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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1904. Call-Herald Election Forecast Indicates a Republican Sweep in So-Called Doubtful States SR Continued from Page 25, Column 1. State cn the Presidency and as Demo- cratic on the Governorship. The Call- Herald investigation shows a strong Democratic drift in this city and al strong Republican drift up State. INDIANA REPUBLICAN. For the State of Indiana The Call and Herald obtained three polils, made by experienced men, each working inde- pendently of the others. One poll was made by e Democratic newspaper which is supporting Parker, and this | paper has with great accuracy foretold i' results e past. Another was made | by the Chicago Record-Herald, which 18 an Independent newspaper, but which is supporting Parker. Still another was made by a newspaper man who has done similar work for The Call and Herald for many years and whose im- partiality is recognized by Democrats and Republicans alike. In Wisconsin two canvasses, each in- ; dependent of the other, were conducted, and in each case the official result was | given after exhaustive inquiries | throughout the State of all elements | possessing familiarity with voting con- ditions there. In West Virginia the results were as- certained by a representative of a Dem- ocratic newspaper, who has repeatedly foretold elections in that State, and by & representative of The Call and Her- ald who made the pall for The Call and Herald in 1900. POLLS TALLY CLOSELY. The result of the inquiries in In- @iana was that each canvass showed the State would go Republican. The Democratic paper has placed the vote for Roosevelt over that of Parker at 20,000. - The Independent paper sup- ng Roosevelt estimated the State S The Cali-Herald | ed it at 12,000 for elt 2 week ago and refused to his estimate in view of Bry- ond tour of the State. le fact that these change &n's s me to exactly the| each of the thirteen | distri Each cor: ent gave the number of dis which the ne and those which 1 win as four. | usions were m OPERATIONS A FAD. Gradually Awakens to the Fact , operations has been d; before that the taions (piles, etc.) dreds of patients were 1d huYried into hospitals, n and robbed of their last he trouble was a simple s or piles only, home with a simple 1g but fifty cents a box. ocured one fifty cent box of| Pile Cure of my druggist, tion of buying a larger | happily surprised | I was cured, and amids left out of the 1 have not had piles since I used this ‘ box. one box, which has been about two | nths: previous to using Pyramid | Pile Cure I had the worst kind of | bleeding and protruding piles for over | thirty-one years, and no one knows, | except those who have had the piles, the pain and misery I suffered. ‘I e a poor man, but have often said I would give a fortune, if I had it, to be cured of the piles, and now I | have been cured for fifty cents. I should be very ungrateful if I did not v ou and give you every priv- flege to use my name and this letter, when I know there are so many who suffer as I did.” J. A. Weismiller, 1100 Bladensburg Road, Washington, D. C. The Pyramid Drug Co., Marshall, Mich.,, publish a little book on the causes and cure of piles, which they will be glad to mail free to any appli- cant, and we advise all sufferers from this painful disease to write to them for it WEAK MEN DR. HALL'S REINVIGORATOR stops all losses and unnatural dis- charges in 24 hours. You feel an improvement from the first dose. We b 0 much confidence in our treatment that we offer Five Hun- dred reward for any case we can- not cure. This mecret remedy cures nightly emissions, wasted organs, varicocele, ect, strictures, kidneys, failing memor: draine in the urine, gonorrhea, dis- ase of the prostate glands and all other terri- ble effects of self-abuse or excesses, which lead on to consump nd death. Positively cures the worst cases in old or young of that morti- RELA FOR J YOU lost power, fying condition, quickness of the discharge, and wanting to do, and_you can't. Sent sealed, $2 per bottle; three bittles, $5. Guaranteed cure any case. Call or address orders HALL'S MEDICAL INSTITUTE, 855 Broadway, land, Cal. for sale at 1073% Market st., 8. F. Send ree book. Every Woman 18 interested and sbould know ‘about the wonderfal but send stam) 1:instrated book— gives foil particulsrs and directions in. valuabie Lo ladies. MARVEL 41 Park Bow, N w Montgomery, San Francisco, Cal. m Hatteroth (Ladies’ Dept.), 224 Sutter. Drug Co., 400 Sutter and 100 Stockton, 7, BRUSHE FOR BARBERS, BA- kers, bootblacks, beth- u: iiliard tables, brewers. bookbinders. c.na;“iunln, e gyers. Sour mille, foundries. lsundrics. 