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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, APRIL 1, Call v oo iusrisrke iRl K 200 JOHN D. SPRECKELS, Proprietor. ‘céress 4. Communcations to W. 5. LEAKE, Manager PUBLICATION OFFICE..Market and Third, S. F. Telephone Main 1868, EDITORIAL ROOMS 217 to 221 Stevensom St. e Main 1874 Delivered by Carriers, 15 Cents Per Week. Single Coples, 5 Cents. Terms by Mai ALL Including Postage: .1118 Broeadw: KROGNESS. Marguette Bulsing, Chicago. Marzzer Fore g sing, NEW YORK COREESPONDENT: C. C. CARLTON, Herald Square REPRESENTATIVE: ..30 Tribune Building CHICAGO NEWS STANDS: House: ¥ Audizor: Sherman 0. ews Co.; Grea:t Northern Hotel: ont House 5 el Welli ngton Hote! clock, Horses, at c'clock. Horses, at freight rates were e at the reguest of local preven t to our retailers or he result is that in ys wh East we pay a de- 1 need to pay, and that of a small class ur own we ct that the rea- ply to increase r the; of our trade. Their fight i t for us in pect, but solely for their own the St. Louis jobbers have in their efforts to ex- 2 As 'y are near the v do not have to carry such large ad yet by reason the greater es through of goods ordered, > the profits of the By reason low rates they r 1 of the Great ¥ West, market almost to the und numbers it is 2000 miles from to the Pacific, and npward of 1700 ontrolied by St. Louis, the freight ch as to virtually shut Pacific Coast job- etition. £ possession of rutes being bers out Owing to the water transportation the rates to the coast itself are in favor of the local jobbers. Ower 2 strip of country about 300 miles wide they c on competition with the St. Louis | men and give the retailers and the consumers the benefit of 2 petitive market in which to buy. If the local jobt de be destroyed by differentials it will not be long before .prices of lowered to Pacific Coast con- people will be wholly dependent upon sumers, Eastern dealers. There is, moreover, ancther consideration hardly if less important than that of ¢heapening prices to retailers and consumers, and that is the protection of the jobbing trade of the coast. It is estimated that in San Francisco ne there is $75,000,000 invested e. . "That amount of capital employs labor, pays taxes, imiproves propérty and.advances all the interests of the State. ~If by railway differentials in faver of St. Louis that great indusiry be rendered unprofitzble, the injury will:be felt not in San _Fran- cisco alone, but throughout the coast.” All the inter- €sts sacrifice of one w I 2ffect ‘all the others. The claim of the Pacific Coast jobbers is just in it- | self and is supported by every consideration of ex-. pediency. economy and loeal patriotism. We have a natural right to havé freight rates adjusted to owr ad- vantages as 3 seaport with water transportation. It is right that our people should have the advantage of competition between a local jobbing trade and that of the East, and, finally. it is right that an industry which helps to sustain the general prosperity should i a community are closely interlinked, and -the | A JAPANESE BOUT fifty years ago an American ship, bound f\ for this port, picked up in midocean from a floating raft a company of strange little brown men, and brought them to San Francisco. They had been shipwrecked. Their race and na- tionality were not recognized; their language was known; their home port could not be identified They were curios here. Finally it was discovered that they were Japanese, and they were sent b That little company of starved, shivering, szilors were the first of their race to land on this con- tinent. Since then great changes have occurred in their own country and the world The Japanese have become rovers. They lack many admirable qualities which the Chinese of the same classes have. But they are i istent, truculent, and in 1 INVASION. in | a es the Goddess of Chance with eathu- siastic devotees. These Japanese cooli lent manners. B nese coolie is preferable to a Japanese of the same class ‘We have no law to exclude the Japanese coalie, and he has found it out a sands. i , to exclude a C nt e been aware of anger of such an invasion from Japan, does not see: put in our treaties with own statutes. Between us and 1 e open. In the lions which swarms on We have to adv at representati once at Washington, for the purpose of securing ne- gotiations with the Mikado that will give us author- ity to stop this invasion where it is. Fortunately the ground has been cleared by our dealing with Chinese exciusion. We began in the be- f that an ordinance of the San Francisco Super- ors could keep out Chinese. That