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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, Parker's Attacks on President and Cabinel Help Roosevel Democratic Nominee’s Mud-Throwing Campaign Wins Only the Condemnation of Fair- Minded American Citizens. Chairman Cortelyou Informs His Chief That No Promises of Any Kind Have -Been Made by National Committee. Bpecial Dispatch to The Call. beard Mr. Cortelyou say to the President on his last visit to Washington: ‘Mr. President, 1 firmly believe you will be elected. If you are I can say here and now that you will take office with- out a promise of any kind to any man having been made by the national committee.’ "—Statement by a CALL BUREAU, HOTEL BARTON, WASHINGTON, Oct. +25. — President Roosevelt's friends here, both in and out of the administration, do not hesi- tate to openly express surprise at what they call the “unworthy character of Judge Parker's campaign against the administration.” Vigorous comment is made on Parker's speech at Esopus yesterday, in which he charged that officers under the present administra- | tion were appointed at the dictation of great combinations of capital and that trust contributions to Roosevelt's cam- paign fund were nothing less than a direct purchase of immunity. In view of Parker's instructions at the opening of the campaign that there should be no attacks of a personal character upon the President, the lat- ter's friends are astounded at the tone of this speech. They look upon it as a sharp attack on the personnel of the nt administratio~ from Mr. Roosevelt down, and the integrity of his campaign managers. A member of the _abinet whose per- sonal and political relations with the President are closer than those of any other member since the retirement of Root made answer to-day to Parker's harg He is so intimate with the nt that when he talks of m this kind it may fairly be a < t he speaks directly from N Roosev In a statement to The Call correspondent he said: Parker's speech has certainly lowered the of his campaign, especially in view utterance haracter ¥y con- ortant of the Standard Cortelyou say to the President sit to Washington: “‘Mr. Presi- believe ¥ ill be elected you ‘are can say here and mow that you Will take office ‘without & promise of any kind to eny man having been made by any member of the national committee.” e — KNOX FLAYS PARKER. Convicts the Sage of Esopus of the Veriest Hypocrisy. WASHINGTON, Oct. 25.—Senator P. C. Knox, who was recently Attorney General under-President Roosevelt, to- night issued a statement in answer to Mr. Parker’s speech on trusts and for- mer President Cleveland’'s remarks on the same topic. Knox says: v n the past few days Mr. Cleveland in a peech criticized the Republican party running amuck™ in the business in- he country, which means that he President for not dashing wildly in sight and destroying the ocent alike; while Judge Parker yesterday bewailed the fact that corpora- ted to yiolate the law and that ibuting to the Republican cause, hat can be the reason for this change of front? Mr. Cleveland, on March 17, 1904, not- withstanding the decree of the Circuit Court pronouncing the “beef trust'” unlawful, said it was not w the prohibition of the law, thus throwing vor of the beef trust and against the United States at & time when the case was pending and undecided in the highest court, while on October 21, 1904, be inferentially’ demanded that all incorporated business should be wen- tonly assailed . Is there any connection between Judge Park- er's abandonment of his futlle common-law panaces, which meant immunity to the trusts, and the fact, as he slleges, that the trusts contribute to the success of the Republican w Why is appendicitis so common to- day? Because we have got into the per- nicious habit of eating too fast. Dr. Curtis, the great authority on this disease, says: “Appendicitis of- ten follows the eating of a very hasty, or particularly large or indigestible meal.” After carelessly following a foolish custom you can insure your safety by | taking Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets. It is an accepted, scientific truth, which admits of no dispute, that if you will only keep your digestive ap- paratus in good order you will never suffer from this dread disease, which, at best, means a weakening operation, with long weeks wasted in bed and big dootor’s and surgeon’'s bills to pay as souvenirs. Keep your appendix in health by the proper use of Stuart's Dyspepsia | Tablets whenever you have laid your- self open to danger by overeating and upon the least sign of stomach or in- testinal trouble, for otherwise, at any time, this dangerous disease may lay you low. The curative influence of this great medicine is quickly shown in the gen- tle, soothing effect it has on all in- flamed conditions of any part of the digestive tract. Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets tone all these parts up to a proper condition | of perfect health and regulate their functions into a proper working state. They also make away with all the causes of irritation, inflammation or indigestion by helping to dissolve, di- gest and assimilate or put to proper use all the food which is lying around in odd corners of your digestive ap- paratus, fermenting, rotting and curdling, like so much garbage in a dirty sink. In these natural and perfectly sim- ple ways Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets restore all sufferers from any form of dyspeptic trouble to health. They are safe and reliable. They mever fail to relieve and cure quickly &nd permanently. R . iPoenaix vermitormiz. | your appendix ' © Use ‘about welght of his opinion in fa- | member of President Roosevelt’s Cabinet. \ party? Do the principles of law which Mr. Cleveland thought last March protected manu- factyring monopolies change in October, and if ), Goes the c or only thos the perpetu: the_continu try? ge affect the Belmont trusts which are suspected of seeing in n of Republican administration general prosperity of the coun- Judge Parker, in his speech on Monday, also said: ‘“‘Many vears have passed since my act- ive participation in politic & startling change ha: method of In the meantime taken place in the ducting campaigns; a change not for the better. but for the worse; a change that has introduced debasing and corrupt meth- ods which threaten the integrity of our Gov- | ernment,” It is astounding that Judge Parker should be willifig to challenge the comparison which this statement inevitably calls out. When Judge Parker last actively participated in pol- itics off the bench he was chairman of the New York State Democratic Committee, which clected David B. Hill as Governor. He was & cog in the Hill machine. There have never been in our political history methods more debasing and corrupt than those of the Hill machine in New York, and they culminated in the steal of the State by frauds and the cverthrow of the Hill machine in consequence. This was the machine which Mr. Parker ran until, as a reward for ruhning it, he was made a Judge by Hill, and these are the meth- ods he deplores. - Again, Judge Parker speaks of the campaign contributions by great corporations. He states that some of the enterprises which have un- duly thfived through favoritism have become so rich and strong that they can and do con- tribute vast sums when it is made clear that it will be advantageous to them. Judge Par- s describing precisely and exactly the es which gave Tammany Hall its strength off which in the pres- York State. an in political life who does not know that this is the case and knows that Judge Parker is seeking to be the beneficiary off the very methods which he affects to de- nounce. Again, Judge Parker says: ‘‘Political con- tributions * by _cgrporations and trusts mean corruption. They cannot be homest. A cor- poration will subscribe to a political party only because the cogporation expects that party, through its control of public officers, executive or legislative, to do something for the benefit of the corporation, or to refrain from doing something to its injury. No other. motive can be imagined: that in the nature of things no other motive can exist.’’ It is astonishing that Judge Parker should have the temerity to say this when his own intimate associates and supporters, the men who conducted his campaign for the nomina- tion and who are now conducting the cam- paign for his election, represent these very corporations which he affects to denounce, or else owe their political strength solely to the contributions they have recelved from them in the past and expect to receive from them in_the future. When Mr. Hill last April in the State con- vention which put Sudge Parker forward for the Presidential nomination declared that the trusts should be regulated by the State and not by the nation, and when, Judge Parker himselt declared that the common law was sufficjent for their regulation, knowing full well that the abandonment of every effort to regulate them by the Federal rnment, Mr. Hill and Judge Parker were Dbidding for the support of the great corpora- tions and bidding for this support Wwith reck- lesx disregard of the interests of the public. Now, as a last despairing effort, he inveighs against them and seeks to obtain votes by thus attacking them in a manner utterly un- worthy of the candidate of a great party for the high office of President, . Judge Parker's statement in yesterday's speech that the President and the trusts com- bined in an effort to ‘“‘satisfy the country that trusts were opposed to the present ad- ministration” is simply preposterous and smacks of the rashness of desperation. e Mo, BRYAN TALKS OF REFORMS. Makes Eight Speeches in Indiana, Ending at South Bend. SOUTH BEND, Ind., Oct. 25.