to f v .- ormmr VOOL. XLVI. XO. 14,156. PORTIAT), OREGON, xuONXtAY, APRIL 23, 1006.. PRICE FIVE CENTS. - ' ill HORRORS CHIEFLY IN IMAGINATION San Francisco Fugitives Haunted by Visions of Impending Epidemic. ITY LIVES IN SKELETON FORM Soldiers Deal Out Bread and Bullets and Make All Idlers Work; DREAD HORRORS OF NIGHT Only Choice Is Stay Indoors or Risk Being Shot as Thief. WALK UP MARKET STREET All Races and Ranks Meet in Bread Idne on Equality Hundreds Shot Down by Evcr Prescnt Soldiers. . TSY-ARNO DOSCH. OAKLAND, Cal.. April 22. (Staff Cor resjNmdence.). In San Francisco Itself the elU'uion is not half so uppallinK as In OaSa(3 &r at any outside point. Horrible faraUpn of the.$mage. rumors of fever, .cholera, smallpox, anything you please, vrcep from under thWack smoke that fringes the water frtiit. and iUa fact that all leaving the city must stay away lifts the tension to the screaming polr; But here, at Jefferson Square, on the very edge of the burnt district. It is another story. Of the 200.000 left In San Francisco, all have found some sort of shelter, for. If they had no shelter, the road to the ferry has been pointed out to them and they have been urged to go. If reluctant the first day. one night's wan 5ering in the dead, black city, with a rifle in the face every minute, has meant flight In the morning. Yesterday, as we crossed into San Fran cisco on the ferry from Oakland, there were dozens of men and women without the Governor's pass begging Jted Cross and relief committees to permit them to go through with them. They were des perate They would fight before they would turn back. Market Street Still Survives. First we saw the ferry building, wlth'lts metal flagstaff bent by the earthquake. Then Market street, for Market street still survives. There Is not a building Intact along its sidewalks to Van Ness avenue, two miles, but the street Itself Is there. San Francisco may be burned. but its great thoroughfare is a greater thoroughfare than ever, though its com merce goes all one way. From the ferry to the Donahue foun ialn, at the Junction ot Bush and Battery ptrrets with Market, there is hardly a wall standing. Over to the right is the gutted Merchants Exchange building, Diagonally to the right, nothing but the walls of the Fairmount stand, even to tho far side of Nob Hill. Diagonally to the left there is not a wall standing ten feet high for so great a distance that the end cannot even be seen In tho thin smoke. Just ahead totter the ghastly re mains of what San Francisco means to most of us. Shells of Building. Mock. The Palace, the Call and the Chronicle buildings stand in mockery- They keep up the semblance when everything else is gone. It is tho most pitiful sight. To walk by those buildings is llko attending the funeral of a friend. 1 sat on the stone seat of tho waiting station, oppo site the Palace, where five, days ago crowds were scrambling off and on the -Market-Street cars, and tried to get my mental bearings. The brick frame of the Palace, with Its sandstone portal, was directly opposit tho Palace brick. I had. thought it was wood. I have found out since that half San Francisco thought it was wood. It was solid brick, and stood the upheavals of the earthquake better " than many modern building. This far from the water front, there was no smoke to. speak of. But there was a thick, choking dust rising from the bricks powdered in the street. Down to the ferry passed a string of wag ons. carry-alls, automobiles, wheelbar rows, bicycles, taking to the ferry 10,000 people an hour. On the back track were only soldiers, relief committees. Army wagons filled with provisions, a few sight seers and an