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E | § B 44340044444 444000004444 0400042 ; 7 .4 :P : 3 3 Pages 01040 ¢ £Pages 20 {0 404 > : + b + c .mm¢¢b—¢¢“flm<ofi“wo: [ R R e e e S Y 1 i *SAN FRANCISCO, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1902. FOR PARDEE AND OTHER CANDIDATES for Republican success. : PROSPECTS + — — — : Republicans of Forty-l“] First Hold Big } Meeting. OLD GU P 1 IONEER HALL was too small to hold the voters who turned out last evening to attend the big meeting given under the auspices of thg Republican organi- | | ELECTION A \D P zations of this city. The voters present enthusiastically cheered for Dr. Pardee, Congressmen Kahn and Loud, and applauded ‘the sentiments expressed by | | R EJOIC ES AT | Chairman Horace Davis and Congressman Metcalf of Oakland. Julius Kahn delivered an able address and was roundly cheered. The meeting augurs well ’ OF PARDEE | i ~ PREDICTED | Republican State Lead- | ers Figuré on i Result. Julius Kahn Declares | Union League Club His Opponent i; \ i Gives Check to : Committee. Insincere. the members of | | e “0ld guard” of the Republi- | | tended the rally | | | T Republican State headquar- ters confidence in the election of Dr. Pardee is absolute. The e hail on Octavia | | | f}“]’:“"’f\’:a:"sr: C"“j‘“llt’m‘l‘; o Srece gacend- | ek ittt o8 STt aa the representative | | P€Lis ouomy [ iy i eet, 1 gladdened Republicans of the For- ; § (i 7 ! PHe e servative experts have been considered. whom they found assem- | | In making a table of the probable majort- eir hearts were warmed | they were made to leap joy at the enthusi- The name of e party, George mentioned with- of cheers. The hall wing and in the crowd their bread in the district. | Kahn, who had the | | the first speaker of the V'CHTOR ties for Pardee the estimates are ecut | down to the lowest figures derived from METCALE ; Republican sources. In calculating the TSN 5 | | strength of the Democratic candidate a ? RN broad margin in faver of Lane is given. S | The conclusion is reached that Pardee's clection is beyond doubt. TRe last and oniy hope of the Lane leaders s that | | San Francisco will give an unprecedented majority for the Democratic ticket. Reports from the eighteen Assembly | cistricts of this city convince the Repub- s i | lican campaign managers that Dr. Pardee time to answering |.[is daily gaining strength among the st opponent to the ef- j’| wage earners. The swing of the inde- b been disloyal to pendent voters is toward the Republican ple of this State in the| | | column. The last week of the campaign ure the re-enactment | | will be conducted with remarkable viger, exclusion act. He| Meetings have been appointed for every very best of evidence, | distriet of the metropolis. | Eloquent ecord itself, that he al, but that he had he utmost .to. secure strongest kind of legal t the hordes of Asiatic speakers will rally the wavering. REPUBLICAN NOMINEE. The able and popular nominee for Gov- | ernor, Dr. George C. Pardee, will meet the voters of the various districts and they can judge for themselves what man- ner of man he is. He will speak at Santa Cruz to-morrow evening and begin his metropolitan campaign on the day follow- | | ing. | | Word has reached Republican headquas~ iters that unauthorized collectors are so- | he selmen’s clause in the an Kahn said ngress) that no ship should em uld have work. 1 n sailors | man all our | ed this question by Dou you be- vhich does not ap labor can He replied | the American hip | s _fought the hé Senate and ment against it ponent to the uld ‘mot com- were not al- liciting small sums of money in the name of the committee. Every person author- | ized to_collect money for the committee | is provided with a subseription book, | which contains an authorization as fol- | lows on the first pag - “Mr. is authorized to receive eon- | tributions for the Republican State Com- | mittee, campaign of 1902. | “W. J. DUTTON, “Chairman Finance Commitee.” e Fort-fiset The- N ’ CAMPAIGN CONTRIBUTION. rayf mecugpla¥i £ The Union League Club committee on e g e & DISTINGUISHED REPUBLICANS WHO SPOKE IN PIONEER HALL AND TWO CANDIDATES WHO RECEIVED HIGH ENCOMIUMS. pclitical action held an interesting ses- : | sion last Friday. Jo—a iy —* |'for a grand mass meeting under the aus- pices of the league was discussed at ‘1z Congressman Metcalf Pays Sincere Tributes to His Colleagues in House of Representa- s the i ies were