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Show FULL DVEKTISE in examiner COR THE PRESS ASSOCIATED the DISPATCHES UTAH WEATHER FORECAST IT IS MICE IT CHARGE medium best advertisingexaminer the as the city, county well reaches the OUR CITY. INDICATIONS tmE BUBSCRIF-BOOK- THE THE E S ARE WEATHER THAT WILL BE FAIR MONDAY AND TUES- ARE OPEN TO DAY. IV VOL OGDEN NO. 42 CITY. MONDAY UTAH. MORNING. FEBRUARY millions: crease of one and steel rails, $1,500,000 atael sheets anl BLESSING AND CURSE plates, $1,250,000; structural Iron and OF WEALTH AM) HOME steel nearly 12,040.000; wire. $1,750,-00builders' hardware nearly $Z.0flur ('40: locomotive near $2,000,000; sewing machines nearly $1,500,000;. metal Wealth Nasd Not Be a Corruptor of work machinery- more than $2,000.-OoMorals It Is the Vulgarity of It We' Recoil From. mining machinery mors than typewrieera, $506,000; printing presses, more than $540, 400, 000, and bar iron, an Increase of more than Pittsburg, Fob. 14. Taking for Tile $1,000,000. Tin plate has pawed the topic. "The Blessing and Curses of $1 .0(H), 000 mark la the value of exporWealth and Home," Rev. lir. C. W. tations. the value of tin and terne Blodgett, at the North Avenue Methaggreand tin exported taggers' plates odist Eplacopa ' church, today made in 27,054,477 pounds, quantity gating the Thaw case the tuple of an extravalued at $1,001,651. ordinary sermon. Wealth need not be a corruptor of REPLACED BY JAPANESE. It Is the vulgarity Morala. be sold. It that the world recoils from. This of Leave to Warned Brown Men Were country la reading of the tragi scenes and Left. in the court of Justice in New York Portland. Ore., Feb. 10. A apodal with intense Interest "Pittsburg la deeply interested. to the Oregonian from Wondbnrn save: Here on the streets uf Allegheny tbe Considerable faellng waa engenderwife of the chief actor played ed here by the Boathern Pacific laying poor when ahe waa a glii. Arrow the river off white men emploed on the railroad husband now op trial for the mursection at this point and replacing the der of a man In Now Turk, the reveal-menthem with eight or ten Japanese. of whose lilt makes von shudThe feeling ran so high that fifty epeut his boyhood Americana called at the section house der with horror, came from respectaboth days. They warned the last night and Japanese ble families. One knew what poverty to leave town. waa hunger for bread -- tbe other, and the was no violence There when a mere lad, spent enough money promised to leave, and this In a to keep a dozen families. morning they left for Portland within They year noth go wrong. the limit specified. A. Schwa buer, the One. seemingly by the cruel hand section foreman, refused to work with fate, the other through lore that them and resigned hla position yester- of All our hearts bleed was blinded. day. Warrants will be sworn out to- for them. Will the fathers and mothmorrow far' the ring leaders of tbe ers of this and other cities take any crowd that drove the Japanese out. warning? "We ring When Is My Wandering Boy Tonight? but Where Is your girl? GERMANY AND BAYTI At the place of amunemeut, then deInto some tpided studio then coyed ON EVEOF TROUBLE Borrow and a life wsose than hell. "No higher vtrtyie should be demanded at woman lluui a man. Tbe German Bankers Rafuae to Return same code of ethics should apply to I Money Alleged to Have Been both. Obtained Fraudulently. A treacherous sfoundrel of a man, poor or rich, should have the same treatment aa the Abandoned woman. Port An Prince, Haytl, Feb. 10. The Poor Evelyn Nesbll Thaw la not the relatione between the government! of only girl that has been ruined aa abe Haytl and Germany are strained, ow- wav. In tbe outcome of the trial Harry ing to the refusal of the German bank-erHermann It Company, by direc- Thaw, the reckless and unfortunate boy tion of the court nt Port An Prince, of one of our moat, respected homes, to return to the Haytlan government millions are Intareal ed. What of tbe large sums of money alleged to have outcome of the lode and lassies not Hearts are atlll been obtained fraudulently. Among grown to manhood the alleged transactions of Hermann to lie broken and homes