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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL,. THURSDAY, JUNE 23, 1904 “JOE” CANNON'S LOGIC AND QUAINT WIT SWAY VAST CONVENTION THRONG BLUNT WORDS OF CHAIRMAN STRIKE HOME, Campaign Spirit of the| Delegates Is Aroused. SR His Speech a Summons to Protection’s ‘ Colors. —_— The ose who were the lack of day. Per- e fighting representin rican people chair delegates w not var n memory the ir ontro the center scinated. »r, strar city. He begir his face. were inspir him f ur hand they his he spoke. AVOWAL. A FRANK refrest ank. avowal spee. sBut h ntenti That s e abandor of pr his orig abulary cheerin ty store and ress tk fros ying that ramble. And, first enthusiasm in th great river t ing in the mo i breadth dow known for t raises | nderstands that | nest with one | & and makes hen that is th moment. nt Oh the Republican through 1 a you find do_not want ve 0,000,000 peopl t they will a party aration that sl national, achieve h Abraham Lin it well. We have him th make convention years ago, the glad to see the conven- courtesies of the convention possible that we could just about now A divided country, a’ bank Pt treasur credit. The Republican ty got power and under its great leadership enuc legislation upon the statute k to the principles of { and Hamilton, and legislation that revenue while placing dutie: adjusted as 0 encourage every | » take part in the diversified | d resources of the country i su bear with me for five minutes speak of the comparison as it was | the one hand of facts and the con- dsy. In 1860 we had been sub- dominated for riy: insignificant in manufactu alture. Under our policy, which wed, with the exception of four that time to this, the United | s first in agricuitore and by | fled her industries we are the greatest manufacturing # footstool. One-third of all products that come from the fac- in the United States by the co-operation of American cap- American labor and skill GREAT HOME MARKET. us make one other statement—our pro- every year are greater than the entire | 1904, ntially trade T ag many years with the | cras | or decent conditions? Take the country under | dore Roosevelt 3 estimated. f the Ur REDUCED POSTAL depa now? We have postal average 1,000,000 onal na pa ays den tection @s r power. whate a dagger f th sermon, free tr nd he did it w minority side and heerin uding as T never witnes nat House, bec at last ¢ Democratic delivered t y nce the people th the lea ght 1o c er und map in i Williams in the Houee. They have bee ng give the untry Dover's powders DROPS INTO Oh,”" said a dis follow- the astute Sen: come » power, while protecti bery we will to you that we will jo of trade, but W ndustries over night.” God, think of it! but won't kill yor you to deat day 1 guard to the pe: are dwelling in peace serity under a Republican policy ds me of the fable of Aesop. You his_fables hat th e dog: e record in one o said to the sheepP*'discharge were their natural protectors— em- | us and we will take care of you.” Does apital of this country and the labor of this try want fo be under the care of the wolf an and the wolf Williams and their fel- I do not think so. What a country And, Republicans, we have got to out- | this is. line the policy and lead the people in caring for it. Why, we are like the women; we not only have to take care of ourselves, but more, | as one of our women said, we have fo take care | of the men. The Republican party not only has to care for itself, but has to care for the | minority by a wise policy. How has it been doing it? We preserved the Union under the policy and leadership of this party. Do you recollect that the opposition party, on a de- | mand for an armistice and negotiation and compromise, nominated McClellan in 1864 and moved heaven and earth to defeat Lincoln? | Do you recollect when the constitutional amend- | nents were submitted they sald nay, nay, and then, after they were adopted, the Demo- came into power temporarily in Indiana and Ohio they passed acts taking | back the assent of the States. When the first | battle was fought against greenback money back in the seventies, out in the Middle West, whatever they were on the Atlantic coast, | they were flatists in the West. From step to | wtep through all these forty-four years, where, you measure time by advance, we have ved two centuries as compared with any er period of the world’s history. they have pulled back, pulled back, and when we ac- complished—and it Is not necessary to march forward and try to accomplih again—they move into our old quarters and squat down there and make fuces and say, “'You are going to send the country to hell.”” MAKES COMPARISONS. But we do not mind it. We move on. Why, gentlemen, why multiply words about ancient the administration of Grover compare It with the country istration of William McKiniy Cloveland and nder the