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16 THE SAN FR/KNCI,SCO C‘LL‘ TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1907 CARMEN SN BUT LITTLE THROUGH ARBITRATION Award Gives Them Twenty Per Cent More Wages, but DISSENTING VIEW BY FATHER YORKE T of the t a4 of arbi- . cally complete; it only alate the terms of the This ent was made Tudge afternoon at _the x s ender 1t award in the jifferences between and its employes. the T im on o the st armen was today's is de- he 33 cents an number of years the co n Company er side of no 30 to 40 cents BETTER PAY IN OAKLAND that Oakland t motormen and conductors, expressed by Cornelius he pick of the men ing to work ¥ are harder, Oakland, pleasant s v be ere when rney for the ss the award public by the remarkable decis he s = knhown that b rday « e Beatty had not been will- g nsider a greater lincrease than for the ‘carmen itrator fo the from his original yrning Tirey ave said to some of his award would grant increase of 20 per cent, erewould be no change in e working daj t advanced by Beatty e to the le to have eat cost At railroad position Ford is in ser number been that it to the com- id z pen ask wo id mean an 0 a year the com- o er words, it would be equivalent to the necessity of setting q fund of $5,000,000," he is re- e urged during the course rbitration is evident that nd of the jurist the property olved w a stronger con- than the pgrsonal rights of men DISSENTING OPINION Yorke. in his dissenting opin- take the ground that motor- conductors as a class are un- throughout the country, and hey are suffering from the' evil tance of the days when s were operated by horsepower and ers were obtainable at a niggardly ge for sixteen hours’ work. During the taking of testimony it had been repeatedly ed by the at- ney for the railroads that the ques- of the company’'s ability to pay erease demanded was not befor th rt, and on the company had refrained fro ntroducing any testimony on this pc This silence, under the ordinary 1 f evidence, would bave been « mission, but it appears that the ques- tion of the expense involved weighed most strongly with the umpiring ar- bitrator, who had the deciding vote. The question of the greater cost of living was passed over in the conclud ing argument of the attorney for the carmen. Tt was believed that 1t would not have great weight, as the com- the co its sid pany could not be held responsible for | prevailing high prices. Greater stress was laid upon the: harder. conditions under which the men had been obliged to work since the fire. It is under- '0d. however, that in granting the nerease in wages the Chief Justice ex- pressed himself as having been 1{n- fluenced by the greater cost of living rather than by the harder conditions of labor, which, he held, were inappre- ciable and temporary. The decision would have been signed vesterday had It not brr\ for the fact that the increase in Phe wages paid by the Oakland Traction Company, as it was alluded to in vesterd Call, was brought before the board, and an argument upon it was made, which, it was hoped, Would be of avail. Ths board was in session until’a late hour in the afternoon, and many interlinea- | tions were made in the text of the majority decision without appreciably changing the result. The new conditions established by the award will be in effect only a little more than two months. On May 1 the present contract will expire and a new agreement will have to be made be- tween the United Railroads and its carmen. —_—— Up-to-Date Valentines Each is a Valentine filled with sweet surprises—our Valemtine Candy Boxes. | Haas' Candy Stores, Fillmore at Ellis ! and Van Ness al . - will street | trued as an ad-|{ JURORS HUNT FOR ENESOROPPER N 1T Rafael an 'BRIBERY CHARGE INQUIRY FUTILE 1‘ San Rafael almost had a new sensa- tfon in connection with the Cochrane- Taylor feud yesterday during the in- vestigation by the Grand Jury of the charge of jury bribery in the Keefe se. The inquisitors had been in ses- 1 about an hour when they heard a noise between the ceiliugrof their room and the roof. It must Have been made by an eavesdropper who had made his way up the ladder in an room to the trap door leading to the rat and bat inhabited silences of the spider-wehbed attic. Foreman