closing week of the campaign the con- | ciusion was reached that an extra meet- | ing would not be as helpful to the cause a direct contribution to the campaign ‘ |fund. It was resolved to - contribute acramento assured o S Ll . - 3 The proposition to call ntrasted the prosperity h exists to-day with the on which e the factor s be he fires i thousands of able- R e tives, Eugene F. Logd and Julius Kahn, and the Voters Voice Their Approval. to support them- milies. In conclusion, he | money. In accordance with the sugges- ribfite to the ability and > ¥ e 2 | tion the directors of the le: erda - LPe mly, and IONEER Hall was far too | mous act was applauded. In his speech ) date for Congress in the Fourth District, | publican party ls the party of construction: | their feet ‘and cheered vociferously for | o ‘1%, JITeCtors of the league vesterday 2g - C..Tpries; who small to -accommodate the | Mr. Davis said in part: entered the hall and if the cheers that |the party that builds up: it Is not the party | the able representative of the. Fourch | 5" > P o S SIS P 'y be an en- | sme o g, reeted the popular candidate are a crite- | °f, déstruction—that tears down. —(Applause) | piC. 8 3 ias S2e) > bef. lican State Central Committee. Mem- comy #f Sabor, ns Fion: Al large crowd that attended & e POp! ¢ L The keynote of this campaign s and should s b was several minutes before | perg of the league residing in the inte- nst | the Republican ratification | HORACE DAVIS PRESIDES - rion, he will be elected by a large major- | be prosperity. You can't get away from that. | Quiet was restored. Then Chairman Da- | rier report that the indications point to - e " ~ g 5 S P i 0 OVER THE ASSEMB GE ity. In his speech,.Mr. Metcalf paid trib- It is ever present. It is with us to-day, it | vis introduced Carroll' Cook, one of the the complete success of the Republican QUOTES FROM GOMPERS. | meeting last night. Hun- e LA utes to his colleagues, Kahn and Loud. a:;u:‘!i‘chm:lss:’lge;ee&i:n;;l‘;vellho&f”lh;zufl‘: Republican candidates for Superior Judge. | ticket. It is claimed that the Demoerats E E es of Indiana traced the| Ore08 of Noters Were ¢OM- | He Appeals to ‘Voters to Stand by | ™ Part he spoke as foilow us for many years to come. ' Judge Cook made a brief but stralght | will not be able to hold up their usuaf the R lican party. | pelled to stand up and hun- ? L am especlally gratified to-night to be in the | Let me point a few conditions that existed | from the shoulder talk on eriminal jus- | majorities in Fresno Tuolumne, Tulare € en n the risk that|dreds were unable gain admittance. En- the Party of Prosper- home town of my friends and colleagues, Julius | in San Francisco a few years ago and con- | tice which elicited considerable applause. | and Stanislaus counties. T s re T T in entering polities | thu m ran high. The mention of the iey Kahn (cheers) and Eugene F, Loud (renewed | trast them with the conditicns to-day. 1 want > - cheers); glad of the opportunity of testifying | to call your attention to the condition in 1802, J,‘fdg" f‘m:‘d spoke favorably of his asso- | names of the distinguished members of | My friends, we have come here to-night to | to their worth and ability, and of congratulat- | At thal time the Republican party was in | Clate candidates for judicial honors. He | He quoted at length from showing | oy et . ratify the ticket. Ten days from to-day We |ing the citizens of San Francisco and the peo. | Power. The factorles were running full time. | took particular pains to speak of the | SMYTHE ROUGHLY HANDLED. 1ould be | the party evoked the heartiest applause. | shail stand up face to face at the yolls and | pic of the State of Callfornit, as well. tpon | The working people were employed. There mas | qualifoations and sterling worth of R. B. | 1. ) s raft. W ver Pardee’s name was heard the | determine in which column we are Zoing to | being represented at Washington by two such | contentment throughout the length and breadth McClellan, the only candidate for Supe- | Littlefield Flays the Democratie ¥ of the Re- | zudience manifested i pproval by con- | place this good State of California, our home, | eminent and distingulshed gentlemen. (Ap-|Of the land, but the demagogues appealed to y d ¢ Whether it Is going to be placed in the ranks | plause.) San Francisco has never had a mors | the prejudices and passions of the masses, | ToT Judge on the Republican ticket who | Nominee for Congress. s change | tinued cheering. The meeting was in|of Cleveland and free trade or going to be loyal, more faithfl, more earnest and more | Tather than to their judgment, and induced | is not now on the bench. The mention | RIVERSIDE, Oct. 25.