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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, APRIL 24, 190s B. KATSCHINSKI Philadelphia Shoe Co. 10 THIRD STREET, SAN FRANCISCO Adjoining Call Building. ()lJT G SHOEb seamless heel | CLAIMS CLEVE ~ DECEIVED HER Wife of Patternmaker Says in His Reconeiliation Act Palo Alto Property to Be Sold at Auction \ | | | | RESUMES PROCEEDINGS ® H H & & H He Was Not in'Eamesti H H H x | | | Asks the Court to Take Up| Again Appeal to Have Him | Punished for Contempt [ [ In an afidavit filed yesterday by Sa- | @ die I Cleve, wife of Leonard Cleve, a s patternmaker, she tells the court that she is the victim of her husband's plausibility and asks that the contempt proceedings instituted a week ago and which she caused to be discontinued be resumed forthwith, and that Cleve be g punished. It appears from the affidavit that the Cleves did not get along together. Mrs. Cleve was of the opinion that she did not get enough of her husband's earn- ings, and so instituted a suit for main- tenance. The action was heard by Judge Seawell, who thought that Cleve was just a little bit neglectful, and or- d him to pay his wife $30 a month for her separate support. The order was made April 16, and within a week ve had her husband cited to r and show cause why he should sghed for contempt of court. pay her the money. The he excuses of Cleve was set ut they were never heard, ve sent word to the court « that she wished not did to the affidavit of eve is sorry that she that when her spouse nded that he bygones and his bosom says nlucky month and John A. ing month, ed. They had © e Q (3 e [ 4 (3 (3 [ 3 [ [ [ 3 ADVERJTISEMENTS. Saturday, May 17, 1904. Catalogues Now Ready. :UPLAL MADE BT THE BLINL | | California California as a last resort. of our small that of thirty-five and being only effective workmen a small fraction of 1 per cent of the brooms consumed in is in the way chanics who have Yet, all their Surely it cannot be true that the broom product Didier, Miss Aitkens, W. Plowman, J.|ing the day. Arrangements are in|Byrne, J. Wickers, W. Judson, B. Daniels, J. M. | charge of the following committees: Thompson, W. Crossficld, H. Hodges, | General committee—David F. Sup- | Seymour, W. H. Lutz, G. Richville." | ple, chairman; Frank Drury, secre- |Stafford, E. e ——————— | tary; Rev. Philip Byrne, treasurer. i‘Kug]eberg. A. SACRED HEART PARISH GOES | Committee on grounds—Colonel J. C. | Tracy, TO MOU INS NEXT MONTH | O'Connor, T. J. Redmond, J. J.| | Hughes, J. T. McKenna, Homer Rip- | only equaling of any me- faculties? Homer Reception committs Watson, J. Ambrose, W. Perry, Butler, J. Savage, J. F. T. J. Walsh. Floor committee—Joseph ' Corbett, Rippon, Arnold, T. Klink, J. Regan. Captain J. F. H. Farmer, H. John Franchi, Val abandoned her more leaving her and their nd upon the charity of for a living. gham is seeking a di- ground of unningham, rried in May, 1902 »vided for her for some time, arning a salary of $150 a Mrs. Cynning- to resume her and frie Anna C. Cunn voree on the Jame A. ( neglect from ) whom she She says he th It a decree ham wants permission maiden name, Eklund. Harriet McGill wants a divorce from Charles E negiect cGill on three grounds— infidelity. They Jose in January, maiden name was wants permission and were married at San 1902. Mrs Arrasmith t gruelty MeGill's and she resume it E. B Warren is the defendant in the which Rose They were vroceedings in Warren is the plaintiff. married at Decatur, Ga., in February, 1902, the alleged desertion occurring the following June. Desertion is charged in the complaint filed by Mar- vin Belden against Beatrice Belden, and in the suit of Kate Schaumoeffel against Henry Schaumoeffel neglect is charged TAN KID IA([ SHUL& also | ADVEBTISEHENT& Our FNew Illustrated Catalogue just out Send for ome | HOSIEI LERS CELEBRATED B. KATSCHINSKI Philadelphia Shoe Co. 10 TEIRD ST. San Francisco, WEAK MEN| DR. HALL'S REINVIGORATOR stops all losses a charges in 24 * improvement fron: « have so much STOMRCH FrenS