Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, HOMR DRAWS UP 4 RIGID TRUST BILL Provides for Publicity and Governmental Jurisdiction. - Corporations Must File An- nual Statements of Business. Measure Provides Against Conspira- cles to Stamp Out Competition and Msintain High Prices. e asked ed for the ute offen- er assogiation ed FEDERAL JURISDICTION. A y Gene of the United 5 v of any et 'y or other &= gaged any statement he T - regard to the conduct of s he clally re- int stock ciation to give a or transactions en- months preceding has sold any jed any artic any rans- re the nd circum- person, a ation ks of pora- er Laso mong s shail the Attorn ! ed States or by & the: purpos Licensed to Marry. following ma.. to-day How mma Hess, € Albert Carl Vincent, both of Oakland , 31, San Fran- Webster. York; Flox ), hoth and Hat- e ond Fields Above Pretoria. TRY IT TO-DAY. 15c. and 23¢. per package. Aigrocers everywhere; ARMY UNIFORMS 10 BE CHANGED | War Department Makes Report of Board Public. Sty ndations Are Ap- proved and Thus Become Regulations. | ! | l Wrecked for Second Time Within Absence of Fatalities Is i | | Recomme: | | i | WASHINGTO? artment The War De- ma ublic the report of be by General f which Colonel Patten is the in detail the . in the army uniform, some seen the first time at has aded rm | Young & | recoraer, n set changes m of which were the White House rece yesterday. | T f recommendation is that of-| ficers when on duty ould be required | t> wear thelr uniform during office hours. | | Othe mmendations, all of which b pproved which are conse- « army regulations, provide titution o e sleeve orna- ts for those of embroidery and metal Chaplains are to wear K X sred gold oak leaves on of- ficer vifors must come off, except on nks above that of major. The United coat-of-arms, $n gold, is to be to all shoulder knots of officers captain | important change is the abolition of the chapeau, the service helmet and the | ice r officers and the service isted men. Provision is | combination h and belt for brigadier ndation « nerals. A significant rec- | for a more detailed th hoes -to be worn by officers, for it is rumored that the board’s | labors were begun as a result of the de- | otherwise properly ull dress, wearing a pair Hereafter chevrons are | way on the sleeves be- 1d shoulders. | ations are that belts and cartridge cas are to be worn out- 2 the »at; that marching sho provided for the men and that au of insular affairs shall have | omm to be worn m tween the elbow Other recommer be KING RECEPTION | IN HONOR OF DAUGHTERS ome residence of Homer King, | : . 4 dway, was thronged with callers | il day afternoon, the occasion being | \e first “at home” since the coming- | t reception for Miss Genevieve and Miss | 7 A Hazel King several weeks ago. The af-| | adr was < informal and the| | received by Mrs. | | assisted rt was hostess at jay at her home mentary to Miss a popular bride-elect. The e of the decorations was yel- being prettily decorated in ith ferns. Among : Ardella_ Mill Starr, Miss Hammond, Miss Grace Baldwin, Mrs. Alex- ldwin and Miss Juliet Garber. tes of the Irving Club held an ting meeting vesterday in Utopla The president, Mrs. E. R. Tuttle, After business affairs were dis- a pleasant programme was ren-| Mrs. Fred Hanson, the reader | )ston, and Miss Marron, who ren- | % al piano numbers excellently. | Hanson’s dramatic readings are al- | ved, and her work is | stic and finished. A | selection from her own pen, “Red ing Hood,” was a dainty bit of per-! sonation and extremely characteristic. The numbers. given yesterday were Rich- ard Harding Davis' “Trial of Abner Dar- row,” Dunbar's “Possum”; “A Matrimo- | nia) Dispute,” by Philip Ofis; the -quarrel from E AKLAND, Jan. 2—For the aec—' ' ond time in three days the Liv- ermore local train was wrecked this morning about a mile west of Pleasanton. It is most re- markable that the only injuries sustained by any of the train crew or the passen- gers was a broken toe by Engineer E. R. Saulpaugh and a sprained ankle suffered by Mary E. Black, the matron of the City ERSFULFETGA. . ENCANEER, .. 