THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBURO, PA. lilR. TAFT is fiects) Xarrics Nearly All the Doubtful States iEW york" 191,000 Ohio, Indiana and Wis consin Are His Connecticut and New Jer sey Big Taft Vote IARYLAND REPUBLICAN kxt Congress Will Be Strongly Republican Washington, I). C, Nov. 4. Wil--ni Howard Taft, of Cincinnati, O., id Jajiies Schoolcraft Sherman, of Uia, N. Y., the Republican candl Aes, were elected President and .tee-President of the United Stated. Every State regarded as doubtful ppears to have gone for Taft and herman, and the popular vote for tese candidates throughout the suntry was a tremendous one. Mr. Taft has been elected PreRl ent by a plurality which will hardly ill below Mr. Roosevelt's In 1904. !a has carried all the doubtful States Ath the possible exception of Ne-s-aska, where the contest was very lose. In New York State Mr. Taffs ilurality is 191,000, and he has car imi Greater New York by a small jiuraiity. la New Jersey Mr. Taffs plurality say exceed Mr. Roosevelt's. The DOOOOOOOOO v i Taft's vote In the Electoral College 317 J Bryan's vote in the Elcctor- l al College 100 Taft's majority in tV.c- Elcc toral College 151 J Taft's plural 11 y i.i New York i State 190,000 I Taft's pin.'.Jity in New Jer- eey 61,750 ' Taft's plurality In Ohio.... .100,000 Taft's Plurality in Indiana 3,000 Taft's plurality In Xew York City 0,300 Hughes's plurality in Xew York State 70,000 Chanter's plurality In New York City 58,700 -COOCOCCCCOOOOOOOOCOOOOCU ate Is Tuft'B by probably 60,000. le returns from Maryland indicate at Taft has won the State by per .ps 5,000. Ohio and West Vlr nia, which had been classed as ubtful, have been carried by the publican candidate. Wisconsin, nsldered debatable ground by Dem. ratlc managers, is for Taft by 60, '0. Minnesota is overwhelmingly v Taft, about 100,000. Gov. John a is re-elected by 30,000. In many the Southern States the Demo atic pluralities fell off. Tcft swept the country by a vote Men will give him 317 ballots In e Electoral College against Mr. -.van's 166, or only 19 less than Mr. joeevelt had in 1904. His major f will be 161. William J. Bryan ffered his third and most crushing ifent in his twelve-year run for -esldent of the United States. To enforce his policies President :ft will have an overwhelmingly apubllcan Congress, the Senate be 5 as strongly Republican as be re, and the House Increasing its eprnbllcan majority from 67 to 65. About every so-called doubtful 'ate went Republican, though on e morning after the election In ana and Iowa were still in doubt, was noticeable that the majorities . the East were greater than those the West. In New York, for ln anee, Taft beat the great Roose lt majority of 1904, getting 186,- 6 majority, as against Roosevelt's .5,000. Taft's plurality on tho popular te Is estimated at 1,087,750, as alnst Roosevelt's plurality of 2, 6,615 over Parker. Gov. Hughes has won over Lewis uyvesant Chanler. Mr. Cbanler's owing in Greater New York was vay below expectations. Up the ate Gov. Hughes ran far behind r. Taft but came down to tho Bronx tth enough of a lead to secure his . ctory. Hughes has about 71,000 , Juality. Greater New York has given Taft ' President a plurality approximat or. 10,000 over Bryan, a phenom ' ion which has not been seen before ' Kept in 1S96. The New York county plurality ' Bryan is only about 8,500, with a rw oistrlets missing. Brooklyn went tr Taft by more than 20,000. PIM and Richmond are for Bryan occcccoococooocoooooccoooo ij PLURALITIES. REPUBLICAN. California 15,000 Colorado , 5,(100 Connect Iftit 35,000 Di-Iiiwhio 3.5CH) Idaho 'JO.OOO Illinois 170,000 Indiana 3,0()0 Iowa . s 40,(00 Knnsna 20,000 Maine 31,500 Maryland 5,000 .Massachusetts . . . 120,000 Michigan 100,000 Minnesota 110,000 Montana 2,000 New Hampshire , 20,000 Xew Jersey 57,750 Xew York 100,000 Nevada 1 ,000 Xortli Dakota ... 1 0,000 Ohio 100,000 Oregon ........ 25,000 Pennsylvania . . . 