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14 A = RO ORI, 2 SEiuieieleta’alniniu nluin:a nlninlelutn nse urn 0 n 0 000 THE SAN FRANCIS 30 CALL, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3 189 o g 8 3 o o g The 1899 Rambler is a w these wheels sold in this Stat satisfaction that the trade has season to make their purchase Oit stock became exhausted. trick to induce trade has invariably resulted have c. they had not come sooner Ieievisielntetaelnininieialniein suln The same conditions will & b g to get your 1899 model before g $35 for this model rather than 2 LA NIRRT NI VA R UAA s ARV A A AL AVAV AN AR AU AN ALAUALA AT AR AV AVAAU AR VRN AL AVA N ATTAVAIA A judgment has proven very satisfactory. HISTORY OF THE 1899 RAMBLER. onderful success. The 1898 Model was so perfect that the manufacturers made no change in 1899, and their There have been 10,492 of e, and they have given such universal increased enormously. It has been our custom to advise the public at the end of the s of previous years' models be'ore the en this has been taken as a joke or as a It has, however, been no joke and no trick, but n many intending purchasers opportunity to buy a good reliable wheel at a moderate price. the They losing ed after the goods were all sold and expressed regret that hold this year; therefore, it is advisable they are all sold—if you prefer to pay pay $40 for the 1900 model. 0 17T T T 0T 0 0T T 7717777 PP Y77 T PSPPI AP ST TSI P Y R R RO O RO RO OROROROR RO R R RCRC OB OB ORORORCC & ANNOUNCE ..1899 oD THOS. H. B. VARNEY, ar et and Tenthr Streets, SAN FRANCISCO. |4 AT " HORCRCBORORCRCRCRONCR ¢ eins iuisieitie;atuletulazeln: PRy Iy Yy Iy Iy d RO o . | o 1900--MODELS~1900. 1900 Models. 1899 Models. 200 25 .28 27 <29 -30 32—Light Roadster, corresponds to. ... 33—30-Inch Wheels, corresponds to. . . 34—Ladies’ Double Bar, corresponds to. 35—Ladies’ Single Bar, corresponds to. ., 36—Combination Tandem, corresponds to. 37—Men’s Tandem, corresponds to. . .... 1900 Stock Will Arrive on or About November Ist Acents Wantep in NorruErn Carirornia. First car to arrive is nearly all spoken for, and will b> over- sold before arrival. Agents should take note of this. tuiRiEtet etntulhlulalnl et el w s n ntnlul nlu n u ns u wT e 0 s 6 s 8o m w0 KNOW VAL THEIR HOLDINGS Pan - Handle Figures| Made Public. |3 MAY INFLUENCE ELECTION. =t o GAS CONTRACTS GO OVER FOR ANOTHER WEEK. e Bupervisors Include All the Medical | Colleges in the Call for Plans for a New County | Hospital. ‘ Lo i ‘At 10 o*clock this morning the report of | Rhe Park Panhandle Commission will be open for public Inspection at the office of the clerk of the Board of Supervisors &t ‘the City Hall, and those who have haldings within the line of proposed ex- tension will know just what ap and praisement nts t as equi- of their realty wity’s agents havi table. That the taxpayers in the proposed goute will know at what price their prop- ertles are held Is due to an order passed %y the Board of Supervisors yesterday sfternoon. It was the intention of Mayor Phelan and the members of the commis- €lon:to keep the figures a dead secret until gfter the panhandle election had taken place and the result been announced. The Mayor sald vesterday in objecting to the anotion of the board to open the report that the publication of the figures would avork an injustice to the property owners, many of whose holdings had been ap- praised at a flgure lower than that fix improv ded Open a bottle of Wielands Extra Pale at your home table with the same confi- dence and anticipa- tion that you uncover a dish sent in by a trusted cook. It is made good by the best methods, of the best material, and kept good by being sterilized after bot- tliflg. Quarts, pints, half-pints. Your grocer or telephone West 44, California Bottling Co. 140717 Bddy St 0 claimed ed that a knowl- of the valuations fixed would create among the anticipated ion would ot took They edge the ilt, chairman of the Finance Commit- tee,said after the meeting, “There are doc- tors and lawyers and other professional people and bak it that district sions and trades deper upon_ th gth of their resldence in the locality. Their values are r confined solely to their realty and improvements, but large- ly to the fact that they have established in the cc This places of busines t reckoned by the aisers, 2 cases it exceeds the actual of the holdings. Condemn the homes and places of business of such men gnd they are forced into other neighbor- hoods, wh tive los a time & tice or list of customers. It