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THE SAN FRANCISC O CALL, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1900. ADMINISTRATION WILL BE BACKED BY NATIONAL LEGISLATURE CONGRESS IN RIGHT COLUMN publican Majority IS Assured in Both Houses. raging Returns From ast, West and Even | the South | R n =) c REF NTATION OF ALL PARTIES Estimated That Repablicans Will Contr o the Senate by Twelve and Houss by Forty-Seven. licans 202, ionists 5, “And the dead steered by the dumb went upward with the flood.” 184 RESULT PUTS BRYAN TO SLEEP. How the Democrmicfnudidate Spent the Day at His Home. . Neb., Nov. 6.—N in brother, partner; pnal Cc s majority simply re- 8. rom gvew York after’ that Baokiyn . iragi > r led him to believ ¥ The g large increase in On the heels 4 of the I was one from a i announcing that tha n by a majority of e S ——— —t W for McKiniey four ndicated the loss 8 Y s also a disap- i cen belleved that " 4 » for the Demo- | ) H with the outsidé | wire. Both he and | i cerful mood and | H inted with the circum- | € er have dreamed that i s time the center of na- . | m 2 the newspaper men : 1'1’ - yan's house sought | from Mr. Bryan he had just gone to! When | be disturbed. room he glanced over apparent interest and desire to make up for rest he had lost in the past lown and was fast asleep He had slept . after which he | > to his farm | ret some « few we in less than fi went for a horseb; He did not, howev ated and therefc Bare thus manif s concern | than hund: sands of his fol- lowers Mr. Bryan remained in his private apartments during the en evening and slept the Er part of the time. He aid not m ppearance in the par- lor of hi where the newspaper correspondents were congregated, until | 11 o'clock, and his coming at that time | was for the purpose of notifying the press | at he would have nothing 3’0 say f(lr‘ publication during the night. He added ht possibly give out a state- Tow assurance the and soon visitors to the afterward the fatigue or n bellef Is quite gen- Bryan will say MOrrow not doubt the election for f his rival, for while ct utterance of such ly admits to-night not hope for more sublican majority in ates. McKINLEY HEARS RETURNS. At His Canton Home the Executive Learns the Result. 'ON, ( 6.—President Mc- received ele on return to- his surrounded by a old friends and many ladies who guests of Mrs. McKinley, to her the interest and excite- culminating eyent of the fo, the home umber of his rs 1u with of this nator eveland, nd . of Governor Roo velt at Oyster so that the President was in constant sraphic touch with clate ket and with on ders siden ary the the his headq st of the gentle made d fle Mrs. Mc- in the par- sident wi in his pod showing no signs of anxiety over result e President in person read aloud some of the returns, but refrained from n whatever on the unruffled com- rts which be- 1 at an early hour. S telyou read most of the ¢ some of the more cheering 1ts being heartily pplaude sts. Mast of the earl dv mentary d inconclusive strong indications that probably Iilinois had ley were received with faction 9 o’clock the Preeident recelved a atch from an enthusiastic individual New York and Illinols carried the fr‘rr McKinl and that he was re- ed. The responsible leadcrs made no early claims. although thelr dispatches told of ns at rit of victory The President's New York gone for Mc great satls near at hand. first _congratulations from headquarters came from J. H. Man- | ley at New York, as follows Praise God, from whom all blessings flow. Your triumphant re-election is conceded by Democratic managers. I_tender my arnest congratulatio We are very appy at headquarters At midnight Canton was in a frenzy of enthusiasm which knew no bounds. The crowds which had been burping red fire downtown marched to the McKinley resi- | dence with bands playing, rockets sendin, lurid streaks across the midnight sky and tumultuous cheers, mingled with the din | of horns and steam whistles. The crowd was stilled for a time with some of the cheering news recefved. This included Jispatches from Kansas, claiming. that State by 40,000; from.Secretary Heath of the National Committee, saying Indiana gave McKinley 20,000 plurality; from the Towa chairman. saving low as 100000, and from the Union Leagu lub, Chicago, giving the President glow ing congratulations. But the crowd clam- ored for the President and he appeared, Waving his acknowledgment of the deaf- ening cheers. He said: “Fellow citizens: I thank you for the very great compliment of this call on this inclement night and at this late hour., Of | the gratitying reports from all parts of . the country none have given me more sin- cere gratitude than those from my own city and my own'county of Stark. and T appear now only to do as I have done on % many former occasidns—to thank vou once more for the warm and hearty in- dorsement which you have to-day given my public acts, ik Arrested for Tllegal Voting. DECATUR, Ind., Nov. 6.