The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, September 25, 1902, Page 4

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THE SAX FRANCISCO. CALL, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1902 GEORGE C. PARDEE RECEIVES FLATTERING WELCOME 2 REPUBLICANS INFUSE LIFE INTO CONTEST Pardee Starts on Tour of the Counties South, Registration in City Closes With Record Breaking Results Prancisco for the aggre- all records of single broken by the en- The highest pre- day was 3100. In \e ubernatorial In 1900 the reg- tal election was registration is mark of the and is 8589 above torial registration of voters sig- rge vote is in- 1 blican cause, ( § notices touc! will be received Comm! n inter ant work of reg- been neglected. upremacy in Cal- v now tered in local tom PAEDEE’S SOUTHERN TRIP. Republican nominee for ¢ v s T [ te, will leave S me P m. to-day for San N a few minute: E etings wit wn FROI' REPUBLICAN MASSES OF THE CAP ITAL CITY % L all of these pla MEETINGS. BLICAN promoters hes in ev- Yy, withou the her Re- tions wiil 5 Mar- - support d the muni- s of the vor Repub- | Pratt, Dowdall, W M. H. Esberg, | mittee—Dr. 5 r Republicans st night at the ses were 10 or- ican League e all Repub- nthusias of the Re- tickets. publicans, a large organ- e near future, n consisting of McDonnell, ostrand, §. W | es was appointed was Isidore G S PEETY DEADLOCK IS UNBROKEN. Marin Republicans Fail to Nominate | Fifth District Supervisor. AN RAFAEL, Sept. 2—Ten Repub- | ho got into a deadlock | empt to nominate a | ervisorial District No. § t to renew the struggle. still 5 to 5, | nomination | oting was fruit- heir supporters to ad- was aone. he incumbent, were the and principals in who voted for Barr John F. Boyd, cCarthy and P. | porters were | E. B. Mc- ! ¥. Sharpe. it is said, will each Santa Clara’s Big Registration. SAN JOSE, Sept The greatest regis- t the history of Santa | 1 in the office of T at 10 o'clock to- t week there has been register, and besides a clerks, twenty-five out- e been in the fleld. This s registration will be about 17,000, a of more than 1000 over the registra- ye ago. S o Stanford Democratic Club. NFORD U SITY, Sept. 24— tanford University Democratic Club ed here last night and the fol- te cers ele President, E, G. vice president, W. Swing secretary, D. P. Campbeil *08; treas- urer, W. C. Doane *03. S. P. Elias '99 of San Francisco addressed the meeting and announced that several of the eollege speakers would take part in the.fall cam- paign. 1 - | vote directly ‘on a prineiple, Tremendous Enthusiasm T[1 O AR = £ — CAMINETTI IS WORRIED OVER CHAIRMANSHIP May Decline Honor of Managing the Demo- cratic Campaign. He Will Confer With Ex- » Governor Budd Before Giving Answer. Ex-Congressman A. Caminettt of Jack- son, Amador County, arrived in this city last evening and repaired to the headquar- ters of the De: ratic State Central Com- Inittee for the purpose of conferring with the members. He found Secret Al Me- Cabe receiving visitors, but no ¢ ber of the committee of whi member present. Caminetti from Amador County for the purpose conferring with Ex-Governor Budd, tem- porary cnairman of the Campaign Co mittee. At the meeting of the ecutive committee last Governor Budd pr ed. An effort was made te have the Gov- ccept the hip of the Committ declined busines: that Caminetti w t L for the place and sugge selected. A committecyw cure Caminetti’s acceptan the next meetin, Caminetti is 1 member of the Cou also volunteered to the State for from the ever, L. Ford for ern district, a nor Yane for Governor. He can not ca his promises if the memb s of the | Gcutive Committee msist ¢ ‘him cepting_the chairm the paign Uommittee 1 B Caminetti s to kold a heart to heart tali with Budd oon. beeen out of town on business pected to reiu - The Democ tee act! g clubs thro the city. T of the permanently last nig said to ¥ officers of Hirschbers: Walsh, and treasur executive committee fifteen was pointed. Headquarters was oper meetings wil held every night. Notie h ings for the | | | | {1 ROUSING OVATION TO GEORGE C. PARDEE, REPUBLICAN FOR GOVERNOR, ON HIS APPEARANCE BEFORE THE CITIZENS OF SACRAMENTO AT FORMAL QOPENING OF CAMPAIGN IN THAT CITY. NOMINEE | | | | 38 T arks the Op_ening of t 3 e he Gubernatorial Campaign in Sacramento. ACRAMENTO, Sept. 24.—Dr, George C. Pardee, Republican candidate for Governor, was given a most enthuslastic wel- come by the people of the capi- tal city to-night on the occa- sion of his first public appearance here since the Republican convention. Throughout the afternoon he was called upon in the Golden Eagle Hotel and hear- tily greeted by citizens who desired to pay their respects to him. To-night, in Clunie Opera-house, an immense audience awaited his coming and on the streets the greatest enthusiasm prevailed. Dr. Pardee was accompanied by Duncan Mc- y of San Francisco, Senator Russ Lukens of Alameda and Albert E. Castle of the Republican State Central Commit- tee. The party was escorted from the hotel to the opera-house by the Roosevélt { Rough Riders and the McKinley Republi- can Club, the organizations turning out fully 1000 strong. Senator Robert T. Dev- lin presided at the meeting and in the opening address predicted that Sacra- mento County would roll up a splendid majority for Pardee. He said that Cali- fornia was vitally concerned in a protect- ive tariff, and, while the people could not they counld