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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1900. IREWERS WIFE |/AMERICAN COLONY IN 0F NEVADA LTy | PARIS IS INTERESTED A Miss Mabel K. Hopkins of This Cit WHMS—UWUHE[ to Wed Dr. E. L. Gros . s Filed in Complaint g of France. by Mrs. Gehrig Denmied |+ by Her Husband ———— | | municipality ASSAILS WALLACE IN A COMPLAINT Drury Melone Files Bill Alleging Ex-Judge Tried to Influence Legislation. RURY MELONE, through his at- torneys, filed a bill of particulars yesterday in the Superior Court concerning one item in his cross- complaint in the suit brought against him by ex-Judge Willlam T. Wal- lace and his son Ryland T. Wallace. The bill of particulars sets forth that consid- erable sums were expended in influencing the California Legislature to secure the passaage of a bill to facilitate the collec- | tion of Melone's claim against Placer- ville for pa yment of bonds issued by that and igned by Jackson R. Mpyers and George W. Harwood to Melone der an agreement for collection. The following are the items in the bill of par- ticulars: December, 158 —Board, lodging and transpor- ion of Willlam T. Wallace to Placerville, December and January, —W. T. Higuins, | for his influence ‘and services in procuring the paesage of a bill by the Legislature of Califor- nie to facilitate the collection defendant’'s | claim, 5000, December and January, 1881-W. B. Carr, for his influence and services in procuring the passege of a bi the Legislature of Cali- by a to facilitate the collection of defendant’s 34000, December and January, | for his influence and | wiiitam T. 1881—Colonel Gillis, rvices in procuring the the Legislature of Cali- collection of defendant’s passgge of a bill by fernW to facilitate the claim, $600. December aary, 158 Myers, 1—Expenses of Dufty, Couroy, using their in bill by th to facilitate the col- memorial, $44. rge T. Knox and Holland ont, former clerk of W. 6 ted on the claim and Harwood, before men- from Placerville for the redemp- tion of Placerville bopds. The suit of the W, s against Melone is to get what they is thefr share of that money from lone, and they have asked for legal services. Melone’ latm is for $63,225 4, ded items based upon ion_of Dantel Wallace as ng the em 2 s attorney by P. n: for services in bringing about the litigation between W Miller Lux over marsh & minin: near < near San uring a compro- mise of J im against W. T. purchaser for W £ Pact Bank & 3 or Stiating loan of $100,000 for W. T. Wallace to the & Valley Water Company; for pur- chasing property on Valencia street, be- n Thirteenth rteenth, for llace; for purcha on Van Ness twe. Myers and Harwood to get a settlem with Placerville of the bonds of the nicipality held by them m Myers F was to receive one-half the money re- covered and from Harwood one-third. L R e EX-JUDGE W. T. WALLACE, ACCUSED BY DRURY ME- LONE OF INFLUENCING LEGISLATORS. % - November 21, 1580, Melone and William T. 3 the complaint, n T. Wal- r stance one- covered in the proceed et up that he received acerville, but that ad been more than s was to receive <penditures to e Upon the advice of Wil so Melo: verred, he paid out from 1580 to Janua 1, 1884, the sum of $1 which, with iInterest up to this year, would have amounted to $1 amount fonal part of the allace used and January Legislature tf averm his influe 1881 t Is that W. T. in December to procure from the sage of a bill to facili- tate the collection of Melone's claim. Judge W was _iil last evening and could not be seen. Ryland Wallace. hi s he alleged facts son, who is a party to the suit, s had never heard of any such as were mentic Mr. Melone's bill of particulars, 1t i strange to me,” said Mr. Wal- lace. es mentioned are 1880-S1. ed at_tha time by the Legislatu able Placerville to in- corp: there been the claim h collected long ago, without doubt. The Placerville bill was | passed o i at al ¥ last year. I don’t understand 1‘Jury Agrees on