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48 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, APRIL 15, 1906 NEWS OF THE COUNTIE BERKELEY GIRL FEELS ALUMBERMAN TIDAL WAVE SHOCK g Mrs. Lydia S. Sterling, a Berkeley girl, was among the passengers who experienced the shock of a tidal wave that swept over the steamship Barbarossa, bound for Europe, when that vessel Mis. Stetding is on her way to Italy to fill operatic engagements. She cabled her parents from Gibraltar yesterday of her safety. was one day out of New York, on April 4. 2k f .‘;.__ Mrs. L S. Sterling]] a Passenger on Hf Barbarossa. || ————— | Her Parents|| e Is Safe at | Gibraltar. e Is on Way to ltaly to Fill Opera En- Sh gagements llowing cable: strenuous and nens to compete The that the mce the struck the J?fieooo S N anding < < > her parents fears they Aaughter's H EXNDS LONG LIFE OF ENGINEER SINC CREETING T0 EASTERTIE DEAT o i -~ e e ap| OAKLAND, April 14—“Christ = is e - ng at the family | Riren” will be the theme of the Easter - r rier | Services in the churches of this city ss. He was e y, | tomorrow, and in many of the houses 82 ye of worship elaborate choral pro- Mr. Boardman | grammes have been arranged for the s Stat i wotked a5 a|morning and evening services. In all New York and Mas- | the Catholic churches of Oakiand sol- he came to i-| emn high mass will be celebrated at hardware | 10:30 a. m. Amoong the music pro- he came t0{grammes arranged for the Easter ser- d the profession of | vices are the following: m 1864 to 1868 he| pIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. M- _°f| Morning ervice—Anthem, “As It Be- Truckee Tater)®an to Dawn” (Coombs); solo and of lrakla"‘d and chorus, “Hosanna” (Granier), barytone e was appointed | A4 chofr; anthem, “Why Seek Ye the e i Apointed | Living?” (Peel). cholr. Evening ser- bip. He also| jjce _Dudley Buck's oratorio, “The the | giory of the Cross,” by chorus choir of fifty voices and the following solo- jets: Mrs. M. W. Jellett, Mrs. E. J. Joll soprani; Miss Ruth Waterman, alt . F. Veaco, tenor; Clement P. Row- 1z lands, bass; Mabel Francis Hill, organ- be held - Monday | %t 31s0.for an offertory, in the evening, X Zrom the famanY | “Watchman, What of the Night?" (Sar- - Y| gent); duet, Mr. Rowlands and Mr. Veaco. | FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH. Morning, 11 o'clock.—Organ prelude, when ral years ago, Clifford H. and f Oakland, Charles £ Portland and Frank W, e ——— HALF HOUR OF MUSIC IN THE GREEK THEATER alf hour of | (Guilmant); Credo, chorus and trio n at the Greek The- | (Gounod); “Out of Heaven,' soprano &t by the De Koven |solo and chorus (Cowen); “My Re- ( voices, with |deemer Liveth,” contralto solo (Man- < tenor, director |mey); “Awake Up My Glory,” chorus E am C. Davis 07, | and boy choir (Barnby); organ postiude, by Roscoe War- | “Offertory in G Major” (Lefebvre- The programme will | Wely). b | Evening, 7:30 o’clock—Organ prelude, (Gounod), the De|First Movement, Sixth Symphony accompaniment of | (Widor); cantata, “Victory” (H. J. “Serenad Stewart), chorus, quartet, soprano and ¢” (Tacomini), Mr. | contralto solor; cantata, “The Daughter Mr. Lucy; “Fer- | of Jairus” (Stainer), chorus, soprano, Koven Club; | tenor and bass solos; organ postlude, Gwanier)), Mr.| “Finale”, (Franck), chorus choir of (Sullivanf the | sixty voices; soloists: Mrs. Grace Davis companiment of | Northrup, soprano; Mrs. Carroll Nichol- amme commences at | son, contraito; Chester Rosckrans, from San Francisco | tenor; Henry L. Perry, bass; Miss Vir- clock ferries. On|ginia de Fremery, organist; Alexander isitors who do not | stewart, musical director. rough the university | At the morning service the boy choir take the Buclid-avenue of twenty voices from the Sunday- clegraph-avenue cars at|school will assist the regular choir. BBl St FIRST M. E. CHURCH. D0 ke the Alcatraz| are Orrin Kip McMurray, soprano; | Miss Mabel H. Grey, contralto; Herbert | A. Smith, tenor; J. M. Robinson, bass; | 3. M. Robinson, musical director; Miss ——————— COLLIDES WITH A CAR. OAKL } - April 14—While ariving | Elizabeth Simpson, organist. along E :,ertn'—:n(h % street, near | Morning — Organ ‘prelude (Widoz); T and . Dusey o v | “The Strife Is Q'er” (Stewart); “Life's e, DigEY, collided | Resurrection Morn” (Neldlinger); post- nd badly braised, | 1ude: “Toccata” (Du Bois). me at 3605 Foue. | , Evening—Organ offertory on Easter was 80 badly | BYmn (Guilmant); selections {from taken 1o 4 vetery | Gaul's “Holy City”; introduction, organ; bugEy was de. | CHOTuS; tenor solo; quartet, “No Shad- 3 =% | solo, “My Soul Is Athirst for God”; ‘At Eventide It Shall Be Light”; chorus, “Eye Hath Not Seen”; OAKLAND, April 14.