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THE SA FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1904 GOLDEN STATE REPUBLICAN CONGRESSIONAL NOMINEES ARE ALL-ELECTED Representatives Bell, Wynn and Livernash Are Lefeated in Their Respective Districts. B - TJUYS AT, - HEAVY VOTE IS POLLED IN ~ THE INTERIOR —_— Incomplete Returns Show Big Repulb- lican Gains. The following table of partial returns from the counties of the State shows that there was a decided increase in the Republican vote. The vote in the southland was particularly heavy: Alameda . Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa % Contra Costa Del Norte . El Dorado . Fresno ... Glenn .. 5 (Glenn .. Humboldt i 5, 3 2 8 Humboldt Inyo 396 inyo Kern Kern Los Angeles Madera Riverside . Sacramento San Benito ........ San Bernardino ... San Diego .... San Francisco Siskiyou Solano . Sonoma. Stanislaus . | Sutter Tehama Trinity .. Tulare Tuolumné Ventura. . Yolo Yuba ... i, % PRESIDENTIAL VOTE 1900. PRESIDENTIAL VOTE 1004. L Y] President. 1w | 3% Pr 7 { L M . | 34 | z £ | B - || 5| 3 |5 | < 2] s la | = | & 2 g 5 [ o i 3 8 A e COUNTIES. i 2 £ COUNTIES. g I 2 -2 g ] 8 21 B 8 g 3 b S 2 3 = [ o | { £ 1 188} 22,161} u:ml 6,677 | [Alameda | .5 84/ 89| 15| fAlpine Amador . Butte . Calaveras Colusa Contra C. Del Norte El Dorado . Fresno ... 23| 2,621 58 4,420/ Kings . Lake Lassen .. Los Angeles Madera Marin . Mariposa. . Mendocino sen Placer [Plumas Riversid. Sacramento . San Benito . San Bernardino. . San Diego 43 San Francisco. ... San Joaquin Luis Obispo. 1 Joaquin Luis Obls ateo . Barbara Clara anta Cruz hasta S2828 no Sonoma Stanislaus Sutter 28 52 Z7n2n 3 15 11 51/128,349) Totals N 2, n 1900 gave McK: Pro. 5024, 8.-D. 7554, ering’ cluded in fotal vote. | Jana Bryan 5 SIXTH CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT.| EIGHTH CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT Vote in 1002 Vote in 1902 3 THE STA 2 NATIONAL LEGIS TS OF .V fight carry Napa ( came t there we The following tables counted in the several districts 8t 2 o'clock FIRST CONGRESSIONAL Vote in 1902. z i 30 FI Doradc Humboldt Laswer Meriposa SECOND CONGR SIONAL DISTRICT. Veote in 1902, on of the en- jonal ticket in strict came as a great ats, as they thought 2 g H nd when the news won the day » the Bourbon camp. had FOURTH CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT. Vote in 1902, | Coad) (pmoy (o08) Aepsup Congressional DISTRICT. Cussr) p)n,‘l s < IMON s (dayy) v 12,574 | 12,308 AL DISTRICT. Vote in 1902. Cdo) WD z s Curacr) sy CCdan) JIORR Contra Costa It is up to Kuropatkin to commit And if he doesn’t shoot any | Solano better than his soldiers, he'll have to get & Japanese soldier (o do_the shoot- suicide, ire creates the future, | | Monterey San Benlto San Joaquin . Santa Cruz Stanislaus T £ PR ;o\ i 0 e g < 2 s [ 2] & s T A g 2] 3 | 31 -l 8 Ba | 2] 3 COUNTIES. o R | 51 g PRlLa s 2| : 3 Sk €| : | § oA - Inyo Fresno . . s | Kern Merced | Riverside .. | San Bernardino . San Diego ...... | San Luis Obispo. | Ventura S Totals Totals | o | | 21 8 T . | = 2 £ | 21 & | § Z| 5 = i I | AR a g ~ F g | cousTr. N3 COUNTIES. COUNTIES. Loof . RE A £ | Ben Franciseo 16,034 10,061 1,000 136 | Fresno - 40 | oy 5 FIFTH CONGRESSIONAL DISTRIOT. | Kie 2 e ade Orange Yote in 1902, Merced . 4 Riverside .. Vo ks Monterey 2 | S8an Bernard { 7| © 2 | san Benito 1 | San Diego. : B Fe Z | san Joaguin 51 San Luis Obispo | | £ 5 | santa Crus . a3 Santa Barbara... i% 8 Stanisiaus ... 22 lare e 5 QC otefs 154 Ventura . COUNTIES. o B 3 San Franeisco (part) | San Mateo Santa Clara Totals . RETTIE Vote in 1904, = | SRR COUNTIES. 172| & g PR 1 = | San Franeisco (part)....| ... | 1,089 | 9,213 San Mateo. . 1,0 841 {‘ Santa Clars. Totals Counterfeit Citizenship., Official estimates are made that last vear there were issuedsin this country, or to people about te come here, more than 100,000 spurious certificates of naturalization. For the most part these, of course, went to a class of aliens who, through ignorance or vi- ciousness, would have failed, even after due residence, to attain citizenship if subjected to the _examinations pre- | scribed by law. fraud is a serious one. The immigranfs who take advant- age of it are less culpable than the rescals who make possible the carrying out of the scheme.