3 hangers, printers, nters, shoe stablemen. tar-roofers. tanners, BUCHANAN BROS., Brush Manufacturers, 609 Sacramento St. e ———— Schools and Colleges. EALD LEADING BUSINESS COLLEGE OF THE Over 24 Post st., San Francisco, Esab. €0 Open entire . " T T sirculars (treen Cal. & night. | the resources on the Pacific side of the | | W which there was a double investiga- tion. New Jersey is likely to go Repub- lican on the national ticket by about half of what it gave McKinley in 1900. McKinley's plurality was 56,000. The canvass indicates a Roosevelt plural- ity of about 27,000. E. C. Stokes, the Republican candidate for Governor, may run behind Roosevelt more than 18,000 votes. Connecticut seems almost certain to go for Roosevelt by a large majority. It is belleved that nothing short of a miracle can change the result in the last few days of the campaign. In Delaware a full vote should give the Republicans the largest plurality the State ever had. PARKER HAS MARYLAND. Maryland is unquestionably in the Democratic column. This is due al- most entirely to the race issue raised by Mr. Roosevelt. Maryland is the only doubtful State in which the Pres- ident appears to be weaker than his party. West Virginia, which Henry G. Davis was expected to carry for Par- ker, is probably Republican on na- tional issues. There would be no doubt about it but for the injection of State issues in the campaign. It is entirely possible the State may elect a Democratic Governor and a Democrat- ic Legislature and still glve its elec- toral vote to Roosevelt and Fair- banks. ‘Wisconsin’s 13 votes are conceded to Roosevelt, notwithstanding the State factional fight. In Colorado the trouble with the miners for a time threatened the Re- publicans, but the indications are that Roosevelt will carry the State, and he may be able to pull Peabody through. Nevada is a doubtful State. One re- port gave it as probably Republican, and another as probably Democrattc. In view of the fact that the Demo- crats have carried the State repeated- ly since the advent of Bryanism, the State is put in the probably Democrat- ic column. PACIFIC COAST STATES. The Pacific Slope States of Oregon, Washington and California are span- ned by a great Republican rainbow. | This is due very largely to the policy of expansion which has been pursued by the Republicans and which has re- sulted in such great development of continent. | Nebraska will go for Roosevelt by a plurality somewhere between 20,000 and 50,00 There is really no fight for | the Presidency in that State. Bryan | has conceded that Roosevelt will carry it. Bryan is making a great fight to win the State Legislature, but the in- dications are that it will be Republi- can and Bryan will not go to the Senate. All the rest of the States in the Mid- dle West, as well as-all of the New England States, probably will cast their electoral votes for Roosevelt. It is believed Idaho will be carried by | Roosevelt. Montana is placed in the | eclumn called “doubtful, probably Re- | publican.” Utah, it is believed, will| its electoral vote to Roosevelt. | ming is regarded as practically certain for the Republican column. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. The Call-Herald estimate on the | House of Representatives gives these totals: Republicans, 210; Democrats, | 164; doubtful, 12. | The present house stands: Repub- | lican, 210; Democrats, 176. The following is a list of those whose election to Congress is indicat- ed from California: First District—J. N. Gillett. Second District—D. E. McKinlay. Third District—J. R. Knowland. Fourth District—Julius Kahn. Fifth District—E. A. Hayes. Sixth District—J. C. Needham. Seventh District — James McLach- lan. Eighth District—S. C. Smith. All of these are Republicans, ————— OUTLOOK IN MONTANA. Betting Is Now 3 to 5 That Roosevelt Will Carry the State. HELENA, Mont, Oct. 29.—Mon- tana’s three electoral votes will, it is | which 1o Li Jfrom th cou but one remedy- PERUNA * ADVERTISEMENTS. thscaweGAZARRH there is A TN Roosevelt; Joseph M. Dixon (Rep.) will succeed himself as Congressman; the Legislature to be elected Novem- ber 8, it is thought, will give a work- ing majority to the Republicans, means that Thomas H. Carter will succeed Paris Gibson as United States Senator March 4 next, and in conciuding the forecast of | the coming election, Governor Joseph K. Toole (Dem.) has an excellent chance over William Lindday (Rep.). Theodore Roosevelt is almost an idol in Montana. To begin with, he was an early-day resident of the State, a member of the Montana Livestock Association, the only President to pay the State a visit, is considered better acquainted than any of his predeces- sors with the wants and needs of the ‘West, and, furthermore, his