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Oakland Tribune from Oakland, California • Page 18

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Oakland Tribunei
Location:
Oakland, California
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18
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TUESDAY EVENING OcilantJ CtlOune MARCH 13, 1923 to Sli PATRICKDAY ELEVEN DECIDES I I 0--and Still Going MANUEL LEt SI LV who hss defied disealeuid tveti toothaches! for eleven decadet, and hat outlived two HilveM Hop. Valentino Is Guest at City Council Meeting Science. Aids Religion, 100 IVlinisters Are Told celebrated hit llOth birthday tndnf. the latter a tremendously more hopeful term. Man did not begin at a height and fall miserably, he began away down and has been climbing ever since.

The difference between a race that started with every spiritual advantage and made a mes of thing in spit of that and a rao that started from the brute and ha eilrabed to where we are, la the difference between pessimism and optimism in religion. But evolution goea farther than to give tt a hopeful universe, and vi '-1 "wf 1 A- TATE ONLY 39 FAIL Ea6lbay Cities Furnish Large Proportion of List of 'ti New Attorneys. Out of 101 person who passed th state bar examination, a largo proportion eoniM from the East bay cities, acoordlng to a list of successful candidate Issued today by the district court of appeal. -The list of name, to be admitted to practice Friday, Include Mrs. Maud W.

Costlgan, wife of Pro feasor E. P. Costlgan of the Unl verslty; of California Ernest Charlea Crowley, the University of California blind graduate; Ruth R. Lange, daughter of Professor Alexis F. Lange.

head of the de partment of education at the tTni versify of California; and Mortl mer Smith, Jr, -son of Superior Judge Mortimer Smith of Alameda "-f The state board of bar txamln ers certified the successful appli cant today, announcing that only 39 failed to paM the examination. The list of new attorney front Alameda county follows; Robert McKee Adams. IS Man dana boulevard. Oakland: David Ft Bush, 1764 Shatter avenue. Oak land: Pearl A.

Brunk, 1340 Pled mont avenue, i Berkeley: R. Chandler, 92 La Fayette street, Alameda: Maud Costlgan, II HUlcrest road. Berkeleyr Ernest Charlea Crowley, 3338 Ellsworth stneet, Berkeley: Sinclair Mont gomery Dobbins, 1413' Virginia street, Berkeley: Fred Forgy. 367 Durant avenue, Berkeley Nathan H. Goldwater.

1130 Grand avenue, Oakland; Robert Louis Hall, 1707 Euclid avenue, Berkeley; Clifton Hildebrand, S2l Shattuelt avenue, Berkeley; P. L. Hollings-Worth, 754 Eagle avenue, Alameda; Frances M. Jessen, 1T35 Haste Berkeley: Halla way Edward Jones, 3543 Dwtght way, Berkeley; Virgin Lewi Kayo, 3100 Bancroft Berkeley William N. Keeler, 2614 Channlng way, Berkeley; Osborne T.

Knapp, ISIS Kales avenue, Oakland; Ruth R. Lange, 2601 Le Conte street, Berkeley: Charles Arthur Lasher, 2437 Telegraph avenue, Berks- 'ley; Tom Louttlt, Hotel Whitecot 'ton, Berkeley; Riohard N. Mather, 261 Hanover street, Oakland: Jay Maurice, 411 Pine street, Oakland; LaSalle A. Andrew Maynard, 2240 Telegraph avenue, Berkeley; Wal ter w. Maynes, zss xeiegrapn avenue, Berkeley; Dorothy Elinor McCullough, 330 Parker street, Berkeley: Donald McGregor, 301 Cottage avenue, Richmond: Taujfo Molina.

2437 Telegraph avenue, Berkeley; Marlon Jeffer son Mulkey, 2437 Telegraph av nue, Berkeley; Harold O. Mund henk, 2411 Durant street, Berke lev: Alfln N. Nelson. 293 Tel' graph avenue. Berkeley; Irving L.