occasional policeman avoid ing the soldiers. Work or Be Shot. Half a block ahead the soldiers were stopping sightseers and putting them to work clearing bricks from the street. Two nobby-looking individuals with canes were stopped and put to work within lea feet of me. Assuming a very business-like air. I starlet up I be street a thc-Iar xMe e a 1 - lawMawmmmmmmmmmmWmmTMraK M wl Wa M .aV as awfc ammmmmmamMJJllasV IIBBBIBBBsM LOOKING eOLTUWKST ON MAICKKT STREET. TIIK HOLDINGS. READING FKOM THE LEtT. ARE: A. FALACE 1 LAMES AKK ISiaiNU FROM THE DOME Or THE LA ST-NAM ED. IN. THE CLACS SPKKCKEI.S provision wagon and got by. For' the sfli dicrs might keep "you "working there all day. and even to. hqsjtatc meant doa(h. Two men are reported .shot .on Market street yesterday. because they did not show due readiness to turn in and help. As far as the City Hall there are many "tottering walls, but beyond to Van Ness avenue then Is -.nothing but a waste of ashes. The only building intact is the postofnec, about the walls of which yes terday sprawled hundreds of people writ ing. Beyond Van Nests, over to the Pre sidio and out to the Goldt-H Gate Park, only a few spots arc burned. What re mains remains Intact, and an far as I can sec most of the householders Intern! to rc: main whore thry arc ' The world may le llove that San Francisco can never build up as It was.. but .'thche people have their all right where they are. and they wllj remain.' Moreover. there . rt'Sf.) of them. J All Meet in I'eedln: Line. In a house on Oetavta ttrcet .where, we found sholU-r with a friend' there ay 2 poopio where mere wore rour ociora These strangers each go out and stand -in, lino where the soldiers are givingiout food and bring it back to the common table. Out in-Jofferson Park, within a block, arc thousands or people Injtho small area. jeople of every class and bon dltlon of life. . Three tbnes a day they stand in line and get their little handout! Yesterday 1 saw a Turk In native jeos-tumc,- one of the worst if San Francisco bums, a refined lady. a barefooted child, a workingman, two. Chinamen and a ptjetty girl all J5queaed into ton feet of awaiting lino that extended a quarter of a mile. Everything is reduced tp a common levcL Here we have civilization Infthe' bare. .On one extreme the ureat horde, reduced to standing two- hour) In ilne for a loaf of bread, and on the other the Impressive organization of the military assuming complete coslroi on an hours notice and looking after the he'altli and general welfare of the mul titude, sodhat no one has pone .hungry since the imminent danger of fire has passed. .-Terrors or dhc Mglil. -.-. .... On the surface things have a holi day .appearance as long as Uie "day lasts, but 'with the night toks terror. "With the city imder" military-control, not a, light- burning after dark. 'not even a street lamp, the night fancies are awfuL Below, the last.flre In' the city are dying, throwing a jle. ghast- Cpada& w.?t-t& CONTENTS TODAY'S PAPER The M'ratber. YESTERDAY'S Maximum trrnpratre. 6 tec. minimum, rrcdpStata. O-Ol of an lark. TO DA YS rlod st unbilled it bw fru. ' iuth le wett lrd- - The California Dlter. fun KraaetFoe 'as tn after the fire by aa OrtxenUn rtair cerrerpondent. race I. San FranclMO - recovering and organising mWef. werk. race t. Acilt preparatiMU for rebwIMtng city. le 1. Jlua4reds tf p'ifn rruthed and tNNaed to dath In rain, race -1. . iJrVju; eainiK of reXace f M irrvW"d for In Sis FranriiM-e'and Oa3flwLTsMt i-K I.I u I.- aamac to l!ff pur and Hutro Hal hi".. rcr 5 Vallani rk"e ihf mint. rir S. ltallaa m win- t exUaruih fire. PK n. "V1crw vnratMrfM M-eteet hoallh. Ta(e I." TtofwiiSfM? preppy Itsi Cri manace r- . Mf ark. r;r,4. 