—Washington Times. Some automobiles are called runs abouts, and others should be known as stovabouts. SEVENTH CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT Burmese Pelmleum~ lndn;n. Vote in 19032. The universal rivalry in the oil trade because the Burmese petroleum indus- try is so rapidly growing. The imports have decreased from 91,000,000 gallons in 1901-2 to 71,000,000 gallons in 1903-4. Prices and freight rates have been det- rimental to the American product, the imports of which have considerably de- COUNT! “ EPUPAL JO ON Cdoy) UROWION wa() uosuyor creased, and which has now become an TLos Angeles .......... i | 194 article of luxury. Trade in Russian Vote in 1904. petroleum is also decreasing, which is g _? H 5 partly due to the influx of Straits oil, =.-= | £ . but chiefly to the increasing production i- | 3| S of Burmese petroleum, the consumption ‘13 H a of which has more than doubled within | COUNTIES. 7z g % |two yvears, and in 1903-4 reached 40,- | EH 3 | 2 000,000 gallons out o an approximate s 2 total consumption of 110,000,000 gallons. seit T < New York Commercial. etitel e ————— Los Angeles. i) W 10.986\ 3,068 Tireless Government Slenths. The most indefatigable sleuths in the Hints to the Rose Lover. Iworld are those In the employ of the If you have rose bushes in your|Government. The other day at Har- yard and wish to keep them from be- | per a United States detective arrested ing blighted by frost they must be|one F. L. Lefler, who has been work- cared for before the cold weather!ing all summer with a thrashing ma- sets in. A rose bush that is properly | chine crew in the neighborhood. About guarded against frost will be as good | a year ago Leffler, then living in Penn- as new next spring. Take some old | sylvania, was divorced by his wife. clothing and go out into your rosé | During the trouble he wrote her a let- garden at once. Don’t put it off —de- | ter reflecting in a scmewhat profane lay I8 dangerous. If vou have jack|and obscene mannmer upon his father- roses cover the bushes with castoff |in-law. The letter was turned over to pajamas. If they are American Beau- | the postoffice authorities. The Govern- ties use kimonas to protect them.| ment detectives followed Leffler all the Don’t make the reses blush by gown- | way to Kansas and he will be taken ing them in unfamiliar garb.—Mil- | back to the scene of his crime.—Kansas waukee Sentinel, N 1 City Journal. gradually ceases to affect East India, | IS IN INE + LARGE REPUBLICAN ' { i LOS ANGELES Nov. 8.—Never be- fore in the history of California poli- | tics has Los Angeles County given such a majority to any ticket as that which to-day she gave to the whole Republi- can ticket. The prediction of the party ranagement was that Roosevelt's plu- rality would be 15,000. It will be greater than 20,000, and indications are that the Republicans will elect not only the entire legislative ticket, but the Super- to one Supervisorial district. Everything points to a Republi landslide, one which will give to Pre dent Roosevelt a vote far in excess of that ever before given here to any Re- publican nominee for any office. Chairman Lee of the County Central Committee, who through the campaign has claimed that Roosevelt would re- ceive a plurality of 15,000 in the county, now claims 18,000, and the returns so | far as recelved seem to indicate that -laim is not an unreasonable one. Hlit tickets were voted only for legi lative and county offices snd there w practicaily no scratching of the elector- al lickets. The expectation on the part of the Democrats that J. Ross Clark and Eu- gene Germain, Democratic candidates for electors, would receive a large com- plimentary vote was not realized. They got no more than their fellows. De- pite the claims of the Democrats the entire Republican legislative ticket ap pears to have been successful. Out Po- s by a decisive vote, but not by any- thing like the plurality the Republican | national ticket received. Carter has defeated Gould in the Thirty-seventh Senatorfal District, but | Carter