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. S. LEAKE, Mana er. ket and Third, S. F. n 1868, OFFICE. . Mo ephone PUBLICATION T Stevenson St. 4. to = EDITORIAL RO = Te Main 187 15 Cents Per Week. & Cents. Postage: Delivered ..86.00 1ay), & L5 1 All postmasters are authorized to receive subscription w forv 4 when requested. ..1118 Broadway OGNESS, 2uiiding, Chicago. OAKLAND OFFICE Heraid Square ENTATIVE Trbune Building WS STANDS: 31 Unlon Square; . no, e e . AMUSEMENTS. Lady Slavey.™ Barrow 1y streets—Spectalties. Veudeville every afternoon and | “Faust.” —Vaudeville. Ha ng to-day. ng to-cay. AUCTION SALES. May 21, at 11 o'clock, Horses, at May 2, at 11 o'clock, Carriage ot RIGHT ACTION AT LAST as it reflects the se ent of the cor ced adverse to t caused by ors to first | ons betwer g the side ditures a total and should not have been im- drinking saloons has been the any a woman has walked to tice of resorting to t which ch the evil was one whi one nan went ow. er, h rap- another In some sets it WO 1t to such places, and the stances became a habit which car- to a waste of | e, to idling, intemperance, | temptation h the hom ; of the side entrances is thus a step in | i morals. It removes from the | menaced the welfare of all less important than the prohi- track gambling which not infrequently e and easy drinking of the e act another safeguard bas been placed uth of the city, and the welfare of the There is no rendered more secure. cement to vice which was once open, ne of the community has been dis- | 4 mproved fair-minded men it will be a matter of regret ice authorities did not formulate a defi- nite to enforce the law to close | the nces at once as soon as they ass their official responsibilities instead of gi g the saloon men reason to believe that if they conformed to the six-foot partition ordi- | nance they would be permitted to maintain a side and the business which came The action of the authorities in that re- st an implied promise that if the par- | regulation height the saloon- 1 owed to go on as before. In that | proprietors have been unfairly treated and red a monetary loss of no inconsiderable | has been the effect of an uncertain and istration of police affairs, and while flicted has been slight in comparison h will result from closing the side | , it is nevertheless an act for which the au- y censured. on carry spect was al titions were keepers wc way man i * San Francisco has another sumptuous hundred thousand dollars or | be zdded to amounts already due to | , who have furnished the city with sup- v contracts, and are still whistling | two ty seems to need is a reform of its re- | All these annual deficits have occurred reformers have been running the city. They | 3 ocating the dollar limit in taxation, they get in office proceed to give us a two ration on a dollar limit. What we vo Collar limit reformers who will tr: ¢ going now the city is largely run at | 1se of contractors for mercantile supplies to house, hospital, Police and Fire and other s who never get their pay. Occasionally | nomize by putting out the street lights, and | the bold highwayman flourishes and collects | m the belated citizen regardless of the dollar | times the public school teachers are deprived | of their pay to reduce the deficit. The reform charter | appears to be just like the consolidation act in regard | to this chronic and incurable deficit, and will probably | make it larger, for it increases the cost of the city government., | ment, G @ BRYAN PLAN. PROMINENT Democrat in Washington City is out with an affirmative policy which he is sure will carry the country. He says: “What the people want is business, and they are not over particular whether it comes from famine, war or external or internal development. Therefore the only course open to the Democratic party is a policy of internal extravagance. I am a firm believer in the Chicago platiorm, and particularly in its silver | plank. But the people have tasted the sweets of re- vived trade and will be loth to give them up. The Democratic party cannot meet this by just denuncia- tion. It must offer a substitute. Even ship subsidy expenditures are better than none at all. The people not o favor but demand large public expenditures, legitimate if possible, but illegitimate if necessary.” After this large ani free expression of judgment as to the sentiments of the people, this Bryanite pro- poses his programme. He wants the