was from this standpoint and from the other point that every man had th. right to know just what plans, the eity contemplated with regards to his property that the Supervisors looked at the ques- tion yesterday and seeing it in that light they voted to open the report, file it and refer it to the Finance Committee. The proposed new City and County Hos- pital also came in for some little further discussion. Under the original resolution empowering the medical and art cia tions to select a board to any plans that might be subm the ve been there such only nty Medical Society recognized, a good-sized kick went up from the College of Physiclans and Surgeons, as members of the Clinical Society, Cooper 1 College and every other | in- in the city. The same old bitter- t has existed for years among the ctor factorles found a fresh vent, and the roar was loud and long. In framing the original resolution Supervisor Per- t was ignorant of these fac Ings and unintentionally slighted every s of the County Soclet one save membe He squared himself vesterday by amen ing his first resolution to include Cooper Medical Colleg College of Physicians and Surgeons and the University of Cali- Department and two 'rs to be appointed by the Art Asso- clation. The gas question bobbed up again when | the bids for outside stations not acted upon last week was called up. A motion was made to put it over another week. Perrault moved that the whole gas yues- tion be taken up on Wednesday night at 8 o'clock. Deasy amended by making it at 4 o'clock Wednesday afternoon. Both | motions were lost and nothing will be done_until the next regular meeting on | Monday next. The letting of the street light contract upon the gas company’s Hid of $1 35 per thousand feet was brought up next, but itke the outside stations bid it went over for a wee! ault of the Finannce Committee repc that ted gas bill for August exceeded the limit of | the omne-twelfth act by $167. this and other excesses the | resolution was adopted: Resolvetl, That public notice be and is hareby glven to all contractors, merchants and others supplying the city with merchandise or labor that the one-tweifth act will be strictly ad- | hered to by this board, and that no demands will be audited In excéss of the mo propriation. Information as to the c | the funds can always be obtained Apropos of following hly ndition and persons, | companies and corporations supplying depart. ments whose funds are impaired or depleted | must distinctly understand that they are doing 80 at their own risk. Ex-Supervisor Tom Morton's bill_for coal furnished the City and County Hos- pital prectpitated a rather warm discus- sion which resulted In_ the presentation of some figures which demonstrated that | that Institution has not been conducted upon strictly - economical lines, The monthly appropriation amounts to §7500. | The July bills were as follows: Coal, | $40206; ‘furniture and carpets, $25575 | drugs, $116567; wines and liquors, $39 53: stable expense, $12515; salaries, = $2943. In August the total footed up $8522 85, The payment of the claim of James A. | 8nook for the feeding of the prisoners in County Jall No. 2 during August was as. sured ‘by the adoption of a_resolution which eliminated the segregation of the funds_into individual apportionment to | each branch jail and threw the different apportionments into one fund to be drawn upon for subsistence by any of the insti- tutions included in Snook’s contract. The. veto by Mayor Phelan of the order granting the Market Street Railway Gom- pany permission to substitute wooden for | i\\'llh other items the total was $9603 3. | a- | to have built up another prac- | onal feel- | the | on Kentucky and Mis- | ustained. | 262 over the various ar was o For payment of three {iron electric pole: | sion streets was he surplus of. propriations made in the dered divided as follows: C. E. Newman as bond expert fc months, $2; salary of assistant office of rd of Supervisors, $i: 50, A re tion was passed to print em- powering the gas Inspector to test the gas meters rivate consumers 4 behind it shall be turned over to the ompany for correction. If the con- r is being koed by his meter to extent ent, then the gas pa Any gas com- violating the ordinance shall be sub- of not less than $50 nor more ach offense. NS RECEIVED. fons were received and re- | r committee L. Strick- | irbs, cesspools, ete., on the prc gra ner.of Waller street and DeLong ty owners for the grading of | 1 curbing of Sixth street, be- | | om and_Harrison; n of | Improvement Clut mprove- v condition alr- and Glen Park Im- carrying out of the in relation to outlet sewer for Ar hard requesting that the f Schools be directed to enter | with him to grade, y's portion of t and Andover avenues at & | mize, | tie cos PROTESTS RECEIV. The following protests were received and re- | ferred to the proper committees: Property owners agalin: paving jreenwich street, between Fillmore iner: property own. | ers against raising the grade of Morton place, off Filbert street. STREET WORK RECOMME The Superintendent of Streets recommended the mance of the following street work Twelve-inch sewer in easterly portion of the | NDED. crossing of California street and Twenty-first | avenue, fourteen-inch sewer in westerly por- | eight-inch sewers In northerly and portic with cesspools, culverts, | etc, with granite curbs and plank on the four angular corners; four- sewer, etc., in Californl; enty-first ‘and Twent nues men pavement on westerly half of the Tondway of westerly half of crossing of ourteenth, Ghurch and Market streets: gran- | ite_curbs reat avenue, between Twenty. fourth and Twenty-fifth streets, on Wildey ave. nue, between Webster and Fillmore streets, and n Twenty-fifth street, between San Jose ave- |'nue ‘and” Guerrero street; cesspool, culvert, granite curbs and an artificlal stone sidewalk n_northwesterly corner of Army street and an_Bruno avenue; twelve-inch sewer, with manhole, etc., in San Bruno avenue, between | Mariposa and'Eighteenth streets: granite curbs ent street, between Green and Union, roadway thereof to be paved with bitumen. RESOLUTIONS OF INTENTION. Resolutions déclaring intention to order the following street work done were adopted: Cuvler street, graded, rock gutterways, | wood curbs and plank’ sidewalks tructed therecn and the re amize | tween street, by cond 'ave- tween | on Vin, red- to be con- iway to be macad- granite curbs on Greenwich street, be- Fillmore and Steiner, roadway to be paved with bitumen; granite curbs on Central avenue, beiween Page and Halght streets, road- way to be paved with bitumen; artificial stone | sidewalks on the southeasterly corner of the crossing of Central avenue and Page street, roadway of crossing to be paved with bitumen’ artificlal stone sidewalks on Central avenue, between Oak and Page streets; granite curbs on Snrader street, between Halght and Waller; bitumen pavement on roadway of the crossing of Shrader and Waller streets; eight-inch sewer in Shrader street, between Halght and Waller, nect with sewer in Waller street; road. vay of crossing of Haight and Clayton ‘streets to be paved with bitumen; roadway of crossing of Halght and Shrader streets to be paved with bitumen; cesspools, culverts, granite curbs and artifictal stone sidewalks on northwesterly and nortMeasterly corners of Halght and Cole streets, artificial stone sidewalk on the south- casterly corner and bitumen pavement on road- way of the crossing; Army street, between Noe and Castro, to be graded, roadway and side- walks to be macadamized, twelve-inch sewers constructed therein from ' Castro strest to & point 117:8 feet easterly thereof; elght-inch sewer in Army street, from Noe 10 a point dis- tant 310 feet westerly thereof; romdway of the crossing of Chestnut and Jones streets to be paved with bitumen; Chenery street, between | Randall and Castro. to be graded’ redwood | curbs, rock gutterways and plank sidewalks to be laid thercon and the roadway thereof to be macadamized. STREET WORK ORDERED. Resolutions ordering street work adopted as follows: Tilden street, off Castro, l4-inch sewer, with three manholes and covers; Zoe place, oft Fol- som street, paved with bitumen; Twenty-ninth street, {rom San Jose avenue to Dolores, gran- ite_curbs, bitumen roadway. The following proposed work was stricken from resolutions ordering by Acting Chatrman Holland of the Street Committee: San Bruno avenue, Fifteenth to Alameda Etreets, 12-inch sewers and manhole; crossing | of San Bruno avenue and Alameda street, were bills and refund | ; | tract to sewer C sewer, manhole, culvert, etc.; San Bruno ave- nue, from Alameda to Division street, 12-inch sewer and manhole. STREET WORK FULLY ACCEPTED. Resoluti fully accepting the following street work were finally passed: Jessle street, from Herma: o its southerly termination, bitumen; Eighteenth street, be- tween Douglass and T bitumen; ' Ala- bama street, between surth and Twenty bitumen reka and Eighteenth streets, bitumen eenth and Douglass street avenue, streets, Broderic and between Clayton