admin- and under Theo- If a man will dwell in com- son for a moment and make a falr com- arison, if he would not indorse the policies of the Republican party he would not believe one though he were raised from the dead. McKiniey, Roosevelt: the Dinglcy tariff, thaf restored t0_us economic prosperity: the gold standard that settled for ail time the matter of sound money; the short, triumphant war with Spain; the Philippines and Porto Rico coming under our flag, and freedom to Cuba, 1n a record that will stand in the future second. only to the record made by George Washing-' ton and’ Abrakam Lincoln. Imported anarchy struck down our great President _when partisan strife had almost ceased. The world paused in wonder and in indignation—not in fear, because as life went i | lungs as trust busters. CErarax. TOr AT DorzrrEr. m our great leader and our great President there was a young, active, henest, courageous man standing by the bedside who under the constitution was his successor, and he there said, “T.am to be President, to carry out the | policies of the Republican party, and I will in the footsteps of Willlam McKinley Abraham Lincoln > your coming President great things have pened in the last three years. 1In the| World a single great policy in a genera- We have more than that untry. 1 have glven you old ents under Un- : we great _succe ve had the nsumi tion of the freedom to Cuba w by superior statesmen. Impe- agh 1t n, talked about under McKinley, has dis- | government and 20 with growing ecivil 1 the Philippi Aye. iv _bas disap- peared from the face of the earth. Did T sa from the face of the earth? I will stick to| because the doctrinaire here and the doc- trinaire re, whether in New York or whethe; a his toga about him, saying. hou,” and still after this nce_and 1 Bost T an great q settled by the consct : the i all the people, cries ‘“Wolf, wolf. DISCUSSES PHILIPPINE Well, under the constitution of the United | States he has a right to.. Let them ask what s going t ome of the Philippines. At least | peace: at least we have growing civil | ent, and as our $0,000,000 in this h century shall increase to 250,000,000, shall zo with production and com ce, in the fullness of time that territory Ge useful the United States, whereas meantime we will be like a benediction States is great in duction great is our wealth? In imbers was the per capita In 1900 $1235 was the per capita In 1860 the wealth was measured | en on dollars, in 1900 ninety-four yw a hundred billions. Great Britain 1 aggregate of wealth of sixty bil nd gathering vet In &he st has been 1iving five hundred year: ang from sixteen to The world's wealth is four red billions of dollars. The United States bas one-fourth of it | But our friends the enemy, some of them | le politiclans, vex the air crying “Trusts, Oh, they come out strong with good | Since 1890 have they ever_done busting? Oh, no. There is no Jericho now, and If there was it would | never happen again that people would march | b the walls blowing ramshorns seven | til the walls fell down. That is what | crats are trying to do. Trusts? | reat combinations of capital against | y? Yes. But the Republican party, | ue to the people and its traditions, te to provide under the constitution that would prohibit these com- mething party! It slept under| IcKinley had the war with Spain and the young, re oration of prosperity, but mmf rusiastic, true man took an oath | to see that the laws were executed and | has executed the law. And in his opinion usts are unlawful and should be dissolved. That is the difference between the Democrats Republicans. One bursts by wind, the ther by law. NO COUNTRY SO RICH. There is no country on earth that has so | much wealth as ours. Why, interest fs| cheaper and cheapening until the credit of | the United States to-day commands money at a premium at 2 per cent, which is 1 per cent lower than any other nation on earth can com- mand it Forelgn combinations? Yes. But all = the | while these great wealth seeking individuals, | desiring favorable investments month by month | 2nd year by year, enterprising citizens desiring gain, found additional industries. Tuke the cw sus of 1900. The figures are correctly tabu- | lated and made accordng to the facts and the census of 1900 shows that from the establish- ments of the so-called trdsts in the United States only 14 per cent of the factory product me, whereas 86 per cent of the factory prod- | uct came from thelr competitors—individuals | and small ownerships. And it is bound to be that way, If you will stop and think. i There are eighty millions of our people. If | some man conceives the idea that when - he | dfes wisdom wiil have departed and that he can corner the air and the water and the | sunlight, he will find eighty millions of people | Who make our civilization' that will not only | make a law and put it into force, but by | competition and enterprise will swear that the admitted declaration of the enemy is & false- hood. Can you prove it? Yes. Just a minute. In the last two years the wind and the water that came from overcapitalization m forming the so-called trusts have been squeezed—and | there are people who make the “‘mouth bets” | about the price of water companies and com- | panjes that have gas on lop of the water, | made by printing press certificates. Oh, they | stand around and say: ““There is the most extraordinary shrinkage in values that was ever known. “How much?"’ | “Oh, a good many hundreds of millions; the Wall Street Journal says over a billion, six hundred million And yet every dollar of property, every par- ticle of property that was represented by tm-i overcapitalization two rs ago Is yet with ue. Now, all the fools that bet it to §o down and the fools that bet it to go up can fight it out. Tt doesn't make one particle of difference to the eighty milllons of people who live by the sweat of their faces and do a legitimate business_ COMPETITION ALWAYS. Oh, gentiemen, the law, public opinion, public sentifent, the desire for good invest- | ments—dbllar for dollar in the.factory .where a dollar costs one hundred cents—goes into competition agalnst the factory that cost a hundred cents and is burdened with another bundred cents common and another hundred cents gas and another hundred cents moon- ehine. Work it out. It is all right. “Oh, but,” says our enemy, “my God, look at the etrikes you are having in this country. This their strong sult—strikes, strikes! Now, what is a strike? The strike is an effort by the employer and the employe to agres | order. | @ Republican House without it. iC and McKinley and Roosevelt and help us | ization, is that cach gencration works out its " tion, holding [ | | | | | | o — - | | PARTY CHIEFTAINS WHO ARE | | PROMINENT IN THE REPUBLI- | | CAN CONV. M e L s | how the profits should be divided. If the em- ploye doesn't get a ought to get after arbitration astrikes—a quarrel about something; the divi- | sion of something. Well, then, it is abso- lutely ‘necessary to have a strike that there | #hould be profit. Great God! How many strikes were there under Cleveland, when the | Democrats wers running things? When money | became scarce the profits were scarce. There | is the whole story. | Oh, but outrageous things are done by the | employer when he oppresses the laborer, and | outrageous things are done by eome laborers when they go on a strike. Yes, outrageous | things are done in some of our best governed | churches and among those who do not belong | to any church. Once.in a While a citizen com- mits larceny. Once in a while a man commits | arson. Yes, there s law-breaking and dis- | Law-breaking in the formation of | law-breaking at times in the organiza- much as he thinks he | is tried he | tion of labor when it goes on strike. The | great body of the people that own the wealth | {@re not for the trusts, and the great body of labor—honest men who live by the sweat of | thelr faces. re not for law ing in the strikes. The law—the et anchor of civili- zation— atrong enough to pull down the | | strongest; strong enough to curb the wicked | and viclous; strong enough, like the d, to throw its arms about he pocrest and bring him 1 PRESIDENT RE SNTS LAW. | All must obey under e Roosevelt, as | the national represntative law. He is | and will continue to b, without favor or affec- tion, the reoresentative of law, supreme and | universal in our borders. A few word$ more and 1 will conclude Government is for the people. It into co-ordinate branches—the J Our 1s divided dges of the | United States courts, who hold office for life, i or during good behavior; the executive: the Congress, which cons ordinate | branches, the House | Senate, great | legislative bodles—they could not be otherwise, born as they are of 80,000,000 people who are competent of self-government Now, then, you know under our form of | government the party in power is held respon- | sible. The function of the minority is to put | It on good behavior by being ever ready to ap- | peal tu the people. Let me tell you something. If our government kas a fault it is that after | an clection one party s sometimes placed i power with only one leg. 1t may have the Serate: it _may have the Preside it may have the House. It goes along on crutches. Yet you want to hold it responsible for publ ntiment. It I had the po 1 would change our constitution that at every quadri enulal election the party that received the popular approval should go fully Into power and let the public have a government according to the sentiment expressed at the ballot box. But we have not got it arranged quite that way. What s the next best thing? Theodore Roosevelt? Ye Stronger than his | party, he will be triumphantly elocted Do vou like the Senate of the Unit It is ‘' condition that cannot be changed in November. It could be changed at the end of fonr yeare, electing a third every two years. You like the electoral college of the great popular party, 386 strog, jcoming with the war- | rants of attorney from the people to cast their votes for your candidates. 