Neumlller, Hotel Whlteoottort, Berkeley: Elmer E. Nichols, 2066 Broadway, William Paulln, 213 College avenue, Berkeley: A. Postlewhaite, 843 Mead avenue, Oakland; Leo Ells-Oworth Slevert, 4160 Emerald Street, Oakland; Mortimer omun. 2503 Wootsey afreet, Berkeley; Herbert Eastman Stark, 3333 Edward street, Berkeley; Guy LeRoy 103 PASS BAR EXAM 11 and all hit children Mif Hut hr.l)v "it 4 PEOPLE TO VOTE ON FIREMEN'S PAY BRRKKLRT. March 13.

Action which will place a proposal for an Increase In salaries for Herkeloy firemen on the ballot ot the mu nicipal election on May 1 was taken this morning by the city council. Councilman Charles Heywood asked that tlu firemen be given asuurahce that their proposal be placed on the May ballot so that they might bo spared the trouble of starting Initiative proceedings. Unanimous approval was given to th proposal, detail of the pro posed new salary schedule to be worked out later by the city officii Is In conjunction with representative of the fire department. According to Couhellmsft Heywood the present 31311 salary of beginners In the fire department In sought to be incraid to tlOO with a proportionate increase lor oiners In th department Salary Increase for various members of hli department were asked today by Councilman Oeorge Hohmirtt, oommisslotier of streets, Here Is the now salary schedule which Schmidt would have pasted: Hulldlng Inspector, 3250, Increase of 340: electrical Inspector. 3199.

noreaae of 320: nlutnbina Insnee- tor, 3Z00, increase 1150, Increase of or 30; elork, 313! assistant electrician. I1T0, increase of 320. The proposed increases were re. ferred the committee of the whole for consideration. On request of M'sa Norella Davidson the council reminded actioln for tho widening of Ban-1 croit way and uapa etreet to Tele grapn avenue, property owner along the thoroughfare experlenc ing a change ot heart, afloordlng to Miss 'Davidson.

Jewelry Bandits Evade Police Hunt PORTLAND, March 13 Oy International News Service). Police today are without a tangible clew to the identity or whereabouts Of the two nntllly-drPHwd bnndlte who yesterday afternoon entered the G. Kramer Jewelry establishment here on the seventh floor of a downtown office building, bound three men and a young woman and i escaped with diamonds end Jewelry valued at 320,000. The bandits are believed to have escaped In an automobile, Banker Arrested un tor mer Lsharze CHICAGO. March It.

David Wiedemann, vlis president of the closed Logan Square Trust Savings Bank, who confessed what he term "a technical forgery" of 321,000. was taken Into custody this afternoon by State's attorneyrs office deputies. Ill arrest followed Uuestlonlng by State's Attorney Robert Crowe and Chief State Bank Examiner II. S. Savage.

Attorney Presents i Plea For Wilkens SAN-FRANCISCO, March 13. Attorney Frank J. MUrphy argued throughout this morning, pleading for th life and liberty Henry Wilkens, on trial for the second time for alleged complicity in the murder of hi wife, Anna. The slaying occurred during a sensational holdup May 30, last. Solano Man Head VJ Of Supervisors SACRA MKNTO, March It.

Thomas McCormlck of Rio Vista wa elected president of tho Star Association of County Supervisors shortly before the convention adjourned here today. The next in. huai convention of tho supervisor a -1 ri.j 1 V- He The council of; the white "man wa visited by tie red man to-'day. when Joseph. Secakuka, koowa a "Tellowfeef of the Eagle tribe of the Hopl was guest of the Oakland city council and observed the operations of that governing body, la the absence of Mayor Davie, Secakuku waa welcdtned by Com tnlsaloner Frank Co! bourn, vice president of the Routine business waa transacted by the council.

Secakuku said It was' Interesting but had no particular "klca." Secakuku waa then Introduced to the various member of the oounoll. The Hopl 1 training to be a movie notor In a motion picture of the Grand Canyon, now being taken by an Oakland concern which 1 handling a new method of screen production. Secakuku, who look somawaat like an Indian version of Rudolph Val. enUno, says he 1 delighted With the "movie game" and hopes to stay In it. He ia now on his way to New York, picture observers say that the Indian Valentino Is a good actor and is Hkely to make a big hit.