1 HKlrnt f Mr ,1-eritM- a nym la. aate-' . nMrtrflf lour. ;cneral New. ArmMt inMtrrmlen in- KreaH mtnlnc 4i- . ttlet. .Pasc : BrjniMng l Olympian came at Athena. I'iKW" . - . . . Twenty nitnr killed Tv explaln la Colo- 'r B.I ii lr-. Dtaill tattle ttwcn rcllclou ecte in ' ItUnd. Vmsv 2. raclfle Crxit. .Tmlntnad of timely rappH' feai been nt "t San FranHwn by Orra-en ti. Tage S TActraltnead of 'refoieca -arc fed at Aah- 1. "laud. I'ace . . Iong-tiurJvJ carne-pf oorlaw U aarartard In rmatllla Coanty. Pace 2. Benittm'.'xnd fetcrl , tiin'T pjYih3j -ion far Socrarv,ef Stat and :Jlale Tre-aaurer. "JUcr I. I . " . . r Mariae.j l'ortlan-Aiatlr Steamvhipr CvmpaKy pr- - "pare - .rlabllth, f nelihl j-ats frpm .Uorttand to Europe la vhz Canal, race' 12. " . Detroit woman l anxlmia tn Ifim here abouts ft hturtiantU who- came Wrti to awltt la floating ttiR Gee. W. Elder, race 12. rortlaad aad "lclnltj. Serluu problem confronts the Coaat. says F. TV, keadbetter. I'acv 10. Dr. Ilavlln make trong'tatetnent in reply to clergymen ho think drvatatlon of Saa Kroci was a vlrltatlen from God. Iate II Stanford tudenta return and teM of wreck or university and raxcty of cludcnia. race 12 First rruReea reach rorttand. hem their ar teAderlr cared for. -Pce:l. ncIisbwoman tells graphic story of cala . 'trophe at San Franctc race I-. Train leave rorttand to feed tb famUhed and clothe the nateid. race '12 'Word continues to com ot safety of Port- lauders in San Frasclsoo. rage 11. HellrJ eommlttc keeps op Its rood ork for San Francisco. Pace 10. Eteaxner Alllanc arrives with ecsrs.of de- atractioa or JurVx and ateer the Coast. and report iaA Mghthosto at Io!t Areaa is 'a'KCked. laz 12. . DEftTH LIST LARGE Will Probably Exceed Even the. Earliest "Estimates. . . 'MANY- HUNDREDS RERISH Cpllapc of Lodiii-llotiHJs Sotitli ofj -Market Street Kills "jlajdr'ity. . . Victim.. Are Crcmatctl " in the Kulii.-. i SAN tKR'ANClSCO. April 22. Now. that the 'extinction df the Are allows of Ihqulfyrit has become known'that hun dreds, if not thousands, of people Joit .their, lives, either in .the collapse . of 'buildings due to thc'ea"rthijuake'or"ln the fire which consumed the ruins in which !thcy were imprisoned alive," but injured and powerless to flee. A merely partial estimate places the totaf at 'over 709 In the lodging-bouses and a few ndjoln'ing buildings. South'4F Market, street the loss of life was chiefly brought about by. the collapsing- of -many cheap 'lodging houses. Among others, the caving- of the Royal, corner. Fourth and .Minna streets, added to the horrorof the. sit uation by the shrieks of Its many scores of victims embedded In the ruins. , Otcr 360 In Ohc 1Iousc. The collapsing of the. Portland House, on Sixth street, between Mis sion and Market came about In a sim ilar manner- 1 Fiilly -SO'nersons .we're entombed. Many of these were saved avefore the nre'e-entuaH" trept tonne 'scene- . , . -1 . ' The large,' five-story Brunswick lodjCdng-lioose with' its - :ta roems lllled wirhefta?f oh. tlae, corner '.ot mxth aiIlwar streets col lapsed, to Ibe crewsd entirely Hd. Arc started M UtetwiKs, scarcely Are jalawte HOTEL. H. MONADNOCK. C. IIKAKST. D. CLl'S SrRECKELS BUILDINO BUILDING THE "CALL. HAD ITS BUSINESS OFFICE. later. ; It is estimated that over S00 persons lost their lives. "Part -of" tlie large ' Cosmopolitan House, corner Fifth and Mission streets, collapsed "at the very first tremor. Manv or the leerera were' ."burled "lritfie ruins, oih'ers" escaplng-ln their nlghtelothlng. . v I ' At 775' Mission street, the Wilson 4lfQuse. -with its .'four stories and .SO rooms, fell to the ground a mass- of ruins. As far as Known very icw ot. the inmates were rcscued- Hoa1 of Strangers Perish. The'Dc'nver House. 