—Wil- liam J. Bryan addressed a large meet- ing in front of the City Hall here to- night. Bryan spoke of reforms that were needed by the Government and declared them to be vital issues of the'campaign, and said: The election of a Democratic ticket will hasten every reform by removing overshadow- ing issues. A Republican election will delay all reforms because a Republican victory will not only continue the issues that are now abeorbing attention but may add new ones vnsuspected. In addition to the meeting here Bryan made addresses at seven towns in the State to-day and will make a number of speeches in Indiana to- morrow. Al the theelings to-day were well attendeéd.’ ’ — s Colonization Frauds | Voters of Mayfleld - n Greater New York ~ Are Qut for Hayes Special Dispatch to The Call. NEW YORK, Oct. 25.—Of the first batch of 10,000 names examined by | George Morgan, State Superintendent of Elections, in his search for fraudu- lent cases of registration, 1500 have been discovered, where his deputies in their personal canvass were told on the premises specified that the persons named were not known there. Mor- gan made this statement to-night, adding that the figures came only from the lower districts of the city, and that if the proportion was maintained throughout the evidences of fraud would be enormous. . MEET T0 BUILD (P THE WEST Trans-Mississippi Congress Delegates Gather at St. Louis for Annual Session A e ST. LOUIS, Oct. 25.—Eight hundred delegates to the Trans-Mississippl Com- mercial Congress assembled to-day in Congress Hall on the World's Fair grounds. During the sessians, which will continue through Saturday, mat- ters of Importance to residents of the trans-Mississippl region will be dis- cussed, such as “Irrigation,” ‘“‘Good Roads,” “River Navigation” and “In- terstate Commerce Laws.” Previous tb the opening of the session a meeting of the executive committee was held, at which it was deeided to limit the report of the committee on resolutions to 500 words. It was also decided to hold only one session daily. The meeting was called to order by the chairman of the executive commit- tee, Thomas Richardson of Portland, Or., who introduced B. C. Kerens of St. Louis. Kerens, in the course of his re- marks, sald: The Trans-Missiseippl Congress bas sdecstion and A number of delegates made rt e ‘worl mj] - dustrial and commercial - it in the Western tes. - The congress a;nuwmtofinun'm- of any inthe world. SAN JOSE, Oct. 25.—There was a big political demonstration at May- field in honor of E. A. Hayes, the Re- publican nominee for Congress in this district to-night. It was the largest political gathering ever held im the town, and there was an abundance of enthusiasm. A band concert and nu- merous honfires enthused the . crowd before the meeting. Ralph McComish, president of the Mayfleld Republican Club, presided. E. A. Hayes delivéred a stirring ad- dress, dealing with the tariff and the issues raised by the national platform’ He urged the election of the entire Republican ticket. This was neces- sary, he said, to insure the carrying out of the policy advocated by Me- Kinley and now being put in force by Roosevelt. Hayes said a Republi- can Congressman would be able to ac- complish more at Washington than a Democratic one, and he promised if elected to work for the interests of California and the citizens of the San- ta Clara valley. Hayes was wéll re- ceived and he was frequently ap- plauded. The other speakers were: Major Kyle of San Francisco, Edward Dfitei of San Jose, Fayette Mitchelltree, can- didate for the Assembly in the Fifty- seventh District, and F. E. Mitchell, candidate for Supervisor. abir S el ENTHUSIASM IN SOUTH. , San Bernardino, Redlands and River- side Hold -Joint Rally. SAN BERNARDINO, Oct. 26.