The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 16, 1901, Page 14

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1901. Al LE SAM Ak 1 Canal Case in Circuit Court. i S ot of Other Colonels Heuer corps of th within the iines ot tidal canal e United tes Cirewit presented by for United B that resi- all de are has neve emnation LLIAM NAT FRIEND INS REGULAR PASTORATE y Called to the First Church at Golden, Colo. 15.—Rev. Po: William Nat W. H hs, and s corbe in the re town that matter ever held in here was the Students, ity life. gs College of Princeton and ( first regular —_—————————— gs Wins Debate. Nov. 15.— h annual | v and Hugh ss R. B. Deutsch n the negative. The 1 George C. Edwards, 8. Golden. A large ended the debate. ————————— end Money Disappear. Y, Nov. 15 —A serving wom- W. Rideout of 1629 1ing without me a purse to Mrs, ross the . Fifield. The funeral of this afternoon mily residence e many present and handsome. 1cf W. H. pk the Th B T . ert Harrison, Olney, W. W. Jast night aiternoo J. Lange, the pastor ¢ will perform the ceremc Theiss «f Oakland will preach in v. J. H. Witte in English. ation South Berkeley hall for some Foote. a8 . Foote for five framed virthplace of Shakespeare The Navy Depart- 1 acceptance of the _Burglars broke into nk at Manasquan, N rried away $4600 Nov. 15.—All the dele- Congress except Mr. ates left on an ex- 2 end other southern pointe 15.—Sir Henry ario, Nov as Administrator sworn in c This is the first n has served in*that capacity. commander of the British forces acted in the absence of the ost guards at every country iscate all the matches found n alleged intru- | to him, | e was absolutely | bas been holding ser- | e Board of Free | assed a resolution | absence of Lord 'MAKES A HIT KING WITH OF CAMBODIA Dentist, Who Is a Gra of California, Trav pair and Pull Mo Cuate of the University els 1000 Miles to Re- lars of Royal Sufferer | GRADUATE OF UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA DENTAL DEPART- MENT WHO REPATRED TEETH OF CAMBODIA'S KING. -+ AKLANDY? Nov. 15.—Dentist to the King of Cambodia—that is the § office which an Oakland boy, an alumnus of the University of California, was recently commis- | sioned to fill. Dr. Paul T. Carrington is e name of the physician who was part nd parcel of the retinue of an Eastern | potentate, and he is a son of the Rev. John Carrington of Siam and Mrs. S. E. Carrington of 1265 Castro street, Oalk- {1and. He filled the office and the King's | teeth to such a nicety that he came away | under a shower of ecommendations and | with a medal on his breast. Since h aduation from the State University in 1897 Dr. Carrington has been | practicing dentistry in Bangkok, the cap- | ital of Siam, where he was born twent | five vears ago. American dentistry is | away ahead of anything.else in the far 2ast, and the doctor's services have been | mostly required by princes and princesses during his residence there. He has an | office in a fdncy building on the King's | pighway, which an imperial edict de- | mands shall be kept aflutter with flags {all the time. | _ Recently King baving heard of can dentist and »out his feats Noradome of Cambodia, the fame of the Ameri- read in the papers all of painless extractio bi ador to make o arrington. These nego arried on amid an extrava- n, ro ires | tions gant unwinding of red tape, at last reach- ing accomplishment with prepayment into were the h of the United States Minister of the fee agreed upon. King Noradome Suffers Much. Penom Penh, the capital of Cambodina, {is 1000 miles from Bangkok. It took Dr. | Carrington, accomy bis brother, Bartine Carrington ys to get there hree deys by steamer on the Gulf of m and two days on the river. Dr. Car- { rington found ing Norodome sufferin { immensely from aching molars. His Ma- | jesty’s household was in of grea | agitation. The King w: able” and | the servants hung on his words, fearful | of his wrath. They had tried every means | to alleviate his shooting The French and the Chinese entists had failed in their attempts to supply him with imitation teeth. Those fitted by the Frenchman were held with a lot of springs, so that when the royal sufferer taiked they bounded out of his mouth or sometimes held his jaws so he could not close them. Those furnished by the Chi- en were composed of ivory from the | tusks of the elephants, and they wobbled THINKS DRUGS CAUSED HIS SON’S DEATH Derman E. Noggle Explains Circum- stances Surrounding the Case of His Unfortunate Boy. KLAND, Nov. 15.