3 Ri —— % INJURED, MAN IN CHARGE OF scene between Lady Teazel and Sir Peter, TRAIN, ATTENDING PHYSI- from *School for Scandal,” Eugene 2nd County Hospital of this city, who CIAN AND WRECK SCENE. “The Rock-a-bye Lady From | jumped from the steps of a passenger bye ‘.;:.(.—I;» rx and ;‘H!s{\\'ord of | coach after the wreck was all over. The | - + M. Re-Brac. An informal re- as ov 2 lowed\ the programme unl:ll ;E_LE".Z"‘C was overturned and badly dam press Messenger Robert Norman was in eyl sl 4 | aged, the tender and baggage car were | hig car at the time. The car was badly wrecked and he was hurled from one end to the other and yet wa carcely bruised. As for the passengers none were in- jured save Mary E. Black, who, in alight- | ing from a coach after the wrecked t | broken and splintered and there was hard- Iy a truck left under any of the five pa senger coaches that were behind the big engine. . Blakeman are chape- | y of young S8an Fran- this week. The party > e Blakeman, Miss| The train involved in this wreck was | % sl Rt own, Miss Olive Holbrook, Knox | the same one that bumped into the gravel | jH¢ To%E “'n'm’:)"" Rl o el e Charles Holbrook and H. P.|cars at Livermore station on Wednesday | '\ (e e A & Ho ol he train left Livermore at 6:30 o'clock . night. The engine was the same one, the - . e = in the morning.and arrying back s cars were the same, the conductor, Joseph | 1o gan gl CG B e o peo Mr. and M g rick Colleton Innes | D. Moffitt, was the one who took the Liv- | 5 =0y 500 0 e o oSN il ‘L." M o TetDre T T g . o 3 | ple who had gone to the various Liver t y eir | ermore train down on nesday, an b 3 S : wedding trip to 8 bory = A more Valley towns to spend the edding trip to Santa Barbara if Engineer Bradley had not taken a lay- | yoor geason with their relgtjve TE e off for a rest he would have been in vk et G Sk gl,“,k‘ - hn R. Jarboe is spending the Tge £ *#:‘ S i Zadl ihe train aughter-in-law of the late Jose \. New York v&nsbb..nwguru\\n ¥ I»' R. Saulpaugh, one | one of the pioneer residents of SR L the yeptgat miens 9F ¢l O [ the rmore Valley and whose family rs. W m Tevis came up to San ! 'Y Of enxineers | still resides in that tion. It was short- clsco t Wednesday for one day | CAUSE IS UNCERTAIN. {1y before 7 o'clock d the train was only. After attending \he New Year's| The cause of the wreck is somewhat un- | bowling along at a good rate into the | party of Dr. Harry Tevis and attending | certoin and theories run from a spread | €ntrance of the Niles Canyon when the to the interests of her family, Mrs. Tevis | rail due to soft track through the gamut | accident happened. returned country me in Mon-{ of wreck ¢ such as a broken fi i R ® her children are plate. a flange, a broken rail, | ALD, HUBBEED D0 SCHRE. spending the winter, | down to the rtling, though hartily | Word was carried back to Pleasanton . s . probable, theory of a deliberate attempt | and an appeal for help sent to tiie Oak- X guests ‘,.r ”“j “f?"‘l Cumberland en- | tc wreek the train. As the wreck tore | land pier. Owing to the frequency of ved their w Year's dance on Thurs- | up the track for about 200 feet ail traces | wrecks of late the story rapidly spread day eve k- large number of friends | that would lead to the discovery of the ¢ that there were many injured. The peo- were invited to add,to the merriment of | cause were cbliterated, It is probable that | ble of Pleasanton were promnt to render the evening. Dancing was enjoyed in the | the disaster was caused by the spread- | assistance. Dr. W. A. Hershiser of that dining-room until a late hour. Many pret- | ing of the to what is known as | place went at once to the scenk of the ty evening gowns were worn. |a “soft” The place where the | Wreck on a handcar. Fortunately his ser- | wreck occurred is on a curve just at the | vices were but slightly needed and when HIT WITH BLACKJACK end of what is known as “Indian cut,” | & special train nn;h'fi;l from Oakland with | and these two facts would indicate this | wreckers and medical aid