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Show Vs ttah Vealher forecast iilssoflira b Rain Tuesday mBunc8n(L wvvvvwwvww - VOL. L OGDEN NO. 68. TUESDAY MORNING, MARCH PRICE FIVE CENTS. 8, 1904. 001 TRIAL Of WAR PROGRESS POSTAL CASE PERRY HEATH'S CITY. UTAH, IlH ALEXBT HAS I i PROUD OF ALL AFTER President Smith Has Victoria, D. C, Man n 7. Cipher Irregularities Charged in Were Transfercd to an Uncle Bombardment Killed Woman, dispatches received y '.o ratal au- What is Russia's Position as Plural Marriage Ceremony of Them. thorities as Esquimau U inii.iy from the Performed May 19, 1596. to CoaL Wounded One Man. Administration. by Marriage. British admiralty order ihe cruisers Forty-Tw- o I Returned to Certificate Anonymously After the gation Began. uvtf Chargid With priation Using Approfor Advancing Hla Political Standing. ytiinftnn. March 7. Foetal at hlis engrossed the attention of the I ff THE MANIFESTO T Gjoss ; Company Investi- , Washington, March 7.- Referring to the Muntague Indicator, Mr. Cowtoday, practically to the exclu-o- f herd said 1.000 shares of the stock were to go to the first assistant postall eiee. The subject was by Mr. Overstreet, chairman master general, Mr. Heath. Mr. Beav4 the committee ou posuifflcea and ers held 2,000 shares in the name ofruads. who submitted the report Richardson, the president of tho cumJtthit committee on the Hay resolut- pany. Continuing, Mr. Cowherd said: ion calling for Investigation regarding "Those shares had not been transthe iu of "influence by members of sal-g- j ferred to Heavers, mark you. Beavtks House to secure incresses in fur postmasters. There was a full ers said he had not seen Mr. Heath, Htendance of members on both sides as he had been hard to locate Just now, being busy on national commitof the chamber when Mr. Overstreet Kited that he had been directed by tee matters. In August, 1902, Beavers writes wnimous voted of the committee to ncommend that the Hay resolution to Richardson as follows: "Dear Richardson: Our friend In be tabled, aa the information wanted the report. Minority Balt Lake wants enclosed stock drawn iKsmpanit-B. Baron. uenbers urged that debate and vote In the name of Glenn oi ihe'ro solution should be deferred, Kindly issue new certificates and have to u they had not bad an opportunity to these destroyed. Forward same iml the report, so an agreement was me by registered mall. G. W. Beavrtsrbcd to postpone further action ers.' On the face of this certificate the and four thousand until Wednesday wero ordered return certificate, is a notice as folcopies of the report delows: printed. There will lie three hours Bditor Salt Lake Tribune.' On the lete on the motion to table and a formal amendment w ill ho offered by bark of It la an endorsement similar to that in the rase of Heath. The Bathe minority to provide for a general . ron mentioned la an uncle by marriage investigation of the Fostofflce depart-nestof Mr. Heath. The certificate is finally returned to the company anonymUr. Overstreet said that In his opinion there was not a single Instance of ously in a blank envelop after the inenmy reflection on the integrity of any vestigation began, and that blank trailer. The postofflre appropriation velop is destroyed so that we do not know from what place It was returned, Mil was then taken up and Mr. Muon, (Deni. Tenn.) arraigned the present Of course, no man can say that this testimony shows .conclusively the comestem employed In tho Post office end made an appeal for a plicity of the first assistant postmaspseral investigation of the affairs of ter general lieeause the testimony must rely largely upon the statements the department. also of Beavers.who is himself known to lie Mr. Cowherd. (Dent. Mo.) aemlier of the committee, followed dishonest and dishonorable; that Is, with a review of the charges made by If the Bristow report Is to be believed the Bristow report, which he referred at all. Therefore we cannot rely upon In to ax a shameful story of fraud and his statements, but, I submit that view of this shameful story of graft zladmlnistration. that has gone on in the' department Without debate the House unanimowith so many usly adopted tho resolution of Mr. tinder his management, Marlin. (Rep. Bo. Dak.) directing the clues leading toward him. It seems to me the most extreme measures might zecretary of commerce and labor to the causes of the difference well have been adopted to find out vhlrh exist between tho prices of live whether there has been any unlawful act on the part of that gentleman. cattle and dressed beef. I submit further that the report on Mr. Overstreet made an elaborate numexplanation of the provisions of the the Tnlloch charge shows that bill. While he was speaking a ber of people were employed on the disbrought In and laid on the direct order of Beavers with thewere that they bundle of a understanding reports tinct dnorkeeper's desk