1t you approve of them, the Republican policie: 1t you refuse a workin; of Representatives, oy; You \Jike States? if you approve of you are short-sighted majority in the House because you cannot keep UNDER WHICH BANNER? I am done. I have already detained you | longer than I expected. In conclusion, let me again say that we are proud of the past, we | are proud of the future. The twentieth cen- | tury is to bring mare of good or evil to the human race than the nineteenth century brought! Under what party banner will you enlist? Under that of the anti-protectionists? Under that of the people who sit still or tear down? Or will you take service with the party Lincoln and Grant and Garfield and Harri- macrh o to victory? Speaking to the living in the presence of the dead: We have tears for them and admira- tion for the great things they have accom- plished, but the glory of our race, of our civil- own salvation and marches forward to suc- cess and the betterment of the condition of mankind; and, as they drop into their grave, their successors move on to the stage of ac. all that the give and going in turn a generation's march further on for the benefit of the race and of civiliza- tion, RIS SR ROYALTY TO VISIT FAIR. Princes George and Conrad Arrive Here From Bavaria. NEW YORK, June 22.—Two royal Princes of Bavaria have arrived here to visit the St. Louis Exposition and make a tour of the United States. They are Princes George and Conrad, sons of Prince Leopold, who is first cousin to the King. Prince George is a lieu- tenant of Guards and Prince Conrad a lieutenant in the Seventh Bavarian Regiment of Infantry. The young Princes are accompanied by Baron Wilhelm von Reitzenstein, who is adjutant to their father, l | There is quite a commotion over the | mittee proposes to appoint delegates to | the Congressional nominating conven- | provisions of the primary election law | trary. | against the proposition to appoint. The ! meet in Oakland on August 23. | evening, July 6, the Republieans of San | Francisco will ratify the nominations | ing will be held under the joint aus- METCALF | CONGRESSIONAL' BATTLE NOW WAGES IN METCALF'S DISTRICT {Knowland and Lukens Are Chief Aspirants in Re- pubiican Competition---Plans for Ratification. | —— | The fight is on. in the Repub)lcan! camp_of the Third Congressional Dis- trict. The leading aspirants to sucteed Victor H. Metcalf in Congress are | State Senators Joseph R. Knowland of Alameda and G. R. Lukens of Oakland. announcement that the Third Con- gressional District Republican Com- tion from the localities in which the are not mandatory or obligatory. In these localities delegates were appoint- ed to the recent State Convention at Sacramento, hence it is argued that such proceeding is not rough or arbi- \ It seems that the good will which the committee entertains for Mr. Metcalf | extends likewise to Senator Knowland, and therefore it is said tnat the latter will gain a decided advantage over Lukens in the appointing process. The members of the committee are W. H. Chickering, Frank Barret, J. M. Stow, George D. Metcalf, John Birmingham, E. E. Johnson, Morris Flynn, Dr. C. L. Tisdale, W. L. Crooks, W. G. Henshaw, H. F. Stahl, C. L. Crellin, R. W Church, Everett J. Brown and J. H. W. Riley. There will be thirty-five delegates outside the incorporated cities of Oak- | land, Alameda, Berkeley and Vallejo. The politiclans figure that these thirty- five will vote to nominate Senator Knowland. Alameda is conceded to Knowland, hence it is figured that he will easily capture at the outset 44 of the 94 delegates in the convention. AGAINST APPOINTMENTS. Word comes that the supporters of Lukens intend to put up a strong fight committee is required to meet and is- sue its call for primaries not later than June 29. The convention will probably At the Alhambra Theater Wednesday of the Chicago convention. The meet- pices of the State Central Committee and the California League of Republi- can Clubs. Senator E. 1. Wolfe, Henry C. Dibble and Thomas Rickard repre- sent the executive committee of the league and Senator E. F. Woodward, James K. Wilson and Frank Schmitz represent the Republican State Central Committee. i July 6 is the fiftieth anniversary of the birth of the Republican party, and | the event will be commemorated throughout the country, from the At- { lantic to the Pacific and from the lakes to the gulf. | LOS ANGELES IN At Los Angeles arrangements have | already been made for a great ban quet at Hazzard’s Pavilion. The tabl will be spread to accommodate 1000 guests. The number of acceptances registered