there was noth- { AND POCKETS RIFLED condition. The water running into the | Ing left for them to do. | cut kept the soil soft and spongy, and | Wrecking cars were sent both from amd, an insurance clerk, | when the train struck the curve the | Tracy and Oakland. A special train was California street, secured a | strain was more than the track could | made up at the western end of the wreck m Police Judge Mogan yes- | stand, 80 it is thought, and it gave way, | and the passengers brought to Oakland for the arrest of Walter Harvey | throwing the train into the ditch, | about an hour Jate. Engivieer Saulpaugh liam Elmer on a charge of rop.| This latest railroad disaster is remark- | Was taken directly to the Rallroad Hos- The warrant was handed to Cap- | ADle Father for narrow escapes than_ for | pital in San Francisco. < tin, who will make every effoet | "Pot really happened.. Had the wreck | The clearing of the wreck wass matter twq alieged footpads | occurred one hundred feet heyond tie | Of 8reat interest, for toward evening o was on his way | €Atire train wduld have toppled into o | Many trains in each direction have to home velock New Years ey | sunken road which passes under the rail- | find their way over this track to and S 'and as he paseed the corner of Joek. | F023. track and the loss ‘of life wauld | from Livermore, Tracy and Stockton. It g-n and Kearny streets Harvey and E. | Lave been equaled only by that of the | .. 2 mer, two young men whom he kne‘w Byron horror. Had it occurred ane hun.;"_——_— L slightly, accosted him. While they wers | orco foony oreh oack on the line the! | mThe Call’s Great Premium to talking one of them hit en piled up in the cut him on the head with a blackjack, knocking him down and i\:ah;:e t}:;‘e:k(r:v‘\;«l;u]r(ll]egu:egr::el;hnear]y Its Subscribers, b i s, By S i G0 2 S n | |y ie’ciEn 1T e a razor pad been taken e ] Mol AR | A car-load of Call Superior Atlases has arrived and they are mow ready for distribu- tion. All subscribers to The Call are entitled to a copy of this great book at the prem- ium rate of $1 50. Out of town subscribers desiring a copy of this spiendid prem- ifum will be supplied on re- ceipt of $1 50. Al mail REMARKABLE ESCAPES, The cscapes of Engineer Saulpaugh, Fireman Swansen and Express Messenger Robert Norman were little short of mirac- ulous. Engineer Saulpaugh was at the throttle when the wreck occurred and it all happencd so quickly that when the engine toppled over he was still founa at his post. In that moment the walls and roof of the cab in which Saulpaugh stoog were swept away and yet the only in- from his | | iams had been confined to his bed | sterday morning from the effects ' e blow on his head. He made inquiry | | about Harvey and Elmer and ascertained | that they b gone to Los Angeles. Cap- | tain Martin has sent a descripiion of them | to the authorities in that city and has asked for their arrest. e Native Sons’ Parlor. ury that he sustained e A new parlor of the Native Sons of the | grent foe. How Batloaugn covaned Hoseh | | orders will be shipped by ex- Golden West will be instituted at Rich- | when the cab was carried away and| | PFE™® 0t subscriber’s cxpense. Terms of this zreat offer: Subscribe for The Daily Cail for a period of Nix months and You will be entitled to a copy of this_ splendid $8 00 Atlas for $1 50. on mond iy evening next. It will | be known as Kichmond Parlor No. 217 | District Deputy Grand President William A. Peake will install officers of city par- | jors on the following dates: El Dorado, | broken to pleces will have to go down one of the mysterious freatures of rail- 1oad wrecks. Fireman Swansen had an equally ‘narrow escape. He was huried through the front of the cab and was J ary 8; S8an Francisco, Januarv 9 and | found after the wreck on top of the b-iler. Olvmous. January 14 He was but very slightly burned. Ex- — DISASTER AGAIN OVERTAKES THE LIVERMORE LOCAL TRAIN raculous. JANUARY 3, 1903. Three Days, and | | ‘ | | | 2% TS was a bad wreck to clear away, for all| of the cars and the engine were in such 2 