work. In tho accompanying the Hay resolution. never to do a day's desk cases of postmasters when they emMembers crowded around the and business was suspended uutll ployed nnwsrrmntedly they were comand It every member had procured a copy of pelled to return the money; to course same ought the me to the report. (ffow Mr. Moon of Tennessee, the ranking have been followed by the Poatofflce of minority member of the Postofllce department and the administration to the committee, disavowing any political the 1'nlted States in respect pnrpose In view of the evidence at first assistant post master general. hand, urged it to be the duty of the ESCAPES. MURDERER House to look closely Into the affairs of the Fostofflce department. The Had Been Sentenced to ba system of administration, he said, was He Hanged March 11. weak, anti investigation might enable St. Joseph. Mo.. March 7. Mark the llduse to revise and strengthen the system. The "slime, he said, Dunn, convicted of the murder of a which had been found In one branch wealthy farmer named Fenton, and , esMarch may have permeated other branches. sentenced to be hanged Dunn posgot Jail He salt that the names of 150 memfrom today. caped were ber had been linked with the wrong session or two revolvers that duing in 'the Fostofflce department, smuggled into jail and forced the death net justly he said, except in a very watch to submit to being bound with lew cases, but he asked how this wire he had used In making baskets. would ho viewed. He exonerated the He held the watrhman prisoner all Republicans from any desire to proter night and forced him to call the JailWhen the in office, but said they or soon after daybreak. to were derelict in not providing a bet- Jailor appeared Dunn threatened ter system. It was not a partlssn kill the death watch unless the jailor matter, lmt an issue that must be turned him out through the wheel. met. The Jailer, to save the watchman, dirt Mr. Cowherd of Missouri, said that aa ordered. Then the murderer forced of the Jailer and his brother, a deputy in criticising the administration the i'ohtofflce department, he wanted sheriff, to enter the jail, locked them Urst in pay his compliments to the In and escaped with the key. Post office commission. MONEY SEWED IN CLOTHES- They bad worked bard and Its chairman bad The shown great zeal and ability. Elko, Nev.. March 7. On removing deuart the clothe today from the body of etulmaii-- s of the Fostofflce ment. however, were not to be relied Mrs. A. E. Woods, who fell from a on. xml to correct the evil Congress train west of Elko on Friday night, shniil-order an Investigation with a preparatory to embalming, some gold view to getting rid of the maladminiwas found in a stocking. This led to stration that had obtained during the further investigation and upon ripRim few years. her clothese to pieces $721.51 were ping g The provision in the bill for a found sewed up In them. agent to buy all supplies for the department was commended by WONT STOP WHEAT EXPORT Mr. Cowherd. He declared that M. W. Louis bad been put into the service Paris. March 7. The Russian amby First Assistant Postmastcd Gen-ex- l bassador. M. Kelidorff. following the Heath as cashier of the Kansas announcement to the same effect from Ci'y office and Immediately trans-torr- St.. Petersburg shout s week ago. toin Washington as head of tile day Issued s formal denial of the rebecause contract! port that Russia had any intention of supply division wn to be let shortly afterward. Over stopping the exportation of wheat. F'.n,,,i pounds of ink had ben bought zu increased price, when it NO RED CROSS MEETING. taken only 21.600 pounds. Mr. of Maii i.iim. Washington. March superintendent of the money Mr- system, was mentioned in con- the present war between Russia and nection with the printing contract for Japan the gathering of the Congress muniy order blanks. of the Geneva Red Cross at Berne, "I ml we not have a right to expect which was to have taken place next Wimr recommendation from the do May. has been indefinitely postponed. Pvt tin nt after theio disclosure for a etisr.so in the methods? asked Mr. WILL THEY KEEP PROMISE? 7. Offlcfsl advices fowi.rni. Vet no recommendations Part. March that the Macedonian This was his reason for received here say an Investigation of the do committee has given assurances to the it p. Ax emphasizing this neces- - representatives of the powers (list will not foment an Insurrection in the (Continued on Face 3.) spring. me-eng- - er wrong-doer- l pur-thasn- d pre-vtni-:- Fort Did Not Return Firs of Japt Works Wera Not Seriously Damaoed St. Petersburg, March ,7. Viicroy Alexieff has telegraphed to the Czar from Mukden as follows: Siipiilemenflug my message of March 6 1 most humbly rejsirt that at 1:25 p. m. five out of seven of the enemy's ships opened fire on Forts Suzvaroff and Llnetach on the town on the roadstead and along the Valley