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HUGHES ELECTED GOVERNOR ' Pro1·lden~~ nnd Woonsocl>ct, 11. Re· OJ\l •. \110:\1.\, pnblloun in Centn\I Pulls n.ud Uepnh· Guthrie, Okl11 .. -·Tho ronsl.ltullotl lican gains n.r.;~ I'EillOI'tod lu Pn'!l·tuolt• ot tho new State (lr. Oltlnhomn w!JI.be t:'t, tl1ongh t.he ell~· Is Democt•altc. It wrl~ten hl' Demorrut~. Vel'non loo)!JJ M IC lJ. L. D. llrunger, DOI111)• Whltlnp;, SCPI'Cl~r~· oC lh • Oklahoma Ct\UFOitNII\. Gn n F!'llllclaco.-- llepon.R fl'On\ nil l~nding conntl•lR or Callfurnla ~how tlln.t. Oil lett (Rep.) Ia olel\t•d Qov• ~'t'no1· by nl: hmat 2r.,ooo plul'allty. 'J'hesa figm·ea may bo htnrllalled wben l'llll l'etur•ns CCilllO In from Soul.hot'll Cnllrot•nla, whol'e the Hopnbllr.nn vnte was l•xu·emely houvy, In Snu Jl't•an• c·IRC(I tho l'lllo WHS clo~l', I.,unl{don (Ill· clependoctt Loaguo) p(llllng ncat•ly liS l!ll'go n voto as Bell Ol' Gillott. rrat. 11 Ill I'Oialu his sent In CousrN~, Republican CQntml ('ommlltcc. <'Oil· !l~ 11':11 ;\din D. C!lpi'Oll, ltc•tmbllcan. ccdos tile DCIIlOCI'al~ t.h~ thi'OO d~l0· Carried New York State Against W. R. liearst by Large Plurality. - gatrs, while Clqlrman .!cBs Dunn, o! 1'\1•:\\' .II.UII'!HIIHE. th~ l.>emucratlc Commlttl'l.l, snrs t.hot•t• C'conronl. N. 11-Thc RCilllblienns will be lit lc~~J;t sei'Cill.)·ulght Demn· C'krlctl Charles M. Floyd Govol'lltH' \ratio: 1lelcgatcs on till' flout· of tho ov~r !\'nthtm c. .!1\meson ( Oem.), ron,·entiou. R.Apubllc•nn manngc•t'\ Coug-t•ossmrn C1·rns A. Sullowny u~tl I admit t.hnt Oklahoma lli'OVC'll 11 IFOtlt l•'•·anlt D. Cur1·iiH·, HoiHil.lllcans. were dlijUIJpohttment. 1'hc, \nnlmown\ again HUct•@a!fttl. Tho .r.eglslnture qunutlty of the Tnclian iCI'l'ltory wns RESULTS OF BALLOTING IN OTHER STATES w·!ll be R~pullllcnu on joint lmll()t by 1\ concession to tho DomocrutH, hut WISCO~SIN. Mllwnu,kce, Wls.-Indlcn lions btlsed on hulletlna ft·om l'nrlouH pnrl.s of tlH: St11te nre tbut Governor DaYid• son, Republican, hns won over AYI• wat•d, l)Pmocratl~. by llO,OOO llllll'al· It)', aqd that. the •·est. or the ROllllbll· eau tlcltet has pulled tht·ough with similar mm·glus. On nccount o! thll . or,•• J 110 nHtjorlty, th1is Insuring th~ ninP Oklnhomn dl~t.t·lcLs, counted on c 1 n !oa or n Hepnlllicnn Sctutto•·· l.ly tho Republican leaclet·H, wero cnr· --- ried by tho opposition. 'l'h~ Osugc Nntion Plet'led two DC>Ulil~l'nls. 'rho lndlttns ns R. general rule yotod tha Democratic ticket. Majority Swept by Party Now in Office-86 Majority in the House- ·wadsworth, Del en der of the Beef Trust, One of the Few to Fall-Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Re- publican--Rhode Island, Democratic-In Ad- ditiC>n to New York State,· There Vlere Wllmlngton, D~I.-Tho H.epubli- runo llnVCI <'Rt'rled DelttWl\l\e and oln{~<l Ilun.on !ot· Cong:·ess, oy~r l\lt\1'1'\'l. D~mot'I'Rl. Th~y wlli also contt·oi tho L~,;;l~llliiii'CI that wlll clflct 1: 9Uccessot· to U. S. Senator Aloe, H.c· l•llhllc.\n. hilS)' season on the rarm6 the vote all SOl.'TJI C,\JtOI.IX.\. over the State was light. 'l'h\1 He· Elections Occurring in Forty-one Cl~vc~.uu1. _ 0 ~~~· indtCRllon~ 111 • 0 States and. Three Ten·itories. that tho Re1mblicnn Statn ticket llns' 1 been olectod by a plurality ot at :Joast Charleston. S. C.- The ~l~el.ion publimtns hRVIl elect.od t)robab!y nine, llel<l ht South Cat·ollna was w!llwut and llOsslbly ten, of tho eleven Oon· Incident nn<l a vet•y small vot\ Wllo gressmen. If the latter, they wm polled. Fot· Govern<>!', M. F. Aus~l. have :;nlued ouo Represon,tat!ve ovet• Democrat, nnd the enl.iro Stnto ticket tho JII'E>sent: delegnUou. , ~ ho haf.dest was elected the only Oil POsition be· fight locally Wl\8 In Rep1 eaenta·tll c .T. Ins' ,J. L. Cl;andler, who !'er:oll•ed halt· W. BnbC<lck's district, the Third, ~ lluDdl'ijd Oloelnllst votos. Seven - ·- ~o.ooo. In the Cong1·ess flgbt It Is I estimated thnt twenty Hepubllcnns Nc11· Yot·k C'lt)'.