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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 3, UNIDN LABOR OFFIGIAL JOURNAL RINGS T SHOWS DANGER | OF SUPPORTING LABOR TICKET! | | Says Adm:nistration by | Class Would. Put Nail! | in Coffin of _Unions Prophesies Low Rate of Wages if Schmitz Is!| . Elected Mayor of City e } | dangers of a class adminis- | tion in municipal affairs are resented in the editorial, under g “Our Last Word of | in Organized Labor, the labor unions of | rday’s issue. The | H y is prosperous, the trades ve also prosperous, ber thereof. It you te the money out of you like to vote the wife and children—then the worst class ticket, ticket, and you will ¥ Yes, more, you offin of trades is concerned iready we can point worth of work which is offices awaiting the ket, party t , and trary; Sut labof, the can, as a prudent and armoniously with its son f the father gets intoxi- sciousness,” and in a es the son that should age away from t that father will o the almshouse. such examples. Take sas under its Popu- | other common- e a semi-class party cins of government. ame. Capital has is begging for em- ch a condition in want your ui reduced to $0 k increased to te ticket! Vote band! Vote those a n y for their while the sand-jot Vote away your Vote aw remember a trade union paper, directors of Organized sed of the following repre- ons: Francisco Bricklayers' Shoeworkers' Unfon No. al Workers' No. 6, sec- | blecutters’ and Fin- Union No. 223, nters’ and Joiners’ | n, Painters’ Unfon N . Cementworkers' Unior Mutual Protective bers' Union. Want Tracks Removed. ssion F ation of Improvement t on Noe Street and a 1 to the pledges . It was that only Mr. | ed _the re: racks from n was adopted John Lackmann Indorsed. t & meeting of the Army and Navy an League last night John Lack- mann was rsed for Sheriff. —_————— BUFFALO, Nov. 2—Two of the large puildings of Jacob Dold & Co.’s packing jstablishment were burned to-night. Loss £ | gave Tobin a formal introduction to his | Has Confined the Fight to the Busi- | this campaign, I have not been betrayed | not represent them; that my people are | born poor. | ter ana no worse, I L HE following statement was for Mayor: three members of unions affiliated with in the loeal papers. “A number of witnesses were good grounds for the charges. “Owing to the lateness of the hour the accused an opportunity for a fair journed its session and will resume the EVIDENCE FOUND JUSTIFYING CHARGES AGAINST E. E. SCHMITZ issued by the secretary of the Build- ing Trades Councll at a late hour last night relative to the charges brought against Eugene E. Schmitz, the Labor Union party candidate 4 “The executive board of the Building Trades Council, in conform- ity with the instructions of the council, met this evening for the pur- pose of Investigating the charges made against Rugene E. Schmitz, the can- didate for Mayor on the Labor ticket, the charges having been preferred by the Iron Trades Council and published examined and considerable evi- dence elicited, sufficient to convince the board that there exists and the desire of the board to afford and impartial hearing, the board ad- investigation to-morrow (Sunday), at 8 o'clock, at the Carpet Mechanics’ Hall, 7 City Hall Square.” — oz TOBIN PROMISES INVESTIGATION OF COMMISSIONS IF ELECTED: Continued From Page Twenty-One. when he left it was with the fflend!hiP and admiration of every man in the hal Colonel T. F. Barry was the first speak- er of the evening. In the course of his speech he said that he was there to answer any questions that might be put to him. A man in the audience arose and said: e “I want to ask you how much salary Mr. Tobin recefves as attorney for the Hibernia Bank?” Colonel Barry started to reply when Tobin jumped to his feet, pushed Barry to one side and facing the audience sald: “I will answer that man. My salary is less per month than my opponent on the Union Labor ticket got for the job he did for the Risdon Iron Works last June.” The audience, composed largely of workingmen, rose to their feet and cheered. Barry finished his speech and audience. TEDLS OF THE CAMPAIGN. ness Issues. When the cheers, which were renewed as. Tobin faced the audience, had ceased he spoke as follows: . “Mr. Chairman and gentlemen: I hope that in this, almost the last meeting of into an expression that might, in its tone, indicate anything of bitterness. Whatever the individual feelings of any man upow any ticket may be, after all, gentlemen, we are all citizens of San Francisco. We are working for the best interests of San Francisco as we see them. We are help- i o build up the future prosperity of San Francisco as we conceive it to be, and whether we be on this ticket or that ticket or the other ticket, gentlemen, let us remember that we are fellow citizens and fellow men and live in peace, in | prosperity and in generosity of spirit. (Applause.) - “I have in this campaign assailed no- body. J have criticized nobody. I have expressed personal animosity toward no | one and I shall not now if the questions directed to me are confined within the limits that I know you will confine them if you ask me questions. I shall not break the rule that 1 started out to carry | through in this campaign, to conduct it.