The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 2, 1902, Page 19

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ADVERTISEMENTS. SIErcHED PROM LIFE— THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, Our advertisements for these $9.00 suits have appeared so continuously that they certainly must have de some impression upon you. : Possibly you are one of the vast number who have bought a suit, but if you are not, we personally say to \ The strongest plea we can make for the value of these garments is to mention that our guarantee goes with cach and every suit, and the guarantee is “Your money back if the suit is not satisfactory in every way,” Could we do more, say more, or offer more ? The materials in which the suits are made aré blue serges and mixed tweeds, cheviots and worsteds, above is the single breasted blue serge sketched from life. Notice what a stylish suit it is. The This tells the tale. The suits are made by us and sold direct to you for $9.00; otherwise the price would be $12,00. Every garment bears the union label. ong Stylish Overcoats also tor®9| { What is true of the suits is true of the overcoats, as concerns the value of the that goes with it. We have seen the satisfaction given by our clothin a binding guarantee. The overcoats come in black and blue Kkerse garment and the guarantee ] g and we know whereof we speak when we give It would certainly react upon us if the clothes djd not come up to our claim. 2 o ys and cheviots in stylish lengths, coming below the knee. They are §_wellwmter coats and we want you to see them and realize what a “maker-to-wearer” price means in the saving to the customer. MAIL ORDERS Out - of - town orders filled for men’s or boys’ clothing, hats or furnish- mngs. 00D 5(0 718 Market Stresct. CATALOGUE __If you iwe out of San Francisco, write for oup new illustrated catq- logue, “Attire for Man i and Boy.” EUREKA'S POPULATION GIVES, Continued From Page 17, Colmun 5. “This gentleman whom I am about to ntroduce to you needs no words of praise from me,” said Chairman Skinner, plac- ing his hand gently on the San Francisco man’s shoulders. “His fame is known to all. My friends, I present Hon. Joseph C. Campbell of S8an Francisco.” Two thousand voices hailed the speaker in one grand chorus as he turned to the chairman, and, thanking him for his flat- tering introduction, began his remarks. Said he: “And so, my friends, the Democrats tell you that the affairs of the Govern- gresgive | change. ment are not run along proper and pro- lines and that we require a History again repeats itself. | When the Great Creator, in his wisdom, | | put the first man and the first woman on earth, he surrounded them with all the necessitites, nay, the luxuries, of life. The fruit grew a-plenty in the garden, the grass and trees and flowers and brooks were made to beautify the earth and to gladen their hearts, and everything that they might desire was at their command. “But the snake came along, and the snake was a Democrat. Eve was a Popu- list and Adams was a weak-kneed, wishy- | washy Republican. The snake said that | the whole structure of the earth was wrongly conceived; that where the Crea- tor had made the flowers green thcy should have been red; where the brooks trickled through the landscape there Woman’s Nightmare The critical ordeal throuih pure. pase, however, is so fraught wit dread, pain, No woman’s happi- ness can be complete yrithont children; it is her nature to lova and want them as much so as it is to love the beautiful and which ‘the expectant mother must suffering and danger, that the very thought of it fills her with apprehension and horror. There is no necessity for the reproduction of life to be either painful or dangerous. The use of great and wonderful remedy is always eppliedexternally,and Las carried thousands of women through the trying crisis without suffering. 8end for tree book munu% information mothers. of priceless value to all expectan! The Bradficld Regulator Co., Atlanta, Ga.\ of 1 's Friend so prepares the system for the coming event that it is safely passed without any danger, il This Mother’s Friend #hould have been rivers of gold; that the trees were too high and required too much exertion to secure their fruit; that if he were making the world over he would change the whole order of things—would change the color of the flowers and would cause the trees to grow to a lesser height so0 that all Adam and Eve would have to do when they were pinched by the pangs of hunger would be to lie on the flat of their backs, reach out with thelr toes, shake the shrubbery and the fruit would drop gracefully into their mouths.” The audience roared as the speaker fin- ished his story, for more than two min- utes, preventing him concluding. Camp- bell continued: And this, my friends, is what our friends would have you do. They would change things as the snake advised, and God help us if we permitted ourselves to take their advice. CLOSES WITH SOUND ADVICE. Campbell spoke in a happy vein throughout, unearthing a fund of new stories, which he related with striking effect. He dwelt with considerable em- phasis on the.prosperous times America had enjoyed since the last Republican regime and pleaded with his audience not to do anything to disturb