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Show DAILY UTAH STATE JOURNAL, QUAKEH AFTEB till IS TIE BOSSES isctenre. They are pulling every his- sible wire to protect tnemselvea. The disreputable elements or t;ie city, as a matter of course, are working day and In tough night fur the ring ticket. wards the city party will have little oi iiu chance. A number of public service corporations, managed j Notice of Municipal Election 1905 TO j by respectable people, have Joined hands with the gang. These corpora- tions have reeeUed many corporate fa. vurs hi the !ast ami ure looking for i more In the future. The Pennsylvania Railroad comjwny is doing the best it can, according to current reopri, to drive its thousands of employes away from the city party ticket. The Philadelphia Rapid Transit company has ordered all Its motormen and conductors to hand Into their offices their names and addresses, the object evidently being to have their action on election day watched over by some company foreman. This has enraged the men. however, and they have threatened to strike If an attempt Is made to enforce the order. Mayor Weaver has made a wonderful ault from a mediocre city father to a popular idol. He has rushed around the city of late in an aautomobile, speaking at one meeting after another in succession. In each case there have been significant gatherings. Halle and tents have been packed early In the evening, overflow meetings have been resorted to, and everywhere the mayor has been received with unbounded enthusiasm. As Is the case In the Jerome movement In New York, people are participating here in the active management of the city party who have hitherto never paid any attention to MiUtlcs. Poor men have contributed small sums out of their wages, and the real Interest manifested by the rank and file of the city Is the best possible Index to the extent of the revolution. Mayor Weaver Is not a particularly attractive speaker. He would not, under ordinary circumstances, carry a crowd with him. Hll diction Is he frequently rambles, and often repeats himself; yet circumstances have put him to the front, and the peo- pie are doing the best they can to keep him there. They cheer him long and loudly, and the mayor, who never has been a bad man, although he consorted with the gang for years, rejoices In these evidences of popular approval, and shows It by his manner. He has found out late In life, to be sure that It really pays to be honest in poll, tics, and that reform Is the bert means of the hearty support of the r Gang Rsalixss Thia ia Its Daath and ia Work'ng Vary Hard. Strug-gl- a Nov. 6. TomorPHILADELPHIA, the battle of the uallota In thia city and great Interest la manlfeated in the reault. The old town la getting after Ita rascals with a snarp atlck, and the once powerful teacera of the gang, who, until within the laat few months, were positively contemptuous regarding the ability of the people to revolt, are now manifestly frightened. Penrose, Durham, Martin and all the other rulers of high and low degree have come to the conclusion that they are already beaten In this election, and furthermore that they are likely to lose their hold on the state treasury, which has been one of their favorite sources of political supply. The people of Philadelphia have been in the past Indifferent to the purity of the ballot, and the machine has gone ahead stealing everything In sight and by the putting their own men in office most shameless corruption on election day. They will result to their old tactics tomorrow, but conditions have row Ia changed marvelously and indications are that while there may be a good deal of lighting at the polls, the police and thousands of city party watchers will be able to secure a clean election that Is, clean for Philadelphia. There has been a real political revolution here. There Is not a great deal of talking on street comers or In hotel earlobbies, but people are in deadly cernest, and Philadelphia will almost tainly be redeemed, for the time being, at least, from the rule of lta corrupt political ring. Thera la more than one sign or this Philadelregeneration. The women Inof the fight, phia have taken a handnew city party and are supporting the In the most effective fashion. Under the old rule the machine bosses permit ted the open existence