—The local marching club, the clubs from Redlands and Riverside, the gun club of Redlands and the Army and Navy League of this valley held a rally here to-night that was pronounced the most enthusiastic of the campaign. T. C. Seymour was chalrman. The speak- ers were : Professor Locke, candidate for the State Senate; General Pres- cott, nominee for the Assembly; S. C. Smith, Congressional nominee from the Eighth District, and Congressman McLachlan. Congressman McLachlan was greeted with cheers when he arose to speak. He reviewed the hiswry of the Republican party and urged the ~voters to remember what it had done. He closed with a stirring tribute to President Roosevelt that brought the audience to its feet, Gillette Razor Wins, Svectal to Francisco Call. ST. LOUIS, Mo., Oct. 25.—The Gillette Bales Co., Chicago, was awarded medal at fair for beauty, safety and ractical sha: 1t f oy R S SNYDER WINS AT PRIMARIES. LOS ANGELES, Oct. 25.—Primaries for the selection of delegates to both the Republican and Democratic city conventions were held in this city to- day. ere was no contest on the head of the Republican Mayoralty ticket and S. A. Butler. will be the choice of the convention. There was a ,warm contest on the De: between Mayor M. P. Snyder and Edward Kerr, the former winning out by probably 8 to 1. T 7Y N E REPUBLICAN RALLIES ~IN THE CITY TO-NIGHT Ju]ius Kah In regard to the legisiation in Con- gress for the building of a steel collier at Mare Island Navy Yard, Hon. Victor H. Metcalf of President Roosevelt's Cabinet wires this message to General George Stone, chairman of the Repub- lican State Central Committee: “WASHINGTON, D C., Oct. 25, 1904. “Congressional Record shows ‘that Perkins obtained the amendment in the | Senate. VICTOR H. METCALF.” When the foregoing telegram was shown to prominent Republicans last night the remark was made: “The sup- { porters of Bell who have been attack- ing Senator Perkins will now turn and attack Mr. Metcalf.” REPUBLICAN RALLIES. There will be two Republican rallies in San Francisco to-night, one in the Fourth and the other in the Fifth Con- gressional District, The meeting in the Twenty-eighth Assembly District at Occidental Hall, on Third street near Howard, which was at first scheduled to take place Monday evening, October 24, was postponed until to-night. Fall- ure to engage the hall rendered the post- ponement necessary. The list of speak- ers, however, remains unchanged. Ju- lius Kahn, the party’s standard-bearer for Congress in the Fourth District; F. A. Markey, nominee for State Sen- ator, Seventeenth District, and William Mindham, candidate for the Assembly, Twenty-eighth District, will address the people. The meeting will be held un- der the auspices of the Republican State Central Committee. At Phelps Hall, 317 Devisadero street, there will be a rally to-night of the Republicans of the Thirty-seventh As- sembly District. E. A. Hayes, nominee for Congress, Fifth District, will speak to the voters. F. C. Jones, nominee for the Assembly, and Senator E. 1. Wolfe, candidate for re-election in the Twen- ty-first Senatorial District, will also ad- dress the meeting. The Thirty-seyenth Assembly District is relied on to give the Republican ticket a magnificent majority. Four years ago McKinley carried San n and E. A Hayes Secretary Metcalf Wires That Per- kins Won the Collier. Francisco by a plurality approximating 10,000. In that memorable campaign San Francisco won the historic banner, a .trophy Wwhich goes to the county givingthelargest majority in a general election to the head of the Republican ticket. The banner was taken to Los Angeles in 1902 and is there for a long time, as Los Angeles the south that the banner will stay there for a long time as Los Angeles County promises to give Roosevelt 15,- 000 plurality on November 8. It is gos- sip in ail the political camps that San "Francisco will give the head of the national ticket a splendid majority, but the most enthusiastic champions of the President on the peninsula do not ven- ture to predict a plurality of 15,000, All signs, however, point to a great Re- publican victory in the State. . SOLID DELEGATION. A solid Republican delegation to Con- gress now seems assured. The Demo- crats are putting up fights in the First, Second, Fifth and Sixth districts. At the outset the State Central Committee was inclined to regard the Second Dis- trict as the one exposed to the greatest danger on account of a “subterranean” [campaign on the part of the Demo- crats, but late advices from the several precincts of each county of the great district convince the Republican cam- paign managers that McKinlay will be elected by a majority of 2000. The most gratifying intelligence at party headquarters comes from the Democratic counti’s of Mendocino, Xolo, Lake, Glenn and Colusa. The Republicans are exceedingly active and vigilant in the Democratic strongholds and are bringing into the camp of prosperity many voters who formerly trained in the Democratic ranks. It is gossip in political camps that a Bell expedition was recently organized in Sacramento for a still hunt in San Francisco for storiesto be used against Duncan E. McKinlay at the finish of the campaign. The still hunters are on the scent of an oil stock story which has been peddled around the San Fran- cisco newspaper offices and everywhere rejected. SALINAS, Oct. 25.