'on Lower Third strcjt. with. its many rooms, fared the .same rate, ana none may crr nno how many were killed, the majority of "the inmates lAlng strangers. A small two-story frame building, - MORE MONEY NKCOCO. The wrnrk f ratine a popular CaH- foe Bla rritef SuBd-umtertaken by The Orrsonlan and Erenlng TeUcrarn. I txiac. continued wth creat sucotm. Although It was Sunday, a conslderabe aiaoasl f cajhv and . a number of . Lev bland -Clark ceilflcate were left yesterday at The OreconUn business office. lfyoawlll read the news ae- ccpnUi from . San Francesco you will learn that It will be necessary to feed. t clqUie .and. ahelter jaany thousands of people for many months, to. there b no dancer -of too much money being sub- .aerlbed or their relief. Thr Ore jror.Un hope t raise Zn,W30 la thl r manner, .It knows, erery cent of 'it will be needed. So brine In your money, ryeur certificate, or slve yeur manejr and crrtlllcates ta the cen- .trst..reHer, cp-ntslttee. ; It I no mat- ter which fntsd gets" It. for It" will all . be-devoted 4tna -common -cacse. I occupied by a man and wife at 405 Jes- 'sle street, colRtpsed without nn in 'stnnt's warning." Both 'were 'killed. it To Uie norm of taricet street, the lodging-house people fared somewhat better. The Luxemburg-, corner Stock- Lion and O'Farrell streets, a three-story affair, sqffered severely from the fall Jn of many, tons of brick from an ad Jolpirjs building. The falling mass crashed; through .the building, klllias a. nan4und woman- . , -j tbe-.-Sutter-atrcet Turkish .baths a "brick chissmey toppled over and tCoadu44 oe Taae X) PLAN TO IB Property-Owners in Consulta tibn With 'Architects. EX-MAYOR -PHElfAN - LEADS YIir Replace StructHres - on 'Market Street Merchants Order New . y Stocks Many Buildings Iiittlc Damaged SAN FRANClSCOAprll 22. Many-of hthe most. substantial business men and ppropertj; ownersvof San Francisco are in consultation with the ' architects, Vhile the work of clearing away tho debris &ocs forward a great corps of draughtsmen will be busily, occupied preparing plans for the new buildings. r . . - .i . . -r X t 15 UIIUCISIUUQ JUD;S. u. X IlClUIX will be one of the first to rebuild on Market street. His plans are not com 'plete'. but call in general for a flno structure at Market and O'Farrell streets.' Mr. Phelan recently purchased the property adjoining and reaching- to Stockton street. His intention Is to cover the entire frontage with build Ings as soon as it can be done.. All Banks to Bcbuild. 'Practfcally;everx bank: in-San Fran- .cisco will be rebuilt. AIL of. these in stitutlona have Eastern connections and "many of them are afSllated with foreign banks-. Owing- to the great Drosoerlty of San Francisco- the local institutions, almost without exception. have lance deposits to their credit in rNew York and European -capitals. This 'iKoney will be available at once, and after the strain of the moment 'has been relieved, building operations will bexta. - p. w. IdUcnthal. president of the "SngVe-Callfornia Bank, said: "Now is 'the 'time for every aan ' to put his JanuIfWr to the wheel to build UD'the 'new 'city. . There Is gelag to be a sew' 'cny. asd I am. going- wot an x'can tColed w I"ae .11.) 1 ENSON DEFEATS GATCH AT FINISH Very Close Run For Secretary of State. STEEL IS HOW AHEAD OF HOYT Clackamas Man is the Prob able Choice for Treasurer. WITHYC0MBE NOMINATED Cake Has a Lead in the Senatorial Contest That Cannot be Over- come and Duniway "Walked Away From Competitors. , KEPCBUCAN NOMINEES. Senator, short term. F. W. Mulkey. Senator, long term. H. M. Cak. Congressman, First District. "W. C. Hawley. Congressman. Second District. W. R. Ellis. Governor, James' Wlthycombe. Secretary "of State. F. W. Benson. State Treasurer, G. A. Steel. Supreme Judge. Robert Eakln. Superintendent Public InatrucUon, J. H. 