made desolate and some of tljem may be yours. A Company with the Haytlan govern"No state can rlar higher than tbe ment wa one which was said to have inproved favorablo to the government. home, and no church can lie mure Thia was concluded by the Haytlan fluential than the firesides from which minister of flnanre, the German lega- Its members come. The warning voice tion' and Hermann A Company. Tbs that comes to ua over the dirking German minister demanded that thss wires and the cold type of the press Is, Have a Jealous care of roar boya transaction, a well aa others, be n Tilled, but thy Haytlan government. and girls. Restriction is tar better that the German minister than ttalleenaed liberty and' a morsel of purity better tbsn wealth with In- deemed offensive, refused to arqul-corThe German minister at tha same time demanded tbe withdrawal of the phrase objected to. This also . RETURNS FROM JAPAN. was refused. Fears are entertained here of grave Evidsnce of Good Feeling Toward United States. complications ensuing. The Official Monitor, recently pule , llshed notice of the expulsion of Mr. San Francisco, Feb. 10. State SenMxnsour, an American citizen, but ator G. R. Lukina, who returned toMr. Furntas, the American minister, day on the steamship Siberia from Jabelieving the cause for tbe man's ex- - pan, where he has been sojourning for pulalon unjustified, naked for the with- his health,- - says that he witnessed drawal of the trder. This, however, In Japanese no evidence of was refused, and Man sour haw left for toward the I. 8.. but on tbe conNew York. , trary he waa led by prominent JapanThe seal of the American legation ese to helleve that that country enbaa been placed on hla shop. tertains a warmer sentiment Of friendship toward this nation than towrad any other, and that any thought of MONEY HAS NOT BEEN war between the two countries would be extremely repugnant to tbe Japan- one-thir- d ,T SMN FROM Her ENDURED Husband Has Requested That Given Respite From Ordeal Delmas She Be Making Other Arrangements Kew York. Feb. 10. Evelyn Nesbit Thaw probably will not, aa bad been expected, return to tbe witness stand tomorrow morning when the trial ot Per hHsband for the murder of Stanford White la returned. The at rain of tbe lnat few days, in irhirh abe baa been male to live again the hours when, according to the abe baa sworn that abe made to Harry K. Thaw, the was tbe vto tin of the architect's caprice, bae told leverely on the young women, and tonight It was atatad that fhe prisoner had come to har rescue and demands 1 a respite Air ble wife. On her visit to the Tombs, Saturtold her day. Mr. Thaw that the had suffered greatly during the ordeal when her association with White was laid bare, and Thaw communicated the fact to the attorney!. He told them that hia wife was in bad shape, and requested that she be given an opportunity to recover her self. Attorney Delmas then set about to an rearrange the plana of the defendant that Mrs. Thaw's presence in court aa a witneaa would nut be required until Tuesday. If tonight's plane do not miscarry Mrs. Thaw will not be recalled until by Tuesday, and her District Attorney Jerome will begn n hut-ban- cross-examinati- Wednesday. Another development today that startled those directly concerned la the case was the reported ! llu ess of a Juror. Visions of a mistrial were soon dispelled, however, for It wai ascertained that the jurora lllneae was not auch aa threatened to incapacitate him. Wilbur P. Steel, 60 years of age, a manufacturer of gas appltancei, has contracted a severe cold, but seyi he will be able to go into the juror boa when tbe trial la resumed.. Today may be enld to have been Thaw's beat Sunday In the Tombs. He rose after what he declared had been a restful night tn good-spiwand with a hearty appetite. He did not at tend service tn the chapel, but spent the morntng with the newspapers end In rending the many messages brought him. Of these, one read; "Re brave.'' Late tonight it was said that Mrs. Thaw was anxloua to have the ordeal over aa aon aa possible and had asked that ahe be permitted to resume the stand t- morrow. Thia was not prom-Lethough It was said that posslbl Mra. Thaw