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The Salt Lake herald. [volume] (Salt Lake City [Utah]) 1870-1909, January 23, 1896, Image 4

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t 4 THE SALT LAKE HERALD THTIESIkAY JAHTJABT 23 1896
H n
I
TBE DALlY HERALD
THE HEKAL1 IUBLISHttG CO
p C Chambers President
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t Richard W Young Manager
a
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THE HERALD
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lOUR INTRODUCTION OFFER
In order to Introduce our daily tc
those who are not now subscribers we
make the unparalleled offer to send
The Herald to any part of the United
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TRY IT I
These are unusually stirring times at
home and abroad
4
These orders will be taken with the
understanding that the paper will be
continued until ordered stopped
President Dole of Hawaii has beard
I
enough for a Populist senator
Eastern papers are taking our Utah
I I story of a shower of salt with a grain
of salt
Was polygamous for Utah to enter
I a Union where there were already for
tyfour sisters
Spain will pursue a new policy in
I Cuba Heretofore she has been pur
suing an ignis fatuus t
The tear talk of the last month has
I accomplished one good resultit has
killed the Napoleon craze
Cush Davis doctrine will not aid Ms
I i t presidential boom although that was
no doubt its primary purpose
Editor Pulitzer seems to have a key
II to all the situations Did he obtain it
through the Worlds want columns
i Keely motor stockholders have had
Ii I smother successful exhibition of the
I motor It never fails to work them
Since Foralcers election as senator i
from Ohio it is proposed to put fire i
I r escapes in the senate wing of the Cap I
itol I
The Boston Journal says Yvette
I Guilberfs art consists in diabolical insinuation
I
sinuation Thats just what Satans
was when he talked to Eve
General Weyler is said to be a terror
4 As his policy will be actuated by the
I I spirit of the Spanish inquisition he
i may not inaptly be called a holy ter
t ror
Hi General Campos was only human
arid failed to put down the Cuban re
I bellion General Weyler promises to
be inhuman and will fail to put down
the rebellion
Wiho invited Banker Morgan to a con
ference at Washington December 23
I bids fair to become a national ques
xion Suspicion would point to Secre
tary Morton judging from the past
The Colonial Dames of New York
have refused membership to a descend
ant of Benjamin Franklin on the
S ground that Franklins record was not
of the best Everybody knows who I
Franklin was but who in thunder are
the Colonial Dames
I I
If the TransMississippi exposition I
company wishes to accomplish
any
thing in Iowa and Utah no time is to
be lost The legislatures of both states
arf vow in session The pressure of
business upon them will soon be so I
great that they will not be able to
give attention to anything connected
with the exposition says the Omaha
I
WorldHerald = I
Washington dispatches say that
about February 1 the treasury depart Ii
ment will resume the coinage of slIver
dollars and continue tho same until
some 18000000 are coined That is
A good so far as it goes but it does not
go far enough There should be an
endless chain of coinage of silver dol
lars which would do away with the
endless treasury chain that now drains the I
I
w I
Comparing the speeches of Senator
Brown and Senator Cannon thanking I
I the legislature for their election as sen
ators Senator Browns is much super
ior It shows a better appreciation of I
the responsibilities of the position and
of the interests of Utah it was more
practical and less flowery than Sena
tor Cannons In fact in all respects it
Vra3 Use better speech of the two
L
THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY AND
SILVER
I
The New York Times thinks there
are reasons why the Democrats of I
New York city can accept with resig
nation the choice of Chicago as the
city in which to hold the Democratic
I
national convention One is that by
going to the Lake City the convention
escapes the influence of the machine
politics of New York city and state
Another cause for satisfaction is that
by taking the convention to Chicago
it escapes St Louis whlh jas supposed
to be the choice of the free silver men
It was not only expedient but neces
sary says the Times for the salva
tion of the party that at the very out
set in the first maneuvering for posi
tion the free silver men should be de
feated
The choice of Chicago over St Louis
is not a very marked defeat for the
free silver Democrats and there is
very small comfort for single
standard Democrats in the se
lection of Chicago as the con
vention city The Times may be as
