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THE €A FRANCISECO CALL, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1903. DEMOCRATS FIRE THEIR FIRST VOLLEY BEFORE BIG AUDIENCE AT ALHAMBRA Franklin K. Lane Receives Warm Welcome. PORDRI oo Says Only He Can Administer the Charter. Pictures Himself as-the -City's Saviour. ol el mbra crow Hynes the oratory of can- of “eom- of his cau or Spirit ot andidate’ than however ar th ques | tion a question of men. | W Ar w have the the right kind of bave high ideais? - fnter of the must pestions the motives Are they e e Demotratic party, practical | men. and we believe. that the best kind of | practca cs i done by serving the city of | Eat, Francisco ar e bext. © (Applause.) | And T i veason | why it wives me e Kives Pleas- ur 10 d o platform with men who with me before in other cal ng my ends with but one exception ug Platform, and one other thet'] mee i this hall, and the oldest man in the service of the city and county of San Fran- o SOCUPYInE the »'of ‘the head of & § that other exception 16 & man Aegartment, ar whom the Repu the courage or office not have the ency to renom party, ho party nd_the De a ocratic ‘ year after year, renomipates its men, and bae mever had to turn down a mah for lack of fdelity to the people. (Applause.) Tell me, | Wy friends, of any other eity in the United f tmies -or of &ny r party within any city A hin, country of which that splendid Pobst can be made. We have been clean of | ecord: we. have been straight in office; we “ome Lack 10 Our people Year after year,' and | they give us the of the hand, they | ghe us the shout e and they give | r votes on election day. indorsement And isn’t that | " he Democratic party is in the minority in | San Francisco, 1 believe, and yet in the thres Farmered fight two years ago we elected a Bozen men, snd we will do better than that this time. § have met with singular charges in my ampeigns. You are familiar with them. 1 was charged with being & Prohibitionist in the northe: of the State and lost votes in the last campaign, and was charged with not being & Prohibitionist in the southern part of the State and lost votes on that account down there. Bui the gravest charge of all has been made sgainst me now in that I am not a busi- mess man., Now you are selecting a_Mayor. Mr. de Young says that you want a business man. Now Mr. de Young knows a great mauy Ahings about his business men. (Laughter.) To you know there are business men and business men. Mr. de Young is a g00d busi- ness man himself, although his profession is that of & journalist. Mr. Ruef is a good busi- ness man, 1 believe, though his Drofession is that of & Jawyer. But when did the jdea come into Mr. de Young's head that we should have & business man for Mavor? Go back in your minds two years, my friends. Mr. de Young's people nominated & business man, and you re- memiber thet that busines¢ man, Dot being Mr. e Young's business man, Mr. de Young turned him down. The day after the election he printed an editorial in which he sasd: AL’ i1 a Dbusiness even a i Mayor. gl — CLAIMS EXPERJENCE. Says He Is Capable of Transacting City Business. Re administration business man is revered by whc of the be President, a ma f delights to hon run a ship what of & man would you select? (A voice | business man Laughter.) If you wanted | a4 man to make a horseshoe what kind of a | man would you se 1f you wanted a man | to run the busine a city what kind of | | a man would you 2 (A v “*Franklin K. Lane.”) ¥ s 2 man who | had_some kriowledge of city bu wouldn't | want a business it is to w | what the should be, then | r myse that_having | m: = But you | calize that th of this city is not conducted as any ese man may | conduct his businefs or as the business of | any great corporation for which you may hap- pen to work 1s conducted. The buciness of San Francisco, owing to_the fact that we have a charter, owing to the fact that men have been found wanting in public service—the business of this city is run by rule. There are certain rules for this purpose, and it hes been my businces for five long years to study what those rules were, to find out how the business of | the city and county of San Francisco should be conducted, and 1 believe that I know. Lut I am not going to talk of that | You probably have noticed In the papers that there is an absolute lack of harmony in the Democratic party, as evidenced by this audience (laughter), and an absolutely peace- ful condition obtains among the Republicans. ‘Why, my friends, the peace that obtains amomg the Republicans is of that kind which passeth all understanding. (Laughter.) It js the peace L o e i BODY OF MURDERED | SAILOR IS IDENTIFIED Captain of the Scottish Moors Recog- nizes the Deceased as a Mem- ber of His Crew. SAN DIEGO, Oct. 7.