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Oakland Tribune from Oakland, California • Page 13

Publication:
Oakland Tribunei
Location:
Oakland, California
Issue Date:
Page:
13
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

VOL. LXXXIY. Believe Orphan jp Girl Poisoned Mill Strangers to Be Given Protection Police Will Ward Off Pests at Ferry Deborah Dyer, Prominent AtU.C, toWddClare Torrey She Was Right; Knife Was There Told Doctors She Swallowed It; X-Ray Proof Couple Cha rged With Mistreating Child HUM' Ml TO 00 10 SEHftTE CHKYtiO. Nov. 2.1.

Mrs. 'Eliza mm 115'PLEft SAX FRANCIS' 'O. Nov. 23. Xo longer will the stranger within San' Francisco's gates be robbed by taxi drivers and hotel sharks or deprived of his suitcase through his own care- ST.

I.nris, Ni.v. -I-ily Schap-paoher. the 11 I who for two mist rented, starved" and enslaved ly a couple who tooi.i her from St. l.ouis lo a irm near Netherlaiul. ila was being put on a train fur St.

lJUis several duvs alio, acri Ui the l-elu-f ot lessness Acting Captain Duncan Matheson of the Harbor dis- beth HcH'hsliorjfcr was right and the hx-tors were wronp, as she proved by a sklfrraph. Eight imiiulm uRci Mrs. Hochs-boitrcr had typhoid fever. She re-i-oered, hut her Monuuh did not feel rlfrht. Finally it dawned on her in a dim way that during; the delirium of fever he had swallowed a table knire.

r- Ono' phjilelan aftei another was ralll on to prewribo for the stomach troiihle and to each Khe told of the 1 1 net issued order ttys morning hoia- lug the sergeants on duty at ferry StPTlhpn WUp SaV Mpn personally responsible 3ltpiieil rr lit OrtS llCll jthe (iirection nhdlu-otection' of the of Race Must Stand Swiss Reserve System to Be Proposed in Congress traveling The sergeants have been instructed I to order' the officers to direct strangers to hotels within their means, seeing that they arrange for Together Is two -phv sit ians wito ttfu attempting to restore the child- 'health ami An 8-year-old brother I illy- H.nTl,tha girU 'herself, who became, rational during brief I-'ily had been forced to eat "rat meat" after their had poured kerosene over by 'the approach of fi'oni out a thresit 1 Tin- suspect that the eiri was forced to eal meat trailed with rat poison. Ora lV-nd his wile, Martha, who obtained possession of and her brother front their widowed father last. August, are now In juil at- Curuthers-ville, Mo- Mffj. eliai'Ked witirTeldni-otis assault and her husband with an table knife, but each had something to say of the imaginations of nervous! women. They told her to fowl it.

Today all were Invited to view the X-ray photogTaph. It showed a lO-lneb knife lyinR In a dlufronal fm-Hltlon In the lower part the stomach. Mrs. Hcx-lisberger will ho operated on to remove the i New YorK Hebrew Speaker Twice at Berkeley Sen. Chamberlain Says Measure Now Is Educational the price of taxi fare before stepping into a machine.

Taxi drivers are forbidden to hotels by the order wihd "must Tgowherethe stranger directs. The officers wlli watch telephone booths to see that persons do not leave their grips outside to he upJfy the petty thieves who infest the Terry btuTd-Ing. Tf- officers are instructed to' look out for strangerssand speak to them without vvaiwrvg to-. be- con- "WASIIIXGTON, Kov, 23. -Chairman Chamberlain of the Senate military committee announced today that he planned to Introduce a bill for j.att.ttnaL..mUttar:-..-w-lc.mo(tkd "Co-education is a great success; It hat, in fact, in many phu-es btvcmir coo-eiluontJUin.

"Wherever you fiixj t'i Jews g-atlierett togetlier you. will finul eleven different opinions iulteil- even more serious crumi anaio.sL im child. fenlon, Sheriff -Stubbleticld of Pemiscot tounly says. Charity Opposes yido ws Tag Day i "1 want to seo-tlw again the God-Intoxicated rH-e that Lisle Thread BanK Best, Says Chief CHICAGO, Nov. 23.

-The "lisle thread bank" is Ahe safest place for carrying Christmas shopping money, says Charles C. Healy. chief of police, in a. list and don'ts" for Christmas shoppers. He also advls the women to leave their children at home because the presence of youngsters divided their attention and made them easier victims of pickpockets, besides exposing the little ones to possible in-Jury in bargain counter crashes.

thi'y once were. 'Sot from cowacditfJbvtJrom. liis sense of 'rivbi and justice. Congressman Says Women Sell Votes Meeker of Missouri Is Center of Storm Campaign Started to Veto Idea Ihe Jew ought to stand forth to-Llay solid with his fellows against "The Jewlsji renalssawe will i arrive when the Jew has quite re after the Swiss system. He does not expect it will be passed but plans to brtnpr the subjrrt ip for serious contemplation in Congress and also to Pepin a campaign for-military education.