present condi- tions, Said he: 3 It is Just as fmportant, my friends, that we should elect a Republican delegation to Con- gress and a Republican Assembly which will choose & successor to Senator Perkins as it is that we cairry our State ticket. Without the assistance of a Republican Congress President Roosevelt will be unable to continue the poli- cies which have made our peace and happiness and contentment possible. And so it is, I say to you, elect Hon. J. N. Gillette to 4 from this new district, so_he may assist in malntaining the conditions I have just spoken of. Campbell ¢ompared the existing condi- tions with those prior to the inauguration of President McKinley in 1897 and put the question squarely to his audience: “Are you better fixed to-day than you were then, and, if so, do you want a change?” , A chorus of ‘“noes” greeted the latter half of this query. The speaker admon- <hed his audience to beware of the pro- fessional calamity howlers and to stick hard by their guns on Tuesday next. Vote early, gentlemen, and if you your duty, we need have no fe. outcome when the ballots are v:u‘:}.n::'efd.".’he Campbell-was given an ovation as he left the platform, hundreds of persons crowd- ing about him, shaking his hands and con. gratulating him on his speech. It was apparent after the meeting adjourned that the speaker had made a great many votes for Pardee and Gillette and that he had kept in line many a wavering voter who had listened with credulity to- the. pleas of the Democratic spellbinders. Campbell will sail on the Pomona- to- morrow for San Francisco. b e Ovation to Henderson. STOCKTON, Nov. 1—The Republicans closed their campaign this evening with the biggest and most enthuslastic meet- ing of local record. Judge McKinley spoke for the State ticket. Orrin 'S, Hen. | dersop, nominee for Railroad Commis- sioner, made his first address here since nis nomination and recelved an ovation. The county nominees also responded to calls. Masonic Hall was packed to the doors and many were turned away. All candidates were favorites and the meet- ing was evidence of the harmony and en- thusiasm with which the party in San Joaquin faces the contest of Tuesday. TSN L Arizona in ‘Doubt. PHOENIX, Ariz, Nov. 1—The iast big Democratic rally of the campaign was held here to-night. Addresses we; by Marcus A. Smith, delegate to Con- gress; J. C. Herndon of Prescott and J. F. Wilson, candidate for delegate. The result in Arizona appears doubtful, both parties claiming the election of delegate. e McKinlay at Escondido. ” SAN DIEGO, Nov. lL—Duncan E. Me- Kinlay addressed 2 large audience in the college chabel at Escondido this evening, closing the campaign in that part of the county. He declared that.the northern part of the State would give a majority for the Republican State ticket all the way down the line, % 4 SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1902. MARIN VOTERS WILL SUPPORT R. W. JOHNSON His Eection as Supervisor in First District Is Assured. Barr, Repudiated in Republi- can Convention, Will Be Rejected at Polls. Special Dispatch to The Call. AN RAFAEL, Nov. 1.—The political S caldron in Marin County is seeth- ing and the center of its disturb- ance is the fight for Supervisor in the First Precinct. The Republican County Convention made no nomination for this office and the Democrats nom- inated R. ‘W. Johnson, the well known San Rafael merchant, a man of tried in- tegrity and ability. There are two independent candldates In the fleld, W. Macdonald, a bullder and contractor, who has usually voted the Republican ticket, and Willlam Barr. Barr expected to receive the Republican nomination, but the convention repudiat- ed him because of his conduct in the Sac. ramento convention. He was the only Marin County delegate who voted for Gage and he won the lasting enmity of his assoclates by declining to caucus with them and entering into a league of- fensive and defensive with the Hearst or- gan. He is now running as an independ- ert, relying for his support upon the same infiuences that lost him a renomfination at the hands of his party. Johuson has the united support of the business community, the commuters and the solid business men generally, and he undoubtedly will be elected. NO STATE TICKET INDORSED. Labor Union Man Speaks His Senti- ments in Straightforward Style. Editor Call—I notice in the columns of an evening journal that one of our prominent labor leaders stated in his speech_at B'nal Brith Hall Wednesday evening that he could not see how a labor union man could support the Republican party or its policles. I think he will find, sooner or later, that there are quite a number of labor union men Who differ with him in this matter and who hold their union principles too dearly to allow themselves to engage in the questionable busi- ness of dragging the labor unions into the whirlpool of polltics, contrary to the admoni- tion of that man whom we all respect for his conspicuous _wisdom—the president of the American ration of. Labor, Bamuel Gompers. en the labor -union political convention met_here some months ago it decided to put no State ticket in the fleld, but to leave the matter of electing State officers to the individ- ual judgment of labor union voters. And yet we find labor leaders