Democratic party to borrow and spend five hundred millions putting a in vee on both sides of the Mississippi River from New Orleans to St. Paul, and another five hun- Ired millions in reclaiming arid lands, to be given to all people for homes who deserve homes, all others to be immediately deported. While these two projects milit Or. What this highway is to be, bicycle track, he does not say. g on he desites the Government to build « a railway or a Nor does he tell us why it is necessary to connect the two Portlands, in- stead of building the road from Skaneateles to Mil- pitas. It is supposed that this road will cost another billion, so that this Democrat is of the opinion thaz the offer to disburse two billions of dollars among the people will be necessary to elect Colonel Bryan | and will ac omplish that object. He does not at present go into details. All people not fit to receive the gift of homes are 1o be deported. He does not say who will judge of their fitness, or where we will send them when deported. But of one thing he is sure. m He says: “Labor demands employ- Irants demand trade, and the farmer de- mands a good price for his produce, and they are not scrupulous as to the policy that brings it about. I oxic em in this Chri e man’ s it may ian age, we th means d re or res on the extr: ant ale 1 propose will reproduce the conditions of the 1 1864 Every st t of American politics has believed that the election of Bryan would be a e thought leman, who pretty tough job, gh a job as it 1ks it will require bribe of two billions of dollars. Considered in the light of principle his proposition that the Democratic party shall spend two bil- lions of dollars on internal improvements ex- intere: It carries one back to the wild re made *by that party on the Whigs who proposed to do some very modest improv- ing in that line. They were attacked by the Democrats as violators of the constitution, destroy- ers of the liberties of the people, robbers of the treas- ury and everything else criminal. When the old national road was projected by the Whigs, before the age of railways, it was denounced as an imperialist scheme to make it easy to move armies to subdue the people. That road crossed the Alleghanies, following the line of Braddock’s march to his defeat and death near Fort Duquesne, and thence projected westward across Ohio and Indiana. Not only was it opposed by the Democrats, but when railways were shown to be practical the same party Opposed them. They could be built only by use of the right of eminent do- main to condemn the right of way. The Democracy, from New Hampshire to Ohio, opposed this and fought it to a finish. Had that party had its way this country, as far as internal communication is con- cerned, would have been in exactly the same condi- tion as China, with its population congested on the coasts and watercourses. In view of this history, it is very interesting to hear a Democrat advocate the expenditure of two billions of dollars to secure the election of Bryan by pledging the party to a vast scheme of internal improvements. The Lodi merchants who object to the introduction of a free mail delivery in the rural districts in their neighborhood for fear it will injure their trade by freeing the farmers of the necessity of coming to town for mail are short-sighted. The improvement which the mail delivery will make in the district will tend to attract new residents, and the Lodi folks will have | a larger custom than they ever had before. THE COMMERCIAL MUSEUM. RATIFYING in every respect is the success which has thus far attended the movement for the establishment in this city of a Commercial Museum on the lines of that of Philadelphia, and upon a scale of sufficient magnitude to make it of first-class importance to the commercial world. It is but a com- | paratively short time ago that the enterprise was first spoken of among our progressive merchants, and al- ready enough has been achieved to render its early | establishment well nigh certain. More than a hundred firms have signed the roll of membership, and others are rapidly uniting with them. It is hardly necessary to say that every mer- cantile, manufacturing and banking firm on the Pa- cific Coast should co-operate with the movement. In the very nature of things, however, it is upon the business men of California the chief burden of carry- ing the enterprise to success will rest. When the museum has been established