—Candidate Smythe 2 S . i ce > ose §; to the | intelligent representative, and labor h ver | them to try a change. ~Well, they got & |of McClellan's na vas followed b; S of the | the nature of a peace meeting. Oppo- | placed among those States that are true to the i pres: Y or has never e % Mec n's name was followed bY|ang his jubilant utterances we: i P o nents of the party have been spreading | £197%gus Brinciples of those Republicans who | had o truer or stancher friend at the national | change, and what was the consequence. For | Luq”cheering. Chaitman Davis thes fo sl 2 e g - should the Demo- s e y et are dear to our hearts, all the Way from Lin- | capital than Jullus Kahn (great applause) | four years ng people of thls coun | W duced the ‘popular. youns comiidats | toFR Into infinitesimal’ shreds by Conm- . in power, Mz | stories'that there was disruption in the | coln and Garfleld to cur beloved McKinley and'| San Francizco ‘and the old Fifth District has | Iy Were idle and as my colleagne has told e i Lol S an et ddate | oressmen Littlefield, who addressed the « s 3 e ~ : | o Now, my friends, California is a Rcpublican | a better equipped, a better informed and an thetr daily bread & foF an opportunity to earn | pejjow Republicans and Ladies: I feel great- | Breatest political gathering ever held in el the malicious stories the members of | State. ']n.em is no quesll;r‘:’l nlbo:"r“'r !\‘rocu nlb‘lex- represenllntl\'v) (thn l-‘;xgpne F. Loud. Y » ly honored and deeply touehed by Judge Cook’s | this section. Littlefield devoted a great . - he Unite T need only to average up the last four elec- | (Renewed applause. say to you to-night, B s P kind words, and 1 _know not how to realy to.| 53 t s Tuture e ER e -I“DUbl‘cans'-Pr{md“ ’Mgue' Uons. 1t has gone Republican by an average | from the information that comes to me as a | QUOTES AN ARTICLE them. If you see fit ta elect me 4o the ostnc-_- | :’::,lflofs:,x; a:n(:e;:adz z:"(::sf“";m,nl b "I]e boring - | Mutual Alliance and kirdred organiza- | vote of ten to fifteen thousand. Why should | member of ‘the National Congressional Com- to which T aspire and make me an assoclate | 2 : Ny el S | tions met in harmony to help along the | she not do the same thing ten days from to- [ mittee and a member of the executive com- BY JOAQUIN MILLER |of Judges Cook. Hebbard and Hunt 1 assure | Catlons by referring to the speech Smythe Repubiidan tanee day? Why should she uot rcil up a blggec | mittee as well, that the indicatons all point s you that no act of mine will ever make you | recently delivered here. He declared that majority? “Why should she not go Republican | to the election of these two gentlemen by safe Tegret it. Smythe classed - sugar, prunes, citrus Thomas D. Riordan, chairman of the | by 25,0007 (Applause.) & nt o | matorities. (Great applause.) Eabn Says the Poet Was “Agalnat [F8=0 1 1 0 o e for the Asseme Biits, oty by ¥ c o cpublican County Committee, called the | , There s every reason that there ought ‘to TR Re-enactment of the Exclusion bly in the Twenty-ninth District, fol- ald t ugt id: | be more Republicans in~this State than four . the luxuries. He said that in Maine they = big meeting to order. In doing so he said: | ;2,1 %00, " "We have haa prosperity and suc- | HEARTY CHEERS GREET Act. g’_wet: llflvu:ilar; e ma;‘le a brief (t:;'lk | had become household necessities and he | . This meeting has been called under the |cess and we have evérything that tends to I have in my hand the North American Re- | directed particularly to the voters of his | was amazed to find %hat in the land of auspices of all the Republicans of the city | improve your welfare. Let us stand by our CONGRESSMAN KAMN | viow of December, 91, in which Mr. Jeaauin | district. Lou Brown, candidate for Board | and county of San Francisco, including the | colors. Let us not be deluded by false Issues. Miller, whom the Examiner in its issue to- their culture they had been classed as United Republicane, the Primary League and | Fight your fights at the primares. 