Western spirit of “Up and doing” appeals strongly to the average resident. His earnest efforts on behalf of the national irrigation law have served to endear him to Montanans, as water is the one thing needed to place this State in the agricultural list instead of being known as a mining commu- nity exclusively. This sentiment finds ample support in the poolrooms and hotels, where quite conceded, be cast for Theodore Dangerous dandrufi here js no denying the fact that dandruff is dangerous—to the life and vitality of the hair. It is the outward manifestation of an unhealthy condition of the scalp, and if neglected will surely result in the loss of the hair, the appearance of premature old age and ultimate baidnegs. Ccke Dandruff Cure not only quickly removes every trace of dandruff from the scalp, but positively prevents its recurrence. -It is a delightfully refreshing tonic, without a trace of sulphur or any injurious ingredients, and when faithfully used has proved its ability over and over again to produce a heavy, luxuriant growth of hair where all other remedies and formulas have failed. hin, brittle and poor hair, therefore, need no longer be a source of mortification to any one. What Coke Dandruff Cure has done for thousands it can and will do for you. Your druggist will tell you the same story. Get a bottle to-day and try it, Coke Dandruii Cure Ask your druggist. announced themselves as wagers are constantly being made on the result’ At the very outset Presi- dent Roosevelt was made a slight fa- vorite over Judge Parker, supposedly on the ground that Montaha, eliminat- ing the silver issue, is normally a Re- publican State, as was evidenced by the results in the elections preceding and following the two Bryan cam- paigns. - So heavy, however, did the play be- come on Roosevelt that the odds have gradually shortened until he has be- come an almost prohibitive favorite at the rate of 5 to 3, while Judge Parker is posted at 9 to 5. A wager was made here yesterday that Roosevelt would have a larger majority than Governor Toole and more was offered at an even money proposition, but no takers appeared. A further indication is to be found in a straw vote taken on a Northern Pacific train bound from Missoula to the Bitter Root Valley, whose passen- gers were all residents of that section. Of 156 passengers 122 were for Roose- velt. A word of explanation is due when considering the statement recently made by Senator Clark, who, while addressing Judge Parker at New York, declared that the labor party in con- vention had indorsed his candidacy and that, therefore, he felt no compunction in promising him Montana’s vote. It is true that the so-called labor convention did indorse the Parker electors, but this labor convention is hardly regarded as truly representing labor in Montana. In July last the Montana State Federa- tion of Labor, in annual convention; voted by a large majority not to enter politics. Constituting this federation are the largest unions in the State, in- deed, every union in its confines is either a r.omber or affiliated with it, 8o that the so-called labor indorsement does not carry so- much weight as might be expected. - 0ld time Democrats by the score have i 29.—William HEARST EMPLOYES ORDERED TO VOTE FOR ROOSEVELT EADWOOD, S. D, Oct. Randolph Hearst, Democratic can- didate for. President be- fore the St. Louis convention, is supporting Roosevelt for the Presidency. The Homestake mines, for the first time within the knowledge of the oldest resident, is pla- carded from surface to the low- est depths of the mine with signs: “Vote for Roosevelt for President; don’t forget that in voting for Roosevelt you vote for a continuance of prosper- ity.” The Homestake mines are the property of the Hearsts and controlled by William R. Hearst and his mother. They are the richest gold mines in the United States. > ‘When William R. Hearst was a candidate for President he di- rected the Homestake managers to vote for him in the county conventions of the Black Hills countics and every county sent delegates favorable to him to the State convention, which in turn declared for Hearst and sent a delegation instructed for him, with former Senator Petti- grew heading the delegation. Senator Pettigrew was recently inspired to say in an interview that Parker should be defeated. Now, the proclamation issued by the Homrestake mine, “Vote for Roosevelt,” is the- most pleasing order that has come from headquarters since fhe y—— mine was discovered in 1876. the winning of the Northwestern States, including” Montana, Wyoming and Utah, it is regarded here as a certain- ADVERTISEMENTS. e Rohm-Bristol Special $500 WATCH FOR WOMEN A Watch which bears our guarntee. Solid.u- karat