position as to blook the track. No at-| tempt was made to get the engine, tender or baggage car on the rails. They were | simply hauled to one side. The passenger | coaches were soon go6t out of the way, | and shortly after 4 o'clock the Stockton pascenger train got by, a little more than an hour late. It will take several days to | get the heavy ‘engine right side wp and| into the Oakland shops for repairs. | HINTS AT FOUL PLAY. \’ Division Superiritendent W. S. Palmer, | in speaking of the wreck, said: 23k All we ascertaihed- in our inspection and in- | vestigation to-day was that the locomotive first left the rails at a joint and that an angle plate | i = was broken. Whether this plate broke of itself or whether a defective flange on a wheel caused the engine to climb the rail at the joint and | break the plate we were unable to determine | definit The rails were broken in several | places ahead of the joint where the locomotive | first jumped. These breaks were undoubtedl; caused by the engine hitting the rails when & jolted over the ties. We also found spikes drawn from the ties, but how this was done it is difficuf® to say at | present. We are not prepared to assert that | any one drew the spikes. They might have | n forced out of the ties by the pounding of the locomotive after it left the rails. How- | ever, we will investigate this phase -of the | accident further. It was on a curve where the | wreck occurred. After leaving the rails the locomotive plunged ahead about three lengths before it toppled over. | Conductor Joseph D. Moffitt came to | Oakland on the special train from the| wreck and took his regular train out to Livermore again at 5 o’clock to-night. He | sustained no injuries and did a great deal | of work about the wreck, quieting those passengers who were not injured and tak- | ing care of the disabled engineer. This is his explantion of ‘the affair: 1t looks as if the rails spread when the en- | | gine struck the curve and ditched the train. | This is the kind of an accident that no one can foresee, and there can be no blame at- tached to any one. The fortunate thing is | that it did not happen on the trestle ahead and that Seulpaugh escaped. IMPROVISES BANDAGES. | Dr. J. M. Beukers of Alameda, whose family resides in Livermore, was in the wreck of Wednesday night and yesterday | morning. He came through both acci- | | dents without su ning any injuries | other than a few minor bruises. In both | wrecks the physician attended those wiio | were hurt. “He said yesterday: ! I was sitting in the smoking car when the train left the track this morning, in nearly | the same location that I was when the wreck occurred Wednesday night. T was thrown against the back of a seat, but got on my feet quickly and made for the door, as I thought | the car was about to topple over. The car was thrown directly aéross the rails and at right angles to the locomotive, which had careened over and was lying alongside of the | roadbed. ‘e found the engineer near by. His left foot was injured and he was somewhat stunned. I was forced to use improvised ban- dages in dressing the engineer's foot. [ can- i not understand why the Southern Pacific Com- | [ pany does not carry on its trains bandages, | | cotton and other supplies to be nsed in emer- | gencies of this kind. It would be a wise plan | and might result in the saving of lives in in- | stances of coflisions and other accidents on the | rail. Lt DETECTIVES INVESTIGATE. | Receives Report That Tampered With. ¢ Manager Alger has reccived a report stating that the accident’ was possibly | owing to the act of miscreants whe had tampered with the rails. As soon as this | report was received in the railzoad offices | Chief of the Secret Service Crowley was | called in for consultation and later three | | | Manager Agler Rails Were of the Southern Pacific detectives weres sent to the scene of the wreck to inveg- tigate. Local railroad men who are not persor- | ally interested in the accident scout the idea that the rails were tampered with, and consider that the wreck was due te | some other cause. | Engineer Saulpaugh, when seen at the | Southern Pacific Hospital last night, | made the following statement concerning the wreck: At the time my engine left the rails we were traveling at from twenty-two and o half to | twenty-five miles an_hour. I did not have a single second of warning. I was looking out | the cab window, but T could not see that there | was anything wrong with the ralls. As soon | as I felt that there was anything wrong I put | on the brakes. I bhad scarcely time in which | tc do this when I was struck on the head and rendered unconscious. My left foot must have got caught in_some manner, as it is badly crushed. 1 was very fortunate in not being ctalded by the escaping steam. When I camo 6T found myself in one of the coaches, where I had been carried. Besides the broken bone in his left foot, Saulpaugh sustained a laceration of the | scalp just above the forehead. Californians in Washington. WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan. 2.—The fol- lowing Californians registered here to- | day: At the New Willlard, H. G. Platt | and Joseph Marshalhit of San Francisco; | at the Ralelgh, George C. Carson of Red- I ding. i { the property | The original charges in the divorce pa- | AMERICA’S REPRESENTATIVE | Steindorff’s | Steinway Hall, C REFUSES TO PAY BUNCH OF BILLS Millionaire E. O. Lind- blom Balks at Some Big Charges. Wife's Dry Goods and Doc- tor's Accounts Are Rejected. . s Oakland Office San Francisco Call. | 1118 Broadway, Jan. 2. After settling a fortune of $175,000 on his wife, Erik O. Lindblom, the Alaskan mil- lionaire, has balked at a little matter, trifling, of course, to a Nome mining king, of a $1000 bill for new dresses and other woman's dainties and a $5000 charge for a physician's attendance upon Mrs. Lind- blom. i It is this aggregate of $8000 that has thrown an obstacle in the way of a peace- ful settlement of the divorce suit of Mary Ann Lindblom against her wealthy spouse, that has been dragsing for months in the Superior Court of Alameda County. Lindblom has put his foot down and has declared that he will not pay those bills. He defles his wife to collect them and intimates very strongly if she 1s not satisfied with the settlement which has been made the subject of a written agreement between the couple that she | can have a battle. As an earnest of his position, Lindblom has reopened his end of the long waged | fight by filing a new_cross-compiaint in the suit, accusing Mrs. Lindblom of cruelty, unfaithfulness and intemyperance. But that is only an incident after all | this prolonged warfare in the courts. Af-| ter the first skirmishes were over both | sldes got together to fix up matters finan- | cial. Lindblom, who is credited with | being a hard-headed man of business, told his lawyers to make a settlement of interests that would satisfy | bis wife. Her attorneys at last agreed and the agreement wi signed that she should accept $175,000 worth of property. pers were toned down and the suit was in readiness to be tried when objection number one came from Mrs. Lindtiom's side. It consisted of a declaration that Ler counsel was not satisfied with the collateral Lindblom had furnished as se- curity for a $0,000 note he had mage a a portion of the property settlement upon his wife. The security consisted cf a | block of stock fn a prominent mineral spring company, which is commercially | rated high. | Shortly after that’ agreement was made ! and following closely upon the objectionc, | Mrs. Lindblom's attorneys presented the two bills now in Gaestion, the dry goods account from the White House and the physician’s bill from Dr. Carra B. Scho- fleld of this city, and demanded that they be paid. -But Lindblom declared they were not included in tbe agreement arl he would not pay them. | Then followed the renewal of the cross | complaint, the -fitlng of which will pre- | vent a dismissal of the divc-ce suit by | Mrs. Lindblom in the event the settlement | goes awry. To dismiss the suit would | leave her still the wife of Lindblom and in a position to