—The remains of B. who committed suicide at on Wednesday, have n shipped to this city, which was the voung man’s home. Dorman E. Noggle, rcceiving clerk at the United States nch Mint in San Francisco, the un- foriunate suicide’s father, is much di tressed because of reports that the deed sed by his failure to send money to his absent son. On the contrary, Noggle had supplied the young man with meney, and ‘on the day_he ended his life had sent him a draft. It is believed that voung Noggle's deed was brought about by mental aberration due to the use of drugs, to which he became addicted after. taking them for medicinal purposes. | “The funeral will be held Sunday after- noon at 2 oclock from Brown’s pariors, Thirteenth street, near Broadway. —_—————————— Dairy Students Organize. BERKELEY, Nov. 15.—The studenis taking the dairy course at the University of California have formed an association to advance scientific research in the study they are pursuing. An attempt will be | made to maintain the ofganization pei- manently with the view of forming an association of dairymen throughout the | State s soon as graduates leave the | school to enter practical dairying. Officers bave been elected as follows: Presider O. L. Cocke; vice president, H. E, Bing ham; secretary, R. Stenhouse; treasurer. J. H. McCorkie. There are at present two en and thirty-five men taking the Besides theoretical study ke butter and cheese % pounds of milk week- {1y, using the latest dairying apparatus. bout a term’s work is required to com- | plete the course. { R T, German Troops Assault Chinese. | SHANGHAI, Nov. 15—The disorderly | conduct of the German troops is causing much trouble. Recently there have been | numerous cases of assault upon the Chi- | nese police, which the German officers ‘e a Tight in this dry [Seem powerless to prevent. —_—————— One-half the world smiles at the frowns of the other half, 5 Mr. | 50 much that they gave the King a_lan- tern-jawed aspect. They also tied the King’s head up in poultices to reduce the swelling, but these only succeeded in making the martyr monarch the harder to_get along with. Dr. Carrington’s first duty was to re- move all of King Noradome's aching teeth —a feat which gave his Royal Highness a great deal of pleasure. The few that were left Le drilled and filled with gold and the vacant places ‘he supplied with false molars and incisors. He also sup- plied him with black substitutes. The white teeth the King exhibits when he is in the company of white people, but when he gets among his own race he changes them to black. It is part of the religion of the Cambodians to wear sable teeth. That is why they chew the betel nut con- stantly. Use of the nut from childhood puts a polish on the tecth like burnished ebony. but it also destroys the gums, and half the population is toothless before it is years old. During Dr. Carrington's professional visit he was the guest of King Noradome in his palace. He was pretty much of a king himself and when his employer be- gan to feel a little better they used to go driving together in the royal coach and our. The King was very much impressed with Dr. Carrington’s brother and wanted to retain him as his private secretary, but business engagements prevented. At the end of two months Dr. Carrington's mission was fulfilled. Just before his de- parture King Noradome gave a feast and theatrical performance in his honor, when there were great things going on. Ths King wept on the doctor's neck and pre- sented him with a badge resembling the emblem of the French Legion of Honor, which he now wears on his breast. Bach of the brothers was given a golden cigar holder at this royal entertainment and thar vely for their many kind- nesses. Writing to his mother of the methods employed by Chinese, who up to a few years ago were the only dentists of the Orient, Dr. Carrington says that they are mcest crude, though ingenious, and the