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8 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1896. ELECTORS AND LEGISLATORS The Count Was Practically Completed This Morning. A VERY LARGE VOTE ON WOMAN SUFFRAGE. Some Rather Peculiar Features That Were Developed by the Count. | CLEAVAGE IN ' PUBLIC FAVOR/ FELL ABOUT EVENLY. Three Proposed Measures Were Adopted andi Three Were Rejected by Very Decisive and Unmistakable Votes. 6 The complete returns. for this City on | the general ticket in full from the 313 pre- ‘ Irvine cincts show some interesting results. George ) 1 The constitutional amendments farad | Jiiius M. Wallin variously. Amendment No. 1, exempting - mortgages and trust deeds from taxation, Republican. ans Spreckels. wood Cooper. | Peter J. Quinn, C. I ASSEMBLYMEN. Twenty-Eighth District. Heory Blumer, ~. 91 | Lawrence J. Conlon, A. 46 4’ Walter Kennersou, K. Eugene ¥. Lacy. 1", D, Thomus Watson, C. John Allen, P., D. John Cook, S. L. James Edward James <. J. Thomas, C William ¥. Wood, Thirtieth District. Bernard Conway, A. 1. Flashoar, 8. L. K. Hagenkamp, Eugene J. Hannon, 1 S M. drwin, C | The Party Will Not Seon | Laumeister’s Ambition to B2 As- THEY BETRAYED THE LOCAL REPUBLICANS Forget Those Who De- feated C. L. Taylor. as the arbitratora. But we said there was nothing to arbitrate and refused. “Phiey took the matter before the State Central Committee anyhow and the decision was ageinst them. They refused to submit to it, however, and took it 10 the State Su: preme Court and the decision was against them there. And still they refused to submit and went along in their work of scattering the Republican vote. Now, | suppose we had assented to their demands. | They wanted us to share with them half the offices. If we had done so, what is to prevent some irresponsibles bobbing up every election and making the same de- mands. It would not do. But it has doae all parties to the blunder and dis- loyalty so much harm that I think they will be slow to repeat it.” Georze T. Gaden, who is a free-silver Bryanite, said: “The defeat of Colonel Taylor for the Mayoralty is a real misfor- tune. I was as much integested mn the local ticket as I wasin the National. Tay- ville andience, and realizing this the lady has withdrawn from the programme. AINSWORTH ESTATE. The Widow Petitions for Her Dower Interest in It. OAKLAND, Car, Nov. 4.—Mrs. Mar- garet S. Ainsworth, the widow of the late George C. Ainsworth, residing at Clare- mont, has petitioned the County Court of Portlana, Or., for her dower interest in the estate instead of a one-third at the ex- piration‘pf five vears as provided by the will. This instrument was filed for pro- bate October 29, 1895, there, and a copy of it here December 31, 1895. It provided for her holding all of the estate in trust, and not later than five years alter testutor's death divide it equally between herself and the two children, Lawrenceand Mabel The will also provides that if she so elects, as by the laws oi Oregon she nux do, she might take the dower instead. an then the trust would apply for the penefit of the children. Mrs. Ainsworth refuses such demises, except the trusteeship for the children. 3 T ring Keturns. OAKLAND, Carn, Nov. 4—The County Clerk’s office has been a busy place to-dav, as the offictal returns of yesterday’s elec- tion have been (oming in. Mr. Jordan, as in all of his other duties, had prepared for the rush, and each precinet was checked off as received and the ballots and tally-sheets deposited at once in the bix vault built for that purpose and where thev will be kept until the canvass is made next Monday bv the Sapervisors. - In 1801 it was estin.ated that the English langnage was spoken by 20,520,000 people; in 1895 the number had increased to 111,» a7 | sessor May as Well Be Smothered. reac Thirty-Second District. C. H. Baker, John A. H Nels K. Larsen, Jereminh Lucey, K. John W. Power, I, John A. Townley, A. % v IS A VICTIM OF HARI-KARI. | De Young Is Held to