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10 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, APRIL 2, 1896. WILL LANIGAN BECOME A BOSS? The Junta Anti-Raineyites Take Him Up to Make Him. A CHANCE TO BEAT SAM. McNab Works a Combination to | beat. Defeat Rainey and Boost Lanigan. WELBURN IS IN THE DEAL.| The New Boss Is Given Practical Con- | trol of the Junta and New | Hopes Run High. | Rainey as to Buckley. . Daggett was doing boss politics throuzh Mint pelitics, if boss politics were ever done, and the organiza- tion, like the whole party, was full of bit- ter enemies of John Daggett. There were | other political enmities of ali sorts. Then frem the start there has been trouble about the apportionment of power | among the big forces, and in the recent | past Lanigan has had some heavy kicks. A few weeks ago there came the outward semblance of a primary for the election of a new general committee, and then began the war with Rainey. The time had come | to *“dump’’ Rainey, but Rainey would not play that. ‘He had closely combined his interests with Daggett, and the Fire De- partment and the Mint made_every effort to increase their strength in_the Junta | general committee. Especial efforts have | been made since the organization got the prestige of recognition by the State Cen- tral Committee, and Mint jobs have been given right and left to people of influence in the committee. But the organization has been officered and committeed by anti- Raineyites, and the *inside” is hard to At the alleged primary but one ticket was allowed ina district. These tickets were arbitrarily made up at headquarters, and the number of delegatesallowed to Rainey and Daggett veople were carefully dealt ~out according to .‘‘expediency. Rainey and Daggett would have got an overwhelming majority at a fair, open primary, but they were firmly repressed amid constant rowing. Two weeks ago it became evident that Rainey and Daggett had practical control of the committee, as far as votes went, though they were llandicnpgefl by the *‘in- side” having the “works.” W ithin a short | time after the primary Rainey had taken into camp many members, who had been allowed to go on the ticket on the supposi- tion that they were safely anti-Rainey, and There is a new Democratic boss in town. }' At least they are making him—Gavin Mc- Nab and the rest of the anti-Rainey Junta | of the anti-Buckley Junta. | It’s Ed Lanigan. There has just been completed an elaborate compact and plan | the Rainey-Daggett workers are hard at it | vet with every pull that can be brought to | ear. Rainey’s strength (including Daggett’s) is now 170 at a conservative estimate, with a possible 190 votes, As these delegates would all be at a meeting, while a lot of | EDWARD LANIGAN, WHO Is ¢UT OoUT never get that executive eommittee. The constitution will be adopted by a majority vote, and it is planned that 1t will provide that a two-thirds vote shall be required to amend it. If, then, with Lanigan’s help the next meeting of the general committee can be saved from Rainey, things will be cinched and a new programme started. The first thing to do will be to control the delega- tion to the State convention. The propo- sition to appoint delegates is still un- settled, but much in favor. Laniean and McNab can have a delegation exactly to order that way and Rainey and Daggett | will take what they get. A primary woula be a terrible risk, even with Lanigan in- spectors. Of course Rainey’s interests are local, | and he is helping Daggett to get the mint ower for himself lIater in reciprocity. aggett wants the delegation to Sacra- mento badly as does Welburn. A Rainey triumph would mean that Daggett would hog things. The *‘inside” is not fighting Daggett particularly. It is willing to let Daggett get a fair show at Sacramento, but it wants the Rainey-Daggett business to end at Sacramento, and to keep munici- ai politics for its own and not for Sam aimey. So the new combination expects tosay to the mint superintendent, *“Mr. Daggett, you are welcome to & good deal of what you want at Sacramento, but it would be bet- ter for us to have tie delegates and use them in your interest.” The triumph of the Lanigan combina- tion in the Junta would also be Welburn’s triumph at Sacramento. Lanigan and McNab would give Welburn as much as it would give Daggett, and Daggett wouldn't. Welburn is supposed to be in this deal by | promising Lanigan his support in local matters in return for favors. Welburn will now see that Jack Weich and Thomas P. Cusick of the Twenty-eighth and other deputies of district influence behave them- selves properly in politics. ‘Welburn's hold on Lanigan is small, by the way. Lanigan is too strong to be bossed much by Welburn on the strength of his little deputyship, and it is, rather, a deal between them. Lanigan has long aspired to political power, and has slowly increased it. He Has dispensed much of pervisors, has