Ver-| | Cases of Angelina M. Abbott | drew A ! on the night of March 24, was concluded fte: { Dr. Ber Dale Sued by Her Hus- | Also Wants Alimony - Deeds Set B _ - e eat b §s K. HOPKINS OF SAN FRANCISCO, WHOSE ENGAGE- . - DR. EDMOND L. GRO8, THE WELL-KNOWN PHYSI- = AS 3 N ANNOUNCED IN PARIS | ed sult & = jiK; e 3 N ty for m t The Call and New York lH - | ment that has t been announced of < h Miss Mabel K Judge S gage- | resident of . gt ar s . | ¢ : The Notorious Chinese | mere Gambler Said to Be . a Marked Man. { » n P, ed a war: = . | ra yesterday for 5 E Sergeal cManus Has a|Y L S o 5 : it 1s al- . - Lively Chase After Sup- by the rear savs | posed ssin. rant' door. but | 1 » the adjoining | 25 . AT - o k NEWSPAPER BULLETIN ki " ® BOARDS UNDER THE BAN Supervisor Connor Prepares Resolu- SIX HUNDRED SICK ARE tion Rescinding All Special Per- EN ROUTE FROM MANILA - mits for Their Maintenance. kg s e police Connor has had a P itals Will Be G ’ e s ed which he will pre s Add n—Gua < t meeting of the hoard lost I 3 m in or Prisoner Adams. een rumor: T few mo- winced that m- t and e in Good Condition. Buckley and O'F of Health Board 8 1 1O itk | visited Butche vesterday morning to - J ; o Lo | investigate the merits proposed ordi- b Ume | ance regulating the operation of slaugh- { terhou After a thorough i gation s enemies | Braunhart decided io report adversely on for . the police | tne pagsage of the ordina which he - F to protect | U N hot practieal. The ordinance pro- p e s or asphait instead of ? J - w e comgre i E Braur A says this the fat e would | gould result in damage to the tools used Little Pete. | WOS T, [Chter cattle. The connection of z < of from high- | t1e houses with sewers, he claims, is not hey are located on piles in conditions of He nce governing the subject. of some general ! INCIDENTS IN POLICE COURT. ordin 7 ogntes the ‘Ivir;;n\h;n > on Walsh. § # jitary regulations but will oppose any | = eet Orator, Regrets He Fastic measurs. He says the only nuis- the locality d is ad animals are collected. fertilizing 11 Not Vote for Bryan. | %0 Folsom ance in (I\Xs' works, whér R erlay o & POSTUM CEREAL. ging th cruelty to chil- | Work of Chinatown Squad. 2 8 s been drinking and neglect- | pmhe report of Sergeant McManus, in WENT TO TEA 8 baby eight months | charge of the Chinatown squad, for m.-\ Her hus- | month of September, submitted to | And It Wound Her Bobbin. " semason and | Chief Sullivan - yesterday. The arrests | 1 by that om | Chinese_lottery keeper aiding g frequently & ! nken habite fan tan flee A lady ¥ f r assistance. The ! Jones, says that sh relle abandon the use o > Cl g g e ago, because A « | disposed ollow: A 3 RO, aid fine, conyicted and_impris b er ealth, and that | ere s bending. 4. The fines col- t nking, but that jected amounted to $I7 ——————————— r s ago, she had E B she had lost 1 charge Mayor’s Veto 'Is Final‘. s d no food seemed H n's court yester- City Attorney informed the Mayor | day. e iting thec atter’s disapproval of | “ } that T iis defense was | 5 s upon the urgent necessity fund v At this time I was | that he was torney - Spinett!, | $emands DL | L o 4 out of the t the famous food | 7, "5'G 1 hands, _and f'" ‘ame unless ‘the Mayor joins with five- st Coffee. and was 50 | said that s, 55108 s M50 | Sixths of the members of the Board ot sed with th sults a an was e x ervisors in ordering such payment. | ed with the results that I,f"f s ,?.;Iff'f\,a ‘or alone cannot draw upon er been without it since. IH} appropnation nor can the board, even by | rove at once, re | resterday on | & unanfmous vote, do so without his con- 2 five pounds of ficshi.. wa T Gapan. | sent. SSRGS i a beyond my usual|iss by 1 San Bruno ave- 3 $ # nue een employed as a servant | Not Wanted in New York. y night he and his | ““ of the baby whllg “hen they returne Rose had disappeared 0 $26 50 belong- | by Hinz and Thur Postum to be good. pure | wife left her in charg: and there never was an