—Investigation into the cause of death of the sailor found floating In the bay last night indicates quite clearly that he was the victim of | foul play. He was a sailor from the | British ship Scottish Moors and was | identified by Captain Todford as Alexan- | der Jarvenberg. Jarvenberg left the ves- | sel Tuesday night of last week, became | drupk and engaged in a brawl in a water | front saloon. Later in the evening he | returned to the wharf and went aboard | the schooner. Bertha Dolbeer. The | watchman aboard the Scottish Moors | stated at the inquest to-night that he | heard voices on the wharf saying that they would. “get him when he returned,” | or something to that effect. The watch- man did not know of whom they were speaking and paid no attention to the remarks. Then all was quiet and Jarven- i vasses by anead, 1s thers What back two hat off to as it with the band (Laughter.) street wagon, bave they effected peace? them? G Republican among want you, my this thing: I am talking to you: recall the history of your ‘party two months in this city and see a it. A coterie of es together and determined uld administer the affa unty of San Francisco. They men who had been prominent of Republican affairs The head of a city went with s hat corporation to corporation of San Francisco begging ¢ conduct of the Republican ned $30,000; and with Hokthe ¥ it you t e ‘past themsel the polit cor- in combination of seven men canture unty the Republican party of of San Francisco, and eight hundred of their the first thing they did. ne of their men to sit there in that convention whom they knew and whem every one of them knew was not loyal to them. They tted him to up of a Board of ve his share in the putting Supervisors, in the nomina- tion of an entire ticket, and then that man— that men himself—went down into the old Republican ship and scuttled it and came up and jump overboard into ‘‘a long, Jow " as the school bocks used to say vels of my early days, and then he ask thirty days' leave of ab- senc ing upon the Rep he must_walk the _aughter.) blican ship told him that piank when he was miles away. You tell me that those men acted in good falth In the Republican convention. You tell me that the Republican party in this ecity acts in good faith. Why there is cne answer to that, one which is conclusive: Look at their Board of Supervisors. Do you think that those men want good government? Is it possible that there is any man within the sound of my voice who belleves that the Republican party stands for good government in this eity under -its present management, when they ‘would have the audacity €0 put up such a Board of Su- pervisors as that which has been presented? ——— COMES AS DELIVERER. Lane Says the_ City Has “Done Him Proud.” Where are all the men in the Republican party whom you and I meet every day and berg was seen no more until his body was found in the water near the place where he was murdered. The condition of the organs indicates that Jarvenberg must have been breathing when he fell or was thrown into the water. It was also shown at the inquest that the de- ceased had had trouble with sailors on the Scottish Moors on the out trip. —_—————————— Railroads Reach Rate Agreement. CHICAGO, Oct. 7.—A new agreement regarding Asiatic trade was entered into to-day by representatives of transconti- nental southern and southeastern rail- roads at a meeting held in the office of J. C. Stubbs, traffic director of the Har- riman lines. Hereafter the southeastern lines will fix the division of rates east of junction points and transcontinental lines Will fix the divisions west of junction points, and there will be no @deviation from the agreed basis. —————— To Cure a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All aruggists refund the money i it fails to cure. E. W. Grove's siguature 8 on each box. 23c. + friends, | men | s of the | in | threw overboard a great body of their | hen what did they do? They they held th convention, they pe And then the men sink- | | | | I FRANKLIN K. LANE, DEMO- CRATIC NOMINEE FOR MAYOR, IN CHARACTERISTIC ATTI- TUDES. whom we shake by the 1ght to call do they hav hand and whom we de- ur fellow-citizens? What chance for honor or preferment In their I party? Why is it that we gather the young men and the strong men to ourselves in our municlpal fighta? Because they know, those young men know that they can come in here | among us and have falr play, a square deal d the right thing done by all of them. The | | Republicun varty, my friends, ains more | | m honest men, re able men, | intel ashan; that the Republican party is 1€d 1 seems afrald to put for- watd, th r party in any city in the United States. And why is 1t? Why is it | that these men can’t be put forward? Why 1s it that they can’t get these young men upon | rtickel for Suvervidors as we have year after vear? | Because they place, they Because they don't want them. want men for whom, in the first buy primaries; for whom, in the second place, they buy elections; for whom, In the third place, they buy thelr votes after they af elected. (Applause.) (A voice—'"That I8 Stuff, stuff, stuff.”’) Yes, and there are a | sreat many men who are after that ‘stuff, | $uft, stuff (Laughter and apolause.) And | men that we ure fighting in this | campaign, und everywhere we e this “stult, sto, stuse.” ey am in earncet in this Aght, would not be Y teel my friends. here before you it I were not. that a