| in an honest, manly, straightforward “Gentlemen, it has been said south of Market street that I am out of touch with the people that live there; that I do not their people; that my interests are not their interests. Gentlemen, I deny this absolutely, Wholly, entirely. My people have lived in San Francisco for fifty years and more. (Applause.) They have prospered with the prosperity of San Francisco. They came here poor. I was | 1 have poor blood in my veins and 1 have gone through the hardships of poverty just as much as any man in this audience and I appreciate and I feel vmpathize with the character, the ons and the spirit of the poor, the rodden and -the oppressed, whether in S8an Francisco or whether they | are in New York or whether they are in New Orleans or whether they are in South Africa beneath the banner of the Boers. | (Applause.) Gentlemen, no man can say to my face that I have not got the spirit of a Democrat in my soul. (Applause.) I hope that whatever the result of this campaign may be one thing shall be es- tablished and it is this: That you will all know me for a young man just like every young man in this audience, no bet- hope. hat I am | of soaps, medicines and toilet P Pete: A fine,@id Scotch wi 15¢ 30c Coaxes & new ekin for soe regular Packer's and Laurence’s Tar Soap, | cake each 25¢ Both excellent and sell for 2sc esch Japanese Cleaning Fluid 15¢ Regular 25c—for removing grease epote, paiat, ete, from clothes. " Owl cut-rates Here are some special prices that should interest every user to come to the store, we'll send the goods to you—just ring up South 356 and your order will be delivered at once. We will also send for prescriptions, fill and deliver them for money than other drug. stores charge for filling. es good untl Saturday night, November gth, r Keegan's Balmore Old Highland Whiskey 95c key bottled in Glasy the characteristics of ly adapted for medicinal purposcs. Renner’s Malt luxuries. If you haven’t time These 1t is perfectly pure, b d the fincat’ Scorch Whiskey ane s Regular price $1.50 a quart bottle. Lennox Hair Tonic 50c Best forthe bairand scalp—reg. 75c Munyon’s 10¢ Witch hazel soap—sells every- where for 15¢ 25¢ Lablache Face Powder Regular Soc—usually charge 3oc Carter’s Little Liver Pills 15¢ The world over 25c, our price Y5c Coke Dandruff Cure ~ 65¢ A snap at our special price like you; that I feel like you and have hopes like you, and just as patriotic as you are ang just as honest and feel as deeply my obligations as a citizen as you gentlemen. If nothing else results from this campaign than this I shall consider that I have indeed been fortunate; that I am jndeed blessed by the best blessings of heaven. “You do not care to hear at this time any discussion upon the principles of this campaign. Those things are all passed and done with now. I have gone before you, discussed this campaign and its issues upon principles that appeal to me as the proper principles, upon business principles. I have conceived municipal Eovernment to be nothing else than the proper assessment, proper taxation and the firope:‘ administration of the finances of the city. This has been my goal. “To_this I have directed all by efforts. And I think, gentlemen, that as citizens, as business men, as practical men who have their business interests here, whose children live here, whose future pros- perity depends upon the prosperity of this city, I know and I feel that all such men will sustain me in this campaign and the result will be a victory for the Demo- cratic party. (Applause.) “‘Gentlemen, this is perhaps the last meeting we shall have in this vicinity. I want to thank you all for the kindness and the courtesy with which I have been treated on this occasion and on the pre- vious occaslons, and I want to repeat it now that if I have shown myself to be nothing more than a plain, ordinary, every-day Amerjcan citizen to those who perhaps believed that I was something other than this, no_matter what the re- sult is, gentlemen, I will consider that I have achieved a victory. 1 thank you, gentlemen.” SURE OF ELECTION. Although neither brass band nor bon- fire proclaimed to the neighborhood that a political meeting was in progress, Na- tive Sons’ Hall, on Seventtenth street, near Valencia, was crowded with citizens of the Thirty-fourth Assembly District. Charles D. South was in the chair and soon after Tobin's arrival he introduced the candidate to the audience. Again there were cheers to proclaim his popularity and as on every similar occa- sion during the campaign, he found hf self with friends. He spoke as follows: Mr. Chairman and gentlemen: In the course of this campaign we have discussed many things incident to a discussion of the platforms of the various parties. It has been our pur- Pose, at the outset, and I belleve we have car- ried out that purpose, to present to the citizens of this city but one issue, namely, the business management