. Capt. J. D. Winchester's experience on a voyage from Lynn, Massachusetts, to San Francisco, Cal., and to the Alaskan gold fields .... g lot of men, probably most of them laborers ; theirclothes hung on them as on a clothes hanger, but theyhad sharp elbows as I found out when I tried to push myway into the cabin to dinner and got a blow under the ribsfrom one of these tall, gaunt individuals; for a while Ithought the cattle pen had broken loose and I was beinggored by the horns of a big buck steer ; after that I alwayskept shy of the tall fellow and never got under foot again. Beeman thought


. Capt. J. D. Winchester's experience on a voyage from Lynn, Massachusetts, to San Francisco, Cal., and to the Alaskan gold fields .... g lot of men, probably most of them laborers ; theirclothes hung on them as on a clothes hanger, but theyhad sharp elbows as I found out when I tried to push myway into the cabin to dinner and got a blow under the ribsfrom one of these tall, gaunt individuals; for a while Ithought the cattle pen had broken loose and I was beinggored by the horns of a big buck steer ; after that I alwayskept shy of the tall fellow and never got under foot again. Beeman thought he would like to see the first-classcabin, but they did not allow second-class people to said, however, that he would see it, so one night abouteleven oclock, he woke me up out of a good comfortablenap, and asked if I wanted something to eat. I repliedthat I did. Then get up, he said, and follow me, Iattired myself as best I could and followed him, and hetook me along until we came to a pantry, through which wepassed. A pantry-man wanted to check us, but we walkedby him, and having reached the dining rooms, sat down at.


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