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B THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1903., C DECLARES WOLF |DUPED BRIDE'S AECENED COIN] 100L SHATTERED Saloon-Keeper Testifles|La Grille Dazzles Youngib Before the Police Wife With Tales Commission. of Daring. Halo of Romance Disappears in Deepening Shadow of Penitentiary. George Simpson Says He Paid Sergeant Money on Three Occasions. a S o i Paltos Besind Beshit ! W. S. La Grille, who had been posing as | before the Police | @ hero in Southern California in the role | ng. Wolf was |Of assistant chief of the United States nd accepting | secret service and proved it by a brass aloon in badge that he had made to order in Los f which he o . Angeles, appeared before United States Court Commissioner Heacock yesterday from po- esses for 4 the case and waived examination on the charge of | having fraudulently obtained from a | Los Angeles the sum of $200 by ting himself to be a Federal of- w he was 1 extradite United States t Court at Los Angeles to be tried to the nalty for the offense is imprisonment in the three years set Agent r reports La Grille to be one of tae v g . . st liars he ever met. After having en- - ke *d ON | tered inte contract of marriage with an le the On the n of Los Angeles, into believing him he came to this s he arrived herty of ited that he ner in Los An- | to remove to this other place | uld not be ; La Grille in- that the Government | r month for the keeping of This was preliminary to from the doctor. | ¥y took United Thomas B. young wom ed and geles whom he wher leged, As bait ons a ) Hazen last Saturda ret Sq Fo: La Grille's re nd Intro- 2 m_to Mrs. La Gri s an ambi- ous but guileless youth' who wished to ss of busin sleu La Grille while awaiting his rified her visit- a h ec thether young e d s 1 various parts of the a calling o prolif - i g ve im and the te wt n like Assistant Chief E e were talking La Grille came of s ser ze troduced his voun a Grille sized them they p me were at he was ¢ denartment Lectures on Photography. nd safd Iver badg the r n looks like. ! , which upon how s Cash Is Gone. Florist” repor to ing to the Tommy Foster was obliged » him from si abject fe Mrs. La Grille wa track on le t the “hero 2d wedded O RE" Wk 1and 2 coward after all ———— e — — SUNSET DISTRICT. JNO. J. FULTON Co. Voters of City Suburbs Rally. for| Republican Ticket. Bright's Disease and . e was held was crowded the doors. The ed out in large Diabetes News. v e the Republican stand ) and when Mr. Crocker ar rived the building sh rom the stamp ; ing of feet. The cheers of the -citizens ¢ echoed through the district and attested wr to those who stayed at home that the R holding an old-time rall) didate for C smpound. | © parcy ¥ and im torney s reappearance. 2 showe s of his late lin i Wes! We | heart was gladdened by the x ~mvnA as of | cept given him. Mr. Long spoke at el Com- |lensth and his remarks were cheered. . s ecided s were aleo made by Fred N ‘:n uti Ibum rd week candidate for Supervisor; Theodore | xpect to get statements of complete stedt, Har Baehr, Lo Jacobs, | cures from them by and by Willlam E. Lutz and others, : A. T. Park, Supt. Schools, D | Mr. Crocker proved himself a popular weeks the candidate. He had been in the -districty ore and knows many of its residents His recention. attested that he. would.re e many votes at the coming election. In part hie spoke as foiio continue ptom: H 0. W. Korper. “Fennell & t shown writes i ! ers of this city. e 0| them 1y 1 a banjo solo. There oron | seems to lemand for musical capdidates fOse: . in this campaign. (Laughter.) You fiave no | M- do ard a sre. 1 about me in this | to | can 1 have heard more about myseif ans.’ knew. (Laughter) I have alwa j LN, J.: o1 to do right, first for Henry J. Cracker, e ind “through what 1s left over I have always been will- M Furnace and give to my friends. 1 huve been placed et 15 try He is very much better ination for the office which is the | and he hes a friend who,was cured by | &7 in the gift of the people of San Fran- It was also recommended to me by | Csco. and I shall ehow you how I appreciate | the honor when 1 am Mayor. 