Fred P. deliberating host and der, closely followea by W. T. Price, who boasts the title of “the Kicker of Mill Valley. He in turn was fol- lowed by George Ring. The trap- door had been unlocked. That looked bad, Constable George M. Agnew as for. Then the door was opened and Fore- Howard raised his head into the d echoing emptiness. Slowly he made his way into the forbidding Howard led the scaled the Tad- so sent Juryman Hazelton attempted to make his way through the trap door. He was too large and had to leave the heroics to smaller men. But the investigation fruitless as proved about inquiry into the al- ed satisfac the tory alibis, and the cause of noise must go down in San Rafael history as’ another mystery too ieep to penetrate. her Byrne who, it was stated, would from Napa to corroborate the nent of Father Egan, failed to at- He pleaded by telephone a pre- engagement, and as he lived re than thirty miles from the meet- ing place of the Grand Jury, he could not be legally forced to come. Instead e is said to have told over the wire what he knew of the matter. In this connection Father Byrne is quoted as having said ‘that shortly ter the conversation between C. H. Beardsley and Father Egan, the latter m about it. This conversation s substantially the same as the story that Father Egan gave to the Grand Jury, to the effect that Beardsley had told the witness of giving $5000 to Pat Cochrane in bribing the jury in the Keefe perjury trial. This was the con- sation that Beardsley denies ever ing had with Father Egan. r. Wickman was another witness summoned to testify to hearing Father Egan say, four years ago, that Beards- ley had told him of a bribe fund handled by “Jim” Cochrame. H. H. Lynch, & newspaper man, was on hand to testify as to how Taylor's scath- ing letter had come into print in San | Francisco. Taylor deciares that the letter in which he made the bribery charge was addressed to M. F. Coch- rane and was secured for publication | without his knowledge and -printed despite his emphatic protest. | Lynch is also sald to have testi- fied before the jury vesterday that | “Jim” Cochrane admitted in his pyes- ence the receipt of $5000 as his fee in| the Keefe case, but declared that | was a legitimate charge for services. The Taylor-Cochrane feud now rests with the jury, and will probably expire ecasily. Beardsley will not be indicted | because his innocence of wrongdoing is apparent to the jury. A misunder- standing between Beardsley and | Father Egan as to what he had said it legal is believed to have been the tause | of the latter's statement which led to | Sheriff's Taylor's charges. The Coch- | ranes ecannot be indicted even if there | were sufficient evidence of bribe- giving, which there is not, because of the statute of limitation. Sheriff Tay- lor cannot be indicted because he is not involved except in so far as he re- peated the story of bribery as told by Father Bga OPEN ALL NIGHT The Board of Supervisors finally passed the amerided ordinance yester- day that will permit.saloons to remain open all night. At present saloons must close at 2 a. m., but as soon as | the acting Mavor signs the ordinance | they will not be compelled to close at all. The ordinance designed to prevent |the attendance of minors at skating |rinks unless accompanied by their postponed, as the managers of the rinks have agreed te exclude minors therefrom at nights and on Sunday mornings. The board passed to print the ordi- nance reducing the width of side- walks in Third street from Market to Berry to fourteen feet, and those in Bryant, Eighth, TFolsom, Harrison, | Townsend, Brannan and Second streets to fifteen feet. The ordinance reducing the widths of sidewalks to fifteen feet in Utah, Ver- mont. Kansas, Rhode Island. De Haro, Carolina, Hooper, Irwin, Hubbell, - El Dorado, Michigan, Georgia and Division streets was finally passed. The board adopted a resolution |granting the Ocean Shore Railway | Company a permit to build a crossing in San Bruno avenue at official grade at {its own expense. | _Lights were ordered instalbed in | Twenty-fourth street at its intersec- | tions with Potrero and Treat avenues, |Harrison, Alabama, Florida, Bryant, | York and Hampshire streets. | The board decided to submit to the | voters a proposition to incur a bonded | indebtedness for the preservation of ITe|exrlph Hill. SR TR, ! AGED MAN THROWN FROM CAR | Bdward Durkin, 76 years of age and for twenty-five years chlef weigher at the Custom-house, was thrown to the ground and badly injured while get- ,uns off a Fillmore-street car yesterday at Sacramento street. The conductor lalsnfled the motorman to go head be- | fore the aged passenger had reached 1the ground safely and he was dragged |along for several feet before the car was stopped. His hip was | badiy bruised and probably fractured. —_— booksellers, stationery. printing, of- fice supplies. The Whitaker & Ray Co., 141 Grove.* Almost Has New Sensation in Feud of Not an Eight-Hour Day| the Cochranes and Taylor adjoining | attic, and with equal cautiousness other jurors f A bat fluttered | against _th but not a juryman moved a musel Carefully but firmly, as men with a duty to perform. they stepped upon the single board which permitted reconnoitering over the lath and plaster to the farthest reaches of the attic. A complication ensued when rane to be used by Attorney James | SALOONS MAY KEEP | parents as guardians was indefinitely | Colonial Actors Have 3 Slipshod Vehicl | % - 5 SR A & PERALTA { GALINDe 1ZETTA SEWEL | [ | | | | HuMPHRevs By James Crawford [ the Novelty Theater last evening wait- | “It had an uniterrupted run of five | man | the Colonial Theater. There were four acts, but two of them sufficed to con- vince that there must have been some- |thing awry in the Los Angeles sys- tem of discerning dramatic values. The iplay would not run more than one | week at the Colonial even if no other | May could be procured by the manage- | ment. \ | H. D. Cottrell |the same Oliver who once was a fa- | miliar figure in theatrical circles south of Market street—are - credited with joint authorship of |fect. From them I infer that Mr. Cot- trell conceived a plot, such as it is, and wrote the dialogue, always sub- | servient to Mr. Morosco’'s idea of stage | effectiveness. In no other way, per- | haps, could the resultant general de- bility have been created. The scene js laid in the Indian Ter- | ritory, and the first gct setting is re- | mindful in its picturesqueness of a syl- | van glade in Mill Valley, which may be | set down as incongruity No. 1. There are many unnecessary entrances and exits by superfluous characters, and from the conversation of the prominent people, which is largely given.to plat- itudinous philosophy and thickly stud- ded with *“damms,” no comprehensive | guidance to ensuing events is deriva- ble. When the element of suspense is | established its duration is brief. Of camplicated situations there are none | entitled to theé adjective. All we are given to understand is that the leading lady is beloved by both the leading| me1 and the villlan, andythat the latter | resorts to many stage-worn devices to win her. . In the second act the scene is a ball- room, and most of the characters are Moroscoed in fancy costume tosheighten the color effect. The leading lady, the leading man and the villain have more goings-on of the same kind, their | scenes alternating with comedy that is| 4 neither reasonable nor exhilarating. { A realistic rainstorm in the third act is reflective of more Moroscoism. 1 did not wait to see it, because nothing | short of a prolonged deluge could offer charm of novelty to any one who has | spent the last three months in San Francisco. Tn their conventional characters the players do as well as could be expected. Mr. Bacon has the most unpropitious role a comedian was ever cast for, and Messrs. Roger, Humphreys and the other masculine favorites are not much better served. Miss Jewell is not called upon for intense emotional investment. | Miss Odell does not seem to enjoy her- self as a circus performer who says things that a real queen of the arena would never think of saying. The placing of a radiantly garbed circus lady in such an environment was evidently an- other Morosco contribution to the pic- torial side of the drama. A five‘'weeks’ run in Los Angélés does not necessarily pronounce a play strong in the elements that assure long runs elsewhere. Perhaps - we should be grateful to “The Halfbreed” for teach- ing us that much. » “FRA DIAVOLO” WELL SUNG Pacini manifested the possession of a | falsetto voice last night in .