sured that the Democrats who stand
for the money of the constitution gold
and silver will make as good a fight
for the recognition of silver as a money
metal in Chicago as they would have
done in St Louis and they have
equally as good a chance for winning
As to whether they can win or not will
only be determined at the convention
but the Times may depend on it that
there will be a mighty effort made for
victory
The Times is somewhat more gra
cious than some of the single standard
organs of the east It does admit that
many of the free silver Democrats are I
sincere men and are loyal to all other
Democratic principles than sound
money Kind soul If the Times were
moved to tears we would say these
are gracious drops but as it is not
we would merely ask when sound
money in the sense that the phrase
is used by the Times that is as mean
ing the single gold standard became a
Democratic principle It says We
hold that the Democratic party of the
nation is committed beyond all ques
tion to the support of a currency uni
formally and permanently good
Granted but we cannot so readily as
sent to the other part of the state
ment of the Times namely and that
can be got only by unquestionable fidel
ity to the gold standard That is an
assumption of our eastern contempo
rary not warranted by any action or
declaration of the Democratic party
There is more to lead one to an op
posite conclusion The states by the
constitution are prohibited from mak
ing anything but gold and silver coin
a tender in payment of debts clearly
indicating that the United States was
to have not only metallic money but
blmetallic money and that just infer
ence was sustained through sixtyone
years of our national life until in
fact silver was demonetized by a Re
publican congress and a Republican
administration in 1873
In the Democratic platform in 1SS4
in respect to money the Democratic
platform said
We believe in honest money the gold
and silver coinage of the constitution
and a circulating medium convertible
Into such money without loss
In the Democratic platform for 1892
upon which the present administration
was elected and from which it has so
far departed the Democratic party de
clared
We hold to the use of both gold and
silver as the standard money of this
country and to the coinage of both
gold and silver without discriminating
against either metal or charge for
mintage but the dollar unit of coin
age of both metals must be of equal
intrinsic and exchangeable value or be
adjusted through international agree
ment ot by such safeguards of legis
lation as shall insure the maintenance
of the parity of the two metals and
the equal power of every dollar at all
I times in the markets and in payment
of debt and < we demand that all paper
currency shall be kept at par with and
redeemable in such coin
It is conceded that the latter plank
Is unnecessarily long and that the lat
I part of it could have been left off both
to the advantage of the party and the
country but with all its imperfections
on its head these quotations from the
authoritative declarations of the party
together with the course of the party
I leaders both in office and out of it
until the present administration began
give a plain and direct contradiction
to the statement of the Times about the
Democratic party being already com
mitted to the sound money policy
when that phrase sound money is
made to mean the single gold standard
The Democratic party is pledged to no
such piece of infamy as striking down
one of the money metals of the consti
tution And as the Democratic party
up to this time has been the party of
the constitution and also the party of
the peonle of the plain common peo
ple so we hope in this crisis that is
coming upon the nation it will be
found true to itself by being true to
the money of the constitution and of
the people
PRAYER IN THE LEGISLATIVE
The following open letter is sent to
The Herald for publication
Salt Lake City Utah Jan 22 1896
To the Salt Lake Ministerial Associa
tion and especially to the Rev T C
Iliff
GentlemenFrom recent newspaper
interviews I learn that you are at
present engaged in an especial en
deavor to elevate the public morals of
politicians I desire to call your at
tention to a flagrant violation of the
law by the Utah legislature and I in
vite your cooperation < for its suppres
sion The constitution of Utah pro
vides that No public money or prop
erty shall be appropriated for or ap I
plied to any religious worship exercise
or instruction and every member of
the legislature has taken a solemn
oath to uphold that constitution Not
withstanding this solemn obligation
the members of the legislature are each
day applying public property for re i
ligious worship by holding prayer
