Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE CITY CAST THOSE WHO WON OUT | IN THE RACE FOR MUNICIPAL OFFICE ETURNS from the oity on the imunicipal ticket are complete from 289 precincts, incomplete from four, and ten are not ac- counted for. Phelan won from Patton by 8184 Murphy leads Henley for District Attorney by over 3000. Lane is less than 1000 ahead of Fitzgerald for City | and County Attorney. For Superin- tendent of Streets Fragley has a good lead over Doolan. For Auditor Wells is far ahead, and Deane has a big lead for County Clerk. The vote for Recorder leaves Berthier about 1000 votes ahead. Martin is Sheriff by about 5000. Web- ster is Superintendent of Schools. Hill {s Coroner by & thousand and Drink- house won easily from E. L. Fitzgerald for Public Administrator. Dodge beat Siebe 6000. ves of the Superior Court the e Borden, Murasky, Seawell For Police Judges, Conlan, , Mogan and Treadwell. tices of the Peace are Barry, r, Dunn, Fritz and Kerrigan. upervisors are: First Ward, Second Ward, Kalben; Third k; Fourth Ward, Perrault; Ward, Phelps; Sixth Ward Lack- Seventh Ward, Byington; Eighth | Collins; Ninth Ward, Heyer; Ward, Deasy; Eleventh Ward, Twelfth Ward, Aigeltinger. > School Directors are Head, Staf- Holbrook, Stow, Brandenstein, mp, Conlon, Thomas, Cannon, Cav- ), Cole and Armstrong. he returns are as follows: Assessor. Washington Dodge, D. er, S. L. e F. Bonnet all, 8. L ; S. Martin, Tax Collector. James N. Block, D.. ambert, 1,929 | 231155 | 24761 23,553 539 | Tilton, R Public Administrator. khous , R Judges of the Superior Court. hodes Borden, D. B. Cu(r‘ on, R. Lo rank J. Murasky, D. Horace, Philbrook, Ind. liam . 3 Judges of the Police Court. lfam G. Burke, D.. T. Conlan, D.. les A. Low, . Mogan, Ifred B. Treadwell, R Justices of the Peace. J. E. Ba ank J. ¥ Alfred Fritz, D..... G. C. Groezinger, R. Fra F Hull Mc Leonard & William Tomsky, Tnd; 12110 Supervisor—First Ward. Edward Hol T. B. W. Lel: A. McKec nie, L 3 isor—Fourth Ward. Willlam E. Costley, 8. L. E. L. Perrauit, R. Osgood Putnam, D. Supervisor—Fifth Ward. D. A. Bean, 8. L. = 1sidor Gutte, D.. Willlam H. Phelps, R Supervisor—Sixth Ward. David Barry, Ind. D. 13,857 Jack Lackman, R. ‘237799 | Carl Prazak, S. L. . 1,958 Supervisor—Seventh Ward. Lewis F. Byington, D. Peter A. Kearney, R. F. Schilier, 8. L Supervisor—Eighth Ward. George W. Collins, R... Carl E. B. Petersen, 8. L. .22,139 .21, | increased his lead of 1000 over Craig. | | now leads by over 200. Hinton is near- ly 2000 behind Laumeister. o | the tables given here the Registrar’s | | count, being nearer official, has been | taken. { Jacob H. Neff, R... | J. W. Webb, Pro.. ITS V Supervisor—Ninth Ward. Charles Gildea, D Albert Heyer, R. T. McGinty, 8. Supervisor—Tenth ‘Ward. Jereminh Deasy, D M. Hansen, S. L. P. McMurray, R.. Supervisor—Eleventh Ward. Arthur Attridge, R.. 24,637 Charles A. Clinton, D 2769 2,045 Aug. Mulier, S. L Supervisor—Twelfth Ward. H. Aigeltinger, R. P. F. Butler, D. Paul Hartman, S. L... School Directors. Benjamin Armer, N. P.. George R. Armstrons, R. P. A. Bergerot, R H. Bernard, S. Miss M. Boyer, 8. L H. U. Brandenstein, D. C. F. Buckley, C. R Wiiliam M. Cannon, D John J. Conlon, P. J. Conran, D. John Dooley, S Edwin ad, R. Miss C. Hecht, 5. L H. M. Holbrook, R. Henry Inskipp, 8. L D. F. Keefe, D Willlam_A. Kemp, R. George H. Lent, D Timothy J. Lyons, D. H. MacMahon, S. L. 3. L Manson, J. W. C. Maxwell, A. J. Mervy, 8. L Francis Pope, D. C.