might be called. Mr. Delmas direct examination of Mra. Thaw wn probably conauma some hours. The district attorney baa bem making the most minute preparation fur his end was In conference today with several perrons, who, it la said, will be callst. aa witnesses. When the trial la resumed tomor row morning there In likely to be the liveliest tilt between the lawyers that ha yet marked the trial. The defense will call to the stand F. C. Per kina, a lawyer of Pittsburg, who drew iip Harry K. Thaw's will. Mr. Perkins arrived here tonight. Mr. Delmas and his associate counsel have been figuring out a way by which they can have the will Intro duced and they, are confident tbs; thi-will be successful. On tbe othe hand Mr. Jerome will strive to keen It nut. and a battle will be tbe result. Tonight Captain Ricketts, who la now In charge of the jurors, announced tomorrow that no women would be allowed In tbe courtroom, except those who had been summoned as witnesses. He said thst this woul j he done because of the testimony, am added that he would have an extra detail of court officers on hand to enforce this rule. caakmally a woman can, and ought to follow some special vocation in addition to (never in substitution fori her horn work. "Hut Juat aa tbe highest work fur tbe normal man is work for his wife and children, so the highest work fur the normal woman is the wurk of the kome, where, heaven knows the woik li ample enough. "'Hut I also feel ahe can do the best work in her heme If ahe has healthy outside Interests and occupations in addition and I most firmly believe that she cannot do her full duty In her husband if ahe occupies merely e a servile attitude toward him, or ro 111 treatment and that ahe la quite ae bad a mother if weak and foolish aa If hard and unloving." sub-mit- CHATTANOOGA WOMEN PROTEST. Agalnat Printing the Details in the Thaw Trial. Chattanooga, Tenn., Feb. 10. Women of this city met today and protested against tha printing of details of the Thaw murder case and similar criminal eoure proceedings. The protest. It was Mated, was made in the Interest of the sanctity of our homes and the purity of our children, and to protest against the minute and derailed accounts given In the daily papers of the aenaatloual and scandalous proceedings of the criminal court. ' Mayor Frierson In nn address declared tbe report of the Thaw trial were disgusting and disgraceful In their detail. He said some of the newspapers had gone too far In their accounts.- - CHURCH CONTRACTS BU rit - d, n . TRUE POSITION OF Family. Syiaciiee, N. T.. Feb. 10. lira. E. H. Merrill of this city, president of the w York State Mothers Assembly. if In receipt of a letter from Prest-'- h ni Roosevelt in which he defines 'hplace of the father and mother In ihe home. The letter wee written In '"sponse to one asking suggestions for h council of toothers recently hejl at N'ewburg. and the state convention ' hr- - held In the fall. The President aye : Fur one of your toplca how it do to apeak of the place 'he father In the home? Now an-'hen people forget that exactly aa the nwher must help the breadwinner by !!b a good housewife o the father n urn. if he la worth hla salt, mnst in r iPVprj way back up the mother la i l bring up the children. After all the prime duties are and no amount of cultivation o amount of sagacity will make the man a good citizen unless ha Jragegood husband and father anil he la a successful brea.lwia-?'r- i tender' and considerate with wife, and both loving and wiae foo-- ; wo1! weak idu ,0 Contract Must bo Accepted Everywhere or Net at All, Says the Pope. Paris, FSb. 14. The Temps prints whet it declares to he n true history of the addreea of the French episcopate proposing model contracts for churches. According to thin acebunt, which bears Internal evidence of being .authentic, the ultramontanea, which are In the majority In the favored the maintenance of the statue quo, but agreed to submit to the Vatican the question of contracts which the moderates proposed, In the belief that It would not be acceptable there. Mgr. Dadolle, archbishop of Dijon, and Biahop Touchet took the minutes to om, end Cardinal Merry Del Val, papal secretary of