meetings in the legislative halls In
addition to this some of these same
legislators in violation of their solemn
oath are paying the chaplain a salary
for constructing and delivering these
unlawful prayers Your sensitive
moral natures must compel you to look
upon this disregard of official oaths as
something akin to moral perjury and
I am sure this is as offensive to you
as it Is to me I therefore expect your
hearty cooperation in all lawful en
deavors for the suppression of these
unlawful prayers If I can aid you in
bringing about a discontinuance 0 ci
this violation of the constitution I
shall be pleased to meet with you at
your next meeting for the purpose of
perfecting some plan which will enable
us to bring about the desired end Very
truly A T SCHROEDER
We think Mr Schroeder has made a
mistake in addressing the above letter
to the Ministerial association and to
the Rev Dr Iliff It is true that the
constitution provides that no public
money or property shall be appro
priated for or applied to any religious
worship exercise or Instruction or for
the support of any ecclesiastical
establishment but that the prayers of
fered up each day in the legislature
of the state come within the consti
tutional inhibition very few people
will believe The gentleman who
wrote the above letter knows there is
a spirit of the law as well as the
letter of it and he further knows that
in the law as in ethics or religion if the
letter killeth it is the spirit that
giveth life and in paying the min
isters for the prayers they offer in the
legislature there is no violation of
the spirit of the constitution
We are of the opinion that Mr
Schroeder wrote his communication
for the humor of it If not and he is
really In earnest in his determination
to have religious opening service dis
continued in the legislature and means
it when he invokes the aid of the I
gentleman addressed in his letter we
ask Mr Schroeder to pause in his ef
forts and think how much this legis
lature stands in need of prayer both
that it may obtain light for the fu
ture and forgiveness for the past
YELLOW DOG POLITICS
Every time a party becomes so
strong says the Chicago Times Her
ald that a yellow dog can be elected
it is at the beginning of the period
when it cannot elect an archangel
The remark is true and as the yellow
dog in politics just now Is being quite
generally discussed through the press
the sentence should live Party allegiance
I
giance when based on intelligent con
viction is an admirable thing as in
deed all allegiance is to ones concep
tion of truth But true party alle
giance does not go to the extent of
requiring one to accept the yellow dog
theory To contend that it does is to
contend that the individual owes
everything to the party while the par
ty owes nothing to its individual mem
bers owes nothing to their moral or
religious sense owes nothing to their
traditions or standards of excellence
Such a contention is monstrous in its
absurdity and utterly revolting to
reason
Political parties as we have before
explained can never reflect all the
political views of the individuals of
which it is composed It only approxi
mately does that Many doctrines are
omitted that very many individual
members would desire to insert and at
times some doctrines are affirmed ty
parties that individual members can
not and in their convictions and their
feelings do not wholly endorse Yet
the aggregate of doctrines is such that
on the whole the individual accepts it
as the nearest formula of his political
beliefs and he gives to this or that
party his support solely for the reason
that it incorporates in its platforms
and general doctrines more of his per
sonal views on political questions than
any other party does
Individuals unite together and form
a political party for the purpose of
conducting the government in harmDviy
with the policy which the party an
nounces in its platform so that party
organization is but a means of enforc
ing what individuals composing that
party regard as the best policy for
the government Accepting the politi
cal doctrines announced by the party
as the nearest approach to ones po
litical faith and uniting with the other
members of the party for the suc
cess of those doctrines true allegiance
Is to be expected to that party but to
say that one must follow his party
blindly sanction all that it does and
vote for any person it makes the party
candidate however unfitted or disre
putable he may be is a degree cf
partisan bigotry to the level of which
we hope the people of Utah will never
descend To do so is to accept the
yellow dog theory in politics That is
over zealous partisans have declared
that they would vote for a yellow dog
if made a candidate by their party
rather than to vote for a respectable
