The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, August 16, 1906, Page 3

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Ruet Giv es the Gavin McNab City s “Stuffers” Trust.” | ““Shall Felons Remove Judges at Will?’ He Asks. By Gavin HE issue end out of jail Court? Have t and insolent in io defeat When a mai might vote for a agreeable?" Fortunately, tion, which has steadfastly uphe who are trying and indecencies tant than any man; it was the independence, freedom and purity of the grealest institution ization—the bench. . remove Judges at will? Shall| crime dictate the law? Shall the Judge, not the| felon, be punished ? ‘ Because Judge Lawlor sent three stuffers fo| the peniientiary shall the stuffers’ trust be per-;‘“ mitted, by colonization and fraud perpetrated ini the burned district, 1o drive him from'the Superior | and nearly all the rest have kept the police courts| norking overtime. of treason in the form of ballot-box stuffing lc‘ss}can count on thirty-six votes and nol est indication. of a deadlock between Id honesty in public life, elected a substantial majority of the convention delegates. Bui what do the decent, self-respecting people| of the town, the God-fearing, right-living people, men and women, think of these organized villain o Denounces th McNab. in the primary was more impor-| Shall felons, in-jail he coagulated crime and political | debauchery of San Francisco become so impudent its intrenched security that it is| readv fo capitalize itself as an institution payingiz‘i: political as well as other dividends? Who were the thugs that were herded about| the burned districts to loot convention delegates| for infamous uses? Of those who were employed James G. Maguire and his associates | er: running in the Forty-fourth one, to my kn_o'flal—1 cdge, has been in jail eight times, another six times, | n of the character of Maguire| offers his services as a delegate, shall the political | ofial of the tomn be discharged at him because he Judge who has made the practice| the regular Democratic organiza-| through all changes in fortune to rear their children to be good 1es | that are demanding ownership of the government as a right of their order? ‘ ed from Page 1, Column >. Judge Lawlor, were criminal the investiga- becomes plainer town ais- ried on in a marred the who stricts frers cattered far nded for the | has madnl reir prosecu- | one | v the | ed even thelr They made loud on Tuesday probable that out warrants | al doom with inal courts will 3 k. Jowever, it is differ- the hundreds that have | 1 swords with him will nor that ne is relent- t of those that- have doing. While it Is true faction of the Grand ng to listen to his ical corruption against lowers, it is believed that DR. PIERCE'S REMEDIES. A Wonderful Record. As made ug by improved and exacs ses Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip- a most efficient remedy for regu- the womanly functions, correct- placements, as prolapsus, antever- n and retroversion, overcoming painful 0ds, toning up the nerves and bring- about a perfect state of health. qt res the backache, periodical headaches, agging-down distress in the pelvic , the pain and tenderness over 0 abdominal region, dries up the pelvic eatarrhal drain, so disagreeable ng, and overcomes every ss incident to the organs nine. avorite Prescription” is the only for women, the msakers of not afraid to print their the bottle Wn{)per thus patrons into their fuil con- .. the only medicine for women, every ingredient of which has the strongest possible endorsement of the most eminent medical practitioners and writers of our day, recommending it for the diseases for which “Favorite and Prescription” is used. It is the onl pu!ru{/ _medicine for women, sol through druggists, which does not con- a large percentage of alcohol, so 1 in the long run, especially to women. It has more genuine to its credit than all other medi- for women combined, having res saved thousands of sufferers from the perating table and the surgeon’s knife. 