—Memorial _|chorus, “For Thee, O Dear Country”; es over the remains of the late ;“’r’; | chorus, “Thine Is the Kingdom' , “{ “A New Heaven and a New Earth”; WICHMAN MEMORIAL. Wichman, wife of Wi of Tonolut, witt be tor¥ B | semi-chofus, “The Fining Pot s for Sil: morrow afternon at 3 oclock s 03| ver"; solo, “Thess Ate They Which Come Out of Great Tribulations”; Congregational Rev. Charles R. Brown wili te. Interment will take place Mountain View Cemetery. pivhcuitagr sl SRR CIVIC /B TO MEET. OAKLAND, April 14.—~The Women's Improvement Club will hold its annual election of officers on Monday | afterncon, April 16, at the quarters of | Homer J. Vosburgh, minister; 11 the Palette, Lyre and Pen Club at 4621 2. m., “The Call of the Resurrection”; Thirteenth street. An interesting paper j 7:30 p. m., full choral service and “The on eivic work will be read after theBurial of Jesus.” The Easter music C! ch ' _chapel | 0 orus quartet, “Great ard Marvelous °f' Are Thy Works”; organ postlude, 0 | “March Pontificale” (Widor). Bishop J. W. Bashford of China will preach the sermon at the morning ser- vices of the First Methodist Church, which will be held at 11 o'clock. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH. election follows: ——————— . Morning—Organ prelude, “Andante SAN JOSE, April 14.—A deputy sheriff | Pastoral” (Smart); prelude (Volck- jeft for San Quentin this morning with Rev. J. J. Smith, who will serve a term (Btainer), chorus; “Mercy and of vne year for fraud in connection with | Trust” (Tours), quartet and chorus; the sale of mining stock. ’ contralto solo, “Resurrection” (Shel- They Have Taken Away My Largo e Maestoso, Allegro, First Sonata | | tenor; BERKELEY GIRL WHO HAD A THRILLING EXPERIENCE WHILE CROSSING THE ATLANTIC. g ley), Mrs. Warner; “Great and Wonder- ful Are Thy Works” (Spohr), quartet and chorus. Evening—Organ prelude, “Adagio” (Haydn), postlude .(Handel); “Ho- sanna” (Stainer), chorus; “Now From the Sixth Hour” (Buck), quartet and choru Cross of Calvary” (Gounod), quartet; “Kyrie Eleison” (Buck), Mr. Burckhalter and women’s chorus); so- prano solo, “Hosanna"” (Granier), Mrs. Best; “When it Was Yet Dark” (Wood- mean), Mr. Burckhalter Mr. Monges and chorus; “King All Glorious” (Barnby), Mr. Pendleton and chorus; recitative, “And He Led Them Out” (Buck), Mrs. ‘Warner; chorus, “Lift Up Your Heads,” (Messiih), chorus; contralto solo, “Glory to God” (Rotoll), Mrs, Warner; “Hallelujah” (Mount of Olives (Bee- thoven), chorus. Soloists—Mrs. Margaret G. Best, so- prano; Mrs. J. J. Warner, contralto; N. ‘W. Pendleton, tenor; H. B. Monges Jr., ‘W. Burckhalter, barytone; Mrs. W. J. Cook, organist; Percy A. R. Dow, director. Chorus of thirty-five. ST. PAUL'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH. Morrning service—Processional, come, Happy Morning’ (Calkin) Our Passover” (Crotch); “Gloria Patri” (Crotch); *“Te Deum Laudamus,’ in F (Kotschmar); “Jubilate Deo,” in D (Sulli- van); introit, ‘““Angels Roll the Rock Away” (Dykes); “Kyrl in A flat (Men- delssohn); “Gloria Tibi,” in A flat (Pley- el); anthem, ‘“Behold, Ye Despisers’” (Parker); offertory, soprano solo, ‘“‘Hark, Ten Thousand Voices” (Fickenscher), Mrs. Fickenscher; “Sanctus,” In F (Gounod); communion hymn, “Bread of the World” (Hodges); *“Glorla in Excelsis,” in F (Tours); recessional, “Jesus Christ Is Risen Today"” (Worgan). Evening service—Processional, *“Christ, the Lord, Is Risen Today” (Mozart); “Gloria Patri,” in D (Sulllvan); “Mag- nificat,” in E flat (West); “Nunc Dimit- tis,” in E flat (West); anthem, “Come, See the Place Where Jesus