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Oakland Tribune from Oakland, California • Page 27

Publication:
Oakland Tribunei
Location:
Oakland, California
Issue Date:
Page:
27
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1 InThiSvSectioM DAILY FEATURE MAGAZINE RADIO PROGRAMS VOLUME CIV OAKLAND, CALIFORNIA, FRIDAY EVENING, MARCH 12, 1926 27 NO. 71 SCHOOL VOTE TRAFFIC 1 Lasssa Fresno Solon Flays Author In History Row 'When We Get Our "We'll raise prize roses," GEORGE W. BRUSSEAU, for 13 years a "hermit's companion," speaks for himself and JIM. his pal. as well as his plow horse.

Brusseau expects to get the $50,000 as the result of his friendship for Charles Kruse, re cluse, who died three years ago. leaving a scrap of paper which appears to deed his 10-acre estate to Brusseau. Brusseau' home, with its decoration of tanned skins, is familiar to Oakland autoists. RULING TO CUT CITY Rupert Hughes Scored for TTUJVIAN inventions seem to go by the law of accelerated 1 velocity. Countless ages men lived on earth before Thales of Miletus conducted the first experiments in magnetism, and then nearly two and a half thousand years before the first suggestion was made, in 1753, to apply them to use for telegraphy.

Even then, it was over eighty years unt.il the first practical telegraph apparatus, in 1835, and over forty more to the first telephone, in 1876. Then forty more, to the first transcontinental telephone message, in 1916; but only ten years from that until, His Utterances About George Washington. THOUSANDS on the iittieth anniversary of Webb Decision on Point of Law Slashes Ballot Roll of Elections March 26; Oakland Is Not Affected MODESTO, Marcn 12. Senator M. B.

Harris of Fresno scored Rupert Hughes, novelist, for his attacks on George Washington's tem-perence, in an address before the Exchange club yesterday, declaring that Hughes' assertions that the first president of the United States never went to church "are utterly false." "Washington not onlv attended the tirst telephone, men spoke easily and audibly, across the Atlantic, through the air, without wires. Improvement in the past few years has gone at such dizzy epeed that only the young boys have been able to keep up with it. First official steps towards the creation of an 80-foot cross-town traffic artery along Hopkins street and Calaveras avenue were taken by the city council today with the passage of an ordinance of intention and the adoption 'of an assessment district map. The project will link up with, the" proposed opening and widening of Twenty-second street from the western waterfront to Grand 'avenue, and will provide a main traffic artery from the bay to-Uhs eastern limits of the city. The ordinance provides or widening of portions of Hopkins street, Calaveras avenue, Fifty-fifth avenue, Camden street, Seminar avenue and Trenor street.

It also provides for widening of portions of Hopkins street, Calaveras avenue. Fifty-fifth avenue, Catm-den street. Seminary avenue, Trenor street. A ruling by State Attorney Gen- pathy to spare, do not waste It on the college pornographists, who find their publications periodically suppressed. They are enjoying it.

I 'HE League is already scrap-I ped," said Candidate Hard-Ing, Justifying the proposal (which President Harding promptly and properly forgot) of setting up some new sort of "Association of Nations" on the League's ruins. Well; what is the most important organization in the world today? To Judge by the space which newspaper editors give it on their front pages, evidently it is the League of Nations. The most interesting dispute in the world is eral S. Webb on a technical church but ran a lottery to get sufficient funds to build a church," said Harris. "This was common practice in those davs." he de point of law is expected to disfranchise thousands of voters from participating In the elections for clared, "as there were no taxes." school trustees to be held inrarious parts of Alameda county on TOURIST A PRISONER.

LONDON. Howard Rullman of Marcn 26. vvebb, in his ruling, a copy of A RCHAEOLOGISTS, digging J- UP the relics of the past, find that moib Improvements have come suddenly. Through whole geologic ages men made ehlpped stone weapons. Then, all once, began to polish them, to make tools for finer purposes, nd to paint really good pictures on the cave walls.

Then nothing Jnore happened for perhaps twenty thousand years, when, as suddenly, the bronze age and ordered New Orleans, a tourist, was accidentally locked in one of the dungeons of the Tower of London for wnicn was received by District At the question who shall be admitted torney. Earl Warren today, holds that such elections do not come several hours. to the League Council. The most within the scope provided by law critical problem in every erovern- wnereoy me are or the great reg ment except ours is its relation to ister Is extended to Include all the League, and the very preservation of the pact of Locarno, the special and general elections held within ninety days after expiration or tne register on January 1. Under Webb's ruling, only those who have registered since January i and previous to February 24 last worm only assurance of peace, depends on League action.

