The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, May 7, 1898, Page 3

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THE SAN FRA MANILA IS LOST TO SPAIN She Will Not Try to Re- take the Philippine Islands. War Departmen Troops as Soon as Dewey Says He Wants Them. NEW YORK, May 6.—The Herald’s Washington correspondent says: None of the members of the War Board believes for an instant that Spain will attempt to retake the Suez canal is open to her fleets, it whom I talked that the withdrawal to attempt the recapture of the Philippines would place not only Cuba and Porto Rico, but the Canaries an American warships on this coast. It was more probable, he said, that the United States would send ships canal to the Mediterranean to attack Spain’s Mediterranean coast than that the Madrid Government would pines; but either contingency he th NEW YORK, May 6.—The Herald's correspondent telegraphs: parations are in active progress for & dore Dewey's fleet e authorities are r tidi h will stance News, un- good t be at e has been heard nendation of the rd, Secretary Long has ar Department that the 1 has been Mare Island. > convoy the will therefore deter- arture of the Mare ted this morn- e War Depart- regiment of in- Peking, an T a ma- con- from he Herald s d by th 1bout 1e sides ing air of the he Spanish men-of- t of rounds rounds for for ty fiity b rounds for each one instructions Merr: with General to sail by 1g and other =d are in condition of what character until from. muc ard view of Commodore 1e authorities pri- not get down until he has his action upon upon Mani Dewey e ore sailed led him asking him unication with the de- is believed he arranged Wildman at Hongkong to t Ready to Send Philippines. Notwithstanding the was pointed out by an expert witn of sufficient force from the Atlantic d Spain itself at the mercy of the from the Pacific through the Suez order its ships to retake the Philip- ought decidedly remote. transmit to Washington all dispatches which he might forward by cable or dispatch boat. According to the ad- vices of the State Department Consul Wildman has had nothing authoritative from the American officer, and for the purpose of definitely settling the situa- tion and relieving anxietyitisunderstood he has sent a vessel to Manila to learn the exact condition of affairs, and upon its return will at once communicate with the department. In the meantime the authorities here have to content themselves with wait- ing for the return of the steamer sent by the Consul or for the receipt of a dis- patch which Commodore Dewey may send at any moment to Hongkong for transmission to Washington. It is be- lieved in naval circles that the steamer sent by the Consul carried to Manila the cable instructions sent ‘to Commodore ago by cretarv Dewey a few days Long, which were exclusively an- nounced in the Herald at the time. It is estimated by the officials" that some information should have reached it. suspended for half a day. And the soldiers! above them and for what those colors ago. band had the right of the line. City Councilmen and county officials colored badges and flags. sent delegations. tions, marching four abreast. School pupils. staff. fered concussion of the brain. At 10:15 o’clock the procession began to move. Grand Marshal R. H. Herron was on foot. John C. Cline and R. W. Pridham. The latter had as assistants F. I. Herron, Robert T. See and E. V. Sutton. The The Merchants’ and Manufacturers’ Association headed by the officers and board of directors turned out 300 strong and made a grand showing with its uniform, tri- LOS ANGELES, May 6.—The farewell of citizens of Los Angeles to the officers and men of the Seventh Regiment, which was extended this morning, was a kaleidoscope of color, a mixture of laughter, joy, sorrow, de- votion to duty, lofty patriotism and self-abnegation. People by thousands turned out to bid the citizen soldiers of the Seventh godspeed on their journey. pathway from the armory to the depot was strewn with flowers. The sidewalk and the streets up to the very line of march were banked with enthusiastic and admiring masses. departures of a similar nature in 61, were on hand. Buildings were decorated. All business, public and private, was The scene was one never Old and young, They showed the true warrior spirit. There were some to whom the musket was still an unknown quantity, whose head stooped from the severe perpendicular which comes only as a result of the trying “setting up” process that they will get at the Presidio or on board the troop ship. The city men swung along with alert step and slight, nervous figures; the country companies lands, Pomona and elsewhere were of men of heavier build, and kept their step in a more phlegmatic manner, but the faces of all, whether smiling or set, showed sternness and capacity for daring and doing that proved casual observer that these were worthy scions of the heroes of Bunker Hill, Chapultepec and Shiloh. 