indicates that the demand for places. will exceed the pavilion space. | The Republicans of San Francisco will not only commend the work of | the national convention at the Alham- | bra on the evening of July 6, but on that occasion will welcome the return- ing delegates. The committee proposes to give George A. Knight opportuni to make the leading speech of the even ing. The plan of introducing quite a number - of well-known Republican kers and limiting each orator to a | ten-minute speech meets with favor. The Democratic National Convention will assemble at St. Louis on the sem centennial anniversary of the Repub! can party. Perhaps the significance of the anniversary was not taken into ac count when the Democratic National | Committee designated that time, but, nevertheless, the Democrats will meet on that historic day. The California | delegation to the St. Louis convention | will leave San Francisco next Tuesday. | DELMAS 1S BUSY. | D. M. Delmas, who has been invited to make an address placing Hearst in| nomination for President, is at work preparing his speech. If the length of the speech shall be measured by the period of time in its preparation the convention may prepare for two hours with Delmas. As Governor Pardee will visit the| President at Oyster Bay, or some other place on the map, as one of the com- mittee on notification his absence from | California will be prolonged. The ab- | sence of the Governor for a consider- able time will enable Alden Anderson, the acting Governor, to become familiar with many of the dips, spurs and angles of the executive office, which knowledge | may be very useful to him in the years to come. The event which extends the furlough of Governor Pardee may shorten the absence of Mose Gunst and bring the latter home in time to attend the ratification meeting. It is noted that Henry 1. Kowalsky, M. A. Gunst, Abe Ruef and J. Steppacher are all away at the same time. Al SCCEED MoODY dent to Appoint Him Pr if Morton Agrees to Take the Place of Cortelyon CHANGES IN - CABINET Friends of Illinois Railroad Man Believe That He May Enter Upon Official Life Special Dispatech to The Call WASHINGTON, June 22. —President Roosevelt desires to make these changes in his Cabinet: Paul Morton of Illi-) nois, to be Secretary of Commerce and Labor, and Representative Victor H. Metcalf of California to be Secretary of the Navy. That Sec- retary - Moody {s to succeed At- torhey General Knox has already been announced. Morton, who is second vice president of the Atchi- son, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad, is now on his way to Washington to an- swer President Roosevelt's second invi- tation within a week to enter the Cabi- net. At luncheon in the White House last Thursday the President offered him the navy porfolio. Morton declined, saying he knew nothing about the navy. Since then Representative Metcalf, who was formerly slated to succeed George B. Cortelyou as Secretary of Commerce and Labor, has said he would like to be Secretary of the Navy, and the President still sees a chance to make a Cabinet Minister of Morton. Morton's reply has not yet been re- ceived. Many of his friends have doubted that he would sacrifice his present prominent and high salaried position to t an $8000 per annum Cabinet pos! ipecially when the Re- publican ad tration might end next PLACES BLAME 0N INSPECTORS Engineer of the I11 Fated Slocum Testifies They Did Not Test Fire Hose RECOVER MORE BODIES; It Is Now Believed That | the Death Roll Will To- tal Nearly One Thonsandi NEW YORK, June 22.—That the ill- fated steamer Slocum had no life pre- | servers aboard less than nine years old was admitted by counsel for the Knickerbocker Steamboat Company at the inquest to-day. Evidence was also brought out that the United States in- spectors did not examine the fire hose and standpipes and that the preserv- ers were not in good condition. Benjamin F. Conklin, chief engineer of the Slocum, testified that there had been no fire drills on the steamer this year, and that the United States in- spectors had not tested the fire hose. Thirty-seven bodies of victimsecame to the surface to-day, making the total number recovered 883. Of these 778 have been identified. From present in- dications it is apparent that the death roll will total nearly 1000. —_—— NEW YORK, June 22.—The general strike in all branches of the ready-made clothing trades in this city, which was called yes terday by the Garment Workers' Trade Councll, went into effect to-day. —_—— GIBRALTAR, June 22.—The American bat- tieship squadron salled to-day for Piraeus, Greece. 4 : 3 March. That he is coming to Washing- ton to consult with the President is taken as an indication that he may en- ter official life. | mittee had decided LINE. | % | tee reported in Chicago. WISCONSIN'S “STALWARTS” ARE SEATED —_— Convention Adopts the Report of Credentials Committee. i Decision Against the La Follette Faction Is Unanimous. CHICAGO, June 22.