“Fra Diavolo,” and, as he was coupled up Iv&'ith Lambardi in the comic duet in the | last act, the two won the favor of the |house more than at any other time during the performance. Pacini soared comically, while Lambardi sang in subterranean tones, and the contrast made the chorus laugh, which is all that can be said in their honor as fun- makers. 7 The “Fra Diavolo” night was ‘well balanced, which means that the com- edy was carried as uniformly as might be in opera. Salvaneschi, Bergamiand Campofiore put zest into their work, Campofiore surprising the audience with her clever comedy stunt. Tromben | did all with the part of Zerlia that the | limited quantity and quality of her {voice permitted. The orcHestra sus- tained the singers'fairly well. and had their chance in court, which has not al- ways been the case when braying horns and a thunderous drummer have as- sailed the ears of auditors and mado chaos of what was otherwise clearly |,conceived and well proportioned mu- | stcally. “Il Trovatore” will be sung tonight, with Adaberto. D'Ottavi, Antola, Can- netti, Marina and Millon. 2 AMERICAN THEATER The San Franeisco Opera Company opened the last week of its production of “The Princess Chic” at the Amerfean Theater last night. The opera has been given a cordial reception and gives promise of playing to big audiences during the remainder of its run. Aida | ed and Oliver Morosco— | “The Halfbreed,” | and to the collaboration may be ascribed | | the incongruities that are its chief de- | Hemmi is a favorite in the title role, while Teddy Webb and his assaciates make the most of the comedy parts as- signed to them. The scenery and cos- tumes are new ‘and elaborate, and have helped materially in winning the suc- cess. Nielson won fame, is announced for next week. sl i & “The Singing Girl” in which Alice| An assemblage that completely filled | until ement gave up hope of present- 9 o'clock before the house leged $& bribe giving. There was no | weeks in Los Angeles” was the big-|ing “The Virginian.” Then the an-|buildings been constructed as they one to be found. All the newgpaper |tvped announcement that decided me to | nouncement was reluctantly made that| should have been the little shake were rounded up. but they’estab- | witness “The Halfbreed” last night at|the players were there, but the scenery | would not have damaged them any |had not arrived from Oakland, and | could not possibly arrive in time to permit of the production. The audi- | ence took its disappointment philosoph- | cussion over the plans for the bleach- ¢ will positively be pre- | ically. The pls sented tonight. CHUTES THEATER Agnes WilHams Johns and William R. Abram made their first appearance in vaudeville yesterday at the -Chutes Theater, and presented an amusing sketch calléd “Realization,” which was received with great favor. Le Barge, tile musical art Beauchamp, an acrobatic marvel; Arthur Barrett, Hebrew imitator; new motion pictures and ‘the Gayety Girls in a burlesque called “Shy Ann” w tributions to the entertainment. DAAING FOBBERIES 31 HOOOLUMS Three young rascals; who have been plying their vocations’as footpads and | have been making their principal stamping ground in Webster street, near Ellis, are supposed to have com- mitted innumerable crimes in the dis- trict bounded by Fell and California and Fillmore and Gough streets. Early vesterday morning the trio attacked and robbed two men, Z. Doassan and F. Conrade, in Sutter . street, near Buchanan. Conrade’s skull was frac- tured; 'Doassan was slightly injured. About an hour later three young men answering the description of the three who attacked Doassan and Con- rade felled a man at the corner of | Eddy and Webster streets and robbed him after severely beating him on the head. The attacks had become so frequent that the police rounded up| a number of young hoodlums of the districts and yesterday morning three suspects were taken into custody and their names placed on the detention book. The corner of Eddy and Webster has been the scene of other hold-ups recently. Several nights ago a man who emerged from the saloon of J. A. Fell, at the northwest corner, was set upon by three young thugs. who