-·Cho:~rl0s Evaus bT rcoduco?d majorlti';'a, 'l'hc Leglslnt-/' han• been olect<ad nnd one Denwcrat. J[u .. hes Repul.Jllcan was elected Gov· ure •·ernalns Repub!Jcau on ,iolnt bill· In Cu)'llhoga Count)' tho Indications \ ' ·. , , lot. Hudson and EsRex counties al'c that tho Republican State ticket Democratic Republicans were elected, 1\El'I'TUCKl\. five without opposition. the Repnbll· Louisville.- BY 11. plurality estl· can nomlueo In the Fout•th nud Sev- mated n.t from 7000 to 10,000 Senn• enth districts getting 011·ly a ltnndful tor McCreary was Indorsed fat• l'e· or votes. election In the Democratic State prl· 0rnor of the Stat~ ot New York b~ n wont Democrntlt•. NGwarlt elected n ha• been cn1-ried by a safe plttrallty LOt:ISIAXA. J)iura!lty of 63,383 1·otes over Wil.l· Democratic Ma~·o1·. Eleven Democru- . and lltat Paul Howland has been New Orleans.--Tho aolill Den10· ia.m Randolph tHmn'l!t, l.>emocrattc tic Assornblyrnen were elected in Els- elected Cong1:essman from the Twcm- crutlc Congressional delegation, so-· und Ind<apendencc League c~nd!,l!lt~. sex Conntr, As this is United States ttetlt District. Congressman Bur- lected at tho prlmat·ies, Is r~turnea Mr. Hearst :·an b~ll!~d hts ticket Senator .John r'. Dryden's home coun- 'ton's re-election is certain, 11s he had with one e:.:cept.lon-George K. Pav- ln New York, Kings .. Ene and Dutch· t.v, the result mav prevent Ills t•e-1. no opponent. \ttm·ney-General Wade mary over Goyernor J. C. W. Beck· ham. J.n the race for Governor, Beckham's ally, .s. W. Hager, and N. B. Hays, both claimed victory. Neither made a large eatirnnte of plu· rality, the result being uncertain. Of foul' close Congressional fights lhe Democr11ts hnvo carried one, re- electing Swnga1· Sherley In the Lonls- v!lle district. Dr. A. D .• lames, ox- United States Marshal, Republican nominee In the Third District, has won. This Is a Republican gain. In the Ninth District J, B. Bennett, Re- publican, present Congressrnttn, seems winner. I d tt 1 liB ' 1·ot succeedlng,.Snm P. Robertson iu ess Count es an tn sea. ern~ •. < • election, although a .Republican Is 1 Ellis, at Columbna, Issued a state· tho Sixth District. Twelv\> constlt.u· t.·icts throughout tl1e Stat~. In Kmgs suro to bo chos~n as his successor. ment In which he said the returns In- tiona! amendments were vote'! on, Ch!lnler ran 20,000 ahead of I_Icarst. In the Cougt·essional el~ctlon the Re- dleatcd that tho Republicans hnd car· l til In New York Countr It was estnnntl•d publicans cat·rled six districts and the ''ried the State by • 0,000. Returns f~:tl~ 1 ~ 8 ~th~~ 01 $t:.~~~~~~ \l~en~uls~:~ f nat Hearst was from 10.000 to 12.· Democrats four. This Is a gain of i''CC('IVed nt 9 o'clock from twenty. by New Orleans to complete th'l sew· 000 votes behiml the rest of the three for the Democrats OI'Cr the last I tlll'ee precincts In the F'irst Congres- eragt•, water and dra!nngo ~yst.ems. ticket. Congressional delegation, which was slonal District now representml by d 1 j 't When notified or hi>. success Ml'. made Uil or nine Republicans and one , :>;ic•holas Longwm·th shows Long. '£his was carrie-~ argo ma on y, Hughes said: \lily feeltngs are not Democrat. In the Eighth District LB i worth {Rep.) 3396, Bentham (Dem.) tboso of elation, but those of respun· Gage Pratt (Dcm.) defeated Henry J ~ts9, tllns Indicating I.ongworth's \\IRGIXI;\ sibility.