The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 21, 1903, Page 5

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, APRIL 21, 1903. CRADUATE CL0 'WIFE SCORES HER HUSBAND ON STEPS OF A COURTHOUS \ ‘5 [NTEHIMNEB‘MFS Margaret Ziegler of San Jose Creates a Preliminary Sensation in Divorce Proceedings President Wheeler and Against the Former Well-Known Bicycle Rider Dr.Jacques Loeb Ad- dress Members. One Speak: on Pedagogical, the Other on Ecien- tific Subject. ancisco ¢ April 2 | SAN JOSE WOMAN WHO FIGURES | PROMINENTLY IN SENSATION- ; AL SUIT FOR DIVORCE. orothy who hs the th pitation of being the most beautiful ant, actress, womn.an in the world. Both Mrs. Ziegler and Dorothy Tennant were born at Eden- ale, n t city. life f the Zieglers has been rather rmy. Ziegler states that on one occa- sior. his wife placed a revolver to his heart and threatened to kill him. At Cap- itola fn July, 18 Ziegler took his wife to 7 | task forassociating with James Treadwell, | sensation the millionaire who committed sui- cide adena, and Mrs. Ziegler, he s, attempted to throw carbolic acid in ther were in- .+ divorce | her husband's face. Ziegler will deny all n simultaneous Mre. “_' _ | the charges of extreme cruelty in her d hind legs oi ooy Mgl o ) h 3 Mrs. Ziegler told T in the | ;or husband that she would not live with former well- | him any longer, and since then she has Otto Ziegler, met her | made her. home in San Francisco. e a rthouse steps; Mrs.| Last nt Mrs. Ziegler telephoned to She gave sted her husband ar at if he thrust his head saloon it would be blown provides: ¢ WILL PROSECUTE CHILD SELLERS C. H. Fiest, the Motor- man, Begins Criminal Proceedings. Warrants Sworn To for Ar- rest of Dr. Thrasher and Mrs. Funke. B AT Following up his determination to pun- ich the people who sold his baby for 38 to Mrs. Beagichole, a milliner in Reno, Nev., C. H. Fiest, a motorman, secured warrants from Police Judge C. niss yes- terday for the arrest of Dr. Marion "Thrasher, whose offices are in the Don- ohoe building, and Mrs. Emeline Funke, who lives on Eighth avenue, Alameda. complaint was drawn up by As- sistant District Attorney Weller and re- cites that the defendants committed a mmisdemeanor under section of order of the Board o ervisors, which “It shall be unlawful for any person to sell or atiempt to sell, propose, threaten or offer to sell any human b ing. Secretary M. J. White of the California ciety for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children accompanied Fiest to the Hall of Justice and after the warrants had been issued he them in the han 14 rve. Mrs. Funke's to the authorities in McMurray arrested Dr. t He was released on $125 42 Ao and Thrasher in his office and booked him the City Prison. cash bail, DR. THRASHER EXPLAINS. Dr. Thrasher denles that he was in any way eriminally connected with the sale of the Fiest baby and yesterday gave the following detalls of his assoclation with the case: Last June Mrs R. K. Bennett of Reno, ) a thoroughly reputable woman, whom I yeors, wrote me that Mrs. Beagl Ly and childless woman, wanted a by to adopt. 1 wrote to Mrs. Funke of Alameda, who advertised bables for adopticn and whom I had never seen up to this time. She replied that she had one, but that there was a $150 nurse bill to be paid by the party adopting it. This information i forwerded Mrs. Bennett. She sent * Beaglehole d with a recommendatory ter to me. and th I teok her over to Mrs twao settied’ on the pa the nu $60 cash being pald at the time to M Funke and the remaining $25 to be forwarded later 1o me, to be handed over to Mrs. Funke. I was naid a medical fee for the examina- tlon of the infant tc ascertain if it had any present or hereditary disease. The child was taken to Reno. In justice to Mrs. Bennett, I will say that she wrote me subsequently that she was mistaken in estimate of the Beaglehole woman. Dis- her trict Attorney Plke wrote me child was mistreated, and I replied, reiating the facts. Mis. Dunphy of 1543 Geary street, of this city, daughter of