vote for the party and the men who rep- resented that principle., He said it was to the interest of every Californian to con- tinue the Republican party in power and to vote for Dr. Pardee and the rest of the Republican ticket. Dr. Pardee was introduced as “our new | fellow townsman,” and.for a few minutes after he arose he tried to speak, but good naturedly gave up the attempt until the applause should Subside. Women waved their handkerchiefs, strong-lunged cam- paign clubs made the house resound with their catchy cries, and from all classes of citizens came deafening applause. Dr. Pardee’s conquest of his audience was-in- stantaneous and he had spoken scarcely a dozen words when he had won the com- plete sympathy and good will of his hearers. PARDEE’'S GEEETING WORDS. These words, falling on the ears of resi- dents of a capital city which rarely sees a Governor, had a cal effect. “My friends and fellow townspeople,” was Dr. Pardee's greeting. “I call you my fellow townspeople for I intend to (lve among you for the next four years; I/in- Special Dispatch to The Call. tend to send my children to ‘your public schools and at the conclusion of my term | of offiee 1 hope you will not be ashamed of me and mine. And when” 1 meet you after that—when I come back to visit you | —1 hope d trust your greeting may be | as hearty as it is to-night.” Continuing, Dr. Pardee sald: The candidate for office full “of trials and tribulations, and the man who thinks it is an easy job to run for Governor, even on the Republi an ticket in_Republican Cali- fornia, does not know how things political are done. Th are things comical and things serious, things pleasant and things unpleasant, things true and things unt charged up against every man who aspires to become a | public officer. All ‘these things have beex | charged against me. And I am here to-nigh to let my future friends and neighbors see | what sort of a man I am, and ng other | things to convince you, if I can, that I have | within me at least the foundation for a fairly | good Governor, and that if elected (as I shall be) the people of my nat State will have no cause to feel ashamed of me. For let me assure you that when I left the State Con- vention here the other day I left it absolutely free from all promises or pledges, except these | two: First, to stand upon the platform of my party; and second, to give the people of the State, when I am elected Governor, as good, clean, honest and economical an admin- istration of their affairs as lies in my power to give them. And I chall keep these two pledges as surely as I live and am elected Governor. 1 spoke to you a moment ago about my party platform. Looking over that document | 1 find the foliowing plank: ‘‘President Roosevelt has pursued a broad and enlightened forelgn and domestic policy and has shown himself to be a friend of the great West by his frank indorsement of such measures peculiarly favored by the Pacific Coast, as the reclamation of arid lands, the jsthmian canal and the exclusion of Chinese cheap labor. And our Democratic friends, a little late, es they alwa; are, and a little disposed to imitate, as they always will be, adopted, a week after the adjournment of the Republican convention, a plank in their platform in which they also favored Chinese exclusion. But, with characteristic modesty, the Democrats did not say that it was the Republican party that first passed a Chinese exclusion act; mor did they say that had it not been for the Repub- lican party there never would have been an exclusion act, WHOLESALE THEFT OF IDEAS. Taking their cue-from us the Democrats, in_their_platform, also favor the isthmian canal, But they are not frank enough to say that this canal matter is also a Republican measure and will ‘be put through by a Re. publican President and a Republican Congress, 1 Our platform also has this plank: “We advocate the construction of Govern ment ships in Government navy yards. W urge upon®Congress that the national elght- hour law be extendeq to apply to ail Govern- ment work, whether performed in public or private establishments. The Democrats took a week to read over our platform and then they also came to the con- clusion that it would be a good thing to have Government ships constructed In Government navy yards: and after a week's consideration ol our platform they also resolved that it Would be o good thing to have all Government work.done under the etght-hour law. On the questior of trusts, our platform hes the followinz plank: to restrict business, to create monopolies, to 1imit production. .or to control prices, and fa- or_such legislation as will effectually restrain anc prevent all such abuses, vrotect and pro- moto competition and secure their rights to producers, laborers and all who are engaged ir industry and commerce.” A week later the Democratic_convention also resclved against the trusts. But they forgot to mention the fact that the only check that has ever been put upon the trusts has been done | by the Republican party, and that President Roosevelt is now vigorously enforcing the law that 4 Republican “ongress passed. And they also forgot to mention in their platform that it is & Reoublican Attorney General, named Knox, who is now giving the trusts’ an un- happy quarter of an hour, On the matter of the abuse of the writ of in- junetion, tlc Republican platform has this o sa; (‘We favor leglslation which will so regu- late