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The VOLUME LXXXIV.—NO 110. SAN FRANCISCO, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 18 189S—THIRTY-TWO PAGES PRICE FIVE CENTS. GENERAL BARNES OPENS THE REPUBLICAN CAMPAIGN the lifetime of nations—that ~the Ha-| streams of China and getting down to a| The Phillppines 1s @ splendid territory, | said here to-nignt, that every ofe for wallan Islands | point where, when the time comes, they | with vast capabilities for production, w the Republican QRAQOBOODN Lere occupied by | will be ready 1o shove the Engiish army | ability to produce just what we need- | ROVLOLURAD ket m ( i reat A S Sem bl a e G re et 5 pGreatChangesyp Bic'*lyetams and forces out of, Shanghal sad Hone |5 080 SO0 foB%), P, (o 1S A Little 2 indorscment” 5 g Taking p that (Jow exists | Is spending $2,000.00000 for fun? They fire!’ & Philippines s Nor tHe itrow. {& Ancient & Mintseration, and o o the, Phillp- intending to dismember those great coun- o éclierln‘};%%rg the | 2 el e 'S, e na- |t And ther vill be lon be- | -~ o 3, 1} dis- | s Place. ey Hawalins Do et ey | & @ Splendid @ fnguishea gen- | 5 History, 2 ¥ Cnacmnation ke o e 3 like the Filipino, | want those countries for their trade. The | & i 1 tleman say that| 5 of it. What is /. .fi?fi?fib{‘?g’c Is [ Of the pure | whole contest of the world to 1s for | g 1erritory. o Moomouid qUeL the C‘h‘agqaf‘ :r\ofi. S i e r r ] alay type, and they were living In a: trade. And America has now entered the | Inited S e 3| thinking of who calls himself a Silver a O a e l O_ state of ‘absolute barbarism. There were | lists. She fs no longer a nation of farms; |G G QUAT VRGO §0.0000 tomaln- | Republican, or who can vote for Maguire all the features we so much talki{she s no longer a people who cannof | tain government in Manila, and right on | becauge of the silver That s as about in the Philippine Islands as a rea- tacture what she needs for her own | the heels of that came a dispatch from | dead as anything by possibility can be. son why we should not take them. They Her abllity to produce is|General Otis saying they did not nced any | That question was submitted to the peo- tell us about the Philippines—that there | ess of her capacity to con- | financial tance from the Government | ple of this country in the last election s 0 ® > are storms thero; there are monsaons | sume. lrficausvfl u&; :!ulles collected there Upon | and was passed upon. The suc t there: thero aro earthquakes thera, What | - The changes that have been made with. | the goods that even now were admitted at | the Democratic ticket in this State would l an e p e. is there in the Hawalian Islands? Just|in {he 1ast-few years are prodigious and | the port of Manila were paying the entire | not enable this Government to put silver the e -“E‘T‘d"f ST H}ey "T'g ab{mh astonishing. In- | efi\‘:;‘sl’;‘nfl;&};l‘o?m“get?;:;gcmm s (-n‘lht' par of gold at the ratio of 16 to 1, hiristianized somewhat since 15 Vet | stea » = S L 4 Y 1 i spen of o o] of y a handful of Americans, a mere mmdf:xfi paananee o ;J;J:ud ‘gf‘ euba':;la want this subject investigated. We wiil g;n‘nl)r\ ‘:f‘::nl;o“rnm»eo(t';r;:» ’;;lluh‘e “fi ‘l\-tl;:?é in comparison with the population of | & America being agalnst the | have it investigated, and it will be inves-| gt move them toward it at all. Sut those islands, have turned t into a com- | X Unitea States, it | {Igated by those who believe In the annex- | these gentlemen who talk so much about cial center; have made the islands | gy Must g is for it. Since | atlon of the islands. the condition of these foreign countrics vastly productive, and have held them | % the inauguration | Thonor the pmd"}:‘ceh“f the great states’ | will remember perhaps what regret was open for the broadest and the widest cul- | & Expand. L of Willilam Me- | man Who sits at the helm of our ship of | expended upon the ble rtion of the O against it means tween them. And why? found peace, $260,000,000. Perhaps it is in reference to that that the Democratic | party objects to any moreinterest-bearing bonds. 