\ . J. Gottlob (Rep.), and In the Ninth re-eleclioa by a majority much re· Richmond, Vn.- Tha election In W. R. Hearst gaYc thu; statement District I•:ugono W. Leakl'l (Dem.) I duced r 1 ·om what he had two years VIrginia passed off quietly, with lit- KANSAS. 1·egarding the electloll won over Chal'les g, Picltett r Rep.). ' ago. lie interest €'xhibllerl In th~ State, Kansas Clty.-Retm·ns !rom ·~1ln· 'In view or tt10 result I have only In the Tenth Distriet .Tames A. Ham- whicl1 Is sa!€'1Y Democrnt.fl', Tho Re-. sus show heavy losses fot· Hoell to repeat what I have said ill my 111 (Dcm.) defeatetl Hown1·<1 B. Cruse • publicans will probabl] Hill ant In I (Rep.), candldato ro 1 · Governor, who opeeches. I am enliscted In this fight (Rep.). This district was t·cpresent- ILUNOIS. the Nllltll Congress District, which. Is ran behind his ticket. Hoell's vote ill against government by t1·usts and ed in the last Congr<?ss by a Demo- Chlcago.-IIllnois Is Republican I nominally Hepublicnn, by a tltmtn· Topeka !s 2600 Jess thnn In 1904. •·orrnpt corporation• and will fight It crnt. In the Sixth District William b,. about 125,000. Cook County, In lshcd plul'l\llt~·. Indications are that ho \'Ill \'In by to the end. . Hughes (]~em.) defeated George H.· which is Chicago, gave a Hepubllcan --- less than 20,000 plurality. \But I will serve in tue lead or m Burke (Rep.) Jacob Hause ling, 'majority of about 40,000. Speaket· WI0ST \'IRGIXI.\. --- the ranks, just ex.ac.tly as the peoJolo Democratic candidate for Mayor o~ Cannon was re-elected to Congress Wheeling, \\· va.-P>Hlial 1 ·ct m·ns TENNESSI~E. desire, and as earnestly and loyal!r Newark. was elected over Walter S. In the Dnnyille, Ill., district by a plu- r 1 ·om scattered COllllties in \Vest Vir- 1\ashvill<:'. Tenn.-Reports show. in one place as in the o~hor. . Howarth, Republican. and George \V.: ralily of 6000. The Le,;;lslature Is 11 ·inla show the probabl(' success of all that Patterson (Dern.), for Governor, \The people have dec!tled to r·~tr.m Tompkins, In'h)'endent Citizen. The Republican, Insuring the return or fi\•e of the R0publirnn Congres~lonal is rece!Ylng the usual ort year major- the Republican party 111 power. f Democrats also made gains In tho Senator Cullom. The Hearst leaders llomlnees by the following pluralities: I ties in Middle Tennessee, which indi· will make the fight ill. tile r~~ks, Board o£ Aldermeu and school board. concede the deCent or their local Hubbard ( Rop.). First District, 3000 cates Ills eHlcnou by 16,000 to 20,· therefore, and as a prn:at~ ('I turn I -- jteague, btit express g.reat satisfaction or more; Sturgis (Rep.), Second Dis- OOO. Avent, for Railroad Commls· do my best to. ~romo.t.e the 1uterests l'EXNSYLVANIA. over having nccompl!sh~d the down- trict, by 1500 or under; Gains (Rep.) sloner, Is running along with him. of IllY fellow CJttzens. Philadelphin.-By n landslide in filii of t~e Democmttc ~1cket, partie· by 3500 to 4000; Woodyard (Rep.) William R. Hearst carrie~ all fiv~ CYery part of Pennsylvauia Edwin s. ularly Gtbbons for Shenlf. by 2000 or under; Hughes (Rep.). in horoughs of Greater New 'York: an<l Stuart, Republican cand.ldat{l for th~ Firth, IJr 3000 or lllOl'€'. Tho went to t~e. Brontt with a ~luraltty of Governor, was elected by a n1ajority 1\fiSSOl:RI. Legislature will llto Republican, '1\'ltll NORTH DAiiOT ,\, 72,027, diVIded as follows. .lofauhat- of neat· 80 000 over Lewis S Emery · · the !lresent joint ballot majorit.y or !an .and the Bronx, 5~. 