1 .shall show it to every man, woman and child in San Fran- clsco. When 1 mention ladles, when I men- tion -children, 1 mean every word I say. 1| want every little tot of 3 or 4 years old to | appréclate the administration of 1904.and 1905. | ent rsician.” nected ¥ with » and Storage Co. of writes that he is just Compound, due to the the has just made two marvel- | I want to have.the sewers put in such condi- ight here, one a lady one | tion that they will benefit the people of the an, who were apparently in the | city. I mean that the parks are to be beauti fied for the eake of the children: b say | every s and gi the gchool- - ses to be bullt for their benefit, and I will every dollar will be so well spent that child and every woman in this city will ven up by physicians. ey are well people.” se and Diabetes are now 87 per cent of all cases > Cotigonaiin. Tab 3¢5 | point_with pride to this administration, 1 will Wathanas. ano J. Ful- | X et the workingmen get every dollar for | A o] ey work well done. 1 will give this municipally a | Samphlots at a8 clean administration, and as 1 have no. strings | | pamphlets at a TEL-Class on me, no bosses to dictate to me, I am sure | city and at the follow- | the municipality will get the benefit of my erior druggists’: Paso Robles, Janny's services. The quartet rendered some more songs, serson, Béwards' | Petalum . Rree Cxmp. Goodloe's| Red Hiaf, Branard’s | specches were delivered by other candi- | Juburn, McLaughlin's | Redding. Red's Dg Co | G2tes and the meeting closed with great Bakersfield, Bacr's | Redlandk, Abbey | enthusiasm for the ticket. Bericla, Trautz Redwood City, W { PRt s airieoh Berkeiey 'ond’'s Riverside, Gardnes 1 . Armstrong’s| Sacramento, Willi LANE AT OCCIDENTAL HALL. Chileo, w-u > Salinas, Kpough's e 1 Ch rdale, Markell's |San Andreas, Peters’ ses Larj tin, Maks Colusa, Robinson's & Bernarding, Towne's Bt s Mesting, b ol Unfavorable Impression. Franklin K. Lane .addressed a big Crockett,Crockett D Col Davisvilie, Campbell's Dinubs. McCracken's San Diego, St | | | | Eagievitie, Powers’ San Mateo, Colpe's erowd of voters of the Twenty-ninth As- reke, Skinner's San Pablo, Solomon’ “ resno. G. H. Monroe's|San Rafacl, Were. |®embly District .at Occidental- Hall last rase V, Loutzenheiser| Santa Ana, Haisei's | Dight. The meeting was lukewarm. - Al- Johneon's though the ‘place was packed to its ut- most capacity and the audience listened | attentively, the candidate -for Mayor falled to arouse any enthusiasm, and ex- pressions of approval were few and far between. Lane announced at the start that his voice was worn and tired from speaking in the open alr and he asked that' his hearers be as quiet as possible. He opened up his rémarks by referring to his unblemished record for the last five years, a record never tinged with dis- honesty. He said in part: The Union Labor party as it stands to-day is practically a division of the Republican party. Abe Ruef, who has been kicked from one place to another, has now landed 1fi the Union Labor camp and is acting as its jegal adviser. We have no Ruef in our party; we are all free men. I want to give every man a square deal, &nd I pledge you my word that, if you elect Hanford. Haywards, Sporndif's Heal@sburg. Evans Hollister, Wavple's Honecut, Horton's Kern, Kern Drug Co's Livermore, Beck's Los Angeles, Owl Los Gatos. Johne & J Lompoc. Dean’s Madera, Luttreil's Merced Dixon's Mili Valiey. M V Dg Co| Modesto, Husband & T) Monterey. Moore's Morgan Hill.M H D Col Mtn View, Johnson's Santa Cruz, Palmer's Santa Monica, Ramag Santa Rosa, Newman's Sebastopol, Worth's Sisson, Lee's Sonora, Eddy's 8t Helena, Brownlee's Stockton, Holden's Sutter Cr'k. Morr! Truckee, Thomas’ Tulare, Lasch's ‘Tuolumne. ish's Ventura, Cerf's Volcano, Clute's ” opportunity of bid growers of citrus fruits north of Tehach- | Priends of Mrs. Lunt Fear That SPLENDID PILE IS PLANNED FOR OAKLAND’'S CITY HALL Preliminary Designs for New Home for Officials of Ala- meda County Metropolis Prepared and Submitted by John Galen Howard of the University of California £ iry | I« | [ | | 1 | [ .