5 There were boys and men in the ranks, going into the unknown, away from all that their hearts clung to, aban- doning their life careers, braving the greatest terror and horror the world has ever known—for there in the past been battles like the ones to come, in dreadiulness and destruction—all for the love of the colors that floated stand for. From daylight until the hour of departure the armory was astir with hasty preparations for the long march. By 9 o’clock the streets on both sides of it were closely crowded. The iron gates at the foot of the stairway were guarded by a couple of soldier boys, and the sidewalk was kept clear by a good-natured detail. arrive by 8 o’clock, and poured in for an hour from all directions. Nearly every one carried a bouquet presented not long before, as could be seen in the solemn soldier face. Of gourse there were red eyes and white handkerchiefs; tears from all sides at the retreating forms as the boys went up the stairs for their last preparations. down and before they fell in line for the first real march in their lives there was many a pathetic parting, and, to look at the older women, many a heart-break, for the mothers remembered another leave-taking First came a platoon of followed the grand marshal. All the Los Angeles members of the Native Sons were out in force, while Pasadena, Redlands and Riverside The Native Sons carried the national banner at the head of their line, with color guards. Then came members of the Chamber of Commerce, headed by the officers of the organization, who carried the colors, and were followed by representatives of the Board of Trade. About 250 men represented these two organiza- A brass band preceded the Jonathan Club, each club member carrying a flag. The first volunteers of Southern California, with 150 men in line, followed the club men. School delegation, 100 strong, came next, followed by the local Fire Department. The Knights Templar drill corps, thirty strong, followed, with 200 Knights of Maccabees, 100 mem- bers of the Americus Club of Pasadena and about 1000 veterans,of the Civil War. Then came the Seventh Regiment, with Brigadier General Last at the head of the column, accompanied by his At the depot a crowd of 20,000 people gathered. Amid great cheering and a tremendous display of enthusiasm the train pulled out, and the Seventh Regiment had gone to the war. BAKERSFIELD, May 6.—Private Prine of Company C fell from the train two miles from Saugus and suf- Prine is being taken along on the train. SCO CALL, SATURDAY, MAY 7, 1898 mothers, wives and sweethearts gazed through their He was resting easily at a late hour. SEVENTH REGIMENT OFF TO THE WAR Twenty Thousand People at Los An- geles Give the Southern Californians ~a Rousing Send-=0ff. to be forgotten by those who beheld Their men and women who had witnessed from Red- to the most have never The men began to As they came thirty-seven years police, thirty officers. The Catalina His aids were Messrs. Max Meyberg, The State Normal A brass band headed 500 High VILL FULFILL them from Manila by this time. The attack and destruction of the Spanish the bombardment of Manila occurred twenty-four hours later, in accordance ultimatum. It was presumed that this bombardment was a matter of a com paratively short time, and was over by Monday night or Tuesday morning. The fortifications then left to prevent progress of a dispafch boat were se at the mouth of the harbor. As Commodore Dewey found no difficulty in passing these fortifications on Sun- day without discovery, it is not believed | in naval circles that a dispatch boat would have any difficulty in getting out. It is sixty hours’ run from Manila to Hongkong, so that information ought to have been received at the British port this morning. “I don't see any cause for anxiety,” said a prominent official to me this af- ternoon. “Commodore Dewey, mark my words, wants to do the thing in the style that he has selected. He does not want to be bothered by instructions 1 Sunday a week ago from Washington, because Washington | 4 | ion and he does not know his pos rangements for keeping in might be embarrassed by what is sent | him from here. He's all right, and when he thinks proper he will communi- cate with Secretary Long.” before the Cabinet the information he 11- fleet occurred on Sunday morning, and { ALL ITS DUT[ES | . 100 rounds for each yith the terms of Commodore Dewey’s | | Emperor William Tells of the Stand of Germany | as to the War. On the Other Hand Commerce and Navigation Are to Be | Duly Protected. | The Kaiser Also Speaks With Satis- | faction of the Footholds Secured in the Far East Spectal Dispatch to The Call. BERLIN, May 6.