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eventh Dag - Advenns_b Be— Defenm Claims he'Wmind e anding 1‘\-es BAVE & TER- - thisir.fiéw | ‘and ;- Haves strcet; . Hdture -of <& 2! wouis ‘Egton willrén- ems ‘of the Jate Phil- will ‘be Harty. GRAPE-NUTS. DROPPED THEM. Medicines and Got Well on Grape-Nuts. hange of food is rather Sounds like fic- Mont., had just being (J’r-d on Grape- | 5. ¢ brought to the City Hall and placed. “I was in such a | if T stooped over the £ up into my throat valuable time and t physicians said 1 about 140 pounds, It was there to Grape-Nuts threw all my medicines end of two weeks' w0 admit that I had | P o3 ¥ nothing but Grape- » cream and gained | = unuyl Peshis Judga Tls: ) #1568, 0ot THe b + OB Etiet o Ted-The afini orbied whigh have: GUtIIF 6G 2o ess 15 Fédponding: ruih\‘ tab o s Porine 'l)r(l qQ‘flSL(J e £hed s fenttor the théstore o Tpreterded that A n i 1o p i ter, thel Chick ¥ thie. ‘store, afterno in ‘the.r: phia, committed m Judge ]'e-mmrd to the Staté Hospital - for the - Insane -at Stockton. | From the time the .unfortunate womar in the care of Mrs. Rose Kane, the mia- 50 run down | tron, she remained unable to realize her | § improper foods that | a month position | to Who she is or wi surroundings or give any informaton-.as here she came from. —_——————— Miss Gussie Mast to Sing To-Night. An interesting concert will be given this evening by Miss Gussie Mast, the charm- ing blind soprano, at Steinway Hall. A Jarge attendance is assured, as the gifted young singer has many friends and sin- cere admirers of her beautiful voice and | artistic methods. The proceeds of the eoficert will be devoted to the further ed- | e i ready ucation of Miss Mast, who is- bravely | ion with a liberal check. making her way to the front in spite of | ¢ jifornia are being looked into to as- | her aisability. The singer will be assisted | cortain whether such a resort could b. | conducted without serlous clgsh with the State authorities. FA e 468 State Board of Health Organizes. SACRAMENTO, Aprild.—The new State | Board of Health appointed by Governor Pardee met and organized this afternoon by electing Dr. M. Gardner of San Fran- cisco president and Dr. N. K. Foster of Alameda secretary. pointees except Dr. O. Stansbury of Chico and Dr. M. Wills of Los Angeles were In addition to: those named the new board consists of Dr. W. and A. C. Hart of Szcramento and Dr. Martin Regensburger of San Francisco. red Maurer, accompanist. —_—————————— Licensed to Marry. OAKLAND, April 1—The following marriage licenses were issued to-day: interest in the events | Charies Wadell, aged 51, and Neilsine H. n. ¥From this point my 1 rapid and to-day I am condition I ever ad no trouble to get :conda Copper Min- lary than before. what Grape-Nuts has done for thanks to pure Postum Co., Bat- Kristiansen, 47, both of Berkeley; Anthony ¥. Carney, 40, Oakland, and Amy C. Cole, 3, Alameda: Jerome A. Hughes, over 21, San Francisco, and Nanette W. Nahl, over 15, Alameda; Harry G. Miller, 2, and Lil- lian C. Benjamin, 25, both of Oakland; John P. Roche, 46, San Rafael, and Mrs. Jennie Guild, 29, Oakland; Clyde T. John- on, 23, and Ethel Guild, 19, both of Oak- land. wuani{:fl AHDSE - mission el domeeflc wa$ Dogisnndled -and e | Dacing: G tbe . EduE sc-*{nn éandmo, (Wae the to D frony réfugee re-"| - rs-in Frange. which. are de- | svdbushmg, \hnmqolvvs Jin sm-ne of tlie convents mas | reive 'a number ‘of refuges’ 3 even they will take no acnnq until the ré- turn of -Archbishop Chiapelle; who is ex- | pected about Faster. May Start a Rival Monte Cnrlo. to " establish- on” the channel American Monte Carlo to rival the famous resort controlled by the Milo' M. Potter, a prominent hotel man, is inviting capital to join in the plan and himself says that to start the stock subscrip- Santa Cruz from - Santa The laws of the new ap- | are flooded. . bhed ¢p the huelflgs’! als jet mupxl ngn orf the. £ ke: ere FuBhing smmae and' mqeywn :’ax three 1 A §° ere eb‘uin; over v “which; spah t.he:n ATIHU: to ondwéters' in verage of eight | and the fall.critinmes . steadily. Thers ‘will be grave anxicty, howeyer, till it 15 known whether- the'San Joaquin will carry. all of its“water and net :send a ! flood ‘of backwater up.through Stockton ‘| channel, which is new rippling near tlhie LOS ANGELES, April 1.