Accuses Daughter Of Disrupting Home Char gee that her daughter by a former marriage. Mrs. Cleo Cox. wife of a Berkeley bank employee, broke were -made by Mrs, Clara W. Chandler of 1810 Bonita avenue, Berkeley, lit her utt for divorce today against George Lee Chandler, employee of the Pullman Car Company plant at Richmond.

'Mrs. Chandler charged that she and her husband and their two children, Hasal 4 A. and John Thomas, lived together happily until the appearance of Mrs. Cox and her husband, who came from the east to live with, her mother and tp-father. Chandler turn so.

oold toward her shortly thereafter, and turned ever the entire man agement of the home of Mrs. Co. according to Mr. Chandler. When to separation of th oouplo occurred on December 10.

1(22. Mr. Chandler tried to take her daugh ter, Haxei witn ner on a trip downtown she testified, but th child broke away from her and ran to Mrs. Cox, who was watting in an auto nearby, 8lnos that time she ha lived with Chandler at the Cox home, th mother testified. Chandler, who filed suit against hi wife, she replying with a cross-complaint, charged that hi wife refused to oook hi meals and that shs cursed and swore at htm.

Probation Denial Urged For Youth Denial probation was recom mended in the case of Victor Cotica In a report tiled with Superior Judge i church today by Leon ard D. Compton, probation officer, when Conoa waa brought to oouft lor sentence. The case was oontln ued unell tomorrow for additional investigation as to the age of the aeienaanc According to the report Concu Was charged with partcipattng in the robbery of T. Meyer at Cap- istrano and Knsenada avnua. Berkeley, July 13, 1(32.

Weapons were used at the time, according to me report. Conca'a reoord, a shown by th probation report, involve a conte. si on made to the Berkeley police. COnca is said to have admitted that and two other held up J. Glbbs on the night of December beating htm into unconsciousness and leaving him for dead.

Conca alu partieipated In the robbery of three persona la an automobile, a cOupie in another machine and a sailor ou Son Pablo avenue. It is claimed. He also confessed to having stolen several automobiles and to have robbed several places at Crockett, according to the report. "Conca la a type of the desperate young irresponsible criminal at whose hand the people of th United States auffer so grievously. He la not a native of thl country and doe not know whether his father 1 eitisea or not," say Compton in hi report.

Guardian Chosen For Beater of Mother -ne pouoe today turned eveu josepa Blmonds, It, who beat his mother, to' H. J. Walker, hi a pointed guardian. The boy prom ied the police that in the future he would not harnt hi mother. Walker alsopromised to keep a' close watch ever the boy.

He wa arrested aunaay Bight en the- eom plaint ot hlsv-mother, Mia. Louts almonds, 1013' Sixth avenua after he Is alleged have kioked hat several times following, aa argument. 1 THE USED CAR THE CAR YOU. WANT READ "Autos for Sale" today and Wednesday ia the Classified Want Ad Page of Th TRIBCNSL 'WY; BALL FEATURES Program of Entertainment, Is Arranged at St Anthony a nail The annual St. Patrick Day eels-bratlon will be held hall at sixteenth etreet and Sixteenth avenue, Thursday even, ing, March 15.

at I o'clock. A pro gram haa been arranged approprl. ate as an entertainment tn Ob of a day connected with the music and song Ot Ire land. r-v Among other feature the ehtt dren ot St. Anthony's School and of Our Lady of Lourdes aoadftmy wilt give two choral 'numbers.

HUSH DASCES Pupils ot the parish, trained, by Miss Pauline Gaul, will demon strata the terpslchorean art. The Misses Gaul. O'Reilly. Walsh. Frankle Harrington and other In Oaello costume, will give a speolal exhibition of the Irish dance to th muslo of "Thv Pipes." The entertainment starts at o'clock sharp.

Th grand ball begins at tROGftVM AS ARRANGED. tar Spangled Banner" tupils-oX Our Lady of Lourde Academy, and St. Anth-ony'e School. "O'ponneU aW'a St. Anthony's School "The.

Fpggjy.DAy".... Phil Murphy Miss Hasel May, accompanist. Recltatlqn. "Unroll Erin's Flag" Susan F. Touhy "Kathleen Mavourneen" Mrs, Leo Hanly Mr.