state, told them the pope was willing to accept tbe principle of the contracts if absolutely solidarity were shown, but this decision must come ostensibly from tbe episcopate, aa he could not publicly Intervene. Thereupon the Temps saye, tbe address was drawn up and submitted to the pope, who, with hie own hand, supplemented the clause specifying that the contract must be accepted everywhere with "or we do not wish It anywhere." The document,- - the paper says, was then brought to Paris and Issued In the name of the- entire episcopate, although many of the bishops never saw it until it waa published. epls-onpdt- - TRIBUTE TO DECEASED BEATORB Eulegiea on Life and Character of Hear and of Lester, house life and character and public services of the late Representative Rockwood Hoar of Masaachnaetts and Rufus E. inter of Georgia, both of whom died 'uring the last summer. Mr. Covering of Massachusetts presided during the eulogies on Mr. Hoar. Tbe following delivered addressee: Messrs. Washburn, Greene, McCall, McXeary Lawrence, Weeks, Tlrreil, Lovering and Glllett, of Massachusetts; Boutelle, Illnols: Sherler. Kentucky: Houston and Butler, Tennessee; Olcott. Parsons and Bennett. New Nork ; Murphy, Moatcbany, Indiana. The eulogies on Mr. Lester were participated la by Messrs. Overstreet, Bartlett, Livingston, Adamson. Hardwick. Lee. Bel and Branley of Georgia and Burton of Ohio; Burgess. Texas; Davidson of Wisconsin and Thomas, North Carolina; Hermann. Oregon; Gonlden. New Tork; Bharkman, Florida; Lacey, Iowa. Mra. Lester, widow of the deceased representative from the first Georgia district, was In the Mr. Overstreet membemr gallery. presided on the completion of the eulogies the house adjourned until noon tomorrow. EXPORT STATEMENT. Washington, Feb. 10. The exportation of Iron and steel manufactures reached their highest record during the lari year, according to figures compiled by the bureau of statistics ad i utterly ruinous) in dealing wlii I cf the department of commerce and children. labor. Tbe total for lg'.6 aggregated J , .think It a crime for the woman I H2,500.0'0, an Inereare of "rit her primary dntles. to shrink 0l4 over the preceding year. rT1 h"Sng a good wife and mother.! Practically every one of tbe importhe woman should have' tant article or groups of .articles e air,e aa man to train ! hare in this gain. Pig ir. n shttws sn right r mini u better the herself; and 0:-- ' Increase of$l, 004.004; bar Iron an in 1 - Jap-ane- PRICE FIVE CENTS 1907 sist parliament. The people complain that the government 1 continuing to support the Belgian and and they alo criticise the inactivity and of tbe ministers, the opposition of the guveniors to the election aud the high prices and scarcity ot t) food. PUBLISH FALSE STORY STREET CAR RIOT, Italian Knocks Motorman Sanaeless and Is Bsatsn by Passengers. San Francisco. Feb. 10. Police reserves were railed out ibis evening to quell a street car riot on Sutter strw-t- . between Fillnunv and Dcvlsa-derstreet. The nioiurmun of an outbound Sutter street car stopped his car because four Italians persisted In hanging on to the running board cn the locked vide of the car. Thej . were flually induced by angry pasen- gers to come Inside and the motor-ma- n threy open tbe current. One of the Italian then stepped np behind the nu'tornian and knocked him senseless with a blow of hla fist. A quickwitted passenger succeeded in bringing the car to a stop within lb black and tbe passengers, abont 4(i In number, proceeded ut glvFihe Italian a fearful beating. The police reserve was called out and they had to use their rluba to restore order. RUSSIAN PARLIAMENT WILL BE DEMOCRATIC -- a, e. Washington, Feb. 10. The Be a Successful Breadwinner and Kind and Tender to Hie ls - FATHLR IN THE HOME today listened to eulogies on the Should - ii. IMPROPERLY SPENT Stolypin Hepea te Werk Along Until Summer Before Diaeolutlon la Necessary, Washington, Feb. III. A telegram irrtdved today by Mayor Srliiuit: from tbe president of the California Exclusion league. In part read: Morning papers announce In bt headline, that Schmlis deserts labor for Japanese. Mayor and acbuul bnard We rai.