was properly et aside by the courts. Then we resorted to an act of the Legislature, and that went glimmering. Then we tried it in the new constitution of the State, and at last discovered that the Chinese were here in pur- suance of the Burlingame treaty, which was the su- preme law of the land, not to be set aside by any local statute or constitut: long time taken in ame nance, rember the v, they will see the necessi beginning the negotiation Japan. We have no doubt that Government will g to take up the question and to settl agreeably to us, and the preliminaries cannot be entered upon tco soon. - with be There is going to be a big prune crop this year, and if the growers do not get together for co- operation in marketing the crop they are pretty apt to be running over one @nother to see who can sell quickest before the year is over. POLI'FICAL PROSPECTS. HILE it is yet some months before either of | the national nominating conventions- will | meet, the Presidential campaign has vir- tually begun. There are no longer any doubts as to. who will be nominated by the two great parties, mnor . as to what will be the | differences between their platiorms. It is to be the campaign of 1896 over again, with such changes as the events of the past four years have brought about. It cannot be a calamity agitation any more, for this is a year of prosperity, neither can | the free silver craze be made so formidable as it was in the former contest, but in the main the issues will be what they were made by the establishment -of Bryan's leadership in the Democratic party. . That being so, political experts have begun to figure out the results. In 1896 McKinley had 271 electoral votes, against 176 for Bryan. Some of the Republican States, however, were carried by very nar- row margins, and conservative calculators do not claim that the party is sure of carrying them all again. Accerding to one of these estimates McKinley is sure | of Iowa, Maine. Massachusetts, Minnesota, New 1 Hampshire, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, IHinois, Indiana, -Michigan, Ohib, Oregon and Wis- | | consin.. That will give him 215 votess Bryan, it is conceded, can count upon 142 votes. There remain | 90 electoral votes to be fought for, but of these Mc- Kinley will have to obtain but nine in order to have a.majority of the electoral college, and it would seem to be easy for him to obtain them, pmicululy as a State like California is put down in the doubtful 1 column. Calculations as to the result of the Congressional elections are more interesting, as they are not so much of a foregbne conclusion as the Presidential walkover. Chairman Babcock of ‘the Republican Congressional Committee is reported to have esti- mated that in the next House of Representatives the Republicans are sure of 150 and the Democrats of 130 seats. That leaves 77 seats to be fought for, and lant at every point and make strong nominations, the | Democrats will have a fair chance of winning.- I At the present time the Republicans hold the House < in a good many of them. if Republicans be not vigi-"| fore, that Mr. Babcock’s estimates of the coming elections are the outcome of a sanguine mind: That fact is noteworthy because this is a year in which the one danger which threatens the Republican party is that of overconfidence. Even if it be beyond a doubt that McKinley will be re-elected, the Republi- cans should not abate one jot of the energy of 1896 in preparing for ibis campaign and carrying it to a conclusion. We ought to have from California solidly ' Republican' delegation, and to that end the work of party organization should go briskly for- ward. . The estimates of experts are encouraging, but ust too much go them. There were e last election 6, cast for Bry: it-is going to take work to beat h even in this year. of prospe; and his' party Kansas City a, but it has already the Democratic national convention, while: Phila- delphia is still discussing wavs and means for col- lecting the amount guaranteed the Republican con vention. t not all the time, an GREAT LAKES NeUTRAL INCE the craze for making the Nicaragua canal a fortification instead of a neutral highway for commerce, the spirit of psendo patriotism is being zppealed to in behalf .of changes-.in_our- treaty’ Great Britain " respecting warships Great Lakes. The waterway. provided by the lakes, whose waters lap theé Shores of Canadi 6n’one side and those of the United States on.thé other, is the in the world.:” It carries the greatest nage by water .to and through the Detroit River Philadelphia should wake up: { most important to s, s, is a standing guarantee of