Ralph A. Knapp, accompanist. Eight Hand Heel Pupils of Miss Gaul Music by Mr. D. D'Aroy.

and Mr. Ed. McCarthy. Vocal Solo Mary rhilomene Brusher Mlas Carrie Rogers, accompanist. a "Queen of Connemara." (b) "Let Krtn Remember." Girls of Our Lady ot Lourdes Academy.

Four Hand Reol Mary Gaul, Agne O'Retlty, F.tteen Walsh, Marie BaHettl. Muslo by W. D'Arcy and. Ed, McCarthy. "Little Town In Auld County Down" Leo B.

Hanty Ella Lee Purdue Mrs. Ralph A. Knapp acoompanlat. Hornpipe Specuil "The Black- bird" Pauline Uuut and Frankle Harrington. i.

i i i WATCHMAN IS ROBBED OF GUN ON MAINSTREE EL CENTRO, March 13. 8earah was under way here to day (or three who last night held up and robbed Harry Smith, night watchman for the Merchants Patrot, as she stood on one ot the main corner of the town. Smith declared today he saw the three men and being suspicious of their movements tried to watch; two of them when the third "man stuck a revolver toward' h(t and ordered "Stick 'em, compiled with the qowmasifcyhe said, od was robbed of hi gun cartridge belt, watch and money Fifty, founds of Dynamite Stolen A irfdrehebse at the Bate and Borland quarry" at the head of Seminary avenue was broken Into last night and 60 of dynamite wa stolen. Th theft Was discovered thla morning by Leslie Clougb, ad employee of th Company, who notltted Lieutenant W. F.

Wood of th Eastern polio ttatlon. Captain of Inspector Richard McBoriey ha deuiled Folic In- spector Arthur Sanderson and Robert Goodwin to Investigate th ease. Chancellor Day of Syracuse Near End ATLANTIC CITY. N. March It (By International New 8er vice The condition of Dr.

James Roscoe Day, a chancellor emeritus of Syracuse University, who been unconscious for almost the past 3 hours aa a result of the culmination of an attack of bron chial pneumonia, remained un changed early joday, according to a bulletin Issued by attending phy sicians. Spirits Decide Place of Burial For Indian Girl REDDIKCI, March 13. The body of Leaping Fawn, Pit River Indian girl, with her hunt. Ing knife and gun lit the casket beside her, He at rest In the Pit RlvM cemetery today, after th spirit of her ancestor were called upon to nettle a tribal controversy a to the manner of her long sleep, Yetrday four score member of the tribe assembled at the old stamping ground at Balrd, near here, to hold the final ritee, A arose In the counoll aa to whether she should burled In the tribal cemetery at Balrd or the on at Th brave vjind aquaws could reach no decision, so the two sachem or medicine men of the tribe were called on. The spirit directed that Leap- tng Fawn should be burled in he Pit cemetery.

Then a question arose over the disposition of her hunting equipment. Th aachern again called on the spirits for guidance, and they j. said that the knife and gun should be buned with her, so that she would be well equipped when oh arrived at th Happy Hunting Ground RISH DANCES BERKELEY, March 1 With' 100 pastor from all sections of California In attendance, the third Interdenominational pastoral conference opened today at the First Congregational church. Dr. Her man F.

Swarta, president of the Paclfio School of Religion, tinder whose auspice the three-day conference la being conducted, was chairman. "How science saves religion," was the subject of Dr. Richard La Rue Swain' address. He said, in part: "Hundreds of thousand of people among all classes are losing their sense of God, because they can no longer Image Him. Most of the Intelligent people have abandoned the idea of' God who can sit down on His As they lose this man-made they turn to the Idea of an Imminent God of a deity who fill all ether.

With many this work for a timet but for an ever-Increasing number 'it proves to be at unsatisfactory a the old Idea of a God a localized form. "As ordinarily conceived, thU Imminent God 1 as material and a non-existent as the God with shape. To many mind, this make God so much- eveiy where that he seems to be nowhere. MUST KNOW SCIENCE. We must picture the objective God In terms that are consonant with the known facts of science.