many friends among the boys, and is a handsome, shrewd and quite popular fellow. He has suddenly struck a tide in his affairs that promises to lead to political fortune Of course,there are the battles with Rainey here and the battles with the Buckleyites at Sacramento and at home in the way of the new Lanigan aynasty, but they are different stories. Lanigan wants local political power, and the Junta is going to try to give it tohim. FAR EAST AND FAR WEST Twenty-Third Annual Meeting of the Woman'’s Occidental Board. Chinese Girls Entertain the Visitors. Miss Hamlin Tells of the Sarabjis. There was the usual picturesque ming- the patronage of the present Board of Su- | DISKPPOINTED I LOVE, A Sailor’s Bridle Who Married From Pique Tries to End Her Life. SWALLOWS A DOSE OF OPIUM. Romantic Career of the Wife of Cap- tain Harry Johuson of the Bark Enoch Talbot. | Anna Johnson, the handsome young bride of Captain Harry Johnson of the bark Enoch Taibot now lying in the bay off the Arctic Oil Works at the Potrero, attempted to commit suicide on board the ship Tuesday night and nearly succeeded. There is an air of mystery and romance about the affair, but from all that could be learned the young bride made the attempt ! in a fit of despondency resulting from dis- appointment in her marriage. She was married to Captain Johnson about four weeks ago in Los Angeles after an acquaintance of three months, and they spent their honeymoon on the trip from San Pedro to this port. The vessel arrived here a week ago last Tuesday, after a tedious voyage. Mrs. Johnson was almost a stranger to the City, and Jast Friday the captain went ashore, taking ber with him. As he had business with the owners he put her on a car for Golden Gate Park, arranging to meet her later. When she returned from the park she failed to meet her huspand and wandered around the business portion of the City looking fer him till darkness | set in. She did not know how to find the vessel, but by chance she met an old Iriend, Elizabeth Emmet, who lives near the Hayes-street entrance to the park, and | accepted her invitation to accompany her home. She was taken sick there and remained in her friend’s care tiil Tuesday night, when she returned to the vessel, haying learned its location. Meantime Captain Johnson, alarmed at his wife's | uvexplained absence, had been scouring | the City for her and had employed pri- vate detectives to find Yer if possible. When Mrs. Johnson reached the vessel | she was dismayed to learn from Mate Norby tnat her husband was not on board | and it was not known when he would re- | turn. She went into her cabin and after awhile she began to think that her husband bad | deliberately cast her adrift. Then the | idea of suicide occurred to her and she | went to where the ship’s drugs were kept | and took a bottle of opium. She swallowed a dose and calmly lay down in her bunk to await death. About 1 o’clock yesterday morning | Captain Johnson returned to thesbip from his fruitless search. He found his wife | unconscious, and the bottle of opium by her side told him the story. He arou | the mate, who hurriedly dressed himself | 1| son for noticing it officially sented. We were married four weeks ago. I was sick and tirea of being dependent upon my friends, and 1 was bhappy after my marriage.”” Captain Johnson was asked as to the motive that prompted his wife to attempt to commit suicide and he replied that he did not know. “She complained of head- aches,” he said, “and I suppose she had taken the opium to ease the pai That is the only way I can account for it. Mate Norby was asked the same ques- tion and be reluctantly said, “disappoint- ment.” When asked in what respect he remained silent. From other sources it was learned that Mrs. Johnson quarreled with her lover in Los Angeles, an¢ in a fit of pique con- sented to marry Captain Johnson. She is a handsome, retfined woman, 26 years of age, with dark bair, large dark-blue eyes and beautiful nands. Her underclothing astonished Matron Keane of the Receiv- ing Hospital, asit was of the finest im- ported quality. Her husband is a bluff sailor, without any of the graces and ac- complishments that would find favor with such a woman. The cabin in which she spent her honey- moon could not be more barely furnished and the smell of oil that pervades the at- mosphere is enough to drive a refined woman crazy. FITZGERALD TO THE wBEE" The Attorney-General Outlines His Position on the Bond Issue. He Believes State Moneys Should Be Invested Only in Bonds Above Reproach. In cne of yesterday evening’s papers the following telegram was published: SACRAMENTO, April 1.