Grafton (flagship) and B.,mh venture, now In Central or Bouili American waters to go to Esquimau!! w hh all siiecr. The Bunaventure Is coming nut front Once Refuted to Recognize It at ConEngland to succeed ihe Crafion as Now and Holds DifferIs traband order The station. thia on flagship ent View. regarded here an ominously signifi cant. ME ARE Claims Apostlo Woman Brigham Young Officiated Two Children Born of Marriage. Washington. March 7. After having Joseph F. Smith on the stand for nearly four hours before ihe Senate committed ou privilege and elect Inns which is investigating the fight ol Hoed Smoot to bit ax a Senator, both the prosecution and the detense announced that they were through with him and another wltuew was called. This was Mrs. Clara Mattel Kennedy, who told some secrets of the Mormon church which, if not broken down, will prove aa important as the statements of President Smith that he and other officials have been persistently habit a ting with plural wives In violation of the law. Mr. Kennedy said she waa married by Brigham Young, an apostle of the chtirrh. to James Francis Johnson, a polygamist . since the manifesto of 1890 and that she has had two children by that husband. The marriage waa performed In Mexto the witness, at the In view of this. Mr. Balfour concluded, ico, the British government was taking home of a high official of the church. Alsteps to obtain more precise Informa- Mrs. Kennedy said shen was born in years ago tion In regard to the interpretation of bany, N. V., twenty-sevetbe Russian declaration respecting and went with her parent to Utah when she was 2 years o'd. Her pacontraband of war. were Mormons and she wss rent brought up in that faith and had been taught the propriety of plural marriage and in fact never had known any different life until after her marriage. The family moved to Diaz, Mexico, when she was about 4 years old, where she lived until 17 years of age. when she was married In James Francis Johnson, who already had one wife. Mrs. Kennedy Mid she met the first wife and they had a "slight. Inter view" about going Into tbe family as a Ohio Mob Lynches Murderer second wlto. Tbe first wife gave her consent lo tbe arrangement. According to arrangement Mr. and Policeman. of Mrs. Johnson and lnby and me witness drove from Diaz to Juarez, "Where we-- e you married?" asked Mr. Taylor. "At tho home of A. C. McDonald, the Trouble Arose Over a .Woman .Acof the president iu the coitnM-lu- r OffWhom With quaintance state. icer Had Trouble. "When? Man-7. Answering London, a in House the of Commons toquestion day, 1'recier Hal tour said the government considered that Russia's declaration that she proponed to treat coal aa contraband of war waa of the greatest Importance. The premier added that he waa aware that the Russian river. "The firing lasted until 2:15 p. m., All Classes Join in Making plenipotentiary at. the West African at which hour the Japanese squaaron conference, held at Berlin in December. Sacrifices. began to move southward, disappear1884, In relation to the neutralization ing out of sight. There were no losses of the Congo, declared Russia never on the batteries or the fortifications. would accept the Interpretation that In the town one seaman was wounded coal should be considered by internaand one woman killed. A later message from the Mikado Abandons All Luxuries and tional law aa contraband of war and that hla government would categoriaaya: Nation Will Bo Abstemious Until cally refuse to consent to recognize The commandant at Vladivostok End of War. coal as contraband of war, either In rereport that yesterday's bombardment lation to the Congo or any other resulted in no serious damage to the dis-tric- port The fortress did not return the enemy's fire. Today at midday the enemy again London, March 8. In a dispatch entered the bay and approached the from Bt. Petersburg a correspondent bombarded the point from which they of the (Standard gives a rumor that harbor on March 6. They left again, the Czar hits received a telegram to making for the open sea. the effect that the Japanese fleet bombarded Vladivostok all day Monday. According to this rumor oniy trivial damage was Initiated, tmt one or two of the Japanese rriiisers were sunk. No confirmation of this baa been received. CRUISER FLEET Russian Cruisers Are Outside Vladivostok. Must Run Gauntlet of Japaneas Fleet Before Reaching a Russian Port. There is much curiosity here concerning the resisting power of Vladivostok, which has long been regarded as the tiiuraltar of the Far East. Vladivostok la known to be better equipped aa a naval base and to bava greater docking and repairing resources than Port Arthur, but doubts are expressed as to the character of its defenses. Russia has been settled there for forty years and it is consequent ly considered likely that the de to napes and guns at this place are t a somewhat obsolete character, ir