If this i done, religion must do it. because the natural science know nothing of God, neither can tbey know. If we can find a God and show how he Is related to nature, me natural science can ten us what He is doing with nature' forceaand the manner of Hi do ing tt. 'The Christian scholar, therefore, must know the. main fact of the twenty or thirty allied sciences if ho 1 to -draw a picture of God that doe not appear to be grotesque to the scientist, and mere and more to the common people, to whom the findings of science are filtering dowa through scnooi ana periodicals.

"Ws cbntinu to repeat the beautiful word of Jeaua, God is a but this has come to be a meaningless expression for, an alarming proportion of society. "A spirit Is a self -communing energy that know itself, and then comes-to know other self-eommun ing forces like Itself. A spirit I a loving Intelligent will. I use the will In its inclusive sense, to mean all the- experience Involved In the self-conscious, purposeful, forth-going energy called self. This la what spirit mean a experience, and beyond what It Is a expert ence, wa know nothing.

SPIRT AND NATCRB. "The scientist has driven nature a substance to the vanishing point. No one know whether there 1 any bulk, yet nature wa never so po tent in our lives -as since we have driven It to invisible energies. It 1 thlt that make men almost like God. We her see in a peculiar ens how" scienoe ha helped to save religion.

Spirit haa been analysed as self-conscious, purposeful energy. Nature has been reduced to law-abiding energy. The theologian and the scientist have come together at Virtually the same point. Whether there Is substance or not, do not know, but whether there 1 or not nature 1 the energy of the infinite will going forth: nature i work and God 1 the worker." Rev. Oswald W.

S. McCall spoke before noon on "The Power' of In action." At 1:30 Deaft Shatter Mathews addressed the conference on "The Presence of Godwin Social Evolution," which wa followed by discussion and the conference hour. SECOND KAKL LECTURE. Tonight Dr. Carl 8.

Patton will deliver the second of the Earl leo tures on the subject, "The Old Tea. tament." Dr. Richard LaRtle Swain will open tomorrow'! program with an address at o'clock on tn subject, "Doe Man Hive a Soul, and What I His Place in the Universe 7" Die, cusslon will follow from 10 to 10:30, then' the quiet hour from 10:40 to 11:40. Rev. Oswald W.

8. McCall will talk on "The Incredible Oonauest." In the afternoon DeatT Shatter Mathews will address the confer ence on "The View of God in the from 1 1 30 to 3:11, followed by discussion until 43, then -the confervnc. hour from Drv Patton wltr dellye the third Earl Jeoture hr the- evented for his toplo "The New Testament." EVOLUTION DISCUSSED. Under the general title, "Con- temdorarv Reuariou Thouaht." X)r Patton last evening gave the first of the Earl lectures, speaking on Ha uM In Hart! "The modem doctrine of evolution I generally dated from the publication la 1351 of Charles Darwin's Origin of What Darwin did in thla book was to offer a working theory of how evolution had taken place, and thus to draw together at once an tne acatterea evolutionary thought thaMiad been running through these eenturiea It la no wonder that the professor of biology Cambridge writes in the article In the Encyclopedia of Eth ics: The Origin of Specie ha Influenced human thought more pro foundly than any other book of modern However, the Darwinian statement of evolution now may be modified (and I believe it to oe modified far. lee than would be Implied la many popular state meat).

No scientina man hesi tates a moment over the mala thing that Darwla was after. 'Probably the entire solentiflo say Schmucker, Is agreed that evolution some form or other 1 the feolutlon Of the mystery of The tcienuno tacts wnien evolu tion aceonnta for and which are tmaccounttd for on any other hypothesis are those of geology, the distribution of animal form, the ooloration Of anlmalsv the fasts of morphology, the rudiments left in the body, and the facta of embry ology. These fact are aot abet and difficult and ooyona tn -standing of ordinary, intelligent people, and the doctrinowt evoiu. tton should not aeoeptad as a dogma bat pon the face of th evidence eontained in the aoieatiad AID TO RELIGION. "What I am here concerned with I not the establishment of the doc trine of evolution (that ha already been accomplished by scientific thinkers) but it spiritual interpre tation.