—The Bee to-night will publish a story to the effect that, not- withstanding the frct that the law provides that whenever there shail be $10,000 1n the State-school land fund the same shall be in- ted, there is at present nearly $300,000 in the fund. The Bee will also say that this is due to the fact that Attorney-General Fitzgerald has g]nced his stamp “of disapproval upon the onds of various counties, many of the issues of which have slready been taken up by some of the leading banks in the State, 3 The paper will further affirm that the State is believed to be the holder of many bonds which, 1f the Attorney-General is correct, are absolutely valueless and that, although he did rot consider these county bonds a_safe invest- ment, he refused to give sanction to an in- vestment of $200,000 in the late National bond issue, and that by this means many thousands of dollars of interest have been lost to the schools of the State. Mr. Fitzgerald's attention being called to the dispatch he displayed no particular concern. “An attack of this character,” he re- marked, ‘is really not worth noticing. A man in'a pubiic Eosilion must expect to be atarget for abuse from certain quar- ters, and I cannot hope to be the solitary exception to the rule. So far as I am per- sonally concerned Ido not consider the dispatch deserving of any attention what- ever, and what is more I can see no rea- Still, since the matter of county bonds has been thus m | ling of the Far West and the Far East at | | the twenty-third annual meeting of the | Woman’s Occiaental Board, which took | place yesterday at the Chinese .\Inssion} Home. The three days’ session opened | with an informal reception to Miss Wam- | | did all Le could with the appliances at | out of pla | bold, the board’s outgoing missionary to | Korea, and to the delegates from the vari- | | ous cities of California. The majority of | | the visitors were Americans, but the Chi- | | nese ana Japanese girls were quite a fea | | ture in the Oriental-looking rooms, and | | the consul-general and his suite were pres- | ent in gorgeous colors which Solomon in | | all his glory might have courted. The reception was distinetly informal. There were enough visitors and delegates [to comiortably fill the large board- | | rooms and leave enough people to spare to | circulate about the house and admire the quarters wuere the little rescued Chinese FOR THE EW BOS> OF THE JUNTA which is to- bring into play in the local ) Democratic field of practical politics a new and ‘quite interesting force, and Ed Lanigan is to. play it as it ought tobe plaved. The idea is to boost Mr. nigan into tbe position of *‘the’’ Democratic boss of San Francisco, which position is to be attained when the “decent element” of the Junta has driven Chris Buckley and Sam Raine into the last sewer, destroyed * i and thoroughly disinfected the tv. If out. Like Brer Fox, he *‘jis lay low and the Junta wins Lanigen 1s to be hailed as | say nuffin.”” He started out with the anti- king. Buckleyites, through the influence of Wel- Of course.this v describes the pres- | burn and McNab, with a good deal of | ent good mtentions of certain people. | strength, and when the committee of Political schemes, and little, are | fifty appointed = mnew general com- mightily uncertain, and we’ll have to wait = mittee, and when the present one to see whether this' scheme will énd like a | was appointed by the “inside” through a | fizz, or whether there.comes a Lanizan, a bright star of a new Democratic destiny, who is to wind up the histo: Chris Buckley and Sam Rainey as Buck- ley, rising a5 Lanigan nov chased Mannix and Brady into obliv This brilliant scheme is the 1 resort of the anti-Rainey portion of the Junta, and ,bv it they figure on snatching the organ- “ization from K . 1 giving him the lickir to-give theni. As Ra ization within his g holeonic was necessary. {)c a lot fight betw he was going has the or Na- y will ¢éen the Raineyites and the Laniganese, and one of the sides will there capture the works. Gavin McNab pre- dicts thatin 2 few weeks all the Demo- crats in Sun Francisco will be throngin the local ‘dancing academies in their eagerness to be ‘‘learning a step for Lani- gan’s ball.”’ : The recoliection of a little recent history is necessary to understand -the situation. last:October Gavin McNab saw som n tracks around town. He ‘recog. kind, and he knew that Chris Buckjey was quietly gathering in the old Democratic general committee of 450, .which was elected in 1890 by the anti-Buckley re- | organizers. MeNab managed to hustle to- gether same forces before Buckley was through, and Buckley was beaten by the election of A. A."Watkins to the vacant chairmanship by .a vote of 184 to 154. Buckley didn’t.quit, and at the next meet- ing; a short time afterward, Buckley had a small majority. "It was at that exciting meeting that the defeated McNab element turned out the zas, made off with the roll and tried ‘to effect an adjournment sine die by trickery.. They witlidrew and left Buckley in possession of the majority. In the meantime a new neral committee had been appointed by that committee of fifty, and this new committee, arbitrarily ruled by McNab and W. P. Sullivan, be- came an