | West Exd Improvement Club and the | Civic Section. of the Adelphian Club. ————— In 1878 nearly all (99.5 per cent) of the | Russian railways belonged to private companies; in 1901 these companies owned only 33.5 per cent of them. In | Germany private rallway ownership decreased the same period from 33 to 9 per cent. —_— ADVERTISEMENTS. FOR THAT TIRED FEELING In spring’s balmy days there is nothing that stimulates and touches the spot like a good glass of Buffalo Bohemian Lager - HANSEN & KAHLER, ° Alameda Co. Agents, 8th and Webster, OAKLAND. Phone Main 458. i " BOARD | | Thus love has been and | ALAMEDA CUPlD 0USTED G FRoM HOSPITAL Love Not Recogmze(l as a| Panacea for the Ail-| THE LACE ROUSE SUIT SPECIAL . 22 50 Right at the opening of a new Suit ISSUES EDICT 2 R ST Request of Aged Couple for Permission to Wed Re-|| season, the Clo‘ak _mJ sults in Quite a Furor|| seciion makes this timely an- S nouncement: Oakland Office San Francisco Call, 1118 Broadway, April 9. By an edict of the Board of Directors | 1 of the King's Daughters Home, billing | and cooing must come to an end in! that institution and the hospitality of the place barred to Cupid. The little| 2od is no longer free to discharge his | | darts among the old people of thsi home. It is strictly a home for in-| | curables, and love's treatment is not| n accordance with the most advanced | ideas existing at that institution.. | The matter is the subject of serious | resolutions and whereasing in which | the board forever quenches the love fires that may burn in the breasts nf the hopelessly afflicted. 1 The question was brought up by the Fifty correct spring models in ladies’ suits, special at $22.50 Some in plain fabrics, others in fancy weaves, but all fault- less in style details. Spring suits, perfnct de- sign‘ng and tailoring, from $9.50 to $50.00 ECONOMY IN MILLINERY but without any sacrifice of style or quality, may be prac- ticed here. THis has made the | | request of A. L. Larkin, oven 61, and. -€C Miss Matilda Rudberg, 6, to join| Millinery section--a new one | hearts and hands in wedlock. To this | i et %3 ccess request the board has made the fol- | this season—--an instant succe lowing reply: i Useful trimmed hats—a pleasing line “Resolved, That it is the -sense of | of ordinary $5-00 values - . - $83.80 | 3 this Board of Directors that marriages IR isite trimmed hats——$10.00would between inmates of the Alamedg| Exqu 1 County King’s Daughters’ Home for be an ordinary price - - - - $6.98 Incufables shall not be permitted, and | Misses’ and children’s hats from B0C be it further “‘Resolved, That should any persons | ———— - while inmates of this home be mar- rled, such persons shall forthwith be | : 050€6¢0O800C00880060095906 dismissed from the home. | “Whereas, Two inmates of the Ala- | x meda County King's Daughters’ Home | g | for Incurables, viz: Mr. A. L. Larkin|g {and Miss Matilda Rudberg, have ap- | @ plied to the Board of Directors of the | @ To make room for our new line of Mission above named institution for permission | @ Furniture which we now manufacture, we to be married to each other and the | i | $ i : | will offer for sale about | Board of Directors have deemed it ad- | | visable to refuse to grant such a re-| g | “Resolved, That in the event| |of such a marriage, we de-| | mand the withdrawal of the said per- sons from the institution; and all money heretofore paid for their main- | tenance and eare, while inmates of the | home, be upon request, returned to hose who have pald the same to this | institution.” Al 1-3 1o 1-2 Less Than Usual SAARRES 16th and Telegraph Ave., Oakland 990302002380 02009290800990 20 “”“... banished from | | the home. UNIVERSITY EVENTS i —In the Gr‘wkl BERKELEY, A Theater at 4 o'clock to-morrow after- ‘7 2 'll‘ | noon the usual half hour of music will | FLOWERS. FREEDOM AND | "ue given by the Choral Scciety, the or- 1| :Br}ul.\uf are features of su- | ganization of women students which, l B e kias Soeti \undvr the direction of David W. Lor- ASI\ A\ \POLUG\ } gain in our Berkeley, Oakland ling, has given concerts at intervals Ean - Aleiedh HMAT Rt throughout the year. The programme \ umns and—THE BOOSTERS | | will be as follows: “Lift Thine Eyes || 5RE soosmive. |to the Mountain: rom Mendels- | '] c T P OO & CMmAarks e s (THRE: | 1111»1;1_(_)( at Remarks| | 2 | Leaves: Barter, Bpting Night £ Sems | -gf Frofessor BernardMoses. | ... ¢ others in the neighborheod pleton Strong; “Homewards,” J. Rhein- 2 . berger; "0 Grateful Evening Stience,”| Who Lost Peach Blossoms | used them for decoration, too. Reinecke. The Choral Society will give BEBCCs Tt | "I intended to e President Wheeler about it to-day, but he is out of town for th 1 also wrote a note to Profe and perhaps when he receives it he may change his views in regard to As for Professor | its annual spring concert in Hearst Hall | at 8 o’clock on Friday evening, April 29. Professor George Davidson has pre- sented to the university library a copy of his paper on “The Alaska Boun- Berkeley Office San Francisco Call, 2148 Center Street, April 9. | The set speech of Profes Ber- nard Moses before his class in history pre or Moses there seems dary.” It is a volume of 235 pages and | yostargay on the subject of co-eds, co s | two charts. A typewritten copy of this |0\ o etiquette and peach blos- | ' De little hope of an apology and | paper was transmitted through Secre- | - & = k WGl fuss in | m\l_c-s.