-lumake complete surrender.' and will nut believe it. Kxcluhm league demands exclusion by art of congress; treaty will not exclude. Sovereign rights must not be bartered away by promises and should not be basis for compromise. We will not yield one Ima of our right sovereign people regardless of coat or consequences." Mayor Schmitz's reply tn purl follows: St. Petersburg, Feb. 10. Election! were held today in nine urge cities (Moscow, Odessa, Tlflts. Kasen, Vllna. Yekater inoalav, Astrakhan, Kishinev and Yaroslav) of the 24 which send mepibere direct to parliament, Moscow haring four members and the oib-e- r cities each one. In accordance with Russian Ideas the counting uf the voles has been pwaiponed uni II tomorrow and definite results of tbe flections are unknown but the indication! everywhere are a victory for the opposition. In oeverol cities, nnteltly Moscow, the question te whether the election has been carried by the con-s- i Huttons I democrats or the socialists. Tbe chances of the surlaltats to Moscow are favored by the results of tbe workmen's elections, low hclh 19 social demoerals were chosen. Elections of pearania, land owners aud workmen were also held today In several protlnoes. hut no reeulte have been received that change forecasts s in these dispatches tout night, the hr. tow of, which, statistic showing opposition victories. The egg. tbe enuat.ltutlonal democratic organ, claims los seats In European Russia, not oonntlng font In city, Semlpalltlnak, Turgid and Astrakhan, which were Included In the forecast of the Associated Press. In spite of the evident opposition character of parliament. Premier Stolypin la quoted as saying that be hopes to nurse along until summer before a dissolution Is necessary, bnt general opinion In that the conatliutlnnal democrats will be unable to bold their radical eolleaguea In cherk, and that the new pnllament'e life will not exceed two months. The expectation that tbe dissolution of parliament would be followed by e change in election Ihwb la denied by Premier Stolypin, Who says he believes this would La unconstitutional. Kostnf-on-Do- Schmitz Declares Their Announcement to Be Absolutely False Says He Is Trying to Do His Duty to His State. n .SOUTH DAKOTANS ACCUSED. The very dav I left Japan," said Senator Lukins, the government took Kittridga, Burks and Martin Called to Account. Imiqlgratlon Representatives Ware Forbidden te steps to suppress coolie to tbe United 8tates. 1 have no doubt Use Funds or Taka Up Tima Pierre, S. D., Feb. 14,Clialrman of Employes. that Japan will do all It can to cur tall the Immigration that is distaste- Glass, of the legislature's cungrts-lo- na investigation committee, tonight ful to this country. wired Senator Kittridge and Congress-meNew York, Feb. 10. A drcnlar letBurke and Martaln that the comSERVICES UNDISTURBED. ter to policyholders by Alexander E. mittee awaited thrlr convenience to Orr, president of the New York Life Around Door But glv them a hearing. The telegram tv Insurance company, waa made public Largs Crowds Gather Martin, being in response to a query No Trouble. Cauao toJay. Mr. Orr declares tbe comns to the chargee agalnat him, stated pany' affairs are being economicalhe had been accused of carrying Paris, Feb. 10. The Church of the that ly conducted. son on a payroll and of Irregularbis the French where AposConcerning tbe reports that the Holy Apostles, church waa Inaugurated ities In the location of national sani8. D. Tlie policyholders funds were need In fa- tolic Catholic was again packed to the tarium ln Hot Springs, I vor of one of tbo tickets for trustee last Sunday, was no repetition of charge against Senator Kittridge there but doors, deat the recent election, Mr. Orr on the certain carried persona he that scenes. Poclares the company's representatives Is at Sunday's disgraceful stationed payroll without service. were forbidden to use such funds or lice In plain clothes Were once was tbe and only nt the doors, to take np time of employe in bual-net- s NAVAL STUDENTS FAIL. Thia was when hours and 'hat to the beat of hla service Interrupted. He shouted man a Sacrillge. young knowledge, not a dollar of the policyte Be Dropped From Enthe Thirty-Eigh- t holders' tponey was