B: Even More Culpable Than the Misguided Candidat. George Aspde E. J. Crane, P. George B. Godirey, D, Thomas Pennington, C. 1 R Rasmu-sen, K Joun G. uth, Thirty-Fou P. D, Code Jr., C. N, Robert Fay, P, Samuel L. Leni Colonel Charles L. Taylor is taking his | defeat at the hands of Kelly, Mahoney, M. H. de Young and other alleged Repub- | licans with that philcsophy that charac- | terizes him as a politician, man of the world and good citizen. However, he knows what brought about his defeat, and is not at all diffident about stating the causes. “Mr. Laumecister has committed hari- 1.007 | kariif ever a man did, politically,” he 258 | said last evening. “Laumeister has been L7811 treated very handsomely in the past by | the Republicans of this City and County. 4 | It comes with very bad grace, therefore, 585 | for him to assume the role of wedge in the |'work of splitting up that party. | “He will find tnatitdoes not pay. He % | has or did have ambitions for the future that might easily have been fulfilled, but '339 | he is as dead as a mnckerel. The idea ofa | man boping to be Mayor of this City who | thought so iittle of himself anyhow asto | accept the nomination after it had been | cffered—by such an outfit, too—to two | different men before him and they having | refused. Why, it is almost laughable. It { is only another illustration of a va | ambition coupled with a very weak “For that reason I consider the pro- | prietor of the Chronicle, M. H. de Young, | as well as the proprietors of the two even- ¥. C. Mosebach, L., 8. L Thirty-Fifth Distriet. Lawrence J. Dolan, P., D., A.-C. D Charles L. edentarx, R., C. Jcseph W. McTigue, Thirty-Sixth District. Wm. H. Gleeson, R. M. W. Liulefisid, C. I, Henry McGrath, P., D., C A Thirty Harry I Mulcrevy, P George A. Wentwort W. L. Wiiliamson, C. -Seventh District. 55 614 | Fortieth District. | Sigmund M. Bettman, C. N.-P., R., C. R. Lonson Martin Manzer | " Forty-First District. is defeated ; and so also are amendment 3, limiting the liability of stockholders in corporations, and amendment 6, the last | st referring to woman suffrage. The vote on these amendments was as follows: No. 1, 11,124 for and 30,762 against; No. 3, 15453 for and 20,025 against; No. 6, 13,144 for and 33,566 against. The amend:ments which carried in this City are No. which provides that all elections shall be by ballot or by such eother method as may be prescribed by | 72 \ nal Democratic Party. Clay W. 1aylor. | Thomas B. + ond. James K. O'Brie: John Rosenfeid. Jeremiah Lyunch. Charles Auderson. ~r s : 4 John Ko 207 law, providing that secrecy in voting be | Rover: Y. ifayn = preserved and which received 25,665 votes | i« B- Hakes... 196 in favor and 13,398 against; No. 4, prohib- | iting the creation of corporations for | municipal purposes by special law. the vote being 22,629 for and 15,134 against; and No. 5, which enables city charters to fix the times, etc., for the terms of Police Judges, members of the Board of Educa- >olice Commissioners and boards of tion, the vote being 23,041 for and 16,- | against. The amount of interest manifested in the several amendments may be indicated by the total vote concerning each, which was as follows: No. 1,41,886; No. 2, 39,064; | No. 3, 35,478; No. 4, 87 No. 5, 39,168; | uffrage amend- | Numver 3. ment drew votes for and against, exceed- | Kot ing by 4824 votes the total drawn by the |~ next hiehest. The Republican electors had 30,951, the (including the Populists) , the National Democrats 304, the Socialist Labor party 755, the National | 1 and the Prohibitionists 122 | This gives the McKinley electors a | Socialist Labor Party. French. Emil L Lemuel D. Bi Natlonal Party, | | 3. M. CONSTITUTIONAL Number 1. AMENDMENTS. 