mounting the Demo- cratic rostrum and appealing to union labor men to support the Democratic ticket, and speaking s though they could deliver over to the Democratic camp the unfon labor vote in blocks, bunches or-en masse. It seems to me that these professional labor union leaders are Democrats first and Labor Unfon party men afterward, and it is time that their detestable attempt {o transform labor unions into breeding grounds of politicians and hotbeds of politics be met and effectively squelched. I beg to add that I am a union man of the right sort; that I belong to Local No. 66, Car- riage and m Workers' International have been honored by that by being chosen to the office of secretary against my expressed and which office I now fill for a sec- rm. AMES W. BIRD. Franeisco, Oct. 31, 1302. St A i SOLANO FOR REPUBLICANS. Senator Luchsinger Brings Glad Tid- ings to State Committee. Senator J. J. Luchsinger is among the visitors to town and is satisfied that So- Jano County will line up for the Repub- lican party all right on Tuesday next. He said: Everything points to a large Republican ma- Jority in Solano. Qur v intelligent and reasoning class of peopls and the conditions existing during Democratic ad- ministrations have not been forgotten. Our people fully realize that the result of this elec- tion will have & great influence on the Presi- dential campaign two years hence, besides af- fecting our standing with the administration in the meantime. Co man Victor Metcalf and Alden An- derson, candidate for Lieutenant Governor, will run far ahead of thelr ticket in Sclano County, They are very popular and have the public confidence. As for the Legislative candidate the county bas a large Republican majority and he should be elected. While the feeling at first was pot strong for him it has under- gone a change of late_and our people feel that they owe much to Senatcr Perkins, espe- clally those living in Vallejo, and they cannot Jeopardize his chances because of personal dis. likes of the slative nominee. election of a Republican United States Senator might depend on ome vote, it is ngt to be considered lightly by a community so much in_ terested in Federal legislation as is ours, and 1 am sure the result will show that the people have reasoned intelligently. —_—— Praises Pardee and Loud, MOUNTAIN VIEW, Nov. 1.—The Re- publicans closed the campaign to-night with a rally which was largely attended. The speakers were Marshall Black, nomi- nee for the Assembly; W. A. Beasly, for Senator, and T. B. Hutchinson of Napa. Hutchinson impressed upon hig hearers the necessity of electing George C. Par- dee and the Republican ticket. He spoke of the good work of Congressman Loud and of his influence in Washington, urg- ing all to stand loyally by him. SO R Santa Barbara Hears Davis. SANTA BARBARA, Nov. 1.—Hon. Wil- llam R. Davis of Oakland addressed a large audlence in the opera-house to- night. He advised all voters to’ stand by the party of prosperity and run no risk of a repetition of the unsettled conditions of the country during Democratic ruie. The enthusiasm of the audience proved that the people of Santa Barbara are loyal to the party and that Pardee’s ma- Jority will be ‘a large one. financial wishes, opd te: San +" TACOMA, Nov. 1.—The big steamer Tremont sailed on her malden voyage to-day from Ta- coma, her home port, to the principal ports of .| Japan, China and the Philippines. It is esti- mated the value of the Tremont's cargo, which f flour, will reach is principally composed of ms.ow and it is said to for the Pacific Coast. be a record breaker ng population is an |- Root, Will Do for YOU, itor of the Springfleld, Ohlo, Republic; DR. KILMER’S SWAMP-ROOT. WHAT A SAMPLE BOTTLE OF SWAMP-ROOT DID. To Prove What the Great Kidney Remedy, Swamp- May Have a Sample Bottle Sent Free by Mail. 1» Every Reader of .The Call ‘W. F', Lohnes, a prominent business man of Springfleld, Ohio, writes the fol« lowing strong indorsement of the great kidney remedy, Swamp-Root, to the ede SPRINGFIELD, Ohlo, Feb. 21, 190L “Having heard that you could procure a sample bottle of Swamp-Root, fres by mail, I wrote to Dy. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle, all liver and kidney complaints. for me.” one. tive properties of Swamp-Root. Call. purchase the regular Don’t make any mistake, but remember Swamp-Root, and the address, Binghamton, N. Y. T S — and it was promptly dent. I was so pleased after trying the sample bottle that I gent to the drugstore and procured a supply. I have used Swamp-Root regularly for some time and consider it unsurpassed as a remedy for torpid liver, loss of appetite and general derangement of the digestive functions. ‘was due to too close confinement in my business. I am not in the habit of indorsing any medicine, but in this case I cannot speak too much in praise of what Swamp-Root has done The mild and extraordinary effect of the world-famous kidney and”bladder remedy, Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, i8 soon realized. It stands the highest for its wonderful cures of the most distressing cases. EDITORIAL NOTE—If you are sick or ‘“feel badly,” begin taking the wone derful discovery, Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, because as soon as your kidneys are