of gambling houses and the most disreputable kind of resorts, all of which were made to organisapay regular tribute to the tion. It was this thing which started now the women to work until tney are one of the strongest forces behind the tac Mayor Weaver. They adoptedcome out to the people of tics getting They recomand fight In the open. mended that householders and bust ness men who were opposed to the ring and who intended to support the new tty ticket, should display party colors. This suggestion has been adopted, and the streets of Philadelphia have blossomed out with American flags tied with blue and yellow, the colors of the extent of city party. The number and these decorations, which can be seen on every street indicate how complete the revolt of the people has been and how large a vote will be recorded for the city party tomorrow If the promises for election are fulfilled. No one who has not studied the situation here can have any Idea of the average depravity of a Philadelphia election. There Is practically no check Testimony has at all on repeating. been given In court in the last few days showing how bold these political crooks have been all over the city. If the stories had not been told under oath and the election officers held to ball by an honest magistrate. It would be Impossible to convince the people In other cities of the brasen wickedness of the methods made use of to carry elections in this city of brotherly love. In the particular case In Question, which happened to be In Senator Penrose's own election district, representing the center of the city and Including hotels and clubs, an unblushing fraud was committed. The registers of two or three big hotels were copied on to the election llsta The repeaters voted under these names of transients, and tattered negroes and unkempt white men were permitted to go to the polls and report themselves as having residence at Walton or Bellevue Stratford. Dozens upon dozens of boarding houses and private establishments were aim Uarly populated for the purpose of vot Ing. At an election In this district last February dozens of men have testified they voted the city party ticket. . Tet so bold had the gang become and so confident that they could not be punished that not a single vote was returned In Senator Penrose's own district as having been officially cast for the city party candidate. Living at one of the big downtown hotels is Justus C. Strawbrldge, retired millionaire merchant, who Is known to He half the people In Philadelphia. swore that he did not vote at all laat February, and yet he Is recorded as having voted, having been personated by a negro who would not be employed to sweep out the vestibule of his big store. Dr. James, one of the witnesses, who itas a city party watcher, testified that a repeater came to the window and actually voted under the name of one of his own patients. He protested at the time that he was well acquaint ed with the appearance of his own patient. but the Judges admitted the vote cast by the repeater and made no con cealment of their amusement at the folly of any one protesting such ac , tlons. In almost every precinct of the city defiant fraud of this character was committed last February- - The same tomorrow and the thing yould be done would not have a city party ticket not for the were If it show of a ghost of Mayor heart of complete change Weaver. He and his associates In this new civic revolution have had erased from the registry list the namesdimof more than 50,000 phantoms. The how many culty Is that no one knows In more there are of the same kind. some precincts where the hamsters were particularly active the actual vote than tho cast has frequently been more ana entire population,, men. women marchildren, so It Is evident that the election gin of fraud in the coming all. after he large may The Philadelphia gang, which la the is nucleus of the stnfe organisation, for its ex- fight a desperate mnklng CITY, UTAH, NOVEMBER 7, BE HELD IN OGDEN i CITIZENS, REGARDLESS OF PARTY, MAKING A GREAT FIGHT. PAGE SEVEN NOVEMBER 6, 1905. MONDAY, BBS " WMBIMBMW M s Bi j IS NOTICE HEREBY GIVEN THAT ON TUESDAY, WILL BE HELD IN OGDEN ELECTION OF THE 7TH DAY CITY, UTAH, FOR THE PURPOSE NOVEMBER, OF ELECTING 1905, OFFICERS FILL THE FOLLOWING AN S TO SEVERAL MUNICIPAL OFFICES, TO WIT: OFFICE OF MAYOR, OFFICE OF OFFICE AUDITOR, OFFICE OF TREASURER. OFFICE OF CITY ATTORNEY, AND OFFJCfe OF. JUDGE, MUNICIPAL OFR-CORDE- AND TO ELECT ONE COUNCILMAN FOR EACH OF THE OGDEN CITY. (BEE LIST OF NOMINATIONS PUBLISHED HEREWITH). THE HOURS FOR VOTING AT SAID ELECTION WILL BE BETWEEN OCLOCK P. M. W. MUNICIPAL 7 ipARDS R, OF jF O'CLOCK A. M. s' J. CRITCHLOW, CitKecorder. T List of Nommations Municipal Election, Ogden, UtahNovember 7, 1 905. Office. Republican RUDOLPH FOR MAYOR. KUCHLER Democratic Socialist E. M. CONROY HENRY H. KINSEY pro-sal- e, FOR RECORDER. WILLIAM J. CRITCHLOW ALBERTU8 FOR AUDITOR. MR8. FLORENCE O'NEIl 8TANFORD MRS. HATTIE i j j FOR TREA8URER. E. WADE JAMES E. HALVERSON JAME8 H. RILEY JOHN E. BAGCEY JOHN C. DAVIS FOR CITY ATTORNEY. FOR MUNICIPAL BRAGONJE JOHN D. JUDGE. JRPHY V. L. CHAMBERLAIN MR8. HARRIET CHAS. JOSEPH A. JOHNSON J. TRIBE M ACLACHLAN JAMES T. AXLEY ser-urln- g people. On the other hand, the bosses have been hit hard of late and seem to be sliding down the toboggan at an In- creasingly rapid rate. They realised early In the campaign that they would probably lose this election In Philadelphia, but they were not especially excited about that as the coroner, sheriff and other officers to be elected now are not absolutely necessary to the scheme of graft They had no notion that the wave of reform would strike the state, and neither had the city party men themselves. But when Mayor Weaver and his able counsel. Judge Gordon, began Investigating they turned up some new evidences of graft almost every day. The filtration report, showing an average profit to the gang of more than 80 per cent of Its contract, has been the last of the Important developments but has been by no means the only one. The smallpox hospital, the consumptives' pavilion and half a dozen other public Works were all made to pay tribute to the ring. Under ordinary circumstances the revolution would have been purely local, but the revelations In regard to the Pittsburg bank have set the people crasy. They openly charge In their meetings of that organization men are directly responsible for the death of poor Clark, the cashier, who committed suicide, and it Is generally believed and asserted throughout the state that every bank that has been favored with a deposit of state funds has been compelled to lend money and discount notes to unscrupulous politicians who have had control of the state treasury. COUNCILMEN . AH, THERE, J. WE8LEYI Former Ogden P re sc her Again Bobe Up Serenly. DENVER, Nov. 6. A dispatch from New York says the Rev. John Wesley Hill, pastor of the James Methodist Episcopal church, Brooklyn, has asked District Attorney Clarke of Kings county to procure the Indictment for criminal libel of the Rev. Dr. R C Swallow of Harrisburg, Pa., and to have him brought tp Broklyn for trial. Swallow was the recent Prohibition candidate for president According to the story Dr. Hill told Mr. Clarke, Mr. Swallow has been attacking him for several months, among other things, accusing him of falsehood, peculiar real estate peculations In Utah and finally with plagiarism. Dr. Swallow by meaans of a parallel column In his paper, the Church Forum, tried to show that Dr. Hill had used as his own words In a sermon delivered on September 25 last an extract from a sermon delivered many years ago by Bishop Matthew Simpson. He further charges that Dr. Hill made free use, without credit of a lecture by Bishop Fowler on Abraham Lincoln." HOME FOR OLD HORSES. Kentucky Gentleman Fixing Up sn Asylum for Aged Steeds. LOUISVILLE, Ky.. Nov. The Kentucky Humane society, which met here today for Its regular annual meeting, will consider a unique plan, the like of which has probably never been under consideration in any country. A plan Is to be considered for establishinfirm ing a retreat for aged and closed horses. During the year Just the society, which has now more than 350 members, has cared for more than At 9.000 horses and other animals. for present the society has no funds dethe establishment of a home for that libcrepit horses, and It is hoped fund will a such to eral contributions be forthcoming when required. A Disastrous Calamity. It Is a disastrous calamity when you lose your health, because Indigestion and constipation have sapped It sway. Vrompt relief can be had In