sufferings of the patient are mgst intense. He says further: ambodians are very fond of short, even d will suffer much to have them so, although nature seems to have intended other- wise, . For this operation the patient is placed in a reclining position, a small block of wood being vsed as a bite block. The operator then proceeds with a coarse —mechanic’s flle to shorten the anterior teeth, apparently not be- ing particular about wounding the patient's mouth. If the teeth prove to be too hard for the fle a saw is then used and with painful destruction of the teeth and soft parts. The operator knows nothing about nerves, but sim- ply_thinks of the 30 cents (Mexican) which fs 1o be his fee for the operation—if satisfactory to the patient. This minor operation is com- pleted in about two hours. Regardless the Cambodians endure this operation, while they shrink from the extraction of a loose tooth. Dr. Carrington is still a member of King Noradome’s staff and he is under contract to again travel the expanse of 1000 miles whenever his Majesty's teeth begin to ache too hard. The teeth e e e e e e ) %PARTIES TO VENDETTA APPEAR IN COURT George and Mike Caldarella and - George Orlando Have Cases Continued. . Three of the participants in the vendet- | ta between rival factions of the Caldarella family appeared in Judge Cabaniss’ court | yesterday on_ the charge of assault to murder. They were George and Mike Cal- | darella and George Orlando, brother-in- | law of the other two defendants. When the cases were called Attorney | Caldwell for the defendants asked for a | continuance and the Judge continued the cases till next Wednesday morning. A | large number of relatives and friends of | the defendants were in court. | _The condition of Frank Caldarella, who | was shot by the boy George Caldarella, is very uncertain and the physicians af | the Recci\'!rllzg Hospital are doufitful of his recovery. rank Manginl, who started | the “shooting at the Roylance Brass | Works, is still at large, but the police ex- { pect to have him under asrest soon. Po. | liceman Mackay, at whom t: v | fired, 15 on nis trail. i —_——————— | To Hold Annual Debate. BERKELEY, Nov. 15.—lhe %ixth an- nual debate between the Students™ Con. gress of the University of California and the Hastings College of Law will be held to-night .in Stiles Hall. The ques- tion for debate is, ‘‘Resolved, that the Enilcy of disfranchising the negro in the outh is wise,” with the proviso that the constitutionality of the measure is not t, be considered. The congress will speak for the affirmative and the law cofiese for the negative. Speakers have been s¢. lected as follow: Students’ Congress— R. 8. Pierce, L. E. Martin and Monroe E Deutsch. Law College—Walter Rothchild, J. L. Kennedy and Hugh O'Neill. The judges will be Colonel George C. Ed- | wards, Joseph T. O'Conner and 8. Golden. T Bitten by a Rattlesnake, SAN DIEGO, Nov. 15.—J. E. Reilly was bitten by a rattlesnake near La Jolla to- day and was brought to the County Hos- pital here for treatment. It was atirst thought that he would not live to reach the city. The bite was on the hand and that member and his arm were enormous- ly swollen. The report from the hospital to-night, however, is that he will prob- ably recover. y TRAEL THROUGH DAIFTS OF SNOW Hard Journey With Bod- ies of W. C. Giles and Wife. Sixteen Miners Carry Their Charred Remains Over Trails, Oakland Office San Francisco Call, 1118 Broadway, Noy. 15. Through deep snowdrifts and over rough mountain traiis sixteen men carried the charred bodies of Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Giles from the scene of the unfortunate fatality at the Dingee mines to the rail- road station at Cisco, fifteen miles dis- tant. The party arrived there this after- noon in charge of Bdward McGary, sec- retary of the Contra Costa Water Com- pany and an intimate friend of Mr. and Mrs. Giles. At Cisco the bodies were shipped to this city, arriving here late to-night. The journey out from the mines was fraught with much difficulty. The miners had to plow through the drifts and by sheer strength pack the heavy boxes which formed the temporary caskets containing the unrecognizable remains of the mine