1 should think it would. Some of the Fa”acies of the Popo__. But how is it with us? Is there a sin- gle one of the long list of illustrious men who since the ad- | ture ‘There are co! s and schools . Kinley this has land in which we now the great Cl‘ tiC D t . .d QRABALA A RO O vent of the He. | there, all the result of American mission- | F R RVV LSV AR l*:‘:tereded ‘\\"Llnlllhi statesmen of the time when California a I a Q blican party ; T it Lretlil cam to the Unjon. DEE 1 o The Record g %i.‘iw‘!.fi-‘ti, 851 has = atrides that this. vesr. Sthe . bajenoe Now here is something I am going to of trade in our favor will very consider- ably exceed one billion dollars. What does that mean? It means that the read to you: Fiity-nine years ago last spring Duntel Web= spread its galaxy L= of the T Ll Bare. D ot pames before & i <3 : American mechanic, the man who builds ger in the course oi an auaress Lo uis fellow o Republicans. people. each: one everything, from a birdcage to a_steam- 140 il SErVIcs to CAlltoma : tiaWhat 46 | g , ang | engine, with his s! and improved ma- / v vith this vast worthiess area, th _— QOOOAURQAG when we call | Chinery can build better machines and l TOZIOn ‘ol snvages andtwlld. hehota of assertsr 7 A s thoughGiod h:‘;l ‘“€ ‘”5‘00[]1‘ lh:; | sell them cheaper, even at the high wages ‘ ot shifting sands and whurlwig ? 'Tv what The Republican State campaign was opened in this city last evening 0 many grand names that they M Gt U howe Shdieds motniain ranees, they can build them for themselves. It erts ur tho we pay our laborers and mechan [ € light the arch of the sky and make i ¢ 2 § enetrable covered to their by a mass-meeting at Metropolitan Temple. The speaker of the evening ! it burn and blazon with illimitable and L i eternal WML vins S fi (Great applause.) Lincoln, With the western coast, a coast of 3000 miiles, was General W. H. L. Barnes, than whom there is no more eloguent orator| Grant, Hayes, Garfieli—the long list of rock bound, cheerless and | the great men of our nation. ending with . with no harbor {0 it? What use ha r such & west of the Mississippi River. The building, which has become historical as | s riesldentoare At dorbe plined bt 1 B s i 3 5 3 1 | side by side with the lovers and apostles acifie C g a rallying point for politicians, was filled to overflowing with an enthusiastic | of liberty; with men of broad experience, Ty cEosst g0 e earee Doavon San iiF(w | sreat judgment and perfectly pure patri- e That was the view of the greatest statesman of his tume. We know how every inch of the territory that has been acquired by this Government has been met with opposition, resistance on the part of very many thinking men, who believed the constitution of the United States could never be siretched over so vast a territory without cracking and going to piece: When “Thomas Jefferson, favorably mentioned, 1 am happy to say, in the Democratic platform adopted here the other day, purchased tne Louisiana terri- tory of the French Government from the Emperor Napoleon for fifteen million and odd dollars that great genera. and eon- queror Jaid down lis pen and said, “I have this day signed a decree which will audience, and it is estimated that more than a thousand people were turned | o=, that will make theif names live e homas Je away In his address dis H | will be so forgotten that the Democ . by ss General Barnes discussed at length the issuss of tfie‘ % l‘““y Vel eI anE R o e s campaign, an / 7 ; o | and won’t remember what they have got ‘, g . paid pa.r!lcu/ar attention to the principles represented by | {3 FIO b teme rie ALaushiarsod oo Judge Maguire and his motley foilowing. He also took occasicn 1o pay His plause.) As eompliments to M. H. de Young and his political ambitions. The presiding | 570Ghat of the & Letween the Democratic platform at Sacramento an party adopted : re are very few dit- - erences. . ¢ b officer of the evening was Hon. Horace Davis. foreign pol l«\hf it STt mlf' hey belleve that William McKinley has V. | conducted the foreign relations of this ¥ Iad Metropolitan Temple been twice its| Louderback, Duncan McNes, Charl e ze it would still have been too| Plerce, Charles Havens, H. Willi | country with integrity. ability and great nodate the