1,124 782 Number 3. Number 5. Number 8. CONGRESSMEN, Fourth District. E. T. Kingsley, S. I, James G. M, votes. plurality of 439 votes in the total count. The total vote for Presidential eleetors in this City in 1892 was as follows: Cleve- | nd 31,022, Harrison 2 Weaver Pop. 508, Bidwell Pro. 489 majority for The Henry Danlels. <3 852 | Cleveland was 3600. J\o*;]’l;(}:;rheil 7.891 The total vote for Presidential electors S Siveaan; T i i R © 12,365 this year was ugene F. Lond, 58,435 819; in 1892 t he totak was or Congress—In the Fourth Maguire D. defeated O'Brien R.; in the Fifth Loud R. bas run away from Kelly D. Braunhart D., Pop. and N.-P. carries the Seventeenth Senat 1 District "as sgainst Burnbam R. Dwyer D. P. defeats Dare R. in the Niuneteenth Senatorial District. Wolfe R. carries the Twenty-first Sena- torial District in opposition to Asher D. P.. C. N.-P. Hall D. P. ran away from Tyrrell C. R. | in the Twenty-third Senatorial District. Feeney D. carried the Twenty-fifth Sena- torial District over Chandler R. The victorious candidates for the As- sembly are: Lacy D. P, C. N-P. in the Twenty- eighth District. Allen D. P, C. N nth District. Hannon D. 2., C. tieth District. ‘reacy A-C. D. and P. in the Thirty- { STATE SENATORS. Seventeenth District. <amuel Braunbart. P., D., C. Thomas F. Eagan, A.-C. Nineteenth District, William 1. Bell, A.-C. D. er, Caivin Lwing, C. N.- Twenty-First District. Iiugo K. Asher. P., D, Clinton J. Hutchins, A. Lewald, C R.. James D. Powers, A. E. I Wo.fe, K. ... Twenty-Third District. P. L. Archibald, C. T Sidney Hall, P. D. J. McCarth John rrel| M. J. Welch Jr., P. in the Twenty- P. in the Thir- Twenty-Fifth District. first District. 31 Bas, Power D. P, C. N-P. in the Thirty- | Jonn fay, second District. John Feene, L E. Jarrets, Godfrey D. and C. N-P.in the Thirty- third District. 83 | courtroom. | into lending his name, like the other, to Sveeches of congratulation on the elec- | £17€, Tespectability 10 their ticker. The = P o result has been to handicap the I imate | pon ot ajor, McKinley wero made by | Republican nominees in their race and to a7 | ing papers that profess to be championsof | 8% | Republicanism, more culpabie than he. The evidence 1s clear tnat they espoused 'S | the cause of this candidale for money. “ | He w=s not the candidate of the Republi- | can party, butof a disreputable and mis- | | Henry C. Dibble, R | B Fennemann, ¢ | Henry M. Owen: Frauk A. Schmiz, P S. P. Blumenberg. 1,4 | Forty-Second District. Bernard Angennet, D Lorenz> A. Henry. i | James J. McCarth; J. Reynolds, P, D. aries A. Stubenrauch, S. L chief-ma g faction, bent rather on the ruin ot the Republican party locally. | Their part in the crisis that resulted in | the eiection of a Democrat will not be for- | | Chy | Rionper. 96 | zotten any more than will that of Lau- | | meister and the oiher candidates on the Forty-Third District. | apostate ticket. {bertan Mrnia rons k. , 188 “This, however, is a comparatively Leon Dennery. C. R. | | James B. Hari, I. W. % Henderson, 698 | small matter,” said the colonel, in con- | 2.3 | clusion. “McKinley is elected, the coun- try is safe, and a péricd of prosperity for | 5 | the whole country is before us. Thatis a | bit of work that is good encugh for one | Char.es Schinkel, Forty-Fourth District. James F. Martinonl. C | Joseph Merinl, R { Gabriel Nathan, P, Edward | Tnomas P. Riordan, chairman of the | R -publican County Convention, said lass | evening: he result of the vote locally will teach some lessons, anyhow, that ought to bear fruit. There is Charles Laumeister, 208 | for instance, who expected to be ana could 798 | have been Assessor two years hence, but 578 | Who stands no more chance now than I do 3| of being President of the United States. He allowed his vanity to be tickled by a | | faw irresponsible people and he is third in | the race, perhaps fourth. Then there is | Asa Wells, a friend of mine and a2 man of 408 1,167 Forty-Fifth District. Frederick Bery, C. R William 1. Gately, ( Felix B. Mnlzrew, P. Joseph T. O'Hanion, — xcott. WOMEN REPUBLICANS. The State Central Club Holds a Jolli- | high-standing in the community, He fication Meeting. | saw his mistake on tlie last day. | = s, % % | Then there Henry