| i | ‘ i | 1 | ! { [ [ | [ L3 ~+ | PROPOSED NEW CITY HALL FOR OAKLAND, FROM PLANS SUBMITTED BY JOHN GALEN HOWARD, HEAD | OF fHE DEPARTM T OF ARCHITECTURE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA. THE PEOPLE ARE } ASKED TO VOTE TO ISSUE BONDS TO PAY FOR THE STRUCTURE. — ; — AKLAND, Oct. 27.—Preliminary plans for a proposed new City Hall for Oakland, estimated to cost $350,000 to $375,000, have been submitted to the special commit- tee of the City Council, the Mayor and Board of Public Works by John Galen Howard, head of the department of arch- itecture at the University of California. METZINGER, JAIL-BREAKER, A PRISONER ONCE MORE' FEDERAL GRAND JURY INDICTS FORMER JAILERS Dasha, Dempsey, Burnett and Three Chinese Brokers Must Stand Trial for Conspiracy. Three {ndictments were reported yester- Patrolmen Larkin and Connor Cap- ture Fugitive at Sutter and Stockton Streets. Andrew Metzinger, the trusty who made such a clever escape from the City Prison on the morning of October 23, is once o the Chinese subs ¢ ing s The Dixnk Eleorehend & aye-stary storte substitution cases. The first more a ner of the c B wan b ctaat Siesance. Tt is |8 asainst Willlam F. Dasha. Thomas J. stody shortly after midnight |/ *'°" assic renalssance. Dempsey and Thomas T. Burnett, th 2 : d 0 face the east, fronting a curved ex-|gp, 3 2 » e by Patrolmen:Larkin and [, o € 5 eriff's deputies, who were arrested for d Stockton streets and sion of Washington street through | complicity with Deputy Marshal Gamble City Hall Park to San Pablo avenue. The propesed municlpal building is de- in the substitution of six for six young men, who nad been ordered to stairways at each end. face the vestibule entrance. floor the room space has been cut them a sum of money Lo substitute Chi- 1, m beforo he had gone | | ain | » City Prison Metzinger On the mal into nese on Jun e and ‘the third indictment he_had filed. the key With| o e § ? | charges them with having conspired with | which he opened the door out of a blank.; ::,';ffl:.':":p:,ttmim; i;':‘%'ré’& ‘:;dri:‘, | Hom Toon on August 18 for a (-:rmm :\umh The file, he says, he found in a waste pasi of dimenaions %8x8 feet being atlotted. | Of MOREY paid by Hom to substitute Chi- per basket. He stated that he had Utti€{ The fioars above have each approximately | He5e The bail of all the defendants was difficulty in escaping and his fiight’ fory 4500 square feet of room space to be as- | 1icd 8t $3N0. foesdom was not seen by, 4 soul. | signed, sgf;e lG”?"deuryDflgnored the charge | Metzinger added that he had been sup- | 8% : ainst Isadore Davidson of havin plied. with, funds by friends and that he | e Jail and b aieing | fraudulently procured naturalization va- [intended to leave the city to-day. Asked | hospital in the high bosement | pers, and that against Jan Li of having why ‘he tarried so long. the jail breaker| ‘The plans call for an absolutely fire- |4 In his possession forty-seven cigars answered that he was infatuated with a | proof structure, steel frame, terra cotta | °% Which the tax had not been paid. Charles Fields. was indicted for smug- gling ten pounds of opium on October 14. ———————— UNIONIZED FISHERMEN SECURE SHORTER HOURS By the action of a board of arbitration appointed from the San Francisco Labor Couneil and Fisherman's Union No. 10,353 the weekly working hours of the fisher- men have Dbeen reduced to sixty-five, in- stead of eighty-five. A double wage rate will be pald those working on Sundays and overtime. All disputes existing between the em- ployers and the employes of the laun- dries are in a fair way toward settle- woman and that he wished to see her be- for went away and was awaiting an ng her farewell. S PROPOSES CITRUS FAIR FOR THANKSGIVING WEEK Letter Wiil Be Sent to Each Orange Grower North of Tehachapi Asking Opinions. Manager. Briggs of the State Board of | Trade will address a letter to the leading | and cement floors and cefings. In making provision against the future ' Architect Howard has designed a struct- ure whose dimensions