| S. Solomonson, §. L. A. Sanderson, C! Schinkel, S. L J. Sivell, S. L W. G. Stafford, R. Vanderlynn Stow, R. H. Strunsky, S. L. J. M. Thomas, R.. Treasurex, k) | Joseph_ P. Kelly, I 551 WP Martin, §. L.. o0 Fifth District William Craig, D... 10,265 E. T. Kingsley, S. L. 753 Eugene Loud, R. 11,385 | Patrick Graham, Clerk of Supreme Court. Lemuel D. Biddle, 8. L. W. P. Fassett, Pro. H. A. McCranéy, D, George W. Root, R. Superintendent Public Instruction. P. B. Gallagher, U. L. 1,310 Thomas J. Kirk, R. 8 Fanny M. Pugh, Pro. 7 Christian_Runckle, D, 17,694 Jane A. Roulston, S. L. 1,982 Superintendent State Printing. Leroy S. Atwood, Pro. 429 A Contl, 8. L 5oeee 1,117 Alfred J. Johnston, R. 23,889 E. I. Woodman, D. 21,859 Justices of Supreme Court. Willlam M. Conley, D. ig"fls Thos. B. McFarland, R. 071 T. M. Stewart, Pro... 741 Robert Thompson, Pro Walter Van Dyke, D. Willlam C. Van Fleet, R. CONGRESSMEN. Fourth District James H. Bnrl‘{, D. Julius Kahn, R. Board of‘Equnhzation. John P. Dunn, D. J. G. Edwards, R. 22,190 Railroad Commissioners. Willlam M. Hinton, D 22,781 24,132 Charles S. Laumeiste: ASSEMBLYMEN. Twenty-Eighth E. W. Carpenter, § L. Lawrence Hoey, D. Twenty-Ninth (Unexpired term.) L J. Truman, R....... S ..21,322 Judge of Police Court. | (Unexpired term.) | Edward M. Sweeney, C. R.. 16,323 School Directors. (Unexpired term.) C. F. Buckley, C. R 2,630 Charles P. Eells, N. P. THE CITY’S VOTE ‘ ON STATE AFFAIRS Result of the Canvass of All But Nineteen Precincts. | HE r turns on the State ticket | this morning are complete from | 282 out of the 303 city precincts, leaving 19 unaccounted for. There | has been but little change in the| positions of the candidates, although some have snatched victory from de- feat and some are so perilously near | losing that the missing nineteen pre- cincts may mean their political life or death. | Gage has increased his plurality to | 2926. | Mulholland for Surveyor General | climbed up over 5000 votes, but Wright still maintains a commanding lead. In | the race for State Treasurer Reeves and Green are in the same relative po- sitions, Reeves leading by over 3000. | For Clerk of the Supreme Court Root | | has increased his lead over McCraney | to 10,000 Woodman and Johnston are | | still running about 2000 apart, Johnston | leading. | The Justices of the Supreme Court} are in the same relative position, Con- | ley and Van Dyke leading. Barry has crawled up a little, but is | still hopelessly behind, and Loud has Dunn for the Board of Equalization pulled up Edwards’ lead of 1400 and | Among Assemblymen there have been but two changes. eighth Hoey has a small lead and in the Thirty-ninth Wardell is four ahead | of Jones. Among the Senators Hoey has passed Twigz. Burnett still leads McCormick, Bettman holds his own and Ashe wins by 20 votes. The Assemblyman from the Twenty- eighth is not so certain as the figures following make it appear. The figures of the newspapers’ election bureau were: Carpenter, §. L., 190; Graham, R., 840; Hoey, D., 790. The figures from the | Reglstrar’s office were: Carpenter, 190; | Graham, 933; Hoey, 973. By the one | Hoey wins, by the other Graham. In | The count will be investigated. Governor. | Henry T. Gage, R.. 27,490 Job Harriman, 5. L. 1,331 | James_G. Maguire, 23,564 | J. E. McComas, Pro.. 543 | Lieutenant Governor. James Andrew, S. L.... Edward L. Hutchison, Robert Summers, Secretary of State. Charles F. Curry, R Emil Liess, §. L.. R. A. Thompson, Controller. Edward P. Colgan, R T. L. Hierlihy, Pro T. W. Maples, D.. John Robertson, 8. L. - 202 Treasurer. E. M. Dewey, 8. L. . 