independent organization. The forcesthat McNab was able to get and - hold together through these events were, first, Rainey and the Fire Depart- | ment; second, Daggett, who was politi- cally associated with Rainey; tnird, Col- lector of Internal’ Revenue Welburn, and fourth, scatiering anti-Buckleyites, inclua- ing-Max Popper. Sam. Braunbhart, et al, McNab was personally and politically friendly and influential with these forces. an was included in Welburn’s strength, as heisa deputy in_that office. These three men—Daggett, Rainey and Welourn—wielded their power, of course, through patronage. It was the force of jobs held by méembers of the committee or their friends that gave eifect to the orders to stand against Buckley. The combination from the start wasa heterogeneous and discordant one. The movement was declared to be one to down Buckleyism, bossism and corruption in the party and in favor of *‘decency and purity.”’ - Yet they pressed Sam Rainey to their bosoms. The inconsistency was ex- plained by saying, *‘Oh, we are using Rainey for a purpose, and when the time comes we'll dump him,” and there were many in the Junta really as hostile to I * | girls live. Miss Wambold, who is going to Iabor among the Koreans, was shaken | bands with and wished godspeea by every one present. She is a pleasant, genial young woman, who does not seem | | 1o feel any trepidation at the prospect of | | devoting the next few years of her life to laboring in the Hermit Kingdom. The real heroine of the occasion was o'bers wouldn’t, Rainey could likely run any meeting of the general committee and carry through a programme. So the anti- Raineyites have seen Rainey on the verge of rule, while his strength was growing, and a few days ago it was an uncertain tug-. of-war, with the chances largely in favor of the heavy-weight stableman, and a big | Miss Maria Culbertson, who for so many storm brewing. years has made a record as the zealou Now. for two or three monthsone Ed- | matron of the home. For nearlya yen, ward Lanigan has kept still and watched | Miss Culbertson has been away sick | the mess. He was neither Rainey nor . s i dnasick | He gave her an antidote, and for three or | past purchased bonds not altogether un- | and round the courtyard in front of the | stage name was Beatrice Lee, and under and hunted up Dr. De Witt. The doctor | strangely represented it may not be ce for me to briefly outline my and for the unconscious woman and then | official poligy regarding them. notified Lieutenant Bennett of the Potrero In rejecting the county bonds in ques- police station, who had her removed to | tion I did so because, in my opinion, the the Receiving Hospital in the patrol | vroceedings under which they were issued wglgun. 2 | were defective. 1 consider that the State hey reached the hospital about 4!should purchase no bonds which are not o'clock, and Dr. Bunnell promptly took | abselutely above suspicion or reproach in effective measures to restore Lerto life. | every particular. If the State has in the four hours she was kept walking round | impeachable, that fact, if indeed it be a | fact at all, does not in any way influence hospital till she gradually revived. Yes-|me in passing upon the validity of the terday afternoon she b, ufficiently re- | proceedings for the issuance of any bonds covered to be taken to a friend’s house. which may be submitted to the State, She was at first disinclined to talk, and | Board of Examiners with a view to their made some rambling statements of a sen- | being purchased by the State. sational nature, which she afterward de- “I have not advocated, nor do I advo- nied making, saying she was so weak and | cate, the investment of State money in excited that she did not know what she | bonds of the United States, because I be- was talking about, | lieve it to be the duty of the State to Finally she consented to tell the romance | invest the said money in bonds of the State of her life. “I am an English girl,” she | or of the various counties in the State, id, “but my parents emigrated to the | rather than in United States bonds. Unitea States when T was a mere child. “Owing to the fact that the proceedings After my father's death my mother put | for the issuance of State and County me on the stage, and as I gave promise of | bonds have been in mzany cases most un- having a contralto voice of more than | satisfactory in the past, I have personally ordinary power a bright future was pre- undertaken to examine all future proceed- dicted for me. | ings before the bonds are issued, in order “‘While still a young girl 1 joined the|to insure legalityin their issuance, and Emma Abbott Company, and remained | with the object of rendering such bonds with them for a number of years. My | acceptable to the State as a safe and relia- ble investment. “I consider that if I were to advise the board to purchase bonds, the title to that name I sang at the Orpheum