300,000 Rhode Island . . . 10,000 South Dakota . . . 32,000 Utah 10.00O Vermont 28,000 Washington .... 40,000 West Virginia .. 10,000 Wisconsin 75.000 Wyoming 5,000 Total , 1,583,750 DEMOCRATIC. Alabama 55,000 Arkansas 20,000 Florida 21,000 Georgia ....... 40,000 Kentucky 15,000 Louisiana 40,000 Mississippi 50,000 Missouri 20,000 Nebraska 1,000 Xorth Carolina . . 40,000 Oklahoma 10,000 South Carolina . . 40,000 Tennessee 20,000 Texas 100,000. Virginia 20,000 Total 492,000 Taft's Plurality over Bryau, 1,001,750. CXXXXDOCOOOOOCOOCCOOOOOOOOO by small pluralities. Taft had 25, 000 more votes than ughes in New York. The plurality in the whole of New York City for Chanler, Dem., for Governor is a little more than 60, 000. The New York Legislature will continue to be Republican by a large majority, Insuring the election of a successor to Senator Piatt. Massachusetts has been carried by Taft by about 150,000. Mr. Bryan carried the city of Boston by 22 votes. For Governor Draper is suc cessful by 70,000. In Connecticut Mr. Taft's plural ity is 38,000, it is estimated, some what less than Roosevelt's four years ago. New Hampshire's plurality for Mr. Taft will be in the neighborhood of 20,000. Maine has declared for Mr. Taft. by 35,000, approximately what Mr. Roosevelt received. New Jersey surprised even the Re publican prognostlcators, and is in the Taft column by 60,000. Mr. Taft is successful in Mary land by a small plurality. The Re publicans claim it by from 6,000 to 10,000. The returns indicate the correctness of the former figure. Mr. Bryan carried the solid South, the reports indicating that the ne groes in some of the States, Georgia for instance, voted for him in large numbers. In the middle West Mr. Bryan did not make the running his managers expected. Illinois gives Mr. Taft a plurality of at least 75,000 and Gov. Deneen wins over Adlai Stevenson by an estimated plurality of 30,000. Mr. Taft carried the city of Chicago by 10,000. In Indiana the reports at 2 o'clock on tho morning after election Indi cated that Taft had carried the State by 8,500. Thomas R. Marshall, the Democratic candidate for Governor, la clo-.-ted over James E. Watson by perhaps 15,000. In Allen county, where Indianapolis Is located, which gavo Mr. Roosevelt about 12,000 four years ago, Mr. Taft beat Mr. Bryan by 12 votes. Ohio went for Taft by a safe plur ality, but the race for the Governor ship was close. Judson Harmon, Democratic candidate claiming his election over Gov. Harris. Michigan rolled up the usual Re publican plurality. It enrolled in the Taft column by probably 126,000. Minnesota provided another old time Republican landslide plurality, about 150,000. , Missouri furnished one of the tightest contests anywhere In the country. Bryan was successful in that State by less than 5,000, ac cording to the early returns. Nebraska Is claimed by the Demo crats by 15,000, although the Re publicans insist that the result is still in doubt. Colorado's plurality for Mr. Taft will equal what it gave Mr. Roose velt four years ago. Generally In the Pacific Coast States the Repub lican pluralities are Imposing, al though in most cases a little below the Roosevelt figures. Iowa went Republican by about 40,000. Kansas leaned to Mr. Taft by 20,000. Idaho la Republican by a small plurality. Nevada la Demo cratic by perhaps MOt. J ooooooooooooooododooodoocx: O o ELECTORAL VOTE. 8 o o 8 (J o o 8 o o 8 8 8 o o TAFT. California 10 Colonic 5 Connect .'rut 7 I Via ware 'i Idi-.lm 3 Illinois 27 Indiana 15 I u 13 Kl'IIVHH 10 Milne 0 M nylmid 8 MaS(M'lltlM'tt 4 10 Ml.hlu.in 14 MiuiiCMit.i 11 M litiinu 3 Nevada 8 Xew Hampshire 4 Xew Jersey 12 Xew YerU 3 North Dakota 4 Ohio 23 Oregon 4 Pennsylvania 34 Rhode Island 4 South Dakota 4 lUh 3 Vermont 4 Washington 5 West Virginia 7 Wisconsin 13 Wyoming 3 Total 317 BRYAN. Alabama 11 Arkansas O Florida 5 Georgia 13 Kentucky 13 Louisiana 0 Missouri 18 Mississippi 10 North Carolina 