Improperly spent." and 1$ compamons belonging towere rollment. Royalists," Yeung of On the subject of tbe company's society y of a charge on impelling finances, Mr. Orr says that in 1906 arrested . Washington. Feb. 10. A report reand worship. there waa a heavy shrinkage of bonds at bureau of navigation, navy ceived inof head the Archbishop Yilaette, of unexceptional quality, bnt the comregarding. . affairs at the Amdepartment, in Catholic movement shows that thirty-eigpany suffered 111 tie as a result because dependent naval academy, hereIra statement plaeed tbe bonds at erica, announced that's prleat midshipmen alii be dropped on to officiate of be ready would after book value. tbrlr account of deficiencies, 15 will be marriages and deaths and turned Notwithstanding thia depression, he baptisms, back and seventy-seveslightbe Celebrated would mass that dally asserts that the assets of tbe comly deficient will be warned and conpany Increased nearly $31,000,000 in tinued with their present daises. The . RACQUET CONTEST. 1946. and the gross excess of asset vacancies will be filled by thirty-eigh- t over legal liabilities la pearly between now and appointments 10. Y.. N. Feb. The March 1. more than It was at the close Tuxedo Park, f the New York Wrenn brother of 1905. Tennla and Rarijuet club reached the FASSET BILL APPROVED. s In the amateur racquet FRIZC WINNERS. championship for the gold racquet Sandusky. Ohio, Feb. For the Best Dsscriptivs Artlcls on at the Tuxedo Tmnl and Racquet Homer Rheinhart, secretary of the clnb today, and Psyne Whitney, of Colorado. Wine Growers' association, todefeating Milton 8. night announced that an agreement the same club, Denver, Feb. 10. The contest for Barger uf New Tork. and Gnorge II. had been reached with the American the best descriptive articles on Colo- Brook, formerly chsmplcn of the Phil- Wine Growers' association whereby rado lnaugaurated by tbe Denver Proas adelphia Racmt- -t club, also qualified certain features of tbe Fasset pure round. club last summer for the benefit of the for the semi-fina- l wine bill lie eliminated and all Tbe final round was reached In the delegates to the convention of' the In the way of the passage of leavInternational League of Proas dubs, court tennla for the gold racquet, Tho that measure will be removed. Tuxeheld In Denver In August, la closed ing Pierre Lorilierd. Jr., of the National Wine Grow era' aocinlo-- i and the prises were awarded today. do Tennis and Racquet club, to meet had been fighting the Fasm-- t bill for From all points of view, fhe contest Jay Gould of tb Georgian court. Lake-woo- over a year past on the alleged ground was entirely satisfactory. on Tuesday that If made a law. It would dlsprim' The prise winners are: nate against many of the wineries of MAYOR OF KINGSTON DIES. Guy L. Ingalls, Free Press, Detroit, lbs middle west to such an extent as Mich. $250; Opte Read, Inter Ocean. to pnt some classes of them out of Chicago, $250; Merton 3. Keyes, Kingston, Jamaria. Feb. 10. Chas. business. St. Louis. Mo.. $240; R; M. Tail, mayor of till city, died this The Fasset bill haa bad the endorseBrinkerhoff. Blade. Toledo. Ohio, $175; at the public hospital, as a ment of the California growers and Lewis G. Early, Time, Reading, Pa., result of Injure- - u stained at the by the companies which Mr. Rliein-hsr- t $125. time of the earthquake. He was then says ha been reached. All of council the of meeting growers' Interest. It la claimed, conducting NEW MEXICAN RAILROAD. and the building collapsed. Mayor will be satisfied. 1'alt was 68 year old and of Scotch El raao. Texas, Feb- - 10. A conces- descent. JAPANESE ARRIVING. sion has been granted by the Mexican government for the conxtructlon San Francisco, Feb. 10. Two hunPERSIAN AGITATORS. of railroad between Qurretaro anl dred Japanese Immigrant laborers arrived here today on the steamer SiAcambaro. In the stat of Guanajua. Teheran, Feb. 1". to. The enterprise I bached by Gov. agitators are busy and the people are beria. All but one were permitted 10 C:sio and other leading state ahowtnw dissatisfaction at the govem- - land. The man rejected was suffering from trachoma. a Announcereceived. Telegram ment of morning papers absolutely false. Have made no arrangi-meniup to date uf any kind. Smry false, like all other eiatemenu made aiwul me. Have refuted to give any statement to reporters. . President has also until conference la and is showing, friendly spirit. 