well they will help all the other organs to health. I think my trouble I can recommend it highly for A trial will convince any You may have a sample bottle of this wonderful remedy, Swamp-Root, sent absolutely free by mall, also a book telling all about Swemp-Root and containing many of the thousands upon thousands of testimonial letters recelved from men and women who owe their good health, in fact their very lives, to the great cura- In writing to Dr, Kilmer & Co. Binghamton, N. Y., be sure to say that you read this generous offer in the San Francisco Sunday If you are already_ convinced that Swamp-Root is what you need you can -cent and $1 size bottles at the drugstores everywhere. the name, Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer's on every bottle. - LEGIONS OF MEN [N LINE. SR TR 5 D Continued From Page 17, Column 1. willt elect a sterling native son, George C. Par- dee, Governor of California. They will return to the House of Representatives a solid Repub- lican delegation, pledged to the upholding and the continuance of the Republican principles and policles. They will see to It that a Repub- lican is chosen by the next Legislature to rep- resent them and their varied Interests, which demand protection, in the United States Sen- ate. Thus will their prosperity be continued and increased. Thus will the development of California go on and her favored people con- tinue to enjoy the greatest prosperity tucy have ever known. To doubt the triumph of the Re- publican party next Tuesday is to doubt the intelligence of California. A NATION OF LABORERS. ‘We are a nation of laborers. There is and should be but one aristocracy in this lanw, and that is the aristocracy of and char- acter. Labor, not goid; labor, not hereditary distinctions; jabor on farm and mill, on rail- Toad and on ship; labor of the hand and labor of the brain; labor in factory and in school- room; labor of artist and architect, of printer and painter, of merchant and mechanic; labor of man, woman and child: abor on water front n pulpit—labor is kin O ber fa" Callfornia s Wholly and steadily employed and is receiving better wages and reward than ever before and therefore Call- fornia is prosperous and happy. Men are at work, business is ng, wages are good, and are constantly increasing; employer is satisfled and_employe is contented; wives at heme are happy; children go laughing to school; plenty born of successful lakor blesses ur people. 'ty “hen, "should we gndanger this pros rity? Why experiment iy tu Biate government or assist in turning the na- tional Government over to the incompetent PDemocracy? Gracious God, have we not had enough of Democratic incompetency? We have Congressmén and a Senator to elect, and let.it be borne in mind that the Govermor to. be chosen may be called upon to appoint a United States Senator. If the Democratic candidate. Who might be described as & young gentleman afraid-of his party and his platform, should by some oversight or nexlec; or lndlflmr‘nce‘:( the people be elected and & vacancy in the Senate should occur by death or resignation, would he appoint & Republican to represent California? Certajnly not. However men.ihay sirive to do so, tHey cannot separate this con- hational politics. e fornia must make her stand for or sgainst the Republican party. for or against a protective tariff, for or against sound and universally accepted money, for or against holding what the valor of ourarms and the diplomacy of our statesmanship have acquired, he rinciples and purposes for or against all the D Mokt To banner of Democratic disaster or under the glorious Cbanner of Republican prosperity? ess Than Half Pric RO S M o o it ey g should, doubtiess wl Themerits of thislibersland mammo*" - e Doys and s NGYCL a0y | i OPAEDIA 7 = of friends careful CALL sgtensive T BRITANNICA Sn cu Bave o botier SILVER STATE Expect General Victory All Tuesday. Both Hawley and Newlands Are Claiming Control of Legislature, s leans practically finished thein campaign on Thursday night in Reno. United States District Judge Thomas B. Hawley, candj~ Samuel Platt, candidatefor Attorney Gen~ eral, addresed a large meeting in the ogera-house. Francis G. Newlands, Demo- cratic candidate for United States Sen- campaign in Reno this evening. He alsa addresed a large meeting. “Both sides are claiming the State. If one may judge from the expressions condition, they are very much worried, while the Republicans are confident. The fight for Governor between Cleve~ land (Rep.) and Sparks (Dem.) promises It is generally conceded that Farrington (Rep.) will defeat Van Duser (Dem.) for Congress by a majority variously esti. mated at from 1000 to 5000. scratched in_nearly every county in the State. The Newlands papers claims the Legislature. on joint ballot by three. Haw~ ley also claims the The Along the Line Next ENO, Nev., Nov. 1L—The date for United States Senator, and Hon. ator, practically closed the Democratia and the appearance of the fusion party to be very close. The legislative ticket will be badly State will be very close on all lines. Tell your friencs to lemd theiw strength in defeating Amendment No.'S on the official ballot, known as Assembly Constitutional Amll-\ut No. 28.

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