12 Nebraska 8 Oklahoma 7 South Carolina 0 Tennessee 12 Texas 18 Virginia 12 Total 1 68 oooococo: In Kentucky, where the fight was hot, there was a Democratic gain ever four years ago. Mr. Bryan has carried the State by an estimated plurality of 10,000. Oklahoma gave Mr. Bryan a siz able plurality. The latest returns from Pennsyl vania Indicate a Republican plural ity on the national ticket of 250,000. Delaware is for Taft by perhaps 2, 600. The pluralities in the city of New Tork, indicated by the latest returns are: For Taft, 10,000; for Chanler, Dem., for Governor, 60,000. New York county gives Bryan 8,700 plu rality and Chanler 50,000, and Kings gives Taft 20,000, and Chanler 4,000. HOUSE REPUBLICAN. Speaker Cannon Among Those Re turned. Close Call for Many. Washington, D. C, Nov. 4. Once more the Republicans have carried the lower house of Congress by a safe majority, but the defeat of the Den-.ocrivts Is nothing like as terrific as it was in 1904, when President Roosevelt headed the winning ticket. Secretary Loudenslager, of the Re publican Congressional Campaign Committee, claimed tho House a few days a?o by a majority of sixty-three and It looks as If he had guessed correctly. The Republican majority la the Sixtieth Congress is fifty-seven. In spite of the hard fight made against Speaker Cannon in the Eigh teenth Illinois District, be has been re-elected by a plurality of from 6.000 to 7.000, and practically all of his warm supporters on the floor have been returned, though some by greatly reduced pluralities. Ttls is particularly true of Representative Dalzell, whom Edward Duffy, of Pittsburg, gave a hard fight. There was no change In the poli tical aspect of the delegation from New York, though some of the Dem ocrats In New York City had close calls. Hlllquit, Socialist candidate for Congress, was beaten by Goldfogle, Tarn., and with him fell Robert Hun ter and J. G. Stokes, candidates for Congress. One of the surprises is the de feat in Iowa of Representative W. P. Hepburn, author of the Hepburn Railroad Rate law. Ho was defeated by J. D. Jameson, a democrat. Taft Gets Returns with Merry Party. Cincinnati, Nov. 4. Up to 10 Clock election night there ht-.d been to break In the optimistic character Vt the returns received at the C P. Taft residence in this city, were .William H. Taft, the Republican on AMate, and Mrs. Taft were surrovnd 4 by a merry party of relatives and dose friends. At that time Judge Taft bad no doubt of his election, a indicated by the congratulatory telegram he sent to Chairman HUch Mck shortly after 9 o'clock. Judge TaXt declined to make any but the aioat general expression of satisfac tion. Elaborate preparations had teen made by C. P. Taft for tho best tile 4mph service possible. The Central Trust Company ap. Cid for a receivership for the Clive- d jtraction properties. SETS THANKSGIVING DAY Precedent in a Proclamation cf Unusual Length Designates November 26th. NATION'S CAUSE FDD GRATIlliDE A Mttlc History and a Mttle Phlloso. piiy. Vow here I'Asf is the Aver no of Individual Comfort nnd Ma terial Well IleinK So High. Washington, Nov. 4. In a Thanks giving proclamation of unusual length, President Roosevelt named Thursday, November 26, as Thanks giving Day. The proclamation fol lows : Once again the season Is at hand when, according to the ancient cus tom of our people. It becomes the duty of the President to appoint a day of prayer and thanksgiving to God. Year by year this nation grows in strength and worldly power. Dur ing the century and a quarter that has elapaed since our entry Into the circle of independent peoples we have grown and prospered In ma terial things to a degree never known before and not now known In any other country.' The thirteen colo nies which struggled along the sea roast of the Atlantic and were hem med in but a few miles west of tide water by the Indian haunted wilder ness have been transformed Into the mightiest