1 3 3 ; Kin~s, Jr., fusion' candidate. In Philadel~ St.. Louis, M~.-Indlcatt?ns syem r.1: insuring the re-election of Sena- lj31o; Queens, 6728; Rtchmond, Sol. phiu the Citv party went down to de- to pomt to the xetnrn o£ llltssour to to mltius. Fargo, N. D.-Preliminary returns show that Flsk has been elected Judge of the State Supreme Court oYer Knauf, the Republican nominee. F'or GoYernor Searles (Rep.) and the rest or the Republican tkket Is elected. r~ate:· returns may show that Searles had a close call. Burke ( Dem.), for Governor, catTied Fargo l.ly a big majority. Hughes came to the Bronx with • , the Democratic fold. Democratic '126 5·16 fen~. Samuel l · Rotan, t~e organl-~leaders claim the election of lhe en· The f~ature of the \'Oting wns the zat~on .cn.~dldnte fot· D.ls:t·ll;t Attar- tire State ticket by 35,000, wlth n big poll for Mr. Hearst in the large ney, wmn.ng ~~ a ~a)orlt:,. of. 40 ·• large m11jorlty in tho next Leglsla· cities nnd iu the manufactm·lug 000 ·. In the llm ty-t~? Congr essmnal · ture, both in the Senate and iu the owns. . . tlventy-srx and tile Democrats SIX. • • • t dlstncts. the Repuhltcans h11vc w~m 1 House. The Democrats regain all o! Such Cities as Buffalo, Rochester, The Prohibitionists olle{\ a little tho seven Con?' e~smen the:~ lost In Elmira, Oswego, Rome and Pough- more thau •o 000 vofes Horner I , the slump of two Hars ago, and pr~b· keepsie gaye materially reduced Re· Cascle 'the\ l~rohibitio~·ist nomine~ . ably one more, though it will ~eqmre publican majorities. In the western ' h later returns to confirm tht~. It t f th St t t h' R ubl'•a de- for Gover.nor, annou_n?ed ,t nt be Jlo~ks now nS if tho Democrats will .par 0 e a e . IS ep ho ll . WOUld vn·o Up politiCS lor good. • · fection extended mto the rural dts- There 11 :~s 110 disorder in Philadel- have probably lhtrteen of the sixteen tricts also, sucl1 counties as Cat~a- phia. The (>alice obeved the Shern Congressme~ in the. next .House of raugus, Chautauqua, the rural d:s- law and did not go ·within fifty feet R~present~ttves. 11 gam of e!ght. The tricts or Erio and other count1es f th oll'n bo th State Legislature will be lll accord noa-r!y cutting the normal Hepubllcan ° c D 1 g ~ \1'1\h GoYcrnor Folk. majority in half. , CO:SXECTICl.IT. Hughes carrie'! ali the up-State <'ountles with tb exception or Che· mnn,s, which gave Hearst 300 plu- rality; Hamilton, which gave him 116; Niagara, whicp gave him 300 Jllllr!lllty, ar>d Schoharie. where the Democratic candidate got a plurality l\ew Haven.-All five Rcpuhli'!:tn Congress StiU U('puJ>licun. Representatives will be returned from '\'ashingtou, D. C.-Tho Si.,tieth of 250. In the State of New York above Westchester the vote was nlmost 100,000 less than two years ago for Governor. Hughes received 70,000 ~ell!l than Higgins in·190~. and Hearst received about 30,000 leas than Her· rick. Complete returns will prob- ably show that more than 110,000 \'Oters above the Bronx tlid not takf> rny r.a;·t in the campni~:t. whic~l lq \n unusual thing, when the intensity of the political <tght is considered. Connecticut, and Hollin S. Woodruff, Congress will be Republican. The Republican, of ~ew Haven, is elected majority in the House will bo about Governor by a majority not much 8 R. a falling off or 3 8. In the Fifty- less than In the Roosevelt tidal wave ninth it was 114, The Honse will of 1904. The Republican State tick- stancl as follows: et majority will probably range from Republicans ••.• , , ••.•• , ..... 236 15,000 to 20,000. Both Senate llnd: Democrats ••.•••••••. , •••• , .150 House of Representatives in the Gen- The Legislnturo is rtepublican. In n~~· A .. f. !'