is understood that during the past few new guna and )cars all the available war material it waa possible to send railroad has over tbe been used for the strengthening ol Port Arthur and points In Manchuria, leaving Vladivostok with old type guna It is reported that of short range. Vladivostok is ill supplied with provisions and necessaries. No more war news from the Far East is published this morning. Dispatches from Tokio speak of the sacrifices being made by the Japanese nation. According to the Dally Citron ides' correspondent at Tokio the Mikado is abandoning all luxuries, and all are going to live abstenlously until the war Is ended. Tbe Kobe correspondent of the Dally Express says the crown prince of Japan and Prince Arlsugawa are going to the seat of war. Other dispatches say that public and private concerns are ail curtailing their expenses in order to aid the government in the prosecution of the war. According to tbe Che Foo correspondent of the Morning Post it Is expected that the Japanese will reach the left bank of tbe liwer Yalu about March 10. A large force of Russians is strongly entrenched on the hills on the Antung district, adjacent and parTheir position la allel to the river. similar lo that which the Doers held on the Ttigcla rivrr. trana-Rilicri- Up to a late hour tonight the Japanese legation here had received no official Information regarding the bombardment of Vladivostok. It is believed at the legation, however, that the Japanese are now between the Russian cruiser squadron and Vladivostok, and there la reason to believe that the Russian squadron la in the vicinity of Prossiet lmy. Russian official dlBpatcbea do not mention this squadron and this fact lends color to the belief that the Japanese warships have shut it out of Vladivostok. It la pointed out at the legation that If this la true the Russiau vessels are in a critical condition, since they must run the gauntlet of the Japanese squadron off Vladivostok or the Japanese squadron off Port Arthur before reaching a Russian port. London. March 7. Tien Tain, March 7. The report that has occupied the Sin Min Tun railroad and taken possession of tbe telegraph lines is Incorrect A resident of Tien Tain has had an interview with Chang, chief of the bandits, called "Chunrhus." According to this man Chang commands 2.000 men who are well drilled and splendidly mounted anil armed with Manser rifles and magazine pisHis principles are decidedly tols. Rusal n. Ylnkow, March 7. The Russo-Chinebank sent its books to l ien Tsln today. The purchase by the Russian of ten lighters la supposed to he for the purpose of blockading the channel of the Liao river after the ice goes out and the foreign gunboats have left.. se London, March 8. A Russian correspondent of the Times ssys the governor of Amur province, Eastern Siberia, has been notified that In consequence of the impossibility of repatriating the Japanese at Port Arthur and Vladivostok because of tbe lack of steamers. Viceroy Alexieff has issued orders that and they must be sent into the interior railnot permitted to travel along the road line. Paris. Msrch 8. The Rt. Petersburg correspondent of tbe Echo De Ter is says Prince Louis Bonaparte lias been given (he command of a brigade of He will start tor the Par Cossacks East on Thursday. By March 17 there will be 217,000 Russian troop in Manchuria. the correspondent rontinues. This information was given by a military authority. Tokio, March 7. Notwithstanding the fact, that It is understood here that Russia is pressing China to make the territory west of the Liao river neutral, Japan remains apparently calm because she baa mhde the reservation that should Russia be allowed to obtain this advantage Japan will use any portion of Chinese territory which is strategically necessary for her operations. j. an SIDES WITH JAPANESE. Vancouver. B. G.. March 7. Lieutenant General Kir Wllliah G. Nicholson, director of mobilization. London, and Captain H. Thacker, of the Royal Canadian garri-m- i artillery, Ottawa, arrived here by train Today from the East and sailed this evening on the Athenian, for Yokohama. They havo been sent by the British war offire to watch military operations in the Orient. General Nicliolson will study the methods of transporting troops and Captain Thacker will be the artillery student. In an interview this afternoon Sir William Nicholson said: "I shall certainly not follow the Russian side of the struggle for aside from any question of neutrality, my personal sympathies are all with the Japanese. I expect the campaign will afford some internsrlng object lessons. Ixinrion. 