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a THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, JANUARY 18, 1896 I Michael Healy of the revenue cutter Bear ! Miss Daisy Van Ness was in white tulle, with FREIGHT WRECK NEAR VISALIA | from the East night_before lastand took | the Friday Night Miss Satah Gojlier wore a modish gown of Spirit of the Blue-Grass Why Mre. Foley Said She Wanted a SE R | rooms at the Palace Hotel. | Club. blue satin, trimmed with a bertha of\men- Divorce From Her Husband. | | met in room 83 of the Appraisers’ build- ing and organized yesterday. It iscom- posed of Captain D. B. Hodgson, stationed at Detroit, Mich, ptain Louis Stoddard of New York, Captain Coulson of the life-saving service here and Lieutenant Reynolds of the revenue cutter Wolcott. Captains Hodgson and Stoddard arrived | [T WAS A LADIES' FETE, Brilliant Leap-Year Cotillon of The investigation is a secret one, all its | | | Pink trimmings. Miss Gibbons was in pale green costums Miss Ethel Tompkins wore green satin Miss Julia Tompkins wore pink satin. Nes dered. costly, were alsoas a rule, e. arly all of the Indies wore their hair pow- The gowns, though very rich and ery quiet and taste- ful. There were no décisive colors worn, ex- cent for the few ro whole ve: ciennes lace. s, and the effect was as a DRAWN IN OLD KENTUCKY, A Play That Breathes the True State. Ward said that the testimony she gave in | the Police Court was false, and that she | gave it under orders of Fred Frye, an at- torney in the case. Frye was called to the stand and he denied the whole story, but the jury acquitted the defendant. —————— HAD TO SUPPORT HIM. WOULD-BE MEN And ¢Has-Beens’’ Are the felane choly Fates of Too Many of Our Younger Generation, If you have erred in youth, if your eyes i i s T " N " Mrs. Margaret Foley was granted a | = 1sed ¥ syst. | proceedings being behind closed doors. | ifhere were five figures in all—the “grand Pt Ti | 1ack luster, if you have used your system i | Lientenant Reynolds, being the junior | right and left,” ‘‘the serpentine,” “the cir- Ivorce from Thomas Foley by Judge| . "o\ 'have disordered your liver or Two Engines and Fourteon | jgmmst Ahtt pmehlat £h | ittt Taker” 458 e gebaisns Eibbasd,esterday for crusity and. il | 1% L35 idneye you should take the | corresponds to the position of judge- | lcium lights, addi h to their = provide. _ > 2 Ton can get it for certain Cars Leave the Sdvocat in's oourt-mesital: | MANY VERY PRETTY COSTUMES | Sl poiie sy COLONELS AND HOBSE-RACES.| ® "soley said on tbe stand that hes| GTest Hudyan. Youcanget s for cer Rails The charges against Captain Healy ac- | v and navy officers wore full uni- diseases, but you must firs PF cuse him of frequently getting drunk on duty while in Alaskan waters. The prin- 12 cotillon SUDPET Was served. nded at midnight, when Regular dancing foilowed. husband came here from Yonkers, N. e tion to the Hudson Medical Institut on money that she sent him, and that % Hudyan cures certain jorms of 1i and Rhides 3 4 : s The rules for the guidance ot participants were | pr. Selected the C] f | since he has been here she has supporzed kidney affectiors, impaired vitality and == cipai witnesses against him are Lieutenant 03d Fellows’ Hall Beautifully Deco- | not extensive. | i o In | Mr. Dazey Selecte e Characters o 5 ; ppor i y ct s TR Daniels of the Bear and Assistant En- y 2ddition 10 the voe meakib ine onbr- ¢hose | him. She bad built a house out in the loss of strength. Hudyan is efficacious PLUNGE INTO A DITCH. | of his commissioned subordinates. h | wishes of his men were heeded the captain | : and she testificd that her busband broke | Fireman Kennedy Pinned Be- | f,‘?,,‘,“gz‘,"“’“" e years past, since the last | _‘ihose wio huvs ho feriners please take seats | Tn selecting the fsmed Blue Grass sec- f,:f;hfi:fi‘,':;lf,?gdffigkzfi‘nesiiioi"fefl1 neath His Cab and Scalded 11, however, the board of inquiry should |leap-year cotillon was given in San Fran- | "S8 il ISP 1 1eq s evening by alady | tion of Kentucky for the scene of his suc- | RoBRcic" e herselt went