Senator Chamberlain and Chairman Hay of the House military committee, officers of the petieral staff and Secretary Garrison will confer this week on the army appropriation program. They expect to have it ready for introduction during the first week of the spssl.on,. Republican Leader Mann of the House today accepted President son's-invitation to confer on nntlonal covered his self-reverence." I From an address at Berkeley last evening: of Rabbi Stephen S. Wise of New York Free Synagogue. I I MISS DEHOR AH DVKIl, TltOMINKNT EN'IV EltSITY OF CAMPORXIA I UTMVV WHO HAS AXXOlNCEl) II Ml ENGAGEMENT TO CM RE M.TOIillV, FIUVATi; SIX HKTAKY TO PRESIDENT BENJAMIN IDF.

WHKKI.KH. 1 ST. LOUIS, Nov. 23. Congressman Jacob E.

Meeker of St CHICAGO. Nov. Chicago charitable organisations today began a campaign to obtain Mayor Thompson's veto of a resolution passed by the City Council last night, setting asUla December 'H as a tag: day fur needy widows. The resolution provides that widows shall do their own tagging and retain all money collected. Aldermen would supply the necessary credentials.

Those. detained by lll-heaXih "c'oi'iUl, provide authorised reprfise-tfllitives. The-objection to the tag ADDRESS OS IIOISIXG. Joseph H. Hink, secretary of the tenement house commissioner of New York, will speak on "Housing the People" at the regular luncheon of the League for Home Rule in Taxation tomorrow Rt the Hof Bran, San Francisco Dr.

Charles H. Hale of Santa Cruz also. addressed the league, lectors. Louis-' In addressing a suffrage; BERKELEY, Nov. 23.

Before an luncheon here, said that in Denver, autlicnce of several hundred, persona, Bo he had been told, women sold Habbl Stephen S. Wise of th.e Free their votes for i'ifty and', Synagogue of Nevy one, of the defense legislation. Senator Gallinger, eh there yuoiui a ui mc cwkiihj that the votes of society women the Senate leader, already has repted. they will be married and go on with their college activities. Mi! -Dyer was graduated in Torrey In were, associated in many 'student duties during their undergraduates peripd.

Torrey Is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Torrey, 2208 Parker street, Berkeley. Both he and lllns Dyer belong to the Phi Beta Kappa honor society. Miss Dyer was one of the most active women" orrthe campus duirng her university career.

She was woman's editor of the "Daily CallfoVntan" and was promi day is that It would promote beggary and expose to Jibes and Insults mfn who appeared on the streets labeled widows." It Is estimated that there are 32,5011 widow In Chicago. buOthe proportion of the needy ones is pot known. BKRKKl.F.T, Nov. Miss Deborah H. lyer, one of the most prominent graduates 'of the X'htversUy of California in 1.91, announced ier engatfement last evening to Clare M.

Torrey, secretary to President Benjamin l'de AVheeler and recently an addition to the Belgian Relief Commission. The announcement was made at the home of Miss Ruth Kinkead where Miss Dyer was being entertained at a tea. A similar announcement to that of Miss Dyer was made last night by Torrey to could be. bought with theater tickets M)rixxm lMt for a reviving The remarks of Congressman self-respect among' the members of Meeker created an uproar and his race; for a renewed sense of several women sprang to their feet solidarity, and for a "faith In things to answer him. 'unseen." The address was under the Miss Mary Bulkley quieted the auspices of the California Menorah women by saving, "Let Mr.

Meeker Society and was on the theme "What continue his able exposition of lhe Matter with the Jew?" Meeker." This afternoon Habbl Wise was Automobile KnocKs WorKman Of Ladder THANKSGIVING CHRISTMAS NEW YEAR nent in the social and dramatic doings of the student Ret. She was a member of When Meeker tried to leave the ain m'ara an interested auaience the members of his fraternity, Phi Kappa the Frytanean Society, English (Tub, Sigma, at a farewell dinner given on the Canterbury (Tub and other organlma- room several women blocked his path when sPok a8 ust tn and hurled suffrage arguments at 1 nfverslty of California at 101 Mr -K-ato. n'Hapa tholfomia hall. His themer at this time Three bio: occasions, within the next tlons. pon graduation she entered the was "The Jew In American Colleges and Universities." In his address last evening Rabbi Wise said in part: eve of his departure lor cerium iu iinc up his duties on the commission.