superintendent and his wife, who met so frightful a death. ’fi.ne road from the mine was little more than a mountain trail, rendered the more unsafe because of the piling snow. It was a journey of many hours, but thanks to the sturdy men who had volunteered their services, it was accomplished without ac- cident. Friends of the deceased couple had made all arrangements for the funeral services, which will be held at 11 o'clock | to-morrow morning from the parlors of Henry Kvers, Washington street, near | Seventh. The Rev. E. R. Dille, pastor of the First Methodist Church, will officiate. The interment will be in Mountain View Cemetery. EORCES CORONER TO TAKE CHARGE OF CASE| Health Department Secures Investi- gation Into Causes of a ‘Woman’s Death. OAKLAND, Nov. 15.—Because of a re- port that suspicious circumstances sur- rounded thg death of Mrs. Mary E. Van ve the Health Department refused to issue a burial permit until an autopsy had been held under direction of the Cor- oner. A certificate of death had been signed by Dr. J. C. Stout, who attended Mrs. Van Wye, and the cause of death there set forth had been indorsed by Dr. John Fearn, who assisted during the wo- man’s last illness. The postmortem ex- amination verified the physicians* declara- | ticns and set at rest the réports which | reached the Health Office. The action of the Health Department forces Coroner Mehrmann to hold an in- quest, but the burial permit was issued this morning after that officlal had re- | ported the result of the autopsy. The funeral services, which it had been feared would be interfered with because of the Health Department’s action, were regularly conducted this morning from Trirteenth-street parlors, the Rev. J. K. McLean officiating. Oakland Lodge No. 18 of Rebekahs had charge of the ser- vices. The inquest will be held to-mor- row evening. Friends of Mrs. Van Wye are trying to trace the source of the re- ports which gave them so much annoy- ance in their preparations for the last rites. o3 — e RESTORES FURNITURE TO A DESERTED WOMAN Mrs. Grace Clement Secures Return of Household Wares Her Husband Surreptitiously Sold. OAKLAND, Nov. 15—Police Judge Smith to-day restored to Mrs. Grace Clement - furniture and other household effects which her husband had sold to a second-hand dealer, disappearing with the money. The distressed wife told a story of suffering and hardship due to the dissipation of her husband, to whom she had been married twenty years. After a long separation she had agreed to his return. During his absence Mrs. Clement, with the assistance of her two sons, had earned enough to pay for a modest stock of household necessities. These had been installed in a cottage-at 664 East Eighteenth street. Clem- ent, the husband, went there during his ife’s absence and removed the goods, selling them for $35. Mrs, Clement and the two children with her were left with- out a blanket to cover them. In ordering -the furniture returned Judge 8mith explained to Mrs. Sarah Ja- cobs, the dealer who purchased them, that she could swear to a warrant for Clement’s arrest, as he had no claim to the wares, which had been purchased with his wife’s separate money. ———————— ABBOTT WORTH' ONLY SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS His Answer to Wife’s Plea for Ali- mony—Jacobsens and -Others Separated by Divorce. OAKLAND, Nov. 16—Clyde E. Abbott, who is being sued by his wife, Maud B. Abbott, for divorce on the ground of cru- elty, testified ir: Judge Greene’s court to- day “that all the money he had in the world was 75 cents.He was being inter- rogated as to his financial standing, his wife having had him summoned to an- swer a motion for alimony. Mrs. Ab- bott’'s attorneys attempted to show that he had, transierred his interests in a Berkeley stationery store to his mother to avoid his wife’'s importunities, but he said he never owned any real interest in it. Mrs. Abbott asks for $40 a month and attorney’s fees. The inquiry will go on to-morrow. Judge Hall granted Mrs. Emile H. Ja- cobsen a divorce from Jacob Jacobsen on the ground of cruelty. The couple had been married thirty vears before they divined that they were not suited to each other. Divorces were also granted by .Judge Hall to Otis Bristow” from Maude Bristow, and Algernon Hall from Lillian Hall, the ground in each case hcing desertion. . WEDDING GUEST FALLS AND BREAKS CLAVICLE Dr. J. P. Dunn Throws Rice and Slips on Polished Floor of Chabot Residence. OAKLAND, Nov. 15.