The lakes cannot be either ther in case of wi The United States has more to gain by this neutrality than Great because we have the large ercial Marquette, Detroit, T Cleveland m the neutral- Milwaukee, Benton or and others on the shores of Lake Michigan. n cities near the. other shore of those ot important. It is believed that the nging this wise treaty has two mo- build ships for our navy at some of the other is the idea that we should ps in those waters to defend the cities on ur shore line. There may be a third motive in a ire to remove an objection to fort: a canal. As long as the lakes are kept clear ps, under the existing treaty, an object les- hed to which the canal fortifiers can make n is | no answer. There is no good argument for changing the treaty. ngland can ever attack us from the lakes, and e can ‘have no navy in those waters, and has eir shores no plant to construct one, our com- ercial cities have their best security in existing con- ditions. Of course if we ¢ ge the treaty, and thereby introduce a navy upon the lakes, England will | have the same right, and both countries will maintain | a warlike fleet on waters that have been peaceful, | neutral and promotive of prosperity ever since the ar of 1812, It is a wrong and wasteful policy for both nations, unbecoming to the civilization which they have in | common, burdensome to their respective taxpayers, | and more likely to provoke war than prevent it. | - The present status of these neutral lakes is a power- 1 argument for the neutrality of all international waterways which serve the great purposes of com- | The immense commerce that is done from | merce. Buffalo to Duluth salutes no wa guns of no fortress. Its annual value runs into the hundreds of millions. Its tonnage of iron, copper, coal, lumber, wheat and corn manufactured mer- No s in its which float it. The great nat the shores of its high- share in the prosperity it brings, and are part- ners in a peaceful victory more impregsive than all the battles in which men have bled and died, from Marathon to Modder River. So let it be. Let the treaty zlone. ISPATCHES from Washington announce that another effort will be made to pass the Loud | bill restricting the privilege of second class nail rates to legitimate periodicals. The bill has and passes the mmen war sword g van. two ns w way THE POSTAL EILL AGAIN. jected to in the House have been eliminated, so that | it is believed a majority can now be counted upon in | its favor. | According to reports the bill in its new form is j simplicity itself. It provides that mail matter of the | second class shall embrace all newspapers and other periodical publications which are issued at stated in- second class rate shall not be permitted to books or the reprints of books whether they be issued com- plete or in parts, whether they be sold by subscription | or otherwise, whether they purport to be premiums or supplements to newspapers or other periodical: | and that news agents shall not be permitted to retura | to news agents or publishers at the ponad rate unsold | periodical publications, but shall pay postage on the | same at the rate of one cent for every four ounces. Even in its amended form the bill will put'a stop to some of the worst abuses which have grown up under the present law, and result in a considerable saving to the Postoffice Department. The economy is the more necessary because upon it depend several questions of postal reform and improvement which annual deficit Congress wgj! give attention to the pro- | posals for establishing a one-cent rate for letters, the circulation of books from public libraries at -low | rates, the extension and cheapening of the parcels post system, and other measures of that kind. For | ‘that reason as well as for the economy itself and the E essential justness of the Loud bill, it is to be hofi-d | that in its amended form it will be enacted at this ses- | sion and the country be rid of what has been for too |long a time a scandal upon our administrative } methods. . | 1 It is to be noted that the less work our soldiers have to do in chasing Aguinaldo in the Philippines | the greater is the death rate among them due to dis- | ease. It would pay us to keep Filipinos running just [ to give the boys exercise. Roberts is proceeding so slowly in South Africa that it looks as if he were pleased with his job and i did not intend to work himself out of it in a hurry. The bubonic scare is hard on the city, but in-the end it will return to plague the inventors mor “The Cerem of Holy W plagu etlnnlflon”u e Mmm' ek be itself supported by all who share in that prosperity. | by a comparatively small majority. It is clear, therc- anybody else. a| 25 votes, and | 5 | is good to be slow and sure at times, but on the | that passes any water front in'the world. The treaty | | between this country and Great Britain, agreeing to " | keep it free of w. its neutrality. been amended in committee, and the features ob- | tervals as often as four times a year, but that the | have been long desired. As soon as we are rid of the. 1900. CHINESE M ing tea: you do here. With us tea Is the national | ind éverywhere in China the teapot. | 1s, -as.you say, constantly ‘in commission.’ | sufficlent quantity of the dry tea leaves is this is poured hot water. | minutes—say four or five—and you have | right a drink fit for the gods. | " 7“1t 1s always ready. water: a matter of individual taste. bave it either weak or strong, just as our “To get down to the basic prineiples of tea brewing and tea drinking as practiced in China you must realize that at home Wwe do not drink tea on stated occasions or only at meals, as almost' say, speaking to an American, that tea'is the ice of China. Instead of the silver water cooler. which constit } an almost invariable ornament of your dining rooms Whenever we are we have recourse to the teapot instead of the cooler. “Let us first cons!der the teapot tself. v porecelain and varies In style, cost and dimensions in accordance with the taste, wealth and size of the family possessing it. Let this infusion stand for a few Whenever the pot needs repienishing all we have to do is to add a little more tea and a little more There is no hard and fast rule as to the proportions of tea and water or as to the character of the tea itself. - “We never drink it bolling hot, as {8 done in America and | England, but at a moderate degree of warmth. this. desirable temperature it is customary to cover the teapot | with a gort of bag padded with cotton and lned with stlk. A INISTER TELLS WOMEN “HOW TO BREW AND DRINK TEA iR His Excellency Wu Ti:g Fang, Minister from China, who | simflar arrangement is often used In England and is thers recently made a witty speech at the dinner of the tea experts. has dictated the following rules—the Chinese rules—for brew- | known as a ‘cozy." *“This is the usual family manner of preparing and drinking | tea in China, but when visitors come courtesy demands that we should be a little more ceremonious. Then we have the tea brewed in individual eups, covered with dainty lids in order to retain the heat and aroma. As a matter of course tea is always thus offered to a visitor the moment he enters a hov “The family teapot is simply emptied and rep morning. an’ not scoured inside, as of its delicate aroma. In this way an o gree of fragrance that s analogous to the se: that has been g In use. “We would regard with horror the suggestion should aad a s to contents of our teapots beyo: water and tea.” sald the Minister with a visible shud agine putting rum In tea, as I am told is sometimes don and is said to be a common practice In Russia! A ecu taste revolts from the thought The idea of milk and suga almost as bad. “Just one hint more regarding tea and I am dope” Minister Wu. ‘“Remer and cheap teas, there a have been adulterated with deleterfous beverage. 1 might It is invariably of It In the morning a placed in it and on what we, I think xcept those that ngredient. th It is all | very adulteration is practiced solely to meet the taste, or lack We use black or green tea and | of taste, of consumers Who persist In so spolling their tea by tastes direct. | the addition of such adulterants as rum and milk and r. It | only they would drink their tea pure, as nature intended it to be drunk, they would instantly detect any attempt at adultera tion and that would be the end of the importation of impure teas.” To maintain B R N ] IT WAS DIFFERENT.” | PERSONAL MENTION. | Dr. AL E Hall of San Jose {s at the Lick. L. W. Moultree, an attorney of Fresno, is at the Lick. E. B. Baer, a merchant of Cloverdale, is at the Grand. S. H. Davis, an attorney of Sacramento, is at the Grand. Professor R. E. Allardice of Stanford is at the California. J. E. Oglesby, a merchant of Atlanta, Ga., 1s at the Palace. D. McFarland, an attorey of Los An- geles, is at the Palace. George B. Graham, an attorney of Fresno, 18 at the Grand. J. F. Corde, a banker and mining man of Brodle, is at the Lick. Dr. F. W. Brophy of Chicago and his daughter are at the Palace. W. J. Berry of Bakersfleld, a well- known mining man, is at the Grand. Moses Blum, the Produce Exchange grain broker, has returned from New York. ‘W. H. Nichols of Portland, owner of ex- tensive ranches in the