1 s restored delicate, weak women to strong and vigorous health and virglity, ing motherhood possible, where there enness before, thereby brighten- making happy m-nf thousands s by the advent of little ones to en the marital bonds and add > where gloom and despondency ed before. V. Pierce. He will send . fatherly, professional advice, envelo absolutely ¢ him at Buffalo, N. Y. . Plerce’s Pleasant Pellets do not gripe. They effectually cleanse the sys- tem of accumulated impurities. | The People’s Common Sense Medical Adviser, by Dr. Plerce, 1008 pages, is sent | "cc on receipt of stamps to PAY expense i maliling only. Send 2i one-cent stamps | for ilie book in paper covers, or 31 stamps for the cloth-bound volume. ddress as above = i’enitentiary Looms Darkly Before the Allied Stuffers | a majority will. In any event, McNab | has the ear of District Attorney Lang- | don, and there are legal ways to the | ultimate end that do not lead through the channels of the law that wind from the Grand Jury room to the doors of | the penitentiary. McNab is after the| stuffers and here arc-some of the dis- | closures that have roused.him to the fight. | BELL'S GANG VOTES. | When election morning came there emerged from the saloon of the moto- | rious Billy Bell,, 427 Seventh streer, forty-five as enthusiastic machine ad- | herents as ever disgraced an American | metropolis. While this place 1s noth- ing but a plain grogshop and pretends to be nothing else save that in the rear are a few bunks that a Chinese would shy at, it boasted of these forty-five voters as permanent residen one of them voted, the majorit the regular Democrat ticket. That so palpable a fraud -was not discovered by the Election Commission and moved against before the outrage was con- | summated is a fact beyond understand- | ing. | McNab says he will at first proceed | against those who voted .from this| place. ery | against minish. fact that instead of running a straight | saloon Bell is conducting a stuffers’ hostelry. serve drinks. only to transient guests; | it did not for a minute believe he would fill his place with bunks from. which | ward heelers could call for drinks to be | served at the expense of the machine | that so comfortably housed them| through the emergency of the primary. AN OVERWORKED TENT. in the Twenty-eighth, where only 360 | voters were registered, 23—fateful | number!—gave their residence as 148 | Hawthorne street. An investigation lisclosed that this number marks the} location of a tent that flapped discon sclately in yesterday's'wind as though | swish away the gathering ashes| that threaten, Vesuvius-like, to bury it forever. Chief among those who walked forth from 148 Hawthorne stréet to exercise the right of the bal. lot is Walter H. Macauley, a Deputy | Sheriff, and those who, according to | thelr oath, dwell with him In the cozy qu}um;(s are the. following: - - | “rank_F. Crowley, : v. | Ellebrook. salesman. flfn’e‘;‘-h L LD laborer; Walter H. Macauley, d’f"‘l.i‘ sheriff:'James P. Murphy, | McCaftrey. blacksmith: Edwara ¥ Mo: | O'Brien. | | Caffrey, plumber: Charles J janitor; W. J. Powers, plumger: Daniel Shelton, laborer; Richard G. Wheart laborer: Albert 'E. Winslow, seamen: John Driscoll, laborer; I J. ‘Hareipnn: | sweeper: E. J. Kealley, fisherman: Johy J. Mahoney. storekeeper: John E, Mo, Carthy, laborer; P, F. McGettigan, la- borer: "John Nugent, laborer; John F.| O'Leary, machinist; James H. Shaiton: | laborer; Patrick Whitney. laborer 3 MONUMENT TO THE PUSH, | But 828 Howard streét will ever stand as a monument to the pollll(’al‘ fide}ity of the push to Ruef. eThis is in | the Twenty-ninth District, which is managed by one “Tom” Finn in the in- terests of the Hérrin satellite. Tt proves to be a popular place with municipal | employes, who are scattered through | the list of forty-seven voters, ‘ who | emerged from its doors on election | morning to do their duty as citizens of | a great metropolis and vote as they were told to vote. Those who regis- tered from 828 Howard street follow: John Adams, clerk; Sam Buxton, un- dertaker; Robert Burke, deputynco,:-:- ner, Morris Bebergal, teamster; George Barry, mailer; William Black, butcher; Frank mailer; Robert Brodie, saloon keeper; Charles Cullen, fireman; Tom Cavenay, cutler: Robert, Déady. teamster, John J. Dougherty,” stable man: Francis. Dougherty,+ boxmaker William E. Doyle, laborer; George E. Elston, teamster: Andrew Flannhery, | stevedore: Francis Fogarty. labbrer: John F. Feehan, bartender; Henry Har- waiter; Edward’S. ~Havens, team- ter: Gray Smith, kitchenman; Norman | F. Hatfield, locksmith; James Harris, {Ji | street. Cont{nued from Page 1, Column 7. strange as it may seem, to obtain the Republican, Democratic and Union La- bor nominations, thus insuring himself | a walkover. Democratic and Unlon Labor nomina- tions, and his judicial heart warms, in the reflection that he and Abe Ruef are close friends. Conlan may turn the trick. ‘While local issues and the startling developments which brought them corth overshadowed for the time State politics the gubernatorial contest was ihe théme of much speculation. The ef- fcet of the primary election upon the aspirations of the varizus candidates the Republican fold h ;! made much clearer and a safer and miore ac- curate estimate of their various posi- tions may be made. Governor Pardee is not yet