Mrs. Bennett, wiil corroborate what I say. TELLS HER TO TAKE CHILD. later that the About six m g0 Mrs. Nicholas calleg on me regarding 1 Beaglehole's treatment of the child and I told her of the circum- stances anc ised her to take the child away from last weel I heard nothing more until Funke, whom I had not and whom I did not at to my offl She told White, secretary of the Chil- in this city, d_the child ched after him and when he came I im where the child was when I last rom it. 1 did not know that Mrs. Nicholas had taken it from Mrs. Beaglehole. Under similar circumstance: same azaf I would do the ADVERTISEMENTS. 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Weight Over 200 Pounds. 128" Cut out and mail this coupon to-day FOR PARTICULARS OF OUR GREAT OFFER TO cm.nunl 4+—21—08 The American Newspaper Association Parrott Euilding, faa Francisco, Ca Please send me free of charge sample pages and full particulars of your Encyclgpacdia offer (Bookcase Coupon). 31 Volumes in All. 25 Volumes Ninth Edition. 5 Volumes American Addi ions. 1 Volume Guide to Systematic Readings of the Whole Work. Sccures This Entire Szt of the NEW 20th CENTURY EDITION lYou can pay the balance at the rate Nate c o o s s e o ssasve SO o« o v TOWMR < s <o & = v o LOUNIN <o i b o 5 or 1 thought T was acting for the cerned. Every day I get it in ople, yet not- CALL BUREAU. says he believes she will at- of only 10c a day for a short time. kill him and he does not go good of al the neck for d the ed to a,nu with ashing to JAng favors f. r of friends who him without a bodyguard. Last night | withstanding I shall continue to do as I have gating told them what she thought of them. Officer Castillo was called in to escort him | done heretofore. —— =g = = € a while it looked as if Mrs. Ziegler wo: home. —_—— BRITT'S OPPONENT IS Masons Elect Officers. attack her hu 1 This the second divorce suit Mrs. | FOUR BIG ‘WARSHIPS IN SPLENDID CONDITION | At the forty-second annual convention Ziegler has filed. The first one was dis- of the Grand Council of the Royal and MINE MANAGERS : e ue e an] AL ooy v 1 missed. Filegler declares he will fight this STOLIAT AN DINGD Willie Fitzgerald Goes Through His | Select Masters, Freemacons, held in Ma- L e _of thy livec er wa one to a finish. W. A. Bowden, attorney s g 2, scnic Temple yesterday, the followins work, I love to her mother, | for Zjegler, served a notice upon Mrs, | ,SAN DIEGO, April 2.—The fleet of Puces Befare Mxperts of pamed were elected as officers for the ¥ teachers | This the bicyclist | - 1y that next Monday he would Admiral Glass arrived this noon from Boxing Game. ensuing term: In interviews deposition. Ziegler a few years | the south, and while the cruiser New Albert H. Merritt, Willle Fitzgerald went through his most illustrious gzrand FEAR OUTBREAK . times, sa about s Ziegler has always | ago was one of the champion bicycle rid- | York remained outside at anchor off 2 ¥ master; David M. Sutherland. right illustrious maginat laimed that his mother-in-law was the | ers of the countr: Hotel fel?sCotonade. the MivEiches stunts at the ocean beach "es‘"da{ f?r deputy grand master; Edward Kell, grand st ca he domestic troubles that have ety e oss s X et i St shead, the edification of Harry Corbett, Eddie | principal conductor of the work: Franklin H. - & g Yo tistei: | 3% R S G Ranger and Boston came into the harbor x Graney and other sporting men. The bay,lxr-nddueuurer_ and Willlam A. Davies 2 ety 1 her to go home. | In the order named and dropped anchor | Qneida, SUPEI'IDtBDdeDt New York youth, who is to battle with “fl'_;' ':f“ :‘ - S e £ was 4 he was not a uni- was to have in the stream not far from the Alert and Nimmy Britt in Mechanics” Pavilion & e Gran apter, Royal Arch Ma- o question of al'- | the Manning. The fleet left San Fran Says There Is Dan- iy o : i sons, will hold a session to-day for the - spoke of one other qual- g el | ) e B . ay week from to-night, certainly proved him- | ;yrpose of electing officers for the ensu- : in university and in 50 M clsoo Wby . A AD0 was - Ahgletown £ Mob self in perfect fettle. He went four fast|ing term. » r 1s a potential . i ito away from an American port fdr two er o OD. rounds with Billy Otts, his sparring part-| The various Masonic bodies, including 5 1 th s said, will be a sensa ’ T mes from cu e ngs s ~Sagrs et e . months and ten days. The ships went ner, and also punched the bag for ten |the Grand Commandery, will visit the The \/}\enl‘}'“ v‘trrf- married south to look after American interests e Masonic Home at Decoto to-morrow. 