'Ackerman. State -Printer. W. S. Duniway. Attorney-General. A. AT. Crawford. Labor Commissioner. O. P. HofC Frank W. Benson, of Roseburg. has apparently won the Republican nomina tion for Secretary of State, with Claud Gatch. of Salem, a very close second. Saturday night the returns, whlch'wera very incomplete, presented a 6mall plu rality for (Jatch. Yesterday figures were received which put Benson in the lead by 309 .to 00, with very little prospect of Gatch making up any considerable portion of this- difference. George A. Steel, of Clackamas County, has probably won out for State Treas urer over Ralph Hoyt. of Portland, by a very small plurality. There is some chance that complete returns may show Hoyt a winner, but the probability la that Steel's lead will increase rather than grow less. His plurality up to last night was 129. The counties not yet heard from are Curry. Lake. Crook. Grant. Harney and "Wheeler. The totals last night ?how Ben son 13,:T73 and Gatch 13,966, but Benson will add at least COO to his total by later returns from Douglas County. It Is conceded that Benson will havo Lake County by over 100 and Curry by a3 MEN ON" STATE TICKET WHO CARRIED MULTNOMAH. Plurality or Name and Office Majority. F. W. MutVey. V. S. Senator.... 7, SCO H. M. Cake. U. S. Senator 2.053 George S. Shepherd. Congress... 1.3SO T. T. Geer, Governor........... 1.7CT Claud Gatch. Secretary State.. 234 Ralph W. Hoyt. State Treasurer 767 Robert Eakln. Supremo Judge.. 0,729 A. M. Crawford. Attorney-Gen.. 133 J. H. Ackerman. Supt. Pub. In.10.133 tV. S. Duniway. State Printer... 3.157 O. P. HoCT, Labor Commissioner' 9.K72 A. F. Sears. Jr.. Circuit Judge.. 1,132 C. U. Gantenbeln, Circuit Judgo 111 much more. He may lose Harney Grant and Crook by a corresponding- amount, though 1C is not likely. He stands at least even chances In the few outlying precincts not included in rcturna from the counties that have reported. The visible plurality In favor of Steel was Increased by the returns from Klam ath County, which were received last night- Carter carried tho county, but is so far behind the other two that his lead there cannot help him. Steel had 63 votes in Klamath to 56 for Hoyt. Whether Hoyt can gather pluralities enough in Curry, Grant, Harney. Crook and Wheeler to . overcome this lead of 139 is doubtful. Hoyt put forth no spe cial effort in those counties. The East ern Oregon counties will probably give Aitkin a plurality and Hoyfs lead over Steel,- if any at all, in those counties, would not be much, while the prospects for pluralities there are as good for Steel aa for thc Portland man. This situation, looks very promising for Steel. The Gubernatorial contest looks like a certainty for "Wlthycombe, hl lead over Geer belny 1135. which It is believed Geer cannot possibly make up from returns re ceived In the future. On Congressman no returns have been received from Klamath, which has re ported incomplete returns on Senator, Governor. Secretary and Treasurer. f Cake leads Bourne for Senator by over MSA votes. The vote on state and district officers, so far as received, is as follows: Senator Bourne 10,131. Cake 11,265. Lowell 6047, Smith 5254, Watson 3316. Congressman. First District Hawiey 6595 Huston 3728, Tooze 5613. Congressman. Second District Ellis 6656, Lacbner 4133. "Rand 4053., Shepherd 5479. Governor Brown 4031. Geer 11,956, 'Csacluded ea Page 7.) J