Willamette Valley, is at the Grand. Jose Argicello, a wealthy resident of San Miguel, Salvador, and his family are at the Occidental. C. W. McNeely, a wealthy merchant of Philadelphia, s at the Palace, with his wife and daughter. W. H. Matthews, editor of the Roches- ter Democrat and Chronicle, is in the city. He leaves for the East on Tuesday. Dr. Tillie Dittenhoefer is staying at the Hotel Savoy and will remain a guest at that hosteiry until April 10, when she | leaves for Europe. | John Ditmas, a prominent merchant of New York, accompanied by his wife and | daughter, arrived vesterday from the East, and are at the Palace. Jose Barillas, nephew of the former President of Guatemala, and his wife ar- rived from Guatemala on the steamer Sydney yesterday and will remain in the city for some time. | | W. B. Hicks and E. G. Boydeston, who arrived from South America on the | steamer City of Sydney, are at the Russ. They have been employed in the famous | Cana mines. Both young men belong to Butte County. E. B. Pixley, the popular proprietor of | the Pacific Ocean House, Santa Cruz, has | been appointed manager of Castle Crag Tavern. Mr. and Mrs. Pixley. are thor- ough hotel people and will add greatly to attract people there. They have the happy | faculty of making guests feel at home. | The appointment is first class. CALIFORNIANS IN NEW YORK. NEW YORK, March 3L—A. S. Clark of San Francisco is at the Netherlands. L. D. Schenck of Oakland is at the Empire. ———— e CALIFORNIANS IN WASHINGTON | | WASHINGTON, March 31—R. R. Has- | | kell and wife of San Francisco are at the | Shoreham. 3 — ee———— Mrs. Ballington Booth Here. | Mrs. Ballington Booth is again visiting | the Pacific Coast. She arrived from Los Angeles last night, and is here in"the in- | | terest of her prison work. She will visit | S8an Quentin. and Folsom, and elaborate | preparations are being madeé to welcome the prisoners’ “little mother.” She will | conduct one public meeting in San Fran- | cisco, Tuesday, April 3, in the Calvar, | Presbyterian Church, corner of Powell | and Geary streets, at 8 p. m., and one in | the First Congrenflon Church in Oak- land on Monday, April 2. She leaves| Thursday for thé south, where her trip ! takes in San Jose, Pacific Grove, Pasa- | | dena, Los es, Coronado Beach and Redlards. The local councils of the Young Men's Institute have appointed W. Chester Keogh, T. F, Ryan, D. Barry, D. E. Hay- | den E,_B. Thomas, J. P. Chandier and | D. J. llen to e arrangements for | the celebration of Dewey day on May 1 It is to have a grand family excursion to and picnic in the Santa Cruz Mountains for the members' and their friends. 5 e Catholie Truth Society. On next Wednesday evening religious exercises .and lecture for the members of the tholic Truth Society will be held in St hedral. 3 Cat! phiets, entitled, he Pas- u on that I R e et o e e THE WORKINGMAN TO WILLIE. “RUN AWAY, LITTLE BOY. WE ARE TOO BUSY TO LISTEN TO YOUR MUSIC NOW. | disturbance, | springy step snd when he spoke it w: | evident that he had entirely recovered | ern Californians since the old days when THREE YEARS AGO —Lif R I R R R R R S S R R R R R 3 | Cal. glace fruit 5ic per ™ at Townsend's. —_———— Look out for 81 cer; best eyeglas: SAILED AWAY | WITH HiS BRIDE Nuptials of Lieut. Belknap and Miss Julia Averill Yesterday. IEUTENANT REGINALD BEL- KNAP, T. 8. and Miss Julia Averill were married yesterday morning at ‘11 o'clock at Trinity Church. Bishop Nichols, assisted by Rev. Dr. Clampett, rector of Trinity, pro- nounced the holy words that made the Young couple one. The groom is the son of Rear Admiral Belknap, U. 8. N., and his fair young bride the daughter of Mrs. Chester Averill of Berkshire County, Mas- setts, and niece of the late Justice For many years her home in this city with her aunt, Mrs. Willlam Ash- burner, at 1014 Pine street. The marriags of the young couple is the culmination of a charming romance. Lieu- Belknap met Press Clipping Bureau (A gomery street. Teiephone Ma pisiiniintus e “My sympathy,™ he said, “is always | with the under dog.” “Yes,” she replied. “b choke an upper dog 100 —_———— Ghost of the Glacier. And Other Tales. including Making a Revolu- tion, Susquehanna Trafl, Sculpture o Once a Pillar of the World, Fea fon, and others. A delightful fully fllustrated. Read v distribution about May Send 10 cents to T. W. Lee, General Passenger Agent. Lackawanna Ratfiroad, 2§ Ex- change Place, New York City. n Limited. —_——— Personally Conducted Excursions In tmproved wide-vestibuled Pull | sieeping cars via S excursion eondu k a cago and Kansas ay and Friday ronto every Wedne CAPE NOME MACHINERY and