!owe~ Is ~lected Mayor. the Senate Lhere will be thirty-two 1 .L 11 o clock 14u towns out o! 168 Republicans, eleYen Democrats, S.)You I g,v~ R. ~- Wo~d~u~, Repni?llcan, .ro: lndependenc(' I cag~&e and one dis, Governot, ~O,O.o9, Charles F. Tha~el·, trict Is in doubt. Th~ Assemblr will Democra~, 27,.79\). The Connecticut have at l~ast 100 Republican nH.'n\·j <;?ngress10nal ~olegntlo~.; all R~pu?~ hera and the Democrats and In de· beaus. is, at la1 gP, Geo. ~e L. Lllle) , pendence League combined about First Pis•rirt, E. StcY:na Henry; Sec- fifty. o.n') District. Nehem1~h D. Sperry; In New York City the Judiciary 1 hu·d Dlstrlc~, E. J. ~itl~. and Fourth eral Assembly will be o\·erwhelming- ly Republican. Archibald :Uc\eil has, however. defeated Allan ,V. Paige for Senate in Bridgeport. Repr.esen- tatiYe-at-Large George A. Lilley, ran ahead of the State ticket. In Anso- nia, t!w Democratic labor cantlir:late, Stepheu Charters, is elected ::.rayor, and in Derby the Democratic nom!· Nominators' ticket received scantr District, Edwm ~I. II1ggms. support, The Tammany Judges ~ re all elected. The Assembly and s~n ate .dh:lsion In New York City will be abOut the same as it is now. Grady deteated Rock easily. In the State the Republicans have carried their usual number of Assem· blymen and Senators, and the Lagis- lature will be largely Hepubll~an. 'the latest fig ares make this the prob- .ble division: Assembly, Rcpubli- .\ans, ninety-five; Democrats, fiftY· five; Sennte, Republicans, thirty-two; Democrats, nineteen. The hardest Cougression111 fight ill tbe State WIIS in the Thirty-fourth ·District, where James W. Wadsworth was defeated by Peter A. Porter, who 1'&0. on a. Democratic and Independ· ent ticket. Wadsworth was ehalr- man of the House Committee on :Ag- riculture and opposed President Roosevelt's Meat Inspection bill last winter. He had a sharp controversy with the President. Representative <hlorge Southwick, of Albany, and Representative JameR ~' Sherman, of Utica, had Yery hal·d lights. XEW JERSEY. Tt·enton. N. J.-New Jersey l'l~ct ad a Republican Assembly nnd three o~&t 'If six Republican Senators, but Jruied b7 Lightning Arrestt>r. P10ul Brown was killed at Mill villf.'l, \· J., while demonstrating a light· ltillg arrester ~u the new electric line ot the West Jersey and Seashore HaUroad. Jo'lfteen hnndred volts tllll!lled through his body. DrelldnouJhf Ready For Ac,lon. ~a4n~mgbt, Britain's moat tor- mldab1e l~:htlng ship, was dealcqated u ftacNJ&i of ~he new Home li'l .. t, wltlo' le to be k~b read:r for loa!lle- '.1 llate actJou l\1:\.&SACIIl\SET'fS. Do~ton, Mass.-Curtis Guild, Jr., lhe Repu~llcan GoYernor, was re- elected by allOut 34,0 00 ovct· Moran, the Democratic candidate, in Boston, and although he made heayy gains in outside mill towns, he was unable to overcome the normal Republ!can plu- l'nlity. Gerry Brown, the Independ- ence Lt::ague candidate fot• Lieuten- ant-Governor, who was also nomin- ated by the Democrats, has run al\ead or the ticket. The next Legislature will be! Republican by the usual inr:;e majority in both houses, and this will insure the election of United States Senator W. Murray Crane, or Dalton. RHODE ISLAXD, ProYidenee, R. I.-The election o! James H. Higgins, Democrat, Gov- ernor by a plurality of at least 6000 is conceded. The Democrats hope to land their whole State ticket. In thirty-five districts Higgins gained 1000 over the Democratic candidate of last year, and the cities are ac- knowledged to be Democratic. Re- turns Indicate that the Republicans will control the Assembly, outside towns whicll were considered doubt- ful having been carried by them. Democratic Mayors are elected In Ten ~lillion Pe1·sons X<•ar Starvation and Serious Disorder Feared. Shanghai, Chlna.