Dr. King's New Life Pills. They build up your digestive organs, and cure headache, colic, constipation, etc. dizziness, Guaranteed by Ogden druggists; !5c. STAife WEBR of uth ; COl In. j. CRITCHLOW, CITY RECORDER OF OGDEN CITY, UTAH, DO HEREBY CERTIFY THAT AND FOREGOING 18 A FULL, TRUE AND CORRECT LIST OF ALL PERSONS NOMINATED THE FOR MUNICIPAL OFFICES OF OGDEN CITY, UTAH, TO BE VOTED FOR AT THE MUNICIPAL ELECTION TO BE HELD TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1905, A8 CERTIFIED TO ME ACCORDING TO LAW AND A3 APPEAR OF RECORD IN THE OFFICE OF THE CITY RECORDER. I, AigE WHEREOF I HAVE HEREUNTO SET MY HAND AND AFFIX THE CORPORATE SEAL OF OGDEN CITY, THIS 30TH DAY OF OCTOBER, 1905. IN TESTIMONY , W. J. CRITCHLOW, City, Recorder. justing of a rubber band to the keys lute. They are his, for he made them. of a box could defeat the will of the He holds the alleged civil service com- F NOTICE. Elko Eclipse Gold Mining company, principal place of business, Ogden, Utah. There are delinquent upon the following described stock on account of assessment levied on the 7th day of September, 1906, the several amounts set opposite the names of the respective stockholders as follows: voter. There is a lever for each can mission In the .hollow of his hand. Ills dldate to be voted for. By putting a confidential clerk Is in the mayor's ofrubber band under the lever the ma fice as the mayors manipulator. His would not register the vote, even power is supreme In inspiring, directchine IN SAN the though the voter believed he had cast ing and controlling the mayor and lima ballot. It was then oieiily charged mayor's appointees. Within those that this was a scheme to defeat tho its he is as powerful rs the grand Turk fusion candidate, and a storm ensued In Constantinople. And with all this that shook the city. It is safe to say power. In a situation wherein he might DEM0CRAT8 AND REPUBLICANS that every voter will look for that ruD deserve and gain the gratitude of every decent man or woman In Ban Francisco ber band tomorrow. WORKING AGAIN8T SCHMITZ. dives, the Schmitz Is handicapped In his cam' he has given us the open low and corthe rooms, pool yawning Ruef. of Abe the friendship palgn by school rupt city officials, the corruption of the Union Labor Candidate is Having tho Abe Isn't popular In Sunday ordl the boys police, the defiance of the city civil among circles, although 8trugglo of Hia Life nances, (he degradation of the as classed a town Is good he around Thia Tima. fellow. The fight has been made on service, the waste of public money, and gained for himself the Ruef, and the Chronicle especially has has thereby of the hoodlums, the support It looks been making war on him. Jn Its edi- adoration BAN FRANCISCO, Nov. of the criminals and the enthusiastic like a victory for the fusion forces to- tion of Saturday laat and yesterday Indorsement of the slums, the rioters, beIt has and John this tall morning morrow, and unless all signs morning and their hat Hues, and dens vile the Reat ta all with the energy bored Ruef S. Partridge, the candidate of the social eleof the others all of degraded publican and Democratic parties for ita command. Is a blight whose existence ments very Saturday It said: mayor, will defeat Schmitz, the union Ills balefuf o nour common labor candidate, who has occupied the Nominally we shall defeat Schmitz Influence covers humanity. our city like a pall." will who Is Ruef It been at the polls. Really chair for two terms. It has That Schmitz will lose Is evidenced hard fought campaign, with the press be beaten. Schmitz hardly counts. the figures: Take 70.000 votes cast by of the city practically unanimous What he is told to do he does and as the basis of computation. Schmitz And boss. to hamIn hii his been Schmitz. He fidelity has glories against must receive at least 35,000 to win. most all odds the dangerous is Ruef mered and Jolted every cay. Charges by Probably a larger vote than this will of graft, of standing In with the Ten- boss whose rules this city has hitherto be cast, but of the excess 2,000 or 3,000 Igbeen derloin, of working hand In hand with endured. Other bosses have should be credited to the Socialist the gamblers and saloon men have norant. Ruef Is a student and a schol- ticket, and it Is conceded on all sides of other freely and openly