within striking distance of the nomination. Hn has a very substantial pedestal upon which to stand, however, and is.credited with greater political generalship than opponent. This may enable him to ké necessary combinations and win the prize. To begin with he has the seventy-six votes of Alameda County, not to trade with, perhaps, but to use to advantage in a quick, short fight, which the struggle must be for Pardee to win. . The politiclans argue that the Gov- r.or cannot. deadlock the convention. so he must work quickly. He has Sacra- 12€nto, Sonoma, Solano and Napa, which, combined with the'others that held no primary- election’ under. the law, give him a total of 334 votes. Nothing less than 413 will win the prize. Congressman J. N. Gillett has the north, with the exception of Siskiyou He has Fresno, possibly San Diego and perhaps a few in Los Angeles. . He can- not count more than sixty-six votes as his initial strength. J. O. Hayes has the votes of Santa Clara and may get the complimentary vote of San Fran- cisco for one ballot. Warren Porter THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, Word to ardee WAIl New Combinations to Win He feels confident of tho| 15 —_— e niore. It is evident that no candidate has the field at his command. Thus Herrin iS master of the situ- ation. He has the éntire San I'ran- cisco delegation, 159 votes, and can call on Walter Parker for the fifty- four votes in the city.of Los Angeles. It is reasonably ' certain that Parker has a propriétary interest in the other votes of- that.county, and will control, them: all, an aggregate o6f 129. Then there are in various parts of the State 122 votes tabulated as doubtful. RUEF BRINGS OUT GAGE. Who is Herrin's choice for Governor? That is a question' the shrewdest of politiclans . cannot answer except by elimination. It is not Pardee, for he is accused of having been too friendly to the 'Western Pacific when the Southern Pacific needed friends. Ruef sent word down the line yesterday to talk Gage. Ruef can commit atrocities in politics, but seldom is guilty of absurdities. In scouting the name of Gage among the politicians he convicted himself of both. | But.the Ruef clacquers were told to talk Gage. to tell of his reliability, his availability and his varied resources as a reliable friend of corporate interests. 1s it Gage or somebody else of whom no one has vet thought? Herrin may reach a conclusion in a féw days. Some haye believed that the turning down of George Knight as a delegate to the State convention was a slap at Gillett. . 1t was simply a petty revenge worked by Ruef upon Knight and in no way affects Gillett excépt to take from | him on the floor of thé €onvention his | chief sponsor. - EX-GOVERNOR AS DARK HORSE. Republicans in thé southérn part of | the State are being preépared for.the | Gage boom. as is indicated in the fol- lowing special dispatch from the spe- pondent of The Call at Los | cial corres Angeles: “LOS ANGELES, Aug. 14—The name | | of Henry T. Gage will be présented at | the coming Republican State conven tion at-Santa Cruz if there is the slight- Pardee and other candidates and if it seems that Gage has a chance. It is probable that the announcement will not be deferred even that long, for it has been discovered that for weeks a quiet but determined effort has been made here to get men as delegates who, upon mention of Gage's name, would willingly vote for him. “Pardee has no strings on the vote of Los Angeles County. He was in- dorsed only by the Covina precinct convention, which named three dele- gates. San Fernando District instruct- ed its delegates for Warren Porter, but the whole 129 delegates from Los An- geles County are practically unpledged as to the fight for Governor. Not a district in the city gave any instruc- tions and it was in the city districts that the Gage boosters got in their work. DELEGATES TO TAKE ORDERS, In most of the districts the men elected were chosen, seemingly, without reference to their friendship to Gage. ‘but a large number of them were made to promise to take orders and were given to understand that those orders might be to vote for Gage if it was seen that Gage could by any possibil- ity win or compel the supporters of Pardee and Gillette to surrender some of the other offices. A politician known throughout the State stated tonight that he would stake his reputation on the prediction that Gage would be a decided factor in the coming contest. This poiitician has been asked if he wanted to go to the State convention, but replied that he had no such desire. He was then told, that any man who would support | Gage and Keep still about it until the proper time would go to Santa Cruz provided