—The ceremony of closing the session of the Reichstag took place to-day in the White Hall of | the Royal Castle. The Emperor in the speech from the throne, after referring | to the fruitful legislative results of the session, including the increases of the | security o guarantee of the maintenance of Euro- pean peace have been secured,” em- army and navy, “whereby the peaceful | f the empire and an increased | Journals on Sampson Copyrighted, 188, by Mercantil (Government organ). ters to enable them to pay it. “Our fields require fertilizer. 0CCO0O000CO000000C000 the flesh of Yankees.”—La Union. | paper on the preceding. COMPLIMENTS OF PORTO RICO TO THE YANKEES Some of the Comment d’f‘the< James Gordon Bennett. SAN JUAN, Porto Rico, April 23.—I send you some examples of Spanish compliments to their “friends over the water,” as published in some of the leading periodicals in the Island 6f Porto Rico: “These dogs of English and those Yankee pigs.” *Treacherous and fraudulent pigs of Yankees.” “All the nations of Europe are friends of Spain with the one ex- ception of that grasping, ambitious and piratical England.”—Botelin “When fortune favors us in war, as it must; when we have made an immer se bonfire of that proud city of Washington and leveled New York in the dust, we will ;place on that treacherous nation such a heavy indemnity that they will have to sell us their wives and daugh- Viva’ Espana.”—Botelin Mercantil. The bones of Yankees will make ex- cellent manure, and with that we will fertilize them.”—El Heraldo. “It is proposed shortly to set up a factory to make sausages from “That could only result in filthy nastiness.”—Comment of another the Island Will Take. 000000000000 0C0O000000 | Commodore Schley that | bunkers. 0000000000000 0000000000000000C00000 PREPARED ‘TO FIGHT THE FLEET Admiral Sam the Report pson Awaits of Cruiser Scouts. If the Spanish Warships Are Bound for Porto Rico They Will Be In tercepted. ‘Washington correspondent sends the following: Rear-Admiral Sampson is now fully prepared to meet the Spanish fleet. Though no information has come from him, officials of the Navy Department are confident he has reached the sea where, with the vessels under his command, he will await the | reports from the auxiliary cruiser scouts, which will inform him of the lo- | cation and direction of the Spanish vessels. One of his scouts, the St. Paul, has} been held back, and will not go to sea | until to-morrow morning. She is to be | more closely attached to the fighting | squadron than her three sister ships, | which have preceded her to sea. She | carries a much heavier armament than some of the other scouts, and, under | command of Captain Sigsbee, she will doubtless take a hand in the expected | battle, where her high speed would make her particularly effective in man- euvering and cutting out and destroy- ing any of the torpedo-boat destroyers of the enemy which might become sep- arated from thé armored ships. It is still the general belief at the| Navy Department that the -Spanish | fleet is bound for Porto Rico, though | some officers are inclined to the belief | that under cover of darkness on the | first night out it may have turned | northward to the Canary Islands or to Cadiz, to combine with the Cadiz fleet, or that it may have gone southward to the nelghborhood of Cape St. Roque to | lie in wait for the Oregon, Marietta and | Nictheroy. As time passes and no ves- sel arriving at either Funchal, Gibral-/| tar or Lisbon reports having sighted the Spanish vessels, the theory that | they have gone to the northward is| weakened. Advocates of the theory | that the Spanish admiral has sailed | NEW YORK, May 6.—The Herald's! southward to iIntercept the Oregon think it is quite probable he will take up a position in the neighborhood of Fernando Noronba, a small island lying to the northeast of Cape St. Roque and almost directly in the ordinary steamer track from Rio Janeiro to the North Atlantic Ocean. Captain Clark was informed by cable of all that was known here as to the movements of the Spanish fleet. He was given discretion as to the route by which he should come north, and, while nothing is known as to his intentions, it is thought he will go well to the eastward of Fernando Noronba so as to avoid the Spaniards if they should be waiting for him in that neighbor- hood. That the Spanish fleet has not gone to the Canaries is believed by naval officers here to be definitely proved by the Herald’s cable stating that on May 4 there were no Spanish warships at those islands. It is only 876 miles from St. Vincent in Cape Verde to Las Pal- mas in the Canaries, and as the fleet sailed from St. Vincent on April 29, it would have arrived at Las Palmas long before May 4 if that had been its des- tination. It is