and its far-reaching machinery for promoting trade is in operation there will then be no lack of members. Applications for en- rollment will come not only from all parts of the coast, but from all parts of the Union. All will be plain and easy sailing then. The sole difficulty in an enterprise of this kind is that of starting it, and even that diffi- | culty seems now well nigh surmounted. The usefulness of such a museum as the one pro- posed has been amply demonstrated by what has been achieved in Philadelphia. The museum there has al- ready a world-wide fame, and from merchants and manufacturers in all parts of the globe letters of in- quiry come to its officers asking information as to markets and prices. So great has been the benefit conferred upon American trade by the work of the museum that other progressive nations are discuss- ing plans to establish similar museums, and it is probable the Germans will soon have one in opera- tion. Geographical advantages possessed by San Fran- cisco make her the natural metropolis of Pacific Ocean commerce. Geography and nature, however, are not the controlling factors in commerce. There must be business ability, sagacity, energy and the fac- ulty of co-operation 2mong a people to secure for their city the benefits which trade confers. The move- ment for a Commercial Museum is one of the most important ventures the people of the Pacific Coast have ever undertaken to make use of the natural ad- vantages they possess for controlling the ocean trade. It ought, therefore, to have a liberal, earnest and | prompt support. pillage, | ry highway from Portland, Me., to Portland, | SUNDAY, MAY 20, 1900. PHELAN'S PETTY SPITE. FRANCISCO CALL, AYOR PHELAN'S letter to General E.S. ‘M Salomon setting forth the reason why the | name of Solomon Cahen was omitted from | the committee appointed by the Supaervisors to ar- range for the celebration of Memorial day is one of the plainest exhibitions of the petty spitefulness and ! inordinate vanity of his nature which he has yet dis- | played. It discloses feelings which no other man in | San Francisco is likely to share, and reveals a sensc | of self-importance which certain no other man | would be foolish enough to manifest in public and in writing. " When the Supervisors appropriated $s00 for the | | celebration of Memorial day it became necessary un- der the charter to appoint a committee to have charge | of the money. Desiring to act in harmony with the ! veterans of the Grand Army on the subject, the Grand Army posts of the city were requested to make | nominations for members of the committee. With | that request the veterans complied, and among the names sent in was that of Solomon Cahen, a member | of Garfield Post and a past department commander | of the Grand Army. When the Supervisors made up the committee they rejected Mr. Cahen, and Mayor Phelan in explaining the rejection wrote to General Salomon that he was objected to “on the ground that as the $500 appropriated for Memorial day was for | the first time in this city made possible by the char- ter, no one opposed to the charter should serve under it in any honorary capacity, and that Mr. Cahen had attacked its most vital and important provision; hence his name was omitted on final confirmation of | the committee.” Thus it appears a member of the Grand Army is to | excluded from even a purely honorary office in con- | | nection with the celebration of Memorial day for no ' cther reason than that he opposed some of the pro- | visions of the charter. It is reported that when the names were submitted by the posts and the attention of the Mayor was directed to that of Mr. Cahen he declared a belief that the nomination would not be ratified by the Supervisors, and added: “We must punish our enemies.” | It is, then, by way of showing his power to punish | his enemies that Mayor Phelan procures the rejection of a worthy nominee for an honorary office; for that he snubs the Grand Army, mocks at the claims of the | veterans and infuses his spite and overweening vanity | into the very celebration of a day sacred to | memory of the nation’s heroic dead. Out of respect for the solemnity of the occasion | and the memories which are inseparably associated with it the veterans very naturally declined to contest | the Mayor’s action or even to denounce it. Their course was right, for in the celebration of that day there should be no scandals. No spitefulness