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SATURDAY ..NOVEMBER 1, 1902 JOHN D. SPRECKELS, Proprielor. Address All Communications to W. S. LEAKE, Manager. e A A A A AP A TELEPHONE. Ask for THE CALL. Th: Operator Will Connect You With the Department You Wish. PUBLICATION OFFICE...Market and Third, S. . EDITORIAL ROOMS.....217 to 221 Stevenson St. Delivered by Carriers, 156 Cents Per Week. Single Coples, 5 Cents. Terms by Mail. Including Postage: PAILY CALL (ncluding Sunday), one year. DAILY CALL (ncluding Sunday), 6 months. DAILY CALL (including Sunday), 3 months. DAILY CALL—By Single Month. SUNDAY CALL, One Year. WEEKELY CALL, One Ye: All postmasters are authorized to receive subscriptions. Eample coples will be forwarded when requested. Mafl subscribers in ordering change of address should be particulsr to give both NEW AND QLD ADDRESS in order 1o insure & prompt and correct compliance with their request. OAKLAND OFFICE .1118 Broadway C. GEORGE KROGNESS. Yersger Yorsign Advertising, Marquette Building, Chiesge. (long Distance Telephone “Central #613.”) NEW YORK REPRESENTATIVE: STEPHEN B. SMITH........30 fribune Bullding NEW YORK CORRESPONDENT: €. C. CARLTON. .Herald Square NEW YORK NEWS STANDS: ‘Waldorf-Astoria Hotel; A. Brentano, 31 Union Square; Murray Hill Hotel CHICAGO NEWS STANDS: Sherman House; P. O. News Co.; Great Northern Hotel; Fremont House; Auditorium Hotel. WASHINGTON (D. C.) OFFICE....1408 G St, N. W. MORTON E. CRANE, Correspondent. BREANCH OFFICES—S27 Montgomery, corner of Clay, open until 9:30 o'clock. 300 Hayes, open until 9:30 o'clock. 633 MeAllister, open until $:30 o'clock. 615 Larkin, open until $:30 o'clock. 1941 Mission, open until 10 o'clock. 2261 Market, corner Sixteenth, open until O o'clock. 1006 Va- lencia, open until § o'clock. 106 Eleventh, open until 9 o'clock. NW. corner Twenty-second and Kentucky, open until § o'clock. 2200 Fillmore, open until § p. m. X THE VOTING MACHINE. NE of the constitutional amendments to be O voted on next Tuesday provides that the vot- ing machine may be used instead of ballots at elections in this State. The choice of the machine leit to the option of communities, in order that y precincts may continue the present ballot and at cities, where the ballot is a blanket sheet, the use slow and the counting tedious and subject to ke, may substituate the use of the machine. The machine is no longer an experiment. It is used 1 New York, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Indiana, is and O The secrecy of the vote is abso- guarded by this mechanism. The use of it is It prevents the purchase e and easily acquired. to the buyer. Its operation is as mathematically cor- rect as the multiplication table. As the voter indi- cates his choice his vote is recorded. The result is once put before his eye. made 2 mistake he can correct it, and the correc- tion destroys the record of his error. The time occupied in using the machine is just one- quarter that now consumed in marking the Australian ballot. This means that four times as many votes can be received in a voting day, or that the whole vote can be taken, recorded and counted in one-fourth the time that is required by the present method. The 1 economy in ballots and printing is an item of saving that soon pays the cost of the machine, and when to this is added the saving in the pay of clerks and judges of election the use of the machine is justified on the ground of economy alone. As the votes are received so much more rapidly election precincts may be made larger, for the votes bei one-fourth the time now required each times as voters. This means the employment of only one-fourth as many election boards, and their use for only one day. They have nothing to count. When the polls close and the machine has recorded the last vote cast the election officers open it and find' the vote for each ate tallied and the total given. Beginning with the highest office voted for, they simply transcribe these totals and so proceed down to the last office on the Ji g taken precinct may contain four many can st. The long ticket in this city, which often re- quires more than two days to count from the Aus- trzlian ballot, can be so transcribed in thirty vtes and the result be known within an hour, as aiter cach precinct is transcribed they need only added together to get the grand total Election res min- ults have been sometimes corruptly changed by holding back the count, in certain pre- cincts, until that in others was known, so that false tallies of the delayed count could sophisticate the re- | sult. This is a corrupt trick often used in large cities. But it is impossible with the voting machine. That mechanism bel any candidate or committee, and it goes on impar- tially, automatically and correctly recording each