in this | City seven years ago. My stage career and on | anti-Rainey, as far as anybody could find primary, he forced large concessions. He shrewdly nursed his votes in the general ¢ careersof | committee and his outside influence, and ! waited to see how things would turn out. He has been hoiding sixty votes solidly apart from the Rainey aud anti-Rainey | fight. These are votes that he can control | on any proposition, and with other dele- | gates friendly to him he would be worth ninety votes on some provositions. | Ten deys ago Gavin McNab and Chair- man Sullivan themselves did not know how Lanigan would go. It was conceded by everybody that if Lanigan went with | Rainey and Daggett the ‘‘decent” element | would” be nowhere. With Lanigan they might win by a smail majority. Lanigan knew that he beld the balance of power and that he was about to be badly needed. | He waited for kis quotations to go up. The inevitable has happened. }gu has been taken into the anti-Rainey camp upon his own terms. He has had no par- ticular enemies in the organization and so tarts on his new career without that handicap in the faction, and he has long < in the same | been personally friendly with McNab, who | | is mainly res[;z sible for the new scheme | that bas just been evolved from the tangle. Lanigan is to be the chief political manipulator of what is now expected to be the domirant faction in the Junta, and | all the anti-Rainey and anti-Daggett | forces are to get behind kim and give him | a boost. The Junta’s programme pre- supposes, of course,winning at Sacramento | the’ battle against the Buckleyites, and | then later on for the control of local Democratic poiitics. Mr. Lanigan is to | lead the Junta to the pinnacle of success if it can get there. | The other day, shortly after the new | plan was effected, Chairman Sullivan ap- | pointed a committee of eighteen to pre- | pare a constitution and by-laws, and a study of it_shows the concessions to Ed Lanigan. He will run that committee. The committee met last Monday night and appointed a sub-committee of five, which, with the chairman and secretary, | are to draft the instrument. Four of the five are Lanigan men, There is E. P. | Mogan, prosecuting attorney in Judge | Conlan’s Police Court, by the grace of | Lanigan’s supervision. There is Dr. W. | J. Gavigan, who wants to be superintend- | ent of the new Home for Inebriates, who | worked hard to get the appropriation through the Board of Supsrvisors, who | had to go to' Larigan for three votes, and i who is a friend of Ed’s, appointed by him to the general committee. Paul B. Hay and W. A. Asmussen_are the other two friends of Lanigan. Frank McEirath is Eddie Graney’s man, and his appointment is a concession to Rainey. Chairman Sul- iivan and Secretary Govern will un- doubtedly work harmoniously with Lani- gan. So Lanigan, with the co-operation of McNab and Sullivan, will prepare the con- stitution. It will to a large extent be adspted to present exigencies. It is ‘0 be arranged so that if Rainey is beaten be can be kept beaten. There will be some sortof an executive committee named by Lanigan and appointed by Sullivan that will mainly run thiogs, and Rainey will she would never be able to take up her work again. Yesterday, however, she was back at her post and congratulations were showered upon the matron at her recov- ery. Very early in the reception the Chi- | nese showed by their suppressed excite- ment that some scheme was on foot. At last one small maiden in biue, who speaks especially good English, darted out of the room and returned laden with a huge basket of pink and red roses, which she presented to the matron with the follow- ing carefully conned speech: My Dear Miss Culbertson, our mother: We bring to you these few flowers, only to show how we love you and how glad we are to have you back once more. The flowers will wither, but our love will never die. Your CHINESE Giris.” After the informal reception the exer- cises were opened with kindergarten sougs cleverly given by the Chinese children of the home. Miss Saranh Hamlin then told informally of the Sorabji family of India und mosv of her hearers listened with sur. fairy tale of all that had been achieved by a poor and low-caste woman. The central velous intellectual possibilities of women of India. Mrs. Sorabji when a child was picked almost out of ‘the streets and educated in the family of an English missionary. Arrived at woman’s estate she was married to a high-caste Pursee named Sorabji, who for embracing Chris- tianity had become an outcast from his family. The Sorabjis had eleven children, seven of them daughters, and, not having th educate themselves in order to instruct their offspring. So marvelous was their success that Mrs. Sorabji is now principal of the largest school in Poonai‘n’, where the fourth daughter, Cornelia, after bein course at the University of Oxford, is now one of the most successful