—While throwing riee at the bride and groom at the Dieck- mann-Chabot wedding last night, Dr. J. P. Dunn slipped on a polished floor, fell heavily_and fractured his right collar- bone. Without attracting attention to his very painful injury, the physician with- drew from the merry throng of guests and had the injury dressed by his brother, Dr. Will L. Dunn, who Was also Dresent as a guest. Dr. Dunn will suffer several weeks' inconvenience. ——————— Guardian for Merritt Children. /i OAKLAND, Nov. 15— Attorney John R. Glascock presented 2 petition to-day ék: Judge Ogden’s court ic. behalf of Fran D. Dusinbury, Myroa T. Dusinbury, George W. Reed and imil Nusbaumer, as trustees, and the VUnjon Savings Bank against the children of James P. Merritt for a guardian ad litem for the children ending the setilement of a suit that has Peen brought against the latter by the former for the quietinx.of title to certain valuable property d2eded by James P. Merritt to his divorced wife, Mary W. Merritt. —————————— Reception and Dance. Company D, First Regiment, League of the Cross Cadets, last night gave a recep- tion and dance in Native Sons’ Hall. It was a full-dress affalr and aitended. The bright military uniforms of the cadets added a touch splendor to the sceme. - LAMEDA, Nov. 15.—“When our first “servant fell out of bed ‘Wednesday night the house shook as if it had been struck by a run- away Kansas cyclone,” testified George H. Bew in Judge Morris’ court to- day during the trial of Miss Marian Campbell, who two weeks ago reigned as dictator in the culinary department of the Bew residence and who was finally ar- rested on a charge of disturbing the peace of her employer. It was during an argument between Mr. Bew and Miss Campbell about wages that the alleged disturbance occurred. The Bews are leaders In the social sets of this city and Oakland, and their appear- ance in‘the dingy court room of the local Justice of the Peace attracted much at- tention. Mr. Bew is a pioneer of Alameda, having been for many years in the.drug business here. “How do you know that it was the first servant giri, this defendant, and not the second girl that tumbled out of bed and rattled your domicile?”’ asked Howard K. James, the lawyer who represented Miss Campbell. “Well,”” replied Bew, “1 know that there was cnly one person under the roof that could jar my residence and my family so and that was the boss servant girl. ‘Whether she had a nightmare or a pipe- dream I am not sure, but I am quite posi- tive that she took a tumble to herself because she was woozy from doses and overdoses of . my choice Vin Pasteur, lwhlch she had smuggled out of my cel- ar.” “Vin Pasteur! Why, Mr. Bew, you know yourself that my favorite tonic is claret; I wouldn't taste that dark brown stuff of yours,” excitedly exclaimed -Miss Camp- bell, before Bailiff Brown and Judge Mor- ris could put the vocal brakes on the de- fendant. ‘When Marian Hit the Floor. “YWhen she hit the floor in the middle METEORS SHOOT ATHIART SKIES Brilliant Shower of Leo- nids Is Seen From Mount Lowe. LOS ANGELES, Nov. 15.—The follow- ing description of the shower of leonids, as Seen from Mount Lowe, is furnished by Edgar L. Larkin, director of the Mount Lowe observatory: 35 The first meteor was seen at 11:55 o'clock, and during the five minutes to midnight four were seen, and 653 from midnight to 5:40 o’clock Friday morning. They all seemed to emerge from within the sickle of the zodlacal constellation Leo. None were actually seen to come out of it, but their bright tracks prolonged backward would converge there. Many were of great brilllancy—many times brighter than Venus, the brightest planet, now evening planet. They were all white but thirteen, which were white, tinged with red, and two quite red. About half left long, luminous streaks, which re- mained ?rom half a minute to the un- usual length of twenty-four minutes. Meteor No. 229 was perhaps the bright- est that passed the