1 fought | Audience Rises En Masse to Express | day says will deliver a speech of Equalization, followea Collins and at | jyxuries. He dissected the Democratie in favor of I the conclusion of his address there. was d the Republican Mutual Alliance, for the pur- [ mine and was beaten and I have taken my my opponent, denounces all the efforts of the State platform and commented on : prosperity bose ‘o reviewing the nomination made at | medicine. | There is more reason why Cal- Its Approval of the Popular people of the Pacific Coast to re-enact an ex- | loud and persistent cheering for E.F.|gmyvthe's inconsistency in declaring for a e i Sacramento of our standard-bearer, the Hon. | ifornia should be Republican tban any other Candidate. clusion act. ~The closing paragraph of his ar- | Loud, candidate for Congress in the Fifth different sort of a tariff in every town George C. Pardee, and of all the Gominees of | State in the Union.' The Republican party | . .. s % s | b ent e e yon. i e ns and 1 am going | District. Chairman Davis announced:that | where he had spoken that State Convention. of protection spreads its wings over the whole t the close of Congressman Metcalf's to read it to you. It is as follows: he had just received a message from C: | where ¥ 3 This meeting is called by the diffcrent or- | State. The tiller of the soil is protected by | address he was loudly applauded. “Billy" ‘I_will not venture to advise, but I will J 8 om Con= Littlefleld paid a handsome tribute to ar ons of San Francisco to show not only | a protective tariff on his prunes and other | Hynes, the inimitable comedian, ' say that if the man who really wants to work | gressman Loud, who was detajned at|pr. Pardee, whose named aroused great Rer cnemies, but her friends. (hat even though | commodities; the manufacturer ia protected by | o es: ¢ and told stories that werg | YilL keep out of the saloon and go into the | Ocean View, where he had gone to speak. | orihiton Hio plea for the support of we may have factional differences on other | tariff on his manufactures, all the merchants | POP onge 5 that were | country and ‘set a plece of land and go to | Ty sould be impossible for Loud to be | o - ks for Co - occasions we are all good, honest, loyal | are doing well. as are all the workingmen. | @PPrapriate to the occasion. In.introduc- | work on It, he will Jook a¢ things as. I save o 3 i be | Captain M. J. Daniels for Congress in Republicans. - And for that =purposs like a | and fellow citizens, it Is due'to the Republican | ing Congressman Kahn, Chairman Davis | fet them down. He will soon want Chiness | PTesent at the meeting, Chairman.Davis | yhe Eighth District was eloquent and logi- happy family we can o hand in hand together. | policy of the last four years. It has brousit | paid him some sincere compliments, He | eI’ for Wife and babes, and above all, | sail, whereat the big crowd became vis- | cal. This being the home town of the Ana mow, ladies and gentiemen and Repub- | a great expenditure of money for this State i in | & Chinese gardener. Or if he cannot tear |ibly disappointed. The meeting was ad- te, the meeting naturally was Ticane, T have the eatrenc honvt Sl the pioas- | sor it it b Dics. DoetRacTs) thie Cruse aatn/ Mr. Sshin NAd In Bl CHOTE Career in | Muselts fooms: the: Sikvis Mt Bt oo o | candidate, : journed with three cheers for President | re to introduce - s th esiding office: 7 States a volume of commerce far bas- | CON&ress made a record that has not beenr| start a factory and employ Chinese, do al- > v d | T ol SvaminE 5 menflemen Twho: Mas auns | S e aclsation I e Cath e D | eaualed. SOONENesaRIaN MateAIL arta most anything except beg and bully: for that | Roosevelt and the entire Republican o Ereat deal for California, not obly s & Con- | ocrats. Californla has had, the Sream of it. | called for three cheers for his colleague | i3 NPE g sl AT e e | ticket. gressman but as @ private citizen and a | She has been on these western shores where | an, e arose en G0 DEMOCRATIC. | Forioriia whe has o naticuat i i B ool ol it et A i d the audienc masse and | and these appeals to Congress mean. The turned to his advantage. Overflow meetings were addressed by local candidates. Enough red light and .