REPUBLICANS’ GREAT VICTORY Roosevelt's Plurality in the Popular Yote Also a Record Breaker. HIS ELECTORAL VOTE NOW 343. The Solid South Broken in the Sweeping Res publican Tidal Wave and the Unprecedent ed Majority 16r Roosevelt and Fairbanks The Enormous Pluralities Sul Rolling Up. Already past the President Roosevelt's popular vote continues to grow, ac- returns, Pennsylvania leads the list of States with the magnificent plurality of 525. This tremend: few votes short of mark Maryland i158 very close, cations that th one presidentia No State except Maryland is in doubt, and unless there are further changes the Electoral college will cast 342 votes for Roosevelt and Fair- banks and 134 for In Congress tl be a Repub- ican majority of 10. he victorion cording to the latest half mill; 3 the 3 with ¢ Democrats will y 3 iI elector FIGURES OF THE VOTE. REPUBLICAN STATES. California. . Colorado Connecticut Delaware Idaho Illinois. .. Indiana Iowa Kansas Maine 3 Maryland Massachusetts Michigan. . Minnesota Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada. . N. Ham New Jersey New York. ... N. Dakota... Ohio Oregon Penna Rhode Isl S. Dakota Utah Vermont Washington W. Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming od ON CQ “4 WB we wy NO a Ovi nN oe Qu nun oe - Nh Wo Lad 0D ~ . 81,869 104,584 77.560 *37.830 *11,773 7.822 *2,408 19.314 56,889 143.606 15.372 09.036 13,141 288.4313 13.972 40,000 14.986 15,000 2,133 30,500 29,71¢ 30,000 12,623 20,000 21,022 75.000 106,581 6,000 4.318 86,279 150,000 125,000 10,000 1 000 70,000 2,000 20,000 60.000 174,691 20,000 165,000 40,000 485.412 15.974 a NAW » &bhodiedO Lo Ww d ba 1,452,454 343 pia i . Totals ; 2,343,641 $k A 5t ates, Alabama Arkansas. .... Florida... .. Georgia Kentucky. Louisiana Mississippi N. Carolina 8. Carolina Tennessee Texas. . Virginia. . tao. V 41,619 11 36,342 4 20,693 5 46,663 13 7.975 131 39438, go 45.953 10 24.671 43.657 9 23,558 12 146,164 30,215 1904 ‘ 75.000 40,000 18,000 40,000 * 14,000 35.000 50,000 50,000 25,000 25,000 100,000 25,000 — Totals 497,000 590,927 The figures 560,927 show pluralities for Bryan in 1900. plu- in that year of State which de £lared for Roosevelt this year being mciuded 133 the total the Roosevelt plurality of vote, 2,126,046 McKinley's popular he electoral vote, 210 Yote in 1900, 37. m——— ROOSEVELT---FAIRBANKS. President. Theodore Roosevelt. Theodore Roosevelt succeeded f death of the latter from gunshot wounds inflicted by Czolgosz Septem- ber 14, 1901, having been elected Vice- President in the preceding November, His career in this exalted office is fa- miliar to every newspaper reader. and it was largely upon his official acts that the managers of Alton PB. Parker made their campaign. "Statehood for Oklsbome. Guthrie, Ok. (Special). — Returns from 20 to 26 counties indicate the re-clection of B. S. MeGuire, Rep., as Jelegate to Congress by about 1, Boo majority over Frank Matthews, Dem. Statehood was the issue upon which the campaign was fought in Oklahoma, and the result is an in. dorsement of the Hamilton Bill, which has passed the lower house of Con- gress and which provides joint state. hood for Oklahoma and the Iddian and has won are stur i exempls le 1s a real ous hfe. Born of family, Fay p ed nH a 37 } & private ed a dude by %( hool 4 ho and was the boys of saw him He had the boys who suit pass to like Nap i Brienne the +} SANOT quently he had to fight envied him, and fights were of daily o mete Territory in 1906, week. After a specialls morning ye his companis “Let's go aroun back and President Roosevelt ha UNR come While it may aril Untry e of the seventeenth Klaas Martensen Roosey : New York city, red § prepared f eit rn in is. he was one of the duate journal of f reign fn aduatic travel 1 In 1880, and af 3 iter 7b gislature, in which sat during the sessions of 1882 and the following years an date 1 R86 He independent candi New York was city in not elected. President Harrison a member of the Civil mmsion in May, 188g, 28 a memeber of the him Com- served and its appomted Service and he board ng the whole of that period a deter resigned to be loard of Police Comfimissioners of New York city, in position he displayed equal fearlessness On the inauguration of President McKinley, in 1897, Mr. Roosevelt re- signed frcm the Police Board to be come Assistant Secretary of the Navy in which position he served until the outbreak of hostilities with Spain ind to his energy has been ascribed by some the readiness of the nava branch of the service to enter upor that brief and brilliant contest When hostilities were threatened Mr. Roosevelt left the Navy Depart ment to become lieutenant-colonel of NATIONAL CAPITAL AFFAIRS. In May, 189s, he President Roosevelt will recom mend to Congress that authority be given to the Philippine Commission to revise the