of the municipality, or as it has been s0 often and tersely expressed, ‘‘muni- cipal government is business, not politics.” We have pointed to our record during the past two years and as a guarantee of our future actions we stand upon our platform fortifled as it is by the record that we have made. After all, gentlemen, to men Who pay taxes and live in San Franclsco the question of city government presents nothing else than the so- lution of the question: How shall our money best be expended, in whose hands shall it be administered the ‘most honestly, and to whom shall we look for cleanliness and independence in public life. Others have discussed this cam- palgn from different standpoints: The stand- point of the nominee upon the Republican ticket, as it has been so well expressed in one of the daily papers, is the standpoint apparent- Iy of locality and refreshment. We have pre- sented to you our views; we have stated to you distinctly and accurately our principles and what we believe to be the proper munici- pal policy of San Francisco upon every ques- tion that has been presented to us. We have shirked nothing; we have refused to answer nothing. We have stated accurately, dlstinst- ly, upon the stump from one end of San Fran- cizco to the other what we conceive to bs the principles involved and what we conceive to the proper answer to the lssues presented by the various platforms. Gentlemen, at this time we can do no more. I feel that behind me will be found every man who is interested in making the city of San Francisco elean, wholesome and livable. I feel that behind me on November § will be found every prac- tical, honest, business-like citizen of San Fran- Siscd who irishes the city to advance who feels that the prosperity of the oity is his prosperity, who feels that municipal govern- ment is business, not politics, and who feels, I know, that the Democratic party during the last two years has given an honest, clean, de- cent, elevating administration of city govern- ment. (Applause.) Gentlemen, I thank you. PROMISES INVESTIGATION. The last of the meetings was held in the Young Men's Christlan Association Hall on Missiod street, near Twenty- third. Here n large audience greeted the candidate for Mayor and once more he found encouragement for the be- lief that Tuesday will see his election by a good margin. He spoke of the raflroad tracks through the Mission and gave his pledge that in the event of his election he would make it his early business to investigate all the commissions under control of the Mayor and see to the proper and immediate eor- rection of whatever abuses and inconsis- tencles were found te e: His address was as follows: Mr. Chairman and gentlemen: The task has been fulfilled. We have just about com- pleted an obligation of civic patriotism. This campaign is all but concluded. I feel, gentle- men, and I know that upon November 5 will be found behind us every man who loves San Francisco, who.would make San Francisco clean and wholesome and livable, who has his property invested in San Francisco and hopes %o see ber prosperous and vigorous in the fu- ture. All these will be found behind us, gen- tlemen, and it is needless to say that all these comprise more than & large majority of the electors of San Francisco. (Applause.) To you people who are in the Mission there i one point which directs you intelligently and without a deflection to the position occu- fed by the leading candidate upon the Repub- fican ficket, and I refer to Mis action with regard to the Mission tracks. He refused to eay that he would carry out the law. He re- fused to pledge himself that he would see that the ordinance of the Board of Supervisors was fulfilled; and this was no-ordinary pledge that you asked of him, gentlemen; it was not & pledge in the usual significance; it was not a pledge to put somebody in office or to_ expel somebody from office; it Wwas not a pledge to do_anything that in ‘any way conflicted with any man's idea of what was right md‘g It wae simply a pledge to discharge W as he finds it, and refused to give you that pledge, and, gentlemen, you know the power that prevented him giving you that pledge. ~ This, gentlemen, is the sole, and to me and to aifl of us, the all-sufficient reason why the Republican ticket does not represent the citizens of San Francisco, and this is the all-sufficlent reason why it represents the Bouthern PacHic Railroad Company. =~ Gentle- men, in a statement to-day in the newspapers he says that the mattep is in the courts and he' cannot see what he to do with it. It is easy for the administration to take it out of the courts if they want to, It is easy for the Board of S isors to extend to the Southern Pacific dlroad Company a license to run over these tracks, and that will knock on the head the case of the city which is" now in the courts. Has he pledged himself that he will do this? Has he said that he was In sympathy with the movement to remove the tracks in the Mis- sion? No, gentlemen; you have ample evidence that all we have said of him the represen- tative of corporate aggression {s absolutely true, It is absolutely true that he consulted with the leading attorney of this corporation. It has Dever been denied. It is absolutely true that ke wanted -an honest man pl " upon the \ NING T0 WORKINGMEN VOTERS SCHMITZ SAYS CHARGES ARE MEANINGLESS Refuses to Give Any Explanation of Risdon Iron Works Contracts Has Nothing to Say Con- cerning the Evidence of Recent Treachery HE publication by The Call yes- terday of fac simile proofs of Eugene E. Schmitz's treachery to the cause of unionism in hay- ing performed scab work for the Risdon Iron Works proved to be a veritable bombshell in the labor ranks. The facts as brought out by The Call were the subject of general dis- cussion among union men, and it goes witkout saying that when these men vote on Tuesday most of them will know how to reward treachery to their cause. In his campaigning speeches about town last night, Schmitz stated in general terms that the articles attacking him were lies which were caused to be published by the capitalists in order to injure his candi- dacy. When seen by a Call reporter after one of the meetings, and asked for his opinion concerning the truth or falsity of the article in question, Schmitz declined to discuss the matter, “I have no reply to make to the publi- cation by The C{lll," he said. “People who know me know that there 18 noth- ing in the story.” ““You performed the work for the Ris- don Iron Works at a time when you knew that to do so laid you open to the charge of scabbing, did you not?” “I have nothing to say,”” was the firm reply. “To spring such stuff at the elev- enth hour means absolutely nothing.” Schmitz refused to say anything further concerning the charge made against him. He said, however, that the labor ticket was growing in strength every hour and that its election, despite the statements of an antagonistic press, was an absolute certainty. L e e o e Board of Supervisors and then he backed dor from his position and accepted the board as prepared for him by the same attorney. It is absolutely true that when confronted by a com- mittee from the cRizens of the Mission, asking him to pledge himself that he would carry out the policy of the Mission with respect to the double tracks, he refused to give an answer, he avoided the question, he floundered and he gave you ample evidence that he i{s what we have all along contended he is—the representative, not of the Republican party, not of the citizens of San Francisco, but of the allled corporations and the allied bosses. (Applause). 1 have spoken upon this issue, gentlemen, be- cause I know every man in the Mission is con- versant with the status of affairs with respect to Mission tracks. The city brought action against the rallroad company. Judge Seawell decided in favor of the city and decided that the railroad company had no-franchise to run cars on a certain portion of the track here and that they must remove to the bay shore. That decision has been appealed from and if the pol- icy of the present administration and the pres- ent City Attorney is carried out the Mission tracks will be removed. But if you placs in power an administration that is not in sym- pathy with that polioy, will_direct the ity Attorney to delay the it, to obstruct the decision of the Supreme Court; nay, more, per- haps to grant them a license to run their ca it will be many a long day before the residents of the Mission succeed in removing these tracks from this district. (Applause). The power of the Mayor under the charter, gentlemen, is very great and I desire to say now that if I am elect- ed that power will be used. If I am elected extravagances that are charged against any board, bad policy that is charged against any board, will be investigated and that extrav- agance will be curtailed; that policy will be corrected if those charges are sustained. Under the charter the Mayor has the power to remove any elective officer in the city and county of San Francisco with the concur- rence of fourteen members of the Board of Supervisors, and he has alsa the power to remove any appointive officer, any man who holds his offica by virtue of an appointment, he has the power to remove that man by simply filing charges with the Board of Supervisors and without going through the formality of a trial. These powers, gentlemen, will be used. (Applause.) All officers and all boards will be investigated 3‘ theroughly l::vo‘n ted by me If elected. lepartment of the be pi P the eight- regulations, proper and moderate as they are, of the unions regulating that olass of work. Gentlemen, I cannot say any more at this time than that"I know and feel that I shall not be offered up as a sacrifice for the good citizenship of San Franclsco. I know and feel that every man in this audlence to whom we have.ap- ging votes; I know that every one of those men will look at our re ne our ca- (Great applause.) L o e e ) BATILE OF TOBIN AND SCHMITI Continued From Page Twenty-One. ers who should talk Wells should have free drinks. Yesterday the ublican bosses spread a rumor that a Bl had been taken in the Western Addition which