The fact that Torrey departs Friday Tor Belgium to work there fo'r the American Relief Commissioned not shed gloom over the festivities. He will be PAN FRANCISCO. Nov. 23. The victim of a peculiar accident today, Vigo Laurid-aen of 1144 O'Farrell street, an electrical worker employed by the Pacific Gas and Electric Company, Is In the Central Emergency Hospital with a broken knee, a broken nose, a lacerated scalp and aher injuries.

Laurldsen was cleaning the electric light on a United Railroads trolley pole In Market street. An auto belonging to Chas. W. Miller was at curb. laurldsen climbed up his ladder.

Miller backed the woman who sold her vote for $50 showed more intelligence than the man who sold his vote for a glass of beer. Congressman Meeker said there forty days, on which a new Overcoat is indispensable. I extension department, where she is now an inspector. J5he is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

J. B. Dyer, who formerly lived In Jackson Oakland, but now reside In Lafayette. is Not destiny. of the greatest punishments back in six or seven months and then has been Inflicted upon the Jew was danger in giving women the ballot, for they would go to greater! the conviction that the world's Let us demorrt opinion of him Is true.

It has reacted lengths than men in behalf of the TK VERCOATS toward making him In a measure I machine, knooked over the ladder and policies they favored. Men were better friends of women, he said, than conform to that opinion. It is a SODhlstrv which he must throw naldo were women, and men could be'. Laurldsen dropped. His body struck an ornamental basket around the pole, rolled out and plunged to the sidewalk.

Millet; was arrested and charged with battery. 'flH Hnnn aa ha baa Uarna'H Inat trusted to legislate for women ut- F-THE- stratc to you distinction in Overc oat even when the price is as low as $15, Children See Liberty Bell Ancestor CracKed PITTSBURGH, Nov. 23. Prominent among the thousands who welcomed the Liberty Bell when it arrived here today were Wilbert and Henrietta Hodge of Chartiers township, descendants, through their mother, Mrs. Thomas Hodge, of William Hurry, who, 139 "years ago, rang the bell so hard that It cracked.

Escorting the children will be a large delegation of Chartiers township school children, under their teachers. i I OF Am DESTROYED I HUB FIR RDINARY Carnegie's Eightieth Birthday Celebrated PITTSBURGH. Nov. 24. The eightieth birthday anniversary of Andrew Carnegie and the fifteenth anniversary of the Carnegie Institute of Technology will be observed at the annual Founders' Day celebration at the institute today and tomorrow.

A feature of the celebration will be presentation to guests of honor of bronze medals commemorating the occasion. untrue It Is but how true It may become. He must not be the doormat of the world. There Is no reason why he should be. It Is not his destiny.

"The greatest fiction ot the age Is that common saying that the Jews stand together. In reality they do nothing of the kind. Wherever you find ten Jews gathered together, you will find eleven opinions expressed. The Jews have been, in fact, so busy talking: of the unity of God as to forget how divided they were becoming and their Increasing lack of unity. To accomplish this purpose it devolves upon the Jew to regain consciousness of his oneness.

He muBt reachieve solidarity. When I speak of solidarity I do not mean solidity. Tou will find many Jews now with a sufficiently solid presentation. FACTOK FOH PEACE. "The Jew is gravely In -danger of losing two of his greatest Individual distinctions his religion and his morality.

Without question, he is still religious and -he Is still moral, hut that passion of old Israel Is gone. The Jews are not today that God-Intoxicated race of old. I want to see the Jews stand up with all that old-time passion of all things right. "I want especially that he shall stand out today everywhere against war. If he does, he will be a tremendous factor In the cause of peace.

He must oppose war not because he Is afraid of it; not because he is a coward, for he has always suffered war; but through that old passion for right and Justice. "The Jewish renaissance will have arrived when the Jew recovers his self-reverence, his racial unity and his pristine passion for things righteous." Let us convince you that, above $35, money will hardly buy anything additional in the way of Overcoat values. Annex of Bon Marche Burns; Loss Is Six Millions WANTED Let's not waste words on set-in sleeves and draped backs On fabrics fanciful that you only need to see in order to admire Sane styles prevail here. Yet even our most conservative coats have a swing to them that saves them from mediocrity. Professional men admire our dressv models in Ox- AUCTION SALES J.

A. MUNRO CO. AUCTION 15KRS. 1007 Clay street, coiner Tep.th street, phone Oakland 4671. will pay highest prlc paid for merchandise, furniture, tc, or will sell oa commission.