stole his watch and tried to get at his wallet. The man kad been drinking in the saloon and had apparently been watched by the young thieves. He fool- ishly showed hig money. Policemen De Rocca and Sweeney responded to the man’s lusty calls for help, but the trio of thugs had fled. A gang of young hoodlums is bred by a poolroom in the vicinity, which is always filled with boys of from 12 to 20 years of age. The entire street for blocks north of Eddy street is honey- combed with rooms occupied by dis- | solute characters whose willingness to pay high rents has had a tendency to drive decent people from the neigh- borhood. e Patrons of cafes near Filimore street have had reason to complain of the ruffians who stand around the corner one re the other con- | WING AN LATHRCP HAVE INDIVDUAL OPINIONS Engineers’ Hint of Lack of Cement in the Bricks at| | -Stanford Jars Treasurer| REPORTED RUPTURE IS DENIED, HOWEVER “Go tell your troubles to the prp- fessor.” The college axiom is reversed. Even the policeman hasn't a look in. There | are storles of unreinforced concrete, of keystones that do not key: of cir-| cles that will not square. The uni- versity is agog with them. and. like Banquo's ghost, they will not down. Rah, rah, sah—this time the Stan- ford. California has had her inning of the gossipy sort. Stanford had her round of discomfort when the temblor shook down a few bricks, and every who had experience with that “nine and a half” knows that the soul of safety was with the bricks without straws—the bricks that could hold| like those of the Palace Hotel. | The story is going the rounds of the campus in effect that since Pro-| fessor C. B. Wing intimated that there | was not all the cement that there really should have been in the bricks of the Stanford University when the shake came, there has not been as cordial a feeling between the savant and Charles G. Lathrop, the late Mrs. Stanford’s brother, as before. Wing has some set ideas on the sort of architecture that should be em- ployed to grace thé Stanford buildings and also an opinion that good material | ought to be used in construction. He does not!say that he is not in favor ;kwm: Lathrop, but it is generally be- [lleved among the stucents that there has existed a somewhat bitter feeling between the eminent engineer and mathematiclan and the treasurer of the university. The report is that it was Wing who first. unthinkingly, made the remark that had the Stanford | more than it did the unburned district | ot san Francisco. | Recently there has been some dis- | ers of the football grounds, and Wing | has had certain ideas that are said | to have been disapproved by Lathrop. | The treasurer positively denies this, | but the rumor is extant nevertheless. | The trustees of the college disclaim | any knowledge of the difference of opinion, and Lathrop says that he has no knowledge of such a report having been circulated. Wing is silent, but | gives the impression that he and the | treasurer are on the best of terms I‘and that they are of one mind regard- {ing the gridiron. | An attache of the university who | has to do with construction of some | of the dismantled buildings and the | building of the new ones said: “Professor Wing has had much to | do with the reconstruction of the uni- | versity; I think his plans/are usually accepted without question. He has had some ideas that may have not fitted with those of either the faculty or the genmeral management, but I do not think there has'been any friction. There has been no official information | of, a disagreement between Wing and | Lathrop.” . Wing has his own ideas of how things ought to be, and he goes ahead doing what he thinks is right with the couragé of conviction. The students have it that he detérmined to show that an engineer of standing and at the head of a great institution knows more than a man who has been reared with his nose close to a bill-file and a cashier’s day book. When the next earthquake comes, in | 2097, according to Omuri, the world will have known the real, inside story of Greater Stanford and will be better able to tell the relative merits of sci- ence as applied to building construc- tion and plain everyday business| | methods as injected into the same. { i Do el FALLS INTO HOLD