lawyers in India and is generally considered to be the most learned woman in the world. The_ exercises ended with the close of | Miss Hamlin’s lecture. To-day there will be an all-day session of the Occidental Board: Miss P. D. Brown, the resident, willagain direct the exercises. The follow- ing ladies are the vice-presidents: Mrs, George Barstow, Mrs. J. G. Chown, Mrs. E. V. Robbins, Mrs. E. Y. Garrette, Mrs, J. Q. Adams, Mrs. 8. Minor, Mrs, W. 8. Bartlett. —————— Sued for Maliclous Arrest. Edward Blaser has sued Henry Meyer in the Justice’s Court for $299, of which $274 is de- manded for damages for maiicious arrest. | Blaser was arrested early in last month on a charge of obtaining property by false pre- tenses, sworn out by Meyer. The case was tried before' Judge Campbeli and dismissed. The Jlainuff claims that the defendant acted ma- iciously and without probable cause, and that in defending himself and procuri: I acquit- tal he was put to an expense of $: He asks the full amount over which the Justice’s Court has jurisdiction. Burned to Death. Fung Chung, a Chinese cook, was burned deuth in the fire that destroyed the lodgln: house at 834 Washington street at an early hour yesterday morning. The Chinaman was asleep in his bunk at the time of the fire. The body was removed to the Morgue. ——————— IF a bicycler falls, and has Mitchell’s Lotion, he can ride his bike home. Magic . | leave, and at one time it was feared that | was cut short by the loss of my voice, | which had been injured by the hard train- ing I got while fitehnoratinn & eHild: ““With the loss of my voice came a stroke | of fortune in the marriage of my mother to Thomas Hughes, a retired and wealthy lumber merchant of Los Angeles. I went | to live with my motner after her marriage | and remained with them till two years i ago, when I had a guarrel with my ‘step- | father. After that [ went to the home of | some friends in Los Angeles, and it was which was not absolutely perfect in every respect. I would be guilty of a flagrant violation of my bounden dnty as an offi- cer of the State. And what is more, I fur- ther consider that by taking the precau- tions outlined in order to secure the issuance of valid bonds, I am doing all that can be expected of me, and even more, in the faithful discharge oi my duties as Attorney-General.” There is nothing that astonishes a prise and interest to what seemed like aj idea of Miss Hamlin’s lecture was the mar- | the | means to educate them, set to work to ! white people come to learn from ‘her, and | the first woman to go through the law ! there I met Captain Johnson. | stranger wisitinz Australia for the first “‘He offered to marry me and give me a | time so much as the variety and beauty of home, and as I thought I loved him 1 con- | its flowers. | 5 NEW TO-DAY. RO R 00 R GO AR TR TR TR PN C RN S ——— SANDEN ELECTRIC BELT. T oa Ve ORI TR AT RN {L TR LR IR LORE S PROURRY rA.,;‘t,,w,;vu,;nv,&vs<v%v,; 3 AP PEDADE ) g & IS X0 ] '? 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SANTA CRUZ VENETIAN WATER CARNIVAL is announced for June 17 to 20, in- clusive. Mere mention brings viv ions of last season’s brillia; r olle year, it is said. | der Bow. 11 be REDUCED RATES ™3, . the Southern Pacific Company for all these brilliant events. Arrange your vacation programmes accordingly and call on the agents for particulars. Thousands will won- nrECpPp<<—=22> Q A DOCTOR § UCCESSFULLY TREATS ALL CHRONIO diseases of the head, throat, lungs, heart, stom- ach, liver and bowels; kidney troubles, disorders of the bladder and urinary organs, rupture, piles, varicocele, hydrocele and swelling of the glands. Loss or partial loss of sexual power in either men or women, emissions, sleeplessness, mental worry, bashfuiness. failing memory and ail the distress- ing jlis resuiting from nervous debility positively an permanently cured. Gonorrhea. Gleet, Stric- ture and !)\nllwn'l:i; and ‘05‘:;:0“:119 disease, Syph. flis, thoroughly and forever c J living' away from thy RITE your troubles If living' away from o EANY, M.D., aminer Office), San Francisco, Cal. city and advice will be given ¥ Address F. L. 737 Market St. (opposite PROPOSALS. SUPPLIES —FOR THE— Mendocino Asylum AT UKIAH, Commencing May 1, 1896, and End- ing October 31, 1896. Notice is hereby given that sealed proposals will be received at the ofice of the Secretary of the Board of Directors of the Mendocino Asylum, at UKiah, up to 3 o'clock P. . of MONDAY, April 6, 1896 (Asylum time), for furnishing supplies for said asylum for the six months commencing May 1, 1896, and ending October 31, 1896, said pro- posals consisting of the following schedule, and to be delivered as ordered: Groceries. §00 pounds apples, dried, sliced, No. 1. 4 dozen bath brick. 100 pounds baking powder, Golden Gate, 5- pound cans. 3000 pounds beans, small white, No. 1, last crop. 10 cases cauned corn. 10 cases string beaus. 24 pounds chocolate, Eagle, No. 1 papers. 