ar- | they made a call. nd never will be, T believe. that Frank M. Travis, who surrendered him- seif to the police Thursday night, alleging that he had robbed his father in New York | - 5 g ¥ | ing to Hinz. She is cha: | of $1000, was released fromjgcustody yes- doc ¢ly take the place of coffee as | Jarceny s charged with petty | 00 v " orning. _Captain Seymour. who ¥ Food Coffee. The beauty of it | Con Walsh, the street orator, was ar- | telegraphed to New York. received the following reply from Captain McClusky ‘Release Travis; will not send for hi Travis says it is a load off his mind and now he will be able to go to work. - _ | rested Thursday night at Pine and Kea “I* c:umd“";t ny streets by Policeman Heinz for di turbing the peace. He was convicted by Judge Conlan yesterday and sentenced | stating that | transportation was paid { important | opened the door for Hoff on | of the murder. | charges against them. i MYSTERIOUS ABSENCE | quar | dent of Hanford for more than twenty | attempted to commit suicide, and Ayers 'HARRIS 1S ACQUITTED diet After Deliberat- | ing an Hour. | and Murderer Hoff to Be Set To-Day. et | The trial of Wayne Harris, the messen- ger boy charged with the murder of An-| Layden, another messenger boy, | in Judge (¢ roll Cook’s court in the Hall | of Justice yesterday afternoon. The jury being out for about an hour, r n- | d a verdict of not guilty. As soon as the verdict was rendered the boy's mother and a number of friends crowded around him and warmly congratulated him. When the med yesterday morning Detective n was recalled. He testified that den before his death and Layden said that he did not want Harris to be prosecuted as he was to blame. The defendant took the stand and testified to the previous quar- rels with Layden and the circumstances | that led up to the stabbing. | After the addresses of Assistant Dis- | trict Attorney Deuprey for the j tion and ex-Judge F ant, Judge Cook delivered his charge to the jury The cases of Angelina M. Abbott, | charged with assault to murder for shoot- | Dil he saw I |ing Actor De Witt Clinton, and Albert | Frederick, George Vereneseneckockock | hoff, charged with the murder of Mr: > street, De- nd continue to be set. te at 603 Guerre were called until cember by J Hoff, been called for short, was granted a new trial by the Supreme Court after being sentenced to be hanged on June 10, 1808. In connection with this case Captain Seymour received a letter from L. A. Legg, who is now in Chicago, he as witn and his wife would ap- es at the trial if their The captain at | pear | onee communicated with the Pinkertons | in Chicago io arrange for their trans- portation. Mrs. Legg is one of the most witnesses against lived in the flat below Mr: Hoff. She Clute and he morning | She heard a scream from | Mrs. Clute's flat and a_heavy fall on the | floor and then saw Hoff leave by the rear | irway | Mrs. Nettie R. Craven and Adolph Sflva and George W. Simpton will also appear this morning to plead to the per;\xr,\-} —e—— OF A HANFORD MAN s | The Police Asked to Locate the| ‘Whereabouts ot Jossph Alfred Hewitt. Sheriff Avers of Hanford, imty, reported at police head- esterday the mysterious disap- pearance of his friend, Joseph _Alfred Hewltt, and asked assistance in clearing | up the mystes Hewitt is an Englishman, Deputy but a pesi- a heavy drinker and it made spondent. Two or three times he | m d Was afraid that he might have come to this city to execute the threat. Hewitt left Hanford in March for San sco to consult a doctor_about his d been hurt. Since then nothing has been heard of him. He is a single man, 42 vears of age, five feet six and a half inches tall, brown mustache | and hair, fair complexion. He used to re- ceive remittances from his people in Eng- land, and had made two or three trips theré and back. — e—————— Board Cannot Delegate Its Powers. The ordinance presented by Supervisor Curtls providing for the shifting of re- sponsibility from