zenith. It was re- markable in brilliancy and width of trail. Its solid portions were dissipated with cosmic_dust by friction against the air, and therefore did not explode. The Streamer was persistent, because very wide bent over the west like the letter ¥, the top of the F separating from the uyp- right and drifting toward the Hyades. Tfie meteor vanished into the trail mid, way between Crion and Taurus. The dis- ruption of the glowing stream was at the star P. Oronis. The detached mass moved to Aldebaran, eight degrees, where it be- came faint and disappeared in the bril- liancy of that first magnitude sun. The original portion remained visible to the unaided eye for twenty-four minutes, and still longer in an opera glass. st before the time of rising the spec- troscope was arranged and the mirrer of the heliostat set to secure spectra of the meteors as they emerged from their cen- ter. - But dlugyulntment was in store, for not one meteor came ‘“‘head on,” that is. in a straight line from their point in space of radiation. So the opportunity of a lifetime was lost, for astrophysicists have long sought the spectrum of a meteor. Licensed to Marry. OAKLAND, Nov. 15.—Licenses to -day to J 3 were lssued to-day to mg_l:.el:;?nn was 1; ] d 21 years, and Mary L 18, itorms l‘:gteh of B‘a’; Lorenzo; Henry )ln;gh% 27, of martial | and Charlotte Harder, 20, both ‘est k s ierke!ey. ot d Former Boss Servant Girl in Hbgw i RTON ' BROW~ WHO CAN TRAIL WIN- | How THE House P UAMES \vyo 7 WHERE TH V' _(FELT To MR.Bew DEFENDED TRIAL 1%2‘:5 4 3o WHEN ~ MARION Prace Rion FeLL OUT OF HER BED PASTEVR e EX:LA_MAT‘QN PoinT" ATTORNEY K. K. 13 MARIAN'S TUMBLE FROM HER COUCH - STARTLES THE SLEEPING HOUSEHOLD , e,of George H. Bew, Alameda So- ciety Leader, Meets Erstwhile’ Empioyer on Common- Footing in Police Court and Denies Special Fondness for Vin Pasteur | * of the night everybody woke up to sleep no more,” continued Bew. “In the morn- ing I went upstairs and inspected the room. It resembled the site of a lyddite explosion. The place was a_total wreck. That settled me as far as Miss Campbell was cancerned, and I decided to give her the grand bounce then and there. Later, when we were trying to reach an agree- ment over money matters, she flew off the handie and my telephone to call the poljce to arrest me in my own house. That was too much for one man and I had her arrested.” “Marian simply didn't know how to cook vestenlay morning. It was awful,” said Mrs. Bew, with an emphatic sigh. as she stepped down from the witness stand. Charged Ber With Vin Pasteur. Miss Anna Hoche, second girl for the Bews, testified for her employers and against Miss Campbell. ~I am certain that I didn’t fall out of bed Wednesday might,” said she. “When Marian came dowwnstairs in the morning she acted funny and queer. She hooked on to the carpef cleaner and began to chase it round and round the kitchen in circles. I saw She was not right and car- ried her upstairs atter she had tried to cook the breakfast and put her to bed. I tied a towel arousul her heaa and put hot bottles to her tee(‘, and she fell into a peaceful doze. Aboul half-past 1 in the afternoon she came downstairs and went poking around to finct a bottle she had hidden under the buité¢ in the dining room. Then she met }Mr. Bew.” “I drink nothing stroriger than claret,”™ answered ' Miss _Campbell in reply to a question from Barrister James. “It was my custom to take a glass every evening at 8:15 for_my nervous svitem. I never indulge in Vin Pasteur. I 4'd not fall out of bed Wednesday night, as' Mr. Bew said I did. Anna did not carry_ me upstairs and put me to bed Thursihiy morning, and I think it is real mean .of her to say so after I had given her some of my wine. I did not spoil the cotfee nor burn the hot cakes. The trouble l'etween Mr. BARK EMPLOVES " STEAL BIG S0 Williamsburg Institution Looted to Extent of $60,000. i NEW YORK, Nov. I5.