crov that| Henry \lpblu:mrra. w. BunSQ w. | wisdom, why don’t they vote for him? o et i gl fowan. | Why da they stand aside and fail to say E | Mallory, n ; way Fran sh Wi H T Revnes] L to him in the only way they can say “Well done, good and faithful servant « ing of the Repub- N. H Burm- | (4 bplause.) make the United States the rival of Eng- city \Jflnfir:i:h»r;)hr:-rl»;_ i\xff,(flprf.' hey know very well that nothing but land.” And yet on our own soil Mr. Jef- seat In the building was S Hend . H. Umbsen, praise would go down to-day with the ferson was abused, lampooned even by our before the time set for | Oscar Lewls, M. F. Tay C. Hendry, | American people. The nation would just the people of his own party, and it was D sl ot e 5. C. Palmerl, P. T. Morgan, C. B. Rode, |as soon endure a sli~ht and an Insull to v Mculty he could obtain the e ¢ 2 Harn Chase, C. H. Mayers, 1. Zeller- Dewey of Manila or Schley of S: iago as ry appropriation to uire that e § o'clock every bach, J. P. M. Phillips, Frank K. Spencer, | to Willlam McKinley. =~ (Renewed ap- splendid territory that until recently has vy was filled. From | E. T. Lampe, Andrew Wilkle, John J. Bea- | plause.) time when the audi- | m H. C. Firbaugh, F. A Malstceltl | They condemn the policy of the Gov- ed re Was never 2| Oriemon J. m onrean W p Senneton. | €rnment In raising war revenue. They comers could galn so| C. E. Crelghton, Wililam 11 Abbowt, |&lways objected to that. There never was N 1o th fitecibr ot |1 200 . Khmsuan, 8. H. Xeat -3, F. bill of Republican revenue with which \ been supposed to inciude all of our north- west territory from Washington to the - Gulf of Mexico. How was it in 1819, when we took from Spain the Floridas? It was attacked on eve hand as an ubpneces- sary act. How was it when we annexed Texas? The voice of ball of the Ameri- \ a a i e B D Eire M Cooney. Joha ¥, | they aid not find fault. And vet, fellow SRS presented an | Muhoney, John Dolbeer, C. W. Tuber, Jacob | citizens, if you will follow their speakers o contrast to the empty benches | Tyl Jr. Themas M_Coleman, D Laydon. | throush this cam 1, although they can peoplo were protesting against it. and i Jucge waguire ‘talked in the | C M Kiane ‘Aowust Schumacher. G 'L |will denounce tue actiof of the Republi- that magnificent empire, so rich and fer- lding one we. o. v 4. 3. Gullfoy . Dodge, Milton E. | can majority .8 In le B ) : v ot Hévan iding one week ago. | T e T e R g e T n majority in Congress 1 NE TeV: tile, filled to-day with between seven and enue for the purpose of defraying the ex- ten’ millions of American citizens. came into the Union more strongly resisted than any other portion of this country has ever come. And when under the treaty of Guadaloupe Hidalgo we bought from Spain the land in which we now live, including Nevada, Utah and Arizona, men like Mr. Webster thought that coun- try was such as 1 have described it to you. They tell us that the Hawaiian Islands are 7100 miles away from An:‘l vet ; Mr. Seward in DO L RRUDDDDY 3557 “purchased, b Q right at_ the g Valuable 10 5 close of our address ered by General | D. W. McNelll, Captain Gunderson, W. H. o ¢ - dell 3 | Nelll, 3 nses of the war, they won't Jay their ©s was everything that was to be h‘«mr;.“ Tt nger on a single item oyrn_ becnfl‘sclnwv ed from the man who : . Viatoher W Bionet ETIC X atgens can’t. There has never been a rcvenue ne of the most brii-| 8 "I ‘THornton, Edmond L. Schiugel, | Mmensure more fair, more fust to all the United States.' He | Bates, A. C. Bauer, F. Arota, | interests of the entire nation—that pro- Judge ‘Maguire and e I A Keirs, S | tects as much the poor and has levied & pon the principles | Wlleox, H. M Gray, A.'Gerberding, E. P. | much upon the rich as the revenue bil g 4 . Barrett, W. R. Morton, John Whitiington, | which is now in force, and which within the I C. F. Tway, A. G. Hagedorn, C. A. Merrill, | the next year in all probability will pay Deorson Nichals, C, M the expenses of the war. (Applause.) e Our friends of the Democratic party, un- e £ Ol » the Republican party, have nothir Fellow Republicans and ladies and gen- | say for the old soldfer. 