vote and counting it as it is received. The machine is locked by four keys, and one of them is in the custody of each election judge. When it is unlocked they must 2ll participate in the process, and even if they were in corrupt collusion there is no Way known to criminal ingeruity by which they can falsify the re- sult This machine will economize three-fourths of the time and three-fourths of the cost of elections, and will obsolete every opportunity for corruption. When the machine was first introduced objection was made that it would permit repeating. As the back of the machine is to the election board it was | thought a voter could consume the time given to him in manipulating it repeatedly for the same can- didate This, however, is impossible. . When the voter has pressed the key once for a candidate the machine locks, and he cannot record another vote for that candidate. It remains locked until he passes out, and is not unlocked again until the entrance lever is raised to admit another voter. In short, the device is perfect for its purpose, which is to permit one voter to record one vote only for one candidate for an office and no more, and have the same truly recorded and counted. The matter is of such importance, whether viewed from an economical or a moral standpoint, that there should be no doubt of the adoption of the amend- ment which will permit the use of this machine. On the ballot this is No. 6 of the constitutional amendments. We hope that the rural voters, who may never need to use the machine, will support the amendment to permit its use in the cities where it is 2 necessity, es by preventing all evidence of their delivery | 1i he find then that he | to be ngs to no party, cannot be bribed by | LIVERNASH'S INQUIRY. HE Examiner’s candidate for Congress began T and continued his campaign by personal attacks upon and abuse of his opponent, Mr. Kahn. He sent to Mr. Kahn a challenge to meet him in joint debate, and took pains to make its language directly insulting and defamatory. Of course no self-respect- ing gentleman would meet him under such circum- stances. A His attacks upon Kahn were in the nature of charges of failure to do his duty in respect to the Chinese exclusion act. Hon. Champ Cfark, the Dem- ocratic Congressional leader of Missouri; promptly certified to Mr. Kahn that he had done his full duty in the Chinese exclusion fight of the last session. This in no way arrested Livernash’s torrent of abuse and misrepresentation. His persistent violence and misrepresentation invited inquiry into his own record. Upon examination it was found published in the Ex- aminer, to the effect that he had been arrested in this city masquerading as a negro woman, dressed in fe- male garb, with a satchel containing a large quantity of poisons. Later on the same paper printed a page of his trial at Santa Rosa for trying to administer poisoned wine to an old man and subsequently shoot- ing him, resulting in Livérnash’s trial for an attempt to commit murder. All this was set forth in the paper which is nrow attempting to foist this peculiar person | upon this city as a member of Congress, to represent its vast and varied commercial interests. Livernash complains -that this record is a slander. Ii-it be so the Examiner slandered him. In order to avoid punishment in the penitentiary for his offense insanity was pleaded, and the Examiner published that defense, including the statement that members of his family were on the borderland of insanity, and that his infirmity was therefore congenital and that he was “a monstrosity.” To defend himself against this record, printed in the same paper that supports him for Con- gress, he has seen fit to call a sort of public lunacy commission, a de lunatico inquirendo, upon himself. The issue concerns the people of this city. If they wish it to appear that they are limited in the choice for a representative in Congress to a man who was fined for traveling in female clothes, blacked up as a negro woman, and who escaped the penitentiary by being sent to a lunatic asylum, and who has since shown reckless and irresponsible traits consistent with the aminer’s claim that*his mental infirmities were congenital, all right. But if they do it will be done with their eyes open. If the great interests of San Francisco are safe in such a man’s hands the people must say so, in the light of their full knowledge of the facts. It will occur, however, to the average citizen that those facts warrant the withdrawal of Mr. Livernash from the field. His intemperate personalities and abuse, and faculty of subtle misrepresentation, mark him as unfit | for the trust which he seeks to assume. Self-respect- ing Democrats have seen him spit upon the indorse- | ment given by their party, and have noted his erratic | and serpentine course, in which detraction and false | statement have been the only consistent and con- | tinuing qualities. Men may sympathize with an in- | firmity that so nearly made him a murderer without esiring to accept him as a representative in Congress at a time when this city needs the whole service of a Co'ngres:man who has always been clothed and in his | right mind. It is ncteworthy that the principal certificates for Livernash are given by Hearst and his employes on the Examiner amd by physicians who, like the doctor | that interviewed Mat Bramble in Smollett’s novel, are San Francisco needs a man in Congress who does not require quite as much certification and vouching, was so carefully noted and fully published in the paper that now attempts to impose upon the public a man | monstrosity,” “purposeless and uncontrollable, ready to commit murder at any suggestion of his crooked Frankenstein.” His course in the campaign is sorry evidence of his Congress to test his soundness. This is the first case on record in which it has been } cide whether a man shall be sent to Congress or an in- sane asylum. As it is certain that his employer, Mr. New Yoik tenderloin, the meeting decided that it is proper to send Livernash to Congress also, to keep IRRIGATION R1GHTS. N interesting contest is now going on between 1 ‘ rights in the Arkansas River. The river flows through Colorado into Kansas. Colorado asserts serts riparian rights and demands that Colorado per- mit the water to flow uninterrupted and undiminished Kansas filed a complaint against Colorado and Colorado filed a demurrer, which has recently been merits. The Denver Republican quotes the Attorney General of Colorado as saying that his State would ! the ground of publiz * necessity. The Republican | goes on to say: “The answer follows the overruling filed by the State of Kansas. The answer reviews the whole history of irrigation, but makes its chief point cedence over the ancient riparian right. It asserts that little of the water of the Arkansas naturally | tion is really a help to Colorado’s eastern neighbor, as the water taken from the rivér by farmers seeps back wrally would. The desert land act and numerous | other acts. of Congress, including the irrigation act. of contention.” The doctrine that water once used for irrigation force as to carry farther than it would have done had it been left to flow naturally is one that Colorado will is one of the statements that are classed as “interest- ing if true”” That, however, is & minor point. The contention of Colorado that irrigation rights are su- perior to riparian rights. That question affects the depends the welfare of thousands tc-day and many millions of that future day when the practice of a deemed from the desert the broad acres that are now untilled. | anxious to certify a cure. nor so much explanation and excuse of a career that | whom it called a “duplex mental wonder,” “a cerebral brain,” *“a roaming scheming monster, like that of | cure, and this city can do better than send him to | considered necessary to call a public meeting to de- jHearst, is to be sent to Congress to represent the | his employer company. the States of Kansas and Colorado over water ! her right to use the water for irrigation. Kansas as- past her arid lands to the lands of Kansas. overruled, and now the case is to come up on its assert a new principle of law and seek to uphold it on | of the demurrer filed by Colorado to the complaint on the assertion that the right to irrigate takes pre- | reaches Kansas. On the contrary, it asserts, irriga- into the river again and carries farther than it nat- the present year, are cited in support of the State‘s will seep back into its original river bed with such probably have a good deal of difficulty in proving. It feature of interest and of importance in the case is the whole of the arid West. Upon its rightiul solution comprehensive system of irrigation shall have re- i It is not to be expected the solution will be easy. 0 CALL, SATURDAY The case is one in which the courts will have to choose between contestants each of whom has some- thing of right and reason on his side. The water rights of riparian owners have long been solidly em- bedded in our law. Now come the irrigationists and in the name of public welfare declare the need of adopting a new principle. It is another illustration of the old truth that a law which may be just and fair in one country would work harm in another. It is to be hoped the case as presented between Kansas and Colorado will be sufficiently broad to determine the whole complex issue, so that there need be no fur- ther litigation on the subject, for the demand of irri- gation is pressing and it is time that all law points concerning it be definitely