still possible, however, that the fleet may have gone to Cadliz, though this is thought to be improb- able. The knowledge that there are no Spanish war vessels at the Canaries tends to strengthen the idea that the three torpedo-boats which left St. Vin« cent in company with the coal and sup- ply vessel on the same day that the larger vessel of the Spanish fleet salled, are now with that fleet. If this is true it is important, as these small craft would greatly hamper the fleet in its progress across the Atlantic and would reduce its speed considerably, thus glv- ing Admiral Sampson more time to make his preparations for the expected battle and making it more certain that the American scouts will fall in with the Spanish fleet. cious characters in the town Mayor Land and Chief of Police Dwyer have ordered the powder houses in the out- skirts of the city guarded night and day, and to-night men heavily armed are watching them. HAS RETURNED ‘TO SCHLEY'S COMMAND. Again the Crack Cruiser Minneapolis Is With the Vessels of the Fly- ing Squadron. NEW YORK, May 6.—A Newport News (Va.) special to the Herald says: Again the crack cruiser Minneapolis is under Commodore Schley’s command. The Cape Henry Signal Station report- ed her passing into Hampton Roads at half-past 3 o’clock {uis afternoon, and at 5 o'clock she came to a full stop off 0ld Point, and Captain Jewell signaled it would be necessary for him to replenish his coal The Minneapolis was at once | given permission to run up to Newport News for coal, and by 6 o’clock heavily loaded barges were alongside the cruis- er transferring fuel to her bunkers. The cruiser will return to Old Point at day- break. 1t is reported that the cruiser. New Orleans, which was expected to arrive some time to-day, has entered Virginia Capes, and is waiting outside until morning to safely pass the submarine mines. AR I Bernabe and the War. TORONTO, Ontario, May 6.—Senor Polo de Bernabe was seen to-day re- garding the report that he has been called to Madrid by the Spanish Gov- ernment at the instance of Lord Salis- bury. He characterized the report as absurd. He will leave to-night for | Montreal, where he will stay until he receives instructions. Senor_ Bernabe claims that the war has only begun. el CUBA FOR THE AMERICAN NEGROES. El Pais Advances a New Theory as to Why Uncle Sam Wants the Island. Copyrighted, 1898, by James Gordon Bennett. HAVANA, May 6.—El Pais this morning publishes a long article say- ing that colored people are ill-treated in the United States, and that the Liberia republic was founded by Americans to get rid of the negro, and that the plan having failed, Cuban an- nexation, with laws favoring the im- migration of negroes from the South, is the idea which many American po- litical men entertain, rather than that of securing a market for American pro- ducts or a monopoly in Cuban tobacco. The Cuban people, it says, should bear this in mind in connection with the American statement that for the sake of American civilization all other pow- ers should concur in the action to pre- vent the plan of autonomy from being carried into effect. _— e Encountered Calms. The American bark Sonoma, command- ed by Captain Landgreen, reached this port las night from Newcastle, New South Wales. It took 111 days to make the passage on account of the light winds encountered. There were forty-six days of the trip during which there was a dead calm. The bark is loaded with coal. OFFICERS MUST HAVE MERIT McKinley Will Not Select Men Who Have No Experience. Provision of the Sinews of War a Serious Subject Considered by the Csbinet. There Is a Fear That the Senate Will Leave Out the Bond Provision in the Revenue Bill, Special Dispatch to The Call Call Office, Riggs House, Washington, May 6. Besides the war situation in its gen- eral aspect, there was some discussion at the Cabinet meeting to-day of the relative merits of the persons seeking brigadier-generalships and other com- missions in the army. The President expressed himself very pronouncedly as opposed to the appointment to such responsible positions of those who have had no military experience. One feature of the session was a dis- cussion of the attitude of the Senate in providing the “sinews of war” for de- fraying theexpenditures of thewar. The President has received positive infor- mation that the Senate Committee on Flnance, which is still struggling with the war revenue bill, will report that measure with the bond feature elimin- ated. This fact is causing the adminis- tration much uneasiness and embar- rassment, and the statement is mage that the possibility of adverse action of the full body of the Senate is a source of much anxiety, The President laid the Senate, and while not expressing | German foreign policy, “while at the absolute confidence in