2,150 Will 8. Green, D. -20,890 Truman Reeves, 24382 C. B. Williams, Pr Attorney General. Andrews, D.. 7 Blanchard, Pro Tirey L. Ford, K.... ATF Strawn-Hamilt 5 Surveyor General. 1. H. Mulholland, D J. George Smith, 8. Green urrier, Pro P, J. E Jullus Platshek, D.. Martin J. Wright, R. | Thirty-First In the Twenty-sJohn F. Twigg, D. C. F. Kennealy, R. 902 Stephen B. Nolan, D. 739 H. F. Sahlender, 8. L. 125 | Thirtieth L. A. Devoto, R 1,021 Ed Hanrahan, D 901 F. Mort, S. L.. m | T. E. Brophy, R. D. S. O'Brien, D A. J. Oliver, S. L. Thirty-Second C. H. Baker, S. L. P. F. Culligan, R. James M. Hanley, D. Thirty-Third R. McCullough, R. E. D. Sullivan, D Thirty-Fourth J. J. Crowley, D.. 1,572 Gustav_ Portler, S. L. 137 Ed I. Robinson, R.. 1,402 Thirty-Fifth Stephen A. Byrne, D 836 ‘William H. Cobb, R. 967 Thirty-Sixta | Edward 1. Coffey, D. 1,770 | A. H. Merrill, R 1,845 Thirty-Seventh James G. Boobar, R. Willlam E. White, D. Thirty-Eighth Lester H. Jacobs, D. ‘W. H. Rickard, Thirty-Ninth Leon E. Jones, R. . 1 Oswald Leifert, J. 8. Wardell, D Fortieth R. C. Altschul, P. P. 236 James H. Kelly, D. . 1,274 H. W. Miller, R! 1,708 Forty-First \ Henry C. Dibble, R. 1,516 J. S. Rosenbaum, D. . o s Forty-Second Lorenzo A. Henry, R. . 1,3% Curtis Hiliyer, D. 991 Forty-Third James P. Booth, D. . T. Lundquist, R. ... Forty-Fourth M. H. Barry, R. . T. G. Reilly, D. . Forty-Fifth R. J. Estudillo, P. P. . W. H. Jordan, D. . Eugene Sullivan, R. . STATE BfiATOBS. 934 1,192 Eighteenth John A. Hoey, R...... Twentieth Frank W. Burnett, R. P. J. McCormick, D. Tweanty-Second 8. M. Bettman, R. .. 2,763 H. H. Davis, 1. R. i 1308 John A. Wright, D. o1 Twenty-Fourth R. Porter Ashe. 2,420 Leon Dennery, R. 2,400 Constitutional Amendments. For amendment No. 1. 12,927 Agalnst amendment No. 13,814 For amendment No. 2.. 14,223 Against amendment No. 2. 9,514 For amendment No. 3 12,138 Against amendment No. 3 10,657 For amendment No. 141182 Against amendment No. 4. 7,838 For amendment No. 13,588 Against amendment No. 5... .. 7,996 ¥or amendment No. 6 9,961 Against amendment No. 6. 8,243 ¥or amendment No. 7. 11533 Against amendment No. 7. 11,669 For the convention to revise the con- stitution L 5,813 Against the convention to revise the Constitution ..... —_——————— Phelan Thanked the People. Mayor Phelan drove down Market street last evening, and arriving at the Phelan building alighted and addressed a large number of people who had gathered and were cheering him. He thanked every- body for the support they had rendered him_on Tuesday, and promised them a good administration, the outlines of which could be found in his policy of the st. The speech was brief, and was he: by few people as the Mayor stood among them. To correct this, he appeared on one of the balconies of the building, and from this point was distinctly heard and cheered. rths which accompanied him played seve: selections, and the crowd then dispersed. Adlie AP TUnreliable Counts. There were persistent rumors of