—Pearl Cutting but | many points and breathed the | plurality | TWO MEN | LOSE LIVES AT DENVER | Clash Between Police and Deputies at o e, M|k o i ‘ Polls. edinliliiion Serious Rioting Begins Before a Single Vote Is Cast. —_— :TROUBLE AT MANY OTHER PLACES ' Negroes Make an Attack on an Election | Booth in Delaware, Destroying It i and Carrying Away Books. D DENVER, Nov. .—Two men four wounded, one of wh wi 1 | bly dle, is the resuit ! | curred early to-day the police force and Sheriffs at a polling pl ond and Larimer town distric Charle Deputy Sheriff, was killed, and Stewart | special policema at the County H | | Fifteen hu poilcemen had been sworn in for and about 1000 | | special deputies. loc Special | | Policemen Charl, and Green were s | | Lartmer stree | | of the polls Several Orders | Police Board authority of any one who in these ordered to 10 feet from Jackson, colored, a revolver struck Carpe foot. Policeman Gr cue of his compa , S on the head and arm, frae and breaking his arm. T the heavy oak club the spec ad_be Officer Car jes to .ret polis. Hampson resisted, ana drawing shoot One bul m and a seco L P the the vantage. At Ed Carbery ran up his revoiver, kil Charles Allen, _colore 1 shot. A score of shots were deputies and Detective Cark s Stewart Harvey (w Richar Hardm. ored) the former in the ri latter in the left afternoon the The feeling created | | moruing intense. | |lett of the United States D shoulde | | Deputt { | , @ m Gregg, Republic: were ar- canteen policy and liquor interests in I nd ¢ :g ille- | our foreign possessions and his_election v. More arrest ame vharge | will have the effect of bringing the liquor may follow. question to an fssue. The Prohibitionists - - ed upon the mocratic party CANDIDATES CAST BALLOTS. « years as ort of a sham, I 1 = - o s ; cod in \I‘!n' way of reform. We neidents Att i etter shape now to press th of e ending - the Voting 'of | jeoitl: flouor than it Bryan had heen (he cKinley and Bryan. successful candidate. If Bryan had been NTON, Ohio, Nov. 6.—President Mc- | elected we would have had to change of Kinley cast his ba at 9:20 this mo "*““]"*“"f -lr'rnrkl : : v S s e B A s s it Is we are inclined to felicitate our- | ing. Shortly before that time he came | cajveq on the result from the s andpoint from the McKin| residence, accom- | of our party. for the returns show In fa- panied by Judge I Dr. Rixey, Post- | vor of the Prohibition party throughout master George B. Frease and Charles R. | the Unit d we face exactly the ! Miller, of Canton, and Secretary Cortel- | Sime ¢ unchanged from what you. ‘A number of people had gathe Luny o e in front of the hous nd the President | more th g of the prohibition shook hands with many and exchanged | vote over 1 pleasant greetings. Down Market street | John G. Wooolley, Prohibition national he and Judge Day walked at the head of | (Andidate, sald he would leave for New Bai s - Presitie ept | York e latter part of this week to the party and the Presldent was ket | continue his campais ainst the liquor sy raising his hat o the many greci- | question. The s will be main- along the way. The windows of one | tained steadily du E Giad of the factorles were crowded with wWork- | he said. durine arioh e dCur Y ears. men, who gave him as he passed. | the country. In 1901 snecial attention will At the voting piace quite a crowd had | he given o Ohlo, Towa. Virginia. Rhode collected to President cast his | Island and Oregon and’ Statee that hold vote. He shook hands with some of the | elections that sbar SN0 States that hol officials and then stood while the que: A o o T tions required by law were asked. H registry number wz 1 his was the VOTING IN PHILIPPINES. ninety eventh b a total vot- = ing Ivl('r‘l; '.)r 3 8. Th ]'Tclvl re- New York the Only State