1t has no ,‘n'e'rifi,r‘f- tlemen: On Wednesday night last in| for him. But we have, and we say that this building was | the men who fought : £ DO KA o s bullding was | the men who fought the battles of the na ¢ the benefit of ties of Maguire nitiative an he and his part : sudience how|publican party and it is its cry to-day. Mapuire. B L0 0 Sh e Like ourselves, the Democratic ?fi-iv 1s " there wereamong | in favor of the construction of the Nicar- SO HG GO D chem how many e Populists and Socfalists and how many al- | G (X XXX O O L that we are unit- leged Silver Republicans. The sheep were =3 % o ed,and that is the not separated from the goats. And they Favor the policy of the Re- sat together in apparent harmony, not|%& £ publican party, to fighting for the triumph of principle, not | & Nicaragua u» Lund the Nicar- struggling for the maintenance of Some aguan Canal—to reat system which should make this| & Canal. £ cut oft that long, inted refere n of M. H ed States gentleman h " rs, the territory SUUIVVOGUT of " Alaska for seven million dollars, and the peace and happiness of the old gentleman's la days were greatly impaired by the abuse and ridicule and libe to which he A8 subjected by the American pre for pur- chasing a country that could only be ap- proached through desolate and stormy seas that were ice-bound and perilc To-day, while we bought it for seven mi tion are entitled to protection, and to prot- i ‘ : 2 A Word ey but oh. how | erence. where other things are 9'4“«’1"1-"0‘0 “the Americans :\I:n)rrni]::u:rhick:“:\"e‘ o gy different! It wasjull sorts of public employment. (Ap- f=3 Nati © spent three thou- oty e About & impossible to say| plause) ation. nd million dol- i the matioian | % in looking at that| That has been the doctrine of the Re- Xt o de | Btace and thi nation wiser and better | £t o ledious terribld TRARLEB IR 3N it i and happier, but to win a political vie- journey that our s as ericin enterprise | tory, Ahe momines of that party Is a | = o SEXERXRIRIONG (ITeY Seat Do Just as soon as American enterprise and experience of American mine ve traced its glacial deposits to their center and shall have found the mother lode, Alaska will give to the world more than the world has ever yet produced. And Mr. Seward got it r seven million dol- terest to the people | Béntleman whom I have known since his | must take In order to reach one side ind which | have | Brst Tise into politics, about 1880, and I|or the other of the continent—because, fel- A e, 4l | have followed his course with interest, | low citizens, the time I8 coming, yea, the with Spain. His| it with difficulty. (Laughter.) He hand is knocking at the door that will country shouid | a multiform inteliectual structure. ~(Re- | make it necessary for this nation to pro- sround won by | newed laughter.) He has been on every | tect itself, not merely from those that lle o = [y I Hi v \ \ "! iy i i | 4 : Therefore 1 that the lessons s greeted | side of every question and now he is on | across the Atlantic Ocean, but from those lars e e A S s Bett mo | all sides of every question at once. (Ap-|who are dismembering ‘the Empire of of history to us are that these territo ries, wherever we can acquire them hon- orably, are valuable to the American na- tion in extending its commerce and throwing out its outer defenses. The Democratic platform says that th\\‘g‘ hope that thing will be investigated. It will be done, but their statesmen will treat it exactly as they treated the ac- quisition of Hawaii—fight it to the last hour of recorded time. Mr. Maguire the other night did not point to his record on the Haw tion. He did not point to his recs anything in particular, and we will call attention to it here ight. He accept- d laughter.) China. They agree with us, then, that ; none but kind words for Ma-|the Republican policy In regard to the mblage. guire. 1 do not desire to (ndulge in the | Nicaraguan Canal should be fully carried ied over the | libel of language any more than I would |out. They why don't they sustain the Re- 1&g to order | if 1 had a newspaper indulge in the libel | publican Administration? of print. 