favorable action | game time vigorously protecting Ger- had as to what is to be looked for from | phasized the pacific character of the | by the Senate with the bond feature | reincorporated, expressed the hope | that there would be a satisfactory ma- | jority for the bond provision. | ~ Should it not,becorae a part of the :Iu\\‘ many urgent appropriations for | the war will have to be held back. The | money to be secured from bond sales, it is reported, is needed imperatively | for the execution of the plans mapped | out, and adverse action by the Senate | would be likely to interfere unless the | money is otherwise provided, and by | as speedy method as the issuance of bonds. The administration is anxious to im- press this fact upon Congress in order that ample revenues may be at hand for a vigorous prosecution of the war. There was considerable gratification | evident at the session at the general war outlook. There was a strong belief that the | Spanish fleet, instead of sailing across | the seas to intercept the Oregon or to come over into the watersynear home to begin operations, would be found event- ually to be now progressing for some point closer its own possessions on the other side of the pond. While there is great reliance on the part of all the members of the administration on the subject, there is excellent authority for the statement that the instructions of Admiral Sampson give him great latitude. THE TEMERARIO HAS ARRIVED AT MONTEVIDEO. Spanish Residents of That City Give the Dynamite Gun Vessel an Enthusiastic Reception. 5 Ceryrighted, 1598, by James Gordon Bennett. BUENOS AYRES, May 6.—The Her- ald correspondent in Montevideo, Uru- guay, sends word that the Spanish torpedo-gunboat Temerario has arrived there. When she reached port the Spanish residents of the city gave her an enthusiastic reception. Word comes from the Herald’s correspondent in Rio Janeiro, Brazil, that after a conference with the President the Minister of the Navy sent orders to the authorities of northern states to prevent y viola- tion of azilian neutrality in case of an encounter between American and Spanish vessels in Brazilian waters. | man rights.” Referring to the war between Spain | his Majesty | and the United States, said: “The Government will fully fulfill the | quties involved by its neutral position, | but, on the other hand, will protect, so far as possible, German navigation | and commerce from molestation or in- | Jury.” | "In regard to the Chinese question the | Emperor said: “The dispatch of a squadron to Kiao- chau to demand atonement for the blood of German missionaries made it | possible to satisfy our long cherished | and fully just desire to obtain footholds | in Eastern Asia_capable of commercial | development and military defense. This has been accomplished by a friendly | understanding with China and with- out disturbance of the relations be- tween Germany and other states.” After alluding to the settlement of the Greek finances the speaker said it was the earnest endeavor of the Emperor and his federal allies to promote the | economic development of the empire, mitigate the burdens of agriculturists and assure the security and expansion of trade and navigation. X His Majesty concluded by thanking the Reichstag for the discharge of its “important dutie: OBJECT TO THEIR COMMANDING OFFICERS. DENVER, May 6.—A sensation was caused in military circles to-day when Companies A and C of the First Regi- ment of the National Guard voted not to enlist in the new consolidated regi- ment of volunteers because they object to the officers appointed by the Gdver- nor to command them. Twenty of the seventy-three members of Company A, which is from Denver, finally con- sented to enlist, but Company C, from Longmont, refusel in a body. The chaplain of the regiment was a mem- ber of Company C and will retire with the company. Spain’s Big Floating Debt. MADRID, May 6, 2 p. m.—It is an- nounced that the floating debt of Spain was increased during the month of April last by 12,244,391 pesetas, NO ANNEXATION THIS SESSION White Says the Senate Has No Time to Dis- cuss the Matter. Declares the Scheme a Game of Sugar Planters to Bull Their Stock. It Is Now Believed That Sampson’s Fleet Will Soon Take Posses- sion of Porto Rico. Special Dispatch to The Call. Call Office, Riggs House, ‘Washington, May 6. Senator White said to The Call cor- respondent to-night that there was no chance for the Hawailan annexation resolution to pass the Senate. “It is merely a game of the Hawaiian sugar planters to bull their stock, which re- cently slumped,” said he. Senator ‘White added that the Senate would be ready to adjourn by June 1, and there would be no time to properly discuss Hawaiian annexation. The administration has nassed an- other day of anxious waiting for