That Gives malne he booth fully a minute, scan- i ning the ticket before casting it into the £ Soldiers a Chance. ballot box. The President marked his| WASHINGTON, Nov. 6—New York is ballot &0 as to vote the entire Republi- | the only State which has given its soldlers can coiumn. fighting in the Philippines an opportunity Jmh:; 1]1(_ then \'\Iw: 1 and the party xf e . ise u.»rrullfi; I:l:' s\ll,r‘fm:r- l—‘\\"v\. started b ¢ e house, receiving | s fher Al ‘},?J,,r“’:“;u"‘i""’s"1:;,::”: Virginia at one time contemplated send the way. The = President received die |iDg commissioners to the Philippin: patches from New York leaders early to- | supervise the voting of its sons, but day, saying a lar: e had been polled | War Department is not advised that it :;;\h;“\ ‘l‘?r‘kh'fu;:_I"“xmsshn: strong con- | carried out this intention. There are more et o % than 30,000 volunteers in the Philippines, o e N o MEp o BIYaN | and about 35,000 regulars. The department Bl i o'clock. The cere-|is not informed what regulations have mony was witnessed by a half hundred | peen promulgated by the New York Com- residents congregated near the booth and | micdionars relative to the qualifications of b dozen er men followed | yoters, but it is presumed they in ac- B 3 £oing to the voung |cordance with the laws of the State. It placesnar. Bry aired to the City |js estimated that several thousand men Hall, where "he filled out a certificate | eniisted from New York State, and if any stating that he had failed to register be- ca of absenc clerk at the City of the Congressional election districts i ;! 3 close, especially those in the vic ail who supplied hini | Jort’ Niagara, where the Forty-second with a certlficate also dispensed to all | Regiment was recruited. the vote of the who would receive tiem yellow badges | soldiers in the Philippines will have an bearing the inscriptior, am a Republi- | fmportant effect. The vote of the soldiers. | can.” and he seemed quite as much oc- | when cast, will be sealed and delivered at | cupied with one duty the ci The uj ] the other. There | Albany, where it will be counted. Offi was quite a procession from the Ci clals of the department say that the Fed- Hall to the voting piace, consisting eral Government could, of course, take no | citizens and newspaper men in T and a number of Mr. Bryan's neighbors | on foot, who escorted Lim to the voting place. CI | action to insure the voting of .troops on foreign service. This was a matter, it Is said, which the States themselves should | have attended to, and surprise is ex- SVELAND, Nov. 6.—Senator Harna | pressed that more States did not follow arrived this morning from Chicago and |the example of New York and send Com- | | was driven directly to his home. Subse- | missioners to Manila. It Is possible, the of- | quently he deposited his ballot. It re- |ficials concede, that other States may have | | quired only a few seconds for the Senator | sent Commissioners, but they believe that | to mark and fold his ballot, which was |in this event they would have been in- | | taken to mean that he had voted a |formed of it. i straight ticket. | T T { | INDIANAPOLIS, Nov. §.—Benjfamin WRONG BALLOTS ARE USED. | Harrison walked to a booth three blocks | | away from his home and voted. The | crowd made way for the former President, who was inside the booth only a short | time. | BLOOMINGTON ov. 6.—Adlai E. | Stevenson ‘voted in Precinct 1, walking from his home to the booth in company with his son. There were very few people | on the street and his presence was almost | unnoticed. Having voted he returned to | his home. | _PRINCETON, N. J, Nov. 6—Former President Grover Cleveland arrived here from New York at 12:57 to-day., was driven at once to a polling place and voted. He then proceeded to h‘ PRI Mistake at Albany Many Cause the | Throwing Out of 328 Votes. | ALBANY, N. Y., Nov. 6.—The sensa- | tional feature of the election here was a imls(ak? which happened in the Eleventh bl Ward, and which may result in the throw- ing out of 326 votes. The City Clerk in dis- Ir?huxlnx the ballots sent those marked | for the first election district of that ward | to the third election district and the bal- {lots for the latter district to the former. ’Thv mistake was not discovered until 186 [ of the ballots had been cast in the first | district and 140 in the third district. The Democratic workers and watchers filed with the Inspectors of Election in both districts a protest to the counting of these | votes. | — JOY AT NATIONAL CAPITAL. i Re-election of McKinley Causes Dem- | Say Election of McKinley Is a Boon | onstrations on Streets. | to Them. ‘\ WASHINGTON, Nov. 6.