oris 1 1 has come in the history of | | | | my cit; that has done me proud; that has been loyal to me; a city that I love as 1 love no other place: & city In which my babies were born, and where I hope to dle my-~ self, and I stand before. you not as one self- | seeking, but as one who is willing to do ail that & within his power to save San Fran- claco at this time from what I believe to be & | Itlgn of corruption that is imminent. (Ap- Do you Fnow that we have a charter which ‘\" 18 possible, although I SuUppose évery man | who is on this platform voted for it; although $ Dose the majority of the men that are In this hail voted for it; yet I want to say to you, after the most careful study of that Charter—. | and no man in the world knows it better than, | {12 as well, a5 1 do. for it has been my busi: =8 to come into contact with all departments | and to intérpret the law, that new fundamental | law for them—I want to say to you, my friends, | that the charter of the city and county of San Francisco will prove the greatest curse that ever nas falien upon this city unless there is | manhood enough In you, unless there 18 4 strength of character eniough in you, unless you are Keen enough of insight to realize that now is the time when the city of San Franeisco must be saved. There is a possibility within that charter of building up the greatest corrupt political machine that ever has been offered to the people of this or of any other city. Let me | calmly for a minute tell you how. Listen to me patiently now. The détails through which | 1 am going will not perhaps be rhetorical, but 1 want this thing to sink deep-into your héarts, | because I am pleading with you to-night. You | know that before we had the charter we had | ‘what was known as the consolidation act, d under that contolidation act we had a pecullar e e S S R TR S RN TRY 70 LYNGH NNOGENT MAN Inebriates Hang a Sus- pected Thief in a Lonely 3pot. Special Dispatch to The Call. SEATTLE, Wash., Oct. 7.—From Unga Island the steamer Bertha brings the story of a drunken lynching bee that came near ending in a tragedy. Daniel Colville, a fisherman, was the victim of the outburst of passion. At Unga is a saloon, presided over by a retired sea captain named Larson. One | under muntcipal control, |'room 1n his house; every man who w — which was half munieipal, and _half under control. We had a Board of Police Commis- | sloners appointed by the Governor and mot re- | form of govern nt, movable by anybody; we had a Board of Health appolnted by the Governor for a term; we had then no Board of Public W but a Superintendent of Streets; we had nc Electricity had no Clvil sion; the idea had not then entered into ds of men that the men in public serv- | gheuld hold their places because of merit | fce and of merie alone. But that thing was changed by the charter. Now, wi is the | result? 1 I see men here, old men, men who beer: acquainted with the public life of Francisco for a great many years, and know that the charge always was that the | Board of Supervisors was the corrupt ‘baly There was the board on which the newspapers had thelr eyes aiways, wasn't it? They used to watch each member of the board and his | vote o see I any corporation owned him. | Now the corporations want Supervisors. Why? | Because they want frane es; because they | want privileges; because they want favors They still want Supervisors, But behind the corporations there {s at the present time ex- to seize not only the Su- administrative board in government; and they ean do it by the election not alone of Supervisors, but of the Mayor, for he has the appomting of these administrative boards. They can make civil service valueless, absolutely worth- leks. THere i not a man within hearing of | my voice, there is not & man at the City Hall who cannot be brought up before a Civil Ser- vice Commission that is fixed, that Is appointed to do Its duty to a political machine, that can hold hie office if this city government is seized adversely to civil service and the scheme of the charter. —_—— ROASTS COMMISSIONERS. Insinuates That Various Boards Are Crooked. There In a Doard of Public Works. Every man who wishes to put up steps In front of his house; every man who wishes to alter a hes to do the slightest bit of plumbing in his house; | every man who wishes to put up a great building, and every man who wishes to make use of hiseproperty has to go before that Board of Public Works and get a permit; and I tell you that every cohtractor and every bullder, every business man and every prop- erty-owner within the city and county of San Franclsco can be made subject to blackmail by the Board of Public Works. He can be told “You go and get that lawyer, or eise you don't get that permit.”” (Applause.) | And there Is the Police Commiesion. Why. men come to me every day and they tell me that they dare not speak their minds; that they dare not stand up for their rights; that they dare not exercise the right and privileze of every American citizen, because they are in the fear of. being broken before a Police Com- mission. Should that thing be In the city