gold case . . . Bobm-Bristol Co. Jewelers and abject failure. Two years ‘ago Joseph M. Dixon car- ried every county in the State for Con- gressman over Judge Evans. His rec- ord at Washington, especially his ef- forts toward securing the opening to settlement of two Indian reservations, ; have, to say the lest, not lost him any votes and his re-election is regarded as morally certain. Joseph K. Toole is the Democratic gubernatorial nominee and as his ad- | ministration has been quite satisfac- tory on the whole and his per-;| sonal popularity is second only to that of President }(’.oosevelt, with many warm Republican friends, he will un- doubtedly be re-elected. Another ele> ment which seems to foreordain his successful candidacy is to be found in' his action two years ago, when he com- pelled the Amalgamated Copper Com- ! pany to resume operations in its mines, mills, smelters and industrial plants, affecting 25,000 men, before he would summon the Legislature in special ses- sion to pass upon desired legislation whereby it would be freed from alleged judicial bias. The present Legislature is strongly R8publican on joint ballot and condi- tions have not changed in two years to a material extent. Thomas H. Carter will be the Republican caucus nominee for Seniifor if the Republicans are suc- cessful, while if the Democrats control, ‘W. G. Conrad will contest the re-elec- tion of Paris Gibson. st PREDICTS PARKER VICTORY. Secretary Woodson of National Com- mitte Makes Absurd Claims. NEW YORK, Oct. 29.—Ury Woodson, secretary of the Democratic National Committee, who said he was speaking for the committee, to-day predicted the overwhelming election of Judge Parker to the Presidency. He predicted that all the doubtful States would be Democratic, and also that some States called Republican will be and are doubtful. Secretary Woodson said: “I have every confidence that Judge Parker will be elected. I have been here 100 days now and I am ready to announce, from observation and what we have received, that Parker is elect- ed. All the doubtful States, so called, will be in the Democratic column, and many of the States called purely Re- publican are now in the doubtful col- umn. e will carry New York, New Jer- sey, Connecticut, Indiana, Maryland, ‘West Virginia, Idaho, Colorado, Utah and Nevada. In other words, all the doubtful States are for us ang for Judge Parker's election. “Illinois is doubtful. Ohio even is doubtful. The big men who controlled that State are now dead. The Republi- cans assume they are going to win there, but we hear they might lose. Even, California has sent good reporlll to us, and we are hopeful of carrying that State. “Maryland is certainly as Democratic as Kentucky.» West Virginia is as sure as Maryland.” i i Secretary Woodson said Chairman | Taggart will be here surely by Monday | night. —_— - WEST VIRGINIA REPUBLICAN. <+ | ty that the undertaking will prove an | Scott of West Virginia, who is chief of the speakers’ bureau at Republi- can ‘national headquarters in New York showed the President to-day a poll of West Virginia. He declined to make public the precise figures of the poll, but asserted that the Republican national ticket would carry the State by 20,000 or 25,000. Of pelitical con- ditions generally he said the fight is won. “In my judgment,” said Senator Scott, “Roosevelt is certain of 305 votes in the electoral college and he may have 311. I do net include 'n my estimate the votes of Nevada and Montana, which I regard as doubtful, with Republican leanings.” PRI O o CALL ON THE PRESIDENT. San Franciscans Assuve Mr. Roose- velt That California Is “With Him.” WASHINGTON, Oct. 29.—Abraham Aronson, Michael P. Alexander and Leo E. Alexshder of San Francisco were among thé callers who shook hands with the President to-day. “California will give 25,000 Repub- lican majority,” said Aronson, “and Kahn will be elected to the house over Livernash, who is already beaten.” ADVERTISEMENTS. San Frantisco, Sunday, 30 October, 1904. From the year 1838, when the first little Breuner stors was opened in Sacramento, to the present year, 1904, when four big Breuner stores congonll‘ the Deople of San Frangsco, Sacramento, Stockton and Rene —*‘Quality”* 2 bas always been our watchword. only Iwenty dollars If any question arises in your mind as to its bei [ 4 genunine mahogany, remember this is “Breuner’s. A dressing table which enjoys the style of many selling for considerable more and a value that no woman can fail to appreciate. Height to top of mir- ror, 61 inches; width, 33 inches. by 28 inches. < We pay the freight on goods up to 50 miles. Size of mirror, 16 !’i‘ (Formerly the California Furniture Co.) 261 to 281 Geary St., at Union Square