crosked work in the First Precinct of the Thirty- fourth District, located at 112 Mason street, yesterday. It 1s said that the re- quired number of election officers were not present at all times and that the vot- ing was conducted on Tuesday with two men short. According to reports a num- ber of mistakes have been made in the counting of the baliots and it is likely that some one will test the validity of the elec- tion in that precincé FOR GOVERNOR. TR ik Bal 4 T.Es : 3 SAN FRANCIECO CALL, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1696, THE STATE VOTE. PRESIDENTIAL VOTE 1896. Sec. State. e 830U JO 'ON day ‘AAUINON President. e ' SEVENTH CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT. Vote in 1898. Vote in 1896. il ] ssstsessedog “Aoied COUNTIES. 10U 10 "ON ‘o ‘uvAIE BabRo 8RS LERE | PITIH 8)oupslg 2 15,301 Riverside . San Benito . San Diego San Bernardino Stanislaus 18%6—Castle’s pluralit Prohibition votey JUSTICES OF SUPREME COURT. time, E-kus-kini, the Low Hor me: ' “My friend, T will now Lel] you some In 1506 the same precincts gave McKinley 8,948, Bryan §2,163. Riverside . Sacram'to San Benito San Ber'do Vote in 1898. FIRST CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT. Vote in 1896. San_Diego| S. Fran'col.... 8. Joaquin] §. L.Ob'po San Mateo| COUNTIES. | -dog ..mm__l puB "W ‘IBMEIS PABIH SIOUPMI COUNTIES. oy “wrvyave «++8 21d0ad ‘210D . Barbar: S. Clara.. dod ‘UIUOW Del Norte. Humboldt .. Lassen Marin Del Norte.. Humboldt Lassen Marin . Mendocino Tulare 4 Tuolumne | 2 | Ventura Supreme Justice. thing. Do you know that Neo-po- g g ! counts_the months of the win(t(:rpuml;mkllli(ll ez 1E 3 LIRS Y sata El £ 2 :No,” I said, “T know Neo-po- Mariposi smie L P e 1 do Rot know ‘what you mean by COURULE Aercen 63 1122 Tx‘ég' R I £ a g the months of the winter on his tongue. e Eod i 3 ul 2 gl E|x This is it,” sald Low Horn. “In spring 2% 31 Frog E S if you kill one and open his mouth and uft 1,878; 2,149 o] = o o =] up his tongue you will find under the 03| 1412 al § ks tongue five other tongues, one tongue for 985 2. : : each month of the winter. In the fall he 1 178 | Nae | does not have these extra tongues. I do sl 1720 | AfaTet® not kngw why he has them nor what it Riverside 2,063 1,681 | Amador means. Riverside . Lo Neo-po-muki is the chickedee, and he is f Saorgmitn; Bacrerinnlyl et s called from his cry; for he siys always Sen Dantto S sl a1t ‘Summer is coming—summer is coming.” San_Dlego Rar Diltgost 3631 3,893 —George Bird Grinnell, in Forest and Frne'co San Francisco. 31,041/ 30,649 Stream. S0 bl 30| 5909 San Dots Obi R AN . L. " po . St it 1spo. 405 San Mateo| 15| 2.339) San Mateo. . . 952 N OLD FRENCH TOWN. S. Barbara| 31| 3,943 Santa Barbar 1004 1,911 SasE S. Clara... Santa Clara. . 5,191 The very name of the hotel at which g, Cruz 13| 1980 the traveler alights will help to foster the s s et | illusion that he has put not only miles, Slektoou 1473 1734 but centuries, between himself and his Solano e 2 ;){rdlnary surroundings. Its sign, de la onoma 053 aute Mere Dieu or de I'Image, carries Stanislaus 1-3"3; Lfig him back to the days when men reled 969 1,128 for safety in their journeys rather on the 502l 515 hand of an unseen protector than on the 1,410 2,667 latest sanitary patent of Jennings. - So, Tuolumne . §34| 1,293 too, the names of the streets serve to Ventura . L) Lat 42 | strengthen the same impression. Here 5 Yolo . 