1890 Mrs. Ziegler at that time thile NGt s charn’ ok by St = - G 3 s s r ¥ho kit Young wimien o while the difficultles were on in Honduras, | jACKSON, April 20.—Yesterday morn-| His wind is perfect and his love for pEERSRES AN San Jose. nnant, a She is the daughter of Fred W r suty Sheriff of t | i 1903 San Francisco, Tuesday, 21 April . ecial price on couch covers to-day $3.50 sale that begins and ends to-day, between the o 2. m. and 6:00 p. m. v ccuch covers in Oriental patterns which y for $500 go for $3.50. Not more than six to any one person and phone or mail orders not be filled. They measure three yards long by A S is positively the only day that the special figure will Held by Officers in Special Dispatch to The Call. UKIAH, April 20. — Early yesterday morning Deputy Sheriffts Willlam Orn- | baum and Ben Melton arrested a man | known as Louls Gleen near the new town | of Wendling in this county on suspicion | that he is the murderer of Q. A. Over- | meyer, the Wells-Fargo messenger, who was killed on the Ukiah-Mendocino City stage March 24 near the Halfway House. The arrest was made at 6 o'clock in the morning at a lonely cabin in the woods | two or three miles from Wendling. There are many suspiclous circumstances con- nected with the life of Gleen. He has | been known along the coast and in the woods for several years as a man with disappearing for several weeks at a time ||| and then suddenly returning to his old {' | haunts. Deputy Ornbaum has been watching the man’s movements for over a year and he is certain Gleen is the person who got over %1000 from a Wells-Fargo treasure box more than a year ago near Orrs Springs on the same stage line. Ornbaum has traced him all over that country, found many of his camping places and generally kept the run of his wanderings. 1t is now admitted that he is the man who was supposed to be Lemmos. Harry | Owsley, the stage driver, who was with the ill-fated messenger on March 24, has seen Gleen here and he says the man an- swers the description of the robber as he the shooting. Detective Thacker, who is here, thinks the circumstances point very but after a portion of Adm Coghlan's fleet was sent to the east coast of Cen- tral America, where most of the trouble coal and also at Pechilinque. They were derstood that the other fleet will go north in ample time to be in San Franclsco Bay at the time of the visit of President Roosevelt to the metropolis of the coast. The Ranger is to go out of commission when she reaches Mare Island and will be given an overbauling. The Bennington is to take her place in the squadron. The fleet surgeon reports that there was no sickness of serious nature during the southern trip, no deaths and only four desertions. S R Engine Tosses a Lucky Child. SEATTLE, April 20.—Catherine Covey, a two-year-old child, was struck by a Great Northern passenger train, going at full speed, in the vicinity of Richmond Beach to-day and was practically unin- track when he saw the baby standing be- tween the rails a few vards before him and seemingly bewildered. It was useless to apply the brakes, the distance was so short. She vanished from eight. Then the big cowcatcher in front of the great smoking engine lifted her from her fect and the engineer saw the child tossed to the side of the track. Fearing that the little one’s life had been crushed from her body the crew of the train and the passengers went back to the spot as soon as the cars had been brought to a stand- still and found Catherine crying, but seemingly not much the worse for her experience. ing Superintendent Hampton of the Oneida mine discovered that the belt of trated since the trouble started. continue in our employment. Members of the Jackson labor union, aided and abetted by out- side members of the Western Federation of Miners, have approached our property and threatened injury thereto unless our company accede to their arbitrary demands. 1t is apparent to even the casual observer that premonitory symptoms of mob rule and mob violence are present, and there is no tell- ing when riotous and unlawful attempts to destroy the property of the Oneida Company may be initlated and successrully carried out. Conspiracies to destroy property are not pub- licly advertised, and property owners rarely have sufficlent notice of criminal intentions of mobs organized or unorganized to destroy prop- erty to enable them to give warning to public authorities. Under the laws of California the county of Amador as a municipal corporation will be re- sponsible to the Oneida Company for any and all damage to its property by mobs or riotous assemblages. It may be that the law contem- plates that when a property owner acquires in- formation of an intention on the part of such mobs, organized or unorganized, to prepetrate the Sheriff of the county in order that proper police protection should be afforded and crime prevented. The Oneida Company, therefore, demands that you in vour official capacity take adequate measures to protect the property of sald company from acts of violence, and hereby gives vou motice that in its judgment there is danger of its property being destroyed or in- jured through riotous and uniawful assem- blages. Should any property through your neglect to take proper precautions to prevent it, the Omeida Company will hold the county of Amador responsible therefor, and will also hold you and your bonds- men personally responsible. In face of criticism no doubt is enter- tained that the Sheriff is acting in ac- cord with his convictions of duty and within the advice of his attorneys. Information has just been received that B. Johnson, bookkeeper of the Gwin, has notice indicates some hitch in the pro- ceedings. damage be” done to its | work is so great that his trainer, Tim McGrath, must keep him away from the All those who visited the ity as a boxer. Corbett admitted that Fitzgerald was a good man and that he Five Injured by Tornado. TOPEKA, Kans., April 2.—Word has city s e distant cousin o ici ; vas no mecessity for the Pa > sawmill had been cut. It had not |gymnastum. E - | s e usin ot | Suspicious Character Is AL Dl Yo heseadiy far Ois P en hued since the strike and he de- | tralning quarters vesterday came away |Just reached here of a tornado at St. The vessels stopped at Acapulco for | clared the act must have been perpe-|With a high opinion of Fitzgerald's abli- | Paul, Neosho County, on Saturday nizht, which destroyed a great amount of prop- erty and injured flve persons, four of i nearly three weeks at Magdalena Bay Hampton was in Jackson to-day with | 8 : Mendocino. at_practice with the blg guns and at | Attorney Eikoff to see the Sheriff. The | Would give Britt a tough battle. whom cannot recover. Mrs. David Cham- ¢ drilling with the boats. The fleet has | following notice was served upon that of- | Fitzgerald’s measurements are as fol- | poriain and three members of a German been practicing fleet or squadron mancu- | ficial: lows: R family named Longham will die, it is be- | Slayer of Express Messenger | vers all the way up the coast. The fleci | T K. Norman, Sherift—Sir: 1t s unneces- | Helght, § feet S% inches: weight. 