1 101 ( Californian trying to do my duty to my stale. Cannot succeed If hampered by hostile press of San Francisco." At tomorrow's conference the Californian's will present their views to President Roosevelt In writing and a final, definite agreement probably will not be readied until Tuesday. Hecrelary Root spent two hours at the White House tonight discussing fhe school question with the President and It ran lie amhorliatlvsly stated that the President tpmnrrow will assure Maor Hctinilts and the board that If ttey will agree .0 end the agitation by abolishing the school the President will ti turn use hla influence secure s treaty with Japan that will cxrludi IhfiJCflUlle labor, tr.un tlils country, "it ran- he ted positively, sail that PresiMayor Mchmlti tonight, dent Roosevelt bs made no definite proposition to us. We discussed the matter with Mr. Roosevelt yesterday our position. and he understands There has been no change In tha nines that time and esa not lie until after tomorrow's eonfrr-enee.- " enn.-plete- d CALIFORNIANS IN CONFERENCE. 14. Feb. Mayor Washington. Rchmlts and the meniliers of (he Ban KrancUcn school board were in conference twice today and formal!) agreed on ihe policy they will pursue In connection with lit question of the Japanese and the Ban Francisco schools. The mayor and members of the board have refused to make any statement as to what post Hon they will take when they call at the White House tomorrow to confer with President Roosevelt and Secretary Root. In a telegram, however, to (he California Excltndon league tie right, Mayor Hchmlts declare the delegation has "not made any arrangements up to date of any kln-l.More than three hundred telegrams were received by Mayor Hcbmltx and ihe members of the hoard today, urging them to stand firm for the exclusion of the Japanese coolie trim Ilia Culled Hiatt-s- . " CARDINAL IIOHENLOHE SUSPECTED JESUITS God Haa Bo Arranged Things That tha Church Cannot Retake poral Power. Tem- n . Rome, Feb. 14. Primo levl, who waa secretary to the late Premier Oris-p-i, adds to the memoirs of the late Prince Hohenlohe by publishing letter written by (Cardinal Holienlohe, a brother of the chancellor, who ived In Rome, From tbrme. letters It appears ibat . Cardinal Hohenlohe suspected the Jesuits had tried to polmin him because he was too liberal In endeavoring through hla Intimacy with laedlng statesmen, chief among them Crisp!, to bring abont an understanding between the Vatican and ihe qulr-Inn-t. ' semi-final- liam 1 s tlr-win- e STAMP INVESTIGATION CONDUCTED AT ALDANY Flva Million Dollars Worth of Btampe Destroyed Without Adequate Supervision. Albany, X. Y., Feb. 14. Comptroller Martin H. Glynn made public tonight the results of an inveeilgatlon whech he ban been making Into the condition of the stock transfer tax bureau of hia office with reference to the handling and dlatmaal of seven million dollars worth of the stamps Issued by that depan ment for use In the transfer of stock under the art of 1905. According tn the comptroller's statement. more than five million dollars worth of tbr stamps have been destroyed either In pmresu of manufacture or by actual burning without adequate record or supervision In the two years since the art waa passed and there la only ihe personal word of a single clerk, salaried at $2500(1, and not under bond, to certify the fart that they were deroyeti at all. The stamps were printed by Quayle and Bon of this rlt). I he plates were In the custody of the comptroller's representative and earh day were delivered to Quayle. The psier Bret used was stored In the Quayle shop under an ordinary lock In an ordinary room.