throngh nis | tind the charges against Captain Healy | cisco, has such a scene of splendor, such.a | it is earnestiy ested that the figures be formed | cessful play, *In Old Kentucky,” C. T. | pockets and secured the $60. by Steam. true, it would be in duty bound to sore. | gathering of fashion, of beauty and of | i o hen i berfectly us possible, thus suving | pajey the author, could not have hit| Since then, she says, it has been impos- and : ENGINEER HUTCHINGS HURT | gineer Dorey of the Perry. rated With Festoons of Smilax and Rare Plants. With his crew Captain Healy has been very popular, his only enemies being soxim { f the port to the Treasury Department, after that the Treasury Department could act according to i judgment. manly presence, been seen in this City as was witnessed last night in Odd Fellows Hall, upon the occasion of the leap-vear with powdered bair on the lowing rules were promulgated: I Icular] cavor Lo carry out the rul aleap year porty. e regulation: 4 i1l be aflowed to cross th No gentle into the figures inder any cire tion to danc I mstances. g after the figure is M. GREENWAY, Man in floor, the fol- requested that the gentlemen es and e floor out of turn cannot be over. ager. cotillon given by the Friday Night Ciub. | The following is a list of those participating | NA I E H_[' E All or very nearly all, of the members | in the cotillon: et o PR TRty o re v e eve: of 8 “olli V. D. Page, | | were ml utl. not mld) at xh; s,lubntllt lfl\ls; 3 éf‘“.’i..ff“‘—'f&”?)’ "l; 5““".\‘“‘3‘ 2 : k | season, but the most successful ball gi | utenant D, W. Kilbourn, Miss The Train Employes Are in the Dar e {here in years. e as to the Cause of the The large hall, with its tinled walls and Miga Cora Broedbirg Disaster. Interesting Lecture by Dr. G. F. Hanson at Cooper ceiling and tasteful decoration; the lights which shone forth from the electric ch deliers and side brackets to be reflected ardec, Miss s MeNutt and E. M. ri and Kobert M. . Holbrook, Miss Eth . Harrington » . Roberts, Miss Ella Good- yre, el His Successful Drama With Keen Attention to Realism. Mission with her savings, and it was not Where other remedies Lave failed. long completed when a fire destroyed both | building and furniture. She collected the insurance and put the money in her trunk, | Hudyan will stop the wasting Hudyan is a : away of tissue § bower when College. back again from sparkling jewels w W. L. Carrigan, Miss Kip and Captain and will build up B ‘ri;:ht el 17, thern Pa- | fair women; rich and handsome \iieus, Miss Marle Zane and J. C. Mc- the nervous sys- y At aen _— | P Miss Mamie Thomas and Frank Findlay. 1 Y ou must se a double-header S tumes adorned with velvets, ribbons an — Miss Luura Bates and W. H. Heath, tem. Hudyan§ for circulars and rrecked near here | OVer a Thousand Varieties of Flora j,co.” of the choicest and costliest ard and Lieutenant J. P, & Lan- strengthens, * in- testimonials of - ) 5 i it = s Corry and George T. Cameron, vigorates and 3 G Fireman edy of engine 1846 | to Be Found Growing on the description, the atmosphere sensuous « Carolan and D. T. Boardman, Miss b i i 1he crast Hud »d beneath the wreck and scalded | Shores of the Ba with the fragrance of flowers and Christ- C w-“l’up"m- \l;fil»\g?"‘:"lln ;‘ncfl_ system. Hudyan but was extricated | G £ o0y, mas gurlands; the soft strains of the S o AR T N iy S een minutes later. T music of the waltz, now and anon giving way aith and H. J. Knowles, Miss forms of lost { A & S to the more poweriul but none the less thrill- on and Lieutenant John W. Joyes, v 3 of the same engine | Much as Californians hate the rain, | jo: molody drawn from the brazen throats of » Newlands and George F. Davidson mun]l'x_OOJ. oartain ed leg. The loss to | there are things which have the power to | the orchesira; the hum of animated conversa- Wiliiams and Allen G. Wright, Mrs. H. peculiar cases of ¢ will not be less than | induce them to brave the open floodgates of | tion ~and sparkling Lon-mot and Iepatiee, 300 and Lieut enazi 5. 