gave indica- tions favorable to Wells. When facts and figures were called for to bring out details regarding the streets polled and the num- ber of votes listed and the number re- ceived by each candidate data could not be supplied. Further inquiry to ascertain by ghom the poll was taken falled to ellcit any information. Still further in- vestigation disclosed the fact that no goll was_taken, but that some one at Cobb's headquarters had advised a poll of the ‘Western Addition. Barly in the week Herrin, Lynch and —_— 1901, A BRODKLYN ADVERTISEMENTS. BELLE THREATENED WITH CONSUMPTION ¢ Pe-ru-na Promptly Saved Her Life. Miss Kitty Maher, 474 Eleventh street, Brooklyn, N. Y., writes: “ For weeks | had a most distressing cold contracted /ate n the fall by getting thoroughly chilled matter in hand in 1ts early stage, It seemed to be through my entire serious cough on my lungs, with driving, and although | took the still my cold kept getiing worse. system and soon developed into a catarrhal troubles. | had often heard and read of Peruna for colds™and catarrh, so I finally decided to try 1t, and am a very grateful woman to-day, as your medicine was almost miraculous n its cure, relieving me before | had taken it two days and curing me in three weeks.”—KITTY MAHER. WHAT PEOPLE SAY About Pe-ru-na as a Remedy in All Diseases of Winter, Coughs, Colds and Catarrh. Peruna cures catarrh, coughs, colds, is well known to both the medical profes- sion and the people generally. It is un- doubtedly the most popular remedy for this class of diseases in existence. Read the following letters: Pe-ru-na Cures a Cold at the Onset Miss E. M. Isaacs, Armstrong, Pa., vice president of the Fortnightly Club, writes: “No one who has tried the comforts Peruna brings would ever be without it. I used to dread the slightest cold, as its consequences were so lengthy and so un. pleasant, and the catarrhal condition Which invariably followed so hard to get rid of, but since I have known of the blessed relief secured through the use of Peruna I am free from all this unpleas- antness and suffering. “A few doses never fails to cure me of & cold and I keep well through its use.”"— Miss E. M. Isaacs. WINTER COLDS Breed Catarrh, Coughs and Consump- tion. Josephine Stolhammer, Denver, Colo., care Soderburg Palace Studio, writes: “My ghyllclun advised me to go to Col- orado because my lungs were delicate, and I had catarrh of the head, which the damp climate East seemed to aggravate. I spent two years here without improve ing. Readigg of the value of Perunma, I began taking it, and in two months I was completely cured and well. This Is nearly three months ago and I have suffered no relapse. 1 consider Peruna very superior to Colorado air for catarrh. If I had known of it before it would have saved me hundreds of dollars.”—Josephine Stol- hammer. Hon. W. J. Purman, ex-member‘of Con- gress from Florida, writes from 1428 Q street, N. W., Washington, D. C., as fol- lows: ““ From representations fo me and my own experience | feel justified in recommending your Peruna to any and all persons suffering with catarrh, nervousness or stomach troubles. | regard it as a great tonic and remedy for such afflictions. |, and others to whom | recommend it, are using it now with beneficial results.””—W. J. Purman. If you do mot derive prompt and satis- tactory results from the use of Peruna, ‘write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case, and he will De pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, lumbus, O. Burns perceived that the drift of the conservative mercantile and taxpaying vote was toward Tobin, hence they re- solved to check the tide if possible by ciz- culating reports that prominent bankers, merchants and insirance men, who do not usually take an active part in partisan olitics, were inclined to support Wells. 'he stories of such support turned out to be fakes. In the downtown business houses, banks and insurance offices the sentiment is largely in favor of Tobin. Indications are that the business men of the city will continue to line up for Tobin. In no other way can_Schmitz, a class candidate, be defeated. Wells is not acceptable to the workingmen because hs is on record in opposition to the eight- hour law. He is not acceptable to the taxpayers and cther friends of clean local government because he is the candidate of the boss machiné. The improvement clubs and the Non-Partisan party are against him because he gives weak and evasive replies to questions concerning the management of municipal affairs. His attitude 1s deplorable. Men who respect his years and his nice qualities as an in- offensive man regret his weakness as a candidate. In the light of events it Is seen that the conservative citizens, irre- spective of party, must unite on Tobin to revent the victory at the polls - for ichmitz. Attempts to create the impression that Schmitz is attaching to his cause more Democrats than Republicans have been exposed as misleading. The standard- bearer of the labor agitators s getting the bulk of his support from the ranks ot the Republican party. Abe Ruef and Colonel T. V. dy, who were leading orators in the McKinley campalgn, are | speaking for Schmitz. Democrats are re- turning to their E; camp and giving their strength to Tobin, but Republicans of spirit and Independence are not goin; to Wells, If they leave the camp o Schmitz they will join the Tobin forces. Joseph. 