The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 9, 1904, Page 7

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1904. T VICTORY SWEEPS WIDELY - REPUBLICAN AVAL ANCHE Bic MAJORITY IN ALAMEDA COUNTY)| IN THE HOUS Knowland for Congress and the Legz'_slatz've Nominees Sweep All Before Them. Forty-eight French (D. . O’'Brien (U. L. nth District, Burke (R.) s 2 slative | 2018, Shay (D.) 463, Cedergren (S.) 343 “oughlin ( Fiftieth Distriet, B - Fift (R.) 1614, Slaug r (8. 208. Fift R.) 1643, Pow- 54, As the 1 and legislative 2 ontinue to be reported they W steadily the ratio of plurali- P for the Republican nominees. night—Alameda County gives the on seawall act: For 0, ) the returns show that the Re- publicane have elected their three uparvisors from the First, Fourth and he Fifth districts. The figures show First District, nine precincts missing roner (R.) 1 Beck (D.) 701; Fourth Republic stagger before irs o Morse (D.) 1891; Fifth Dis- 5 Mitchell (R.) 32 Fitzgerald & ) 224 k At this hour Mitchell leads by 26, Precinct 1, Third Ward of Oak- and Berkeley Precincts 6, 11, 18 and 21, missing. Fitzgerald claims the Third Ward by 54 and Mitchell claims the missing Berkeley precincts by a A SCENE R P‘E'G(‘f‘ OF TiEs \ POLLS AT EMERYVILLE k this morning (Wednes- ! cincts missing, Rowe | | velt at the | publicantem. | PARDEE VOTES WITH DISPATCH. Governor George C. Pardee came |down from ~Sacramento early this morning in eompany with Mrs. Pardee. | The Governor has not given up his residence in Oakland, though he is ltv- ing in Sacramento, and he was deter- mined that he wouid vote, even though that vote might not be needed. It was 11 o'clock when the Governor made his appearance at the polling place at the corner of Eleventh and Market streets. He disappeared booth and in a few seconds returned {and deposited his ballot. d was performed the Governor dis- appeared from the usual haunts of the politicians, and with nis wife spent a | quiet afternoon with friends. FOSTER HOME TO VOTE. Dr. N. K. Foster, Secretary of the State Board of Health, is another Oak- {lander w came home from Sacra- jmento to vote at his old polling place Iq East Oakland. Dr. Foster has been kept very close to his office in Sacra- phenomenal vote for Re- | ment and hls_ friends have seen but| Boyne, Fire Commissioner and enemy {little of him in Oakland since his ap-| of the devil, stands high in the esteem pointment, but to-day he renewed did acquaintances and scanned the Eastern returns. Collector “Stratton votes in the same ecinct with Secretary Metcalf. Mr. had business at the Custom in San Francisco, voted early peared. 3 ! Superintendent Leach of the United | States Mint, voted at 8:30 in the morn- ing in the Third Ward, with his young- | est son, who cast his first vear. |~ The candidates kept cPos precincts. State Senator Lukens was | not worried over the result in his dis- trict and spent the day around the city | with County Clerk J. P. Cook and J. | Cal Ewing, secretary of the Bank Commissioners. SPENDS QUIE LECTION DAY. ALAMEDA, Nov. 8.—Joseph R. Knowland, chosen to succeed Victor H. Metcalf as Representative for the Third Congressional ~District, spent | vesterday in a quiet way. He arose at | his usual early morning hour at his home, 1343 Everett street, and spent te this | in a|guijte likely the Republicans will have After this| fouyge. | My pre-election estimate was a major- | Ccwherd of the v to their | . Chinese vote and he achieved glory OF GONGRESS Republicans Retain Control of All Branches of Government. LOSSES OF DEMOCRATS Several of Their Leaders Are Engulfed by the Tidal Wave. Continued From Page 1, Column 2.| “About 100;” the Sun, 74, with thirty districts in doubt.” All of the paper: agree that the Senate will stand: Re- publicans, 57; Democrats, 33. CHICAGO, Nov.9.--Dispatches to the “ Associated Press up to 1:45 a. m. show | i i | that the Republicans have elected 202 Congressmen and the Democrats 138. Of the remaining forty-five districts thirty-two are now represented by Re- publicans and thirteen by Democrats. CHICAGO, Nov. 8.—Congressman James A. Tawney claims a majority of forty-five Republicans in the next Con- gress. He sald: “With a gain of one and possibly two in Missouri, and a gain of two ana pos- sibly three in Illinois, and the election of Yearington in Nevada, I am confi- dent the Republicans will have a ma- Jority of forty-five in the next House. ity of forty. It is 2 great victory, so overwhelming and decisive that every Republican should be hap : NEW YORK, Nov. §.