« the statements of the Pi Beta tary Hay to the Alaska Boundary Trib- | SOM8 has Fee upan. ¥ SS I | phi girls are most convincing he is By Berkeley. The Pi Beta Phi sorority | more than likely to stand his ground. Dr. George Steindorff, professor of |girls, to whom Professor Moses re- | When asked to-day if he would apolo- | Egyptology at the University of Leip- |ferred as the vandals that had deco- | gl = said | zig, will deliver a series of three lec- | rated their house with his own peach logize! 1 never apologize | tures beginning with Friday of next|blossoms and then read the Scripture | when I know I am right. As for the g of the blossoms, mall matter. lesson on purloinery, want their tra ducer to apologize, and if they do not that is really The other things I week on “The Religions of Egynt.” Dr. Steindorff enjoys high rank as an au- | thority upon archaeological subjects, | get an apology they are going to Presi- | spoke of—co-education, sorority life, and also has a reputation as being an | dent Wheeler. In the meantime F | society—are of n portance, and excellent public speaker. He comes to | fessor Moses will not apologize, and | I meant every word I said.” California from the University of Chi- | there you are. The agents of the property— cago purposely to deliver these lec-| The Pi Beta Phi girls set about to | Cheney & Berry. say they gave the tures, having been in the United States two months as lecturer for the Ameri- can Committee for Lectures on the History of Religions. Dr. Steindor(f | will speak in Hearst Hall on Friday | evening, Avril 15, and Monday and Wednesday, April 18 and 20. The top- ics of his discourses will be “The De- velopment of Egypntian Religion,” “The | Views of the Ancient Egyptians Con- cerning Life After Death” and “Graves and Burial in Egypt; Egyptian Religion Outside Egypt.” The Academic Council elected as deans for the varidus colleges yester- day the following named: Letters, Professor A. F. Lange; social sciences, Professor Irving Stringham; natural sciences, Professor Frederick Slate; agriculture, Professor E. W. Hilgard; chemistry, Professor Edmond O'Neili; commerce, Professor Carl C. Plehn; mechanics, Professor C. L. Cory; min- ing, Professor S. B. Christy; civil en- gineerng, Professor Frank Soule. The only change from that of last term was the election of Professor O'Neill in the place of Professor Rising. ————— Must close out a line of furniture at your own srice. H. Schellhaas, Cakland. —— Marriage Licenses. OAKLAND, April 9.—The following marriage licenses were issued by the County Clerk to-day: Joseph H. Shaw, 36, Oakland, and Nellie Morris, 28, San Francisco; David L. Furry, 26, San Francisco, and Frances S. Hol- lister, 29, Chicago; Andreas Ziku, over 21, and Mary A. Guinan, over 18, both of San Francisco; James Byers, 42, Sonora, and Emma Sipeline, 28, Berkeley; Hayes Mayhew, 45, and Nellie Campbell, 35, both of San Fran- cisco; Willlam J. Greer, 27, San Fran- cisco, and Madge Murphy, 24, Berke- ley; Henry R. Davis, 27, San Fran- cisco, and Virginia de Soto, 25, Con- cord; Ferdinand E. Blanchard, 23, and Adelaide F. Schultz, 21, both of Oakland; Marcel Lemer, 38, and Veronigue Haurat, 26, both of QOak- land co-eds permission to take some blos- soms from Professor Moses' place. They also add that they do net think it was the Pi Beta Phis that com ed the vandalism complained of by Pro- fess Moses, but some others in the neighborhood. —_————— Events at Mills College. OAKLAND, April 9.—Two events of interest are scheduled to take place during the coming week at Mills Col- lege, both of which will be open to the public. The first is the lecture at Lisser Hall by the Rev. Lyman Abbott, which takes place at 2:30 p. Wednesday, April 13, and on the fol- lowing afternoon at the same hour the new bell tower and chimes will be dedicated. The services will be con- ducted by the Rev. Charles R. Brown, president of the board of trus- tees. The chimes will be played ’n)’ W. ! A. Sabin of San Francisco. secure a correction of the impression | that Professor Moses has made on the minds of perhaps a lion people as soon as they saw the account of what he said this morning. Mrs. Virginia Gundry, the chaperone, wrote a note to Professor Moses explaining the whole transaction. Then she tried to see President Wheeler, but he was out of town and will not be seen until next week. It may not be necessary, however, to see President Wheeler Professor Moses may be prevailed upon to change his views in regard to co-eds. “I feel sure,” said M Gundry to- day, “that when Professor Moses gets our explanation he will set the mat- ter right. The blossoms we used to decorate our house were taken only after permission had been secured from the agents of the property. I myself secured this permission. Be- sides, we did not take all of the blos- m. ADVERTISEMENTS. NEW CLASSES for the spring and summer months now organizing at the PolytechnicBusinessCollegs i2th and Clay Sts., Oakland, Cal. A good paying position for every young man or receives training at the Pelytechnic. Fnrollgnow and pv::r:zl?: f\‘)‘:'h: good position by October. The Polytechnic is the leadin: of Chicago. School the entire Day and night classes. g high-grade business college west year. Write for free catalogue to-day.

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