—A scheme is | dinger mark. It woild take a very short | time for Stockton channel to send back far more water than has drained off since the intown-lake began falling. Inasmuch as practically all of factories lie ‘along the streams many must shut down temporarily. The Pacific | Tannery, near McLecds Lake, got the full foree of the flood, but sand bags and bulkheads saved a large portion of the plant from damage. All of the factories and machine shops in the eastern and southern parts of the city were flooded. The Houser and Haines machine shops were probably about the first to be in- undated. The Samson Iron Works came next and the men were driven from thair places at the machines. It was with difficulty that some of them were abie to get from the shops to dry land. The works of the Holt Manufacturing Com- pany were under water about noon, but the situation in that district is much im- proved to-night. 'MANY ACRES UNDER WATER. To the south French Camp Slough is causing trouble and thousands of acres A Targe 1 the 01 (ng arship Bhvn-nni Bnum vy.a- By ashington | ief ‘regret 'nt;w bnnv:\atfan $ be called ther break j u_}'a fall. banlss of 1he Mocho. * ', hilé -the dama;ie Will_not.be “very se- rigus, -unless the’ watef.colitinues. to #ise, ghidanger in;-the situation I ‘o great alarm” among the e of ineii ‘Hras been. sent out o-4he cfeek. {0°levee the breaks if pos- «ard - to; divert the eswollen ‘stream vérflow sweep through the \Vfl!(hcr?» have been established dind - every yfl"eci\utlon taken to° avert a ciious result. * The creek receives. an enormous surfaee wash from-the moun- tains’ becausé of the unprecedented rain- fall of the past three days. With a ces- saticn’ of the ‘rains the trouble will end. falto RS Grass Valley Mines Are 'Flooded. GRASS VALLEY, April 1.—The unpre- cedented storm which swept this section is clearing away, but the effects will be felt here for some time by the mines, which have suffered heavily from water. Nearly every mine in this entire district has been compelled to lay off men on the | the lower levels, owing to floods. The pumps have been hoisting water as fast as possible since Sunday night, but the mines will not be cleared for several days. Rain and, Hail at Santa Rosa. SANTA ROSA, April 1.—About 3 o'clock tnis afternoon a rain, hail and thunder storm struck this city and for a short time water and hail fell in almost a del- uge. The precipitation was accompanied by a high wind, which blew the water in fitful gusts. The gutters were soon rumn- ning full and the water flowed into the creeks and rivulets. X SRS San Lorenzo River Is Falling. SANTA CRUZ, April 1.—8an Lorenzo River is falling so that the danger from a flood-is averted. A large portion of So- quel was under water yesterday. The water was four feet deep in the rear of On the islands the levees| Odd Fellows' Hall. c;qrxpmml;é Rav] Iné' bean; Sabngt shibis: bodg: o_r tored:to: lhelr; olal privilegs “TThé thmine in” th 2ollowing -the {58 ald; - The | “specal . report ndrllrac ritiibute a. Targe’ fldna- £ Toa witlidy- of ey 207 petition the Go | ,.;cumnm[ TGS wa lnqurpeutrd last October with am &uflmflled capiial stock of $120,000,000, to- Laa fife. pers amending its original g with 'the United States Govern- 4mén “or §iates or dependencles thereof, “.or with'any!foreign government or state, ‘Ipclud{n;» the power to sell or hire any or its “sfeamships ‘or sailing vessels or wperty to such governments or vg ~dny pr-pose whatsoever, wheth- naval, militar> or otherwise. ig. elfeted nere that this amendment Fhas ‘been lnderted” to meet the objection 0! Ahé: Enjlish vaenment that under the that Government would Ya: tte lower to impress any of esseld.of the company into its naval *s:fr\k:e ;i fimiés of war. The amended riificats’ s signed by Clement A. Gris- coz;n presifent; and Emerson E. Parvin, .Klng eo ity, Wa.:h Grand Jury 'me. Scxthing Beport Against “Public Officials. SEA’ i'w ‘Wish., April 1.—The King 50@-» "Grand Jury presented majority | and-minority- reports to Jadge Bell late ‘ esierday -and were dismissed. Several ad hiorfll indictments, all of minor im- pnrlannh in-addition to those already an- | endation ©f both reports is the clause iri each recommending that the Mayor and ief -of Police resign their offices, and riection With thie: intiridting that the public good would be mservflt it a majority of the Couneil | would. pursue a similar course. ‘The. sxinority report, signed by ex- reman Piggou is confined chiefly to a pelt pollcy -arrled to the extent which “hds.been. under the present adminis- fiom The. miajarity report censures the police r-brutality in handling prisoners and rises the department of being in league ‘Wit .corruption and erime: censures the ounty -Clerk and Auditer for collecting meney from their employes under the uise; Of .campaign expenses; criticizes Corgner Hoye for bartering away the patronage of his office to rival under- takers; . challenges the justness of the sts .of the Board of Equalization; com- ‘Gemans the Council for the contract which iit;entered irto with the Seattle and Lake Washington Waterway Company; recom- 'm‘ends the resignation of Mayor Hume fand Chief Sullivan, and finally, the call- s . 