8. A Tokio March of tho Times says a Japanese squadron took possissinn of Hal )anf Tso. one of the Elliott group of islands, on February 2T They tound oniy stores of coal and signalling flags there, the Russians having eiaciiaied orre-spondr- nt the island on February 22. The Russians continue to push southwaid along the coast f'om Possiet. Imy toward Song China, the correspondent continues, and the Vladivostok squadron apparently is covering their with Vladivostok. JAPS I BUY HORSES. Vienna. Mar h 7. Four hundred horses were hough' for Japan today in the market at Sopn-n- . Hungary. May 19, 1896. Five Days on the Witness Stand Only One Examined End of so Far. Washington. March 7. At the beginning of tbe afternoon session Mr. Smith said that at cording to his hear. Woodruff uuTsti-.iidinPresident anil Snow runtornu'd to ihe former's liu tiiauiri'tdii and idicyed the law. said that of the six apostle appointed since the manifesto of President Woodruff only one. M. V. Crow toy. is a polygamist, in regard lo Joseph M. Tanner, president of the faculty of tha Utah Agricultural college. Mix Smith said that it was understood that he He dehail more than one wife." clared tli at. so far as he knew no ou in the rhnrch had iiecn appointed an official In the church because he is a polygamist ; that such appointment have been based on merit alone. Referring to the many Inst Hutinn In which Mr. Smith is Interested. Mr. Worthing Inquired wliat companies are controlled by the cbiir--h- . "Only one, said Mr. Smith; "that in ihe theater which was started by Jlrigham Young and in which tha church has always held a majority n( the slink. Mr. Worthington announced that ha had finished with the witness and Mr. Taylor then asked if four out of seven members of the Imard of trustee of the Agricultural college are polygamists. Mr. Smith said lie believed that In lie the case. He answered also that, hin election an president was since Mr. Bmnotn election ns sn apostle, hen-atForaker asked Mr. Knittb if ba had bad any objection to Mr. fimuofc becoming a candidate tor Senator and Mr. Smith said: "I gave my consent to hi becoming a candidate. "Wby did you think your consent necessary? asked Chairman Burrows. Hoiause it in a rule that any one of Ihe general authorities of the rburrh desiring to engage In any buxines outside of bln cliim-- duties must get the consent nr the first presidency and the twelve apostle before can can do so. said Mr. Kmith. The presiding officer of Mr. Bmlth'a ward was given as George R. Emory who. he Mid, In reputed to be a polyga-niin- t. or Who married you? Brother Young." Do you mean Brigham Young, Iho apostle? "Yea, sir." The wltncsa was asked bv Mr. Tailor If she ever had seen Apostle Young before and she said she bad in Diaz and Juares two or three times and that she could not be mistaken. Site could not Identify a picture of Young, how- O., March 7. At 11 Springfield. o'clock the negro. Dixon, waa taken front the Jail and shot to dielh in the Jail yard and tho laxly waa taken from there to the corner of Main street and Fountain avenue and hung high to a telegraph jwle, where the ntob spent the next half hour riddling the hotly with bullets from several hundred revolver. The mob forced an entrance ever. Mrs. Kennedy said she lived with to the Jail by butting in the east doors five years, part of with a railroad Iron. At 10:30 the ntob Mr. Johnson about same house with the the in time the la the genand it melted away rapidly she had two chilBhe said wife. flral. more no attempts eral opinion that of one whom Is now dren Johnson, by entrance. an would bs made to force living. Rhe separated from Juimson Small- groups of men could be seen adat the end of five years, and about a however, in tho shadows of two several and year after that married Mr. Kennedy, stables jacent livery whom she had two eliildren. Iter were tho 10:45 At Jy polio dwellings. husband Is an Episcopalian, more was present nothing satisfied that there the Mormon church. to fear and they, with other officials but she remains in Senator Foraker questioned the wiand newsimper men, passed freely In tness in regard to the ceremony uniting and out of the jail. her and Johnson. She said she could diversion a 11 oclock before Shortly not remember much about it except crowd moving small a made was by The that there were present Mr. Jolinxon. around to the south entrance. was made Brother Young and Mr. McDonuM. police followed and a bluff was no prayer, she said, but she at Jostling them off stow leading up There stood up ana anto the south entrance. The crowd at remembered that she that were to the swered ot questions while yes yell growing, this point kept asked her. the "smash door, "hold the police." InterThe witness said she "lynch I he nigger, were made. husband to Mesa, Art., where he spersed with revolver shots. At this her state president. tlmo a party with a heavy railroad was counselor to the "Why did yon separate from your Iron was heating in the east door, asked. which yielded to the battering ram. as husband? Senator Foraker I could not stand tbe pressure Well. The doors. iron lattice Inner did the east any longer," she replied. mob lb-surged through the tuiw-ke"What do you mean by could not door, overpowering the sheriff, stand the pressure? " asked Chairman and a handful of deputies, and Were you not treatel the assault on the iron turnstile Burrows. to the cell. Tho police from the right? "No, sir, I was not," she said. south door were called Inside to help "Would you bare clayed if you had In cell end the from mob the treated right? It was not bebeen shared had door south five minutes tbe cause you were opposed to Mormon-Ism?