Martin, a cap- The Woman’s State Central Republican | jralist, who has no more use . for Cléb held a -jollification meeting last | the office of Treasurer than a wagon has nigiit in Justice of the Peace Groezinger’s | for a fifth wheel, but they flattered him sident Pallou, Mrs. Jones, Attorney | pive the Democratsn measuze of suctessin Tuper and others : ‘ lers. | a vear when everything should have been | | 12 pocmidedicated to Mrs. Bilion was 2 ohiitas. Whare nbver wadtany: e read by Miss Eila Ellis and received with | 4jon as to who the real candidates were, applause. ) 5 3 tofk aint i The club will in fature have meetings The title descended to it as certainiy as it | The i v v does to a piece of real estate. Kelly and Ma- | ‘fl\‘:rgrr’yng‘r;lzgua;;t':r‘x:en:fl?tflho" to make | honey offered to arbitrate and to cun-§ 8 L ent. stitute the State Central (‘omufiuei ST | last evening, and represented the general | vailing interest in election returns. i night the double bill of “Chatterton and lor as stood up manfully for the people 500,000. in the Board of Supervisors, and has ren- dered this City such service as can scarcely be overestimated. He stood in the breach against big odds. He' should have been made Mayor not only as a reward, but be- cause he 'has xo conclusively shown not only his honesty but his ability. His de- feat will be but poor encouragement for any other to follow in his ways.”” Charley Laumeister “has made the worst mistake of any of them, and the worst mistake he has ever made on his own account. For a man who has re- ceived the consideration that he hasat the hands of his party something very much tetter was to have been expected at his hands tban to have gotten in with the Kelly-Mahonev outfit to throw the party down at this junctnre. Why, there wasn’t anythine that we might not have had this year.” This was an expression by I. P. Kincaid at the County Republican headquarters Ainsworth. NEW TO-DAY. Uncle Sam Has Discovered Away up North, the skin of the Nova Scotia Seal, which makes a shoe leather im- pewvious to water, and with Cork Soles it makes an Absolutely Waterproof Shoe preventing colds, coughs, rheumatism, ete., the com- mon result of wet feet. expression of opinion by those who came and went during the evening, discussing the situation. MIDWEEK THENTER NOTES The Tabers’ Engagement Draws Near Its Close at the Baldwin. The Popular Ferris Hartman!Takes a B:n fit at the T.veli Te-Nght. Every Genuine Pair Stamped BUCKINGHAM & HECHT, - 9 Kasts 738-740 Market St. Carry a Full Tine of Buckingham & Hecht’s t'ine Shoes. 23 Send for Catalogue. The election excitement 1s still telling heavily on the attendance at the theaters, though things will no doubt have settled down to their normal condition by the end of the week. At the Baldwin, last night, the Tabers gave their tinal perform- ance of “As You Like It" to a house that was unusuaily good, considering the pre- To- FOR SALE AT Kasts, 138140 Market Strset, S.F. THE FIRE OF LIFE. The Wonderful Vitalizing Electric Currents Which Dr. Sanden’s Electric Belt Sends Leaping Over the Nerves, Carrying Joy and Gladness to the Heart, Saturating the Body With the Fire of Youth—It Makes Old Men Young and Young Men Manly. *The Love Chase’’ will be performed. On Monday night Della Fox opensat the Baldwin. Captain Herne’s play at the Grand, “Drifting Apart,” is not only highly dra. matic, with well-worked up climaxes, but it is also weil within: the range of proba- bility. Miss Victory Bateman plays her part excellently, and is as much at home as the honored guest in a splendidly ap- pointed house as she is as the viilage maiden in her cottage. The stage-struck Hester and ber lover make themselves at home everywhere, and devote all their su- perfluous energy to the pursuit of their dramatic aspirations in a way which proves highly amusing to the audience. Men, why will you be weak'? Why do you not listen to the flight of time, to the echo of thousands of grateful voices