competent man of the opposite party
When men talk so they at once pro
claim their own bigotry and shame
Nor are they the best partisans The
best partisan is he who while he
recognizes his own reasonable alle
giance to his party also recognizes the
obligations of the party to the individ
ual and to the community No party
has the right to place in nomination
incompetent men for public office or
men whose lives are so bad that their
nomination is a shock to the moral
sense of the community and when a
party does that kind of thing it is pro
per that it should be rebuked by over
whelming defeat By thus rebuking
or helping to rebuke his party by de
feating it the individual often renders
the very best of service to it for he
bringsit back to where it will learn a
decent respect for public sentiment
he makes the party respect the com
munity and when it has such respect
for the moral and intellectual sense of
the community then is the party
strongest
Let us have no yellow dog politics
in Utah good people fir that means
debased politics unclean politics Let
us have party politics and intense
party politics If you will for we ad
mire individuals and communities pos
sessed of strong convictions but in the
midst of it let us remember that par
ties are made for the people not the
people for the parties and let parties
know from the outset that they must
not only put forth good political doc
trines but clean and competent men
for office So shall we secure good
government for the state
WHO SAID RATS
For a long long time past old Eng
land has been regarded as being to
some extent in a state of decrepitude
This idea or impression may have
arisen from associating the name of
her venerable and universally respected
queen with the English government
itself The public imagination has
been filled with Ideas of the great
armies of the continent and they have
seemed to overshadow everything else
England has no great army when com
pared with those of France Germany
and Russia and this fact has seemed
to diminish her importance in Inter
national questions But the tight
little island has not been idle all
these years and has never ceased to
increase and strengthen her naval de
fences William of Germany sent a
congratulatory telegram to the presi
dent of the Transvaal republic which
telegram had the same effect upon the
drowsy British lion that the cry of
rats did upon the sleeping terrier
lying on the rug in front of the fire
The flying squadron seems to be look
ing around for the person who cried
rats but so far has not succeeded in
finding him After sailing around
awhile and making very careful
search everywhere the flying squad
ron like the aroused terrier will re
turn to lie on the comfortable rug in
front of the warm fire there to doze
until some one shall again cry rats
I
BIEUCE TO FIGHT HUNTINGTON
The other day W R Hearst editor
of the San Francisco Examiner and
the New York Journal telegraphed Mr
Ambrose Bierce at San Francisco as
follows
Railroad combination so strong in
Washington that seems almost impos
sible to break them yet it is certainly
the duty of all having interests of the
coast at heart to make most stren
uous efforts Will you please go to
Washington for the Examiner I Will
send Davenport from here and the
Journal will use whatever power it has
to assist Please answer quick
To this Mr Bierce answered as fol
lows
I ShaH be glad to do whatever I can
toward defeating Mr Huntingtons
funding bill and shall start for Wash
ington on Monday evening next
These two telegrams tell the story
of Mr Bierces mission to Washington
That he will make a great tight fait
and honest and that when he is
through Mr Huntington will know he
has been in a fight there is 010 doubt
in the world The Examiner says he
has been the most formidable oppo
nent the railroad monopoly ever had in
Ca ifornia He wields a most caustic
pen and his wit is so keen that it
pierces a man before he realizes what
is the matter with him His Prattle
in the Sunday Examiner has been for
years one of its chief and most attrac
tive features He was always a free
lance in the best sense of that term
and his style was modeled on that of
the great British essayists than which
there is none more charming Ambrose
Bierce was the pleasantest prattler on
all the Pacific coast For once in his
life Mr Huntington is entitled to sym
pathy
In his speech thanking the legislature
for the honor conferred upon him in
electing him senator Senator Frank J
Cannon said that today Utah holds in
her hand the sword with which she
carved for herself as great a monu
ment as stands to any state in the
Union Beautiful metaphor none the
less beautiful than it was suggested
by the fact that the Bunker Hill monu I
ment was carved out with the Sword