settled. S ———— ALDEN ANDERSON. OR the office of Lieutenant Governor the Re- Fpublican party has nominated one of the ablest of the native sons of California. Few men of his age hold so high a place in public life as the Hon. Alder Anderson of Solano, and the record of his past services gives ample assurance of a future more dis- tinguished and more useful still. Mr. Anderson was born in Santa Clara County, and his father, J. Z. Anderson, is one of the foremost business men of the State, being the pioneer fruit | shipper of San Jose, and at present president of the California Fruit Shipping Company. Born of pio- neer stock and educated in the public schools of his native county, Mr. Anderson, after studying at the University of the Pacific, removed to Solano, where he has ever since resided. He has always been keenly interested in the orchard interests of the State, but his attention has not been confined to them. He is one of the men who are born to lead in public affairs, for his sympathies run to every industry and every move- ment that tends to the general weliare. His faculty for leadership and his public spirit soon made themselves known in his new home and he be- came recognized as a thoroughly representative man. Elected to the Legislature, he at’ once attained a high rank among the most influentigl men in that body. Chosen Speaker of the Assembly, he demon- strated his capacity for fulfilling “all the duties of a presiding officer, and conducted the business of the Assembly with a firmness and ‘impartiality that won the esteem of all the members of the House, whether Democrats or Republicans. In the present campaign he is making a notably strong and earnest canvass. His personal popular- ity is attested by the fact that he has the support of many Democrats as well as of independents and Re- publicans. That support is not given him without good reason. He stands as a representative of the best elements in our public life. He is able, honest and true—a man whom the people can count on, and therefore one whom they may justly delight to honor. e e e A CLEAN SWEEP. O far as active campaigning and canvassing for S votes go, the political contest will close this evening. Between that time and the opening of the polls on Tuesday morning the activities of the party workers will be mainly engaged in arranging to bring out their full vote. Any further efforts to in- fluence the general mass of the people will probably take the form of a roorback—of the circulation of an anonymous screed denouncing some particular candidate upon charges that could not be sustained during the continuance of the canvass, and for which no man, even among the rapscallions of politics, could be found to stand publicly responsible. Such being the case, it is time for the pecple to think over the whole situation as presented by the orators and organs of both parties and decide how they shall vote. That confirmed Democratic par- tisans will find some excuse to justify them in voting for many if not most of their party ticket must be accepted as a matter of course. Many of them who | do so, however, will be secretly glad in the assurance that the vote will not elect anybody, and that the wel- fare of California will remain in the hands of the Re- publican party. Outside of the dyed-in-the-wool Democratic stal- warts we know of no teason why any citizen of Cali- fornia should in this contest scratch the Republican ticket. The nominees of the party are men of known worth and experience. They are in every case well equipped for the offices to which they aspire and are of tried fidelity. Independents as well as Republicans, therefore, should join in helping to elect the whole ticket from top to bottom. Since it is certain we are to have = sweeping victory, let us make it a clean sweep. Should the people on Tuesday defeat every candidate who stands for free trade or for the array- {ing of one class of cifizens against another class it is probable we should rid our politics of that sort of demagogy for the rest of this generation. Vote the whole ticket. — AMENDMENT NO. 3 HEN making up your ballot do not forget W o vote for Senate constitutional amendment No. 3, marked on the ballot as “Amend- ment No.3,” providing for the exemption from. taxa- tion of all bonds issued by the State of California or by any county, city, city and county, town, munici- pality, municipal corporation of any sort, or district, including school, reclamation and irrigation districts. The amendment is in the interests of a sound financial policy. A State gains nothing by taxing its own bouds or the bands of any aof its political parts. One effect of attempting to tax such bonds is to de- preciate their value in the market and thus diminish the amount to be obtained for them when offered