30 gallons coal oil, Elaine, 5-gallon cans. 150 pounds cheese, Californis, fresh. 400 pounds codfish, No. 100 cases, last catch. 600 pounds crackers, Extra Sodas, American Biscuit Company. 3 150 pounds corn starch, Niagara, 1-pound pack- ages. 60 pounds currants, Zante, No. 1. 100 pounds mush meal, Breakfast Delight or Twin Brothers. 412 gross matches, satety, Switt & Courteney's, noes. 10 boxes macaroni, No. 1, California, 15-pound boxes. 100 gallons pickles, No. 1, mixed. in barrels. ,d200'pounds prunes, California, French, 60's to 's, 6 boxes raisins, London Layers, 3 Crown. 1200 pounds rice, Sandwich Island, No. 1. 10 gallons olive oil, Durand, 3-zallon cans. & cases oysters, Farren's, No. 2, 12-0z. oysters, 2 barrels salmon, Colurhbia River, large red. 2500 pounds salt, dairy. 50 pounds soda bi-carbonate, 1-1b papers. 2000 pounds sugar, dry granulated, extra fine. 6000 pounds sugar, Golden C. 600 gallons syrup, golden, 32 gal. in barrel. 50 callons syrup, Pecific Ccast Syrup Co’s Standard., in barrels. 100 pounds tapioca, flake. 10 boxes vermicelli, No. 1, white, California, 15- pound boxes. 8 dozen Worcestershire sauce, Lea & Perrin’s, 6 dozen pepper sauce. 6 dozen tomato catsup. 110 gallons vinegar wine, 40 grains. Coffee, Toas and Spices. 360 pounds tea, Japan, Uncolored, A. Schilling & Co.’s Arano, No. 5. 800 pounds coffee. Old Gov't Java green, No. 1. 400 pounds coftee, Guatemala, green, No. 1. pounds chicory. nd a strong. event, to be completely eclipsed this | Flour, Feed and Meal. 2000 pounds bran. 260 barrels flour, Baker’s Extra. 800 pounds hominy, large white. 50 pounds pear! b: 8000 pounds rolled bariey. 3000 pounds rolled oats. 3000 pounds rolled wheat. 50 pounds split peas. 300 pounds ground malt. 15 barrels graham flour. 300 pounds cornmeal, white. Canned Fruit, Ete. 15 cases canned fruit, assorted, standard table, 1-gallon cans. 10 cases tomatoes, canned, 1-gallon cans. 1 case jellies, assorted. Soap, Lye and Soda. 12 boxes soap, Savon, 1st quality, full welght, 106 bars in box. 15 boxes soap, Star of the Kitchen, full weight, 100 bars in box. = & boxes soap, White Satin Borax, New England Soup Co., 100-bars box. 50 cans concentrated lye, America: cans. 300 pounds sal soda. Brooms and Brushes. 15 dozen corn brooms, Ind. Home of Mechanical Trades for 4dult Biind manufacture. 3 dozen prushes, hair floor, No. 12 3 dozen brushes, counter, No. Dristles 3 dozen mop har 2 dozen brushes, shoe, No. 16. B dozen brushes, scrub, No. 4. 6 dozen brushes, pot. Smoking Tobacco and Pipes. 300 pounds tobacco, smoking, granulated, Bohls & Co.’s Bulalo, 1st quality, 1-pound packages. 6 gross clay pipes, T. D. Chew 600 pounds tob: Star, 1-pound "4, extra, all les, combination. ng Tobacco. , chewing, Leggitt & Myers’ Hams, Bacon and Lard. 200 pounds bacon, breakfast, medium light, ar, 00 pounds hams, bidders to state brands, qual- ity equal to A. & C. 200 pounds lard, A No. 1, 10 pounds In can. Butter. 1450 pounds butter, No. 1, fresh dairy, (Must be fresh and sweet.) 2500 pounds butter, No. 1, pickle roll. Fresh Fish. 8000 pounds fresh fish, delivered at asylum, on ice, No. 1. Fresh Beef, Mutton and Veal. 30,000 pounas, No. 1, fresh beet, delivered tn sides 2000 pounds, No. 1, fresh mutton, delivered whole. 1000 pounds, No. 1, fresh veal, delivered whole, Eggs. 1000 dozen eggs, fresh, Caljfornia. Potatoes. 25,000 pounds potatoes, No. 1. Wood, 600 cords red fir, cut from sound and standing trees. 350 cords black oak, cut from sound trees, and 0o small limbs. Oils and Paints. 60 gallons boiled oil, linseed, in bbls. 10 gallons turpentine, 5-gal. cans. 150 pounds white lead. 30 zallons ofl, engine, in bbl., 1st quality. 20 zallons ofl, cylinder, 5-gal. caus, 1st quality. 10 gallons ol, pure sperm, for lantern use, 5-gal- lon cans. 25 pounds engineer’s waste, for cleaning engine. Laundry Supplies. 300 pounds caustic soda, Greenbanks’, 98 per cent. 3 pounds analine blue, Troy Laundry Company’s special. 150 pounds starch, Duryeas'. 150 pounds starch, corn. 100 pounds starch’, spear. 15 pounds wax, Japan. 56 pounds chioride of lime. Clothing. 4 dozen coats, cottonade, unlined, 87 to 44. 4 dozen pants, cottonade, unlined, leg 30 to 34, st 32 to 44. 2 dozen v ottonade, 37 to 44. 6 dozen overalls, unlined, brown, medium welght. 10 dozen hickory shirts, neck 15 to 17, 27 inches wide by 33 inches long. Dry Goods. 200 yards bedticking, Amoskeag, A.C.A., 36 inches wide. 2 gross buttons, coat and vest, horn. 10 gross buttons, pants. 10 gross buttons, agate, dress and shirt, Nos. 30, 40 and 50. 2dozen brushes, bair, for toilet. ozen combs, dress. read, C ark’s O, N.T., assorted numbers and colors. 500 vards canton flannel, XXX unbleached, shua. vards Caledonia check, . wide. 0. 1 medium check, 34 5 300 yards prints, standard, medium colors. 10 yards ches cloth, firsc quality. am, dress, small check. b; linen, 18'in. wide. rds denims, Pearl Kiver. indigo blue, 28 in. wide. 300 yards sheeting, Utics, unbleached, 58 in. wide. 100 yards sheeting, bleached. 