As a few men at Geneva decide so shall the world complete a common organization, with Western civilization as its center, or else divide into two and prepare for the next world war, of which America, by virtue of its location, would be the Belgium. The Redfern Corselette is a marvelous new garment for large figures. may vote on March 26. The ruling does not affect schoo bond elections. Warren said.

civilization appeared, and after it Iron and letters and the beginnings of recorded history. The explanation has always been that some new race, which had gone elsewhere through the slow process of development, invaded the Country, where the relics are found and displaced the" more primitive original inhabitants. But that is not what has usually happened since records began to be kept. It did happen in America, but generally, civilization and inventions have come suddenly, in a people long established, and con Oakland, Berkeley and Alameda are not effected by the ruling as no election for school trustees is Evidently the League is a serious scheduled in these cities. reality, at least.

According to Registrar of Voters Jacob Dimond, none of the resi EXT to William Hale Thomp N1 son's bloviatlons in Chicago, about the time when thn dents of Mt. Eden or Redwood school districts registered during the' specified period this year and therefore, there can be no election quests have more'often overthrown than introduced civilizations. We are in such a period now Men who remembered the hand made world lived to see the rail in these districts on March 26. The total vote cast in Piedmont This Corselette is a perfect solution for the problem of most large women. The back is one unbroken, well-boned section of bro road, the steamboat, the factory.

San Leandro, Hayward, Albany and other districts on March 26 may he materially reduced as a result of tne telegraph and telephone, and the electric light, with all fheii Transformations of human living One lifetime, at the critical pe World Court, by the seven votes of England, will command America to repeal Its tariff and lower its wages, commend us to some of the senatorial explosions on the prohibition question. If this is the sort of thing the American people are going to be served by their ostensible leaders, how are they going to get the material on which to an Judgment Senator Borah put the one sound anchorage "into the Senate debate by pointing out that none of the measures proposed was within the the ruling, it is believed. BRIDE, 15, ASKS DIVORCE. Mrs. Katherine Prieta, 15, today riods of the world's growth, has covered more change than a.

thou petitioned the superior court for cade which flattens and pre a divorce from Franlt Prieta, 21, sand years at other "times. Ve are fortunate in living at the dizziest of all those times. also known as Eusebio Prieta. They were married November 14, last year, and separated last Tues a. time when artists think day, the day after Prieta struck fN her, she says, and threatened tr ugliness preferable to beaut disgrace her name.

Mrs. Prieta in a picture, and musicians vie says her husband has boasted of fie kb Mmmmk I his affairs with other girls. I'ower of ongress to pass, unless the Constitution was first amended to authorize such action. To which Senator Edwards thought it a sufficient reily to charge that bootleggers were contributing to the Anti-Saloon League. When vents, any break.

The brassiere top is made of soft lustrous swami which fits down over a diaphragm reinforcement, assuring perfect control in combination with unusual comfort. The broad elastic section at the hip is a pleasing feature. asked for his evidence, he said: "I don't need any; it is self-evident." with each other in rasping dissonances, it is perhaps not strange that certain college youth who think themselves literary should Imagine that repulsive and obscene realism the mark of literary art. It is a' cheap "boldness" and a counterfeit "freedom" that may appeal to those who have not yet risen to the real thing. No form of defiance is so easy as flouting the taboos.

And no form of martyrdom so feeds immature egotism as "Buffering" under the imposition of the established rules of decency. What would you do if you should nherit $50.000 "I'd take it and grow another SILSTC TEACHER PAROLED. John Jelllia. Hawaiian music teacher. accused of selling a ukulele had been loaned hiin.

appeared before Judge Edward J. Tyrrell this morning to answer to a charge of misdemeanor embezzlement. Tyrrell placed Jelllia on probation. KANSAS LUMBERMAN DIES. WICHITA, March 12.

(P) CONTRACTOR ARRESTED. LODI. March 12. Jacob rose." Tschritter, a contractor, "was ar rested by Traffic Officer C. O.