of San Franclsco? Have policemen no rights as | men? Have saloon-keepers no rights as men? And then there is a Board of Health. Why. I tell you that it s in the power of an ad- ministration within this city to lift the ed@mi- nation of milk, to lift the examination of meat | and send the disease.nto every household in | this clty, and for a consideration. You know | as well as 1 do, you know what departments | there are: you know how people can be held up. And what does ail this mean, my friends? It ‘means this: That the city of San Franelsco is threatened to-day, and threatened in this campalgn by a government by fear; and [ stand here to-night an advocate and am pledged to substitute for a government of fear a gov- ernment by law. What right has a member of the Fire Commission in direct contravention | of the law of this city to go into an engine house and ask these men to vote one ticket rather than another? Why Is 1t that men Who are in the service of this city feel to-day thut they are bound down {or fear that they will be broken? The government of San Francsco should not be from the City Hall outward ¢hould be from the people toward the City E o day recently Colville and his companions gntered the place and Colville’s friends became intoxicated. Colville was the only sober man in the crowd. Captain Larson then missed $209 in bank notes and suspiclon fell on Colville. The rest of the crowd, being drunk and feeling themselves incapuble of giving him a fair trial, eliminated the legal part of the pro- ceedings and took him to a lonely spot, ‘where they tied his hands behind him and hoisted him from the ground. When he regained consciousness he found himself lying on the ground. One of his perse- cutors, fearful of taking the life of one who had been so summarily tried, had taken the responsibility of slipping away from his friends and cutting Colville down. Colville could do nothing but walk back to the saloon and face his judges, and this he did. They gave him four hours to leave the island. As a result Colvilie arrived in Seattle on the ship St. Paul. isting a conspiracy pervisors, but eve the ¢ity and county Speaker ———— NEW YORK, Oct. 7.—Beechman Winthrop, assistant executive secretary of the Philippine Government, and Miss Martha Riggs, fllllggler of Mre. John Dunn Wood, were married at noon to-day. Mr. ard Mrs. Winthrop will leave shortly for Manila. I e e ] ) i HE Democratic cam- | paigh was opened last evening at a meeting which completely _filled the Alhambra Theater. Frank- { lin K. Lane,-the Democratic candidate for the office of Mayor, made the principal | address and was given a | kindly welome. He said the | city had been loyal to him and “had done him proud.” His speech was well re- | ceived and ‘heartily ap- plauded—although the hit | of the ratification was a | song which Candidate for { Public Administrator 3illy” Hynes refused to sing, but the clamors for which for awhile shut out | 5 < | | . . | the principal speaker. * Hall. (Applause.) Now, maybe you think that T am dreaming dreams, that these things need not come true. 1 could give you some instan were I of a mind to. But you know, you who read the papers, you who have kept track of thin; ou know the history of other cities in the United States. You know what has happened in St Louis; you know what has happened in Min- neapolis; you know what has Pittsburg. In Pittsburg they man’s administration. Mr. Chris Magee was the business man, and Mr. Chris Magee saw his_opportunities just as clearly as any man in San Francisco sees opportunit Mr. Chris fagee wns 4 member of a contracting firm, though his name did not appear, and they did business with the Board of Public Works when great sums of money were to be expended. Mr. Chris Magee was a member of a bond indem- nity company, and they did business with all the city employes when they went into offl on the first of the year. Mr. Chris Magee, the happened in had a business business man, saw that franchises were given to his friends, that money was placed in the banks. Those things are all possible San Francisco. We have had a touch of MR irels ST. LOUIS BLACKSMITH. Nominee Tries to Hold Him-Up as | Tepresentative Workingman. St. Louls they had a workingkman run a man named Butler, who has now been convicted of a felony and Is threatened with a term in the penitentiary. Mr. Butler i a blacksmith, and a good blacksmith, and a boss business man.; Mr. Butler dealt with the Board of Supervisors. He did not go about Commissianers, that corrupting Civil Service He would think very they might sell papers. little indeed seliing a horse in a fire de- partment, much less a colt to a friend. But Mr. Butier knew that there were men who wanted a franchise for a street railroad and he s ‘I have a biock of Supervisors votes;: what are you willing to give?’ And they c He accepted the offer, the money was put up in the bank; and then that Mayor—I don't know how they ever came to eleet such a Mayor as that in St. Louis—that Mayor vetoed the ordinance. And then the company sald, “Why. see here. we can't' pay you, you didn't deliver the Roods.”” But, he said, T delivered the votes, dian’t 17 You didn’t contract for the Mayor, you only contracted for the Board of Supe visors.” And somebody some day may say that here. Now, what happened? They elected a young fellow as fresh from private life as 1 was five years ago, as innocentof public cervice and as innocent of politics as 1 was then. That young man has made a grand, a glorious, a natfonal name for himself. You recognize it when I say it, for some day 1 hope myself to vote for Folk for President of the United States. Folk heard of this angwhat did he do? He went down and he ciafied Eis hands on the money that was in the safe deposit vault, under threat of putting the man in jail if he didn't let him have it; and then the cat was out of the bag. Then the oresident of the street railway combine gave the story away. And what has been the resuit? For two vears you have found one man after another going to jail in St. Louis. Why? Because there was a man named Butler who ‘chose to sell some franchises, which has not been considered such an outrageous thing even in the city of San Francisco, But in Minneapolls they had a man named Ames who was Mayor of the city. Ames had been Mayor once and they sald he had made a pretty good kind of a Mayor, and so they thought they had just as well eléct him agaln. And they elected him again. And tnen every man in the city who could be touched was touched, every man who could be reached was reached. The administrative departments were all brought under subjection to him and to his_control. system of biaekmail wentyon which at last attracted the attention of sohme of the newspapers, and the people were BABE WANDERS ALL NIGHT ON BLEAK MOUNTAIN TOP Two-Year-Old Child Strays Awagy From Home and Is Not Found Until Daylight. PETALUMA, Oct. 7.—Wandering in a wild, rough country all night and suffeg. ing from exposure was the experiénce of a 2-year-old child, the daughter of P, Buzzini, The child was missed from home Tuesday night and the parents after a fruitless search called for help. The night was dark and though the search was kept up it was not until dawn broke that the little one was found. At daybreak Al- bert Puckett found the child safe and sound, but wet to the skin, wading in a spring on the Buzzini ranch, in water deep enough to have drowned her had she fallen. It is feared that serious results may follow the child’s exposure on the | the workingmen Many Present Eager for Vaudeville Show. —_——— Resent Candidate Hyne’s Refusal to Sing. Unsung SongNearly Stampedes the Meeting. ¢ aroused and the men driven from the the city of Minneapolls was disgrace there isn’t anything that h pened in Pittsburg or. in Minneapolis Bt. Louls that canmot to-day happen city of San Francisco, for we have mach expressly made for such purposes, if w elect the right men to office. Fhapmin? THEORY OF CHARTER. Lane Also Tells Things About Tam- many That He Likes. This charter was bullt upon the theory the people of the city and county of San Fra cisco were sensible, that it was possible to concentrate in the bands of ome single man this great power of administering the city They- said, ““We have tried San co; we know the people here; we know thaljthey have self-respect and honor, and that If men placed before them, one, two, three, that they with infallible touch will place their hands upon the shoulder of an honest man and say to him Be our Mayor: that it is mot possible those men, not possible to the people of city at large to go S0 far wrong as to create a man a public officer who Will be the servant of a political machine, who will be weak, who will be corrupt, who will not own himself, but bow down before some man Who is his master.” And in that belief the people of San Francisco adopted that charter. The preserva- tion of our rights, my friends, depends upon your votes, and upon your proving that that was the correct belief. If your vote don't dem- onstrate that now such a political machine will be built up in the city and county of San Fran cisco as you have never konwn, and as no city in the United Statés now knows. Bven Tam many is guided by heart. There are things about Tammany that I like, because there. is humanity and there is feeling there. But a Republican Tammany, a Republican masquer ading, not as a_ Republican, a party of pre tense, & varty of goid bricks, a party that is false to its honored name, a party that consecrated to things that are corrupt and are wrong; a Tammany that has no heart, but has a pocket. Don’t you for one moment, my friends. that the workingmen of San Francisco think ave no interest in the government of the city of San Francisco. I know them. There is no mas here who knows them better. I have been charged with appealing to those men for their votes. There is no doubt that that charge e will never come when I sha political platform as a can and be unwilling to appeal to laboring men of San Francisco or bf the Unite States. But I have never said one word those men—and I call you men to witness what 1 say—1 bave never said one word to the men at the Union Iron Works when at noon I talied to them, or to the men at the Water front when at noon I talked to them, or to the men at the Fulton Iron Works when I talked to them not one wotd has come from my lips thar might have not as well been said on the sum mit of Nob Hill or In the center of the business districts of San Francisco.’ I am ho coward. I do my business openly. I want the votes of my fellow-citizens. 1 go down to talk to thoss men, and I stand upon a casting on the stréet or on & barrel, and, my friends, I will do ex- actly the same thing this time; I go down there to them and I appeal to them on the same high, marly plane that I appeal to you now or as 1 will appeal to any other sudience in this campaign. And let me, tell you that t is quicker response among those men to an. appeal for good government than 1 ind in some other audiences fn San Francisco. (Applause.) They are not fooled twice. Do you remember what the old Indian said? ‘“White man fool Indian once, white man damned smart; white man fool Indian twice, Indfan damn fool.” (Laughter.) They know what the issues in this campaign are: they know who are flying a flag that they have no right to; they kmow what of San Francisco stand for »ne moment doubt their 1o alty to this city In this campaign. Don’t you for one moment doubt that they have keen enough sight to see where thelr own ultimate Interests are. Now, my friends, there are two theories upon which the city government of fan Fra cisco can be run. One is the theory of favor: and that is the theory which bosses wish to develop. They want to teach you that you can ‘get things only through pull, only through outside And don’t you for money; that you must see somebody. of the city government, or inside of the city government, or within ' the political machine before you can get what you are eptitled t That is government by favor; that is ® ernment by fear; that is government by timidation; that is government by graft is Zovernment by biackmail. But I tell you it is coming, coming within three short months, a time when there will be imstituted in the city of San Francisco the governmens by right, when men will be able without & ing to attorneys, without appealing to some potent influence outside of the city government but they may go directly to the Board of Public Works, to the Poiice Commission, to the Health Department, to the Mayor of this city and ask that something shall Be done, because they have a right to have it done. 1 have talked much longer than I expected to. I had no idea whatever of making =o lengthy an address, but I want lo Say this word to you: The Republicans spreading the idea that they stand for what is known as New San Francisco. A new Saa Francisco Why, we stood for that seven years a didn't we? You saw me upof the blatform in this city preaching to t! people then that & new era, that a glorious day was coming for this city, that greater prosperity was com- ing, and that We must have a greater, a bigger and = manller kind of government than W had if we were going to realize cur oppor- tunits 1 want a newer San Francisco. I want a newer San Francisco thi has newer activities. and newer industries, and newer life, and newer enthusiasm and newer seif-respect. But I want a San Francisco that has a moral tone that goes back to that old commandment ““Thou shalt not steal” And I want & San Franeisco that goes back to that old day when Christ drove the momey changers out of the temple. San Francisco does not consist of so many_buildings that are twelve stories high San Francisco does not consist of S0 many miles of paved streets; San Francisco does not consist of so many factories and so Wany mills and so many stréet rallroads and so many corporations and so many lawyers. San Fran clsco, my friends _consists of 410,000 or there. abouts, of principled, thinking men who have map hearts and who have heads: who live here and who love their city Frandlsco is to be great, if S to be a New San Francisco, must have pride in her: they must be able speak of her government With seif-respec they must be made to feel that the governmen: of San Francisco is a government of honor they must not be caused to put their heads aside in shame when the government of San Francisco Is spoken of. The New San Fran claco will come, and that New San Francie Will be a government by men such as y Bave here to-night, men Who own themselves. men who think for themselves, mer who love their city, men Who loyal to its interests. men who are not demagogues, men who would not sell any right. men who are determined upon one thing, and that is that tne city of San Francisco shall be saved from am era of corruption, that good government- shall pre- vafl, that good men shall be put in office, that a square deal shar be given to every- body. that this may be a government under the law, & government fust to all. (Applause.) ————— Vote to-day agminst the issuance of bonds for the purchase of the Geary- mnfi_lm- Fear for Safety of Barkentine. TACOMA, Oct. 7. — Anxiety is feit for the barkentine John Smith, which was about five miles behind the schooner Philippines when she passed im the straits Monday morning last,