—Defalcations’ amounting, it is clatmed, to $80,000 have been discovered in thes accounts of the ‘Williamsburg Savings Bank, an institu- tion conducted at Willlamsburg, Brook- lyn. General J. V. Meserole, president of the bank, is authority for the statement that the persons implicated in the affair are Harry E. Corbett, a former paying teller of the bank, who died November 2, and George Zolleinhofer, a receiving tel- ler, who, it is alleged, gave the first in- formation leading to the discovery. The bank is fully protected, it is said, by the bonds of both Corbett and Zoliein- hofer. Corbett had been in the employ of the bank for eighteen years. He was lool upon as a’ man of exem- plary habits and not the slightest sus- picion attached to him up to the time of his death. According to General Meserole on Fri- day of last week George Zolleinhofer, one of the recelving tellers, went to Cashier Willlam Burns and conft to him that he (Zolleinhofer) and Corbett had for the past two or three years taken funds from the institution for the purposes of stock gambling, and that so far as he could estimate the amount that had been lost was between $50,000 and $60,000. Cashier Burns had Zolleinhofer repeat his confes- sion to President Meserole and a meeting of the trustees of the bank followed. ‘The examination was not Tuded that day, nor is it yet concluded, but irregu- larities enough were found to show that Zolleinhofer had not exaggerated the ex- tent of the defaleations. Zolleinhofer, after making his confes- slon, placed himself in the hands of the trust companies and is aiding them in their investigation of the books. He was, with one exception, the oldest loye of the bank, having been with the ti- tution for thirty-three years. He is 60 years of age, Corbett dled in his apart- ment in Brooklyn of pneumonia on No- vember 2. He and his wife were hfiy respected. The dej no % of over ‘positors are in er, as the bank has.a surplus £000000 above. the deposits of $40.000,000. So far as could be learned to-day Zollein- hofer had not been arrested, and it is understood that he will. merely be kept under surveillance while he is aiding t! bank to untangle its accounts. B The most careful are said to be the most S. \ i. | | 5 l MARIAN AND HER FORMER EMPLOYER MEET IN POLICE COURT. F AP 2B Bew and myself was all because he wouid not pay me the $10 25 that was owing ms, He charged me with six bottles of Vin Pasteur and wanted to keep $4 of my wages for it. When I couldn’t have ail that was coming to me I called the po- lice. Instead of arresting Mr. Bew they *Siiee. Campell £ ss amphbel ‘was found It Justice Morris suspended judslgn:lxllg were L e e e e = =l e e S S S Y ) PUBLIC FUNERALS ARE TO BE RESTRICTED Board of Health Offers New Regula- tions Touching Deaths From Cer- tain Contagious Diseases. OAKLAND, Nov. 15.—Public funerals of persons who die from certain contagious diseases are to be restricted in this eity, according to amendments to the health regulations which have been recommend- ed for adoption by the City Council. The diseases specified under this order are ty- phus fever; ship fever, bubenic 4 vellow fever, scarlet fever, Asiatic chol- era, smallpox, chicken-pox and pulmonary tuberculosis accompanied by expectora- tion. Burials or cremation of those who succumb to these diseases must oceur within twenty-four hours after death. —_— J. R. Freud to Lecture. BERKELEY, Nov. 15.—J. R. Freud of the San Frandsco Civil Service Commi~ :;son will lecture on “The Federal Civ.l iwrviee” at 4 o'clock this aftermoon ir: the lecture-rocm of the students’ ob so vatory. concluding lecture will be given November 19 at the samé hour and plue on “Municipal Civil Service.” —_——— Close Vote Against Removal. 0.\ KLAND, Nov. 15—By a vote of 2§ to :4 the members of the Fourth Con~ greg:wi ional Church have deeided against movi my?_from their present location on Thirt y- fourth street, near Adeline. who 1@ Vor a change have announced that they will continue the agitation because of the close vote. \xpenses of tes. According to statements filed before the Reghitrar yesterday various candi- dates spcuit the following amounts during campaign: John Landers, $ii: cWilliams, 355 25; red J. 14 George R. Sanderson,. $1183: Albert’ B. Manony, —————— For very ' minute writing. pens made from crow ¢'uilis have been found to de excellent w.: k. e ——— Pears’ ~ars C All sorts ‘of people use it, all sorts of stores sell the famous Engfish qomplexit. : Established 178q.

Other pages from this issue: