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Show ‘ ae THE ic . EN ath ih , (Continued rs from page ee effect the schools for tae ge Chin one.) : ane et Pe ; Heine ne? vailing higher hot be in our se Hoole: end that our placed in ae ret eee Ppl selma Popa tian ae With was bal : : Sentiment very strong men of aesState.. against Restaurant attending Japanese the White men patronize yoursecond own noon of the SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1906. - Keepers.| young|ness primary grades and | about asked to race" a day the enter er @ rat large people his } V ay ore " @ } ye women abou num- ® of busi-| to his place came of men state|ber the in sentiment the found I nt prefor the] should} so Catldten' iteing! Interview tion earrese apanese of re- only for the REPUBLICAN, at remote distances to attend this I personeily interviewed the restaur-| school If the action of the board/ant keeper and took down their} stands, then, and if no schools are/statements. George Sugihara, a resta-| provided in addition to the one men-j|urant keeper at 177 Third street, stat- | tioned, it seems that a number of|ed that the boycott commenced on Oc-| Japanese children will. be prevented|tober 3 and continued until October | from attending the public schools and|24; that on the first day the boycot- | will have to resort to private instruc-|ters distributed match boxes on whieh| adits est INTER-MOUNTAIN for children residing in the remote! times stones were thrown and windows sections of the city to attend the Ori-| broken, and in one or two instances ental school The conditions in San|the pfoprietors of the restaurants were "rancisco are such, owing to the great|struck by these stones conflagratio f vould not be pos" : who were} restaurant not to their youthful jmp ee position where Many of the people were outspoken In| patronize the Japanese restaurants;| fected by ful tnpr ions may be aftheir condemnation of this course, say-|that customers attempting to enter th MeieGtian sae m with pupils of] ing that they would take exactly the} his place of business vere sometimes Andranca 17 t bos same ‘stand against American young| restrained by force, and that blows the following raxovutio _board passed {men of similar ages attending the pri-| were struck; that on or about the 10th) ‘Resolved That ag n : mary grades am frank to say that] or lith of the month the boycotter: article } elk rict faa uccordance with] this objection seems to be a most rea-| came three times a day-morning, | law of California. : in of tthe moot one ble one All of the political par-| noon and evening, that sometimes} by Airected art ja, principals are here-|tles in the state have inserted in their | they threw bricks and stones Into his; anese ore at "ot hinese, Jap-| platforms planks in favor of Japanese} place that one arfengl ab)i: ee ni dren to the an da Korean exclusion, and on March | them the reason south (side) of bs ano wituated on thej|7, 1905, the state legislature passed ij things and they Powell-and ny : reet etween | joint resolution urging that action ye | iceman that after Mond Poe _Stre ts, on and] taken by treaty or otherwise to limit|that a policeman was seea on the Monday, Oct. 15, 1906 and diminish the future immigration | scene that he complained to the po-| Korean Exclusion Leacue of Japanese laborers into the Tnited | liceman on the beat; that sometimes |} 2° 5 | States the policeman spoke to the boycottei Phe action of the board in the pasTy press of San Franciseo pretty jand appeared to be friendly with "age or the resolutions of May 6, 1905,|generally upholds the action of the/|them; that whenever n pollceman appie! re » 1906, was undoubtedly| board of education. Of the attitude of | pet ared who was unfriendly to the boy-| hee anAue need by. the activity of|the more violent and radical news-|cotters the boycotters lef.; that on one lear BEAL ESe ague, 4n and Korean organization purpose. of sec uring the congress of the Exclus lon formed | papers for the|ther the enactment United States it league tate claims of a membership' in the which membership is said Calitornia fourths of of 78,500 unnecessary to say tone " and that to speak their tone fur-| occasion is the| ters call for as well Japanese The temper the exclusion and tone of of the To | ‘ny measure tny the Chinese, Japanese United States." Yet, ing on of the con-| follows: not adopt of discrimination October the o1 22, Jeague Koreans . 1905. held at in a in| "Ould protes meet- San and state the have no Upon may Fran-|SChools federal right the extend to the aliens such tructing' Itz exec | be fore 4 & -/marily and for ngolian separate children schools of San for] {s interested Fran-]own in citizen: the for the state the dren were attending chools, against Japanese boys -5 and and men 24 ranging years of from age attending years of age. When noe a. | the Te public| of ana pupils left the aor the primary should eontain this Ti - a framed behalf which of and would be ™@oney was made nase Wat a ner Sua by to aE eae | Mr.| Japanes be paid a a | ant a then is that alien| limit chil-| oie ns, for whom it was paid by Japanese the name if was he him again The windows of the Golden Gate ‘@ufant H. Sugiyama proprietor, 256) Third street, were broken on Oct. 17! °° 18. Mr. Sugivama stated that when-! |CV®" 4MY customer left boycotiers threw stones struck Pane 4S them as well; ae white a GBS cash the ke stones 0" the| Police; him to his him that on of the the at} of| that} he applied and that the a letter to as| one side; boyeott consul and write stand window windows, Japanese assistance ®€ would his place the} at them, and| that his custo-| people; that it| near his struck the first day the ‘9 for Be gister ; the from] that president of the he did not know BALES whom the would recognize money him but | 54 aren itie by exclude ren of its own | there S. Imura,' president of union,cash undto the that Cooks' the} union paid; Imura union; clause, met all schools of its public use the