the process of injunction as to prevent its exercise in abridggment of the right of free speech or peaceful assemblage.” Arnd a week later the Demecratic conventicon also came to the conclusion that the writ of injunction had been abused, and resolved agalnst its abuse, BENEFITS OF PROTECTION. I quote these planks to show the working people of Sacramento that the Republican par- ty is, as it always has-been, the party that has made possible the advancement and pros- perity of the working people of this nation. It has stood always for the material welfare of the people of this country, since the time when Lincoln, a man who worked with his hands, became the President of the republic, and struck the shackles from 3,000,000 human chattels and made them free. It has been the friend of the workingman since the tannerg| Grant, occupied the Presidentlal chair. It has been the friend of labor since Garfleld, the canal boy, sat in Washington. * And McKin- ley, the man who snatched us all from the ruln and bankruptey of Cleveland and Democ- racy, was a Republican of Republicans. It was the Republican party that gave us the protective tariff, that has kept our men and wWomen at work and given them the wages they now receive. -And it was the Democratic (] | party We condemn all conspiracies and combines | Good Will of — Leader’'s Opening Words Win the His Hearers. % . that placed following plank “‘We denounce the present unjust protective tariff imposed upon the people by the Repub- lican party, and demand such a revision of our tarift Jaws as will result in the removal of all unjust burdens and the placing of trust made goods and the necessaries of life -on the We believe in a*tariff for revenus in its State platform ‘the Now, men of Sacramento, what do you think of that? The Republican purty believes in taking the trusts In hand and making them the servants of the people. It believés in sup- porting and fostering every industry that will give empioyment to our people. The Demo- cratic party belleves in putting the products of the trust upon the free list, and, by so do- | ing, throwing out of employment the millions of people employed in manuiacturing those pro- Quets. The Republican party believes in | pro- tecting every American industry that can give employment to the American people. And the Democratic party ‘‘denounces the present un- just protective tarlff imposed upon the people by the Republican party.” The Republican party to-day s proud of the protective tariff | it has given to the people of this nation. It is proud when it looks ut the millions of Amer- icans who work in our protected manufactories, ‘And it shudders when it thinks of the ruin and desolation that certainly would follow, as day follows night, the closing down of mill and | factory, forge and furnace, were the Demo- cratic “tarlff for revenue only” to be put into force. How would our- raisin gfowers, our | Wool growers, our prune men, our cattlemen, our lumbermen, our iron manufacturers, our horticulturists and all the thousand and one Interests that are able to exist and employ. so many of our fellow citizens—how -would the men like to have the tariff that bas made | them prosperous taken off and a ‘‘tariff for revenue only’” put in its place? How many of you who now sit before me | have forgotten the want and destltution of elght years ago, when thousands of our fellow- Citizens of California walked the streets with empty dinner pails, looking for work they could not get becausé Cleveland and the Demo- cratic party had closed all the mills and fac- torles? Who has forgotten the souphouses of "84 and '95 when Cleveland was President? And who has forgotten how quickly after Mc- Kinley's election our mills and manufactories began to run overtime and our working people with full dinner pails went blithely to work at wages such as they never had before? And vet the Democratic State Convention solemuly re- solved to “demounce the present unjust tariff imposed upon the people by the Republican party’ and declared that “we believe in & farift for revenue, only!” A tariét for revenue omly would mean the bankruptcy of this nation, the throwing out of work of millions of our people and the pau- perization of all our people. But the Demo- cratic party wants a “tarlff for revenue only” and still pretends to be the friend of labor! FRIEND OF ORGANIZED LABOR. I have been asked what my feelings are toward organized labor. The other day the President of the United States addresssd a convention of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen. And in the course of his address the President said, “I believe emphatically in organized labor.” 