of a vindictive popinjay in office should bg permitted to mar the decorum of the ceremonies. The public, however, will pass judgment upon the incident. If every man who in the exercise of his rights and his intelligence found reason for opposing some clause of the charter is to be ranked by the Mayor as an “enemy” and punished for it, those who are thus placed under condemnation and shut out from even honorary positions in the city will have good cause to recall the Mayor’s once loud spoken pledge that all citizens should be treated fairly under his administra- tion, and ask if that is another of his many promises which were made to get votes and with intent to de- ceive. the | After the Railroad Commissioners heard all the evi- it, the matter has still to go to the courts for trial, and thus we have another proof that the commission THE INFLUX OF JAPANESE. R :PORTS from Washington concerning the im- show that the warning of The Call was not uttered without cause, nor was it given one day is rapidly increasing and has already reached a point that renders it dangerous to the welfare of American In response to a resolution of the Senate, the Sec- retary of the Treasury submitted on Friday statistics dence in the Fresno rate case and gave a decision on is of no use even when it tries to be. migration of Japanese into the United States sooner than necessary. The number of immigrants labor in all parts of the Pacific Coast. obtained from the Commissioner General of the Immigration Bureau, showing that 2230 Jap- anese laborers arrived in 1898, 3395 in 18Rg, and for the ten months - ending April 30 of this year 7181. These figures indicate only those who have come direct “to the United States from Japan, but do not embrace those reaching this country via Canada. How muny there are coming .in this way the department does not know, but the Commissioner expresses the opinion that the number is large. The opinion is expressed that there will be large increases the coming year. He states that strict examination is made to prevent the entrance of la- borers under contract. Such is the record, and no intelligent man can give it a moment of serious consideration without pe-- ceiving the menace implied in the figures. Two years ago the immigration was less than 3000, and now it has reached such proportions that the number coming direct to the United States during this fiscal year may reach 10,000. When to these are added the numbers of those who are smuggled into the country across the Canadian line, it will be evident that it is time to call a halt. Fortunately the people have become aroused on the subject, and the attention of Congress has been di- rected to the evil. When The Call sounded its first warnings of the impending danger it pointed out the best means to be taken to provide the required remedy. Our treaties with Japan must be revised, and the authorities at Washington have been urged to take steps to that end. The attention which the Sen- ate is giving to the subject shows that the efforts of The Call to put a stop to the immigration have been well received. In the meantime it is gratifying that the labor unions and workingmen generally have be- come interested in the campaign and are bringing their influence to bear. Immigration fiom Japan is in many respects more to be feared than immigration from China, and should be placed under equally strong restrictions. —_— It may be a good scheme to administer the gov- ernment of Cuba until the people are capable of ad- ministering it themselves, but it is to be regretted that the first object lesson in government which we have given them is that of looting the Postoffice De- partment. The persons who intended to go to Cape Nome, but had their tickets stolen, may yet have cause to f % | : | give thanks to the thief. There is such a thing as being robbed of an opportunity to get into trouble. Kaiser William has given orders for another drama to be written displaying the greatness of the Hohen- zollern family, and it is now a question whether he is elevating the stage or bulldozing it. 1f Baden-Powell wishes anything in the British em- pire all he has to do is to ask for it. W’W—Wfiw L S S S S e o o e B e e e St oo o o o o “«W HERE 1S “THAT DOG?” —ROCKY MOUNTAIN NEWwWS. 