of Bunker Hill
Mrs Dimmick thinks that Uncle Ben
I is a greater man than Uncle Sam
NOTABLES OF THE DAY
a
W
I
t14 r I
iII1
ORVILLE HITCHCOCK PLATT
senator from Connecticut was born
in Washington Conn July 19 1827 He
was educated in the public schools was
admitted to the bar in 1849 and began
practice in Meridan Conn
He was secretary of state in 1857
state senator in 18612 and a member
of the legislature in 1S6469 serving as
speaker in the latter year
He was elected to the United States
senate as a Republican In 1878 and was
reelected in 1884 and in 1891 and is a
member of many important commit
tees of the senate
Yale gave him the degree of LL D
In 1887
Mr and Mrs Durgin are hale and active
people living near Portland Me Mr
Durgiu is 103 years of age and his wife
is 09 I
09No
No man should consider himself a god
even with a small g is the latest epi
gram credited to Rev Charles H Park
hurst
It is now discovered that Governor
Jones of Nevada has cancer of the
stomach and his physicians say he can
not recover
Carlyle was no friend of Turkish tyran
ny and the phrase the unspeakable
Turk so often attributed to Mr Glad I
stone is really his j
The queen of Portugal is addicted to i
masculine pursuits She is passionately I
fond of hunting and has been seen to
herself thrust the knife Into the throat
of a dying stag Her love for a bull I
fight is notorious
1
HUMOR OF THE DAY
LlteratureEdlthYour narrative is
too bald
AuthorVery well I will introduce
some hairraising incidents Detroit
Tribune
4A frien in need said Uncle Eben
am lible ter be de frien dat yoh done
paid back when you borried money on
previous occasions Washington Star
Haverly Jack says he proposed to
Miss Saddle at the horse show
AustenDld she accept him
Haverly She was too full of the
horses All he could get out of her was
Neigh Puck
The Moth and the CandleSheYes
they are engaged I know she refused
him twice but the third time he proposed
she accepted him
Her Husband Serves him right
Brooklyn Life
1
The differenco between a street and a
woman said the cheerful idiot to the as
sembled and uptothattime happy board
ers Is that the cross streets are the
quietest Indianapolis Journal
McGuire the trampSpare a copper
to an ould sodger sorr
The Mayor What You a soldier
McGuire Yes sorr and more sorr
On one occasion I made a whole regiment
of the enemy run sorr
The MayorDld they catch you Il
lustrated Bits
Exasperated Citizen Look here I want
to make a complaint against your con
founded cable cars Yesterday I got
caught in a blockade and had to wait
for nearly an hour I
Superintendent Thaits just like you
fellows never satisfied Why another
man just came in and complained that
the cars went so fast he could not set
on Life I
1 lit Prices Cream Baking Powde jl
Worlds Fair Highest Award
OO3I3IENT BY THE EDITORS
The Davis Resolution
It cannot be said that the Davis reso
lution nuts the case in terse English
the resolution is not a shining success
in its composition Then too there is
Question whether the times call for a
bill of particulars In recital of the things
which European povers shall not under
take to do in this country The pithy
paragraphs In the original Monroe mes
sage are a clear definition of this coun
trvs views A revised version of the
text Is not needed and there is no rea
son why the doctrine should be rewrit
ten or for that matter reaffirmed An
aconda Standard
Who Vote For Free Coinage
The Miner is still waiting for the Re
publican oman in Montana that will tell
its readers that every Democratic mem
ber of the senate finance committee
voted in favor of the free coinage bill
while every Republican on the com
mittee with one exception voted against
it Yet this is an important faot and the
readers of the Republican contempor
aries are entitled to ItButte Miner
The Man Who Wants War
The man who wants war news has a
variety to pick from He has only to
pay his money and he can take his
choice of Cuba Ashantee Transvaal
Abyssinia Formosa Constantinople Ar
menia with several fairly well developed
scares from England Germany the
United States Korea and Manitoba
Seattle PostIntelligencer
Reeds Political Coffin
The spite work of Speaker Reed and
the gold combine in the house will fill
Reeds political coffin with sharppointed
silver nails and prevent his political
corpse from taking rest even in the
frrave Denver Times
Talle About the Mormons
In 1847 I first went to Utah then the
Mormon empire Brigham Young was in
his glory in the full zenith of his power
then the president of the church its
prophet seer and revelator Never on this
continent and hardly over any people
in the history of the world was the in
fluence of one man more surely felt and
exercised His word was law the beck