when he got there he would take orders. It is said that the majority of the Los Angeles delegation are thus tied up, a_job that was not difficult to accom- plish_considering the fact that the ma- chine carried every precinct in the city at the primaries. Russian Revolutionists Massacre Hundreds Terroists Attack Municipal Officers and Slay With Ruthless Hands. ARSAW, Aug. 15—Revolu- tionists organized to slay policemen, gendarmes and . infantry patrols began their bloody work here today. The conspir- ators shot and killed seventeen police- men, four gendarmes and seven infan- try patrolmen and wounded a score more. Soldiers charged upon a mob and with a velley killed fifteen and wounded'130. The soldiers used their bayonets freely after firing the volley. The massacre is supposed to have been planned by:revolutionists in re- venge for ‘the arrest recently of ten Soéialist ‘werkmen in the iron working suburb of Praga: 4 - The attacks on. policemen began at 10 ‘o’clock in the morning. About 1 o'clock in the aftéernoén news began to arrive from all parrs of the city, re- vealing the concerted nature .of the attacks. In Ostrovaskia street, fbur men attacked a sergeant of: police, but the latter was able to capture three of them, who were armed with revolvers. In a fight in Torgovia street revolu- tionists shot down .two soldiers and a Jewish merchant was killed by a stray bullet. A band of three men.invaded a grog shop in Cholodena street, where. they wounded a soldier.. The clerk and wife of ‘the proprietor openéd fire on the Invaders and-a passing patrol, at tracted by the disturbance, seized'the entrance of the shop and captured the band. ST. PETERSBURG, Aug. '15.—Acting With this announcement it is|apparently with a definite plan and at| guite probable that the guests at the | a signal, the Terrorists and revolution- | of police and a captain of the army Hotel Bell will largely and rapidly di- | ists today Inaugurated a carnival of were.driving in the suburbs today they The attention of the Police|murderous attacks with bombs and re- | were, attacked by an armed band and Commission will also be called to the; volvers: on . the police and troops 1n;the.\r coachman was killed. The officers of Ufa, various. citles in Poland, echoes which are heard from Samara, This the commission may not | Yalta, Kiev and even far away Chita, | suing engagement one of the revolu- like, as it granted Bell a license to| where the acting Chief of Police was | tionists was killed and.another, fleeing, slain almost on his own doorstep. Other Polish’cities singled out by the terror- ' ists were Random, where a bomb was ] thrown in the police station, killing the |'wife and child of' the captain; Vlot- | slasak, where a captain was slain, and | Plock. where,” at “a given signal the | policemen on all the posts were simul- | taneously attacked and several of them wounded. | CHITA, Aug. 15.—Acting Chief of Police Gorpinichinki was &hot today as he was leaving his home, Thg‘utsqln escaped. S o o VOTSLAVSK, Aug. 15.—.. :yolution- ists armed with revolvers today Killed Chief of Police Mironovitch and serious- |1y wounded Captain Hetroff, the chief | of the rural guard. The murderers es- | caped. ‘ | LODZ, Aug. 15—Three hombs were |thrown into the station-hbuse of the | third police precinct here at 6 o'clock | this evening, and, exploding, wrecked | the building and an adjoining lodging- | housé and wounded six soldiers of the guard seriously. three policemen and the wife of the captain of the precinct. | A bomb was thrown at two Cossacks in | Nicholas street, killing one of them and | wounding the other. A soldier was killed and a soldier and a policeman | wounded in Alexander street and an- | other patrolman was killed in Peter | street { Following the bomb outrages infant- | ry patrols fired volleys-ip all direc- | tions in several streets, the firing con- ‘tlnulng until 10 o'¢lock at night. Over | twenty.persons were severely wounded |and many others were slightly injured. | Traffic was suspended and the shops | closed. SAMARA, Aug. 15.