—Congressman Needham was accorded a great recep- tion here to-night. Shortly after dark great bonfires were lighted on the principal streets and for fully an hour before the meeting there was a con- tinuous display of pyrotechnics in the vicinty of the large pavilion where the meeting was held. Senator Per- king divided the honors with Congress- man Needham, each making a strong speech. Needham talked nearly an hour and a half on the insular and isthmian pol- icies of President Roosevelt. frequently interrupted by prolonged applause. His attack upon the Demo- cratic platform and Judge Parker's letter of acceptance and speeches kept the audience in laughter for some time. e After the meeting closed a man who said he had voted the Democratic ticket for forty years shook hands with Needham and Perkins and said he was going to vote a straight Republican ticket this year. “You knocked holes in the Demo- cratic platform,” he said to Needham, “big enough to drive my wagon through, and I guess I'll get in with the party that is doing things.” Senator Perkins paid a great tribute to Needham’s ability and standing in Congress, and enjoined his hearers to remember the great good already done the Sixth District by Needham. “His valpe,” said Perkins, “will be greatly enhanced by his re-election.” Continu- ing Perkins appealed to the young men to place themselves in the ranks of the party representing progress and prosperity. Senatorial candidate Lynch and As- sembly candidate Cooper made strong speeches. Monterey County Republicans confi- dently expect a majority for the ticket of more than double that of two years ago, although the total registration in the county has fallen off. The large losses, however, are in Democratic dis- tricts. “The Republican strongholds have a greater registration than usual. This afternoon Perkins, Needham and party visited the town bf Spreck- els, four miles from here.” Their stay was short and no speeches were made, but the visit to the great sugar refin- ery aroused as much enthusiasm among the employes, many of whom left their work long enough to shake hands with the visitors. <ty s LUMBERMEN IN POLITICS. TACOMA, Oct. 25.—The chief issue in the present warm State campaign has been injected by 1500 Iumber manufacturers -and dealers of Puget | Sound, who are determined to leave nothing undone toward securing an extension of the 40-cent lumber rate to Nebraska, Kansas, South Dakota and other Missouri River points. The rate of 40 cents per hundred pounds now applies only to St. Paul. The rate i18%0 cents to Omaha, which is only a mile farther from Portland, where the Hill and Harriman lines The opposition of the lumbermen applies equally. to both systems because last summer they rejected theirrequest for a lowering of the rate in the ter- ritory named. Lumbermen are ac- cordingly pledging the holdover Sena- tors and all candidates for the next Legislature t6 all measures which will secure a 40-cent rate to the Missouri River. Candidates are signing the ”‘%"‘ in numbers, Shnially i Wages 147,000,000, be- ann 1,000,000, 3“&' freights of $22,000,000, the lat- m 4 rnings of the S:Oe;:h]liflon‘l“ gross ea - ern and Northern c last year.! % —_— Bell in Colusa, . COLUSA, Oct. 25.—The 'Theodore SALINAS GIVES GREETING TO PERKINS AND NEEDHAM _—— He was ' + Willows, candidate for the Assembly, made a short address, and Congress- man Bell was then introduced. Bell was greeted with prolonged cheers. —_—— Hayes Club Organizes. The Hayes Club of the Thirty- eighth Assembly District has been or- ganized with headquarters at 605 Golden Gate avenue. Following are the officers and committees: Max Goldberg, president; John T. Nouree, Vice president; George S. Gould, secretary; M. W. Mclntosh, treasurer; M. Tiedemann 'dr., Eergeant at arms. Campaign committee—Charles C. Morris, James C. Bourbin, John T. Nourse. Executive committee—I. B. Dalzlel, B. H. Algeltinger, George Tantau, D. A. Ryan, Hen- ry Abraham Jr., Frank Robb, I Goldman, Joseph Mann, Charles P. MecCarthy, J. Sam- uels, I Golden. Canvassing committee—Frank Grimes, Louis Bernetel A, Van der Naillen Jr., A. A. Fried- I Stephen, Peter Nielsen, E. P. . M. Levinson, John Plath, Charles Rhine, Morris Goldtree, Levi Kaplan, J. J. Conlon, Joseph Moore, Jesse Mayer. L OUEER VACARY OF INSANE MAN Epecial Dispatch to The Call. REDDING, Oct. 25.