The old negative attitude that evolution doesn't do religloa ay harm and that one oaa stlU be Dloua in spit of oeing an evolu tionist, seem Strangely Inadequate. If evolution 1 true, tt should throw light upon religion as It has thrown light open education, philosophical thought and all th other great bo-man Interest. "The flrat positive contribution of evolution to religloa la to (iv Howard Brakes, charged with holding up an oil station at Tele graph avenue and Twenty-eighth street, February 4, 1338, entered a plea of not guilty when arraigned before Superior Judge L. S. Church today.

HI oase Wa continued a week to be set, the defendant reserving the right to change his plea at that time. The charge against Walter Os- trander of driving an atuomobil whils intoxicated waa dismissed to day. Ostrander was arraetad Octo ber i 12. following an accident st Adeline and Woolsey streets. Os-trander recently was tried on ths charge, the Jury standing seven to five for acquittal.

Charged with falling to procld for his five children, Anthony Enos ws arraigned today, hi case being met tar trial Anf 11. Accordlna tt the records F.nos waa first arrested on a falhire-to-provlde charge and granted probation. In 1313 he wa arrested again on th same charge and wr again placed ou probation. In July, 1916, his pro batloa was revoked and be spent seven months In the county Jail. He wa arrested tn November, 1323, it halnsr nhhrift-rl that for the 'five months prior to that date had given but 31 for th oupport of hi family.

Pleading guilty to a charg of burglary In th first degree Lowut Austin today asked for proba tion. II charged with having tered a drug Store at 300 East Eighteenth street from Which he Secured 3113 and six pint of whisky. Theodore de Wlndt, charged With statutory often, entered a plea of not guilty, hi trial being set for April 11. Mayme Kalan, whoa recent trial on charge of robbery resulted in a disagreement by the Jury, was arraigned today on charge ot grand larceny. She 1 alleged to have taken clothing front th room of Jon Ablasser, an employee of the Altenhelr, On September 14 last.

She was arrested in Denver. Arbullda. Charged with pas Ing fictitious checks, waa granted five years' probation today by Judge Church. It was snowa that he had offered a spurious check for 30 in payment of his room rent. Former Actress Given Divorce Afters testifying length a to au ieged enul treatment on th part of her husband, George Anthony Rooth, wealthy grain broker, llv-Inir at the Bellevue HotoL Mrs, Dorothy RoOth, former New York actress, was granted a divorce by Superior Judge Van Ostrand today A property ottlemnt was mad out of cott and she waa given the cuittody of 4-year-old son, lii-njumin.

Th Rooth wer married in Washington, December 35, 1817 The wife stated that Rooth had bficn sullen and had nagged at her, had frequently told her that She married him because she wa going to loss her position on th Stag and had professed to believe that tnere was another man In the case. When their boy wa only three years old, she continued, Rooth woutd often ask him, "Who Is mama aweeuteartT" TEACHER CONVALESCENT. SUNNYVALE, March 13. Mis Alice Melnnis, one of Sunnyvale's popular young grammar -school teachers. Is recovering from serious injuries received la a motor accident two weeks ago at Meoto Park, when Miss McInnls light car was overturned by a speeding Cadillac Within a fortnight.

Mis Melon! epct to have recovered uf HOLDUP 5 BELIES Mi Manuel Silvstv -Bora Before Waterloo Cele-i bratea 110th BIrtliday ALAMEPAv March lSManuel Lee Sllva, 156) Eagle avenue, Is today celebrating, the faot Is tea year along on th second oentury of hi 1 4 Although bora 110 years ago today, which Waa two 'year before Napoleon fought the battle of Waterloo. Sllva has never yet experienced a toothache of a serious The only member of Sllva' family who Is with hlm today Is hi third wtre, who 1 39 year old. Hi children have all died mostly from bid age. 1 Sllva, who wa borh In the Asores Island, oame to Alameda 75 year ago, and herded cattle for Robert Nay, a local landowner of that time; when Alameda consisted of cowpaths and a few straggling houaea In hi old age Sllva I how being oared for by Robert Nay a son of hi former employer, who is a wealthy resident of this city. in Student Arrested I On Landlord's Plea March 18.