-J\Hsaionnrles re- port a severe famine in North Kl· angsu. About ten million persons are on the brink of starvation. The local magistrates are preventing the people from leaving .tbe region, bilt are taking no ateps to provide them ·with food. Hitherto there llue ollJy. been aUJht dl10rder1, hut t& ta feared tbe1 wUI bteome more Mi'love. nepublican majority. . . . . . . . ~6 The Republicans expected more of a cut in their majority. The Demo- cra-ts galn~d one in Maryland, two in Illinois and one in New Jet'SBJ'. John Dalzell Is re-elected in the Pittsburg dlstrlct niter a hard fight. He has normall)\ a large majorlt~·, but his opponent was popular with organized labor nnd made a strong run. )':epresentalil'e Wadsworth. Chair- man of the Agricultural Commlt~ee, who opposed the .Meat Inspection bill nd•·ocated by President Roosevelt, was defeated by Peter A. Porter ill tile Thirty-fourth New York District. He was nominated by the Democrats and Indep ~lldents. \l\Io.rs~ Sydney\ Zvfadd·, one ot the character& of the Honse, won out In ~Iaryland despite a vigorous fight a;ainst him by Samuel Gom11ers and the Federation of Labor. Mr. GomJ1ers' campaign did not re- duce Speaker Cannon's normal ma- jority in the Danyille district of Illi- nois. .John J. Gardner. of New Jersey, who was also opposed by Mr. Gomp• ers, was elected by 8000 majority. H.epre~entatlve Longworth, tho President's son-In-law, was anothet· man marked by Gompers. The llfO· tests of Cincinnati workingmen forced him to relinquish his designs against Longworth, who Is re-elected. The President's daughter attended her hnsband'.a meetings, and was a figure in his campaign. Hobert Baker is defeated in Brook· lyn on the antl-pass issue. 'Morris Hilquitt, the Socialist, did not suc- ceed In breaking into Goldfogle's dis- trict In New York City. One of the snrprisea of the election· is the defeat or Joseph W. Babcock, of W'!sconsln, formerly Chairman of tho Repubiican Congressional Com• mittee. Attempts have been made many times to defeat Babcock, but they have always failed. The La li'ollet.te men are opposed to him, and cut him badly two years ago. ALABMIA. Montgomery, Ala.-Reti.trns !nell· cate art oYei'whelmlng victory for the entlr\ Democratic State ticket and nominees for Congress. The vote was light, 11TAII. Salt I,ak~. Utah. -The Republl· cans In Utah elected their State· tlclt• et by the usual ptu~allty, roturnlnc Joeph Howell to Concr- a11d elect· Ina: JCIHph E. Frlclt .Ju1tlce of tla• Supreme Court. 1\llCHIG.\X. IOWA. Detroit, Mich.-Bnsed on scatter· ing retums rcceivNl at S o'clock the Uepubllcnn State Central Committee estimates Governor '\'arner's major- Ity at about 100,000. He hns car· rled hy a majority of 6 H the cities of Lansing, Hillsdale and Adrian, which h<' lost in 1904 by 1 i2 l'Otes. can be told from early returns .from The vote i8· only about two-thirds, Iowa Governor Cummins ~\'Ill be that of 190!. elected the third successive time by Des 1\Ioines, Iowa.-As nearly ns 1\JIXSESOl'.\. a snfe but comparath·ely small ma- jority. Some estimates are made of 40,000 plurality, but the opponents of St. Paul, ll!inn.