—While a captain | defended themselves in their carriage | until the arrival of a patrol, In the en- fell and & bomb which he was carrying Iexploded and blew oOff his hand. e - cook; Richard Hughes, collector; Fred- erick P. Horstmyer. laborer; H. W. Ir- win, stableman; Edmund Johnson, wait- er; Patrick J. King, laborer; J. P. Lally, clerk; , William Leater; teamster: Frank J. Mayhew, waiter: Christopher i 5 eddler:. H. . J. McKnight, ugh McDonough, peddler; harles F. McCauley, laborer; Fred T. McGarry, lineman; John O. Fallon, sta- bleman; Dennis Quinlan, clerk; John F. Quinlan, laborer; Willlam Reilly, waiter; John Riordan, laborer; Joseph Rankin, teamster; John F. Sweeney. la- borer; Charles E. .Stein, watchman; Morgan S. Toy, walter; Willlam L. Tan- nian, clerk; John L. Wild, elerk. Peter Joseph Kelly, sald to be a rela- tive of Martin Kelly, deceased boss, whose connection with the Senatorial boodle scandal ‘nearly scared him. to death, though it did place another feather, in the eyes of the push, im his cap of iniquity, looms among the colo- nizers as mine host to a motley collec- tion of fifteen registered from 241 Steu- art street. Here'is the bunch: Joseph Kelly. deputy revenue coltector: Chatles G. Buckley. machin- ist; Btrnt Christiansen, brlgge— builder; acob ~ Englert, “~'laborer? ~Marshall French, foreman: John Howard. marine fireman; Robert Moffatt, oiler; Timothy J. O'Leary. bookbinder: Axel Svenson, seaman: John Enright. mail clerk; ‘harles T. Gilman. bartender; Walter rsen. liguor dealer; James W. O’'Con- not. . guard: Fred Oscar Peterson, watchman; Milikel Sutse, seaman. EGAN IN THE DEBRIS, Thomas Francis Egan heads the. list of ten who registered from 381 Sixth The middle name, “Francis,” tends to throw one off the track, but when this'is reduced to plain "F.” there emerges from memory the knowledge that this is noné& other than the Com- missioner, of ‘Works. Dwelling at 381 Sixth street amid the debris with Egan, as attested by the register, are:. . § Frank A. Markey, deput* coroner; D, 3, Creigliton. clerk: W. J. Fiynn, paint- J:dmes R G{lnt. fllrt}ndg{r:di Ken: eamster; LT, eading, dru e ist; T. J. Hllone% laborer: Jame“ B. unn, . teamster; Thomas Francis Egan Jr., electrician. , A pretentious bunkhouse at 1307 | Howard street preserved a residence in the Thirtieth District to a distinguished | ompany of Ruef administration of- ficfals. Among the most distinguished ‘of the distinguished are the followin, J. F. Nichols, Tax Collector; George B.., Benham, Deputy Auditor; Louf! Claveloux, Deputy.Tax Collector; He: Ingwerson, employed in the Audil 1lito and his Deriocratic backing would office, and F. E. Wallace, Deputy Sheriff. Further investigation will without doubt disclose that many. other colon- ies composed of the push element were located in these districts as well as'in the Thirty-first, Thirty-second, Forty- second, Forty-third, Forty-fourth and Forty-fifth districts. - And - McNab 'is after them. Many of those that are recognized just as plain political scum, willing 'to do any man’'s bidding for the price, will probably escape to pose as heroes in campaigns’'to come. But there are some of the bigger fry for whom the future looms dark ana whose garmeritss within the year may not be tailor-made and may bear the stripes of black and white, which cast no honor, save on the guiltless—who never wear them.' —_— POOLROOM 'AFFILIATIONS * HURT MARTIN IN MARIN Republicans Also Look Askance at the Support Sam Lenke Is Giving the ‘Would-Be Assemblyman, SAN RAFAEL, Aug. 15.—A stiff fight will be waged at the Republican prim- ariés to be held throughout Marin Qounty on Saturday, August 18, for the selection of delégates to the Marin County Républican, Convention which will meet at San Rafael on Angust 25, between William J. Martin, Town Trus- tee of Sausalito, on one side and Ed- ward 1. Butler,.an attorney of Point Reyes on the other for the Assembly nomination. ° \ x Martin is being actively and vigor- ously supported by Sam-Leake,.a Dem- ograt and now a resident of Ross; M. F. Cochrane, éditor of the Independent, and a member of the State Central Democratic Committee, and his brother, James W. Cochrane, who has lately re- nounced Democracy and embraced Re- publicanism. 2 Sl ¥ Martin is being strenuously opposed and Butler as vigorolsly %»or'z‘:d by the Republican organizatipn, led by Chairman E. Martinelli, on the ground that Martin's clése afliations with the poolroom interests in Sausa- make bhim a poor candidate. Martin says, of course, that YI:'e will not be in- fluenced. 1f electe Yy thé poolrooms and will vote for . measure for their prohibition, but Chairman Martinetli winks the other eye an WOon't .do.% L. s The ‘principal . says “He A atile-siound will be] CHICAGO: # Y50 + at San Anselmo, where the two oppos- nig forces are making a close canvass of the voters, and every Republican will go to the polls and cast his ballot. In this precinct W. S. Leake is making Martin's fight and Sheriff Taylor has gone in strong for Butler. The public activity of Leake in Mar- tin's fight has added strong support to the Butler forces, as the Republicans of the county generally deem Leake an objectionable factor in the struggle. The prevailing impression is that the organization will have no difficulty in nominating Butler. ol L Goodyear Rubber Company. Office and salesroom at their rubber factory, 218-220 Spear st., bet. Howard and Folsom. Tel. Temporary 1723. * TG Labor Delegates Caucus. OAKLAND, Aug. 15.