Show I I > > UiNiJE R A S rE J J l = I j The hoboes throughout tho country i I have apparently used their mystic j signs and symbols to good effect It is j evident that the grand lodge of the dishonorable Order of Weary Will lea has had a session and under the time I allowed for the t discussion I of the good I and welfare of the order has lormu liled advice to the effect thai there i was work for every man who hap I pened to be canned by the police or this city It may be a oad thing for the Willies as Salt Lake has a worldwide I world-wide reputation aaa summer resort Hut this year she will not harbor as many distinguished guests an in the I yearn agone There were bul few on time mourners bench yesterday and none of these had the stamp of very I extended travel or as the fashion papers pa-pers say the polish and culture that can only be acquired by extensive acquaintance I ac-quaintance with the manners and customs cus-toms of the world The boulevard appears ap-pears to have been responsible for It r all S 44 W J Daugherly was the first man to stand up in the marbh halls of Justice In answer to a question oC the Judge as to how he came so he fell back upon the t old excuse that some of his friends had concluded to have some fun with him and had apparently succeeded suc-ceeded much to their satisfaction but to the hurt and damage Of the defendant defend-ant lie was not sure but that he could recover damages At least his friends should pity him for the amusement amuse-ment he had afforded them It was J r deemed strange too by I the court that i a tinner and a gasfitter should become j be-come rattled about anything Daugh crty however managed to make the j court understand that he had a burning burn-ing desire to go back to Coreys camp from whence he came The fact that there was an alleged case of smallpox there had no tenors for him rhe smallpox hospital was far preferable I I he seemed lo think than the boulevard I by day and the city I jail by night lie Avas told he might wend his Avay I up the canyon and cautioned not to I drink any of the water en route I 1 O a i Tom King drunk 5 ball up bul I thats an old glory 3 4 go I Nicholas Rodgers endeavored lo show the court that the policemen like many doctors of his acquaintance might be I mistaken In their diagnosis of a case It Is true thai the experience of the men of the blue and the brass and in I cldcntally the hickory club had made them t very expert at times iti so far asa l as-a drunken man Is concerned So ox l pert In fact that they will swear thai a man is drunk to oblige a brother officer I of-ficer who has been out late llle night before and whose Increasing age and Infirmities do not fit him to arise early In the morning Notwithstanding nil this however Mr Jlodgcrs begged to differ with the olllcers While out In r Tlntlc some time ago he met wIth an accident whereby one of his legs became be-came n little shorter than it really ought to be and as a result of this there was a sort of circular motion In his walk ul tlnvb which was most distressing dis-tressing the defendant and was unfortunately un-fortunately of such a nature as to be liable to deceive the police and the public pub-lic generally as to the exact condition I of time t I defendant so far as sobriety w UM concerned This fact Mr Rodgers much regretted but he was wholly un 1 alile to prevent It Whenever he got a cold Il always settled In his weakest I part whIch at the present writing Is I his leg Therefore the circumlocution noted about him at odd times When the Judge fully recovered he told Mr Rodgers that he had better get back to Eureka or go some place where the climate was more conducive to the cure of his leg and the defendant defend-ant bowed his thanks whistling as he descended the sales The Flowers That Bloom In the Spring V a < J Ed Norwood who had been caught by Davies violating the bicycle ordinance failed to claim his bail of 1 Davies grinned and the docket ended i |