—The jubilation i cer Presldent McKinley's re-elec- CHICAGO. Nov. 6.—Prohibition Na. | DeTe over Cinl tlonal Chatrman Oliver Y. Stewart suid ;lzx:l‘l;rl:::o:ll ‘;:‘z:ds,dki\e‘:‘:hex?r%;;: to-night: “The outcome of the election s | il e vl ¥ 1 no surprise, nor Is it a disappoirtment. ' surge up and down Pennsylvania avenue, eering, singing and blowing: horns. | The clection of McKinley will tend to |l the’ absence of the President, there | focalize the sentiment of the people on the | was no gathering at the White House, | saloon question. He is committed to the | and such advices as were received there | e n. pr s home. | "ETON, N. J., Nov. §.—Ex-Presi- | dent Cleveland, when seen by a reporter | to-night and interviewed, satd he had | absolutely not a word to say either on the | election itself or as to the way he voted, i s PROHIBITIONISTS CHEERFUL. | Stone at midnight made the following an- | I will walt before I say finally what I | | Urges World to Accept Teachings of 2k Y el -- 4 issued an order forbidding States Marshal to appoint an were conveyed by telephone to members | Marshals to serve at the polls of th v in Washington. Only | charge is made by the Police Depar three here—Secretaries Hay, Gage | that a large number of Dep d the latter reaching the city | Were sworn In and armed at Sald Police Commissi Rc ner e evening, after casting his be York. Secretary Hay was |Speer to-day B °d and remained at his| ‘‘Four hundred negroes, many of th. & the evening, but Secretary With long records for desperate deeds, Treasury Department, | Were sworn in as Deputy Sheriffs in t umber of friends heard the | office of United States Marshal Bai the Federal buflding and given badges : \var Department Secretary Root, | #nd pistols. The special officers appointed General Miles and Adjutant Genera] Cor- | bY our board were unarmed. except with bin were on hand and remained until late | ¢/ubS, and ordered not to use violence ex- cept in extreme cases \ng. At Republican and Dem- he trouble is the ¢ dquarters officers of commit- growth of the bit- the next House of Representa- | SICR v ves ot O e e United Recsplioudenslager was in charge of | geates Senator to succeed Senator Wal- Republican headquarters and Chalrman | o0& Te e deon UF Y Deaeratin. The Police Department, which s con- trolled by the Democrats and Sheriff Rob- GREAT BRITAIN GRATIFIED. Comment on the Result of the Elec- tions in the United States. LONDON, Nov. 7.—The weakness of erican securities on the Stock Ex- vesterday was a reflection of the interest taken here in the Ameri- ert Jones, who was elected as a_Democrat but who is sald now to favor the Repub- licans, at the req of the Honest Elec- tion League (composed, it is charged, ex- clusively of Republicans) issued a large number of Deputy Sheriff commis- sions to men named by the league. Yesterday the Board of County sfoners, in disregard of an order Butler of the District Court, ‘ommis- f Judge ked the ction and the recognition that. al- | commissions given by Sheriff Jones, and ugh the success of McKinley' was re- | though the court promptly took aetion garded as almost certain the contest pre- | against the Commissioners for contempt, sented all kinds of possibilities owing to | the Fire and Police Board, g on the the complexity issues before the Amer-| advice of leading attorneys, de d to n public. | disregard the authority of the s Additional interest was lent for the Eng- | Although Troop C, Colora National lish observers by the near conjunction | Guard, assembled early at the armory and with their own ‘elections. which also | remained under arms throughout the day, turned alm. wholly on the question of | and it was understood to ve been by imperialism. The morning papers went to press too rly to be In a position to comment on order of Governor Thomas. this afternoon positively sued such orders, and t The Governor fcers of uit, but all published editorials and | trcop refused to say by orders they dispatches depicting the pro- | were assembled. gress of tite contest. All are impressed | Ex-Mayor T. S. McMurray, chairman of