will, it is estimated, provide ample space for the needs not only of the city of Dakland for years to come, but of a possible consolidated eity and county government. The ecdifice is planned so that wings can be erected on the west side thout marring the arch- itectural dimensions or effect. Architect Howard has given the com- mittee a general outline of the plans. The drawings submitted consist of a front , | i | | 1 | elevation, a first floor plan and a general | plan of the upper floors. The committee listed Mr. Howard's efforts Lecause of his distingnished position in his profes- apl, asking what support they will give o0 a proposed citrus fair to be held in this city In the ferry building during Thanks- £ 3 % sion. He has charge of the Benard plan | ment. Labor Commissioner F. V. Meyers slving week. The success that-attended | ror 5 greater university ac Berkeley. has been added to the arbitration com- the Thanksgiving fair of 1902 in the ferry | This new City Hall project is among | mittee as ite fifth member. building has couraged Mr. Briggs to | the items proposed for submission at| A final order has been issued by the believe that ar event this year | forthcoming electlons on bond {ssues for | executive, committee of the Labor day would be ous. On the number | municipal water works, schoois and gen- | parade directing all unions and members and nature of the respouses received to ! eral improvements, that fafled to turn out in the parade to his letter may depend the holding of the | @ riiieeie Jofeojertonferfocforioferiufesfafefefeinl @ | appear and make explanation on or be- | fai i i fore November 12. The State Board of Trade has added & Tickets are out for the seventh annual department to iis reading room fn which | ABERDEEN Sk o The Pacths Coaut Welteew Ao’ are- scrapbooks containing clippings con- clation for to-morrow evening at Native ) | Serping the developmert of 4h¥ countiss AGAIN IN Son’s Hall, Mazon street. § | book. The co-operatton of the State press It Is the intention of the Furniture add 1o askad by the Board of Seike 1t it Carpet Salesmen’s Assoclatlon to secure | the infornration as full g A FLAMES suitable headquarters in which to meet. | n as full as possible for the . At the last meeting of the association a benefit of in Califc of the all n visite and who are interested may become residents in view. ———————————— BROTHER MASONS WILL GATHER AT HIS BIER The funeral ceremonies over the re- mains of the late H. J. Colvin will be held this afternoon at the Masonic Tem- ple. Colvin's death comes as a sad loss to many of the older residents of this city,’ as he was among the first to settle here. He ran the first steam fire engine in this city, tn 1866, and was a member of the noted Knickerbocker Volunteers and the Veteran Firemen’'s Association, of which he was the founder. Several days ago the aged man was in- jured by a street car, and though at first hope was entertained for his recovery, his injuries proved to be more serious than was supposed and he died last Sun. day. The deceased was 72 years of age and was a member of California Lodge No. 1 of Masons. » ————————— Chief of Police Complains. Chief of Police Wittman complained yesterday to the Board of Supervisors that the Sanitary Reduction Works fails to remove the carcasses of dead animals in a reasonable time. Specific mention i made of a dead horse which was allowad TACOMA, Wash., Oct. 28.— A special to the Ledger says that Aber- deen, the business section of which was wiped out by fire about ten days ago, is again in flames. Rifles and Ammunition Are Seized. DENVER, Oct. 27.