republic which the world has ever seen. Its domains stretch across the continent from one to the other of the two greatest oceans, and It exercises dominion alike in the Arctic and tropic realms. The growth In wealth and population has surpas sed even the growth in territory. Nowhere else in the world is the av erage of Individual comfort and ma terial well being aa high as In our fortunate land. For the very reason that In ma terial well being we have thus abounded we owe it to the Almighty to show equal progress in moral and spiritual things. With a nation aa with the individuals who make up a nation, material well being Is an Indespensable foundation. But the foundation avails nothing by Itself. That life is wasted and worse than wasted which is spent in piling heap upon heap those things which min ister merely to the pleasure of the body and to the power that rests Only on wealth. Upon material well being as a foundation must be raised the structure of the lofty life of the spirit if this nation is properly to fulfil Its great mission and to ac complish all that we so ardently hope and desire. The things of the body are good, the things of the Intellect better, but best of all are the things of the soul, for in the nation as in the Individual in the long run it is char acter that counts. Let us therefore as a people set our faces resolutely against evil and with broad charity, with kindliness and good will to ward all men, but with unflinching determination to smite down wrong, strive with all the strength that is given us for righteousness in public and in private life. Now, therefore, I, Theodore Roose velt, President of the United States, do set apart Thursday, the 26th day of November next, as a day of gen eral thanksgiving and prayer, and on that day I recommend that the people shall cease from their dally work, and In their homes or in their churches meet devoutly to thank the Almighty for the many and great blessings they have received in the past and to pray that they may be given the strength so to order their lives as1 to deserve a continuation of these blessings in the future. ASKS LEAVE TO HANG HUSBAND'S SLAYER. Sheriff at Chattanooga, Tenn., Re fuses Wife's Unusual Request. Chattanooga. Tenn., Nov. 3. Mrs. J. W. Davis, wife of a railroad con tractor who was killed here last March in a most brutal manner by David D. Edwards, has asked per mission to spring the death trap when her husband's murderer is ex ecuted here on December 10. She sryb there Is nothing that would give her more pleasure than to pull back the lever and hang Edwards. Relatives of Davis will be here from nine different States to witness the execution. Trampled to Death by Mule. , York, Pa., Nov. 3. George Shen berger, 65 years old, was knocked down and trampled to death by a drove of mules. He had been work ing among the animals at Lauber's stock yards when something excited them and they started on a wild dash about the yard. S'lonberger was found several hours later, his body a mass of cuts and bruises. Banded To Fight llurglars. Cedarhurst, L. I., Nov. 3. Ter rorized by the many burglaries that have occurred In the wealthy colony hero and which culminated In the robbery of Lawyer Joseph A. Shoy'a residence by four masked men, resi dents of this place, took steps to ward organizing a committee of mfa- ROOSEVELT HGRE SUFFRAGETTES They CIimIii TIk-iii elves to Grille of liKlles' (i.illi-ry Piirt of it (Jo Willi Them. London. E:iglan:t, Nov. l. Suffrage-tit ": turbaiirc-H luivo driven the (Jov'.'inmcnt to tho uniiKiinl course of temporarily closing the pt rangers' and lailli-s' naileries In the House of Commons. This was announced by the Spraker In roHponno to n ques tion from Premier Asquith and Mr. llplfour, the leader of tho Opposition, as Parliament was adjourned for the night. When the Houso was discus sing tho licensing bill, a sensation was caused by the display of a pla card and sudden shrill