1ing’of @nother Grand Jury to take up tne = v Vestigation where the present body left TLIQUOR-CRAZED SEATTELITE RUNS AMUCK IN SALOON ! Baniel McCauley Fires Into a Crowd, Wounds Two Men and Is Shot Down. SEATTLE, April 2—Dan MecCauley, { erazéd by tendevloin whisky attacked a . vd in the O K saloon at an early hour s morning with a revoiver. James Clark and William McLaughlin were mor- |-tally. wounded by shots from McCauley's gun. and an unknown man received a se- | rious weund from a third shot. McCauley :% Was hot twice by Patrolman Griffith in the' tumébr fic. Coast in . West. “made | hae- e, v Visit-th | hu approaching” yi it that T .wiis ’lo g0 b the Pavific Coast and visit Colorads and .(‘nl]fnrnla' and ¥ don't 2 .and Terri- bl_hg,o. April 1.—The rain which - Northen: California has [*done "2 "world..of good and not a cent's |, worth, of damage.” The city of San Diego €4 259 of an, inch and the back coun- Ltry received all the way from a like amnupt in the region immediately adja- “the towh £ cent to the bay.to 3.02 inches on the Cuya- maca: Mountains. Some of the streams in the mauntains which have not been run- hitig for years were started by the storms of thé past two days. This is particularly {drue of the northern part of the county, and a report says that the water is run- ‘ning into the lake at Elsinore for the first time in seven years. Water is also run- nihg in Sweetwater River some distance above the dam, but there is every pros- |, pect, with further rains during the next | ing a’supply. L 1t there ever was any doubt about the county harvesting fine crops, that doubt was removed by the rains of yesterday, which reached those portions of the cou ty which needed rain most. Some hay that would h wve been cut had the rain not come will be left for grain. There is no doubt but that more grain will be harvest- { ed in San Diego County this year than ever before. The bee men will aiso take oft the largest crop that the bees have | ever yielded. The bees are already work- ing, for the wild flowers are plentiful and menced to rain again this evening, with the prospect of” keeping up intermittently during the night. SRR A Rainfall Is Very Heavy. More than an inch of rain feil in San Francisco during Tuesday night. The storm is about over as far as this State | 1s concerned. At Point Reyes yesterday | the wind attalned a velocity of seventy- | four miles an hour. . In the thirty-six hours preceding 5 o'clock last night the rainfall at Flagstaff, Ariz., was 4.28 inches, and Forecaster McAdie fears that the transportation companies in that part of n:;d West will experience trouble from floods. ¢ ——— Former Policeman Dies. Joseph H. Brigaerts died at his resi- dence on Bourbon place yesterday morn- ing. He was a native of Belgium, 6 years of age. He joined the Police Department April 13, 18%, and was retired for disabii- ity on pension February 18, 1885. During the strike on the Sutter-street road in 1886 Brigaerts was seriously injured and never fully recovered from the injury. He was a member,of the Grand Army. - into the south and has | | two or. three days, of the reservoir receiv- | have been plentiful for weeks. It com- | attempting to escape from the saloon and | may not recover. No ther cause than bad whisky is assigned for McCauley's out- beak. T April 1.—The quarteriy es- t'mate of the value of foreign coins issued | by the Director of the Mint shows a decrease !in the value of silver for the last three months of 01206 cents per fine ounce WASHINGTO? Anm’nsmtma PAINFUL PERIODS are overceme by Lydia E. | ham’s Vegetable pound. | | | | Miss Menard cured after doc- ton failed to help her. | ydia E. Pinkham’s Vi uble Compound cured me doetors had failed, and I vnnt other girls to know about it. Dur- ing menstruation I suffered moct intense pain low in the abdomen | and in my limbs. At other times [ had a heavy, depressed feeling which made my work seem twice | as hard, and I grew pale and th The medicine the doctor gave me did not do me one bit of good, an I was thoroughly . " The doctor wanted me to stop work, but, urse, I could not do that. 1 take Lydia F, y egetable Cflz“‘ and felt better after taking firss bottle, and after taking six bottles I was entirely mland am now rfect heal am 8o grate- mr it.” — M1ss GEorGIE MENARD, 537 E.152nd St., New York City. — #3000 forfelt CX mafianadd snsc. o Lydia E. Pinkham’s Ve c_a-ndmf—b ‘when