OF SHIP In his efforts to extinguish a blaze | | which originated in the hold of tho| steamer Del Norte, lying off the Har- rison-street wharf, last night, George D. Hilton, a watchman, fell into the | hold, a distanice of twenty feet. After| heroic efforts on the part of a fire| | crew, which was summoned, he was | rescued from his perilous position. Hil- ton was badly bruised in the fall, two ribs being broken and his back badly bruised. He was treated at the Har- bor Hospital. The fire, which was put out before much damage had been done, | was started by an expjoding lamp. of Fillmore and Eddy and insult women who pass. This gang is sup- posed by those who have noticed them to be conmected with the voung raf- cals that have been trying to turn thugs and have many times succeeded. SRR T RS Sickroom Goods and Nurses Madssage. baths and other hourly invalid work. F.Goodban,1305 Gough,nr.Geary. * e e CRUEL DRIVER FINED — Jacob Colton. charged with cruelty ito animals. was fined $20 yesterday by Judge Shortall. Colton's- offense consisted in driving a borse with a large run- ning sore on its back. Engineers and Ghirardelli's Cocoa with their meals. It keeps them in per- fect physical condition and enables them to endure th tremendous nervous under which they labor. There could be no better drink for railroad men than _Ghirardelli’s Firemen derive great benefit from drinking strain delicious ‘ANNOUNCEMENT - During the past week we have received several shipments of Spring Suits for Men which we show today for the first time. These suits embody the very latest Eastern fashions in style and material, and are in every respect equal to made-to-order suits at double our prices, which range from $25.00 to $35.00 We cordially invite you to inspect these ~Suits. You cannot fail to be impressed with the exceptional values they represent. BROW BROS. &co." «..MILL TO MAN CLOTHIERS.... ESTABLISHED 1867 VO BRANCH STORES VAN NESS AVE,, cor.O’FARRELL gistered a strong Supervisor Kelly | objection to the granting of a permit to J. H. Kruse to insta an engine and lumber in the latter's planing miil in Treat av betwaen second -and b streets, be- : ee had reported three months ago against the permit. FEE OF 535,000 | cause the fire cotom Kelly successfully opposed a sion of the rules to consider it and the matter was referred “to the firs The Board of Supervisors met yes-|fOmmites. which will meet next terday and appointed Willlam H.|expected that a large delegation will Mooser as architect to draw the plans | be present to protest against the grant~ for the new -City and County Hos-|IN& of the permit. pital to be erected in the Almshouse| The ordinance providing $275 for tract under the bond issue. Mooser | monthly incre: in salaries of was given four months’ time to com-|employes in Auditor's office was plete the plans and he will receive 3% passed to print. This action was tan per cent of the estimated cost of|tamount to overriding Mayor Schmitz's $1,000,000, or $35,000, for his work.|veto of a similar ordinance. City Architect Shea will receive 2 per| = 2 g :‘1‘::{-. et he th']w.\.\"rs CHILDREN'S PLAYGROUND The bullding committee was in-| The civiec see rel Hall Club structed to ascertain how soon the | by Mrs. Be . filed with t plans for the new schoolhouses will Supervisors a petiti tha be finished. block 128 be secu for a ren's The board set Thursday evening at 7:30 o'clock as the time for taking up the water rates Investigation. | The Spring Valley Company filed a statement that its receipts from July 1, 1906, to December 31, 1906, were $786,886.76, while its expenditures were $1,431,743.80. The company said it was playground at North Beach before any permanent Iimprovements are goa thereon. " 3 fest SCOTS TO ENTERTAL | Seottish Thistle Club wir ties this year with a The San magurate ladies’ p headquarters, 3265 Sixteenth street. Febru ) v 2 unable to give figurés of its financial | Clansmen M. S. Morrison, A. D. McDougaid, . per, D. Girdwo d Sam operations from July 1, 1904, to July 1, | mem iather 0 Sirdwood and Samuel Carw 1905, as the records were destroyed. 