—A special to the Re- publican from Victor, Colo, says Major Tom E. McClelland to-night seized ten rifles and 600 rounds of ammunition found under the residence of J. #. Coogan, a member of the Free Colnage Miners' Union of Altman. No arrests were made, —————— WOMAN DISAPPEARS FROM GRAND HOTEL | Family Troubles May Have Led to Suicide. A report was made to the police last evening to the effect that Mrs. Martha Lunt; agetl 45 vears, a chambermald at the Grand Hotel, is missing. She disap- peared from the hotel on October 17. An examination of her room developed the fact that she had not taken any of her belongings with her and the fear pr vails among her friends that she may have committed sulcide. ' Mrs. J. Johnson, who lives at 1316A Larkin street, a friend of the missing woman, stated to the police that Mrs. Lunt had lately been deeply depressed over the fact that she was estranged from her family in the East and it is suspected that this trouble may have preyed upon her mind and driven her to self-destruction. @ il @ me, I will give you a square deal. We are now nearing the end of the fight; in fact, we are on the homestretch, and we are going fo win becduse our cause is right and just, The wicked and the vicious do not sympathize ADVERTISEMENTS. Dyspepsia and other mach trouble Ty T e e e prapie o hi gt ammonmeatin ajj | SUrely cured by the use of {rom “Baturday afternoon last unti the ;’“fi?}:} foc 2 '-?.‘;?’x. m‘.‘&‘lfl pure 1:",:".' : H next day, although the company was nc- 15 S T e i Shemes e ner of ainer coaptamts e 3 x E. F. Lacey nctei as chairman of the of like character has been made. meeting. .Among the others who mgde 3 ———————— short talks were Dr. T. B. W. Leland, Dr. Will Produce “Everyman. Dodge, Edmond Godchaux, Judge r(‘:mx:- This scientif The members of the Gentlemen's Sodal- iss, Alfred H. Wehe, Carl Westerfeld, | | fop ,’“"'"fic ""‘"‘E‘d‘ is @Bso- | |ty of St. Ignatius Church will produce Samuel Braunhart, Oscar Hocks, W. W. ely harmless; it subdues the § | “Everyman” to-night and to-morrow Sanderson. John Barnett and John H.| |infammation of the mucous mem- § | night at St. Ignatius College Hall, on Marble. { brane of the stomach, and by Van Ness avenue. The play has been IR A T rehearsed for Tlou t;;nl,:n nr:d the nm Exhi oting Machi; settings will be of the est class. e it o -| music for the piece will be supplied by Registrar Walsh has issued invitations to all the eity officlals’ to witness the working of a new-‘voting machine on election day next Tuesday. A booth will be erected at the corner of Hyd: and McAllister streets for the purpose and will be equipped with the-necessary clerks, so. that the system may be exemplified in all its details. 2 the August Hinrichs Company and the that in the territory acres In bearing this season, day by the United States Grand Jury in | hinese old men | recaptured. | signed to cover a ground space 170x64 ‘:‘gvomd to Chira. In this indictment u‘lr'n‘ra: £ ‘;ny‘r::wr“nf feet and will be seventy-nive feet from 'h::‘innj":‘: 2(C§0:;°|(:|r\da"( g 1s l;;ll;-{ged ton streets when Me- | (he street lev : 54 : s year he paid Bur- ng. Althou e5caDed | mental Dalucirade abme. che roof somntes, | It 3100 for the purpose of Inducing shaved off hi che, the ! The main' ‘en: e Pt . | Burnett, Dasha and Dempsey to substi- | % o b | The trances will break into a Ave Chi K 3 _Subs ccognized him at once and com-{ vestibule 54x24 teet with a corridor twelve | :,‘]f‘::’r;;: Chinese. Ehaspecind indictuuc | him to stop. | feet wide along the length of the edifice | o, ¥ 0 U » Daghe &nd, Dempsay arted to runm, but the offi- | Dlovators will : With conepiring with Li Lim, who pafd committee was appointed with this object | HUNTER BATTLES AGAINGT WAVES John Hansen Jr.’s Boat Capsizes Off Bay Shore. Rubber Boots and Heavy Coat Make Struggle for Life Harder. e Berkeley Office San Francisco Call, 2148 Center street, Oct. 27. John Hansen Jr. of Cerrito Point, in West Berkeley, had a close call for his his home. The youth's boat capsized while he was returning from a hunting trip and he only saved himself from drowning after the hardest kind of a struggle. Hansen lost his balance while standing up in his boat to shoot at some d and fell into the water. He was loaded down with a coat filled with s and a pair of rubber boots that immediately | filled with water. When he came up out | of the water he was some distance from |'the boat, which he barely reached before his strength gave out. The boat was half he full of water then, but it held him up | until he could divest himself of his heavy clothing. Finally