—Before the grated windows in a padded cell in the sane ward at the County Jail stands P. Masser, an Italian fruit peddler, with clasped hands raised in suppli- cation. He labors under the very strande hallucination that what he finds is his no matter what it is or in whose possession it-is. He says he has orders to that effect from heaven. It is a sort of a religious belief of his and.he has not hesitated to live up to his belief. Monday in Cottonwood he saw a delivery horse belonging to G. H. Butterway standing in front of a store. Masser’s belief was so strong that he jumped down from his wagon seat and took the horse. He found it, he said, and therefore it belonged to him. “If you find a mine it's yours, Isn’t it?" he said to the officer who ar- rested him. The officer answered yes. “Well then,” retorted Masser, “if you find a horse or a wagon or anything it’s yours, isn’t it?" ————— SANTA CRUZ, Oct. 25. — The trial of Thomas J. Laws on a charge of murdering Elizen Wright on the night of July 30 last was commenced here to-day. The erime was | committed ou Laws' ranch a fow miles from Boulder Creek. ,Wright' was an employe of | the defendant. * S "l, ADVERTISEMENTS. . All Humors Are impure matters which the skin, liv- er, kidneys and other organs can not take care of without help, there is such an accumulation of them They litter the whole system. Pimples, bolls, eczema and other. eruptions, loss of appetite, that tired feeling, bilious turns, fits of indigestion, ' dull headaches ang many other trot bles are due to them. - \ ‘Hood’s Sarsaparilla - and Piils AR A AN AN AN AN e NN PAINE'S CELERY COMPOUND. GEORGE W. DAVREN. The “Nervous® Condition. The term “nervous” is a braad term used to denote a diseased condition of the nerves that is very common. The disease is a debility or weak- ness that affects especially the nervous system. There may be no well-defined trouble, yet those who suffer with ner;ousnegs will mpfinm many things, mental depression, inability well, twitching, aching limbs, and hundreds of nervous disorders. Sleep is not refreshing and the patient wakes up tired. Although the lungs, heart, liver and kidneys are sound, yet there seems to be serious disease in these vital and sufferers with wfeallc nerves feel that all their hysical powers are failing. ” iIervot‘;;ness is wholly the result of wear and tear of the nervous system, caused by irregular habits, long-continued anxiety or worry, too great business responsibility, and any cause which to diminish the vigor of the body. The beautiful delicacy ef the nervous system can be appreciated when it 13 considered that-the nerve fibres do not exceed one-fifteen-hundredth of an inch ip diameter. Each of these nerve fibres proceeds from the nerve centre with which it is connected, to the point at which it terminates, without uniting with any other, So delicate is the structure and so intimately associated are jts parts, that the nervous system can be deranged- easily. and diseased or weakened.. ~ Often sufferers from nervousness do At realize that thollr no;vhu no::l' r;o:;lc:;g and étrengthen wi until the undlu::' is vl.’long standing be- fore acting. Here is a case in point. 8 Brooklyn, N. ¥, Aug. 2, 1904—*It affords me pleasure to voice my appreciation of Paine’s Celery Compound, as | think it a truly wonderful remedy. It curéd me of nervousness and stomach trouble of lon‘ standing when ai! other remedies falled. —=Geo. W. Davren, 5401 Fifth Ave. R oy Py B P on their s, r existence, or borne down by stress of weiwork; Paine’s Celery Compound stands ready to build the nerves back to their healthy condition—to put an end to sleeplessness, and to drive away every ache and pain. Two days’ treatment with Paine’s Celery Com' pound wigzive roof of its marveloys powers. For 17 years this famous prescription has been the most universally used tonic in the world. It has stood the test of time. Physicians constantly use and prescribe it. No prescription has ever been formulated that equaled it in curative power. Remember this,—Paine’s Celery Compound is the prescription of one of the most famous physi- cians this country has ever known, and all repu- table Druggists sell and recommend it. WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., BURLINQTON, VERMIONT, ADVERTISEMENTS. 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