8. ;‘obln, nomines for Mayor, was not hissed or insulted at the Metro- politan Temple mass-meetin Friday evening. The Evening Post makes a big epread of falsehoods to the effect that tga audience hissed the nominee. The facts are that remarks of C. Van Ness, chairman of the meeting, were interrupt. ed. When he mentioned the name of Schmitz some hired rowdies in the lery started a nolsy demonstration d dis- tut the speaker. Mr. Tobin, however, was greeted with generous applause. Hls speech was not interrupted. He was not hissed and there was no manifestation of an unfriendly spirit by the audience. B e L] LJ WORKINGMEN ON THE WATER FRONT —_— Continued From Page Twenty-One. Catarrh Is a constitutional disease. It originates in a scrofulous condition ot the blood and depends on that condition. It often causes headache and dizziness, impairs the taste, smell and hearing, af- fects the vocal organs, disturbs the stomach. It is always radically and permanently cured by the blood-purifying, alterative and tonic action of g Hood’s Sarsaparilla This great medicine has wrought the most ‘wonderful cures of all diseases depending ©on scrofula or the serotulous habit. HoOoD's PILLS axe the best catbartic. - . ve the signal for three cheers for hmitz. Even the hoodlum element by this time realized the indecency of the in- tetl';luptlon and the response svas not in- ng. !-plnus and his bodyguard withdrew to a distance with a few sympathizers. Less’ companion told them in strident tones that when_Eugene E. Schmitz relgned at the City Hall it would be easler for a camel to through the eye of a needle than roperty owner to get a hearing, and or the next two {gfln San Francisco would be run by a laboring man for the exclusive benefit of the working classes. ‘Tobin continued his speech, and when he took his departure it was with the cheers of the workingmen ringing in his ears. The Schmitz forces had arranged for a unter-meeting at the same time and at co the orators ee d not the men had gone ce. Long back’to work ex-Police Judge Treadwell, one of the Schmitz orators, sat in a bus telling such of the “frinde” as had gath- ered around his buggy that when Schmitz was elected Mayor he (Treadwell) would see to it that the present industrious corps of Police Court shysters would be put out of business. Stands on His Record. Tobin was introduced by Colonel T. F. Barry and spoke as follows: “I want to talk to you working men and T want you to listen to me. When my father came here he was poorer, prob- ably, than any one of you. He was in every sense of the word a laboring man. ‘What he became later was by his own efforts. In spite of all you may have heard about me I want you me as a working man’s boy. I am, and as such I claim the right to Your attention on this, the eve of what 1 think we can consider the most important election ever held in San Francisco. “I am here to call your attention to a few facts and not to paint any rainbow- hued picture of what might happen in the future. I am here to remind you that we are seeking your suffrages on the strength of our actual record for the past two years. It is admitted on all hands that the city administration has been cleaner, more economical, more beneficial to ali classes of soclety than any previous ad- stration. “You are problbelx interested in those measures we adopted for the special bene- fit of the working classes. I have referred o to them before and will be satisfied at this time with simply enumerating some | of them. We have enforced the eight- hour law on all work in which the city is directly or indirectly interested. We have raised the rate of labor around the Cit; Hall to $250 a day. We have reduce your taxes, your gas and water rates and have given you a 21 cent street car fare for school children. “We ask those opposing us in this cam- paign to point to any one act of theirs on record for the benefit of the working classes. “We point you to what we have done. On one hand you have our record. On the other hand promises. The campaign is almost over, and on Tuesday it will be your duty to act as citizens for the best welfare of San Francisco ande to be | gulded in your actions by what you know and not 'by promises which have cost | nothing more than the effort of speec When Tobin started away he was fol- lowed by a crowd of men, all anxious to grasp him by the hand and to assure him | that the indecent interruptions had been without their consent or approval and would have been resented but for his stand in the matter. They said further that neither Less nor his bodyguard represented the real workingmen of San Francisco, who resented this method of ca.m“’pun . As one of them said: ou showed your courage in coming down here. 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