renew her fight for more of his reputed Alaska wealth. Such a proceeding Litdblom's attorneys are blocking. ‘When the Lindblom case was called to- | day befare Judge Ogden it was contipued for a week at request of the attorneys. | COMPOSER IN THE CITY Edward MacDowell Will Appear in Concert at Tivoli and at Steinway Hall. Edward MacDowell, the famsus com- | poser and ianist, arrived In the city yes- terday morning afid is now af the Palace. He is on a tour of the. coast citles, his| last appearance having been made in Los Angeles, the southern city giving §im.a cordial reception. This‘is his first visit to this part of the cougtry, though his name is a famillar one to all those‘inter- ested in music. His works comprise com- positions for voice, plano and orchestra, and are rated as classics in the highest musical circles. In fact, the composer is | a symphony writer, and the flattering cognomen, “The Bee®ioven of America,” | has also been bestowed upen him. Mr. MacDowell is a native of New York City, and at first studied piano under Te- resa Carreno. In 1876 he went to Paris and was admitted to the conservatary. In Frankfort he studied composition under the great Joachim Raff, and piano under Carl Heymann. He piayed his first suite for plano for Liszt before the Musik Verein in Zurich with great succ turned to America in 158, and now oc pies the chair of music at Columbia Uni- ! make three appear- in San Francisco, the firsi on afternoon, . January 8, with novelty concert, given | with an orchestra of fifty men, at the Tivoli Opera-house, and the other two @t Steinway Hall on Saturday afternoon, January 10, and Morday night, January 12, under the direction of Will S. Green- | baum. Lovers of high-class music have something to look forward to with pleas- ure in the advent of America's greatest composer, and there will no doubt be a big outpouring to hear him and the Stein- Gorff novelty concert. Mrs. Blanchard will interpret some of his songs at the Steinway Hall recitals. e e—————— ances Thursday | DR. TYNDALL POSSESSES | RARE PSYCEHIL POWERS | Famous Hypnotist and Mind-Reader Astounding Audiences by His Demonstrations. The skeptics and the believers in the power of the mind to transmit thought are having an opportunity to study the experiments produced by the girzatest known expert along these lines, Dr. Alex- ander J. McIvor-Tyndail. There is mucha discussion pro and con over the phenom- | ora praduced by the celebrated psychic at and the attendance at each demonstration has been larger than | ever, Whatever theory may be advanced as a | pessible explanation of the interesting | experiments, it must be sald that Dr. Mec- | Ivor-Tyndall affords every opportunity | for investigation. He uses no apparatus, no assistants nor paraphernalia of any kind. He places himself, unequivocally. fa the hands of his committee, and the committee is chosen from and by the audience. So far they have been men of | urnquestionable character and mental abil- ity. There is apparently 2ot the slightest | attempt at deception or mystery on the part of Dr. Mclvor-Tyndall, neither does he make any extravagant claims or un- due pretensions. He holds to the theory | that thought Is a force like electricity, | and this theory he proceeds to illustrate in a marvelous manaer., To-night and to- morrow (Sunday) night will complete Dr. McIvor-Tyndall's farewell engagement. B W. H. Smyth Delivers a Lecture. W. H. Smyth of the Technical Society of the Paclfic Coast delivered an interest- ing lecture last evening at the Mechanics’ Library on “New Type of Heat Motor and Experiments in TUtilizing Heat Energy.” | effeet " JILTED WOMAN'S LUGK GHANGES New Year Brings Suc- cess to Miss Lizzie « A. Metcalfe. Efforts to Serve Summons in Breach of Promise Suit Prevail. OAKLAND, -Jan. 2.