Lay” (Park- er); offertory, soprano solo, “the “Resur- rection Song” (Fickenscher), Mrs. A. Fick- enscher; anthém, “The Lord is Exalted” (West); recessional, “‘At the Lamb’'s High Feast We Sing”’ "(Elvey). . Edwin Dunbar Crandall, director; Ar- thur Fickenscher, organist. ST. ANDREW’S CHURCH. Celebration of holy communion, 7:45 a. m.; Sunday-school, 9:45 a. m.; morning prayer, holy communion and sermon, “Newness of Life,”” 11 a. m.; evening, chil- dren’s service, with special music, 7:30 o’clock. Rector, Rev. O. St. John Scott. At 11 a. m—"“Christ Our Passover” (Chapple); “Te Deum’ (C. J. Dale); “Ju- bilate” (T. 8. Dupis); “Kyrie” (C. J. Kim- mins); “Gloria Tibi” (Woodward); “Glo- “This 1s the Day"” (Al- bert W. Kitelby); “Lift Your Glad voices” (Van Lear); “Sanctus,” from Ely service book; “Gloria in Excelsis” (H. B. EN- wanger); “Nunc Dimittis” (J. Turle). At 7:30 p. m.—“Magnificat” and “Nunc Dimittis” (West); “Gloria” (Mornington). The soloists will be Miss Elsie Cahill and Miss Charlotte Thomas, soprano; H. M. Baker, tenor; Clarence A. Oliver, bary- tone; Mrs. Josephine Gil, organist. CHURCH OF THE ADVENT, OAKLAND. Morning services at 8 and 11; .even- ing musical service at 7:30; sermons by Rev. Mr. Trivett, rector. At morning service special music has been prepared throughout: . Anthem, “Awake Up My Glory” (Barnby); offer- tory, Resurrection Song (Wood); com- munion service, F major (Tours] EAST | were filled With lumber bought from the | Hammond Lumber Company until that | Company was operating. It was resolved HAMMOND 15 QUTWITTED Opposition in Directorate of Bay Shore Company in Oakland Scores a Coup and Sells Out Yard Stock BUSINESS IS CLOSED OUT IN A BIG DEAL B G | Concern of Which San Fran- ciscan Was the Dominant | Factor Suddenly Vanishes| From the Field of Trade| R — OAKLAND, April 14—By one of those | ! clever, strategic moves which give zest to | the game of modern business, the local in- { terests in the Bay Shore Lumber Com-| { pany have unloaded their stock in trade; and have outwitted the millionaire lum- | berman, A. B. Hammond of San Francis- co, head of the Hammond Lumber Com- pany and other allied corporations in ship- ping and lumbering. | There was completed today the sale of 8,000,000 feet of lumber in the Oakland yards of the Bay Shore Lumber Company to James T ameda capitalist, | who is representing others In the transac- | tion. This sale repr the tangible as- | sets of the company, worth $175,000. Re- | maining unsold was $100,00) worth of book accounts and the corporation stock. { The sale was the result of a warm con- | test in the Bay Shore directorate. On omne | side was A B. Hammond, wWho owns or controls one-half of the stock. On the op- posing end was the one-half interest rep- | and Arthur P. Holland of this city. When | the corporation was formed it was agreed | that each side should have two directors, the fifth to be neutral. HAMMOND DOMINATES. Hammond’s men were his nephew, F. N. Fenwick, who was made president, and C. V. Hooper. The local men were R. B. | Mott, representing the Wall interests, and | A. P, Holland. The fitth man was Cap- | fain Richard Bradley, master mariner on the narrow gauge line of the Southern Pacific Company. Bradley is a brother-in- law.of E. M. Wall, who was elected sec- retary of the Bay Shore Company. The Bay Shore’s business progressed fa- vorably and a large trade was developed. As time went on the company's yards corporation’s-bill had reached nearly $100,- 000. This was made possible by the action of Fenwick, Hooper and Bradley, the neu- tral director, who for a year and a half cast his vote with the Hammond inter- ests. : The time came when the Wall and the Holland side decided that 8,000,000 feet of lumber was too much to carry on the lim- ited capital with which thé Bay Shore that sound business policy forbade them going further, especlally as the Hammond | company controlled and could, If it de-} | sired, load them down with lumber. It was a case of minority votes against ma- jority votes in the board of directors, al- though the stock was equally divided. BRADLEY SHIFTS HIS VOTE. The local men made a