For the second tlm within a week, Alfred Aram, law student at the University of California, ha been placed under arrest on a complaint sworn to by A .0. Weaver, manager ot th Morlll Apartments, Shattuck avenua at Hastestreet, where Aram reside. Beoauss Aram tailed htm a "coward," a Piece of a man" and other alleged obnoxious names Weaver told Judge Ifdgar he had disturbed hi peac of mind and asked that be hated Into court to explain hie actions. The flrsjt ohnpter In the eontro verey between landlord and tenant occurred when Aram caused Weave r' arrest beoauss the latter turned off water and In his apartmehtt Weaver-said In court that Aram had to pay hi rent' and won a dismissal of the oae. fW; Several days later Weaver retaliated by causing -a civil suit for 3393.99 damage to be filed against Aram for malicious arrest and today's disturbing th pence charge come a th result, according to Waaver, of a new clash between th two men.

Boy Dies as Result Of( Auto Injuries SAN JOSB, March 13. Charles Lorlng Syke. 7-year-old son of Mr. and Mr. "Will 3yks of 360 Fremont street, died the O'Connor sanitarium late Sunday night a a result a fractured skull and other Injuries received when th boy wat struok by an automobile driven by Roger of the Winchester road i while crossing The Alameda near the Hester school last Friday.

Ths Sykes boy never regained eonsdlousnei from the time he was struck until his death. 'An operation', performed by hospital surgeons proved uu-avalllng. Missing Boy Found 5 Working at Ranch SAN JOSH," March 13. Kenneth Cooey, the 13-year-old. boy who disappeared from th of W.

r. springer of 1337 Mastick avenue several day ago, Was found yesterday working on a ranch In the foothills west of the city, according to an announcement -made by Springer today. WARM SPRINGS WARM SPRINGS. March 13-4 William Walker of Texas wa a guest at the Breltwelser. hom over the week end.

Mr. and Mrs. Walker will locate at Sacramento where Mr. Walker 1 employed. Mr.

and Mrs. Allard motored, to Oakland Sunday a th guest of Ml Ma and Tina Kohler. Mis Adeline Rose attended a social gathering at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Campus In Irvington last week.

Mlas Adeline Aseneda hat recovered from her recent Hlnes. Mr. and Mrs. BelleclU and Miss Oulnchard of Saratoga were guests of Mr. and Mrs.

Allard over th. avaaW atiil I in HEY! Eddie's tt Advershow 11 IS AT THE' WEDNESDAY NIGHT ii NOTE: We mil sap tjfj all Electric Goods A la be given amy WFREEi' KEIJY0N ELECTRIC CO. 526 Thirteenth St stevick, 3435 Hillside street, BerkeleyrV Bryce O. Swartfager, 1747 Walnut street. Berkeley; gives us a spiritual one; There Is plenty of dirt and water, gaa and natural law and mechanism In it, but it Is a spiritual universe.

Back and forth and op and down and all through It la a spiritual universe. I know this from the doctrlee of evolution. For by that doctrine man 1 organic to the universe, he 1 no stranger 1 It, he belongs here, he was born here, he ha come out of the process of evolution as natural ly and necessarily as the peach come out from the tree or the rose On the bush. He is what the whole process beginning away back at the tar oust has culminated in, "In the same way the highest product of the human process 1 the piritual life of man, -his faith, hi hope, hi love, hi aspiration after higher good, hi divine discontent. hi art.

hi literature, his religion That' the highest product of hi life and shows what he la. The ui tlmate product therefore of the whole process of evolution is-a spiritual life and therefore the universe out of which it ha issued Is spiritual Goodness, piety, i love, are no human inventions, nor atranger In an alien world, but they are the heart of the whole great process. The eseenc of the universe is a spiritual life, it IS a spiritual universe. GIVES BETTER IDEA. "'But the greatest thing evolution doe for.

religion la to give us a new and better Idea of God. Evolution throws a new light upon the patience of God. The life of man thua far ia like a minute at the end of a long forenoon which earlier form of life have spent up on our planet. wonder sometime that God oan keep His pa tlenc with the; human race, but hall He spend the whole forenoon Of His cosmic day getting Hi great experiment going and then lose Hie patience-with tt in second "Evolution give Us a God living fcnd working la His world and not tnerety outside of it Instead of His action upon the world being bocaelonal, spasmodic, unnatural, it V- the reverse of all these. He Is no langer an absentee God.