0t 0090000900000+ P00 PePtPePtEt0IPtP ettt tdtdedededededetdedtdededed OUR PRODUCTS AT CALIFORNIA@ OR@ANGES. Chicago Chronicle. California now has practically a mo- nopoly of this market for its oranges, cherries and grapes of the best varieties. Until seven years ago Florida had the preference here for its oranges. The frost then killed nearly every grove in that State, and after two years, just when the afflicted inhabitants were plucking up courage to plant trees anew, there came another severe frost and deterred many. Ever since, however, the new settings have been untouched by the winter cold, and Florida is once more to be congrat- ulated upon the prospect it has, accord- ing to recent reports, of gathering at least 1,000,000 boxes of oranges next year. But Chicago dealers in this fruit say that the Florida crop will have to be three or four times larger than that be- | fore many ‘“Indian Rivers” will be seen in this market. The bulk of them will be shipped by water to New York. This last winter there has been a small trade of the kind, but only fifty carloads have been received here, while possibly, it is said, 200 carloads have gone to New York. Chicago consumers of oranges once fancled that Florida oranges were supe- rior to those of California, and there was | some reason for -this fancy, but when, seventeen years ago, plants of the Wash- | ington navel variety were imported by the Government from Australia and sent out to the young colony of Indianians at Riverside, Cal., and the plants grew and matured, a_different complexion was put on the affair. Groves of the new variety multiplied and throve amazingly, and after a few years there was nothing to be said against California oranges. The only embarrassment was that enough could not be obtained. Happily, as well for the growers in that y State as for the lovers of the fruit in the East, at the_time of greatest scarcity of oranges in Florida the ‘“navels” were abundant and in their prime on the young trees in Riverside and a score of other fa- Vored places. Florida is now turning its attention more than before ‘“the great freeze’” to the cultivation of the ruling kind under the setting sun, and after a few years the people will have the ad- vantage that comes from competition. The end of the season for early oranges will be in another week or ten days, and nearly all the shipments have been re- ceived. The principal dealers report that during the season 434,400 boxes of oranges have come into this market from Cali- fornia alone. They have not, of course, all been consumed here, but the great majority have been. The average quality has been very high. ‘Skillful horticulturists, assisting na- ture, have by _extreme attention and scientific selection of fertilizers greatly improved both the appearance and_the flavor of the oranges grown there. They have made some of them earlier by two months_than formerly they were, last Thanksgiving there were Califor- nias” in this market of a very good color. Before this year if oranges from that quarter had been received here for Christ- mas it was thought to be doing remark- ably well. PERSONAL MENTION. Judge S. Solon Holl of Sacramento fis a guest at the Grand. Willlam 8. Sims, an attorney of Sacra- mento, is at the Grand. Dr. H. G. Bayless and Dr. W. A. Hen- dryx of Los Angeles are at the Palace. Baron Leo von Rosenberg of New York, who is interested in California mines, is at the Palace. Dr. J. H. Lindsey of Fall River, Mass., is at the Palace. F. M. Hatch of Honolulu, former Minis- ter under the Hawailan Government to the United States, and his wife are at the Occidental. Oliver Morosco, manager of the Los An- geles Opera-house, is a guest at the Oc- cidental. Judge 8. F. Gell of Salinas returned yes- terday from an extended trip in the BEast and is registered at the Occidental. 'W. C. Patterson, a well-known business man of Los Angeles, and wife are at the Occldental. Dr. John J. Gallagher, formerly autopsy surgeon at the Morgue, but who for near- ly two years has been pursulng special studies in the hospitals and clinics of New York City and who was just preparing to go to Europe, arrived in San Francisco yesterday, having been called home by the impending death of hi ther. ————— CALIFORNIANS IN WASHINGTON ‘WASHINGTON, May 19.