for sale. Another is to cause the bonds to be sold abroad, where they cannot be taxed by Califor- nia, thus compelling the State or the counties or districts to send abroad every year to pay interest a considerable sum of money that ought to be kept at home. 1f the public bonds of the kind enumerated be ex- empt from taxation they will bring a larger price in the market and can be floated at lower rates of in- terest. Moreover, they will then become.available for local investment. The annual interest payments will be made to persons living within the State, and of course will be at once deposited in the banks and thus restored to circulation in the channels of trade. Nothing but harm results from the attempt to tax bonds of this kind, while nothing but good would result from their exemption from taxation. Neither State, county, city nor any municipality or district profits one cent by such taxation, while each and all of them lose something upon every such bond issued. | The United States itself does not undertake to tax its own bonds, nor does any other Government whose statesmen understand the rudiments of finance. Cali- fornia ought to rid itseli of this handicap on public improvements without further delay. Make a note , of amendment No. 3 and be sure to vote “yes.” \ OVEMBER 1. 1902. DAUGHTERS OF CONFEDERACY GIVE MASQUERADE FOR C P HARITY * | 1 | i i N | ) i ! | I | | ! | | i | | 1 i 1 | H Miss Jane | : NaugRan Ninsmee | N SR ' i | % = - —b THREE PRETTY AND CLEVER SOQIETY GIRLS WHO ATTENDED THE FIRST MASQUERADE BALL WHICH | WAS GIVEN LAST NIGHT IN NATIVE SONS' HALL BY ALBERT SIDNEY JOHNSTON CHAPTER, DAUGHTERS OF THE CONFEDERACY. o — S = 189 ernie Drown, Mr. d Mrs. Louis Pa King., M nd M wW. 8 HE bal nissque for the bemefit of Igs Sommle, Drunn, He. S ate Mary Laulke | Chasics 6. Lomen. Licuisasnt hon Norao charity given at Native Sons’ Hall | pariott, Mr. and Mrs. John 3 & | Captain Johnson, Joe Tobin, Dr. Sumner Har- last night by Albert Sidney Johnston | M. L. Nokes, Miss Jean Nok | 45, Jack Corrigan. Miss Mabille Toy. Miss 5 ugustus odgers, Georg: | Ardella Mills, Mi d Chapter of the Daughters of the | gnf'Nrs’ . B. Brighem. Miss Allce Brigham. | Mes. W. H " Mille o Tiirupca rox Mo Confederacy was a briliant affair. The | Miss Kate Brigham, Mrs. Willlam Bourn, 3 Edith Pillsbury, Miss Louisa Breeze, Miss &2 1 | Maud Bourn, "Mr. ‘and ‘Mrs. James Carolan. | A - attendance was not very large, though |y Emily Carolan, Miss Genevieve Carolan. | PR R e the lack of numbers did not detract in | Edgar Carolan, Dr. Herbert C. Carolan. Mr. | sfr o S the least from the enjovment of those la- Miss Gertrude Josselvn, i Py ¥ e, Yo Jietta. Yaudtve. ho donned masks, | selyn, Miss Ethel Keeney, M i oniatowski, Sertruds dies and gentlemen Wi : 3 cos. | Keency, Dr. and Mrs. James M. Keene Jollitfe, Mise Vegiuia e. Mr. and Mrs both grotesque and otherwise, and c Gus Spreckels, Miss Lurline Spreckel: Rhdelpls = Spteci Shord es typical of both the past and the Hengry M. Shérman, Miss Sa . | White, Miss Ethel Shorb, Mr. and Mrs. Hom.r e 1 Iy R Mr. and Mrs. John D. Spreckels, | King, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Lent. Mr. ani present and danced until the early hours preckels, Mise Lily Spreckels. Mr. | Mrs. Sydney Van Wyck, Mr. and Mrs. Milton of the morning. and Mrs. Walter E. Dean, Mr. and Mrs. George | Dyas Baiiey, Miss Bailey, Mr. and Mrs. Wil- tions were pretty, the | Sperry. Miss Elsle Sperry, Miss Helen Dean, | liam Greer Harrison. Miss Ethel Harrison. Mr. The hall decora x " the | MF. and Mre. Russell Wilson. Miss Emily Wil- | and Mis. James Monrce Allen, Miss Susa arrangement of the flowers a;\dl tle‘;:;,_ Mise Harrier “Alian, ‘Mise Carrie Tayior, | Blanding, Mes. Jobn I Sabin, ‘Miss I rticular] ss e Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. J. Downey May . T < greans upon the stage being pf 1 hid{ Harvey, Mrs. Eleanor Martin, Miss Edith Mc- | bert Bonifleld, Edward Bishop, Frank Bish so. The musicians were completely an, Miss Gertrude Eells, Norman Livermore, | Mr. and Mrs. T. Bishop, Captain F. M. And den behind a lattice work of evergreens, r. and Mrs. Monroe Salisbury, Miss Margaret | Son, Harry Atkinson, Lewis Allen, David interwoven with lights. Across the stage, surrounded by lights, was the motto of the chapter, “Unity in great things. Lib- erty in small things. Charity in all hings.” !Th‘e guests arrived at the hall early. Among those who welcomed the mukervs were Mrs. Eleanor Martin, Mrs. A. W. Foster, Mrs. Phoebe Hearst, Mrs. ¥. 8. hite, Mrs. W. B. Craig, Mrs. Lysle Fletcher and Mrs. A. H. Voorhels. Among those invited were: . William Alvord, Mr. H.Mll;. .L"l?