—The “majority end” of the Union Labor party delegates to the County Convention caucused to- night at Central Labor Council Hall and indorsed Charles E. Thomas for Assessor, G. W. Bacon for Auditor and C. D. Rogers for Treasurer. J. Smart wds chairman and F. C. Weber secre- tary. The c@ucus adjourned to the call of the chair. —_—_— | | will win. eelers to Shout for age Fight for Assessorship in ameda County. AKLAND, Aug. 15.—It's hammer and tongs between County As- sessor Henry P. Dalton and Charles E. Thomas of Berkeley for the Republican nomination for As- sessor. Dalton declares he will win the prize. Thomas says the combination has been made which will give him 200 delegates and more, if necessary, out of the 286 in the county convention. In short, Thomas figures six more than a majority at this time. The ‘Dalton-Thomas disturbance has taken precedence over the Tisdale and Mehrmann contest in the Republican camp. The politicians are wondering why Thomas is making so many claims of strength against Dalton, whe has campaigned twice as an independent and won both timeés. Thomas refuses to open his coat and show what he says he Mas up his sleeve. But the street-corner gossip gives him a call on the Forty-seventh, the Fifty-first, the Fifty-second and enough from the Forty-sixth to nomi- nate. The first three districts total 170 delegates, and Thomas' followers say he can get at least thirty from the Forty-sixth. It will require 194 to nominate, so here are half a dozen votes to the good. UNION LABOR FOR THOMAS. Thomas will be the cauc®#s nominee of the Union Labor political party, if the Bowen-Petry forces retain control, and with a working majority of at least thirteen votes, that wing expects to_handle the Labor party convention. Now, Dalton does not concede that Thomas can programme the entire Berkeley (Fifty-second District) dele- gation against him for Assessor. He says a lot of the delegates were named by Charlie Spear and Judge Waste, and Dalton expects to get some votes out of the Thomas camp. Dalton says he will have the Forty-eighth, Forty- ninth and Fiftieth solid and can get a good share of the Forty-sixth. The Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth and Fiftieth show 158 delegates. If the Forty-sixth and Fifty-second help along, Dalton If not, he is beaten for the nomination., One reservation must be made in looking over the politics of the county fight, and it is this, that much depends upon the result of the State fight. The State Republican Convention precedes the County convention. The reaction from the big gathering at Santa Cruz will be felt in this county strongly for in spite of every effort to d the State from the county polities, there are strings here and there which here is the hope of some of the op- posing candidates. A decisive victory for Pardee in the State convention would be reflected here in favor, undoubtedly, of his friends in the county convention, and if the reverse is true, Pardee's defeat would affect the situation to the bene- fit of his political opponents. TISDALE AND MEHRMANN, Tisdale has an advantage today over Mzhrmann in that his® Alameda com- starter of 118 delegates to Mehrmann's sixty-five in the Fiftleth District. DENVER, Aug. 15.—The Democratic State committee today selected Denver. September 11, as the place and time for the next Democratic convention. Mehrmann's friends say he has per- sonal strength enpugh to cut into | every delegation in the convention, and | wreck here they insist that a programme “down cannot be easily cut loose from, and | bination with Berkeley gives him a Dalton Opposed by Charles Thomas the lne” against him will not hold On the other side, Tisdale adherents assert that the die is cast for the Ala- |medan and nothing can break it | Again the State convention résult must |be considered. What to make of the Everett Brown-Clarence Crowell battle over the nomination for District At- torney is hard to define. Crowell will |80 into the convention with the sixty- five delegates from the Fiftieth Dis- trict. Everett Brown hasn't a dele- | gate from his own district, yet the talk |along the street is programme for | Brown. Under all the rules of politics Crowell should, as between himself and Brown. win, but politics is a peculiar proposition and there might be a slip. Way down under the surface the |story is being circulated of a com- binatfon move to throw the control of the convention and the next Republi- |can county committee into the hands |of the oppesition to Governor Pardee’ |friends in county politics. The same figures which are used by the Thomas |following are put to the front as evie dence of a move in that direction. Again looms the gubernatorial battle as a factor. Withal there is enough te |interest the politicians, in spite of the |fact that harmony prevails to date onm | most of the Republican candidates. ABE ATTELL GIVEN THE DECISION. GRAND RAPIDS, Mich., Aug. 15.