14 L761 he can sip honey with the Bourdon blanc, o Yuba i ; caper with the Chevres qui dansent, car: | | acole on his destrier by the sidi -11,367/152,393] 96, 88 70,674 Total ... 300,019 146, 688|144, 766 Quatre fils d’Aymon, hunt }mguenozes % the Rue des Renards, or make the best of both worlds with the Chapeauv Vio- lettes. The houses that rise on either side of these quaintly named and tortuous streets | are in keeping with the old world at- mosphere. They belong to every age and every style. ere is one with high- pitched roof and timbered front, its three stories jutting out one above the other, like an inverted staircase. Another, dec orated with the - broken escutcheon of some noble family, fascinates the passer- by with the grotesque figures into which | ifs “joists are carved, or that grimace from the gable ends. On the door of a third huge nails®trace mysterious hier- oglyphs, some Protestant’s confession of faith, or some Leaguer's curse on Henri | Quatre. A fourth, of iess ambitious type, bears upon {ts front the symbols of a | burgher’s noblesse de la cloche. A fifth, standing back a few paces from the street, with a stone paved courtyard, \ San Francisco, part £l Q| = ARSE A |2 sl & | & ! TR R Dk ol 2 g i) S 18 1|¢ COUNTIES. ml o 1 ¥ 5 - i ial i ial : 303| 11,385/ 10,265 15 1108 1,049) Bo et 69 6,032 4,314 Santa Clara 387| 15,625 15,638... Totals .....e. 225| 19,351 ~——1lhad 8,526 *Estimated pluralities. Indians were Vote in 1898. \ SIXTH CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT. g | £ 5 | gl Blg iz 3 |73 o g ® H il LR l‘!l 13,587| 10,334/, 30! 1,431 1,446 26) 1,826 1,729 31 1,939 1,620 35| 2,073 1,860 ~22| 1,659| 1,384| 2902| 21,915 18,373 from under me what ot were present On-esta-pokau, known o seen Once, “snow bird,” himself. how! shore lark. ur, and while t gucked some of the long hair from the orehead to use in wiping out his As he reached down and grasp a little bird—a little gray bird—flew out his hand and away. the hair to see whence it h: found a round, smooth nest, contalnin four little young birds. il - a bird it many weeks ago ung in the lodge witl and elder brothers, princi) Blackfeet, I spoke of this tale that had been told mal,, d of be; and I o the tween the horns of-a bull. lowed by a careful and detail tion, showed that the bird which Blackfeet call “snow bird” is the prairie was. learned th: ‘White ‘my Indi It was a good many years ago that old Hugh Monmei‘ v;ho for more than seven- ty-five years had traveled the prairi lge Northwest, ml‘fl me that orfl:re heeshlotg found a bird’s nest in the thick hair be- tween the horns of a buffalo bull that he killed. He had two Indlans with and had killed the young bull, whlchh{‘l:le nning to skin and cut ing this he ed the hair He could not tel when I was sit- an father chiefs of tne ad heard of just this thing. Calf, ad one case of this kind where the bird was a blackbird; but this he had not ever, he did ee the nest of a containing four 3 Inqui After we had talked about this for some ! ing s Parti; come, he s Mendocino - —— i S where pigeons are wooing with a lx:g:c Ezfigc .13, 59,061 61'))0! formal courtesies of Sir cghav;llus dx‘r&mfi?fi Shast Shusts 529 1 Wi marvelous in- Sicrra { Slerea 2 | First District — Railroad Commis- | teflaced branches,’ the masierpiece of Siskivo | Sicbigoe . some unknown Jean Lamour.