cries from the ladies' gallery demanding votes for women, while simultaneously a bundle of hand bills fluttered down from the strangers' gallery at tho opposite end of the chamber, and a man shouted protests against "Injus tice to women." Attendants hurried to the galleries and the man was unceremoniously ejected, but from the ladies' gallery sounds were heard of a desperate struggle. Two suffragettes hnd firm, ly chained themselves to the gillie and resisted for a time all efforts at removal, crying continuously In shrill tones their demands for votes. The scene was watched with ar.iae-n-.cr.t from the floor. The removal of the two militant suffragettes prcsentej u comical cene to those In the corridors. Loth of tho offenders were laughing heart ily as they v.ere escorted by a po.sso ef policera'en, one of the officers tar rying that portion of the Iron v.-or It of the grille to which the women were chained. They were conducted into a committee room, and work men were summoned to file off tho iron from the chains which were securely padlocked around tho wo men's waists. It was found that the chains had been carefully prdded to prevent noise and betrayal when the suffragettes entered the ladles' gal lery. Simultaneously with the scene in side the House a party of suffragettes harangued a large crowd from the equestrian statue in front of the Parliament Buildings. The police arrested thirteen of them. UNABLE TO KEEP HOUSE, KILLED SELF. Wife Informs Husband Why She Slew Herself and Their Child. Worcester, Mass., Oct. 31. When Louis Minoli, a granite cutter, re turned home from work he found his wife, aged nineteen years, and their year-old baby, Caesar, dead in bed with their throaU cut. The medical examiner decided that tho woman had killed the child and then com mitted suicide with the same wea pon, her husband's razor. Mrs. Minoll left a letter for her husband, in which she declared that she loved him, but that she was go ing to end her life because she did not know how to be a housekeeper. ANTI-TIP CONVICTION. Foremun Found Guilty of Selling Laborer a Job for $1S. Milwaukee, Vv'U., Nov. 3. Joseph Pennybecker, foreman of the John sou Service Company, is the first vic tim of the anti-tipping law, passed by the Legislature three years ago. Convicted of accepting $18 to em ploy a laborer, Joseph Pennybecker, foreman of the Johnon Service Com pany, lost his job and was fined ff0 and costt. It was proved that he accepted the money from Andrew Adamopolous and in consideration thereof gave employment to William MIchaelopolous in Minneapolis. The prosecutions are under that section of the anti-tipping law called "bribery of an agent." The law op erates against a person giving or re ceiving a tip. GO ARMED TO CHURCH. AssaulU on Women Terrorize Cleve land Suburb. Cleveland, Ohio, Nov. 3. As the result of more than a dozen assaults made upon women in Cleveland Heights, a fashionable suburb, in the last few days, women attending the five churches in that place carried revolvers. As an additional precau tion none went unescorted. The con gregations attended and returned from services in groups. The men also went armed. After services In one of the churches a vigilance committee was hastily organized and, officered by three deputy marshals, scattered about the suburb so as to insure the safety of churchgoers. To date five women have been seriously Injured end a dozen robbed. Slate Gray For Warships. Washington, Nov. 3. The bat'lo ship Maine, which has Just returned from a cruise around the world and Is now undergoing repairs at the Portsmouth Navy Yard, will bo the first battleship to receive the new altte grJiy war paint recently adopted by the Navy Department. A naval officer who was in attend ance at the recent Newport confer ence said at Washington that tk criticisms pf certain points In re lent naval construction had been sui. talned and changes recommend d. SENATOR ALDRIGH NOT TO RUH