ran behind the Presidential ticket. In the contests in the various Assembly districts the Republicans | | won without an exception. | In the Supervisorial contests Patter- | son (R.) is undoubtedly elected oevr | Moore (D.). The election of Wilson | (R.) over Bailey (D.) is still in doubt. Wilson ran 100 votes behind in one precinct. Between Lauder (R.) axgd | Alexander (I.) the indications are in | favor of the success of Lauder, but| this is by no means certain,”and the | complete returns may change the com- | plexion of the news. Angeles was polled. Fully 90 per cent of the total registration was represent- | ed and the registered vote was 50 per | cent greater than ever before. There was no disorder at any of the precincts. At midnight the returns indicate that | Los Angeles County would give Roose- velt 20,000 plurality. SANTA CLARA COUNTY. SAN JOSE, Nov. 8.—Banta Clara { of the national ticket. E. A. Hayes, Republican candidate for Congress in the Fifth District, will have more than 3000 plurality in the county. The city of San Jose gave Hayes a plurality of 1022 over Wynn. The entire county Republican ticket is elected by a hand- some plurality. A. L. Rhodes and J. R. Welch are elected Judges of the Su- perior Court. The Supervisors elected are A. L. Hubbard in the Second Dis- | trict, Henry M. Ayer in the Third Dis- | triet and F. E. Mitchell In the Fifth | District. The election passed off quietly. Vot- ing machines were used in all the pre- cinets of the county with the exception of half a dozen of the most remote ones. Chairman E. D. Crawford of the Republican County Central Committee | stetes Roosevelt will carry the county | by 5000. At Republican headquarters | the following vote was given out at 10 | o'clock to-night, with Alme, Alameda, Alviso, Burnett, East San Jose, Hester, Jefferson, Llagas, Mount Hamilton and Rucker yet to be heard from: Roose- velt 6192, Parker 2086; for Congress Hayes (R.) 5289, Wynn (D.) 3079; As- sociate Justice of the Supreme Court, Lorigan (R.) 6368, Dooling (D.) 18§ Superior Judges, Rhodes (R.) 4522, Bu nett (D.) 2881, Welch (R.) 4433, Bowden (D.) 2739; Twenty-seventh District, | Wright (R.) 2225; Trantham (D.) 1049; | Assemblyman, ~ Fifty-fifth District, Paul Arnerich (R.) 1440, J. W. Trou Ward Jarvis (R.) 1342, G. W. Waldorf (D.) 558; Fifty-seventh District, F. Mitcheltree (R.) 978, H. E. Milnes (P.) 354; Supervisors, Second District, A. L. Hubbard (R.) 1121, A. G. Col (Ind.) €93, W. T. Aggeler (D.) 784; Third Dis- trict, H. M. Ayer (R.) 1352, J. W Borchers (D.) 1048: Fifth District, F. E. Mitchell (R.) 1389, M. Farrell (D.) 1200. PALO™ALTO, No 8.—The total vote cast here to-da-— was §46. Roose velt got 484, Parker 102. For Con- gress—Hayes 439, Wynn 155. For Su- | preme Justice—Lorigan 486. Dooling 89. For the Assembly—Mitcheltree (R.) 306, Milner (P.) 272. Superior Judge, short ierm—Rhodes (R.) 446, Burnett (D.) 159; long term—Weich pervisor—Mitchell (R.) 378, Farrell (D.) 220. The voting was by machine. I | — . | | '8 mona way Broughton defeated Dillon | dale (D.) 662; Fifty-sixth District, | (R.) 431, Bowden (D.) 174. For Su-| " MAJORITIES ARE ROLLED UP. Counties og—SE)uthland x Poll Tremendous Vote INo Disturbances Dooling & preme Court, Lorigan T BUTTE COUNTY. OROVILLE, Nov. 8.—Twenty-nine precincts out of fifty-four in Butte County give Roosevelt 1389 and Parker votes. The precincts yet to be heard from will give Roosevelt a greater plu-~ rality over Parker than McKinley gained over Bryan four years ago. visors as well. There is doubt only as | These precincts give McKinlay (R.) for s 1176 to Bell's 1108. Coombs a plurality of 264 over Bell in two years ago. W. F. Gates -ted Assemblyman from the Seventh District over Armstrong (D.) Cong | by a large vote. it | CALAVERAS COUNTY. N ANDREAS, Nov. §.—Calaveras County will go Republican by a very big plurality. The Congressional con- test between Gillett and Caminetti will be very close. Gillett is considered to be the winner. McKenny (R.), candi- ! date for Assemb Messen- | ger (D.) by a large vote. DEL NORTE COUNTY. | | | cresc ov. 8.