'Making his words mine, i also ‘‘believe emphatically in organized labor.” I believe in it because I feel that only in this way can the common people (from whom spring our Lincolns, our Garfields and our Mc- Kinleys) advance. ~And I feel that upon the advancement of our common people depends the- future greatness, even the perpetulty, of our country. Therefore, 1 always feel glad when the working people achieve anything that will better their condition. I know of no bet- ter way for them to do that than by orsaniz- ing for their own advancement, and I do not thirk that any good American wili do any- thing to in any way deter them from it. What is the greatest issue in this cam- palgn? There is but one answer to this que: tion, and that is this: The continued pro: perity of our people. The true mission of any government is to make happy, contented and prosperous the people. And this is, as it al- | vays has Dbeen, the policy of the Republican And 50 in this State to-day we of the Republican party look with jealous eyes upon the continued prosperity of ail the people of California. We desire the miner and the farmer, the wool man and the cattle man, the horticulturist and the viticulturist, the sugar man and the lumber man, the working maa and the capitalist, the manufacturer and the oil man, the producer and the consumer, we desire them all to be prosperous. And we be- lieve that with a “tariff for revenue only” no one of these can be prosperous. And we feel sure tkgt if otr Democratic friends get into power and turn over the protective tariif which they dencunce in their State platform we can expect only a return of the hard and bitter times of '94 and '95. And we of California have great and pecu- lar interest in (he continuance of our present prosperity, which we have achleved under Re- publican’ rule. For the first time in Its his- tory California now- lies in the direct line of trade and commerce with the swarming mil- lions of the Orient. For the first time in her history California now finds turned toward her the eyes of all the world, looking upon her as the shipping point for that great commerce which will ere long flow outward and inward through the Golden Gate and give us markets for all we can raise and manufacture. Mar- kets are necessary, if we have aught to sell, and where can we sell them better than among the millions on the further side of the great ceean that thunders at our very doors? Where can we sell them better than under the protec- tion of the American flag, so safely planted over there by the American soldiers? FUTURE OF CALIFORNIA. ‘Within the next generation I look for great things for California. When, as ought to be in the near future, her flood waters are dammed within her mountain canyons and let out in goodly streams to restore the ‘withering ver- dure of her parched summer flelds; when her forests, under the watchful care of the State and nation, hold within their cool and shady depths the snows and rains that fall upon our mountain sides, I look to see California’s people increase in number with glant _strides, and where she now has thousands, millions will be here. I look to see, coming and going from her ports of entry, argosies big with the “‘wealth of Ormus and of Ind,”" taking from us the products of our California empire, re- turning with all the far East can send us in return. 1 look to see our harnessed cataracts turning the wheels of countless factories turn- ing out the fabrics we can then suppiy, and I look to hear our fuel problem satisfied by the products of our southern wells, the clank of forge and furnace going up from every side. Our Demoeratic friends, through thelr ora- tors and newspapers, are ‘telling us that there i8 no connection between this State election and the coming national election two years from now. But, if this be so, why do they nom- inate Congressmen and members of the Legis- lature, upon whom will devolve the election of a United States Senator? We have now in Congress a solid _delegation - of Republicans, And we want to send to Washington this time two Semators and eight itatives to hold up the President's hands and carry on the policy McKinley so auspiciously inaugurated, But if our California people should be be- guiled into voting against the State ticket, how easy it would be for them to elect a Democratic Congressman, or twn,hnor*thm‘ or even more; and if they do that, how easy it would be for | tourth | tarift for | corted back to his places hirtieth Hall, Howa S Ke as feliows D. V. Keily, mem Hen off, m ty; John A. Lyi - vote for next Nov rity made pos: epublican by M To swam thing to d ve .that the p address was follo Duncan Mc The meeting w mendous cheering _an enter of amn enthu- til finally es- An Earl;ilt;m;;g_m eeting. SACRAMENTO, Sept a touch of the “stren I campaign Dr. George C. Pardee drov to the edge of.the c this (Thursday) morning at 1 §'clock ressed the streetcar men after they had fir held in the hall to runs. The meeting w of the Carmen’s Union, coffler of Twenty- eighth and M DR. PIERCE'S REMEDIES. DANGER It is courting danger to stand under icy eaves. Not a few have learned this to their cost. FEvery winter injury and even death are reported as the result of this carclessmess. But there is a far more popular way of courting danger. Every man. or woman who, neglects a cough is inviting sickness, and many a fatal sickness has its beginning in a slight cough. The timely use of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery will cure the cough. Even when the cough is obstinate and: there is hemorrhage with emaciation and: weakness, “Golden Medical Discovery” always helps and almost always cures. 1 was troubled with a bad cold, which settled on my lungs and left me with a miserable cough,” writes Mr. h D. Burns, of 33 otk e used two Botkles of our’ Golden Medieal Discow. ery,' afler which my cough disappeared entirely. I can- not recommend your medie cine too highly.” Accept no substitute for * Golden Medical Discov- ery.” There is nothing “just as good” for dis- eases of the stomach, blood, and lungs. Sub- stitntion means a little to the dealer

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