—At 11:30 p. m. Chairman Babcock of the Re- publican Congressional Campaign Committee said that present indica- tions were that the House of Repre- ntatives would have 50 majority for e Republicans. The returns from the Western States are still very mea- ger and he based his calculations upon | districts that he believes are assuredly Republican. Of the gain in tha East there are six in New York, two in New Jersey and one in Massachusetts. WASHINGTON. Nov. 3.—Chairman Democratic Congres- sional Committee at 11 o'clock sz “We concede that the Roosevelt | landslide has carried the lln{ls? of Representatives by a majority- as | large as that now held.” KANSAS CITY, Nov. §.—Cowherd (D.), in the Fifth Missou District, and Benton (D.), in the Fifteenth District, are probably defeated for Congress. The Renublican claims that Elis (R.) will have 1000 plu- rality over Cowherd, who is chair- man of the DemocratieUongressional campaign committee. CHICAGO, Nov. 9.—Dispatches to the Associated Press up to 2:15 a. m. show that the Republicans have elect- ed 208 Congressmen and the Demo- crats 135. Forty-three are still miss- ing and the majority of them are now represented by Republicans. It is a majority of seventy-five in the BOYNE BUSY IN ('l{l%\TO\\'A\'. Fire Commissioner Spends an Active | Day in Forty-Fourth. H. A. Duffield, watchman in China- town, drummed out the vote of the Chinese, about 150 in number, and | gave interest to the election in the Forty-fourth Assembly District. George of the denizens of the Oriental quar- ter and to do him grateful service he was given aid in /his political contest. Boyne sped about the distriet and looked after his end of the fight with the generalship of a Boxer chief. His flight from precinct to precinct made it appear that fire alarms were con- stantly ringing. But the Comm explained that only an elec going on and that it was only he who was “there with bells.” To Duffield was entrusted the care of in getting every available ‘‘native son” to the polls, Some came with dangling queues, but a few had so far under- gone Americanization as to have mod- est hirsute adornment. However, they were all full-fledged citizens of the land and entitled to exercise the right of franchise. An aged colonel, with the twang of the South, forgot his spectacles in a voting stall and made to réturn for ihem. Meantime a Chinaman had taken his place in the booth and was busily comparing a sample ballot marked for him with the ballot he was to vote to find the places where he should impress the stamp. Bryan. plicol; 5 _ NEW YORK, Nov. 9.—Democratic | successes are confined to the Solld LATE RETURNS HEARST TURNS ONLYINGREASE | IS GUNS UPON TH E FIGURES JUD 6E PARKER Early Morning Estimates;Expected Denuneciation of of Pluralities for Roosevelt. PARKER'S VOTE Sl[ALL, Esopus Nominee Runs Far Behind the Total of South, in which Kentucky is included, | and Parker has not carried a single| State which did net give its vote to| Bryan four years ago. Unofficial re- turns indicate that he has lost some of these which the Nebraska candidate held for his party. Officlal figures from some of the Northwestern States may slightly change the totals, but based on the returns available at an| early hour this morning the electoral vote with plurality stands as follows: ROOSEVELT PLURALITIES. Colorado—3000. California—6000. Connecticut—33,000. Delaware—2500. Idaho—15,000. T11inols—200,000. 1ndiana—>50,000. Towa—125,000. Kansas—89,000. | Maine—37,000. | Maryland—1000. Massachusetts—=30,000. | Michigan—142,500. | Minpesota—73,000. Montana—10,000. | New Jersey—350,000. | Nebraska—40,000. Hampshire—20,06: ! Nevada—Small New York—185,000. | North Dakota—29,000. Ohio—145,000. Oregon—320,000. Pennsylvania—350,000. Rhode Island—5000. South Dakota—30,000. Utah—8000. oming—Large. PARKER PLURALITIES. Alabania==15.000. £ Arkansas—40.000. Florida Georgia-—45,000. Kentucky—10,000. a-—50,000. North Caroli South Carolina—Large. Tennessee—25,000. Texas—190 0%. Virginia—22,580. T e e R THE MANY JOYS OF OVTDOOR LIFE Even the City Bred Man Yearns for Them In the Summer Days. A cat turns around before it lies down because its jungle ancestors had to crush the grass to make a bed, and | the instinct still persists. Perhaps man- | kind takes to the wouds in summer for the same reason. The groves were man’s original abode, as well as God's | first temples. But while the longing to get back to nature at this season is nearly universal the instinct for enjoy- ing the wilderness is much less widely distributed. | While some persons are exuberantly happy at getting away from civiliza- tion, others who fancy that they want to leave the town behind are made perfectly miserable by the lack of their | accustomed conveniences. The splash of the water on the boat's sides or the hum of the reel to sucn persons is no | compensation for the lack of ice, of comfortable beds and rocking chairs. At the first sign of a mosquito they are overcome with annoyance and sun- burn to them is an evil quite without recompense. Your true son of the woods, city-bred | though he may be, counts all the suf- fering that belongs to life out of doors as not grievous but joyous. The dis- ccmforts are not to be compared in his opinion to the delights of camping and fishing and hunting. His enthusiasm, indeed, is inexplicable to the man who has not fallen under the same spell. There is no telling the lover of the woods from the town devotee by his appearance. The book-looking fellow may be a mighty fisherman, while the athlete may be miserable out of reach of a car line. Perhaps the difference | | ‘sane, the N minee Appears on Time. PLAN OF THE EDITOR He and Bryan Will At- tempt to Reorganize Democracy. NEW YORK, Nov. 8.—Melvin G. Palliser, manager of the Wadtson cam- palgn in New York, said to-night that | in pursuance of plans agreed upon by Watson, Bryan and Hearst shortly after the St. Louis convention, a con- ference would be held in this city, probably next week, looking to the formation of a new party on radi¢al lines. NEW YORK, No Ycrk American say “Judge Parker 9.—Hearst's Ngw is overwhelmingly beaten. The reasons for his defeat arg perfectly plain. Judge Parker sim- ply failed to inspire the earnest, gen- uinely Democratic elements of his own party with confidence. They did not feel that in voting for him they would be voting for Democratic principles. And he did not attract Republicans who are tired of the reign of special interests and are ready to come over to the Democracy when the Demoec- | racy has the courage to be Democratic. “August Belmont and other promi- nent promoters of the Parker move- ment were in a position to know all about the feelings of certain enor- mously rich and influential ‘captains of industry’ and ‘kings of finance' toward Reosevelt. To their broad intellects it seemed that all that was necessary for Democratic success was to present a candidate whose sobriety of mind and sedate demeanor would offer an impressive contrast to the noisy and sv-aggering President. Thus would the support of the disturbed and incensed | ‘business interests’ be secured. “Is it surprising that the masses, and others who do not class them- | selves with the masses, viewed the sane, safe and conservative pro- gramme merely as an equally sincere and foolish endeavor to win the trusts away from the Republican party and to form a partnership between them and their neutral enemy, the Demo- cratic party? ““The ballot demonstrates what con- struction the people put upon Judge Parker's denunciation of trusts. It is ‘manifest that they attributed his hos- titity to the trusts to the failure the trusts to be friendly to him; that they read in his tardy anti-trust atti- tude a complete breakdown of th safe and conservative’ pro- gramme, a bitter disappointment of | the expectation that the trusts could be coaxed away from thelir allegiance to the Republican party. “Judge Parker lost because the real Democracy refused to accept him as a Democrat. Had J. P. Morgan gone upon the stump for him it could not | have had a worse effect than the ob- They also are particularly incensed over the announcement of Palliser, chairman of the People’s party, that “in a few days a conference will be held between Watson, Bryan and Hearst to form a new Democratic party. They have also obtained a copy of a circular letter emanating from the anti-Parker Democratic League, the officials of which were pronouncedly in favor of the nomination of He: This letter was distributed broadcast the latter part of last week from the headquarters of the 54, floor C of the Hotel Majestic, Chi- cago, declaring that the Democratic party had been captured by the al- | mighty dollar and urging the defeat of the Belmonts, McCarrens, Hills and Clevelands and make it possible to elect a true Democrat in 1908. e inclose a blank form and would be pleased to have vou fill in the names of Democrats in your vi-, cinity who you think are not inclined to vote for Wall Street Parker.” The cirqular is signed by George P. Locke, who formerly was chairman of the Kansas Democratic State Exec- utive Committee. He has been for years in the employ of Hearst and was | in charge of the Chicago headquarters of one of the Hearst leagues and dur- of | league In suite | BIVES FIRGT RETURNS T0 THE PUBLIC The Call's Bulletins Are Foremost in Announcing Roosevelt’s Election. CROWDS READ THE NEWS Vast Throngs Bloek the Street and Eagerly Await for the Latest Results P S S The splendid election bulletin service | of The Call was highly commended on every side. As early as 2 o’clock yester- day afternoon crowds began to collect in front of The Call office eagerly await- ing news of the election returns from the East, San Francisco and the State. At 3:20 o'clock in the afterncon a bul- letin was put up announcing that | Rooseveit would undoubtedly carry New York. At 3:50 o'clock a second bulletin appeared announcing that Roosevelt was undoubtedly elected President of the United States. These were the first Intimations con~ veyed to the local public of the result of the national election. The news was received with tremendous cheers. From this on The Call kept the lead In ad- vising the people of the situation both in the East and In California. | At 6:20 p. m. bulletins were posted | announcing the election of Kahn and Hayes. At 7 p. m. the election of Ker- rigan, Troutt, Murasky and Seawell was announced. By this time a tre- | mendous crowd had collected in front of The Call bulletin boards. The special telegraphic service with Eastern cities was as perfect as it was possible to make it. No expense was spared to give the news at the very | earliest possible moment. Special tele- graph operators were engaged at all | the big Eastern points, and the regular | staff of correspondents was largely | augmented for the occasion. The local reports were handled at the | Registrar's office in the City Hall by reporters of The Call staff. The ne was telegraphed to The Call office over wires especially strung for the paper | use. The public of this city has never | before received the election returns in so rapid a manner. | & B very carefully. - Unquestionably all of them were based on his belief that the Democratic national ticket would be badly defeated. By keeping out of the East he is freed from ay responsibility for the outcome and it cannot be claimed that his utterances in the | West were the cause of the landslide. As to the West itself, he has the cer- ificate of Judge Parker and of the | Democartic National Committee that | his_sérvices were greatly appreciated. The great advantage Bryan reaps is that his supporters everywhere are relieved from the odium of being bn{';ars. is stand is likely to be extremely radical on all of what Re calls the economlic questions. . The tendency of his utterances is expected to be trustive prominenkte of August Bel- | toward the socialism which is mak- mont and the speech-making of | ing headway in the citles rather than Cleveland and Olney.” to the populism which formerly was New York Democrats are loudly | the source of his strength in the denouncing the treachery of Hearst, | farming communi whose literary bureau struck off |eirculars on Monday showing voters ADVERTISEMENTS. how to scratch Parker and vote for Roosevelt. AN OBJECT LESSON In a Restaurant.’ A physician puts the query: Have you never noticed in any large restau- rant at lunch or dinner time the large | number of hearty, vigorous old men |at the tables: men whose ages run from 60 to 80 years; many of them bald | and all perhaps gray, but none of them - | feeble or senfle? Perhaps the spectacle is so common as to have escaped vour observation | or comment, but nevertheless it is an objeet lesson which means something. Jf vou will notice what these hearty | old fellows are eating you will ob- serve that they are not munching bran crackers nor gingesiy picking their way throungh a menu card of new fangled | health foods; on the contrary, they | Seem to prefer a juicv roast of beef, a | properly turned loin of mutton and even the deadly broiled lobster is not | altogether ignored. The point of all this is that a vig- orous old age depends upon good di- gestion and plenty of wholesome food | and not upon dieting and an endeavor | to live upon bran crackers. land’s vote at midnight | majority of at least 300. ral hours with his family. At 10| The Southern gentleman was halted. | in temperament ymay be traeed back|ing the national convention in St.| There is & certain class of food 2% ke (D.) 3082, Lesser (8.) RS TR | k he went to 2408 Webb avenue, “You will have to wait till that gen- | to childhood. A person may be made | Louls was in charge of the Hearst ks who seem to believe that meat 1 r ) 189, For the unexpired OFFICIALS CAST BALLOTS. | oiling place of the Third Pre- | tleman is through,” explained the elec- | also anything if he is caught young | headquarters in that city. S e . . : Metcalf, Knowland Pn which he lives, and east Bis | tion sificer, poInting to the legs of the | enough. The psychologists have a thes| — All of the others who are named as | cOffee and many other good things are £76 McPike's 2738 Metcalf, Pardee, Perkins and Other He was number 70 on the sig- | Chinese in'view under the curtain. | ory that all kinds of instincts manifest | officials of the anti-Parker Democra rank poisons, but these cadaverous, i A Distinguished Men Vote. | nature book. After Mr. Knowland | The colonel was face to face with a | themselves for a time in the growing!ic National League are known to have | sickly looking Individuals are a walk- Dooling (D.) 3560, Walk- g S s 3 had deposited his vote he chatted with | new race problem. He gave vent to a | child and. then disappear unless spe- | had affiliations with Hearst. | ing condemnation of their own theo- s legislati district OAKLAND, Nov. 8. ection day in| the election officers, all of whom were | deep disgust, grew red in the face and | cial attention is given to their develop- | ———— ! ries. N s n:m:‘d:i ‘;:r Oakland was m?de lrm'.ahle only by the | perso l"l frlenfis and neighbors. He 1m'_me voting plac‘e sputtering after | ment. A : s BRYAN'S BIG PROJECT. | The matter in a nutshell is that if . promine sie who came home to|then strolled along Park street in|having recovered his spectacles. This may account in part for the! The etiaddls: dhciola the, ydivres & . en born in| O T e from the presence in thie| COMDanY with his two-vear-old son| Most of the Chinese voted in the ! giversity of feeling toward nature that| WASHINGTON, Nov. 8. — Close | (D¢ Stom: s ral d the enth John G| TOF T h men as Seerctary Metcalf| @1 dropped in at the polling booth | Soventh Precinct, on Stockton street, | exists so unaccountably among men | friends of Bryan delcare that his plans | Se5tive juices in sufficlent quantity any .hm“u’\y €t “."n{ B Soeunttaent’ ot (‘umn?, - o i of the Fourth Precinct. Here his at-|and here Duffield was on duty the day | and women of otherwise congenial|for 1908 are to control the radical and - Wholesome food will be promptiv di- s 4 M W o Lat G s s pept = perce and| tention was called to a novel “kitty” |jong. H. L. Bienfeld was on hand as | tastes. Unless a person fished with a | sémi-socizlistic sentiment in the West | Sested; if the stomach does not do en. M W, Simpson Labor, Governor George C. Pardee, | that the election officers had arranged | watcher for the Merchants' Associa- | tont pin as a child he isn't likely to!and in the East. The old alliance of | so and certain foods cause distress one es his ?lsu’ United es Senator George C. Per-|for the reception of donations. Mr. | tion and there was 2 continuous per- | pecome enthusiastic over the sport as'the South and West may not be re- | or two of Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets s eyt Ml kins, Collector Stratton of the Port of | Knowland yielded up a piece of sil- | formance of merry entertainment. |, ynan The woods may lure, but they newed. The South will Be told that it | after each meal will remove ail diffi- : ¥ Francisco. and ver and went his .way a happler| Bienfeld was free in challenging thel o' likeiy to captivate unless the|gained nothing by breaking away from San Superintendent | culty, because they supply just what Lukens is re- 00 plurality, mhe | Leach of the San Francisco Mint, the P 2: Lukens (R.) 4158, Faw | election was extremely = quiet. There 4 » (8.) 483. The Repu s a large vote ;m]led‘mnd the ballots A capr men f';ln;‘"""'h a8 | were dropped into the Boxes early. e eixth | Distriet, | Strowbridge | Secretary Metcalf had traveled more R.) 1673, Joseph (D.) $42. Forty-seyv.|than 2000 miles in order ‘to cast his strict (R.) 1423, Dodd |vote. Mr. Metcalf has retained his 3 v P e % | residence here and registered the last time that he visited Oakland. To-day FREE &?gfi FREE | ! he exercised his privilege as an Ameri- - | | can citizen, and at 10:30 this morning SUNDAY CALL | | he made his appearance at the polling ; place at the corner of Fourteenth and SMALL ADS. g | Webster streets and deposited his bal- Your choice of {lot. He was alone, and it is said of A CLEAVER | him that he cast his ballot in the quickest time of any one in this aristo- cratic precinct. Mr. Metcalf was just ten seconds in marking his ballot, and there can be no question but that he aveiled himself of the little circle at | the top of the ballot. After voting Mr. Metcalf joined friends at the Athenian Club and there received some special returns that were gent him from Washington. Early this evening Mr. Metcalf telegraphed #———————————————} his congratulations to President Roose- —Or— ! AN EMERY STEEL. ! Both desirable articles and un- usually big values. Free With Every Small Ad in SUNDAY CALL. See Small Ad Page for Further Partic though roorer man. In the afternoon Mr. Knowland vis- ited various precincts in Algneda in an automobile hdndied by CHarles F. | Fletter and which contained besides Mr. Knowland Captain M. W. Simp- son, Republican State Senatorial nom- inee from the Fourteenth District, and J. Clem Bates, who is running for | Assemblyman in the Forty-seventh District. } To-ngiht Mr. Knowland received a | score of congratulatory messages from ! friends throughout the State. —_—————— The raising of Angora goats is a new industry to be established at Fort { Collins, Colo. The ranch of 480 acres is on the north fork of the Big Thomp- |son River, and the company starts| | operations with $25,000 capital and 800 head of goats eligible to registry. Mr. Chamberlain and John Morley are alike in one respect—they both abhor physical exercise and never walk more than a few yards if it is possible to ride. They hold that a.man who works hard with his brain does mnot need great physical exercise. Chinese and Duffield was sponsor for them. The watchman was bubbling with good nature. The watcher was outspoken in hot condemnation of vot- ing by Chinese. / “You're sore because you're not on tep,” Duffield said banteringly. “The gang has always voted the Chinese and now because we have the advantage you are kicking like a sorehead. These Chinese are entitled to vote accord- ing to law and it is not vour place now. to make a kick. Their voting Is on the dead square.” Bienfeld was stirred to chailenging the Chinese with renewed vigor. But altogether he did not shut out more than five votes. One of the Chinese proved to be an ex-convict. “The unknown army,” as the Com- missioner of Pensions calls the living soldiers of the Civil War who have not applied for pensions, numbers about 200,000, or about 30 per cent of the total number of survivors, who are placed at about 900,000. This “unknown army” is applying for pensions at the rate of about 14,000 a year. devotee early learned their ways. The taste for outdoor life :may be culti- vated to some degree, but unless it was developed in youth it is not apt to prove robust.—Kansas City Star. SR R e N Goes Circuit on Indian Trot. Rev. Mr. Strother, a native of the Bermuda Islande, who is a Methodist preacher, his circuit taking in the | roughest sections in the mountains in Tucker and Preston counties, West Virginia, stands out unique. He will not ride-a horse and he can hardly be beaten in a ten-mile race. Some time ago he preached in the Dennison schoolhouse, on Location Ridge, near the Preston County line. When he stepped down from the pulpit it want- ed just one hour of the time he was due at St. George, nine miles distant. He took the road without hesitation and struck an Indian trot, which he never broke during the nine miles. At the end of the hour he was in his pul- pit at St. George, reading the opening hymn of the service and gave not the Jeast sign of fatigue.—Chicago Chron- icle. its: former ally and joining with New York. At the same time Bryan never| has looked on the Southern States as | fruitful soil for propagating his popu- listic or radical ideas. His strength in the West and Southwest will be greatly increased by the overwhelming victory of Roosevelt in New York. every weak stomach lacks, pepsin, hy- dro chloric acid, diastase and nux. Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets do not act upon the bowels and in fact are not strictly a medicine, as they act almost entirely upon the food eaten, digesting it thoroughly and thus giv- If Bryan takes satisfaction in any ing the stomach a much needed rest ope thing it will be in the knowledge , 2 that Judge Parker, on a conservative | 2nd an appetite for the next meal. 1zcform, was worse beaten in the ccm-l, Of people who travel nine out of ten servative East than he himself was on ( use Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets, know- a free silver platform. {ing them to be perfectly safe to use at The Herald representatives in In-|any time and also having found out diana, Illinois and Wisconsin in the | by experience that they are a safe- West and in Connecticut and New Jer- , guard against indigestion in any form, sey in the East have been told that‘ the local leaders of the Bryan Dem- ocracy were already laying plans for the reorganization of the party. This information also reached the Herald from Democratic Representatives in Congress, who had loyaily supported an in his two campaigns. They seemed to know in advance what was going to happen and a sort of free- masonry appeared to have carried the news through a half dozen States. Bryan had apparently laid his plans and eating as they have to, at all ‘hours and all kinds of food, the travel- ing public for years have pinned their faith to Stuart’s Tabiets. All druggists sell them at 50 cents for full-sized packages and any drug- gist from Maine to California, if his opinion were asked, will say that Stu- art’s Dyspepsia Tablets is the most popular and successful remedy for any stomach trouble.

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