—The elec- tion passed off very quietly in Del Norte County Incomplete returns at midnight wed the following vote: Roosevelt Parker 185, Gillett for 201. The Re county by a cialist ticket pol FRESNO.COUNTY. }('ungress 290, Caminetti for Congress | | | FRES twenty-seven cinets In Fresnc a plurality of r publican ticket byva larger ago. A Cungressman | heaviest vote. “hmd hjs vote of four years ago. For The largest vote ever cast in Los |Assemblyman in the Sixtieth District {W. F. Chandler will win out easily, ’,v\hlle In the Sixty-first District the fight between Drew and Brickley is a | close one. Drew at present has a slight | advantage. In the twenty-seven precincts Roose- velt polled 1929 and Parker 1047 votes, Thirteen precincts out of thirty-eight in the Sixt ssembly District give Drew ickley 384 votes. | The Republicans will elect one Super- visor and the Democrats two. PR . TTENN (OTT\ GLENN COUNTY. WILLOWS, Nov. 8.—The vote cast in | eleven out of fifteen ots in Glenn County is as follows Roosevelt 339, | Parker 407; Associate Justice Supreme Court, Dooling 340, Lorigan 346; Con- gressman, Bell (D.) 462, McKinlay (R.) 328; Assemblyman, Geis (D.) 418, Wey- and (R.) 331; Superior Judge, Finch (R.) 418, Pirkey (D.) 349. Prentice, Stanton and Jackson are elected Super. visors. HUMBOLDT COUNTY. EUREKA, Nov. S.—Incomplete re- turns from Humboldt County indicate that the county has gone for Roose- velt by more than 3000 plurality. - lett (R.) for Congress, will Cl!.l?!7 (3:, county by 2000. He will carry the city of Eureka by about 700. Thomas Sej- vege (R.), for State Senator, will car- ry the county by 3000 or more. Two out of the three Supervisors to be elected will be Democrats. INYO COUNTY. BISHOP, Nov. 8—ZXishop Prestnot 1 gives Roosevelt 95, Parker 32, Lori- | | | gan 92, Dooling 38, Smith 93, Lucas 33, Leeke for the State Senate 89, Boyd Davis for the Assembly 39, Lumley it Bishop Precinct 2 gives Roosevelt 42, Parker 30, Loutan 43, Dooling 33, Smith 44, Lucas 33, Leeke 42, Boyd 33, Davis 39, Lumley 39. a2 B KERN COUNTY. | BAKERSFIELD, Nov. S8—Returns from twenty-six precincts out of fifty- nine in Kern County indicate that the county will give Roosevelt a plurality of from 125 to 130 votes. S. C. Smith Republican nominee for Congress, will receive a plurality of somewhere |}, the | neighborhood of 100 votes. The Super- | visorial contest is still in doubt. The y returns indicate that the Democr: | have elected one Supervisor. s ‘ LAKE COUNTY. {The count was completed twenty | minutes after the polls closed. majority of 100 to Rooseveit. | total vote was 394, nearly 150 short of the registration. The vote was as fol- lows: Roosevelt 229, Parker 130, For Congress—Havyes 221, Wynn 142. For | Senator—Wright 226, Trantham 131. ! For Supreme Justice—Lorigan 249, ‘Doollng 111. For Superior Judge— Burden 195, Welch 172, Burnett 197, | Rhodes 166. For Assemblyman— | Arnerich 216, Trousdale 138. San Isidro, San Felipe and Las An- imas precincts combined gave Roose- | veit 118, Parker 64, Hayes 109, Wynn | 68, Wright 115, Trantham 68, Lorigan '111, Dooling 65, Arnerich 111, Trous- | dale 66. Solis and Uvas' precincts are yet to be heard from. ALPINE COUNTY. lowing are correct returns of the vote in Alpine County: Roosevelt 73, Par- ker 9; Congressman, Gillett 73, Cami- netti 9: Associate Justice of the Sy- i 1 | MARKLEEVILLE, Nov. 8.—The fal-‘ GILROY; Nov. 8.—Gflroy gava 31 Inel LAKEPORT. Nov. S$.—For the third time in the history of Lake this | county has gone Republican. Roose- | velt's plurality is 62, with three small precincts to hear from., but the re- turns will not change the result. While the county gave the Presiden- tial ticket a plurality, it is believed that Bell for Congress will ca county by about 250. e . LASSEN COUNTY. SUSANVILLE, Nov. 13y — Lassen County held to-day the quietest elec- [tlon In its history, many voters not { taking interest emough In the contest to 80 to _the polls, motwithstanding that | four Supervisors were to be elected, {an evént which usually arouses the | interest ¢f county voters to the highest pitch. Returns from fifteen out of “;’"“fi"m precincts give Roosevelt 174 plurality and Gillett for Congress plurality of 252 4 p B 8 Rl Continued on Page 5. Column 1.