tariff law now in force im the islands, The auditor for the Postoffice De. partment, in his annual report, recom: mends that fourth-class postmasters be paid salaries, President Roosevelt announced that John Hay will again be secretary of state in his next Cabinet, regiment a | ] 1 2 ik Wood force embarked for ( Charles Warren Fairbanks. s Republi usually large He 1) tune. The National Tickets. owing are the tickets nom the different parties Alton B. nated by Democratic Pre sident, Parker, New York: v Henry G. Day 8, West Virginia Republican President, ee Charles W. Fairbanks, Indiana Prohibition — President, Silas Swallow, Pennsylvania: vice president, George W. Carroll, Texas Peoples President, Thomas E. Watson, Georgia; vice president, Thomas H. Tibbles, Nebraska Socialist President, Debs, Indiana; vice president, Benja- min Hanford, New York. Socialist Labor—President. Charles H. Corregan, New York: vice presi lent, William W., Cox, Hinois, A Freazied Woman's Deed. New Haven, Ct. (Special).—In a desperate fight, lasting 20 minutes. Mrs. Elizabeth Barnes killed Cora Cassidy. Neighbors had vainly tried to separate the women. During the fight Miss Cassidy fell exhausted, and the other woman, grasping her by the hair, beat her head viciously against the floor, literally pounding her to death. At the end of the fight, when her victim had ceased to move, Mrs Parnes sank 10 the ground in a fant EIGHT PERSONS KILL] road Crash, MISUNDERST ANDING OF NEWS IN SKORT ORI | rhe Latest Happenings Condensed Reading ” fer Be Comestic, ly Demolished — Wreckage 30 Feet High fic Delayed For Sixteen Hours. FALL BLIZZARD CAUSES HAVOC >oow, Hail, Rain sod Wind De Much Damsse Sweeps East sod South HELPLESS WOMAN TORTURED Lighted, Candie Held to Soles of Her Feet Miscreast Fined on Iastaliment Plas. New York (Special) eh before h The she convicted mendicancy sentend court was that must ears, and that she must appear in each day to make the payment MeCarton is thirty-five . The police say she 1&¢ a member the McCarton family, several of hose members were recently arrest. n New York Supposed Safeblowers Arrested, Chicago (Special). —Superintendent five June. The prisoners had revol. vere of large caliber, dynamite and a bottle of nitroglycerin. The five men were taken to Norwalk, O. Railway, reports the arrest § Raing now, Pennsylvania «x-dividend its top price for the year. “General Asphalt has $1,500,000 of quick wssets,” says one on the inside. A big union of Texas farmers has decided to hold its cotton for 12 cents a pound, Annther advance was made in the price of sugar, potting American granvlated at § 15 cents. reached ¥ both sexes the Skoptsi which is the extinction of the human race, have been exiled It i= declared in Vienna sect that the will short. onference of Bra ol $0 naval force newspapers claim of securing sue Samth American Argentina appears jealous zil's intention to take 5 loat 0.000 tO ncrease her ambitious among the Brazil is premiucy states The Ecuadorian minister to Colom- bia, General Julio Andrade, has sign. ed at Bogota a treaty submitting the Ecuador-Colombia boundary dispute to the arbitration of Emperor William H Germany. The Danish government will accept President Roosevelt's invitation to participate in a second peace confer ence. Great Britain and Mexico have also indicated their willingness, A supplementary budget of $20,000, 000 for the expenses of the army ir Southwest Africa is 10 be prerented 10 the Reichstag & cal } TR REJECTS siershury Officials Say 8 Direct Propos al Arbitration Would sod Advices From London eclare Projosal Just Kejzcied wig for Be Hoctived, “4s a Dire Une Roo eve Teke No Action JUDGE WIN REVERSED. He Had Decided the Chinese Exclusion Law Usnconstitut'onsl. lates HEREROS REVOLT EXPENSES. ate $20,000,000. (By Cable) A tary budget of $20,000,000 for the ex- supplemen- nses of the army in German South- of the insor- presented to the Reich. in December Even this sum irrasses the imperial finance min. which 1s striving to reduce the deficits apd at the same time additional funds for various works and for the army and The progress in suppressing pative risings appear to be going well About 1,400 re Cravite going 10 Southwest Africa largely to replace the Josses of the ommand: in the field from sickness si a result I8Lry annual provide public Havy the moasay ably alr For Agricultural Buildings. Washington (Special). — The bide for the new Agricultural Department buildings were opened, 20 proposals being received. The total appropriation for the buildings is $1,500,000, of which between $280,000 to $300,000 will be used for mechanical equipment. The bids cover all work and materials cone nected with the superstructure com. plete and range {rom $1,225,000 to $1, 400,000. .
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers