The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, March 29, 1905, Page 5

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 29, 1905. 3 O FOR REAVY HAUL Lining of Her Gown Is Used, as a Capacious Pocket. Large and V aried Assortment of Plunder Recovered. BY JAMES C. CRAWFORD. ne of the argus-eyed sleuths em- orium noticed that s lower circumfer- increased as she flitted to counter and fingered d displayed. he decided icion arouse adow and sharply watch He discovered that although she purchase anything the infla- her skirt continued, so he escorted her to the searching 4 there had his suspicion | -5 irmed. Lining 2 vast pocket, owing aticles were stockings volumes receptacle was d by the plun- she had visited rtments when he special po- her pil- When and requested was headed e section of 4 he face- she had not and then a would have stolen possessions. » Judge Conlan rimsor rge ¢ onted blue and -skirt hung as loo of Comedian Dil hat and a hflr a dia- an hardly believe you,” sai pocket arrangem ‘art,”” she re- atyer pocket to | a washer lady?” ven- was her in-| I soys laun-| linen that I to wash.” | o your own wash- 1 will be your scene | e — ADVERTISEMENTS. A GOOD DEAL OF NONSENSE About “Blood Purifiers” and “Tonics.” ery drop of blood, tissue In the » but one way me food p: every bone, | body can be | and that is, | perly digest- | y and the idea f can purify the | new tissues and strong us and on a par with dyspepsia or indi- disease, or that other t & weak stomach which re- t f’m an be made to d ]J,\'sr“psia Tabl“l! cure in- sour stomach, gas and bloat- | r meals, because they furnish | digestive principles which weak | machs lack, and, unless the defl- | ency of pepsin and diastase is sup- | plied, it is useless to attempt to cure stomach trouble by the use of “ton- ‘pills” and “cathartics” which olutely no digestive power, p ly effect i{s to give a tem- n{ \he active principle in | vspepsia Tablets will digest of meat, eggs and similar | experiments have shown hey will do this In a glass bot- proper temperature, but of are much more effective in the stomach | There is probably no remedy so upi- | used as Stuart’s Tablets, 2 is not only the sick and ailing, it well people who use them at every | to insure perfect digestion and ilation of food. ple who enjoy fair health take rt's Tablets as regularly as they | - their meals, because they want to | well, prevention is better than 2 nd Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets | do both; they prevent indigestion and th remove it where it exists. The ar use of one or two of them after will demonstrate their merit and eficiency better than ahy other argu- ment CASTORIA | ¥or Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought o Tz Bears the Siguature of ths from this date, | | | cution, She did not seem to be dismayed by the sentence. . Mrs. Hattie Grote of 1103 Santa Fe | avenue, Oakland, was also accused of shoplifting, and Judge Cabaniss heard the te nony and pronounced her guilty as charged. When arrested in the store of Hale Bros. she had con- cealed on her person six bunches of WEDS POGILIST | Friends of the Woman Are of Opinion That She Was Hypnotized by Fighter ROMANCE 1IN DENVER Mrs. Stratton on Becoming Wife of “Blondie” Cooksie Gives Him "a Fortune | { Special Dispatch to The Call. DENVER, March 28.—Has Mrs. Mary E. Stratton, beautiful, wealthy, re- | fined, fallen victim to the hynotic arts ! of “Blondie” M. Cooksle, the prize- fighter? Mrys. Stratton last evening took the ring gladiator for her second husband. Immediately after the cere- imony she presented her pugilistic spouse with a bill of sale for the finest restaurant in Seattle. Then she poured money into the pockets of ‘“Blondie” artificial flowers and two coils of iand sent him forth to give largess to clotheslivie, which she had just pil-, the gamins. Finally she secured a com- fered, and in court she did not at- tempt to deny her guilt or to offer explanation as to why she had stolen the goods. She is the wife of an in- dustrious carpenter and the mother of | It was intimat- | three bright children. ed that an inordinate love of finery impelled her to purloin, but the Judge said he was unable to understand how clotheslines could be rated as articles of feminine apparel, and then in turn intimated that he will impose a fine of $50 when the weak-willed woman ap- pears for sentence this morning. | . . Seventeen-year-old Freda Dearman, charged with vagrancy, told Judge Mo- gan that if she were convicted the blow would kill mother. “She thinks I'm a good girl,” plained Miss Dearman, finds out that I have been disobedient ex- the disgrace will send her to her grave. | It's not for myself I'm pleading, but the life of a kind and trusting mother.” His Henor was palpably inclined to leniency until the disclosure came that the defendant's maternal relative, a re- spectable resident-of South San Fran- cisco, had abandoned effort to reform her after twice compassing her arrest for waywardness. So the girl was promptly pronounced guilty and in- formed that she may be sent to an in stitution for the disciplining of in-| corrigibles. “Oh, gick!” she exclaimed, dis- gustedly. D As like as the proverbial two peas in & pod were the Misses Addle and Aileen Conboy as they stood before Judge Mo- gan and vehemently denied Mrs. Wil- | “and if she | partment in.a sleeper, two tickets to Seattle and departed with her new lord. | Five years ago “Blondie” Cooksie was an itinerant hypnotist. He trav- eled all over the West and gave exhi- bitions of throwing himself into a sup- | posed cataleptic trance. In a confes- | sion written for a local magazine he admits that he was one of the most ! arrant fakers that ever took the dol- lars of the trusting. Mrs. Stratton is a linguist and an | accomplished musician. She has lived | all her life amid surroundings of cul- ture. Her aims gre high and her ideals of the best. “Blondie” has been a suc- cessful barber, hypnotic subject, light- weight fighter and waiter. His has been the hand to mouth existence of sporting men. His language smacks of the curb. How, then, ask those who know Mrs. Stratton, could she have been attracted to “‘Blondie”? They an- | swer their own question thus: “She must have been hypnotized.” Mrs. Stratton’s first husband was a young society blood of the Pacific | Coast, who. died in Seattle about two years ago from the effects of an auto- mobile accident near Los Angeles. He was the son of wealthy people, who | established him in business as an archi- tect in San Francisco. ————— DANGER OF LYNCHING FOR POISONING CHILDREN | IN Woman Who Committed Crime to Wed and Youth Involved Stir Public Wrath, PADUCAH, Ky., March 28.—There helmina Chapius’ accusation that | is believed to be danger of the lynch- th had disturbed her neace. |ing of Mrs. Mary Brockwell, aged 29 They were tall and willowy of form and their tight-fitting blue silk gowns and walists and yellow satin neckties and white chiffon hats, heavily banked with vari-colored roses, were exact counterparts. Yet they were not twins. Afleen confessed to having been born two years prior to Addie's arrival on this sphere. Supporting the cause of Mrs. Chapius, who dwells at 321 Eureka street, next door to the home of the defendants, were Mrs. Daly, Mrs. Frank, Mrs. Suren and Mrs. Filisetti, all of whom — | | —_— - 3 { testified that the two Conboy girls | | were common scolds and constant men- | aces to the peace of a highly re- | spectable neighborhood. Mrs. Chapius | averred that every time she put her nose outside her door she was orally abused by Miss Ajleen or Miss Addle, | or by both in unison, although she had | done nothing to provoke their ire. With facitl expression indicative of | horror, pity, contempt and several | other emotions, the defendants, seated side by side, hearkened to the prose- occasionally looking at each other, shaking their heads commiser- atingly and audibly exchanging such comment as “Did you ever?” ‘“How can she?” “Ain’t that the limit?” varying the | way ladles do when their astonish- | ment is too profound for utterance. The defense was an unqualified denial of every accusation contained in the complaint and adduced in testimony. Their arrest was a “put-up job,” they declared—a deep-seated conspiracy | to oust them from a vicinity in which they had declined to become popular because they considered themselves of higher soclal caste than any of their | st neighbors, As for demeaning them- selves by voicing the language alleged by the prosecutrix, they would just as | soon think of associating with her or any of her friends. Their father, em- | ployed by the Southern Pacific, cor- | roborated their views as to the motive of the prosecution, as did their broth- er, an attache of the tglephone com- pany. And a little auburn-haired ma- tron, name not called, was feverishly eager to back the defense, and did succeed in launching her sentiments at the bench, although she was not summoned to do so. It looked like dismissal with a repri- mand for the Conboy sisters when Patrolman Stanton, whose sobriquet is “Castle Garden,” voluntarily in- formed the court that they had been arrested on two previous occasions and charged with drunkenness and disorderly behavior, and that on one of the occasions he was compelled to tie the elder Miss Conboy to a fence post while he undertook the subju- gation of the younger. On the other occasion Patrolmen “Jerry” figured as the peace guardian. 8o the Judge pronounced the Conboy sisters { guilty as charged and ordered them to appear for sentence to-day. w. R ‘When the case of Ah Wah, accused of stealing an accordeon, was called in Judge Conlan's court Clerk Rice in- structed Bailiff Laws to summon Mary Magee. docketed as the complaining - intelligible criticism by | . | sharply clicking their tongues in the| Nyhen | years, who admitted that she poisoned her three little daughters, and George | Albritton, the youth who, she says, proposed to marry her If she would commit the crime. Both were ar- raigned to-day and remanded. Mrs. Brockwell says that suffering and in- ability to find homes for her children drove her insane. Albritton denies any knowledge of the tragedy. —_————— | GARDEN CITY LABORER | HAS A NARROW ESCAPE Almost Buried Alive While at Work | in a Sewer in San | Jose, SAN JOSE, March 28.—E. D. Mo- .| ran, while working ih a sewer to-day, was buried under a mass of earth that suddenly fell upon him. He was un- conscious when extricated, but will re- cover, —————— How Is Your Fountain Pen? If it does not work well it may require a little adjustment, which we will gladly do without charge. We are selling agents for “Waterman's ldeal Fountain Pen™ and sole agents for “The Marshall,” the best 31.00 fountain pen in the world. San- born, Vail & Co., 741 Market st. ———— e —— witness. “Mary Magee, come into court,” repeatedly bellowed the bailiff in the corridor, but there was no re- sponse, and finally the Judge ordered a | bench warrant to issue for the com- plainant’s production in court this morning. When the arresting police- man gave her address as 33 Spofford ! alley the clerk remarked she must feel | homesick residing amid a nest of Jap- anese and not ultra-respectable Jap- | anese at that, to which the policeman rejoined that as she herself was a Jap- | anese she probably did not suffer with | nostalgia. What's that?” exclaimed the Judge. ‘Mary Magee a Jap?” “That’s what,” was stolid reply. An inspection of the signature on the | formal complaint baffled all efforts to decipher it as anything else than | “Mary Magee” until the Japanese in- terpreter opportunely dropped in and promptly spelled it “M-a-r-i M-a-j-e Then the court heaved a sigh of rellef | and proceeded to the next case on the | calendar, the officer’s ] | Otho B. Mitchell w=s committed for | highway robbery an~ Judge Mogan fixed his bail at $10,000. The defend- ant’s wife was in court and wept pite- ousiy when judgment was pronounced. “No, 1 n.lnt worldn'. but me wife is,” said James F. Cassidy, when Judge Mogan asked him if he labored | for a livelihood. He was arrested at | the Ocean Beach while he was stroll- {ing with Miss Anna Hill, native of | Germany, who was also taken in and ' booked for larceny, the complainant | bejng Mrs. Anixter of 1422 Devisadero et, who alleged that Anna had | robbed her of some furs. Mr, Cassi- dy was charged with vagrancy, and | the Judge promised to relieve his wife of the cost of feeding him for quite a long period. Miss Hill was remand- ed for turlher.lnv?u;nlon. . James Easton, steward of the Brit- ish ship Kirkcudbrightshire, was ac- cused by Captain David Roberts, mas- | ter of that stout craft, of having stow- ed away in his sea chest certain ar- | ticles of wearing apparel which were | the skipper’s personal praperty. “Hoot, mawn,” exclaimed the stew- ard, when arraigned before Judge Ca- baniss. “Th' duds air my ain, thot I aye tookit frae th’ slop chest wi’ in- tention tae pay far them.” tain; “th’ claes air mine, an’ ye waur gaen tae gang ashore wi’ them.” Case contlm:ed t:ll tt:-dny. Hazel King,"a Digger squaw, claim- ed exemption from prosecution for vagrancy on the ground that she was an aborigine and a ward of Uncle Sam, and Judge Conlan pronounced the point well taken. But he will sen- tence her for-drunkenness and - ing Patrolmen Skelly and C:% when they undertook to arrest he: Stockton and Washington streets. She tore their rlforml. ogues and general commercial pri mmnmnc&mmmm~ “Nae, nae, ma laddie,” said the cap- | § ' $20 bills which has ever come to the at- OPLIFTER IS RIGGED|WEALTHY WIDOW [LAND FLOODED | BY BAD BILLS Gang Operates in All then Big Cities of the (mmtu. With Counterfeiting Game AGENTS ON THE TRACK: Denver Believed to Be the Headquarters of Men Who | Turn Out Spurious Paper DENVER, March 28.—A counterfeit- | ing scheme, gigantic in its proportions, | which has as its fleld the whole of the | United States, has just been unearthed | by thHe Federal authorities. A number of Government secret service agents are now in Denver following clews which are said to have led them to believe that the headquarters of the gang are located in this city. The operations of the counterfeiters are said to extend all the way from, New York to San Francisco, and sv | far it is belleved that something like | $50,000 has been secured in the larger cities of the country. The counterfeit is one of the best du- plicates of the Buffalo series of $10 and tention of the Federal authorities. A description of the counterfeits as fur- nished by the United States Secret Ser- vice Department follows: Series 1901, No. 29513972; face plate, 159; back plate, 87; check letter, D; signed Lyons, reg- ister; Roberts, treasurer; portraits of Lewis and Clark. The counterfeits are a shade darker | than the genuine. Secret Service Agent E. H. Wilson is here working on the | case. Speaking of the counterfeiters’ method of operation he said: “Their work is 8o smocth that it is almost impossible to detect them at it. Several agents are sent out and pur- chases for small amounts are made in the stores of the town they are in. A $10 or $20 bill is presented in payment and they receive their cash in change. The counterfeit is not discovered until it goues to the bank, and even then in a great many cases it has been allowed to go through, so perfect is the imita- tion. “There is not only one gang, but sev- eral of them scattered around over the | country. How many there are in the | deal we cannot tell yet.” —_—ee———— MORMONS BUY JAIL WHERE FIRST PROPHET MET DEATH Plan of Church to Re-establish in II- linois May Cause Public Op- position. CARTHAGE, Ills,, March 29.—Be- | cause of historical associations the | members of the Mormon church have | purchased for $4000 the old jail here where the old prophet and the! founder of the faith met a tragic death at the hands of a mob. The old | structure was not worth over $1500. | It is proposed to establish a mission | church in the building. In this connection announcement that the Mbrmens are coming back to Illinois after-¢he’lapse of half a cen- | tury and are to- establish three new churches has caused comment. The fact that the new church is to make ! Carthage a headquarters in Illinois may be followed by public action in opposition. 1 ——————— AGED WOMAN STRUCK WITH AN AX DURING NIGHT | Her Skull Fractured and Her Body Mutilated by an Unknown Person. OTTAWA, Kans., March 28.—Mrs. Caroline Jobes, aged 72 years, of ‘Wellsville, was attacked at the Sem- ple Sanitarium here during the night by some unknown person and perhaps ' fatally wounded. Her skull was frac- tured with an ax and her body was horribly mutilated. There is no clew other than tracks surrounding the| building. The mutilation of the body | was similar to that in the Nickum | murder case at T.peka last year, when Mrs. Nickum, who kept a board- ing-house, was mysteriously murdered and the body fearfully slashed. No motive for the attack upon Mrs. Jobes | is known. —_—— HEART FAILURE CAUSES DEATH OF A SAN DIEGAN Robert Hamilton,} Well Known in the South, Drops Dead in National City. SAN DIEGO, March 28.—Robert Hamilton, one of the best-known men in San Diego, dropped dead to-day in Natlonal"City. Heart trouble is be- lieved to have been the cause. Ham- ilton was seventy years old. In early years he was closely identified with the business interests of this city. JNO. 4. FULTON. CO. HE STOPPED 100 SOON We in reiterate that people suffer- ing with Bright's Disease or Diabetes must not stop the treatment immediately upnn the disappearance of the symptoms. To be safe it should be continued from two to three months afterward. Here is a case in point. The moment the sugar ceased he dropped the treat- ment and the diet. Result—in six months he began to note some return. He now goes on the treatment again and will take it till the results . are - permanent. But note the fine results obtained the first three months when he ceased the treatment: i = Louisville, Ky., March 11, '05. Gentlemen: After about e|‘htecn months’ treatment with a first-class phy- sician here for sugar in urine he aban- doned the case, stating that he had done ail that medical science knew what to do in my case. I then began the use of Ful- ton's Diabetic Compound. This was last May. I used nine bottles rlflt along and tollowed your instructions implicitly, fin- ishing the last bottle in July, 1904. I went to the same physician here at that time, and r a thorou, my. presence he pmnouneod the -ohnelyfm ? sugar or album then I'have taken nothin, this trouble and have eaf thing I wanted that was set before mo. Noucln‘ some iptoms of return, e just had the doctor make a u-t. Tll specific tnvlty is 1020, -nd he re- ports there is not the slightest tra sugar or albumen. but I thought best tn ask your advice. Youl‘l. ~ +J. HARRIS, 301 E. College St. © Bright's Disease and Diabetes are cur- able in about 87 ber cent of all cases Fulton’s Compounds. El: Jno. J‘r Fulton Co, - M' When 'to l\npect Brl Disease— weakness, or eyelids, .m'xey trollbh -tnr tho filn! mont] drowllnl-.fdunlm d for mph]qt one who signed the report ‘Washington | | ~words, heading of the ar- h) mug "w:hn’un-t ‘Want Thieves.” THE EMPORIUM. ! THE EMPORIUM. EERERERE RREERDR ERERRE RERERRRERE RERE RRERERER RRRRERY. 2R REERRRRR RRERERE RRERRE RREK Ladies Jack each . . i We ask no better opportunity to make you a permanent cus- tomer of our suit and cloak de- partment than to have you come and investigate this suit offering. It is markedfrat ;t;r eveg'7dsao se]]mg price, from to A under the prices asked for similar [ garments in exclusive suit and cloak houses. The picture shows the style, a 24-inch Norfolk Jacket and the very latest novelty in even length skirt—the material a novelty gray suiting, with two inch very faint blue squares, our price $20.00 Broken Checks and Plaids are very much in demand this spring. We are offering a pretty walk- ing suit, with unus style character—a daint- ily modeled blouse, with leg-o-mutton sleeves, the " (J 7 blouse having a silk girdle and blouse and skirt braid trimmed—a suit you would expeck $35.00 for,at . -« . . - gore pleated skirt ; . three side pluu flounce, an only- A e and we can now fit the little girls and the big ones in any of the flowers if Stecial sales tablesy Millinery Dept. Untrimmed Stra: Hats—Cuban braid hats that éan be made into a hundred different nlupu. for women, nr:asumdchfimnmd;ppwmclyumed w:th the flowen ofiered above. are on A New and Different Spring Suit $20.00 Silk Blouse Walking Sult—The lowelt priced silk tailored suit worth having ever placed on sale in San Francisco; handsomely braid trimmed, taffeta Ened 1 I- CALIFORNIA'S LARGEST- This Morning, 9 to 11, a Sale of Beautiful Millinery Flowers Half and less than balf for new, bright, well-made between 9 and 11 to-day. you come who have half a dozen hats to trim for themselves and their daughters will appreciate this opportunity for getting the flowers they need at half the price they expected to pay. 25¢ bunch of large crushrmsmabwlta: 3 different shades of colonnp,dnsm 35c bunches of small wild flowers, baufiu!ly colored, natural effects, this moming - - 50c bunches and sprays of baby roses, pink, cerise, ck and tea roses, this morning - - - 250 10c 19¢ —Second floor. Other Untrimmm’ Hats from 50c to $6.00. Some of the price, yard . - yard; special will be in_ great $3000t wfllmakenommal(e. - ‘ no These embroigerz: K:; on each $77.50 Flour—Emporium brand, our money-back tee eng kel spsby i v prsr T g Y R o X - iy a7 500 kind 290 | Peas—Yelow s, or whole geen, 5 bs.... . . . . . . 250 Extrd quality, satin covered, square hbhs——thbl.J—avwl.lpemL}lbo......'“ and oblong shapes—blue, Tomatoes—Extra standard, gal. tins. . . . . . . 210 red and , to-day - K:lenlMuu;d—Bnmpmd.}fio?b:kZh . . 150 Dresses, sizes6to 14 nn Yellow Corn Meal—Best Eastern, .. .230 Russian E(euDre-eq,y:heamd Belts 250 Cocoanut—Best shredded, special b . . . . . . . . . 130 tka dots, trimmed with white es” silk cloth belts, with f White Beans—Fancy small, 13lbs. . . . . . . . . 500 Bouics, szme 210 5.+ - Wfl,],_wmm B Oe—Fad the twe Ty plebags. - - < s « a.x < < B3 Percale Sailor Dresses, sizes 8to | §5 3500 POigicry patent | Wilson Whisky—Special for two days. . . . « . . . 8@ Fascinating Fancy Ribhons, 10c, 20c bons for n:kk.g and nnllmeg :iuows offered at specul re reas mommg. oy € s Fine quality 4}4-inch brocaded Taffeta Ribbon in white, pink, blue and changeable effects—novel and effective designs, usual price 30c; sale Soft finish 3%{-inch striped Taffeta Ribbons, in white, pink, blue m;]lcblu:l. A Big Offering of . Waist Patterns Worth $1.76 [ ————— For $1.08 Embroidered shirt waists this summer. Get two or eJ;att‘ems to-day at luced price and you Wednesday and Thursday Port or Sherry—For two days, 5 bottles. . . . . . . 