—The report of the committee on credentials, which was promptly adopted by the National Convention to-day, was presented by Senator McComas. The first part of the document related to those contests in which the action of the National Committee was upheld. | The report in this connection was re- ceived with a ripple of applause, which was slightly accentuated when the d cision placing both the “Lily Whites’ and the “Black and Tans” of Louisana was read. An outburst of cheers greeted the an- nouncement that the credentials com- in favor of the “Stalwart” faction in Wisconsin. The statement of the committee, giving its reasons for its decision on the Wiscon- sin case, was heard in complete silence, the convention showing intense interest in the report in this particular. On this contest the report says: To the contest over the delegates-at-large and their alternates from Wisconsin unusual ideration has been given by the sub-com- > and the full committes. The contest was patiently heard by the National Commit- tee for six hours, being argued on behalf of botk s by counsel before that committee, the book and pri ament being sup- *d by both sides to the individual members of that committee, and at the end of such pre- ntation that committee, being fully advised to the material fac d the merits of the pro-ci-adl u— ed to place on the permanent rc clegates. C. Spooner, J. V. Quarles, J E Baensch, with M. G Riordan, Richard Meyer Jr. Keller as alternates. Gilbert E. Roe, who had submitted to the nal Committee an elaborate argument of lIsaac Robert w on ppe cation ented in communication is ap- £ y mmittee. , resenting the false imputa t communication placed upon t onal Commi and upon you e tmpeac »¢ the good of sai 3 1 ention b testing delegations could impartial hearing and a d taith of erm| ng to the truth and right of your committee or by appeal to proceeded, notw anding said contest b sunds therein stated, his convention, aft pear, decided to om facts of eaid case. MADISON, Wis., June 2 are going before a higher court, and I do not care what the credentials commit- The situation | is not understood there, and the dele- gates did not want to learn,” said Gov- ernor La Follette to-day. “Our ec¢am- paign is ready to go on, and we are ready to meet any move the ‘stalwart may make. The State Central Com- mittee will meet on Friday, and we will at once proceed to business. Our dependence is on the people.” koo rillos LONDON TIMES' COMMENT. Says the Republican Platform is Bold and Consistent. LONDON, June 23.—The Times, the only London morning paper which prints an editorial on the platform adopted by the Republican National Convention at Chicago, says the plat- form bears the stamp of individuality of President Roosevelt and excites ad- miration for its adroitness, as well as for its strength. “Adroit it unquestionably is” says the Times, “but save in the few points where the hand of the politiclan is vis- ibly impressed upon it, it seems to be bold and clear and consistent. What the judgment of the people will be it would be neither prudent nor politic at present to forecast; but, be it what it may, it must determine great issues, not for the United States alone, but for civilized mankind ——— Japanese Retire After Hard Fight. LONDON, June 23.—The corre- spondent of the Standard at Feng- wangcheng, under date of Jume 21, says that a large force of Russians at- tacked a small number of Japanese on June 20 at Hslulitien, fifteen miles northwest of Fengwangcheng, and that the Japanese retired after a stub- born fight. kel Firing Is Heard Back of Port Arthun CHEFU, June 22.—A steamer which passed within three miles of Liaotieshan Promontory reports that the big guns on Golden Hill were fired from 5 until 6 o'clock on Tuesday evening and that later the firing of machine guns back of Port Arthur was heard for many hours. ————— CAPB TOWN, June 22.—The first through train for Victorfa Falls over the Cape-to-Cairo Railroad left Cape Town to-day amidst en- thusiastic demonstrations. ———— HELENA, Mont., June 22—The Suprems Court unanimously held to-day that the fate trials bill enacted at special session of the Legislature last December Is constitutfonal - — | TEN BEAUTIFULLY ILLUMINATED ART SUPPLEMENTS i Beginning with the issue of | July 3, THE SUNDAY CALL ) Will issue a series of the hand- | somest Art Supplements ever | issued by a paper in the | United States. Look at this attractive list: 1. “A Grass Widow,” by Bry- | son. “Footlight Favorites,” by Bryson. “Temptation,” by Bryson. “The Girl in Yellow,” Bryson. Innocence, ‘Constance,” by by Bryson. " by Riehter. ) | 7. “Rossmond,” by Richter. | 8. “Mother and Child,” by | Richter. “Head Over Heels,” by Brown (H. A.) A Serious Case,” by Rose- land. i ! sure to collect this servies. | i EVERY ONE A WINNER. z | | ARE HUMMERS.