81 in. wide. 100 "yaids shesting, unbleached, 4-4, Indlan Head. 100 yards long cloth. 50 yards table linen, bleached, 72 in. wide, 50 yards elastic, garter, black and white. 50 yards sheeting, unbieached, 5-4. 2 dozen bedspreads, white, 4-4. * 1dozen extract lemon, 16-0z. No. 1, Standard. 1 dozen extract of vanilla, 16 0z bottles, No. 1, standard. 20 pounds cinnamon, ground, 5-pound cans, A. Schilling & Co.’s best. 40 pounds ginger, ground, 5-pound cans, A. Schilling & Co.s best. sl pounds mustard, und. 5-pound cans, A. 00 e l': 4, 5-pound pounds pepper, black, ground, 5-pound can A. Scliiling & Covs beats o 2 5 4 dozen bedspreads, white, 3-4. 10 dozen ladies’ hose. No. 209, cotton. 15 dozen cotton socks, men's assorted sizes. 5 dozen handkerchiefs, ladies (o0 dozen handkerchiets, mew's, Turkey red, 24 nches. 5 dozen hairpins, K. & B., assorted, No. 100. 200 yards musiin, bleached. Fruit of the Loom. 1000 needles, Milward's, assorted sizes. 1 gross safety pins, assorted sizes. 1 gross pins, W ns’, F. 3 dozen darning cotton, white and black. 3 dozen linen thread, Barbour’s, Nos. 40 and 60, white and black. 1 dozen dress stays, horn, 1 dozen in bunch. 6 dozen bunches shoestrings. 1 dozen papers machine needles, assorted Singer sewing-machine. 10 dozen towels, toilet, huck, half bleached. Shoes and Slippers. 3 dozen pairs men's brogans, sizes 6 to 13. 2 dozen pairs ladies’ buskins, sizes 3 to 8. Respecttully submitted, E. W. KING, Medical Superintendant. The above-named articles are all to be of the best aualities, subject to the approval of the Medical Superintendent. and to be delivered at the asylum at such times and in such quantities as heNasy dee sire. Aud it is expressly understood that if a grTeater or less quantity of any article above mens tioned shall be required by the Medical Superin- tendent, the same shall be furnished by the con- tractor at the contract price. The contracts will be awarded to the lowest re- sponsible bidder, and no bid will be received or considered uniess accompanied by a certified check in an amount equal to 10 per cent of the bid or bids presented, which amount shall be forfeited to the people of 'the State of California as settled, fixed ana liguidated damages in case the bidder to whom the award of contracts Js made shall fail or refuse 10 enter into such contract- and furnish such bonds for the faithiul performance of the seme as the Board of Directors may require within five davs aftersuch award. Separate bids will be received ior SR TEA AND SPICES, FLOUR, FEED AND MEAL, CANNED FRUITS, ETC., SOAP, ND SODA BROOMS AND BRUSHES, SMOKING TOBACCO AND PIPES, CHEWING TOBACCO, HAMS, BACON AND LARD, TTER, FRESH FISH, FRESH BEEF, MUTTON AND VEAL, EGGS, POTATOES, WOOD, AND PAINTS, LAUNDRY SUPPLIES, CLOTHING, DRY GOODS, SHOES AND SLIPPERS. The Board reserves the right of refecting any op all bids. Pavments to be made monthly in cash when there is money in the treasury for such pay- ments, and when ihere s no money in the treas- ury, payment to be made out of the first money 1n the treasury applicable for such pu Bids to bé addressed to W. W. C of the Board of Directors of the Mendo- m, at Ukiah, and indorsed on tho envelope “Propesals for Furnishing Supplies. Samples of articles showing the character a NGHAM, d quaiity thereof required, except such as are perigh - able, may be scen at thé storeroom of the asylum, ‘The attention of bidders is called to the follow~ ing section from the Political Code of this State: Sectfon §235. “No supplies of any kind or char- acter for the benefit of the State, or to be paid by any moneys appropriated orto_be appropriated by the State, manufactured or grown in this Stave, which are in whole or in_part the product of Mon- golian labor, shall be purchased by the officials of this State having control of any -public institution under the control of the State or of any county, - city and county, city or town thereof.” Tn oraer to preserve uniformity and facilitate the award it has been resolved 10 receive no bids un. less made upon blank forms furnished by the seo retary. Parties will please carry out the sum totsl for each article and add up the sume, %0 that the gross amount may be seen at a glance: oth will not be cousidered. 5 b y order of the Board of Directors of docino Asvium at Ukiah. 4.0f the M- Dated Ukiah, March 6, 1596, J. H. SEAWE! Porr LL, President. W. HAM, Secretary, COSMOPOL: AINT, Opposite U. 8. Min:, 100 and 102 Fifth st., B:II ¥ rancisco, Cal.—The most select family hotel in ibe city. Board and room, $1, $1 25 and $1 60 day, according 10 room. Meals 25¢. Rooms, l’o‘: and 750 a day. Free coach to and from the hotel. Look for the coach bearing the name of the Cog mopolitan Hotel. WM, FAHEY, Proprietog. ANSY mfim Safe lways 4c. for Woman's Safequard. WILCO: €0, 228 SOUTH x-:'m'n'rn ST..PH}(L?DEA.C{;!A?