4. Benson, Miss Ro- 5 | . sy * R which lighted up the festures of those who o e and A. P. Hay | the skies and risk a wetting. One of these | e nartisated. ceful wnd unimated | TR0 sei—3ies Knight and Frank T Owen, Mias : s - S R 5 e us parsc P M. Woods and James Jrockett, Miss Fva aster oce d at a switch a mile | potent forces was Dr. G. F. Hanson's in- SL\:’,‘“l\(ul‘, e )uh,dn”‘:“ eming| MOody Lan atar Van Winkle, siiss Roge from Cross Creek, or midway | teresting lecture last night at Cooper Med iy ety v Hoopoe Ant Bl , Miss Bertha Smith 1mped fro h in traek. . | Despite the sheets of rain which had de- M 3 d Edwin McAfee, Mrs. ngine jumped from the main track, pull I p‘ i 3 e 2 » and old age—the matron with her weph S, Tobin. Miss Eiia i en with it. Fourteen | scended without intermission during the very threads and with Ant Howard s Vesder Al freight s followed, and ail were badly | entire day, seeming to redouble their ‘-;uumxr\m ery sweet McBy an m;u : H. & thln\l;,)ll;s ?mm— wrecked. The fourth ear stopped squarely | violence after nightfall, the lecture hall at | !¢ Which tine i o By o 8 aud Douglas Waterman, Miss Mokes and of the second engine. that when the | he reversed i~ stoppe into womanl the college was comfortably filled. i Dr. Hansor’s remarks were of special interest, since he confined himself prin- cipally to & consideration of the flora in- digenous to the shores of San Francisco Bay, giving some old, familiar favor- bending 1 there enjoy The brill Mrs. 100n and I and Jerome Watson, uders, Miss A e Zane Clay Horace | H. Woolworth and Stanley ibbons and Lieutenant Schneelly apd ‘Ihom ek an 3 M. nas F 9 and Jerome A. TAINTED BLOOD- to serious private diso sore-producing germ pimples, copper-colored spo | 01d sores and falling hair. | to Hot Spri ‘ the old p i . and —, Miss Mabel de itute, gone 100 yards. gs says ites names so formidable as to be! er Jr.. Miss Lizzie Carroll and L the first thing ing from | positively {rightening, were it not thag | !¢ the room. I Srm WS T L) LIVER—When vour liv y able taste was sh. Celia ‘Tobin and Augustus lor, y feel blue, melanchol wheels of the first engine when the | the well - known reality is so charm- | Ella Bender and nes Newlands. Efi’m\“&n”u-‘ff' L eia | akes were thrown on. He knew some- | ing. Among other interesting bits of | g o PS8 S oottt arbat and Bhades Bara e that you reall and immediately re- | information, Dr. Hanson spoke of O oen ns e ler Paige, Miss Lanra Sonan 2 2 than a second be- | no less than fifteen distinct varieties of rd, Miss Elma Graves g e g di oD Gl Tones gel | the buttercup, easily distinguishable one Maumie Stubbs an Tarn McGrew d A. B. Miss it from us. Write for book on liver troubles, topped.” he said, ‘we | {rom the other. Of the glia_he said there : gelleries and | ) e s A% Hhig) U Dinen w0k fter the train stopped,” he said, *we | oro AL IUCET dlfiarant forme. while. ot e i e Do HUDSON MEDICAL INSTITUTE found my fireman n | mint, properly so cailed, he had been able ey an Williame and 1. MeC. Yan - s to him, but the escaping to find only three varieties. L Ry aH, o e e, Mise . . s § & 3 : r in the center of the hall w F. A. Greenwood, Miss A. s s Sts. aterns were | A strange denizen of Marin County is thegentar ot oo | Gt ana 1o - adamien reenwood, Miss 4 Stockton, Market and Elfis Sts ng pao | the mimulus, popularly known as the s 3 Aliss Lottie Dutton and W.W. Chapin, NEY ies are sou 2ecax | ““sticky monkey flower,’” h Dr. Han- aped wich | fe Drown Raymon rman, Miss o usd(Eh oy ongRt (v by und under the engine, and pres- | - e 2 Dry Har : b eur- | Pref i many men, because o many men live rapia p o0 P N e ahutehedstany hed it | Son said resembled the mimosa or sensi- ht blue. Large { o7 3 T Tlo lives—use up their kidnevs. If you wish to ently sbmeone/claiclied 1y iandipusho It | tive plant, otherwise called *‘touch-me- e colors were also used. | {20, 213, H. Be have vour kidneys put in good order send for back. We pulled, but that did 2o good: | not," in it3 peoulior shrinking from the B e msketor e o i Croxton: Atias Josephinc | oue Kidney Begnlelar o bofiar Joain wled in and Kennedy | 2 u i o