HOI Ex-Gov. Utter Says Decision Wnj Made After His Re-election Two Years Ago. CONDEMNS GOVERNOR KIGGIriS, Announcement Made Now So It Clin. not Do Said Alilrlch Was Forced Out. Once Ruled Senate, Rut Times Have Changed. Providence, R. I., Nov. 4. That Senntor Nelson W. Alilrlch has told him that he will not be a candidate for re-election to the United States Senate in 1911 was the statement made by Gov. George H. Utter at a big Republican rally In Infantry Hall. Ex-Gov. Utter'a statement sur prises not only the rank and file of the party, but the leaders as well. Mr. Utter made this statement, he explained, because of the fiery at tacks on Aldrlch made by Gov. lo gins, and In order that If AMtir:i should retire It would he clear that he had not been forced out by any "Llttlo Olant Killer." Aldrleh'a statement to him v;s made two years ago, said Mr. 1'tter, Just after the Legislature had re el ected him to the United States Sen ate. At that time Aldrlch wanted to call the General Assembly togeth er In grand committee and make the announcement that he would not again be a candidate. Ex-Gov. Utter said that he persuaded Aldrlch not to do so. He condemned Gov. Hlgglns for his attacks on Aldrlch, and continu ing, said: "I am going to tell you something that I have never told In public be fore this evening, but which I want now to go on record. Two years ago next January, on the day that Senator Aldrlch was re-elected, he asked me I then being Governor if the House and Senate could not meet together, as he had something he wished to say to them. Because of his poor health, particularly evi dent that day, I advised against his undergoing the strain. "He said he wished to say pub licly that he fully appreciated his re-election to the Senate, and that he would never again be a candi date for re-election." ALDRICII WEARY OF SENATE. He Wus Once Ruler, but Times Have Drought a Change. Washington, Nov. 3. It has been known among Senator Aldrich's friends in the Senate for a long time that he would not be n candidate to succeed himself upon the expiration of his present term, and from tlmi to time during the last two years the report has obtained publicity. Senator Aldrlch himself has never taken the trouble to confirm or deny It for publication. If he had not reached a settled conclusion on the subject, however, the course of events in tho Senate in the last two years would have tended to increase his inclination to quit tho game on march 4, 1911. The Senate now is very far from what it has been for many years from the Aldrlch point of view. ASYLUM WARD BURNS. 9123,000 Fire In State Institution at Rome, X. Y., Yentorday. Rome, N. Y., Nov. 3. Ward Build ing B of the State Custodial Asylum for Feeble-Minded Women here was burned. There were about 150 pa tients In the building, about thirty of whom were confined to beds. All the sick and helpless were safely removed. It will cost $100,000 to replace the burned buUding and $25,000 to fur nish It. The State carried no insur ance on the property. It was of brick, 60 by 160 feet, and two Bto rieB high. NEW YORK MARKETS. Wholesale Prices of Farm Products Quoted for the Week. WHEAT No. 2. Red, $1.09 $1.10Vi. No. 1. Northern Duluth, $1.13. CORN No. 2, 77'77. OATS Mixed, white 5157V4. BUTTER Western firsts, 23 25. State Dairy, 22 24. CHEESE State full cream, 13 Vi 14 . MILK Per quart, 3 c. EGGS State and nearby fancy, 32 38; do., good to choice, 32(9 36, western fancy 25028. SHEEP Per 100 lbs.. $2.60 $4.00. BEEVES City Dressed. T&lOVt- CALVES City Dressed. 8 4pl4. HOGS Live Per 100 lbs., $5.00 $6.65. HAY Prime per 100 lbs., 85c. bTRAW Long Rye. per 100 lbs.. 89 00. LIVE POULTRY Spring Chickens per lb.. 14c; Turkeys per lb.. 14c; Ducks per lb., 12 13c. Fowls per lb., 9 14. DRESSED POULTRY Turkeys per lb., 10018c, Fowls ped lb., 9Q 14c; Chickens, Phila., per lb., 16021. VEGETABLES Potatoes, Jersey. Per bbl., $1.60 $2.00. ONIONS White, per basket, $1 $i.e:. 7