SUPPLIES. SAND CENTRIFUGAL PUMPS: aid you ever out even bef. ed pair had heard of vesterday mornin; ble assemblage at he betro geme came from" her home in Massac & Drake Amalzamators, s to attend the wedding, and Miss KROG“ ing daily; 1 Elinor Davidson of Berkel Six friends Eine cheap. of the groo: all navy men, officiated as ushers, and L Moale and Lieu- tenant McLean acted as g k The church was filled w' ber. of army and navy people, prominent among whom were Admiral Reme: d staff, Admiral Kempff and staff. Captain SAND CENTRIFUGAL PUMPS In Overation Daily. €25 Sixth Street BYRON JACKSON. f";’g:"fi‘ of the )x‘ wa and Captain Strong CAPE NOME HOUSES FOR SALE. bride sailed on t STEPHEN M. WHITE RECEIVES AN OVATION Ex-Senator Stephen M. White has completely recovered from his late mala- dy. That he las resumed old time place in the hearts of his associates and admirers is cvidenced by the enth 3 tic reception tendered him at the cent annual banquet of the Los Angeles Cham- ber of Commerce. The Los Angeles H= ald has this to say of event: “Where there was so much that was even‘ful it is pleasant to note that an in- cident that grew to the dignity of an ova- tion was the arrival of ex-Senator Steph- e Hongkong Maru. Washington sts., Oakland, D~EDGI'G PUMPS. Ofl. Gasoline. Steam Ho! Centrifugal Pumps. Engines&Boflers. HendyMachk Wks + Fremoat. EXPZRIMENTAL MACHINERY & MODELS. ! L. PETERSON. 54A Missicn, 8 F.: communi- cations from inventors stricely confidential MARSH STEAM PUMPS Supply fresh or salt water for sluice Ddomes: high or low lifts. Simonds 8 Market st PUMPS AND GASOLINE ENGINES. | A3 kinds of Pumps and Gasoline X: WOOD! ©al IN & LITTLE. u2 Market st.. 8. F. BEACH GOLD CONCENTRATOR. SAVES AH the Gold br Gravitation No silver. Hand or powsr. In operation i4 R GOL» SEPARATOR. Cyclone Gold Sepa-ator and ! “Qaily operation, Wm. H. Birch & Co.. the significant ' 1 138 1st. en M. White. It was well along after :he’m(_?‘r::n ette;.&ld“grglmu , while MATTESON'S SLUICE WASHER. Presdent New & grace- | Long and bined saves ful speech, that signals of exuberance | - o moid THAN WINKLE. 63 Macke o were manifested toward the doors of the banquet hall. Mr. Newmark had to stop and was looking over his spectacles to- ward the entrance to see w Wi the Nhite: GILD SEPARATOR. MARSHAL: Gold Saving Machine 239 Fol- som street, (viental Gas Engie Company. GASOLINE ENGINES, GAS ENGINE. wo - whedn. ‘_cr!es of ‘White,” arose and these soon develo; 1 intg cheers and shouts of joy. ‘Our sup:,q scon shook himself loos€ from the crowd that surrounde: s entered the ball and made his way to & seat among the notables at the head of the tabies; as soon as ali had recognized him there | was a pandemonium of greeting which lasted several minutes. he ex-Senator was given a seat by the side of Senator Bard, the two shaking hands mos: cor- dially. Senator White, though idoking thinner than of yore, came in with & | HER( many e .- - LIQuoRs. WHISKEY * gAmms e sox. CBRICATING Oi1_Crude ‘on asa LEREIGN & McQUFFICR. 3 Svear s a g M.mrgs FOR SAVING GOLD. . ¥ Hu Dlace. Kearny. SSier ‘and Bush strecs. " o - T R T e - from his malacy, that he was the came old Steve who has been idolized by Soutn he was District Attorney until he reached the foremost -place _of all the Pacine Coast public men. There was admiration and rgpect intoned ‘in the cheers that | R were lven to im, but eTe W also . more, the heartfelt Joy of a whate p-o- | ROCKE?S ple at his reccvery and the sincere fricad- g ship of all. Democrats and Republicass.” In speaking of Senator wpmte'; re- sporse to the toast, the same paper <vs: | “Then came Senator White. It was like | the triumphal ertry of a returnins con queror, and so it was, for he had coaquer- ed a serfous ailment and was his noble F. ston RS. Rocker: _Centrituial Pumps: Machinery. PARKE ROCKE Hula-Hola & LACY.CO. n and ist sts., Oakland. or Builders’ 3 | PILE.DRIVING ENGINES. Worthington Steam Pumps & Water Moters, self again. Nothing would d -ASsem- Mundy Holsting Engines. Tatum Bowen. Bly But 0 hear from him, ana (‘}"‘;;uxms-l — L. er Francis in glo: words praise ENGINES, BOILERS. ETC. E introduced him, and trumpet tones | paxem & - e s ettt i HAMILTON. Engioes 208 Totters: s T g e BT o thery | _loWest Drices’ o the-cdase & Bavts v heartetrings, A report of his Speech is | S ke utterly inadequate to e an of ts | “ ’ . ToTITE P ST e anyldea of 'S | yUR COATS AND ROBES FOR CAPE NOME. and force, The cheers and continued ap- SN SOUFISCN S S v, plause - which it-was receivi TENTS AND VERS. alweys remain a vivid memory. as well | NEVILLE & CO.. Lo Noon tedn nunldd.r-g,tothuwmmm covers. il and B "