PhEavish Colared elaoitic MEIE. || Miackore cox, Miss Helen Potter | 4t v eys and ho'v to mak = "f T a all | m!hcif,e hlaxt’"k;s\llnl(];”;eu:?r?vl:y he.l-hmf-e»r . Stedn | and ¢ ad and Peter test. The book, “A Knowledge of Kidney nd the s n{u.i; )n‘n all | sai d ourteen varieties, dif- gold whistle. She | D. Mart “W.McNear, sent free. > dragged Hildebrandt | out Kennedy came with him. XKennedy | fortunately never lost his senses. The steam b 1d bim did not reach the upper part of his body, but his left leg was bad| scalded. He was under the engine for fifteen minutes. fuperintendent khalter, who is in charge of the wreck, could give no in- rmation as to the cs The track- r reported after t passed that LOKING FOR THE DRONES, in Supervisors Investigating Cer- tain Municipal Depart- ments. The Finance Committee Believes That | Dummies Are Drawing Pay | Without Working. A storm is brewing over the heads of the municipal officers which, if it breaks as the | Finance Committee of the Board of Super- visors anticipates, may cause a scandal in the departments of the City government | such as has not cropped up for years past. Some time ago it came to the ears of the board that in certain offices men were on the payroll and were drawing salaries for which they gave no returns whatever beyond cashing their warrants as regular- ly as payday came around. An investigation was at once set on foot and every effort made to locate the “dummies,” apparently with some suc- cess, though the members of the Finsnce Comumittee, who have the matter in charge, are extremely reucent regarding what they have fou 5 | The first step taken was to have the expert of the board prepare a statement of the number of men employed in each of the municipal departments during the montli of December, the names of those whose names appear on the payroll, their compensation and the work they are sup- posed to perform. This report was submitted to the Finance Committee and has been the subject of dis- cussion at a number of executive meetings. The illness of Chairman Taylor has pre- vented definite action being taken, but it is expected that on Monday next the heads of the various departments will be called S 2L O i 7 LAURA BURT AS MADGE Hudson Medical Institute Stockton, Market and Elfis Sts., IN “IN OLD KENTUCKY.” upon a more romantic spot had he searched this broad land from ocean to ocean. | It was an old Kentucky colonel, one of | those knight-hearted old prototypes of | | Colonel Newcomb, who said that the Blue | Grass was heaven enough for him, and | that the only way for God Almighty toim- prove on the Elysian fields was to tell the | preachers to include in their announce- ments of the inducements offered tke peni- | tent the statement that there would be | horse-racing in Paradise and that the ! clubhonse of the Kentucky Association | would be located near the wire; that | Colonel Jack Chinn would send the fields away and relate his coon stories when the card had been cleaned up; that Milton Young, Bill Barnes and Sanford Lyne would pose in the judges’ stand ana Tom McDowell and Hal Hendley and Gus Straus catch the time; that Hull David- son would have charge of the clubhouse and dispense hospitality, and, finally, that the Holy One would promise that the big soring at Colonel Pepper’s distillery would always flow and that Major Thomas’ mint patch would never fade away. Mr. Dazey has drawn hischaracters with rare skill and a thorough knowledge of the characteristics, oddities and peculiarities of the people he aims to depict. His colonel can be seen almost any day lolling about the office of the famous’ old Phcenix Hotel in Lexington—a breezy, whole- souled Southern gentleman, whose one passion is a fondness for a good horse. His beroine is an excellent type of a true Ken- tucky girl, idealized possibly in obedience to the demands of dramatic license, and his moonshiner a strong, vigorous fellow, rarely seen out of the fastnesses of the mountains and better known in Kentucky than outside of that favored State. Lexington, the Queen City of the Blue Grass, has been