—Dr. Stark and wife of Oakland and J. A. Woodward and wife of San Francisco are at the St. James; W. D. Case and wife of Los An- geles and H. W. Scale of San Francisco are at the Arlington. ———— ‘‘Have lved Shuli el very long In the sub- o TS Sttt For | TRACT ATTENTION. CALIFORNIA OIL. Denver Times. In casting up the value of Colorado’s many resources it is the custom to speak of our coal, gold, silver, copper, agricul- | | tural lands, railroad interests, etc., but | | very rarely do we take any interest in the | | value of the oil discoveries within the bor- | | ders of our State. Yet the value of these | has been accentuated most markedly of | 1ate by the oil excitement that now exists in California, from the bay of Frisco clear | down to San Diego. | | California has always been thought of mostly as a frult and general produce | | State, with a record for gold mining in | days gone by. When the subject of its future as a manufacturing State was broached it seemed a foregone conclusion ]lhzu that was among the impossibilities, | for nowhere in the Golden State has coal | been found in quantities worth mention- ing as a commercial factor. Recently there have been wonderful and wide- | spread discoveries of oil—mostly fuel oil, | though illuminating oil has been found | | and is produced in goodly quantities. alifornia has _been producing oil for | | many years. Some of the wells have | | been pumping steadily for as Innf as twenty-five years, ang recently the inter- est has become very much more general. The increased production has been suf- ficiently large to assure fuel users that | they would be safe in making such altera- | tions as are necessary to use oil instead | of coal. The Santa Fe Railroad has al- | tered all its engines used on its California | lines, and now uses fuel oil only, and | 4 17 per cent in cost as compared with | coal. Big buildings in Los Angeles have given up using coal and are able to heat their structures for less than half of the cost of coal. Traction engines and other | such like machinery are run by this fuel, and the owners state that mnot only is it a great saving in the cost of fuel, but it saves the cost of transporting weight | and also saves the wages of the man who | used to have to be employed as a fireman, | as the ofl runs into the firebox without a | stoker's assistance. | One of the peculiarities of the develop- | ments in California is the fact that the increased production has not decreased the going price of ofl, nor do large pro- ducers find any dificulty in readily selling their oil. This will be understood when one considers that such a sreat concern as the Unfon Iron Works of San Francisco takes 30,000 barrels a month and uses them | for fuel, while at Redding one large smelter company is bulldln; a storage tank to hold 125,000 barrels of oil, for use instead of coal in the furnaces. It is therefore more than probable that California will forge to the front as a manufacturing State, and her location at | the gateway to the Orlent highly favors | such” a probability. | ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS. STEAMER CHINA—F. W. Newark, Cal. The steamer China of the Pacific Mail measures in length 440 feet. PATENTS—J. 0. D, City. In the cla fled part of the city directory you will find the names of the local patent agents. SENATORS AND ASSEMBLYMEN—F. M. L, City. In San Francisco there are nine State Senators and eighteen Assem- blymen. ARMY STRENGTH-P. P. B., Oakland, Cal. Prior to the war with Spain the stren;ru_: of the army of the United States was 27,582, SHARKEY-McCOY FIGHT—F. W., Newark, Cal. The Sharkey-MeCoy fight in New York, January 10, 1899, end the tenth round. tE . sk WHERE SHARKEY TRAINED—F. W., Newark, Cal. Tom Sharkey trained at the ocean beach at the time he was getting ready to meet Bob Fitzsimmcns. SAN FRANCISCO DIMES—J. M. & C., San Jose, Cal. There is no premium for dimes minted in San Francisco since 1590, except for the twenty-four minted in the year 1804 WITHOUT MINT MARK—A Subscrib- er, City. The dimes of 1594 that do not bear a mint mark were coined at the Phil- adelphia_or parent mint. Such do not command a premium. REPELIER—H. S, City. ‘“Repelier,” the name of a hotel in this city, was the surname of a gentleman who resided in Pennsylvania a number ¢f years ago, and lt‘oax;n:ihom a hotel in that State was POLL TAX—P. M., Fairmount, Cal. The statement that poll tax was abolished in California is not correct. The constitu- tion provides that poll tax shall - 1ec:e<f and that clause holds unfi?elfo{l repealed by vote of the people. EELS—A. 8., City. The eel lays its eggs like most all other fish and like the lam- prey it spawns only once and dies. The sels ‘which descend to estuaries or the sea, leposi