news from Manila. While the President and his advisers profess a cheerful philos- ophy in discussing the various theories to account for Commodore Dewey’s silence, they are unable to conceal the apprehension they feel lest all is not * {well with the gallant commander and | his brave saflors. The executive offi- cers of the department who are familiar with the cable service in all parts of the world are surprised that at Hong- kong there is no definite news of Dew- ey's fleet, for had the slowest vessel of his squadron left Manila Wednesday night, more than three days after the victory over the Spanish fleet, its dis- patches would have been placed on the wires several hours ago. Certain offi- clals who take a more cheerful view of the situation declare that Dewey's pro- gramme has not been understood at the department; that he is engaged in reducing the fortifications of the Phil- ippines in detail, and that until he has finished his work he will not only send no word to the department but will take no steps in looking to the restora- tion of cable communication, which would mean the opening up of a chan- nel through which he might receive or- ders from Washington that would prove most unwelcome in view of the status of affairs in the islands. Vete- ran naval officers declare Dewey should have a free hand until his great task is completed, and are disposed to con- gratulate him on the opportunity to work untrammeled by the directions of superior officers. It is confidently believed that Ad- miral Sampson’s fleet will take Porto Rico within the next forty-eight hours; indeed, it would not be surprising to learn at any hour that San Juan had surrendered and that blue jackets were policing the old Spanish towns. The orders Sampson has received as to the assault upon Porto Rico leave much to his discretion, especially witl. reference to the important question as to the whereabouts of the Spanish fleet. Havana will not “- bombarded until the fleet has been located, and if found in Cuban waters not until it has been disposed of, but the situation with ref- erence tg Porto Rico is different. Its capture presents no strategic difficul- ties nor peril to the astacking fleet, and at the same time it is highly important that it should be taken by our forces to prevent the Spanish squadron from using it as a military base. Hence Sampson ma¥ even now be demandin; the surrender of San Juan, which lje: at the mercy of the shotted guns of his formidable fleet. Guarding Powder-Houses. SA MENTO, May 6—Owing to the presence of strangers and suspi- ! ADVERTISEMENTS. S i SO o S TR DB i ALASKA AND KOTZEBUE SOUND STEAMERS. Johnson-Locke Mercantile Company, Agents, “GOLD PICK LINE,” 609 MARKET STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, L] ‘Will_dispatch the ’ggl‘lv;)fl&grg;cl%fii\!;t!e‘a;n!e(r:lsmay gt.h JE SOUND, DU . NUNIV. LAND, HOR KOTa BSAY. ST. MICHAEL AND DAWSON CITY. The newly built triple expansion steamer, “GRACE DOLLAR. 7pon arrival In ST. MICHAEL passengers for DAWSON CITY will be trans. un-régom the newly built, highly-powered river boats and barges “RIDEOUT, “GOLD STAR,” “PINAFORE" and others. The “GRACE DOLLAR’ then will proceed without delay to KOTZEBUE SOUND, where passengers will be disem- barked and placed upon the river steamer “ARCTIC BIRD"” and will be given free passage up the Putnam River as far as FORT COSMOS. The Pacific Coast and Kotzebue Sound Transportation and Trading Company whi also maintain at KOTZEBUE SOUND a warehouse. Parties contempiating a trip to KOTZEBUE SOUND are strongly advised to take passage on the “GRACE DOLLAR.” She has a newly built triple expansion engine for the highest power; her bows will be sheathed so as to permit her making her way through the breaking ice; and the “GRACE DOLLAR” without question will be the Bral vessel reaching KOTZEBUE SOUND this year. May 2th—JOHNSON-LOCKE MERCANTILE COMPANY, Agents, Will dispatch for DUTCH HARBOR, NUNIVAK ISLAND, HOOPER'S BAY, ST. MICHAEL and DAWSON CITY, the steamship “TILLAMOOK,” Connecting at ST. MICHAEL with the steamers “STAGHOUND,” “GAMECOCK,” “CITY OF DAWSON" and other boats. _ June 1st—JOHNSON-LOCKE MERCANTILE COMPANY, Agents, Will dispatch for ST. MICHAEL, DAWSON CITY and YUKON RIVER POINTS the magnificent steamer “ NORGAN CITY,” 'HOOPER'S acity, 700 passengers and 2000 tons of freight. The “MORGAN CITY" connects f{“’s’r yICH‘XEL vgfith the “GAME COCK,” “STAGHOUND,” “FOWELL,” “AL- VISO, RIDEOUT,” “GOLD STAR” and “CLAN MACDONALD.” Satlings of three additional ocean steamers early in June will be announced by, us within a few days. ¥ Passenger and Freight Office, - JOHNSON- LOCKE MERCANTILE COMPANY, 609 Market Street, San Francisco. 112 Yessler Way, Seattle. 809 Home Insurance Building, Chicago.

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