-anwhile the sheets were eounted out or printing there was no safeguard to prevent their being abstracted. Moreover, the mtnpireller declares; I lie count uf sheets doe not tally, the. explanation being that some of It wae used for other purposes. The first iaaue waa found to bo aunreptilile of counterfeiting and In May or June of last year the priming of thia waa stopped end a new Issue waa began on patent paper. When the new paper, which was to defy counterfeiting, came tn hand," said the comptroller, It received as better safeguard, but waa left In the Qnayle shop. And the comptroller's seal with which the bundles were sealed was apparently aa carelessly I reared." A statement was made to him by Watkins, the comptroller said, adding: He Mys that early In October he took all that, remained of the old Inane of stamps from the vaults down to Quayle'e shop In Green afreet, boxed them np end they remained there without guard 'or warehman at least one night. The safe depoalt people any. however, they were not returned until Dec, 26. There were over two millions Is thia fot $1,256,211. which had been returned by the bank of Manhattan company to the official distributors of tbe atampa and fil. 427.396 which had never been Issued. I do not know how kmg they remained at the Green street shop, hut according to Watkins' tatement, they were brought bark here to the state houue and on December 29, two days before I assumed office, they were burned In the furnace down stairs, without being counted or checked np, and without witnesses save a clerk who was in no way legally reapnnethle for their rare. The record of the burning of Dec. 29 waa not entered until Dec. 31 the day before I took office. lf REGRET DEATH OF CORTEBE. 1 lie-ert- brother, who then was the German chancellor, and this memorial probably was the origin of the Austrian veto of Cardinal Uampello at the lai ' conclave. ; Cardinal Hohenlohe on June 24, 1889, wrote Pope nay In; "God has arranged things so that the church cannot retake, tbe temporal power. The salvation of souls that we submit and remain tranquil In the ecclesiastical sphere." Tbe pope's departure from Italy wa spoken of owing in friction over the monument to Giordano Bruno, the philosopher, who waa horned at the Ktgjre In the Campo Del Friori at Rome aa a hereti. Cardinal Mohan-kib- e wrote te Pope Leo. Criapl haa asked me to Inform jou that If you wlah to leave he will not oppose It and will have you arcom-panle- d with all honors, hut that your kollneaa will never he allowed to retain to Rome." Cardinal Hohenlohe alan disrnaacd wkh Criapl and foreign Minister Blanc the best way. tn cane of a conclave, to a prevent the election of Cardinal ss pope. Italy, It was cniitended. in thia could not- - act without appearing to minimise the spiritual sovereignty and Independence of tbe church; neither could Germany becauae It waa a Protestant power and Austria alone wan in a position to act Blanc diew up a memorial which Cardinal Hohenlohe sent to hla lo, R;mi-loll- Call on Authorities to Offer Reward for Capture of Murderer. Patcreon, X. J.. Feb. 10. Beverrl hundred perrons, rno-tl- y Italians, nxt today to consider tbe murder of Justice of the Peace Robert Cortes, who wae blown to death by an Inferntl machine In Me office on Friday evening. Circulars calling on all Italians and others to attend the meeting are to be dlatribu'ed. The resolutions to be presented later will, beside expressing regret at tt4 death of Justice Cortese. rail on tit-- i federal, state and county government to offer a reward for the arrest an.t convict tun of the manufacturers and senders of the bomba. Business interest generally will be asked to con:i tribute toward a fund to be used reward for information which will bring about the arrest of the murderer. Every Italian In tbe city and vicinity will be asked to attend the funeral which will be held on Tuesday from Bt. Michael's church. law-abbll- CHANGES TO BECOME EFFECTIVE Waahington, Feb. 10 Aa Important change In tbe administration of the poatoffire department will become effective about the 15th Instant, when the division cf correspondence w't be divided and distributed etaons other bureau of the department. Assistant Postmaster General , First Frank H. Hitchcock recommended tl. change in faU nnnual repgt, and It ha. been approved by Postmaster General Cortelyou. It is' of tbe blgbeat Importance to people who me tbe mails."' said Mr. that this change be Hitchcock, made." |