t their eggs th d lmfl the "‘E:lr‘: 1{1 :u !m "l'%uol:: :gl: which cannot e to sea, breed inland rivers lakes. o TO DESTROY SNAILS—J. B., Fruft- vale, Cal. Cabbage leaves, if placed at night in garden beds where there are snatls, will be found to have, when turned ; | —_—————————— | in the morning, a number of the pests at- tached to the inner side. The leaves be collected and the snails destro eép snails out of garden beds sui the beds with flve-inch board, covered with a composition of train oil and soot. The snalls will not pass such a barrier. A LEASE—-M. G. B, City. Whether a lease can be transferred to another party by the holder depends upon the conditions of the document. It is safest for a party who desires to purchase a place of busi- ness, the owner of which has a lease on the premises in which such business is conducted, to ascertain from the landlord if it is agreeable to him that there be a transfer. GREEK-TURKISH PEACE—H. C. M, Bodega, Cal. The treaty of peace between Greece and Turkey was signed September 18, 1897. It provided that the Turco-Greek frontier should be rectified. Greece to a war Indemnity of $17,000,000, evacuate Thessaly; prisoners of war to be ex- changed after signing of treaty; full am- nesty to all who might have been comp: mised by the war; subjects of either c try to move in the other’'s country; rig of immigration and emigration; Greece to pay $4,400,000 for private losses; to aveid abuse of consular immunities; secure a regular course of justice; safeguard to Ottomans and foreigners 'in their differ- ences with Greek subjects; the Porte to have the right to submit proposals for settling questions arising from stipula tions of the convention of 181 to the pow- ers to act, whose decision Greece must accept: re-establishment of postal and telegraph relations and neither to tolerate proceedings which would lead to disturb- ances. ————e—— ——— OLD COINS AND OTHERS—Sample 20¢ or $5 for 100 booklets, giving valuations of coins. R. F. Elliston, P. O. box 2076. * ————————— Commercial Enterprise. A shopkeeper wrote to one of his cu: tomers as follows: *1 am able to off you cloth like the enclosed sample at haif a crown a vard. In case I do not hear from you I shall conclude that you wish to pay only two shillings a yard. In o der to lose no time ccépt the last- mentioned price.”"—Tit-Bits. —_————— Cal. glace fruit 50c per > at Townsend's.* —_———————— Specfal information supplied daily to business houses and public men_ by ths Press Clipping Bureau (Allen’s), 510 Mont- gomery street. Telephone Main 1043. * The Son—Here are some college bills T haven't paid. governor. The Father—But what have you done with that last check I sent you? “Oh, that enabled me to leave town."— Life. CAPE NOME MACHINERY and SUPPLIES. OUR GOLD DREDGING PUMPS | Were successful at Nome last KRoG year. All others failed. In opera- tion daily. 3 Stevenson st., 5. F. | SAND CENTRIFUGAL PUMPS In operation daily, €25 Sixth Street. BYRON JACKSON. DREDGING PUMPS. Our centrifugal pumps are golng to Cape Nome, are you? Better buy one: just the pump for S"l‘el‘. has Interchangeable parts. W. T. JARRATT & CO.. cor. Fremont and Natoma. D-EDGI G PUMPS. !‘ Of], Gasoline, Steam Hoists, Centrifugal Pumps, | Engines&Bollers. HendyMach. Wks., 40 Fremont. | N ARSH STEAM PUMPS Supply tresh or salt water for siuice boxes: high or low lifts. SIMONDS, 33 Market st. E" GINES. steam, gas, gasoline: full line: mfrs. American Mfrs. Assn.. 20 Fremont. In stock, prices. GOLD SEPARATO?. MARSHALL Gold Saving Machine. st. Orfental Gas Engine Company. SLUICE BOXES. Klondike champion sluice saves gold: competi- tion invited. 1798 1ith st., cornep Guerrero PLATES FO» SAVING GOLn. Schaezlein & Burridge, 3 Hardle place. Kearny, between Sutter and Bush streets. 229 Folsom oft SILVER-PLATED MINING PLATE:. GET them at Denniston’s San Francisco Plat- ing Works, 652 Mission st. SILVER-PLATED AMALGAM PLAT'S. F. W, BELL, Central Plating Works, $2 Mis- sion st., S. F. Phone Jessie 301, TANKS. TANKS—Pactfic Tank_Co., Beale st. I i ‘manufacturers, 3§ S. F.: 348 . 2d st., Los Angeles. PORTABLE ' OUSES. BURNHAM-STANDEFORD CO., Washington and 1st sts., Oakland, or Builders’ Ex., S. F. GROCEPRIES. GROCERIES, provisions, tents: packed, shipped free. SBARBORO & CO., 821 Montgomery. MEDICINE CASES. FERRY DRUG CO 3 Aaries st LIQUORS. WHISKY ZE% 258 Slnthdew HUNTER RYE. WHISKY. CHRISTY & WISE Commis- sion Co., 327-329 Sansome st.