he ballea the boat out | and got safely to shore, thoush he was more dead than alive when he reached land. ————————— OF INTEREST TO PEOPLE OF THE PACIFIC COAST Several chnnges—Are Made in the Postal Service and More Patents Issued WASH . Oc —Postoffice estab- | lished: Oregon—Shirk, Lake County, Olive G | Shirk, postmaster. ! Postoffice to be discontinued: Californfa— Alexander Valley, Sonoma County, to take ef- | fect December 31, instead of October 31, as | heretofore announced. Oregon—King, Marion County; mail to Maclay. | The llowing patents were issued to-day: | California—Albert J. Arnold, National City, | fishing reel; Hiram W. Blaisdell. Los Angeles, mixing apparatus; Frank D. Bullard, Los An- geles, plpe wrench; Elisha K. Green, Los An geles, means for jubricating ralls of street cars Marius Hennings, San Francisco, bake oven | Alexander Hess, assignor one-half to A. S. | Willlams, San Jose, feeder for oil burners; | Frank G. High, Los Angeles, sash fastemer; | john Kunny, H. G. Arundell and P. R. Kunny, | Los Angeles, ratching clutch for drilling swiv- els; Willlam H. Ladley, assignor one-half to R. L. Pleler, Maricopa, water supply device for well drilling; John W. Livermore, Berkeley, traction wheel; Willlam W. McCormick, San | Francisco, bag: George Morrill and C. G. Sonora. pump; John Nicholas, Berkeley | dow-shade fixture: Emery Nichc one-half to F. A. Huntington, steam generator; Joseph A. P primary battery; Charles H concentrator; Willlam H. T Heath, Gamul, current water motor. Oregon—Charles H. Mattox, Baker roost: Adam Mieden, Sumpter, garmen Nelson W. Thompson. it Washington- Day, | william L. Mc Seattle, portable conveyer | Byron C. Riblet, Spokane, discharge terminal for wire rope tramways; same, grip_for aerfal wire rope wire tramways; Charles W. Smit cas horseshoe; R. W. Wood, SERVANT GIRL ADMITS SHE WAS THE BURGLAR Los Angeles Police Arrest Pretty Em- ploye Who Manufactured a Crime Story. | LOS ANGELES, Oct. 27.—Mabel Welper, the pfetty 17-year-old servant girl who on October 6 was found locked in a closet at | the ome of A. W. Fisher, her employer. and told a story of having been placed there by an electric light inspector, who then robbed the house, is In jail and charged with the burglary. She has con- fessed her guilt and has produced jewelry and other valuables worth more than $600, the proceeds of the crime. The girl was not locked in a closet, there was no electric light inspector in the crime, but she committed it without assistance. Her arrest was made at Ocean Park to-day, where she was found wearing one of Mrs. Fisher's watches and other jewelry. A former employer had told her how in Chicago men dis- guise themselves as electric light and gas inspectors to gain entrance to houses for the purpose of robbing them. This sug- { gested to her an easy means of escaping detection, so she robbed the Fisher house, hid her booty, tore her dress in several places, went into a closet and began screaming for help. —————e————— CHICAGO LABOR LEADER | MURDEROUSLY ASSAULTED | Four Unidentified Men Beat Him | Into Unconsciousness and Leave Him for Dead. CHICAGO, Oct. 27.—William Rossell, a member of the finance committee of the | Chicago Federation of Labor and former | business agent of the International #sso- | | ciation of Machinists, is at his home suf- fering from an attack made on him by | four unidentified men. Rossell, after being drugged, was hor- | ribly beaten by the quartet and left lying | in the gutter for dead. | The circumstances of the attack are al- most exactly similar to these surrounding | the attack several weeks ago on P. J. Donnelly, president of the Amalgamated Meat Cutters’ and Butchers’ Workmen. President Schardt of the Chicago Fed- eration of Labor, when told of the attack to-day, was reminded that he had been | receiving numerous threatening letters re- cently. The Machinists’ Union, to which Rossell | belongs, has empowered its business agent | to ‘spare neither pains nor money to bring the pérpetrators of the outrage on him to Justice. | | I i | life yesterday in the bay half a mile from | ARRANGES THIRTY- MINUTE SCHEDULE New Ferry System Will Run Two Trains Next Week. Another Controller Car Ar- rives, Completing Equip=- ment Necessary. s B Oakland Office San Franeisco Call, 1113 Broadway, Oct. 0. troller car for the trains “key rou ferry system has The second co of the new arrived, and it is now being fitted up at the ¢ ards in Emeryville. As soon as s is in running order tie company wi abled to inaugurate a regular te schedule between San Fra and E rkeley trains is made oller car and of the con- the completes STEAMERS FROM NOME CARRY GOLDEN CARGO News Is Lacking Regarding the Fate cf the Disabled Meteor. SEATTI Cect. 23.—T? Nome steam- ers reached S between 12 and | o'clock this m g, bringing a total of 1500 ps ver haif a mill treasure Roancke left S Michael on or 16, the bay at that time being f with ting ice. T Senator was able to take off a number of pessenger: ifed her at St Michael, and t : down on the Roa- noke. The Se Ohio left Nome on October 19 None of the the disabled teor. The the Meteor on October 10, the Ohlo about w of the h Harbor. at Dutch hing was known of the movements of the Meteor the rev e cutters Man- were p ring to start Bering Sea ’in search of ning left on the evening Bear was to have fol- lowed the next morning. The course which was mapped out will cover a cruise of ten or twelve days The captains of both the Bear and Man- sed iderable anxiety, as iown that severe storms raged on Bering Sea d week following the time the ve sighted by the Ohio. The Eureka aid to have had only ten days’ ly on board when she left PRESIDENT CELEBRATES BIRTHDAY ANNIVERSARY Oect 27.—President lebrated the forty-fifth is birth. Many beauti- WASHING Roosevelt to- anniversary Ay « ful and touching reminders of the event came to him from every part of the coun- try. Hundreds of telegrams and letters of congratulation were received at the White House during the day. When the he Cabinet assembled for the eekly meeting they joined in members of usual sem}. extending their cordial congratulations to the President. Among the floral offer- ings was a huge basket of chrysanthe- mums from the propagating garde: It | contained specimens as large as the | crown of a derby bhat and of splendid coloring. ———————eeen Marriage Licenses. OAKLAND, Oct. 2.—The following mar- nses were issued by the County age lc Clerk to-day: Charles A. Freese, 43 years | 0ld, Berkeley, and Lillian T. Snyder, 30, Los Angeles: August W. Hoffmann, 2. Santa Cruz, and Emma M. Hodgkins, 25, Alameda; John Andrade, 33, and Jesste Lopez, over 18, both of Alameda: Edgar A. Bayley, ling City, and Grace W. Davis. Michael J. Donahoo, 3 21, both of San Fran- W hifrom, Kathe ine M over 21, Oa Best, over 18, and Berkeley 1and, ———————— Cotopaxi Volcano Spouts Fire. GUAYAQUIL, Ecuador, Oet —It s reported from Quito that a dense column of fire is visible froms there, emerging from the Cotopaxi voleano. The neigh- boring villages have not sustained any damage. — ee———— Late Shipping Intelligence. ARRIV Tuesday, October 27 trom Coquille Stmr Chico, Martin River, via Port Or DOME: ed Oct 27—Stmr Centennial, SEATTLE— for San Frame FOREIG) VICTORIA, B C—Arri Nivelle, hence Oct 10: neith, hence Oct 15 OCEAN STEAMERS. NEW YORK—Arrived Oct 27—Stmr Kron prinz Wilhelm, from Bremen, Southampton and Cherbourg; stmr Lahn, from Genoa, Naples and Gibraltar. ——ee———— Automobile Dealers Assign. LOWELL, Mass., Oct. 21.—The firm of Horace L. Shattuck & Som, hardware, bleycle and automobile dealers of Loweil, Boston and Providence, has assigned, with labilitles, it is understood, of $500,000. PORT. ed Oct 27—Br ship Br ship Cambusken- ADVER' Anheuser-Busch Plant covers 125 acres— equal to 60 city blocks. Capacity: Brew House—6,000 Barrels Daily. Bottling Works—700,000 Bottles Refrigerating Plants—3,300 T Malt Houses—5,000 Bushels Daily. Ice & Storage Elevators—1,250,000 Bushels. Stock Houses—425,000 Steam Power Plant—7,750 Horse Power. Electric Employs 5,000 People. Light & Power Plant—4,000 Horse Power. Largest Breweryinthe World Orders promptly filled by TILLMANN & BENDEL, Pacific Slope Distributess