Evolu- Sature and In human life at which I od used to be supposed to have yiwwa) vviiiuiii. ous. 'There are no break in it. Therefore God 1 either not In the process at all, In which case He is of no consequence to us, or He is In the whole process from star dust to man. Modern thought accepts thl latter alternative.

"We live and move 'and have our being In so do all other things and creature. And God live and move and haa tome part of Hi being in and In all creatures and things. He Is not the Infinite car-pen ter-and-joiner; He la the wis dom and the purpose and the for ward looking will which appear throughout the whole creatlpn. "And when you get God inside of His world instead of outside of tt, that means all sorts of wonder ful things, tt means that ail thing are a revelation of God. All literatures, alt music, all art, all science, all religion.

God was revealed In Judea, He also reveal Hlhself In California. He dwelt In Jesus, He will also dwell In ua Nature Is the Sarment of God, law la the vole of od, conscience is the word of God, man ia the living temple of God. Evolution brings tGod home to us and lights up that Whole long; past and the depth of our own spirits, With HI presence." Former Oakland er Dies in Washington WASHINGTON. March 13 William Whisnant, 36, Oakland, CaL, died here today from heart dlaesae. Whisnant was a clerk In a hotel here and was found at his desk.

He cam, here from Oakland last January. Concord Autoist Beaten. Robbed by Tunnel Road Thug BERKELEY, March It. tn a fight with a bandit on the Tunnel Road early this morning, John Imhoff of Concord was defeated, he told the police today, with the result that the bandit took 3240 and his automobile Investlaatloa ky policeman Walter Gordon, who found Imhoff wandering along the street at Claremont and Ashby avenues at 3 o'olock this morning, dlserosed tmhoff's automobile lying wreck at the Tunnel and Vlnoento roads. Imhoff said that he succeeded in injuring the bandit, although net seriously, la restating the letter attempt to rob Mm, Tomorrow Alright QAeet-etasI aartaol, e4Se nS vlgar ta 4imMw eed atiaalaatire si Mis, latareva the aapa-tlt, rallava Sirk Waad ae aa4 Btk- OaaUaattee.

ValJgd for V. rfumoRauuHi (MaVthlrdtheiecvlartfaM tbe esedr Ui. far afcil4ca. a4 adatta. livrvv I 1 Homer Blain Terrill, 487 Central avenue.

Alameda: t. Robert Thomas, Hotel Whitecotton, Berke ley; Dewey Tiftafiy, (213 Harwood avenue, Oakland; William A. White, 2703 Channlng way, Berke leyr Robert A. Woodyard, lSfi Ro- nado avenue, Piedmont. Early Resident of Stockton Is Dead STOCKTON, March 13.

Thomas u. Leavy. exempt fireman of the olden days, former businessman and raiser of fine cattle and hogs. died yesterday morning at hi hom, 413 North Hunter street, after a long Illness. He was born here (4 year ago In.

what I now the heart of the business district. After retiring from business In Stooktbn he started the Calla Grove stock farm near Manteca, where he raised pria animal. Later falling health compelled him to retire to private life. A widow and three son survive. Driver Appear on Intoxication Charge SANTOSE, March 13.

H. K. Bundt? charged with driving an automobile while intoxicated, was arraigned before Justice of the Peace C. lu WItten yesterday. Bunds' trial- set for March II at 2 o'clock.

Ball was fixed at 31000, which was furnished. HEY! Eddie's Advershow IS AT THE WEDNESDAY NIGHT NOTE: Wt Kill all Household Goods to bi gfoen away i FREE 3 wilt be held In Chlco. Jt-eeph Fob- fldnntiy to return from- the hosier, sn Diego supervisor, wag Pita! and again take up her school chasen a treasurer. duties..

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About Oakland Tribune Archive

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