-Returus received cummins sny he wlll be lucky to get hy tho Democratic State headquar· half that. Cummins sustained severe ters Indicated a landslide for John· losses in the southern part of tho son, Democratic candidate for Gov- State. The entire State ticket. will ernor. The first two precincts out be electecl with Cummins and the in the State heard from show decided· Legislature will be Republican by Democratic gains. Dodge Centre, mo 1 ·e than a working majority, lnsur- Minn., giYes .Johnson 110 aud Col<a lng the retur11 to the United States (Rep.) 102. This same precinct two Senate of J.P. Dolliver. years ago gave Johnson 58 and Dunn, (Rep. l 14 7. Twenty-eight scattered precincts In the State, including some In Mlnueapolis and St. Paul, give Johnson (Dem.) for GoYernor, 2222; Cole (Rep.) 1209; gain fot· Johnson ovet· two years ago of 684. J. \V. Lawson. manager of the press bureau of the Republican State Central Com- mittee. at 8 o'clock, wired the Cole people in the State that the election was a landslide for Johnson. IDAHO. Boise, Idaho.-Scatterlng l'etttrns indicate that a landallde ha5 over- ta:ken the head of the Republican ticket in the north and central por- tions of the State. Ada County has gone against Governor Gooding by a 1 few huudred votes. It seems quite certain that Gooding will be defeate<l unless he makes up his losses in the COLORADO. • Mormon counties. The remainder of the Republican ticket Is elected. Denver, Coi.-Bnchtel, the Repub- lican candidate, carried tbe State by from 15,000 to 30,000. His majority In Denver County was 10,000, and though Democratic gains in other parts or the State were expected to offset this somewhat, the Adams sup· p•wters v.•ere disappointed, WYOliiNG. Cl!eyenne, W'yo.-The entire Re· publican ticket, beaded by Governm· Brooks, was elected by majorities of not ress than 2000. The Republi· cans J.lso eiect the member of Con- gress and the Legislature, which will elect ,l United States Senator. SOUTH DAiiOTA. Siol.IX Falls, S. D.-Reports from the State are meagn', owing to the scratching of county tickets. lucom- IJiete returns Indicate the election of the lto.Jpubllcan Congressmen and the Republican State tlcl;:et by not less than 35,000. TEXAS. Austin, Texas. - No.tw.Jthstanding excellent weather, the total vote cast In the election was small, compara· tlvely speaking, not exceeding 400,· 000 votes, all told, 135,000 of which represent th!,l combined vote of the .Republican, the Reorganized Repub· l!can, Socialist, the Soclnllst-Labor and the Prohlbitlol\ parties. The next Legislature will ,be' DemOCI'atlc over- whelmingly, there being only a slight chance or tho Republicans to get' one member In the Lower House out of a possible 128. ISDIANA. NEBRASKA. Lincoln, Neb.-hidications are that George L. Sheldon, Republican nom- inee fo1· Governor, haB been elected by a plurality slightly In eJ>cess of the &000 returned for GoYernor Mickey two years ago. The rest of the Re· publican State ticket is probably elected. The returns Indicate Repnb· liean gains In the country districts and Democratic gains in the towns. NEVAD.4.. Reno, Nev.-Vote counting, which is proceeding slowly, indicates a Dem- ocratlc·Silver party victory. Sparks. fat· Governor, Is running ahead or Mitchell In all quarters. Returns show Sparks, Barnett for Congress and Sweeney fot· .Justice of the Su- preme Court in the lead. NORTH CAROLIN.4.. Raleigh, N. C.-Returns indicate a Democratic majority In North Caro- lina of ove1· 40,000. In the Eighth District Hackett (Dem.) • defeats Blackburn (Rep.) by about 500. In the Tenth Crawford ( Dem. l won by over 1200, making all 11lstricts Dem· ocratlc. FLO IUD A. .Jacksonville, Fln.