1 do not belleve a party was| Their platform differs from ours in that ever helped by caricature. 1 do not be-| We approve of the acquisition of the Ha- lieve a party was ever assisted by libel, | walian Islands and taking them into this | No g()o(fl man was ever hurt by it; no réo\-erument and nation as an outpost and | bad man was ever made any better by it, | defense for it. They say nothing about - "men | (Renewed applause.) And so in consid- | that. and It is well they do not. I would at on | ering the questions that we have to de-|like to sec the Homorable Stephen M. State | bate here to-night 1 propose to follow the [ White and the Honorable James G. Ma- # SLeLe s % it | guire—and I pause to say that 1 will not foot down on | ZZag course, sometimes like the light o px el and sometimes like the clouds that |call him “Gallagher” because he says his eclared for e timents of GENERAL W. H. L. BARNES, Orator of the Evening ation put and ‘| hame is not Gallagher, and although he . . . ed a position on two platforms. Is he hon~ protection of American industries, hone il It through his caroer as politl | gpent fifteen or twenty minutes here the in His Various est and earnest in so declaring? He < and liam McKinley. He d. 2ding the suffrages “of ;h im- | other night in tellling the audience before agreed in writing to support the platform Sia voisfor Ga N&ft wis SoraioY Gatfernia o him what his name was not, he did not of the Populist party in this State this | per ke to tell them what it really was. the same D the The platforms of these parties have all ““.ffi?fihfnever Mr. Maguire's nam‘e '}‘n“fv have brou nation | been before you. Some of them you may | e it would not do to mention his name in which it was ve read, and others you may have| i, conpection with the Hawalian acqui- ation of the Democrats. ed by. The first and most remark-| gjijon, because from first to last he ob- P | able declaration of the Democratic plat- introduced the speaker | f, 8 tha . structed all legislation upon that subject peater | form is that it affirms the principles of | ;g “was at all times, like his distin- of the evening. Thomas Jefferson. He flourished ncariy uished friend from Los Angeles, our year, which platform ratified and con- firmed the Populist platform of the last Presidential election. Democrats don’t do that. They were willing, for the sake of victory, to carry Maguire, but even the worst of them couldn't stand the Populist and destructive doctrines that are entertained by those people. Attitudes. Northwest can suppl{ out of their sur- lus more than encugh to feed the world. ¥ ranc jeneral Barnes was | 100 years ago, and there has not been a A t means that the money of this earth is Y . o The sop ;f}“fil,‘.’,‘fu,f‘e ol Photsiae |single locratic President since to [ Senator from the south, bitterly opposed coming to this country. It means that Hetdgteed to stand by and use =il his the sigual plause, and cheers so | LR (e LiTE Could point. with prida | to the aunexation of the Hawailan lsl- the time wiil come when they will com- tnluence if he should be elected Govern long continued t was several min- | o'Wt glory. They stop at Thomas Jef- | ands. And yet when they learned that bine against us to prevent the extension BROA0OD (2B for at they utes before the speaker was permitted to | ferson. (Laughter) They have mothing | the Nicaraguan canal was absolutely es- a 7 o AT L £ GO Ee Y. Anesian b call the initative make his voice heard. | to sy about. Andrew Jackson, nothing | sential to (he safety and protection of 8y labor, There is education; there 18 a | deas. And the war with Spain is but the Magtiire’s : 5 ‘380 the refaren. Y the introduction of General | #bout President Poik, nothing about poor | this nation they knew as well as they | BTeat deal of refinement. sven among the | bare twinkling of the coming day in com- | state. I honor the prudence and care and | & R T HiE wese: oy & < 0ld Jumes Buchanan, and. - of course, | knew anything else that the necessary | Datives themselves. 