by the comparative fewness of disorders. | the Honest Election League, tnis evening The Daily Chronicle says: “Considering | offered a reward o W “ior the arrest itement over the enormous elec- men who Eiued area the tranquility of this great contest is remarkable.” The Standard: “There can be no reason- able doubt that President McKinley has and conviction of Charles Allen Riot in Delaware. WILMINGTON. D A riot oe- been re-elected. Isolated cases of tumult | curred in the third election district of should serve only to emphasize the ad- | Wilmington this morning. Tis fet mirable spirit and common citizenship | has a large negro vote. The officers were nearly half an hour late in opening with which the people of the republic play their part in the engrossing struggle for | polis and they found about a hun the m It is significant that raciai | Negroes assembled in line waiting to vote. animos the cause of the worst con- | As the doors opened they saw a white flict.” man, James McHugh, who had gotten in ahead of them, attempting to vote. This infuriated them and rushing In they as- saulted McHugh and the inspector, James Dugan, cutting both seriously. Policeman Sheery was also cut in attempting to re- store order. The negroes Gestroyed the booth and the registration books disap- peared in the melee. Elsewhere the elec- tion was quiet In the city The Standard goes on to express the frankest satisfaction over the success of McKinley, adding: “This success in- sures a continuance of the stability in oney matters and no change in the for- eign poli of the United tates. The triumph of Mr. Bryan would have been felt everywhere as heralding a sharp re- versal of the policy which g“l made the | ‘nited States a powerful and energetic Shot Twenty Times. member of the great family of nations | BRAZIL. Ind., Nov. 6.—A riot was pre- STONE CONCEDES DEFBAT, | CiPitated in a saloon at Caseyville eariy | this morning over politics. About fifty == aged and over two hund Democratic National g,.dq“,m,,;';’;;,";.'g,:“gzgd_ Wallace Graves wa Closed at Midnight. YORK, Nov. §.—Ex-Governor instantly killed. Over twenty bullet he | were found in his body, Willlam Hustia | and seven othe and Itallans, were more or less injured. NEW nouncement: | " The bufldings near which the riot o “I give up. The returns telegraphed to | curred were riddled with bullets. It these headquarters from New York, New | sajd a party of Republicans and Demo- | Jersey and Connectlcut show that these | crats gathered in the saloon and began States have gone Republican. Returns | discussing politics. Afterward the parties from Maryland and incomplete. My iInformation from the Middie and Western States is so indefl- nite that I cannot form an opinion as to | the result. As I do not know the fac! est Virginla are | met in the street and a fight began. one of them uring at Graves with a shotgun, instantly killing him. This was the sig- nal for a general firing. Died at the Polls. KEW YORK, Nov. 6§.—Mendel Jachim, an aged merchant of Irvington stree. | aropped dead outside a voting booth tc | day just after having deposited his ballot. He suffered from drops “I don't know whether 1 shall live to vote aga b | said just as he left the place. A momen later he fell to the sidewalk prostrated. RED WING, Minn., Nov. &—John J. quist dropped dead to-day while in the think is the result.” Mr. Stone then closed the Democratic | Natlonal Headquarters for the night. POPE LEO ISSUES . AN ENCYCLICAL Christ for Improvement of Society. voting booth. His ballot was partly NEW YORK, Nov. 6.—A special to the | marked. | Sun_from Rome says: The Pope has Is- | T T iy sued anhenv_\-cllfinl Jrain hlhe world to | Trouble at Philadelphia. accept the teachings of Christ for the HIIA, Nov. 6.—I improvement and salvation of soci | PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 6—In a row the avoidance of conflicts, 1o pur the | early this morning Willlam Martin. a principles of Christianity in practice in education, commerce and general rela- tions. His Holiness says that the na- tions have heard enough of the rights of man and that they should hear more of the rights of God. | McAleer man, was stabbed in the breast | by one of a gang of men who took exc: | tion to Martin's activity for the Dem 'crtllc‘ nOnS::‘ne‘:. ”anfucg;g;‘gmfin]_: seriou: This is “Squire strong- hold, the bloedy Fourth Ward,