- " the fate or the east one. was asked In an incredibly short time the jail "I am a Mormon still." she said, was filled by a mob of 250 men though not a very good one. with all tbe entrances and yard gate makSenator Hoar asked the witness it 1.500 thus men, blocked by fully to had received any form of marshe tor militia tbe ing it Impossible had to access the negro riage certificate from Apostle Young have prevented The and she replied that she bad not. the soldiers been on the scene. Mr. Worthington took the witness the heavy Iron partition leading to if rite cells resisted th mob effectively until for cross examination and asked Is know arYoung that did not Brigham hammer end sledge cold chisels k dead. now The later. tow minutes rived a "Yen, I heard so a few wck ago. to the turnstile was broken and "And Mr. McDonald don't you know the mob soon filled the corridor leadi furth-he is dead? that that Seeing cell. the to ing "No, I had not heard. that. said Mrs. resistance waa useless and to avoid the the au- Kennedy. Ulltrg of Innocent topersons, Mr. Worthington asked the witness the demand of thorise consented was if she knew whether bur first husband He man. the right the mob for deed and was liitorincd dragged from bis cell to tbe Jail dons was living or sed thence down the stone steps to that she knew nothing ulxiut him ami Pm paved court In the jail yard. had not heard of him since tlsuir sepat wil ness became toniure-Fearing an attempt on the pas-- of the ration. The under croa-( xaniinalton times several formed leaders tbe him rescue to police ts a hollow square. Some one knocked and made some contradictory she cormost the which for those par and the ground to the negro rear to him toll hack for five feet. rected later when her attentionfor was the Nine shots were fired into hi pros! rate called to them by the attorney prosecution. She was unable to give a description of Young. (Continued on Tago 3.) ,1 to tha testi- of chilnumber the ninny regarding dren Mr. Kmith had since the manifesto of lxtiu. and he repeated that there had been eleven, to the best of Mr. Taylor returned hin recollection. Are you mire of tho asked I number?' Taylor. cannot any that I am absolutely Mr. attre. "Now, I don't want to be impertinent, but Isn't it a fact that there have been twenty? asked Mr. Taylor. No. nothing like it, was the answer. "Well, how many by your wife named Alice? Please give the names." there were Fielding. 'By Alice Jesse and Andrew. The youngest is alwnt 4 years old, replied the witness. That Is one born on the dav of Mr. Smoot's accession as an aiiostto. Id it not? asked Mr. Taylor. The witness answered that it was and proceeded to give children born to his wife, Mary, since Hie manifesto. "By Mary the children are Silas, James and Agues, he said. Whose child is Samuel ? atked Mr. Taylor. ho answered. Ho "He is Mary's. slated that ho could not give Samuel's age or tbe age of his son. Galvin, and that by each of his other three wives be had at leant two children manifesto. Mr. Taylor f.lnce the rressed the witness fur a detailed siatement or lire children by the other three wives, and the witness protested - ( , i vigorously. lm-ga-n 1 lo understand that. I am not. permitted to have children by my lawful wife.? he asked of the chairman. "Unless I am compelled to do to I shall tier line to answer In regard lo iho number of children 1 have bad by tny first wife." What do you mean by lawful wife?" asked Chairman Burrows. "I have a legal wife." answered Mr. Smith. 'I mean the woman I tnar-lic- il first the woman I married ircr.y years ago. She is the mother of eleven of my children." "Do you include tho number of children you have had hy this since the manifesto In ISfiO in the number of children you have had hy ail ask'.'J your wives since that time? Senator Hoar. "I do, was the response. lr. Taylor a::s!n Helred for a de- tailed sihedule of Mr. Fmi'h s children born since 1SW) and over the protest of Mr. Smith Chainnan Burrows (hat tl.e question lie anew-re-d. Mr Smith gave a list of chiliiten by tl.e wives in the order in wVeb hs married them. The li' is ax follows: by By Julia. Edith and Rum-'Sarah. Asfatb aud Jennctta: by Mina. died: child which by Martha, and one and Anderson; Alice. Fielding. Jre-'by Mary, Silas, Agnes. James and ir.ay- - to Am lie qtie-tio- kc-e- 1 ns i wo-rn- psd-Ioc- daie-rnen- A ' 4 , A ; : ! tContiniied on Tage 3.) i -- rex.- - f I |