1Tt is true that the | parison with that which some cven of the | patience, the seeming reluctance with | Two - Horse g IWe big, Wores. Barnes the California Quartet, assisted | nuiyrally enough, théy have nothing 10| outposts of that llne—that its outward | Chinese and the Japanese have done the | elder of those here present will witness. | which heé plunged this nation into war, as and as Mr. Ma- the venerable Samuel Booth, rendered | say about Grover Cleveiand, although he | defense was the Hawalian Islands. They [ MOst of the manual labor in the Ia- | “Thank God we have taught the world a | [ admire the way In which it was carried | % Riding Act. % ‘guire suid about oral pat songs, which were so |15 the only Democrat In the United States | told us that there was nothing to_be | Walian Islands, just exactly as the Chi- |lesson, Thank God they have learned |on when it was once begun. ~And he s 3 e suse fof Teceived that the singers were re- | that has had the individual magnetism | gained by mequiring the Hawallan Jsi- | 15,406 Tapanese, sre foing It to-cay in | that the South was not conayered. but | coming to the conclusion, as 1 belleve he | GO GAT R O and - socilistic et andFugalid | to save the party twice from wreck and |ands, and what has been accomplished in | {h° TR! 5. And the islands tliem- | brought home. Thank God ' that they | fias alfeady Instructed his commissioners, | wpron I will spek of fricentiye beoatss called agatn aee | ruin. T do not wonder at that. It is u| those islands is a strong lesson and an S B scessary part of | have léarned that we did not need a for- | that it is impossbile for us to partition | e i b Sy thing. 4bo Several scores of prominent Republicans | sorry story for the American people, the | iljustration to us. The same thing they | the Possessions of the United States, in | eign war to spring up ‘the spirit of dis-| those Islands with any power on the face | {ne) A A o T otiner conntles oceupled scats | adminISUAOR. of Grover Cleveiand. He | ot o ey ence to the Fhlippinos. At | LW of what 13 going on in the dismem- | union in the United States. But that now | of the globe. that they can't be half Spans | tought it meant something nasty, o X man who had the courage | though in thelr platform they say they berment of Asla and the taking posses- | and forever it is a united and indissoluble he platform, which has been beauti- [ was a b 7 on the pla 'm, whi s ictions. He was serfous and | hopo. that subject will be thoroughly in- sion of those countries, and of the people | people, standing breast to breast and back ish and half American: that the genius of | W\ 8 &7 Y00, that in government it vt of his con our country cannot stand side by side with fully decorated with fi and bunting | 5 o " When he belleved thi against whom we have been defending | to back fight either side of the conti- P, 3 means something confusing and exceed- Rl ; 5 - e proper | DOPS.} foaroilt theras Bk he Inst ) o back to fight either side of the conti- | {he ‘miserable carfcature of government e S 2 and large lithograph likenesses of Henry | (EInlt T the external and internal com- | 1oL Eated And e i I n sy e | Qurselves since the very origin of this | nent whenever the time comes. (Great | that Spain has presonted to E0Nernment | ingly nasty. The wisdom of our fathers, T. Gage and Jacob Neff. Among those | merce of this country was to be open i st | Government. Isn’'t that true? Do you | applause.) who occupled seats on the platform wery | and free as air, and that we should fibsh | for the interests of the republic. T don't | suppose it is for fun that Russia {s build- ut they tell us we can’t assimilate the | ; z : eetic ! ¥~ | believe there is a Republican in the Unit- | ing a raflway 5000 miles long across Si- | P de. 1 don't know th the following named vice-presidents ot | nothing but };:x?filflul“g;;;m::\;;?;a“ogm: D e to0ay) =ho. Teally Valuas . hs sl T an earilce, long: across 81 | Phillppines. on't kno: upon which this nation has grown to its resent magnificent dimensions, was ounded upon the doctrine of representa- the last 300 years. Is there man in America who believes in giving up one t we ean, | single inch of that soil beneath which 1i v don’t know that we want to: buf | rotting the remains of one single Ameri. | tion and upon the division of the parta the