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Show ELECTICS ItKTt liXS. I Mr. Richard Warburtou, county i clerk of Tco:'e, sends us the returns re-turns for thai county up to yesterday yester-day mornicg, with the apologetic statement state-ment tint Tooele "b:ing a county of magnificent distances it is pretty hard to get the reports in time." Two precincts pre-cincts had not been heard from. The vote was: Constitution "yep," 72S; constitution "no," Z0. For representative represen-tative in congress Frank Fuller, 730; Mike Fuller, 15; John Carrigan, 1. For State senators from Salt Lake, Tooele and Summit counties Wilford Woodruff, Geo. Q. Cannon, Win. Jennings, Jen-nings, 737 each; Charles II. ITemp-stead, ITemp-stead, 7.14; Lucy Stone, 1. For representative rep-resentative from Tooele county John Rowberry, 7CG; S. W. Wooley, 1. There was a touch of irony in giving one vote to Lucy Stone, the wag who did it evidently desiring to acknowledge acknowl-edge her services in the woman suffrage cause, albeit she is not a citizen of the Territory. So far as the returns have been received from different parts of the Territory, the vote is an average one, and the total number of ballots cast against the constitution is about three hundred. Utah county cast :J, 1 70 votes for the constitution, a;;d 7 against it, with three precincts to hear from. L. K. Harrington and A. 1C. Thurber were elected State senators, aud Win. B. Pace, L. John Nutall and W. Pusen-berry Pusen-berry representatives. Beaver county cast 4 1 1 votes for the constitution; none ag.iiost it. Jesse N. Smith was elected State Benator, and John R. Murdock representative. In Utah and Boavcr counties Frank Fuller received lor representative in congress, as high a vote as east for any candidate. |