of his finger was a command He ruled
with selfpossession always studying for
the pecuniary interest of the people giv
ing forth from his large experience and
his distinguished ability so far as their
worldlY a If airs were concerned the best
of advice and judgment At that time
very few indeed In the Mormon church
doubted his power or disobeyed his com
mand He was supreme not only in
worldly affairs questions of taxation or
political positions such as mayors of
cities representatives to the legislature
both in the house and the senate of the
territory but above all was he supreme
as the head of the church to which obe
dience was the first law A man of dis
tinguished personality of greater self
nossession than I have ever seen in any
man practical in every sense of the
word and he was one of the most deter
mined characters in all history L E
H in Cleveland Plain Dealer
LTAH
No more we watch hove eastern hills
To see new stars arise
But turn where proud Sierras lift
Their snow peaks to the skies
For mirrored in the flashing streams
That wash their rocky slopes
A star of promise gleams and lifts
Lo swell the Nations hopes
The circling orbs that guard the land
Send greetings from afar
And welcome to their sisterhood
Fair Deserets silver star
Then round the coastline silently
New lines of march they take
To guard and sentinel the land
In endless rounds they make
Make room make room as new stars
rise
Spread wide our banners folds
No other land beneath tho sun
Such oriflamme unrolls
No stars that rise wax faint or fail
From yonder field of blue
The Star of Empire westward leads
Tho world in grand review
Still lead bright orbs loved flag Ions
wave
Fresh lustre gild thy bars
Tis ours von firmament of worlds
Bright galaxy of stars
H Parker in InterOcean I
I
l SALT LAKE THEATRE I
CHARLES S BURTON MANAGER I
Curtain at 815 p m
THURSDAY AND FRIDAY JAN 23S4 I
I fiil t iif i
LINCOLN J I The Most Thrilling and I
Naturally Presented
I Play
on the Boards Mounted
CARTERS I with all the Lavishness
and Regard to Detail
I Characteristic of MR
NEW CARTER
I
I PLAY Mechanical THE GREATEST Effect
I Special I OF THE AGE
THE TERRIFIC
Scenery
Special lloublB Leap for Life
A PERFECT WONDER
Company IN STAGE CRAFT
To hold as well as win success
Keep all your playbill promises
LINCOLN J CARTER
Prices 51 75c 50c 25c Sale of seats be
gins Tuesday Jan 21
NFXT ATTRACTION
FREDERICK WARDE
In REPERTOIRE I
Four nights commencing Feb 3
EVERY EVENING AND SATURDAY
MATINEE
W BBk ° BBinnin
p Monday 2O
Jan LDU
J B ROGERS Manager
A Superb Production of tho World
Renowned Drama
FORGET ME NOT T
With the Full Strength of
Tho Grann ODBrR Honso Go
Prices 2c 35c and SOc
Matinee Every Saturday 2Sc
Evenings at 815 Saturday Matinee 215
UJbiBJC
YCEUn
OF A
THEATRE 20
THE EXOR3IOUS SUCCESS
Passions Slave
Cast includes EMmoml Hayes Har
ry Corson Clarke Wallace JJIanro
J J Williams Charlotte Tittell
Emily Lytton Edith FolIoclc and
others
P1UCES 25 S5c
Saturday Matinee lSc
ELBOW
GREASE W
n t
i c
i J r
f
I t
A slang term denoting lots of rubbing fast falling Into disuse since
the introduction and almost universal use of
60lD DUST Wasbii Powder
Which will you use the Washing Powder or the elbow grease The
first knocks the dirt out the other knocks you out GOLD DUST is
sold by all grocers in large packages Price 25 cents Made only by
THE N K FAIRBANK COMPANY
St Louis Chicago New York Boston Philadelphia San Francisco
= = = oc
z c M L I
ANNUAL
Muslin
Underwear
Sale
r1t Commencing Monday Feb 3
s
J W
GREaTEST BgGiNs
Ever Offered in this City
J
T G WEBBER S pt
S The George Thackrah index
TELE
Challenge Index World
304 ricCornick Building
AflERICAN BISCUIT
MANUFACTURING co
SncceBsors < e UTAH CRACKER FAC
TORY Manniactdrers of
Fine Crackers and Cakes
CreniD and SnoTriJalse Sodas in One Two and Five Pound 23azea
HENRY WALLACE Manager
itII
442 Sout Second eat Street
DAVIS HOWE CO
IRON FOUNDERS nACHINISTS
MAJTUFACTURERS OF ALL KITOJS OF
fINING AND MILLING MACHINERY
Prompt attention paid ill all kinds of repair trnrlc
No 127 North First Weal Street
Have You OIL
Seen the ClIM I Ix EATER
IT IS ALL RIGHT II I I
SpencerBateman CO
Will be glad to show 3 ou these and all the others oi
their full line of HARD AND SOFT COAL HEATING AND
COOK STOVES
67 Main Street
RAND MILL CO
Rock Drills Air Compressors
Mining Machinery p
AIR COMPRESSORS
With Compound Air Cylinders
i and Compound Steam Cylinders
witt Meyer or Corliss Valves =
Bmifl i Drill Pf 23 lark Place Sew York Air Compressor Driven by Di
Rand UllU VJU1 City U S A rect Impulse Water Wheel
Offices Nonadnock BulWInS ChMSgoIlL BIG Eighteenth Street Denj
yer Branch E TO Box 3SS Butte Mont Isaperalns Mich Sherbrooko P Q Canad L
SartadoS30 city of Mexico

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