— | Hisses, jeers and continued cries of | “Rotten! “Rotten!” greeted the ciose | of a sensational fifteen-round fight té= | night when Referee Siler of Chicago | gavée Abe Attell of San Francisco the | decision over Frank Carsey of Chicago. | Carsey led the fighting fér eight rounds, and from then until the end it was almost even, Carsey repeatedly | sent stiff lefts ‘to the face of . the world’s featherweight champion, and for the last six rounds Attell bled pro- fusely from the nosa Only once did Attell land a blow | that looked in any way dangerous. That was in the fourteenth rc :nd, when after a terrific mix-up in the center of the ring Attell clipped Carsey a hard left on the head that turnéd the Chi- cagoan clear around and all but sent him down. Attell was lightning fast. | Carsey was clever in blocking and | ducking. | At the end of the fight Carsey bore |no marks of the encounter, while At~ | tell was covered with blood. When Attell was given the decislon the crowd rose almost as one man and hissed. —_— Ome Car In Commission. A lone passenger car was run over the California street line yesterday. By Sunday the company expects to have four cars in operation. In thirty days at the most the regular schedule will be resumed with eight new cars; all of “which are now being prépared at the power-house at the cormer of Hyde and | California streets. | R — | NEWCASTLE, Aug. 15.—In a freight tonight one man, Peter Beck, was killed and five hurt. To the Man Who Appropriates $1,000 | Annually for Advertising A great many of Lord & Thomas’ most successful clients began their advertising with appropriations of a thousand dollars and cven less. HE Lord & Thom: grown to be the largest advertis- ing agency in America through the successful development of small advertisers. Today our volume o $4,000,000.00 per year—represents the appropriations of nearl; the average appropriation is less than $6,000.00 per year. Some of our clients who started with small appcr&%riafions are now placing .00 yearly with us, and their businesses have grown and are continuing to grow in proportion. The great majority of our clients are over $100, now appropriating less per year. Our future 3 rowth de&filds upon the development of these $3,000.00- a-year advertisers into the $100,000.80-a~ year class. ‘We want an opportunity to show you how YOU can start advertising with a small appropriation and get into the $100,000.00-a-year class. The small investor greatest need ef pro investment. We realize appropriation of the beginner means more to him than the $100,000.00 2ppro- priation of the older a govern ourselves accordingly,. We want to tell you how your advertising appropriation by basing your investment on the only LORD & THOMAS as Agency has ~ trustworthy guide in advertising —the Lord & Thomas Reeord of Results. Our exclusive Record of Results is the classified, indexed tabulation of actual results from hundreds of small and f business — 700 clients, so large advertising campaigns. This record is interpreted, and the posi- tive knowledge gained thereby is applied to your business by the ablest and highest salaried corps of than $3,000.00 develop th One of n always is in city every few tection for his that the $1,000 dvertiser. We way. We are ‘bound we safe-guard our representatives . k-uipg-wh-_ds.-fl:nh ‘which we send free to interested advertisers. advertising men in America. That is why we can and do develop small advertisers, because we elimi- nate practically all of the waste in advertising due to the use of wrong copy and wrong media. We want to explain to you, in the detailed workings of the Thomas Record of Results and just how our organization can apply what it teaches to your business. We want to explain to you why we are particularly anxious for and how we are peculiar! with the greatest care. Pord & small accounts ly organized to i is in your days looking after the interests of some of our present clients. That is why we are advertising in this newspaper—to you—NOW. * A letter granting us an interview in your office will not obligate you in any books (cloth NEWSPAPER - MAGAZINE - OUTDOOR ADVERTISING- B A LARGEST ADVERTISING AGENCY IN AMERICA ANNUAL VOLUME PLACED FOR CLIENTS, 8§4,000,000.00

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