2 The board appointed Clement Ben- | for an outing at Shellmound Park on July 4. nett official stenographer for the water —_— rate investigation at a salary of 38 per“ Cold Day Lunch Ho day. | business, 417 Pine st. charge of the programme. Plans are be t 18e. Reopen west Montgmr Look Out for the Dog! When you purchase a disk talking machine wateh for the trade- mark of the dog. If you will do this you have the assurance that you bave one of the best machines that the market affords. It is the sign of the “Vietor. We carry the largest line of Talking Machines = is shown im any store west of the City of Chicago, sound-preof rooms In which to try them. In no other\store can you see such an immense line of machines and records as the following umnder one roof In this city. Victor, Edison, Talk-o-phone, Zonophone, MACHINES AND RECORDS Then, too, you may find any of the records that you you do not have to ask a second time for any record. Any disk record we sell can be used on any type of disk talk- ing machine, Out-of-town customers are requested to send their names to us, together with the nmme of the machine they own, and we will gladly keep them apprised of the newest records as fast as they are pub- Records that nd elght (5) ay ask for; lished. Any make of machine of type may be purchased oa small monthly payments, if it Is not convenient to "CLARK WISE & CO. Cut.-Rate Music Dealers 1420 VAN NESS AVENUE ‘ Between Bush and Pine ' BIENNIAL REPORT Showing Unclaimed Deposits January 1st, 1907, In SAN FRANCISCO SAVINGS UNION At San Franciseco, Cal 3 Sec. 583b of THE CIVIL CODE. The president of every savings ban savings and loan society, and every other bank, depository, society or instity tion in which deposits of money are made, whether any interest or dividend | aid, or agreed to be paid, thereon or not, must, within fifteen days after th Rrat day of January of every odd numbered year, return to the Board of Ban Commissioners a sworn statement, showing the amount placed to his credit, th last known place of residence or postoffice address, and the fact of dea * known to such president, of every depositor who has not made a deposit th,. i or withdrawn therefrom any part of his deposit, or any part of the intarest o dividends thereon, for a period of more than ten years next preceding. Such president must give notice of these deposits in ome or more newspapers pub- lished in or nearest the jown. city, or city and county, where such bank, soclety or other institution is fituated or has its principal place of business. at least once a week for four Successive weeks. the cost of such publication to he paid pro rata out of such unclaimed deposits. This section does not apply to any deposit made by or in the name of person known to the president to be 1} ing, or which, with the accumulation thereon, is less than fifty dgllars. T Board of Bank Commissioners must incorporate in their subsequent report eac return made to them as provided.in this section. Any president of any of the institutions mentioned in this section who neglects or refuses to make the sworn statement required thereby is guilty of a misdemeanor. Approved March 21, 1905. R NAME. A AMOUN ALLEN, Sarah W., trustee R. S. Seymore, 1512 Washington st., Boston, o I o e e z o n . Humboldt Ba; . Calif... ov : , James E., 1308 Valencia st., San Francisco, Calif. ?IOAYI“EVAN. James, Adams House, San Francisco, Calif.. DOZIER, Wm. G. Jr., trustee, Collinsville, Calit F N DRAKE. Fannie W. San Francisco, Calif.... deas 4 GUGLIELMINETTI, Vespasiano, 709 Stockton st., San Francisco, Cal JOHNSTON, Hannah, Redwood City, Calif. ... S « MARTIN, William, 624 Commercial st.. San Franc! MARTINS. Jose L., San Francisco. Calif... McPHERSON, John R., New Washington Hi ¥ n Fra E POWER, Mary A.. trustee, 830 Turk st. San Francisco, Calif. SPILLER, Annie M. Sixth st., San Franecisco, Calif... STEVEN Allce.& :!nay st. San Francisco, cca'r‘r“ ¥ Ellen M., 167 Orange aw: sadena, 2 “EVEN%. M. E. G., Presidio. SR s o WELLER, Bettie M. trustee Anna H. Weller, 2725 Jackson st Francisco, Calif S I do soléemnly swear that the above is a true and the name, last known address, fact of death. if known, and amount te the credit of each depositor, as required by Section 583b, Civil Code. » Subscribed and sworn to before me thig 14th day of January, 1907. (Signed) BE. B ND. Preside: (Signed) FRANK L. OWEN, e correct report, showing (Seal) Notary Publia