Perhaps you wouldn't, but that's what George W. Brusseau would do. His home at 3200 Edith street. Jackson on a charge of damaging the highway by running a tractor and two disc harrows over the highway for a distance of several Alexander G. Houston, 67, prom with its decoration of skins of wild inent lumberman of the south Nevertheless, if you have sum-' blocks.

west, died here today. cats and other wild animals, has attracted he attention of hundred of bav district suto tourists in the Pol la ost dozen years. Brusseau thinks his $50,000 days r's are not far off. Then he'll go to work at his hobby of raising roses in hopes of Arthur Ramage C6. 1311 WASHINGTON ST.

specialty sliqp Itv sn "GO AND GET IT." produrln a duplicate of the one for which the late Senator James LONDON. "Go out and make DELfflCEILEFT 484 Thirteenth Street, near Washington (j. Fair, railroad and mining mag your own fortune," was the message left to his three sons by Isaac rate, paid half a hundred dollars. Brusseau lives in a cottage who willed his wealth to I I' Nathan. known to motorists on Edith street charity.

in the Moraga foothills as the "Bat 200 ESTATE House" because of the numbers of anlimal skins which have been tanned end nailed to the outsid walls, jie has a two-acre tract of his own which he farms with the John D. De Lancey, retired shoe of Jimmy, his faithful plow merchant and father of Attorneys norse, and also has a large kennel Clarence A. DeLancey and John or dogs, which help to keep hlrn com pany. P. DeLancey, left an estate Restoration of the rose gardens $200,000, It was estimated today with filing of the will for probate De Lancey died on March 5, at the age of 73 years.

wnicn Drought fame to his hermit friend. ChHrles Kruse, and to Oakland twenty years ago when Fair purchased blooms at fabulous ri-es. Is Rrusseau's plan. Brusseau expects the supreme court to award him 10 acres of land left him in a "deed-will" by The widow, Mrs. Susan De Lan Fashion Park Suits, $45 New Blues in Fancy Weaves Such as Invisible Herringbone.

Diamond Weaves and Fancy Diagonals Also Many Styles at $35 cey, Z712 Market street. Is willed the home, another niece of prop erty at 825 Sycamore street and Kruse three years ago. the income from the Barstow hotel, San Diego. The six children and one grandchild. Richard De Lancey, 371A Hawthorne avenue who Is the child of a deceased son.

Wife Gone, Man Prefers Death SACRAMENTO. March 12. VP) Grieving isrer the loss of his wife, who only a few 'minutes before entrained for Denver and her Frank, receive equal portions of the hotel upon death of the mother. and share the residue of the estate. The children are the two Oak land attorneys; Clinton of Pass And April 4th It Easter dena.

Dr. Herbert 45 Lenox mother's home, taking with her their five-year-old son. Ralph K. Bucher. 2H years old.

a salesman, ended his life by taking poison. Mrs. Bucher had separated from him more than a month go. avenue. Dr.

Chester Kan An eImo, and Mrs. Genesta Weatover, Sunday New Rocheile, N. 1 Sample Line of LAST DAY OF GRAND OPENING A i. If Hat or Cap With Every Garment FREE IN SAUTERNE KID Winner nm-etrepi. Boa de Roue ad trimmed on toe end heel and mmSar model fray ft Cuhon oyjd high Swim ktoU IN GRAY KID Light grey teith "Cochatoo" e-pKqo mnd 5tfiu heels of V(ef jrey mmilar mod tit in parch tnent ortd French blonde: ftep mi end dainty ttrep effect: Cw Ixm ond 5uus heel.

0.50 Star Shirts $1.85 and $2.65 TogrtW with hirU talcen from our regular stock, formerly priced from $3.00 to $5.00. Some of the samples would sell for more. Every shirt is desirable and is made by America's best shirt maker. Many imported shirtings arc is this lot Keck baod. collar to natch aad coCar attached arc ia the The Easiest Terms in Oakland Nothing Down I sat OPAL GRAY KID SIX MONTHS TO PAY I SmtrCg bvrentd owas front aUraV smkA of grmf LLxard tdU fonringjh nrm Poris tonfm effect: mrJ lots of moo aWeZi mPUl trvmneJ ilh colored kid.

akHotar na Hzord eUH ot lot Sixes 14-1 iyx. Spring Styles that are different Ycu'U be sure to find juil the anil or topcoat iron afarrf in our larft nttt sfor. nrfr.Mi4f mm Ksdo -Ordr, $34-' Better Clot he for if en Pajamas KTIJC WKV SMtrai Special Women' Holeproof Hose $1.00 Cuarsnteed Pure Thread Sul New Spring Colors. Sires 0 to 0V2. $1.85, $2.35 PUis) colors aad fancy psRrrm.

S28 FOURTEENTH ST, OAKLAND nd in Saa Fraaciac rttm em htirtij art.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1874-2016