—The Nime- Sonoma. Sonoma. . 130 sioners. teenth Century. T Toham - - —_——— rinity . rinity LT 25 § (m3| B GENIUS A “SPORT.” Totals ... Totals ......... s |§2 £ T : 2 |55 ¢ Through all time men of genius h 1896—Barham's plurality. folt iy JO-Seamus. Anvo " o 3 scoffed at and hav i = Prohibition vote .. COUNTIES. ’_3., = :,5 fosibts oF itse 1;’;;&1 zll[x]lm":‘rlie:he;z:"fl:o - gojimd create superior orders of manhood. Nor SECOND CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT. e == Vote in 1898. Vote in 18986. S| Ak are repeated every hour. Considering Alpine .. them one would suppose that wealth = E 5 .9 | g |Amader titles, dignities are talismans which in- B sl g e g |Butte. sure Virtue and honor and personal worth g a o ! 2 12 13 Calaveras and beauty in those to whom they de- 5 § =2 E§ g zaceu;:}.ll Tm}\sn:’alr;s are ridiculous, and so z E - are titles. Nobility is of blood and not COUNTIES. - : COUNTIES. 2w (P8 | 9 arters, royal sponsors and (:hnristeanlr?é X o 5 |8 2 Tobes. = Pedigrees, portraits and family z | € § y history, when truthful, tell us a great deal : $ g é‘ about the nobility of a race. Titles, quar- H H :;e]rmgs.dnndx patents are worthless; and = SoFi fey Aipine Aipine P Eenebal, 4s bafl & s as i production Amador Amador 21 1,508} of a great profligate. Races that produce Butte . Butte 55| 2,287 genfuses should be avolded; the best is Calavera Calaveras 32 11,530, the second best—the normal.” ey Ll o an e Genius, as some one (Victor Hugo, I fianm s Mariposa . 9] 4| 8w gxln!k)mhas flnelly said, is a promontory fong - Saaripos: A retching out into the ocean of the infi- N Nevads &) Lot 295 nite. Look for the descendants of Shake- Placer Placer 30| Toesl 1064 speare, Bacon, Macaulay, Weilington, | Sacramento . Sacramento . 68| 5,168| 4,057 Nelson, Gibbon, Swift, Voltaire, Carlyle, | San Joaquin San Joaquin 50| 2,59 4,221 Bonaparte, _Goldsmith, Spencer, Milton Sutter .. Sutter . 17| et 6 Cromwell, Disraeli—to take a few names Tuolumne Tuolumne 21| 658 1.156] at random..and you will find that they uba uba .. | v 11 are not. For. the genius Is always a trans- Totals ... Totals .. 47| 15,613] 24,434 B ever symmGtrioat. o e e = 18%—De Vrles' plurality.. likels n&t, am; she makes provision for the Second District—Railroad Commis- | grunction of the race—The Humanita- sioners. R IR T AR e ;,[‘511839]; CONGRESS IONAL DIS",I‘BI(i:‘. F] ; R PARLIAMENTARY HISTORY. ote in 3 ote in 1896. o O T S s 5 The privilege of freedom from arrest en- R z Z | o glra Jjoyed by members Parliament is confined 732 2l Folrel kB to civil matters; but, since the abolition Se| 8 5 2! g COUNTIES. (& 8 of imprisonment for debt, this immunity So | B % s 2 5 ED has been shorn of most of its utility. K] : 8|3 3 F s of of the characters in - B51e 3 bk his first.novel, “Vivian Grey,” that ‘“‘the i : - e 2 1 only way to keep him out of the House of =R : H San Francisco. 308]... Correction was to get him into the House Uh R —| San Mateo . 18| 15| of Commons.” Parliament was then a Alameda .. ur 11,802 Alameda 125/ 12,446| 8,256/, —— — convenient haven of refuge for ‘“‘splendid Colusa. .. 18 567 Colusa . 368 Totals ..........