-All the Demo- cratic Congressmen of Florida are re-elected, and the State ticket Is carried by a decided majority. The vote was light. Returns Indicate the defeat of the Dralna&e Constitutional amel!dment by a vote on the propo- sition of three to two. • Shipload of Immigrants .4.rrived. The steamship Wittekind arrived from Bremen at Charleston, S. c., with 500 Immigrants brought oYer by E. J. Watson, South Carollna's Commissioner of Immigration. N~ ilolcller XIUed. ln· a .aioon out.-tlle Ua:li• Fort Bllaa reaenatitia liar Bl Pliib, Tual, 11e. lro IOidtei'lt' llf the Tweatr·lftla In· taatrr fouallt . tattl ·oil• 110141• wu \1114 aall a11otlatr bUI:r. hart. Dyspepsi~f Women CliiiH lly F111111 Dlaonlere lid Cured ., L)dla 1. Plllkham•a Yeg1tabl1 Compoullf A rre1.t many women 1111ft'er with a form of indi61'~•tiou ot• tlyliJ)tlp~ia which doe• not 1eem to yield to or<lhlnt•y tr~a\ mtmt. Whilu the aymplOIII8Hil~ln to be a!llillar to tb011e of ·Ortllnary lnollg••· tlon, yet the mlldlclneaunh·ci'HI\IIy pre. aoribed do n~1t letom to rntore tho pa- tient'~ normalllon<litlou, Mn. Pinkham olahns tb&t there IS • l•ind of dya~psia ·that is caused b.v a derangement. of the female organism, and which, while it causes u disturb- ance elmllar to ordinary fndlg\estiou cannot be relleve<l with on t :>. me,lldnt whl<lh not only &ct• lUI a stomach tonic, bnthnapecnll&rtonlc effect on the t ... l&;ale organism. As pt·oof of thla theory . we call at- tention to the cue of Mrs. ll!agglt Wright, Brool<IJ•n, N, Y., who wa~ eomf.letely eur~d by [,y~ia E. Pinlc· ham lfVea-etableComponnd aftt•re~ery· thin~ else had failed. She writus: \For·two y.an I s:utreN<I with dysp~polo wbl~h \\degeuerAI.ed the entire \''\t\m t.l:tut I wu unable to 11ttf!nd to my daily tluti<'S. I felt weak and ncrvouo, &11<1 notlolngth\t I at. ta•ted good and It rau.OO aclist.m·hn.n<'Oin m:r atomacb. I t.rie<l rlltrerent dyspt)l\'ia cnreo, but nothing Memed to belp me. I wao rul· Yltled to 1lvc r.vctia E. Plukbam's \'~gotohlt Compound a triill, ami w&• bappilv surpl'i<t<l to find tb11.t-lt actf!d like a fine tonic, and in o few days I began to enjoy and prnperlydh:<'lt my food. My J'OCOvery waa ral'i1, nnd in flvo weeka I wns\ well woman. • have rec- ommended.lt to many sulferln& womeu.\ No other me<lidne In the world has received aueh w.idespread and unquuli· fieri endoreement or has such a record of Clll'CS of female trou blea. ll!l hna f,ydia ~. Pinkham'• Vcretablo Compound. The bhll(llon TUIUI<'I, The making of the Slmplon tunnel has been tbe dream of three gene,·n- tlons. But nlthou&'h the people r•f the various uations concerned wern ready ::md willing to fraternize o\·or the common desire, their Govern- ments created difficulties, which have only just been settled. The openlnt; ar the Slmplon tunnel was not. onl'' il. great engineering f€at, but also a triumph of diplomacy.-Lo Figaro. RHEUIITISM AND NEURALGIA ·ST. JACO·BS OIL , The Proved Remedy l'or Ove~l;' so Y ear•. Price 23.: and SOc The Lancashire clergyman who re· cently lett the word \obey .. out of the marriage serYice gives as his reason that he does not wls)J women to start married life at a disadvan· tage. But It really matters little In practice. It has long been under· stood that thou.gh a man and his wire 11re one the wife Is that one.- London ({lobe. Nf tJOil Mar is ~ 1'!01 of 1 Ral 1'&111 llltll holt hen bon stoc deb cau1 stoc the UoD •rt•o at , Jtav• ut 1 aei'E '£ Livl l1aB mor Yor '30, dow '!'WE aw: beer fiidE mo1 The lakE ~031 toll« Ma@ whl 3rll1 was S; !loy, frel: Ral wat hav• the Iron trac the the but the rroE the telc1 lice gull D tliO\ neat The llltrl terlc sog~ ther tree dow dow the and wa~ and wilt• F mer fron a~ve t·eee ILls ton. beer Cou: Dan the was 110 l enfo pl!a1 l\1 by a Ova Ber1 toss• bull The in a ,;er dro\ fork s. c .Yi\·e