—After nineteen- imn- 1 attempts to serve Willlam A. ‘Glunz, the returned Alaskan Argonaut, with summons in a suit for $§10,000 for breach of promise, Miss Lizzie B. Met- calf’s luck changed just as the new year was being ushered in and the summons was served upon the elusive defendant #t his home, 912 Adeline street. Glunz must now show cause why he should not pay Miss Metcalf the sum prayed for in her complaint, which .says they were sweethearts in Alaska, with the under- standing that they.should be married on their retury to Califgrnia. His promise has not Heen kept PERSONAL MENTION. J. 1. Thornton, a rancher of Fresno, is at the Occidental. 3 Lieutenant Governor-elsit Alden Ander~ { son is at the Grand. W. E. Duncan, @ miting’ man of Oro< ville, is at the Lick. George E. Shinn, a steamboat owner ot Eureka, is at the Russ. Monroe Urew, an attorney of Detroit, is a guest at the Palace. Railroad Commissioner N. Blackstock i registered at the Palace. Louis F. Vettes, an attorney of Los An- , 1s 2t the Galifornia. George C. Hill, a: manufacturer ‘of Los Angeles, is at s California J. M. Wilmans, a cattle and mining man of Newman, is at the Lick. Wailter Bacon, a well-known. attorney of Los Augeles, fs in the city. E. L. Sheridan porting editor of the ge C Tribune, is at the Ru @ole Jr., an attorney of Los Angeles., is a guesteat the California. re. merchant of « with his wife. citizen of 0, en route H. Willeford, a hard: Sacramento, is at the Rus Thomas Hughes, “a leading Los Angeles, is in San Francis to Sacramento. W. I Miden, ticket agent the Pull- man Compgny, with headquarters at Chi- cago, i« at- the Occiden*al. J. B. Richardsim, an old resident of Suisun 3nd-a w nown capitalist; is & guest at the Grand for a few -days. Gifford Pinch of the Forestry De- of the-United States; is at ths Occidental. He -ha t. returned :from the Philippines @ad is en routé to. Wash-, iagtdn to make an official report. State Senitors.J.D. Byrnes of San Ma- teo, Clifford Coggins of La- Moine, 3 Emmons of -Rakersfleld, J. B. Sanford of m H. ‘Savage of San.Pedro, C. W. leton of'Loes Angeles, Thomas Flint J» of San Benito, €.° M. Beishaw of Antioch*and M. L. Ward of San Diego re in the ¢ity. e - Californians in New York. W _ YORK, Jan.. 2—The - following Califorsfans are in New York: From -San’ Francisco—A. L. Black,’ at the Holland; H. R. Fee, at the St. Denis; Mazs. G. Henley:: B:. Heniey' and L. Steile, at the Broadway Central; D:. Little_ at the Rosgmore; 4. Marcus, J. K. Kirkland, | at ihe Imperial; C. “B. 'Sloan,* at the Grand; ‘W- Fahey and - D: Jacobs, at. the Grand Usnion: Mrs. H. M: Hoyt, at:the za; S.,H. Moses. at. theé - Herald Stuare; E. -W. hall, at the. Manhat- tan; R. J. Parker, at the: Vendome, and *P. H. Pagram, at the Morton. From Los Angel M. 1 cs, at the Cadlllac; S. E. Adéms_G. P. Drew and R. W. Vincent, at the Imperial; E. Fel- lows and wife, at_the Savoy; E. lows and wife, at the Manhattan; H.. M. Hast. ings, at the Park Avenue, and G. ‘W, Walworth, at the Earlington. T. Mills, From San Jose—Mrs. St. Denis. at. the SCOTT'S EMULSION. NEURALGIA. If a person has neuralgia in their system this is the sea- son when it will be felt. Itis an ailment that may spring from a variety of sources. Anzmia or any depressed state of the bodily functions are frequent causes. : The ex- haustion resulting from rheu- matism also makes it easy for neuralgia to get a foothold. Any exposure to cold or dampness quickly causes an attack’ of the painful ailment and in scme cases it will hang on almost continually during the winter months. The medical world: has for years recognized cod liver oil as being of great value in fortifying the body against netraigia and agamst all con- ditions of bcdily depression. Jtisa powerful agent for good in giving new life to the worn out nerve centers and building up the weakened tissues which are resoonsible for- the ailment. In Scott’s Emulsion the pure cod liver oil is combined with hypophosphites of lime and soda, the latter contribut- ing strength to the bloed and bones. 3 t As the principal mission of Scott's Emulsion is to give healthy, solid flesh, active tis- sue, pure blood and rich bone marrow it will be readily seen why Scott’s Emulsion is so effective in driving out the causes of neuralgia. We'll send you a sample free upon request. SCOTT & BOWNE, 409 Pearl St., New York.