-e:nr:m Miss Livermore, M Kittle, Miss Kittle, Mr. and Mrs. A. P 3 . : ANSWERS TO QUERIES. HIS CITIZENSHIP--Subseriber, City. The item relative to the citizenship of Franklin K. Lane was published in The (all of October 19, 1902, page 5, column 3. and_Mrs. rs. N. G. . Drown, THE RIGHT TO VOTE—Subscriber, Colton. The constitution of California says: “No person who shall not be able to read the constitution in the English language and write his name shall ever exercise the privileges of an elector in this State; provided, that the provisions of this amendment relative to an educational qualification shall not apply to any person prevented by physical disability from linwood. Miss Leontirie Blakeman, Miss Con- ance Barrowe, Miss Bessle Ames. Mr. and Mrs. Stirling Postley, Dr. H._ B. Reynolds, Louis Beedy. Thomas Van Ness, Will Horn, Major C. T. Boyd, Mr. and Mrs. George Page, Willlam Sanborn, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel bue: Fred McNear, Mr. and Mre. Laursnce Ssot Miss Cora Smedberg, Miss Caroline Ashe, Mr. (and Mrs. Gaston Ashe Miss Azalea Keyes, Dr._ and Mrs B, F. Clarke. Miss Ethel Clarke Miss Rowena Clark, Miss Olive Halbrook. Dr. ard Mrs. Selfridge. Miss Seifridge, Miss Sallie Maynard, Mrs. Oscar Fitzalan Long, Miss Kate Gui Mrs. Hyde-Smith, Edward Greenway, Miss Elena Robinson, Miss Pearl Landers, Miss Eugenie Hawes.' Miss Hazel King, Miss Ruth Allen, Miss Elizabeth Allen, Miss Lucy any person who now has the right to vote, nor to any person who shall be 60 years of age and upward at the time this amend- ment shall take effect.” (Amendment adopted November 6, 1504.) —————— Prunes stuffed with apricots. Townsend's.* —_——— Townsend's Californta Glace fruit and candies, 30c a pound, in artistic fire-ctched boxes. 629 Market st., Palace Hotel building. * piiate S ahan Special information supplied daily to business houses and public men by the Press Clipping Bureau (Allen's), 230 Cali- fornia street. Telephone Main 1042 * AL iR atugl s crlieamii: A ton of soot results from the burning complying with its requirements, nor to of 100 tons of coal. Salisbury, Danforth Boardman, Miss Charlotte | A nice present for Eastern friends, | | BulL { J. H. Bradford, Lieutenant Brice, Baird, Frank Baird, Robert Baird, Everett M. Bee, N. F. Bowers, Captain and Mrs Bergess, Colonel and Mrs. Rawles, Miss Rawles, Miss Bonnle Reeves. Miss Bessié Reeves, Miss Mario Miss Eleanor Davenport, ' Miss Gracs Buckley, Miss Grace Baldwin, Misses Bailey. Miss Florence Booth, Miss Jennie Blair, Dr and Mrs. Black, Sam Boardman, Lieutenant Bert Cad- wallader, A, B. Costigan. J. E. Cralg, D. Coleman, Lieutenant Church (U. §. N.), Bruce Cornwall, Paul Cowles. Miss Ethel Cooper. Miss Harriet Currier. Misses Crellin, Mr. and Mrs. Frenk Carolan, Miss Elsa Cook, Miss Kathleen Bull, Mr. and Mrs. H. Dutton, Mics Moily Dutton, Frank Dutton, Harry Dution, Dr. P. Dunbar, R. Duperu, Paymaster Doherty. J. Camvbell Shorb, Miss Jane Wilshire and Miss Catherine Harrin R s O IR Y A CHANCE TO SMILE. Mrs. Dimpleton—Why your life insured?" Dimpleton—What's the use? Pm well enough. and I'll probably outlive you. Mrs. Dimpleton—Well, you always did look on the dark side.—Washi e ashington don't . you get A gentleman, Scotch Presbyterian, trav- ellnz with his five-year-cld son, told the child as he put him to bed to sdy his prayers as usual, which the boy flatly refused to do. “Don’t you want the Lord to take cars of You to-night?” asked the anxious T “What's the porter here for?" was the child’s ‘response.—Lippincott’s. §- will know a: ) lead on the night of November 4. Special wire facilities, skillful telegraph and’telephone operators, energetic correspondents and expert accountants will contribute to enable The Call to repeat its notable election achievements of the past. Watch the dome of The Call Building on the night of the election. as you have done in former years. Colored fire thereon will indicate the winner in the battle of ballots for- Governor. S e R AR e RGO 7 It RED is the signal! you once G5 ORGE C. PARDSE wil be the next Governor. . —_— th t +* SIGNALS FLAMING ON CALL BUILDING DOME WILL TELL RESULT OF ELECTION —_ - -r-ore e 1f GREEN is th: signal you will know at once that FRANKLIN K. LANB will be the riext Governor. + HE CALL—always first in announcing the winners in Presidential, State aud municipal elections—will again i Meln me'eafly in the evening until late at night bulletins will be displayed ing in the city and all parts of the State. There will also be a complete bulletin service fromi every section of the BUILDING. _v-——— 1 A showing how the couny/is progress- country, indicating the results in the various State and Congressional elections. Come downtown if you desire the news in detail, but if you are anly interested in the gubernatori sou will be enabled to LEARN THE RESULT BY WATCHING Tt greipesien s THE BIG DOME' OF THE CALL R 5 3 b e S e e b b