between . bitumen Dolores an, between Br tion, bitumen {earny street, between Green and Union, bitu. men. A resolution was passed conditionally accept- bitumen pavement on Kearny street, Resolutions street work were passed to print fully accepting the following from Division street to Ala- meda rtreet, bitumen; Potrero avenue, from Alameda street to Fifteenth .street, bltumen Potrero avenne, crossing of Alameda street, bitumen; Potrero avenue, crossing of street, bitumen; Potrero avenue, from Fift to Sixteenth streets, bitumen; De Long avenue, from Waller street to Frederick street, bitu- men. FULL ACCEPTANCE RECOMMENDED. The Superintendent of Streets recommended the full acceptance of street work as follows: Potrero avenue, Clay street, crossing of Laurel, bitumen; Clay, crossing of Locust, bitumen; Washing: ton, ‘crossing of Laurel, bitumen; Twenty- ninth, crossing of Dolores, bitumen. TIME EXTENSION RECOMMENDED. The Superintendent of Streets recommended that extensions of time on contracts for street work be granted as follows. Flinn & Treac ixty s on contract t lay artificial stone sidewalks on the north side of Broadway, between fillmore and Steiner streets; Flinn & Treacy, sixty days on con stro street, between Twenty- sixth and Army streets TENSIONS OF TIME GRANTED. Extensions of time for the performance of street work were granted as follo: Quimby & Harrelson, ninety days on con- tract to construct a concrete arch bridge at the crossing of Berkshire street and the tracks of the Southern Pacific. RESOLUTIONS OF AUTHORIZATION, Resolutioris authorizing the performance of the following etreet work by private contract were passed to print: Dennigon Contracting Company, to grade, macadamize, curb, etc., southerly half of I street, between Eighteenth and Ninteenth ave- nues; ' W. F. C. Schmidt. MISCELLANEOUS MATTERS. A communication wus recefved from the Su- perintendent of Streets _requesting that . the clerk be Instructed to readvertise for propo- sals for the construction of eewers, cesspools, curbs and efdewalks In the crossing of Fif- teenth street and San Bruno avenue. The Superintendent of Streets was directed to require property owners to construct bulk- heads in front of their property on the west side of Lyon street, between Grove and Hayes, to prevent sand from drifting on said street: also to construct artificinl stone sidewalks in front of thelr property; also to require prop- erty owners to lower the sidewalks In front of 540, 542, 744, 046 and 548 Sixth street: also to require property owners to repair sidewalks in front of 211, 213, 215, 221 and 223 Clay street. The ordinance prohibiting the performance of street work by private contract was re- pealed. The hearing of the protest of property own- ers against the construction ef artificial stone sidewalks on Market street, hetween Fifteenth and Sixteenth, and between Noe and Sanchez, was set for next Monday afternoon. P. F. Sheridan was granted permission to grade in front of his propercy on Chenery street, between Mateo and Roanoke: also to lay a plank sidewalk and redwood curbs. . J. Barra was granted permission to place parts of between a few loads of rock on the uneven the roadway of Twenty-fifth street, Howard and -Shotwell, The Superintendent of Streets was instructed to place Montgomery street, between Broadway and Vallejo, on the street sweeping schedule, as of the sixth class, The Superintendent of Streets was directed to repave the roadway of Fourth street, from the center line of Berry street southeasterly to & point within forty feet of Channel street; also to relay the curbs in accordance with the agreement with Theodore F. and W. R. Payne. —_———— Custom-House Receipts. Port Collector Jackson reports the cus- toms receipts at this port for the month of September at $520,28 33. The month Jase short one, there being two holldays n it. —_———— Customs Chemist Appointed. Port Collector Jackson yesterday ap- pointed Willlam T. Wenzell as assistant chemist in the Custom House. The salary is $1000 per annum. JUDGE McKENNA - PRESIDES OV CIRCUIT COURT |Judges Morrow, Ross | and Hawley Assist. MANY LAWYERS GREET HIM | SUPREME JUSTICE IN THE PINK | AND GLOW OF HEALTH. SR e | Modestly Receives the Congratula- tions of His Professional Friends of the San Francisco Bar. T United States Supreme Judge McKenna presided over the opening session of the United States” Circuit Court of Appeals yesterday. Judges Morrow and Ross sat on each side of Justice McKenna, the hree being attired in the black robes of | the office