raised in thanks to Dr. Sanden’s Electric B2t ? Why do you go on from day to day realjzing that you are losing your nerve force, your manhood, when you see a cure within your grasp ? Reach for it, take it to your heart, and feel the life blood flowing, jumping, dancing through your veins; feel the exhilarating spark of manly power warm your frame, the bright flash come to your eye, and the firm grip to your hand— the grip which clasps your fellow man and tells him that you have found your Mecca— you have regained your manhood. Act to-day; do not delay a matter which is a key to your future happiness ; do not allow a disease to destroy all possibility of future pleasure for you. Whatever your condition to-day, you will not improve as you grow older. Age calls There are only a few more nights in which to see *“Tennessee’s Pardner” at the Columbia Theater. It is a play full of both humor and pathos, which is well acted and arouses pleniy of interest. Cor- inne opens at the Columbia on Monday. At the Tivoli Opera-house this evening a grand complimentary testimonial will be tendered to Ferris Hartman. A new edition of *The Babes in the Wood” will bg presanted for the occasion. Many societies, lodges and social gather- ings, for which he has so often obliged and rendered his services, will send rep- resentatives to-night. The California Theater reopens on Mon- day with “In Darkest Russia.” The Quaker City Quartet is continuing the hit made at the Orpheum on Monday niebt, and Howard’s comic pianoforte plaviag bas caught on well. As stated in e : v ThE CALi Miss d’Australic’s singlng is for great vital force, and the older you get the not of the kind likely to please a vaude- more pronounced and apparent will be your Frawley Company. OAKLAND, CAL, Nov. 4.—The Frawley | Company open to-morrow (Thursday) evening at the Macdonongh Theater presenting “The Charity Ba:l.” On Fri./| day evening *‘The Two_Escutcheons' wil] | be seen here for the first time, and “The | Great Unknown” will be given at the | Saturday matinee. The sale of seats for all the performances is large, and the company are assured of large audiences, Used as a Knife, OAKLAND, CAL, Nov. 4.—Wilson Brit- ton has charged James McCarty with an assault on him with & knife. It is not be- lieved any serious injury was done. Botn are boys who were arrested a week ago for throwing a rock into an Eighth-street | electric car. HISTORY OF A DAY. Alamela County Happenings Told in Brief Chapters. _Professor Charles Edwin Markham of the University Observation School will address Miss McCord’s class at Lower Fruityale next Friday afternoon on “Heroes,” University Lodge No. 144, 1. has been meeting at Loring Thursday night to its former me 0Odd Fellows’ iall on Eieventh streets. The estuary regatia on Thanksgiving is at- tracting attention all over the coast among oarsmen. A fine list of events has been ar. ranged, and as it is the last meet of the season they will bs stubbornl: Cheriptonitin ¥ contested for the . 0. F., which . will’ return eling place in and Franklin J Mahoney D. in the Thirty-fourth Dis- triet. Dolan D., A-C. D. and P.in the Thirty- fifth District. McGrath D. P. and A-C. D. Thirty-sixth District. Mulcrevy D. P. in the Thirty-seventh Dustrict. Poblman R. in the Thirty-eighth Dis- trict. Jones R.in the Thirty-ninth District. Bettman D. C. R.and C. N.-P. in the Fortieth District. Dibble R. in the Fortv-first District. Henry R. C. N.-P. in the Forty-second District. Dennery C. R. in the Forty-third Dis- trict. The vote was very close, Dennery, C.R. polling 698 votes and Lundquist 691. tyan D. in the Forty-fourth District. Gately D. C. N.-P. in the Forty-fifth District. The full vote on the general ticket is in detail as follows: GENERAL TICKET. T PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS, in the Democratic and People’s Party. | J. W. martin Duuiel McKay. weakness ; so cure it now—cureit. The time g is ripe. 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