Sales vry B-rlday. PA HIS, Nov. 23. The loss by fire yesterday in the annex of the Bon Marche, one of the largest depart-Parls, is estimated 30,000,000 francs "On" at vie lines that only I ment stores of as at least t. when mirrored can be ap- ford grays and other dark The flames destroyed much ralu- mixtures predated.

Ui UU1V1I Ail I "Mi. anie old furniture. Objects of art and Oriental rugs worth 20,000,000 francs were destroyed, In addition to vast quantities of merchandise, Including carpets to the value of franos. i -Special" -Auction Sale Business men want our novelty mixtures that are "kept within reason While for young fellows the lid is off entirely. Men don't visualize style from printed descriptions And, correctly, can't conceive themselves looking like clothing illustrations.

100 Lady Solicitors for work in the east bay cities on the livest, best money -making proposition in the market today. This plan is endorsed by merchants and bankers of Oakland. Salary Paid E. N. Tapscott Rooms 215-216-217-218-219-220, First National Bank Uuilding, Oakland.

Of the fine furnishings at the residence First Cereals From BalKans Received AMSTERDAM, Xo'vTls. The Vos- 768 Fourteenth Street, Oakland. Sale Wednesday. November 24th, at 10:30 A. M.

Comprising in part: 1 fine, npiiclrt piano, odd parlor pieces, fumed oak duvenpert. a-e curtains, Hrusyels rugs, steel beds, white enamel dressers, chiffoniers, dressing table, lnm1 oak round dining table, box chairs, folding beds, library table, gas range, heater, china and glassware, etc, etc. All must snii will be sold. J. A.

Ml'N'RO Auctioneers. mem a mmmm WEARING APPAREL FOR MENaoBOYS 1311-1317 WASHINGTON STREET. THANKSGIVING CARDS FOR GREETING FOR FAVORS FOR THE TABLE Our Lines Are Unusually Complete and the Prices Are Astonishingly Low PLACE CARDS An exceptionally comprehensive showing of distinctly typical cards for this occasion. They are shown in printed styles and with appropriate figures attached. A special line is offered for bachelor dinners.

Triced from, each 'ZV-id to 25C GREETING CARDS This is an enormous shown in the form of cards, post-cards and booklets. Priced from, each lMo 25c FAVORS This line is up of candy, containers, ice cups, joke favors and table decorations in typical forms. Triced from, each, SUd to Holiday Card SQftion Second Floor slschc Zeltung of Berlin announces the arrival there of the first consignment of cereals from the Balkans. A Constantinople dispatch says regular shipments of foodstuffs, especially grain, to Germany and Austria, from the Balkans, will begin tomorrow. HIPPODROME GLOVES GLOVES SPECIAL NUMBERS FOR THE HOLIDAYS The Family Theatre Beginning Tomorrow POSITIVELY FIRST TIME IN OAKLAND Charles Chaplin if In the Funniest Comedy He Has Ever Appeared in A Night in the Show" In Conjunction Big New Bill of Who wouldn't be thankful for a Victrola on Thanksgiving! Everybody enjoys its delightful music.and every hostess will be glad to have the Victrola help in the entertaining.

Such a splendid instrument is something for whjch to be truly thankful I Come in and we'll gladly demonstrate the Victrola and play your favorite music. The Victrola shown In illustration is the Victrola XlVt, $150. Other tyles $350. Victors $10 to $100. Easy terms, if desired.

1 I Two-clasp Taft Fennoyer Gloves with P. K. Derby style, shown in all suitable colors. Extra value at, the Pair Two-clasp Overseam in a lijrht in white only and extra specially priced at. SI.

10 One-clasp full T. K. Paris point stitched Gloves, shown in white, tan and black; a regular value. Extra specially priced at SI. 10 Glove Section First Floor Thanksgiving Carving Sets A complete and attractive line of these sets is shown on" our third floor.

The steel is of excellent quality. Either Jordan or Universal steel may be had at option. Game Sets are shown in two-piece assortments and with slag handles priced at, per set 1.25 to 2.75 Carving Sets may be had as follows, all being three-piece sets, including steel: Stag handles are shown at, per set. to 9.50 Ivqroid handles are shown at. per set.

-S M.OO to 9.50' Ivory handles may bty had at, per set. $12.50 to S20.00 Pearl handles may be had at. per set. .8.12.50 to 20.00 Household Section Third Floor -Class Vaudeville Acts-6 High MATINEE DAILY EVENINGS 10c 15 ANY SEAT. ANY SEAT Oakland Phonograph Co.

THUS. 15. 172 Eleventh Street, Oakland 7 Phonp Oak. 6BKT Except Sundays and Holidays PERFORMANCE CONTINUOUS DAILY, 1:30 TO 11 P..

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About Oakland Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
2,392,182
Years Available:
1874-2016