prescribed since a time whereof | the memory of the American citizen run- | neth not to the contrary There wa smblage of law- yers In the room to greet the Justice of the Supreme Court who is wearing the judicial mantle of the late Stephen J. Field. Justice McKenna acknowledged the silent greetings of his-friends of the San Fran- cisco bar with a nod and a smile for each, The Judge seemed to be in the very pink of health, his step being light and his eyes as clear and bright as those of a young gladiator. Among_ the prominent people present were: ‘Thomas I Bergin, John Garber, Judge Slack. Robert Y. Hayne, H. T\ Trumbo, 1. M. Kalloch, S. W. Holladay, James G. Maguire, John H. Miller, United States Attorney Frank L. Coombs, As- sistant United States Attorney Marshall B. Woodworth, Assistant United States Attorney E. J. Banning; John H. Shine, United States Marshal; A. L. Farish, chief clerk to the United States Marshal, and John T. Grey. There was no f rmality attending the opening of the session beyond the cus- tomary mark of respect, which consists in the spectators and court officials rising to their feet when the Judges entered and remaining standing until the Judges were seated. Judge Morrow read the titles of the opinions, which he handed to the clerk and retired, his seat being at once_taken by Judge Hawley. Each of the Judges announced the opinfons handed down by them and the presiding Judge, Justice McKenna, listened to several motions for continuances, etc. Before passing upon these motions Justice McKenna consuited with Judges Hawley and Ross and ob- talned their acqu ence in the rulings he was about to make. The session did not occupy more than ten minutes, at the end of which time Justice McKenna announced that an ad- journment would be taken until this morning at 11 o’clock. . The presiding Justice was visited in his chambers by members of the San Fran- cisco bar, who' congratulated him upon his good health and bade him welcome to his home State. Opinions were handed down yesterday as follows by the United States Circuit Court of Appeal: Several cases in which the Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York was the ellant and Bessie F. Sears, Walter D. Allen, Pine Cohen and George E. Hill and others were the appellees. They repre- sented the estates of dead men who had taken out policles of life insurance in the company ranging from $2000 up to $20,000 in each case. The insured paid one or two premiums and then refused to pay any more and their policies were by the com- pany declared void and canceled. The executors_and heirs sued the insurance company for the full amount of the policy, All the facts were admitted and the lower courts gave judgments against the com. pany, the total aggregating about $39,000 | and more. The opinion handed down yes. | been filed by H. C. A : terday affirms the judgment of the lower neell against Maud Angell for desertion, Elizat r court. The opinlon, after summing up the | ler against Joseph Prefssler ?nbrmrr-lmr\’;fe evidence, goes on to say: g provide, Mary E. Fisher against Will ese facts admitted upon the pleadings, | J. Flsher for intemperance and Lot clear that the court did not err in sus- | Bva Pettus against Thomas A. Pettus ng the demurrer to the answer and ren- | desertion. ing the judgment in favor of lherf‘-).w‘mrlx‘ —————— with interest and costs. There was raised by the pleadings. The parties | Propagation of Salmon. waive the provisions of the statute | The State Game and Fish Commission- ich expresses the conditions | ers yesterday received word from Super. sa for might be forfeited for % mé. The New York | Intendent Lampson of the United States d as indicative of the | Fish Commission’s hatchery at Bairdy it that life insurance | that the take of salmon eggs this ar De deprived of the POWer L2 | amounts to six and a quarter million. s except_in the mode prescribed by | This is about half of the take of last year. The reason for the falling off is the low water in the Sacramento River. Of the number of eggs taken the State Fish Commission will recelve about four mil- lion. One million is to be sent to the Bel River hatchery and the other three mil- lion is to go to the hatchery at Sissons. The United States station at Battle Creek has opened and will begin operations this month. and Loan Society, Clarence C. Drown and others vs. George nd_others. Judgment of tne | fiirmed with costs. Construction Company vs. Judgment of the lower for personal in- | Davidson lower court We rn ( T 00 damages John A. F(il.l'\l)'1 (the Bowdoin College case). Judgment of the lower court affirmed. | “John F. Myers vs. Samuel Sternheim. Judgment affirmed with costs. Southern Pacific Railroad Company vs. | —_— The Supreme Court. The Justices of the Supreme Court will leave this city on the Sth inst. for Los the United S of America and the | Angeles, where they will open the court United State America against the | on the 9th. While there it is expected Southern Pacific Railroad Company. | that they will hand down.decisions in Judgment of the lower court affirmed |2 number of important ca: Nearly all { with costs. In this case the court decided | of the clerks and secret will accom- that the lands granted to the Atlantic and | pany the Justice Pacific Railroad Company were forfeited to the Government, but that the lan bought from the company by bona fide ADVERTISEMENTS. purch s were protected by the v statute: Slla C. Slavens ve. Northern Pacific Railroad Company. Judgment of the low- [ er court affirmed OIL! OIL! Thirty Days To Investigate after you have in- vested your money. If you become dissatisfled return your certificate and get your money back. THAT IS BUSINESS, ‘We have ofl lands In San Mateo, Contra Costa, Santa Clara, Merced and Colusa. We are not one of those WHO ARE JUST ABOUT TO BEGIN. We are at work. AMER- ICAN OIL stock will boom in a little while. It is going now very fast, and within sixty days we wiil be selling oil in Oakland and San JESSE S. POTTER'S WILL. E The Testator Bequeaths His Entire | Estate to His Widow. | The will of Jesse Sheldon Potter, who | died September 24, was filed for probate | vesterday by his widow, Melissa Amelia | Potter. In the petition it is set forth that | decedent's estate will exceed $10,000 in value and is probably worth $100,000. By the terms of the will, which was drawn June 6, 1883, the testator bequeaths | his entire estate to his widow, who is | named as executrix. Deceased makes no | provision for his son, Jesse S. Potter Jr., or for any posthumous child, as it is his desire “that any provision therefor may | be left to the discretion of his widow." The will is witnessed by S. Silverberg Francisco. Orders from the Board and C. P. Robinson. A’ codicil, drawn :‘lgn;)ltl‘:clom may be issued any October 12, 1894, and witnessed by W. B. Treadwell, W, de Jung and E. B. Mastick, rovides that In event Mrs. Potter is una- Ele to care for their son, James F. Cham- berlaln, decedent’s brother-in-law, is ap- pointed his guardian. In event of Mr. Chamberlain's death or inability to act, his wife, Celina Chamberlain, is~ appoint- ed the young man's guardian, and in event of her inability, T. Allen is to assume the duties involved. | A second codicil, dated June 6, 1883, and witnessed by E.*T. Allen and Robert Knight, directs the heirs of his estate to carry on his contest against the will of his mother, Mrs. Miranda W. Lux, until final judgment is reached or a satisfastory compromise effected. —————— KNOCKED DOWN BY A WAGON. Jswell Noyset, a Boy, Seriously In- jured at Sixth and Market Streets. Jewell Noyset, a boy 8 years of age, liv- ing at 164 Clinton park, met with a serlous | accident yesterday afternoon, which at first appeared to be fatal. He was riding on a hay wagon, and at Sixth and Market streets jumped off in front of a horse driven by Wallace Sharp, a_teamster for S. B. Leavitt & Co. Sharp shouted to the boy, but before the lad could get out of the way the shaft of the wagon struck him on the back and he fell, and one of the wheels passed over him. Noyset was taken to the Receiving Hos- pital, where Dr. McGettisan found that his right leg was broken and his abdomen injured. After the boy’s injuries had been attended to Dr. McGettigan thought that he would recover. Sharp was arrested by Policeman J. A. Ryan and booked on the charge of battery, but was released on his own recognizance by Judge Mogan. e e o In the Divorce Courts. Frederick W. Foley has been granted a RAISE THE PRICE, Stock now at $5 per share. Agents In nearly all towns in the State. Call on them or write us for in- ‘ormation. “Illustrated Pros; o Lo pectus AMERICAK OIL AND REFINERY COMPANY, ROOMS §22-323 PARROTT BUILD: SAN FRANCISCO.L o OAKLAND OFFICE....480 TENTH ST, Novelties. Grear Lerr Over Saig Prices Away Down. Youw’ll Say So, ‘When You See Prices, Great Awerican Tuportng Tea Ca. Stores Everywhere, I00 Stores, GOLDEN WEST BOTTLING WORKS, —Bottlers of— divorce from Marie Foley on the ground ANHEUSER-BUSCH BEERS, of intemperance. Sults for divorce have Soon deu"l;;%nemh:flz i % e