been made. The fu- ar. The ordinary associations If the vote polled runs into still sion candidate, In hia speeches, has al- bosses have been vile. Ruef lives that figures It will be to the advan8. H. liaison larger bosses Other reluded to this and has promised the among decent people. of tage S. H. Hobson Partridge. Rurfs venal. profits, shall dens been have element the that openly spectable Schmitz's vote at the fast election S. H. Hobson be closed and San Francisco made a whatever they may be. have been scru- was, In round figures, 26,000. To win S. H. Holton bosses have clean city. pulously concealed. Other offices. In the present contest on the basis of R H. Hoblon 230 Ruef of sale When I am mayor the red light oienly lived by the a vote of 70,000 the Incumbent must 8. H. Hoblon shall no longer be above the fireside has a flourishing practice in a respect- receive at least 9,000 more votes. To 8. JL Hoblon lamp, has been the slogan of Part- able profession. The Instincts of other do this he must get an average of 600 & H. Hobson Rueffa brutal. low and at been hammered have that he bosses has and ridge, additional votes In each of the H. Hoblon until the respectable portion of society training and environment hare been assembly districts of the city. eighteen 8. 8. H. Hob) And has become imbued with the idea that those of an educated gentleman. When the well Informed cltlxen or 8. H. Hop San Francisco Is Just about the worst this training, those advantages and politician Is asked & H. Hor town on the face of the earth, and they those, unquestioned talents he has perCan Schmlts get an average In- And In ascafdance with law and are willing to go to the polls and .vote verted from the noble public uses to crease of 500 votes In each of the eight- order of km board of directors, by devoting them early In order to rid themseives of such which he Is capable ofhorde the quick and Invariable many of een districts?" of shares of each parcel of a Ignoble a condition of affairs. In their eager- to the direction of Is: "He cannot." And the In- stock as answer to who be necessary will be pander ness they can hardly wait until tomorand politicians corrupt jpiay conclusion Is emphasized by sold at lie office of ' Jesse J. Driver, row, and as soon as they have cast the criminal, the vile, the reckless, the disputable statement: additional the treasurer 2363 Washington avenue; their ballots they will expect the re- Ignorant and the passionate that therebe he And will if extremely lucky on the 37th day of Ocformation to begin. by they may gsln by the plunder of the he receives an average of 500 more Ogden, Utah, tober, 1905, at the hour of 3 oclock The Schmitz crowd haven't been Idle public. In each of the seven districts p m.. to pay delinquent assessments all this time, either. The labor unions "For four years it has been known voles he carried two rears ago." thereon, together with cost of adverhave been active, and the supporters that if any one wanted anything which which tising and expenses of sale. of that element have been leaving no :the administration1 was not compelled I Thsnk tho Loft! W. B. WILSON, Secretary. If you stone unturned In their efforts to line to grant he must see Ruef. luWOT Rock, Elko Eclipse Gold Mining Company. wish for s Job for yourself or your Cried Hannah Plant of up every voter. A week ago It was said that there friend, you must see Ruef. If you wish Ark., "for the relief I got fpnn Buck The date of sale of above delinquent was a scheme by which the will of the for a license for a grog shop or a the- ten's Arnlcal Salve. It anvfix my fearvoters could be defeated at the polls. ater, you must see Ruef. If you desire ful running sores, whits nothing else stock has been postponed to Saturday. Ban Francisco stood aghast, for here to construct building In defiance of' would heal, and fron which I suf- November 11, 1905, same hour and we have the supposedly unbeatable the fire ordinance. you must see Ruef. j fered for five years.VIt Is a marvel- place as above. By order of the Board of Directors. voting machine. But a linotype oper- His control of the police commission1 ous healer for cuts, burns and wounds. W. B. WILSON, Secretary. ator came In and showed how the ad and the board of public works Is abso Guaranteed by Ogden druggists; 25a. Him . je |