Don't suffer from La Grippe, Chills, Colds or Malaria, Fever and Ague this Spring. Keep the system forti- | fied by taking the Bitters. It is the | best preventive on the market and | never fails to give satisfaction. mem ease o drains in the urine the prostate glands and all o Lie effacts of seli-abuse or excesses, which lead tion and desth. Positively cure old or young of that mort . quickness of the discharge. and @0, and you can't. Sent sealed. $2 three botties. $5. Guaranteed to cure any case Call or agdress orders HALL'S MEDICAL | It aD)m cures Indi%e‘tion. Constipa- INST/TUTE, 830 Broadway. Oakland. Cai | tion, Dyspepsia and Insomn i Alwo for sale at 10733 Market st., S. F. Send | — yspopaia snd Tasoma ok For tree © | vor manmams. a4 ] BR E kers, bootblacks, bath. | bouses, billiard tables, brewers., bookbinders, candy makers, casnees évers, four mills, foundries, laundries, pager- hangers, printers, painters, shoe factoies. wiablemen. tar-roofers. tanners, tatlors. ete BUCEANAN BROS. | Pureiy vegetabie, miia ang reliable. Causes m-mm m“ | perfect digestion, complete absorption and JASTHMANOLAJ T For cure of all disorders of Stomach, Liver, s the only cure for Nervous and Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder, Female Irregularities, Four Druggist or at 598 HAIGHT ST. Sen Francisco, Cal SickHeadache, Biliousness, Constipation, Plles and all derangements of Internal Viscers. 25c box. At druggists’ or by mail, Redway & Co, N ¥, BLU LH[—R ()XFORI)S r rie ' . 5 seas s week w ¥ e Ladies' Kid ¥ f t r t ties severed yes ¥ 1 Y > er gettin 2 divorce from Ashley W. Dar barber, in an nswer to the su ivorce of Dora T s jes abandoned Q h e charges. He says that when ol eft her a year ago at Sutter Creek, 3 County, it w with her con- s ! an ith the understanding that soon as a sufficient length of time had elapsed divorce proceedings were to be , sstituted. He denles also that he K a month. - His income, he o : er, a Alice | CANVAS OXFORD > u T r r cruelty and intem- | FOR COUNT..Y WEAR, perance. Thompson says that for the| W g e il i e has been ad- | . nvas Footw v g dicted t exces use of intoxi- E T t galy rar 8 8 p Thwmpsnn e h jr B T e d that when in her cups she w uli : ) e Spanish hee 3t s se husband, Clem ell, is clerk in the employ . pr 1. e » Arsdale Lumber 2 % 8 w s % any him for divorce yester- | ay ¢ t d of desertion. She| ‘I the way; Inmates 0f State Home As for Relief From Boycott Piaced on Their Products P The following has been issued by in- mates of the State Industrial Home for the Adult Blind, located in Oakland » the people of California—We are | the inmates and artisans of the Home for the Adult Blind in Oakland. Most of us became blind in adult age and found our means of making a living de- stroyed when our sight perished. Com- pelled by indigence or idleness we sought admission to the Home only place where the handicraft and earn their and comforts. no concention of the blessings of work to the blind. Without it we who live in darkness have nothing to divert us from situation Without work we have sadness ard misery for our companion “In this institution about seventy of us work as mechanics. Our blindness reduces our productive capacity about ness. that of thirty-five people who can see. Our principal manufacture and we take honest pride in declaring that our brooms, in stock and work- manship, are equal to any on the mar- két. By their sale we get our sole in- | come, and working at our trade is our | greatest happiness nity is being taken from us by a gen- eral boycott levied against us m‘slakr enly by the labor unions. APPEAL IS UNHEEDED. “An appeal to them to be merciful to the blind has been made, but is un- heeded. Retail dealers, under penalty of a general hoycott on their business, do not dare buy the blind man's brooms, and now the same cold-heart- ed policy is closing our wholesale trade against us. Nearly all of us were labor- ing people when blindness fell upon us, and many of us were labor union men. ‘We cannot now belong to a union. We