coup day before yesterday and won Bradley over to their Way of thinking. A special meeting of the board was called, and In a few minutes the votes of Holland, Mott and Bradley determined that the Bay Shore Lumber Company should liquidate. The sale of the lumber on hand in the yards was ordered and the business wound up. No sooner was this done than the Ham- | mond Lumber Company put on its attach- | ments for lumber furnished the Bay Shore Company. These attachments cover the amount due on the lumber account, which will be paid Monday and the attachments released. It is said that there will be at least $100,000 to divide as profits of the Bay Shore Company’s operations. When requested to make a statement concerning the trouble Arthur P. Holland sald today: “The Bay Shore Lumber Company has disposed of its tangible assets—that is to say, its large stock of lumber at its Ad- ams wharf yards. The corporation stock and its book accounts have not been sold. The attachments which followed:the decl- sion of the board of directors to sell will be released Monday, and the entire matter may be considered as closed.” e Deum (Buck); ~ Jubilate (Ethelbert Nevin). An evening musical service: Prelude, “Polonaise” (Chopin-Best); an- them, “ihey Have Taken Away” (HB-!‘.- rington); quartet, “Worship of God” (Handel) ; - trio, “Elijah” (Mendelssohn); quartet, “Eventide” (Garrish); postiude, “Meditation” (Dubois). The soloists are: Miss Grace Staider, Kenneth Keefer, Mr. Mosley and quartet, W. S. Goodfel- low, Dr. A. K. Crawford, Hon. Henry Melvin 'and Lowell Redfield. Bishop William Ford Nichols will con- duct the morning services at Trinity Episcopal Church and will confirm a large class. The baptismal and chil- dren's festival will be held in the after- noon, and an elaborate music service has been arranged for the evening. The Rev. Raymond C. Brooks, pastor of the Pilgrim Congregational Church, will conduct the morning service, and there will be special music by an aug- mented choir in the evening. At the Market-street Congregational | Church the regular morning services will be conducted by the pastor, Rev. Grifith Griffiths, with special music in the evening. Special Easter music will be sung by an augmented choir at the ¢ Second | Byron of that city, to the State Board Congregational Church in the morning, | of Education. The State board was re- and in the evening Easter exercises will | quested to receive the charges and take be held for the Sunday-school. An Easter. sunrise service for all de- choir. Special Easter music will be rendered | State board, which could be revoked hyi at the morning service of the Centennial | no ut‘\:‘u authority than that which is- Presbyterian Church. There will be special music at the First Unitarian Church, with a reception | of members into fellowship in the morn- ing, and the Easter exercises of the Sunday-school will be held in the after- noon. S w The members of Oakland Command- ery, Knights Templar, will attend the Easter services at the Brooklyn -Pres- byterian Church in a body tomorrow evening. gramme has been arranged for vice, A, % SAY MACHINES | resented by the Wall family of Alameda | Mrs. Leila Barlow, | r, 49, and 49, both of San Francisco; s A Dbeautiful mullulm p;:: S “Pancsco, ana Asua “fl'“‘ C ARE ILLEGAL Alameda’s City Attorney and Other Counsel File Report Against the Slot Devices VIOLATE THE STATUTES Proposed Ordinance to Li- cense the Contrivances Appears to Be Doomed ALAMEDA, April 14—City Attorney M. W. Simpson holds that the slot ma- chines in the saloons and cigar stores of this city are being operated in vio- lation of the law. His opinion, sub- mitted to the City Trustees, follows: “Gentlemen: Referring to the matter of the legality of slot machines, upon which you request my advice, I beg | leave to report the following: “Section 320 of the Penal Code of Cal- ifornia provides that every person who deals, plays or carries on, opens, or causes to be opened, or who conducts, either as owner or employe, whether for hire or not, any game of faro, monte, roulette, lansquenet, rcuge et noir, rondo, tan, fantan, studhorse poker, seven and