evening: and saw this country hourly rowing | Erowth and the power and the majesty of | she is bullding a branch rallway down | let no man say that the digestion of this | can soldier who gave his | of government under three great heads, e merman, W, ¢, gohnson, Eail | Seie e e Becomin ex s | his country in the face of tho world. and | through Manchuria (o bort Arthur? Do | country 15 not far greater (han'that of | Klarous. fag in ihe pikce of LA nasty | ig executive, the legislative, the judi: A. S. Lowndes, F. W. nner, C. its manufactures stopped, its farm pro- | even those people there whom we have | you suppose it fs for fun that she is|any other nation on the globe, for we | yellow rag of Spain? Never! Therefore G 1 Jumes Gilieran, | Hoca reduced to nominal values. and pov. | undertaken to protect and defend from | planning to bulld a rallway across, con- | have assimilated and digested and made | every man who b 2 It is proposed by those who favor the Hodson, Jonn | 81" ‘want and misery stalking over all | themselves as well as from Spain, but | necting with the great city of Peking? good American citizens of over 30,060,000 of | holdthose ;snua;“é‘;":*:;fé‘én‘;: SFwar | Initiative to Bt e e ey v ith the 3 SManoney, | 7 A JET 160 1 with revenues so | thinks that we ought to hold every foot | Do you suppose It Is for fun that she has | heterogenous population since 180. gath- | should vote for the Republican candidates | \Eislative portion of the Government be- AL Booth, | {mpaired’ that the country was obliged, | of those islands. (Applause) fought the English out of the charter for | ered from the four quarters of the globe, | for State ofcers this fall in California. cause they say your Legislature may Mok Drommond, 3. AU Mclachien | (iSugh him, to borrow in'a time of pro- | It is a very few years ago—oothing in|a rallway connecting both | the great | from England to Java. I quite agree with what Mr. Davis|eet, It fay be, Bowerer el o s emith, A. W. Scott, A. P. Van Duzer, whose business It is to consider these Sweeney, Martin O'Connell, L. K. otts, propositions, but hold that it is the right— 1.°3. Conlin SIhbiss DUCAK, John D, 2hely, R EREEXEEEEEF - H R R RR LR AR X R F XX I L F L XXX R X FARH R XXX E XXX F R KR AR R XX P XX XX E XXX R B LR X R XXX AR LR XXX F X% % %% %% % %% %% |and they don't say of how many—but it A. Bouvier, A. §. Nicholson, WHAT A VOTE FOR THE TICKET MEANS. is the right of some indefinite number 3 5, J omas Morton, W. H mi it w . R A T A to be hereafter ascertained, to prepare a . 8 Duval N corge b Graam, 3. N: measure of legislation, send It {0 the Leg- YA Pobert Ash, W. H. Davis, A. H. islature, demand thaf it shall be passed Brows, Edward Poliitz, G. R. Fletcher. . to the 'extent that it shall be referred B elly, A. G. Hawes, George A. Pope, back to the people, and the people shall R Mowbry, E Bunker, J. P. Fraser, vote upon it, and when voted up it shall L A stand until again it shall be sent back + avior, Albert He: R. Samuels, T Wite, M. Hart, W. D. Richardson, o © . o ¥ to_the people. That is the initiative. ?f B. Cogswell, Joh L O G g A vote for the Republican candidates means an indorsement of the National Administration— Roferandum means that when the Leg- “kus, James A. Green, P. g 5 sgqs = g 3 4 ber of £ sallagher, {’:‘"‘fk;;o;n&m‘: s ‘Beocdict. an administration that, under the guidance of William McKiniey, has proceeded with such ;12‘;;,:,?“,,,‘.‘3‘?‘”;%,&%2‘%'5‘ fhat they want v Ll Fautkner, C.K. Bonextell, - % to pass upon it themselves, they shall ad- A L Tart, g-flg:;;":;;;;;\é‘%;‘%;};,;% gigantic strides that this year the balance of trade in our favor will very considerably exceed drésa a ‘petition to the Legisiature, all k-..?‘;:.,?{‘,‘:‘l%f‘"uh'p';;rmr‘%r;.mé‘nsb Cyrrer, one billion of dollars.—General . H. L. Barnes, in a Speech at Metropolitan Temple. e o ey dha A. W. Wilcox, R. . SV oo hod X * * * * * * * % | Islature has passed any law, no matter * * * * * * PR R R R R never again be presented to the Legis- lature for its action: If voted upon favor: ¢ C. soDougall, Phills, T. Brovti, B T R L R e A s A R R e R e e R Ames. F. A. Hyae G. H. Mitchell, Davis