called the hub of the horse world. Between the name of Lexington and the horse there is linked & sentiment s0 inseparable as to cause the one to sug- gest the name of the other. Equally fa- vored by nature, the city is blessed by its association with the equine, and “this noblest of all animals is constantly repay- ing the debt it owes Dame Nature and its native heath by superb contests the world over. Old Lexington himself was a race- horse of unexcelled ability, and his get have demonstrated that his gifts were as potent as they were brilliant, and like the descenaants of those lion-hearted old Ken- Handel, the famous composer, used, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL- sible to live with him, and so she asked | when traveling, to order dinner for three, or if hungry for five, and then eat the and secured a divorce. i -r whole himself. ——————— = Notice Inviting Sealed Proposals for the Purchase of Lincoln Water Works Bonds. The Trustees of the town of Lincoln having by ordinance of said town entitled an ordi- nance providing for the issuance and sale of ‘bonds for the town of Lincoln for the construc | tion, acquisition and completion of a water- J works system for the said town of Lincoln for fire and other municipal purposes, passed and aporoved the 17th day of December, 1895, | ordained that there sheil be issued by the said | town of Lincoln forty bonds of the denomina- tion of $500 each, bearing interest at the rate of 5 per cent per annum, payable annuelly, | and also directing the Town Clerk of the town of Lincoln to give notice inviting proposals for | sale of said bonds. Now, therefore, notice is hereby given by the | Board of Town Trustecs of the town of Lincola | to sell said bonds aforesaid as they may deem necessary. The said bonds are to bear date the first Monday in January, 1896, and are to be numbered consecutively from one to forty, both inclusive, tke first bond 10 be made payable on the tirst Monday in January, 1897. and the re- maining bonds consecutively are to be made payable on the first Monday inJanuary in each succeeding calendar year, until and including the year 1935; the said bonds are to be made payable to the bearer at the office of the Treas- | urer of the said town of Liacoln, in the said | town of Lincoln, Placer County, State of Cali- fornia, and to each of said bonds there is to be attached interest coupons equal in number to the number of years which the bond in ques- tion has to run beiore its maturity. Sealed proposals for the purchase of said bonds will be receivea by the clerk of the said town on bebalf of the Trustees of the said town at his office in said town at any time from the date of the first publication of this notice up to the hour of 7 o'clock P. M. of the 31st day of January, 1896, and that thereafter said bonds will be sold by the Board of Trus- tees of said town to the highest and best bid- der for cash in gold coin of tne United States, The Board of Trustees of said town hereby re- serve the right 1o accept or reject any and all bids. No bid will be considered that is for lass than the face value of said bonds. aid bonds will be delivered in the aggregate amount made up of forty serial bonds of the entire issue Easy Soothing tucky colonels who made Kentucky and of $20,000, numbered from one to forty, h r, 5 0y CU 43 * rty, botl certain employes in their offices, and also | the turf the present day. The city of Lex- ALL paid unpme dél:vzrr\"CZ(otngc“tiu::;snf:n‘;“:::#e to make some showing as to the work that SCENE AT THE COTILLON, ODD FELLOWS' HALL ington is the turf center of the world; the of the Town Treasurer of the said tow ; Eas bean Aofie by thase Taen. e Lt finest, fleetest thoroughbreds are reared in i ¢ L5 2 Sketched by @ “Call” arti oug: A Lincold. The purchaser or purchasers of said Should the state of affairs be found to [Sketched by @ *“ Call artist.] the hluel,{rns! region. It has been said bonds, to whom the same are awarded, must exist that is anticipated the matter will be 2 dliat the, IavoriissSan COLKNANKY in COMPLAINTS, give an undertaking