a half, twenty-one, hokey pokey, or any banking-or per- centage game played with cards, dice or any device, for money, checks, credit or other representative of value, and every person who plays or bets at or against .any of the same - prohibited games, is guilty of a misdemeanor. “Considering the subject it will be necessary to assume the manner of operating slot machines, which I do in the following: “Nickels or other coins are’placed in the machines by the player, which per- mit the same to be operated or played, and upon the hazard or chance of the play the player either wins or loses, and if he wins he receives checks, cigars. money or other representative of value which are paid by the person owning or conducting the machine. Whether or not the acts described are unlawful de- pends_simply upon a fair construction of the law which I have quoted. “My opinion is that a slot machine operated under the supposed conditions constitutes a banking game played with a device for money, checks, credit or other representative of value and that its operation unde: luch condi- tions is forbidden by law. Attorney Charles C. Boynton has ad- dressed a communication to. the City Trustees, in which he holds that the lo- cal ordinance imposing a license tax of $10 a year on slot machines is illegal and that the gambling contrivances are being operated in vialation of section 330 of the Penal Code. In his letter Boynton says in part: “While we should go after the di- rect- violators of the law, we should likewise take a hand in anything: that might be construed as giving them en- couragement to violate the law,. and that if- we are as a city going to permit to stand on: our book of ordinances clause.or sentence in spirit so signifi- eantly encouraging to a certain char- acter of gambling lawbreakers, we should neither be surprised nor loud in our regrets that gambling existed and flourished In our city.” City Trustee Gorham has introduced an ordinance to place a license tax of $100 a year on slot machines, but in view of the opinion-of City Attorney Simpson this measure will probably be laid over Monday night and a movement inaugurated to abolish the machines in this city. MANCHER SLA T H THBLE CHEYENNE, Wyo., April 14.—John Boyle, one of the best known ranchmen in this section, was assassinated last night as he sat at supper at the Ketchum ranch, twenty-five miles south- east of Cheyenne and just off the line in ‘Weild County, Colorado. . News of the murder was brought to Cheyenne by Willlam Ketchum. Boyle, Ketchum and James Cassidy, a cowboy, were seated at the supper table, Boyle facing a window. Ketchum and Cassidy heard the sharp report of a rifle and saw Boyle settle in his chair. When he did not stir they sprang to his side and found that he had been killed by a bullet which entered his body just over the heart. A hole In the window pane explained the entrance of the missile. Cassidy and Ketchum rushed outside and both heard the rataplan of two horses galloping along the canyon in which the ranch is situated. They got their rifles and pursued, but were distanced and lost their way trying to follow the trail in the darkness. Cassidy took care of the body of Boyle, while Ketcham rode to | Cheyenne to give the alarm. Four years ago some one put poison in Boyle’s food and nearly Kkilled him. The murder was similar to those in the days of Tom Horn. | ———— NOLIN CISE 5 REFERRED SANTA ROSA, April 14—The Sonoma | County Board of Education today re- | ferred the charges made by Mrs. Jennie Nichois of San Francisco against Prin- cipal Walter C. Neolan of the Sonoma city schools and a member of the county board, based on statements of Dr. W. E. Principal Nolan desired to have a pub- | nominations will be held at the Twenty- | lie hearing here, where all parties reside, third Avenue Baptist Church, at Wwhich | but the county board decided that it had there will be special music by a large | no jurisdiction owing to the fact that he . such action as may seem proper. held a State lifo diploma issued by the MARRIAGE LICENSES.—Oakland, April 14.