the Board of Supervis- ors to the Board of Public Works in re- ard to street encroachments and permits or building alterations and maintenance of engines was reported upon adversely yvesterday by the Supervisors’ Judiciary Committee. Supervisor Reed said the Board of ‘Supervisors had no right to delegate the powers conferred upon it by the charter. Commissioner Mendell stated that the Board of Works would require additional inspectors to carry out the provisions of the ordinance, which led Mayor Phelan to remark that the board had been accused of having a surplus of employes already, to which Mendell smil- ingly assented e JUSTICES OF THE PEACE GO ON GENERAL TICKET Registrar So Decides, Though Gov- ernor Did Not Include Them in His Election Proclamation. Notwithstanding the fact that Governor Gage omitted to call for the election for five Justices of the Peace in his election proclamation, Registrar Walsh that all the c es for the office will ced on the al ticket to be voted for Novembs 1900. This course is In cordance with the opinion handed down v Attorney advised the Regist to make all preparations for election of Justices of the Peace, which the rter provides shall be elected at the same time as mem- bers of the Legislature. The Registrar the proclamation of the Governor not cut much fizure. Heretofore the Judges of the Superior Court were includ- ed in the call for the election, but this is the first time that the candidates will g0 on the Sta , the idea being to id the which will « ts, s the handling c In an opimion of the Attorney General on the subject he holds that the Justices of the P re not municipal, but State judieial officers. He further states that “jt sumed under the law that the elec- ADVERTISEMENTS. WHY MRS, PINKHAM Is Ahble te Felp Sick Women ‘When Doctors Fail. How gladly would men fly to wo- man’s aid did they but understand a woman’s feelings, trial and peeualiar organic disturbances. Those things are known only to women, and the aid a man would give is not at his command. To treat a case properly it is neces- sary to know all abont it, and full jnformation, many times, cannot be given by a woman o her family phy- Mgs. G. H. CHAPPELL. sician. She cannot bring herself to tell everything, and the physician is | at a constant disadvantage. This is why, for the past twenty-five years, thousands of women have been con- fiding their troubles to Mrs. Pinkham, and whose advice has brought happ ness and health to countless women in the United States. Mrs. Chappell, of Grant Park, IlL, | whose portrait we publish, advises all suffering women to seek Mrs. Pink- ham’s advice and use Lydia E. Pink- ham's@Vegetable Compound, as they cured her of inflammation of the ovaries and womb ; she, therefore, speaks from knowledge, and her experience ought to give others confidence. Mrs. Pink- ham’s address is Lynn, Mass., and ber advice is absolutely free. his | be | t April in which | sensibilities, | > PAINE'S CELERY COMPOUND. ‘3‘\““\ W P | | OUND Will give you restful nights, a good ‘appetite, and stop that racking head- .ache and backache. HEALTH RESTORED. Mrs. M. A. Cummings, 140 No. 50th Street, Phil- | adelphia, Pa., writes: *‘I have occasion to do a great deal of work, and before | used Paine’s Celery Com= pound was troubled with irequent headaches, pains in the back, was unable to sleep at night, and had no appetite. | was completely run down and un- able to attend properly to my business, A friend recommended Paine’s Celery Compound to me, and after using two bottles | feel like another woman.” tion of Justices of the Peace will be held) JEREMIAH LYNCH HOME next fall.”" They are to be elected at the FROM THE KLONDIKE ame time and the same te officers nd not as officers of the 1 coun Will Seek Relaxation at the Paris Exposition and Will Again his is in exact accord with the provis- fons of the charter, says the Registrar. |~ Citizens who have registered and_ who | have changed their residence since