133 |jieved. David Chamberlain has bruises of | will remain here until the early part of | sary to call your official al]fnlxn:l‘lfl (l‘;e i;:- 3714; neck, 16; walst, 321; forearm, 123 |3 Severe character, while several othur Overmeyer May Be next week and will probably be joined | ditions existing at the Dneita win€ S8 OFFCC | yiceps, 14; thigh, 2114 calf, 12%; ankle, 9%, Persons sustained minor injuries. | s within the next day or two by the Ben- "}:f;‘:’s ‘ot the Onelda mine have been intimi- | in Custody. nington from San Francisco. It fs un- | Hated and threatened with violence if they | = - ADVERTISEMENTS. FINAL DECREEY $100 REWARD! On December 10, 1902, a final decree was entered by the Cirenit Court of the United States, for the Northern District of California, in suit of Benjamin Levy, o S no fixed habitation and no visible means | jured. The engineer in his cab was his ch ter and to, destroy his 4 & T X - of support. He has been in the habit of | swinging around a sharp curve in the | comcrty such property owner should motity | | Boston, vs. J. M. Wright & Co., San Francisco, establishing the plaintiff's rights and perpetually enjoining and restraining the defendants from manufacturing, selling or offering for sale, directly or indirectly, spurious face powder which had been put up in imitation of Lablache Face Powder in counterfeit boxes, bearing counterfeit labels, enclosed in a counterfeit circular, and sold to retailers and the public, or in the use of the words “ B. Levy,” or any of the words, labels, designs or circulars or stickers used by complainant printed, written, stamped, painted, attached or posted thereon, or having any label, printing or device thereon in imitation of complainant’s label, printing or device or any thereof. sloo REW ARD will be paid for the arrest and conviction of any person e e article as Lablache Powder. manufacturing, selling or offering for sale any spurious Lablache Face Powder: peculiar perfume is extracted from flowers and plants which possess soothing sixty inches wide and fringed all d ||| saw him exactly. The place of his arrest been notified not to take further steps in ocane are SORpEG At SRS a0 || s only & few miles from the scene of the tarting up the mine until further orders. fard to find a home without a couch and a new St tapted hold-up moft e DERctically’ in ;t‘"waf e;‘p”“d that the works would | § 18 the best and purest toilet preparation in t!?e m{ke& It will delight you to covering is always welcome. To-day, Tuesday, the direction taken by the murderer after ear start in full blast to-morrow. This latest | | observe the wonderful benefits your complexion will receive from its use. Its be recognized, so come as early as you can. (Successors to California Furniture Co.) pp. Golden Gate Avenue. strongly to Gleen's guilt. King Houcrs General Wood. {|| ROME, April 20.—Brigadier General Wood, although hurrying through Rome on his way to Egypt, wished to have an audience with King Victor Emmanuel. His application was presented yesterday ||| by Embassador Meyer and was answered ||| to-day. appointing an audience for to- morrow. This is considered a great act of courtesy shown by the King to the American army, as sometimes weeks elapse before audiences are granted. No soap in all world is so cheap. the No soap in all the world is so good—none so lasting. Sold all over the world. Receives Testimonial. A testimonial entertainment and ball was tendered to the clever little actress, Miss Elsa Tolon, by her numerous friends last evening at Golden Gate Hall. A large crowd was present and all were highly entertained by the enjoyable pro- gramme which was rendered. The grace- ful dancing and the charming voice of Miss Tolon won for her the hearty ap- plause of all present. The testimonial was given to assist Miss Tolon to finish her studies for the stag and healing properties and are also powerfully antiseptic in their nature. Lablache Face Powder is invisible, it makes the skin soft, smooth and beautiful. Preserves a fine complexion; restores one that has faded. Beware of dangerous counterfeits or substitutes. The genuine bears the signature of “ Ben. Levy™ in red ink across the label of the box. Flesh, White, Pink, Cream, 50 cents per box, of reliable Druggists or by mail. BEN. LEVY & CO., FRENCH PERFUMERS. 125 KINGSTON ST., BOSTON, MASS. Free Art Supplement Next Sunday—"“The Lady in Scarlet”

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