—The following marriage lcenses were is- sued today: Daniel W. mua;o,. and Sarah ?wy !Lamh of orge N. Hefn, 3 E. Taylor, 24" both of San r ; Joseph S. Duarte, 29, and Annic C. Goularte, 18, both of San dro; Mangel ' A Elbey 5 €. Joseph, 21, Qakland; Richard H. nd | zle. 20, both of Oakland: Willfam A. | 18 of STANFORD STUDENT WHO IS TO TAKE PART IN COMING SHAKE- SPEAREAN PRODUCTION. 5 AGED WOMAN STEAL TO APPEASE HUNGER Sick and starving, aged Mrs. Louise Alic, a French Canadian, aged 72, turned | shoplifter yesterday and was caught in the act. The woman arrived here Friday from Montreal and yesterday found her- self alone and penniless. She spent her first night In the city, wandering about the streets. pangs of hunger keenly. She had not a friend here to whom she could apply for aid and 'she could talk but little Eng! In her broken French Mrs. Alie tried to attract the sympathy of passers by on Market street, but no one would listen to her. Then she became desperate. She en- tered Hale Bres.' store and-watching her chance snatched a satchel from a counter and managed to escape without being de- tected. Made bold by the success of her first theft, the old woman decided that she would steal enough to keep her from starving until she could find work. -Hun- ger had destroyed what moral senseé she had. She went into a 15-cent store and took a number of small toilet articles, which she stuffed into the satchel. A clerk saw her this time and Special Policeman O. S. Neil was called. The aged thief was taken to the City Hall station, where she was booked charges of petty larceny. Mrs. Alic pro- tests that this is her first offense. “I did it because I was starving, e says. “I did not know a soul here. No one would help me and I was so hungry. 1 intended to sell the stuff to buy food. I came from Montreal because I was told that I could find work here. I have not a relative in all the world.” ———— New High School Is, Dedieated. SANTA CRUZ, April 4.—The new high school building at Boulder Creek was dedicated this afternoon with appropriate ceremony. The principal address was de- livered by Superintendent of Schools J. ‘W. Linscott. In the morning she felt the | on two | BOUT THE BAY —— WILL PRODUCE OLD PLAY BY | BARD OF AVON Stanford Students Give Shakespearean Revrval. o SPECIAL DISPATCH TO THE CALL. STANFORD UNIVERSITY. April 14 The Sword and Sandals Soclety of Stanford University will make its inf- tial bow in Shakespearean plays next Friday. pight, when. it will present “Two , Gentlemen of. Verona.™ The performance will be given on ‘the eve of the.intercollegiate track meet and the ~proceeds will- be turned over to the varsity band to defray the expenses incurred through the purchase of new uniforms for the organization last year. In attempting the successful produc- jtion of Shakespearean works the local | soclety’ Is taking a lengthy stride in the way of advancement. The play selected has been eliminated from the professional stage of the Pacific Coast for the last twenty-six years. Members of the Varsity Glee Club will assist in the serenade Scene. James C. Ray 07 has the part of Pro- | teus, and on him perhaps devolves the | heaviest work'of any member of the cast. Ray made his first appearance on the Stanford stage as Sir Anthony Ab- solute -in the 1507 sophomore comedy. “The Rivals.” He also appeared as® Prince Charming in “Princess Enone,” | last year’s junior opera. | To Ernest R. May and Roy Kbellogs have fallen the parts, respeetively, of Launce and Speed. May first appeared in | “Knight of the Burning Pestle’” three | years ago. Kellogg was Bob Acves in “The Rivals.” He also appeared in the 1%6 junior farce, “The Beauty .Shop.” | ana this year’s junior farce. Dudley D. Sales, the varsity baseball eaptain, will have the part of Valentine. Sales ap= peared in “David Garrick,” the 1906 sopho~ more play, and in the boat club farce, “All Tangled Up.” Miss Nora K. Dunn will play the part of Sylvia. She had the part of Connie Pell in the senior farce of last spring. Julla, the “ardent, faithful and constant,” will be taken by Miss A. Eillerbeck. Miss Elizabeth S. Officer will appear as Lu- cetta. The cast is as follows: Duke of Milan, father of Sylvia, J. E. Stewart; Valentine and Proteus, gentlemen of Verona, D. D. Sales and J. C. Ray; Antonlo, father of Proteus, J. McC. Ward; Thurio, a foolish rival of Valentine, H. H. Bernard; Egla- mour, agent for Sylvia in her escape. J. MecC. Ward; Speed, a clownish servant of Valentine, R. S. Kellogg: Launce, servant to Proteus, E. R. May; Panthino, servant to Antonto, R. S. Kellogg: first, second and third outiaws with Valentine, W. H. Walker, E. J. Swift and M. A. Gunst; Julla, a lady of Verona, beloved of Pro- teus, Miss A. Ellerbeck; Sylvia, beloved of Valentine, Miss N. K. Dunn: Lucetta, waiting woman to Julia, Miss E. 8. Of- ficer. —_————— EBELL HALL PLANS. OAKLAND, April 14—Plans for the Ebell Society’s new hall to be erected on Harrison street, near Fourteenth, show an exterfor in old English de- sign. Clinker bricks and shingles will be used for the outer embellishménts, with plaster and half timbering from secorid story to roof. The three floors will provide library. reception-room, committee and dressing rooms and a banquet hall, section rooms, an audito- rium, musie, art and tea rooms and other accessories. e BALL PARK FOR ALAMEDA. | ALAMEDA, April 14—L. W. Schro- der Jr., manager of the Alameda base- | ball club in the California State League, { has been granted permission by the City Trustees to establish a baseball park at the corner of Eagle avenue and Sherman street. ————————— SAYS SPOUSE IS SHIFTLESS.—Oakland, April 14.—Suit for divorce was brought today by Margaret Heist against Adam Heist, who, she asserts, on account of his shiftleseness, has falled to supply her with the necessaries of life. He is now in Kentucky, where they Were married twenty-five years ago. —_—e————— MUST STAY IN JAIL.—Oakland. April 14 The petition of Albert C. McDonald, who re- cently shot Joseph Mello at Pleasanton, for the writ of habeas corpus was denied today by Judge Melvin. ADVERTISEMENTS. Get What You Ask For! HERE is a Reason— Why the Good People of America buy Cascarets as Every sécond some one, somewhers, is Buying a little Ten—Cent Box of Cas- carets. 1,2, 3, 4,5, 6—60 times to the Minute, 60 Minutes to the Hour, 3600 Boxes an Hour, 36,000 Boxes a Day of Ten Hours, 1,080,000 Boxes a Month, and then some. Think of it—220,000 People take a Cascaret tablet each day. Millions use Cascarets when necessary. ‘Tho Judgment of Millions of Bright Americansis Infallible. They have been Buying and Taking Cascarets at that rate for over Six years. 1t is not an Experiment, not an Acci~ 4 true, faithful, loyal servant of Mankind, . Over Five Millions of Dollars have been Spent to make the merits of Cas- carets known, and every cent of it would be lost, did not sound merit claim and hold the constant, continued friendship, Patronage and Endorsement of well pleased people year after year. P S There is also a Reason— Why there are Parasites who attach themselves to the Healthy Body of Cas~ caret's success—Imitators, Counterreiters, Substitutors. . They are Trade Thieves who would rob Cascarets of the “Good Will” of the people, and sneak unearned profits, earned and paid for by Cascarets. A Dishonest Purpose means a Dishonest dent or Incident, but a sound, Honest Business, batd on Time-Tried-and-Tested Merit, never found wanting. There is a Reason. A Cascarets are the Implacable foe of All- Disease Germs; the incomparable - | cleanser, purifier arid strengthener of the entire Digestive Canal. . They Act Jike Exercise on the Bowel- Muscles, make them strong and active— able to Help Themselves do their work— keep themselves clean. . ‘Cascarets are the safe-guard of Innocent Childhood against the Dreadful Death- of the Liftle Ones. : They are Purély Vegetable, absolutely Harmiess, always Reliable and Efficient, Product and a Disregard f the Purchas- ers’ Health or Welfare. Beware of the Slick Salesman and his ancient “Just as Good™ story that com- moezfls:se refutes, ¢is are made only by the Remedy Company, and d:'hmo\n Tittle Ten Cent “Vest Pocket” box is here’ shown. They are neyer sold in bulk. Every tablet marked “CCC." Be sure you get the genuine. BT A ™ FREE TO OUR isa stamps is 3 'fi’“&gfiafi