| 33| 25| paupers.” There are three at least well Contra Costa &l 175 Gontra Costa " = authenticated nstances on recordof mem. | | B ers who got elected to the House of ;} 2:};. ~¢ Lake Third District — Rail Commons in order to escape the conse- 25| 1,438 i sioners. quences of their heavy liabilities. —_— ] — In one case an Enlish member named 1856 Hilborn's_plurality 3,659 o |28 Sheriff, avoided. imprisonment by pur- Prohibition vote .. 327 ~oEE chasing a seat for one of the old ‘‘rotten Soclalist vote ... 387 - boroughs,” in 1807, for the sum of £1000. COUNTIES. - In another case an Irishman named £ lim Bourke was confined in the King's Bench FOURTH CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT. gz o e cir 10 mici 1 . 5 ot him elected for an Irish constituency, Vote in 1898, Vote in 1896. S 2 Ut he mever entered the House. On his oW | B | R % Alameda . 125|116 release after election he fled to the Con- [] w3l B |wE 2 H B = 33 30 tinent and remained there. Again, in Z8| Z |gd | § 7 3 7 M 18, the year before Disraeli published Bopooles 2 158 e g Vivian Grey,” a man who was in prison ialow ) 5 R EY] £ s for debt was rgturnedh trom Bererley, a UNTY. B ol ~ COUNTTY. w ] 5 small English borough, and was forth- ol wlo o hB [ 15y o s naslon; o e ith released on a warrant issued by Mr, 3 5 g 2 |83 H B 3 Speaker. It was a casc, in real life, of efioiend 8 Falie 3 2 11 from the House of Correction to the FLan o I 7 sl om : 7 House of Commons.—Good Words. ks A3 3 PHP id @, : —_—————— SiSimcancisn R SR e 15,07 9 | Rivermide i SIR COLIN CAMPBELL. Soctalist Labor vote. 907 § 1896—Maguire' il San Benito 18 9 EErehahes 2 e A 6557 | San Bernardirio. Russian horsemen were coming on fast, Sao Dlteos: and a grim silence fell on the High- San Luis Obl landers. Then, as the beat of the hostile FIFTH CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT. 2:‘;,: g{zrba troops sounded dgeper a:d lloudex;, a ?i“fl. ) iy ous quiver ran down the long two-dee Vote in 1898. Vote in 1896. s fne of the Ninety-third. Thedmenhwerg and_ charge. gager to run_forward a “Ninety-third, Ninety-third,” rang out the fierce voice of Sir Colin Campbell, “3d—— all that eagerness!” He had pre- viously ridden down the line and told his soldiers. “Remember, there is no retreat from_here, men. You must die where you stand.” And from the kilted privates came the cheerful answer, “Aye, aye, Sir Colin; we'll do that.” The Russians were now within range, and the fire of the Highlanders rang out sudden and sharp. A few horses and men came tumblin down, and the Russian cavalry wheele instantly to the left, threatening the right flank of the Highlanders. Campbell, a cool and keen soldier, saw the skill of this movement. hadwell,” he said, turning to his aid-de-camp, “that man understands his business.”” So, too, did Campbeil, who instantly deflected his line so as to protect his right and met the advance with a destructive volley, before which the Russian horsemen at once fell bacvk.—Cornhill Magazine. —————————— It happened one day subsequently that the two Governors met in a drug store. The Governor of North Carolina re- marked to the Governor of South Caro- n. “It's a long time between winks!" ‘Whereupon thex approached the soda- water counter and the Governer of South Carolina winked at the young man behind it.—Chicage Tribune. —_—ee————— THE AVERAGE MAN’S NEED. The average man is not a Caesar, and what he needs is a wife who s above be- juspicious.—Detroit Journal.