980 Table Wines—$1.00 quality Sauterne, Riesling, Burgundy o, £ “- 50¢ prettiest and most desirable rib- 20c regulady 15¢ a 'ao demand WA RAARAR AARAAAR ARARAAARARARCAAR ARA AR RAAR AR ARAARAAA MRS WAAAAR ARRAAAR WAXARAA N KA AR AARARR RAR R AW WARAARAR 7N WARAAR ARAARRR AR AA A AR AdR A aannaa i | I I & § § | x | | | BEGIN CRUSADE - AT UNIVERSITY BERKELEY, March ZB—Thlevery is declared by college men to be 'so com- mon at the University of California that a crusade has been begun by the newly formed students’ affairs commit- tee, with the object of detecting of- fenders, securing their expulsion and thus raising the moral tone of the col- lege. The first step was taken last night, when the students’ committee recommended the expulsion of J. A. Harris, a self-confessed thief, and to- day the campaign was given further impetus by Editor J. P. Loeb of the Daily Californian, the representative publication of the student body. Loeb.calls on all students to assist in the work of purging the university of ~thieves and others whose moral character unfits them for association with reputable college men and women. His editorial is as follows: Eor the first time the undergraduate commit- tee on student affairs d to judge the ac- tions of & fellow student and.recommend his expulsion from the university. This first case was comparatively clear; the culprit confessed, without any attempt at evasion or denial, thai hs was gullty as charged, and there was only one thing. the committes to do. Now, Powever, “they have undertaken a more difficult task in annocuncing their intention to start an ssive campalgn against all university. It will not be easy to dem.-t oftcnders, if indeed there are any committee can hope (01' success only If h-ckel up by the student has asked all vi tims of thefts to nl Loeb is a member of the students’ af- | fairs committee, which has been dele- gated by the students to act in cases measures may seem by to be required. His name appeags as recommend- the expulsion of S-.rrb. He printed 1 0 which at- "’wam'm" ".’u-i:.u! its plain- B’olnlhea and support, has the students’ commit- tee, in the work of removing the moral miasma which has hovered over the college since Yell Leader Bulkley's sensational case was made public, and Harris' confession of theft was wrung from him by officers of the law. The disgrace attending the exposure of these men’s wrongdoings, a part of which the students feel has been re- flected upon their colleges, has made the great majority of the men and women in attendance at the State in- stitution determined that the university shall be purged, and it is promised that developments may speedily occur cal- culated to rid the colleges of more than one undeslnblz character. ¥ Tssues Licenses for New Banks. The Board of Bank Commissioners issued licenses yesterday for the es- tablishment of the' Bank of Wilming- ton and the Bank of Fortuna at Wil- mington and at Fortuna. - Each of these institutions has an authorized capital of $25,000. P. E. Hatch has been elected president and F. S. Cary cashier of the Wilmington bank. E. W. Haight will be president of the Fortuna bank and A. H. Smith will be secretary and cashler. Friction Between Warden Fleming and Superintendent of Nurses Settled by Mayor. A conflict of authority between Warden Fleming of the City and County Hospital and Miss Julia M. Kane, Superintendent of the-Nurses” Training School at the same institu- tion, was deemed of sufficient import- ance to merit a special confeérence yesterday In the Mayor’'s office. May- or Schmitz and Dr. James W. Ward, ident of the Board of Health, e the official arbiters of the differ- ences existing between Fleming and Miss Kane. The trouble arose over the M”- tation of the rules of the lating to the discipline of the nIn.-. Miss Kane was of the opinion that she exercises supreme authority over them, while Fleming took the stand that she was amenable to his author- ity as warden of the hospital. After a long discussion the controversy was amicably settled to the entire satis- faction of both parties concerned. They were enjoined by the Mayor and iDr, Ward to get along in harmony. ADVERTISEMENTS. Removal Notice. The Singer Store, located for many years at 22 Post Street, has heen removed to No. 210 STOCKTON STREET where our patrons will receive careful Menfiun. By this sign. you may know and will find any other. * 3 Singer Stores Everywhere lh&mdmsnemsoldztbnrmmnlflyconsdmd.m : leedles and Repairs hr ‘All Makes of Sevlu Mach'a:s SEWING MACHINES RENTED AND EXCHANGED mf&m Machine Company -~

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