Janu- Visit Egypt. | ary 1, 1900, have only unti hursda < g 2 kel e | S%aber 31, o © re-register. As many | Jeremiah Lynch, B Domiaz. Egyptolo | Voters have moved they are urge gist, author, bon vivant and miner, re- appear at the City Hall at once. A turned last night from a three years' so- | lenge will bé prepared consisti journ in far away Alaska. Mr. Lynch | those who have not T id 1“m the! has prospered during his stay in the ctucts Sor “thirty dayu besides & frozen nofth and wiil now seek relaxation in travel and sightseeing. another book during his will enter into negotiations with his publishers regarding it at once. He will then away to the Exposition Jgypt, remainin some time. Bohemian Club blinked | —— s — | ATTORNEY FAILS TO | | MAKE HIS CHARGES GOOD Grand Jury Investigates Alleged | Scandal in Health Department, | but Is Not Enlightened. The Grand Jury made an effort yester-| made | food inspectors, been derelict in d | cause they had been paid not to condemn | impure milk, also that there had be rtry day to probe the charges made by Attor- i et i ney Joseoh Rothschild against th administration of € ADVERTISEMENTS. inspection bureau. Rothschild e persistent | milk _condemned for some time | Rothschild also made vague charges | bribes had been accepted by Inspectors | during the Chinatowr quarantine. the Latest Novelties in | _The Board of Health requested the Grand Jury to in te the matter, but the latter bod e enlightened ss before | repited faile ) before nd | when Rothschild erday. To all t did_not know make his charges good. | the Grand Jury for five minutes onl | proved so un: actory a witne he was a wed to take his departure. e WANT A NEW SCHOOL IN POTRERO DISTRICT Improvement Club Committee Pro- tests Against Transfer of Pupils From Columbia School A committee from the Nuevo Potrero Improvement Club vistted the office of the Superintendent of Sghools yesterd enter a protest against the School B order transferring pupiis from the Col Including Muffs, Scarfs, Fur Hats, Etc 10 PER CENT REDUCTION. Repairing, Dyeing and Dressing at Short Notice. { | i bia School to the Irving Scott ~School. | e The committee consisted of A. D. Pratt, | C.°F. Kimball and J b et } _\D,KOC“UR' 12] Post St | visor' Dwyer accompa: | petition was filed requesting the (Don't: Mistake the Number.) | of a new schoolhouse on property owned " by the city on street, between Roems 7 to 11, over O'Connor, | Twenty-fifth and went ih. Moffatt & Co.'s. Phone Black 3743 i erintendent of Schools How- | ved the committee in the absence | of Superintendent Webster, who is on a { vacation. Howard assured the committee | e would call the atte of his suyp to the petition and the would certainly present it to the Board ¢ Education et Say Signatures Are Not Genuine. A number of protestants appeared be- fore the Board of Public Works yasterday in the matter of the San Francisco Cdn- struction Company to pave the roadway | on Beicher street between Thirteenth and Fourteenth. They alleged that the names attached to the petition were not genuine and some whose names were used were opposed to the prosecution of the work. A postponement was ordered until a fur- ther investigation. A delegation from | several improvement clubs also protested against the application of John McQueen for permission to run a carpei-cleaning establishment on_Alblon avenue, between Fifteenth and Sixteenth streets. matter will be referred to the Board of Supervisors. e oo Bank Officials Promoted. | Joseph Friedlander has beenr appointed cashier of the Anglo-Californian bank and | #'. E. Beck has been made assistant casn- | ier. Mr. Friedlander has heretofore aueul SAME SHAPE TWO QUALITIES ARROW L BpAND > NISTOGALjGARSON +25¢ each¥2 for 25¢ .CLUETT PEABODY &CO MAKERS LADIES— ONIA™ COARECTS lflfiT 0!532].5‘%3 IRRECULARITIES Absolutely reliat iniess; plain wiaj iy SR o, sl Fheas Blde.-3an Frascisce. ale as assistant manager and Mr. Beck has ) been accountant. cked,