| powder was burned during the evening to S t . made the hall resound. In the course of | so-called ‘“‘laboring man,” who is not one in Sale of Quicksilver Mines. make a tolerable Fourth of July celebra~ e vin e Won, ERivc [wsl- SamRMEE ey A Kohii o his speech Congressman Kahn said: | ten of the real laboring men. simply 1 & beg. | SAN JOSK, Oct. % —The Cerro-Bonito | tion. shns L5 pias Mr. Davis was cordially greeted by’ the g gar and a bully. He does not want to work. | quicksiiver mines in San Benit — o oot ™he | qudience. Before beginning his address | CONGRESSMAN METCALF 1 don’t know how to thank you f@r your ex- | He only wants to get something for nothinz. ?n 0 Thepte T rHet ant o, O-Fbe ong- IN STOCKTON. £ 40| she chalmit el K6 WARIOEEY ) S DISCUSSES THE ISSUES | C°¢dingly cordial greeting. I don’t know how ST T & ; and the Flint es-| SHORT TALKS KTON. 1 do no to thank my colleague for his kind words. tate, have been purchased by a comy — so many good Republicans obliged to e A Whatever I have done, whatever I have ac. | LOUD W. UNABLE TO of San Jose and San Franclscyo capllaxl)lz?sy Significant Result of a “Straw Vote™ #tand up, but, he said, it was a good sign | Chairman Davis introduced Congress- | complished has been such as any man would ADDRESS THE VOTERS |and if is said the development of the o repon and Washington have clesien | O their intercst in the cause. He invited | man Metcalf, who delivered a splendid | accomplish who went to Washington with an mines will be at once commenced on g Taken in Lodi. Governors and mothing has hap. | three or four of those standing to take | speech on the issues of this campaign. Aaatann e Pt hs Xnew how. |, /41, thei/conclislon <af” Kaliive | dddress | fares scale: AL ALS head of the syndi.| STOCKTON, Oct. %.—Hon. Frank H. Now :::; '}r",..“‘?;»:."fi‘;‘;»”{: d ts on the platform, and this magnani- | During his address Jullys Kahn, candi- My colleague has aptly stated that the Re- | nearly everybody in the big hall stood on | cate is H. R, Bradford of this city. Short of Fresno spoke to a good-sized ? {or Onegon ana Washingion have | @ RS it S e e e SRR [ oy s Maqp i T en e hat, for Oregon and Washington have behalf of the Republican State ticket. ; s, | 3id happen. would Tappen, namels, thatciflc Coast belleve, indors. and demand ) up San Juan Hill and noW leads “Capital and | then, I say, my.friends, abandon these islands | of the Short talked entertainingly of the ob- Mington - s | their industries would no longer be protected | “‘tariff for revenue only,” and elght Démoeratic | ranem together to peaceful arbitration, Presl- | of the Pacific Ocean, which Were given o us | g Dum:axg:xy:gfi &I) s“; clltsy'1\1‘?:"1““" servations made during his tour and e3 California snould follow in | by a protective tariff, but a tariff bill for | Congressmen would go to Washington pledged | dent Roosevelt, whose administration has done | PY @n act o. providence? i ok, R. B. McClellan S ittoraia shoud mot go Demp | rorenue only would be passed, yhich would | fo support that plank; then will beglif the re- | more for California than any Democrat has| WOULD BRING HARD TIMES, |0 Frederick Lux, candidate for the | pressed himself as confident of a sweep- Catiforala, should not o Demo- | open the doors to the foreign products of pau- | action and you Will observe, my friends, that | ever even promised to do. | Results haes shom: Assembly from the Fourty-first District, s the habit o n the 1 compenions and ‘‘misery e 2 b : ing Republican victory. He discussed the atic. | per Jabor. and hence the manufacturer, the | iastern capital which became timid once be- | that the Republican party fulfills its promises, | What God has joined together let no man ressed the meeting, which broke which e Republican a; Golden We ng, not following. jminer, the merchant,-began to draw. in their | fore when this Democratic plank was adopted | while the Dancrns promise but D,VL', fulfill. | put asunder. Would you turn these prosper- | Up amid hearty cheers for Pardee and the S oo Now, my fr . 3f you will follow me for | capital; to put it away in a safe place; to be | will again becomé timid and fear not only | 1 should not say Democrats, but as that emi- | ous days into days of adversity and hard | entire Republican ticket. Democratic parties and insisted that they mement 1 wi W you upon the Democratic | prepared for the coming losses and bard | Washington State and Oregon State, but Cali: | nent. statesmen . and adtrutsteation leader, | times? Would yo! stop the mills and the | g e et PRI entered very decidedly into the presemt argument Wseil why Californis should go Re- | limes: began, to discharge thelr, men; banks | fornia State as well, and California capital will | United States Senator Albert J. Beverldge of factories and make the great employed the campaign. For-én bour and a half he i began 10 call In their loans; business confi- [ begin to run away and hide, fearing this same | Indi . “th ition ‘fo the " | starving unemployed? you would do these o - s o Choir Speeches that in (S92, | dence collapsed, and even before the Wilson | plank of “tariff for revenue anly, " and hard | memer Wodld you sepediste. toe Hoconie: | Thinen. then wote. the-Democratie. ket oo | « Gilroy Belle to Marry. held his interested audience, which B e il "of o oaatic | bill was passed by the Democratic Congress | times will begin again, if ‘not ‘&1l over .the | oxpansion, whidh boan as & reaslt.of an oot of | ticket. of. the opposition to the Govermment |. GILROY, Oct. 2. The marriage of Misg | ¢vinced its enthusiasm for the party lead- » it and obtained control of the House | hard times followed, because capital feared | United Stated, at least right hére in Qall. humanity In extending an aiding hand to a|And If, by your suffrages, you change Cali- | Geneva Keaton of Gilroy and Peter Mort | ers by hearty applause at the mention e o TR oy ORYe DI | that piank. “Uariff for revenue only,” the same | fornia. 8o much, If you please, for the DeWo. | suffering and opprested Heopie, And which end. | fornia into the (so called) Democratic ranks, o4 er Morin as ‘n force, and hence they he plank which stands forth in bold type in the | cratic statement ‘“‘that it will do no harm if O imes laat Jmmedistely [foliowed - ine | Democratic platform in this State to-day, and | this State goes Democratic and that California, . ory eannot be charged to the | the Eastern manufacturers and ths be it. Why was it then? It |of labor in this State are 5 <f their names. A RN ORI e el dv S vosdesion | TR uedd Skt RN Ba sever, geti lgwad {54 Sen Pranciaco WY take place on-fgn- | o i L SRR o ing Governorsiig il 1 jslands of vast resources and of stra * | her falr head in' shame, will brand herseif as . i - empioyers | which heretofore has always been the leader | sittons. whase: people. only need Americantaon | ungratetul, unwise and false to the interests of | (2Y Alternoon at the home of the bride's | taken In Lodi yesterday. The farmers : the platform upon. which the | oh o lor the voiching eagerly | of the great Western Sthtes, should now fol- | to make them men? There was no design or | her own people. rarents, Mr. and Mrs. George Keaton of | who chanced to come into town and all w e platform ‘oich the | what you, the people, the voters, are going |low in the footsteps of our commercial rivals, this jon—| y. -to-] i siness street were 1 that victory there -was a'|to do with it. Now if ‘California Joins the | Oregon and. Washington Lo i e Il T was| ‘There were a number of candidates pre- | this city. The bride-to-be is one of Gil- | the voters along the business st T plan demanded a_"iariff ‘for revenue | ranks of Democracy this year, i ' # asked to state their preferences. The re- 1 G - | o when - their thereb the American people of this en- | Sented to the meeting and they all made | I0¥'s social favorites, an accomplished | ' ¢ b ., 9o Tias just enough | Stafe platform has that seme plank of “ann | - BXPANSION. IS. INEVITARLE. | ihEiche stve soe Smevicas neople of thls en- | O e e e e L Foy ey vocalfst. . who ‘has ‘slways | *2° Was & majosity of IS for Pardes : if you please, joins | Would you undo the magnificent work of th ting ‘and civilizing a crude people, ‘Boar CAPITAL IS TIMID. bands with Washington'and ‘Oregon, the solid | greatest President since Washington and Lin: | nerson shoula 1ive withia himeeir, "memn mai | for the State 9 of Haoalization. was | contributed. her. talents:, to avery'.good Wi vill th t i 2 7 greeted with cheers when he concluded | cause. Miss Keaton was glven LONDON, Oct. 25.—The British steamer Those who had their money iavested _in| Democratic Governor was elected, - put s | e imon e a ey T TiartyTed Mo Haert within' it own walls, much 1cts apandon | BIS remarks. He told how during his in- | 1aception by Magnolia Chapier. (::\;:::' ‘ot | penzance was suntonigte e R mines, o mills, in munutactorles, feared what | California and. the smaller States ‘of the Pa- worthy successor, the man‘Who led.our arinies ' a people wholars n Reed of help. Would you. cumbency he had protectcd the fnterests | the Hasters Sta on IR SVIIG | Thie, oo o i e MR Hhes,