are a community by ourselves, joined in bonds of a common misfortune. “We no not ask charity, but only work and a market for the product of lour skill. The purpose of a labor | union is declared to be humane, If this be so, our misfortune should !make us first among the objects of that humanity. But instead of this we are treated by our brothers who see as if our blindness had outlawed us from human sympathy and set us among the beasts that perish. | “In the Bible it is‘ordered: Thou shalt not put a stumbling block before the blind; and cursed be he that causeth the blind to wander out of and when the Savior de- parted from the house of Jairus two blind men followed him, crying: ‘Thou | son of David, have mercy,on us.’ and he healed their infirmity. “Can it be that in these latter days the blind, stricken and forlorn, are to be punisfed by men as if their in- firmity were a crime? “We appeal to the kind hearts of 1 though it be so small a part of the general supply, it is everything to us; it is manhood and womanhood, | health and happiness. Therefore we lappeal to the people, ask your retail { dealers for the blind man's brooms, with the label of the home ugon them, and take no other until the market is Great Preparations Have Been .\lade] for the Annual Outing and Giving of Prizes. Sacred Heart parish will be the first to hold its annual picnic this Saturday, May 7, has been sele year. ted as | the day for the outing at Sunset Park, | pen, John Franchi, J. C. MeGlynn. Committee on prizes—James Ward, chairma J. Sullivan, J. C. McGlynn, | J. F. Redmond, J. C. Queen, J. J. Mc- Cooney, Eugene Dock: { E. Holland. | Carthy, Frank Rippon, F. Nagle, E.| An Gong, a Chines { Olwell, J. J. Maguire, W. Redman, J. |, oo a'o 0t e pry ‘Amhwwxw, J. Corbett. jl’)srer'tl ves D n an Committee on press and printing— | ery, J. Donohue, e - — Chinese Charged With Burglary. e musician, was ison yesterday by d Wren on two He is accused of clothing | Those who see can form | the sadness and sorrows of our,| With work we have happi- one-half, so that our efficiency is about | is brooms, | But this opportu- | | equally pe rays look for rd with great | Flood, J. C. O’Connor. “T. Powers, . A. Ballisle, anticipation to the picnic and this year | Committee on music—Rev. Robert Miss Mast R. M. Kouper, F. they will have particular reason to do |Sesnon, J. J. Hughes, Dr. M. W. O’Con- | uary 16 and February 17, Hoban, H. W. Smith, J. Lannigan, Miss so, for great preparations are being | nell, F. Rippon, J. H. Francke, M. casion stealir again onen to us. | and oppress us are per Mullaney, W. ton, Silv O. Dudley, McGregor, Those who oppose Staggs, J. Craig, J. re, D. Weider, J. . W. Behan, J. Santa Cruz Mountains. i charges of burg idents of the parish Rev. T. F. Comerford, W. Stafford, ¢ and their | Lacombe, F. Drury, A. F. Burke Jr., J. made to make it the most successful | McKenna. outing ever given by the parish. More | Committee on than 200 prizes are to be awaraed dur- | Fleming, J. goods. Most been recovered. week ago. games—Rev. W. A. Sullivan, Rev. Philip | having broken the umdnv\ in the store | of the Berteling Optical Company. 18 Kearny street, on the mornings of Jan- on each oc- about $400 worth of »f the stolen property has He was arrested a as the | blind could learn | V"BTISEIL.NTS. i Doctors Say DrinK More The body requires ten glasses of fluid per day. Most people drink. too little to flush the body of its waste. The result is bad blood, nervousness, disease. Then the doctor says “Drink More;”” and he knows this advice to be worth more than medicine. ‘That’s one reason why pure beer is good for you. It leads you to, drink more. And the beer 1s also a food and a tonic. But the beer must be pure. Schlitz beer is brewed in absolute cleanliness and cooled in filtered air. It is aged for months so 1t will not cause biliousness. That’s why doctors say ¢Schlitz.’ Brewery Bottling. Ask for the Wholesale Distributers. ~ Fohlg Los Angeies—SHERWOOD & SHERWOQOD—S$an Francisco ‘The Beer That Made Milwaukee famous.