with at least two sufficient brought up at the next meeting of the | forq 7 3 £ - sureties, in the penal sum of 10 per ce next o . | fering from each other in_structure, order | marshalled her forces for the grand right and | Miss Carrie Taylor and Atherton Macondray, Miss | Mr. Dazey understood all this, and that % REEsent ot board and a most interesting session is | and habitat, but all to be found within the | Ieft to the strains of & seductive Strauss waltz, | Sulivan and Jamc Hooo s acondray, Mist | e why heypu!nspirited horserace 1n his LIVER the purchase price payable (o the eaid town of likely to result. Chairman Taylor was | City limits. rhythmical enough to_set the biood pulsizg | C- s Mrs. Cannlnghiam and J. J. Chappelle. | play, ~ His story, too, is deftly woven onmy et condifioned thatsaid puzbhaes seen about the matter yesterday. Among over 1000 distinctively Califor- | “fhey were tipie feveeninree of themnew, | ATIOUE others present were: around a horse, and that horse's prowess is AND Saitis et or e o AtenTsSaIumnoflos “We are not ready just yet to say what | hian flora, which the doctor had exam- | Miss Maynard led alone and for her denterity il e chly Buyng, Marry | what arouses every Kentuckian who sees tesa 0 GBIRET G110 PR xR drus we have founa,” he said, “but I can state | ined, the golden poppy, he said, had en- | ana cleverness she cannot be complimented | 3 fowers, Mr. and Mrs, . F. | 1€ Play to a wild pitch of enthusiasm. KIDNEY same as delivered; and that & failece s L, QikCEhe Bivestigation hhs develi okt gaged no small sbare in his researches. | t00 highly. = She did admirably. She was IS P W. F. Breeze, . L. | There never was a true Kentuckian {zkops; at a failure to take a stig 1as developed some | Befides the well-known Bschsoholizia he | ADIY 8ssisted by Miss Hager and Miss Sarah fon, Allan Bowie, Mrs. Windor Brown, Colonei | who did not worship a good horse. DISORDERS, Up and pay for same within the time herein things that we had heard were true and | cited the Dendromicon the Meconopsis | © ..n..»_r,\ 4 3 I Burion, Mr. and Mrs. & W. Churebill, | In several churches in Lexington the min- ' specified shall be a breach of said undertak. that we are going on with our work, If|and the Artemone. All'these varietios, be | whits pinsAmmie cioch nied iy Sown of e y hrancls . Cero- | isters are antagonistic to racing, but asthe DYSPEP. ing and shall constitute such breach of ftself, this City is paying men fat salaries for | said, contaned opium in greater or less | stripes and a_bodice of cardinal velvet. The ant Carsor “Clement, Colonel | days pass their views are gradually becom- SIA and the sum mentioned in said undertaking doing nothing or so nearly nothing that | Proportion, a number of locai druggists | corsage was high and the sleeves were lon, ing broader, and some of them are regular thall be held and considered as lquidated the results of their labor are not percepti. | SXtTacting from them a product in all re- | #nd bouftant at the shoulders. ' She signaied | 3 attendants at the races and realize th AND damages; and said undertaking may be sneq e st e s o Tost | ePects equal o the opium of commerce. | e enapes An_mchrmnrcskby means of 8 HUe | 0 Nre Pupry b Toare. Mise ) clean, honest racing is the “sport of kings.” upon immediately in the name of the town of S il go ot o Tet | “Medicinal plants, said Dr. Hanson, | oifiistie, which she kept as ottt ama | Lormen. General 1. W. Forsvtn. Hon, and Mrs. . | Mr. Dazey could not have selected a more SKIN Lincoln, and the amount spectfied therein assured that those men wiil go off theay- | ahound. on ATy A e MERED s R AL D S w. xm"uml ‘nux?l. on (L_om;:\s. F"n‘l'.::r Fl_;-dlo » | interesting people for the characters in his recovered as liquidated damages. A deposit zoil just as quick as we can bring such a | Rhamnus Catharticus being one of the |~ Miss Emily Hager wore a very swell gown of | Ir. “and > Mrs. W, Given, d"l‘:" St au iy s ool KB TROUBLES. in the United States postoffice of said town of conclusion about. | most efficient purgatives known. The | pink tulle with & Marie Antoinette bodiee of r, Mrs. W. P. Harrington, Mr. and Mrs. | tucky, and if he has caught the true spirit Lincoln of & notice of readiness to deliver saiq “There has been altogether too much | Yerba Santa or Eriodictyon be found | Siver cloth and pink tuile. . %iononney Harvey, Baroley Henley, Walter & of Blue Grass life, the success of his play CURES bonds signed by the said clerk of the saia town laxity in the manner in which municipal | eSpecially useful in disguising the taste of | Miss Mary Belle Gwin wore pink' satin with |y~ ,;‘f;-,;n';;,{'-,,l;;,,l;;’";’“;ba'_m;rfl_"r:! Ytom M. | is not to be wondered at. and witn the seal of said town affixed, aq. offices are conducted and it is time that a | 9iRiNe and other disagreeable remedics, | °5!Tich tips and a fine old-lace collar. Jerome, Mr. ard Mrs. , Samuel Knight, CHRONIC dressed to the purchaser of sald bonds at hj 488 | While its use was most beneficial in pul. | Miss Mollie Thomas' costume was a hand- | John Ldbvson, M s, Mrs. Alexander place of business or residen o stop was put to it. | monary and bronchial affections. Mhe | 80me pink gown. She wore a large American | Looghboronss, M Martin, Mrs. 8. V. GAVE FALSE EVIDENCE. Bid far 518 Bard e 88 stated In hig ““Another thing we shall investigate is | i s i Beauty rose in her corsage. Jagnara, Mr. and Mrs. McBean, Mr. and Mrs. E. S CONSTIPATION. id bonds, prepaid, shall be deemeq E foy | Sendelia he' considared most, eolBnt In |\ aruy vises Carrollowasiin Heht bins costome | 2+ MeCoiohens BMzs: 71y Mooy, (Mre W- aso | Peoalisr Confeltion Mads by a Witne, s and teken to be notice to the purchaser f the amount of salary allowed clerks for | cases of asthma and the eruption result- | i g e Jarrol! w corsage: and American | py Vit Ge0rse A. Newhall, Miss Newton, Mr. 1h & Ortminal the date of such deposit, and there shall pjon certain kinds of work. In some cases we | ing from contact with poison oak. In fact | Besuty roses. 30 ant Bl Carie P e Paton, m 8 R G SAse i NoO be embodied in said undertaking thy L O believe it to be entirely too much and we | one listening to the doctor’s persuasive ay Siubbs wore light-blue satin. | Puclan, Mr. and Mrs Orestes Picrce, Mr.and drs, | Nellie Dwyer was acquitted by a jury in chaser's assent 0 the form and sufficsnc s will very hkelybmn.ke soy‘?o cln:mgesifou[ 2Lonqvl;fl:ic: vfignld”und liulebdlfl‘lculty in | o) i?;?.‘v?;:*31“1,}‘;‘;"&?1‘;‘?;% 3 G I‘;o’m wfi,fl..n ‘:{mhbano, Likl;‘mhhka‘ua, Judge Bahrs’ court of a charge of grand GRIPE. such notice. clency ot L) im: San Francisco i hia Sm v 3 e . Scott, S 5 i inci 3 suspicions are borne out by the facts. o ek Tt CharEE e R e ST Colonel W Tt Smedberg” My, | 1arceny, and she was acquitted principally Dated December 31, 1595, = “‘Wdfm nolhsmg e 3 "8 | Miss Mabel Denvon wore a striped white- 11, Mr. and Mrs. C. August Spreckels’ | by reason of the startling confession made F. L. SANDERS, Town Clerk INVESTIGATION OF HEALY. Dr. Hanson referred to the wide range of ! ances Currey’s costume was of bro- i L"i'sx““‘:,‘:m"x‘,“-“yx: it Mt‘yh wugi' th:v p‘rliniciml i : = L i - 0 2 e d ede o itE S s lers Tobin, Miss Ju against her. Miss Ward in the Police N e e At e K R e o T ot S it A, Court had {estified that she had seen the EATNY. Avn SEnN HOTEL, fAll Balnk dpavuited nto. the reach of the State norify and south, | poList Moriqudits' Collior wore & biue SIE | 400 Mrs. W B. Tubi defendant in company with the complain- K modoled and renovated. i Yy STS—RE. The board of inquiry which is to in- | with all the modifications of climate inci: | LyciCe,0f delicate tint, with a somewhat darker | hicx, Haron ‘tad Saroresy vans*ait; Mes Voor' | ing witness, and mainly on this acoount European p) me G0c 0 51 3 Aeiy & OO0 vestigate the charges against Captain |dentto mountains, valleys and seashore. blx‘\lleuzg\?er:;‘v :'re['(:amhnw-sm yellow satin, i‘&?'fi‘ A o e end Ml"('v T lhfid(ehnd;m e 7ty 1 nfi""“‘““’:“ "“"s":':g‘rw b g md:"" \ y rs. M. 8. Wilson, A, B. Williamson. Before Judge Belcher yesterday Miss xoom; mv-mxnnnum::?""'w-hovn