children of every Rev ores and the rights of free education to grades which would that representing the that the amount the I its ||! the paid would] Japanese "most-favored-nation" could state, a cider heen shee the oldet ~ be on lit- |Jects the and oO eer an in the state's treatment of Japaness children, or even if a new treaty at eee the and"elwht nee Ja to th; anes that some ' of known became I am informed ormed 16 beside ven said pay Waiters' mura union, the public|there was a discrimination operating being per-|!" Violation of the treaty with Japan primary grades and sitting lolgirislandenoveiotn keep| goods they Boycotters. also known to Mr. the Japaneseto It cisco a moment sean) eee expensive in. Prior to the action of the leagu stitution to educat foreigners and the board of education. as I yi Re aliens who would carry to their coun-| formed, received many protests from|tries the fruits of such education oidzens of San Francisco, whose ch{l-| Therefore, if it should be held that] mitted to attend those schools. ipyaee protests were mainly against Japanese Pay proposition a fon mMhaistate education miane boycot- to their whence and the fed-|-" SE CO Snr LG be paid; that he as prere nt on Oct. 25 or 26 when $100! right to quesat Pyieasacn ine ae tl avasw regard Priat ee ; . i pec lat 1e saw the} essentially xecutive committee io]schools are designed _ the board of education] of the citizens of the ne metition of terms the intended pack up the place Sugihara Pe its voice in hand, the privileges upon cisco, as rep ce eee it, the state, may elect, reported in the San Francisco } . ] Chronicle of October 22 "1905 eens eral government has no lution was adopted by the ies Se re tion its action in this appear . Mr government to lift other asked they | Was ano-agreement to pay the boycot- | ads for the purpose of declaring the} voyeott off that all the fac ts were| public schools of California are a state and not a federal institution. The state has the power to abolish these schools against}]eMUirely, he long the boyeott they vceplied, Until end-until the Japanese give up the} more} to be in the eity of San Francisco. The] conservative newspapers may better be membership is composed almost en-|illustrated by an epitome of their artirely of members of labor organiza-|gument practically is as follows: The tions, Section 2, article sUtution of the league is as "*Thé league as such shall when how of hostility to ‘Mongol } up the burden of their claim}the Japanese are no better than| their business, and that the same reasons|#nd return to dictated the exclusion of the| came," 1inese three-| is than by }usual of | hordes, 1 "aw extending the provisions of the|is that existing Chinese exclusion act so as to| Chines exclude Japanese and Koreans. The| Which SPE went that on the second day distributed among primary 23 grades schools There of are the e eight feeling PaaS in the state especially in is further] labor tion a special cireles, a policeman policeman on and the at the ae came to U ‘ ates would, of course,|the small 1 the of Article XIV of the | nessMany United States, be | white of traders the out foremost of busi- educators S. Star in| ae is hereto A." born in th grades same attached It will and United States as American position age, marked ‘"‘Ex-| OCCUps about] tion be observed the ime while in that the children. those born' number those|they of in he Japan| of all said prominent that to Japanese | Japanes children different|the primary States" to. have labor they men had no children grades; that ‘now in they and|of objec-| 1905 @ the Geary United| G. thée'.same'school'priv-| Of. 705: of that for Larkin: stated that boycotted. Nishi stated boycotted street was month wanted] street four. for 1625 his days. street. R. stated. by me and ™® bY the ©'* peat a | the: his| Eighth ris 1 ] ; A of 19 : Awe 14) 18 Seventh . 7 ; 0 ' 15 yu eee I ; ] 2 3 l 2 10 1 16 1 16 Ae I I 0 = " 14) 10) ; cisco prior six. Of mary high { to this April in 18 number, Sanu was code all ee notuves the total the h been number present The Speech person Fran-| bers, sevent and by The ipart erected, of school of the children, tion There dent attending is Is only this in San one burned ee school at the ably and with structures course of 43 »> as found many it of the erected ay at the to in eo other aid for ‘competent duty in th is school. schoo compare new with venting as the ans r Nearly labor or- deta ie } ‘ave!3 Im-| upon senior= fornia.» i : iving fi was of union pint Ben poen labor well, in - not onl mer from but patronizing a rth nas the bank |} of these} PE $250 Pid on ly agreed clerks the} upon Monday, by a3 Oy their: business - union, oe aoe but that e a was October to 29. balance: have i > words t of shov J t the is sec-|(he StU-) early employed pre&-/yunion | the money All of the ( a b to irt of the stand October Cooks in front and men of were! Francisco, Waiters'| Oakland California Japanese! in out the of and past labor about = five or si cities Yd dalean hoycott, The} oe boycott ea ‘through the labor 7 matte: x se , yoyco ede al ' | cat alld was of in the San nain must be institut-|in council, ; ost Ere ned agains front of ; Hames even | re eurents nenar- ene restaurants lo-|| rancisco for a period |} the restaurants and of customers entering have been taken down | tp ‘ _ men tee «tr faee UE \ g; saw the captain chief Colby, asin BRILLIANT DISPLAY : also H charge} 9 Mas ; ZOFRS eC Qi OF YULE-TIDE SUGGESTIONS a a ‘ Gri AND , . 772 Gd ~ e hin | Rep ub lican 9 tin : : Teen hKeceive ae va rit ‘ t, Height but mt oe rh a Ia, 0 1 ' ‘Phones Both of i Oba 3 il r eT: oUt S190. 3 a2 aii Dooly ; SNepu ican Block, Salt Japanese - the fron t up behind fs ( rus Shed in the "but to not : °°)" the to police on Laguna cs eee ae oe ase oo City. } ind ' BNE a sae a started pan ae GALS ae ae > . thi : atlack which oo a eased irrested for on pall have ak ; ©.823 Obata. 3 p | to the the Oe nee ents ' Lo peace report are orn statement sublished the A bee to In Bae Sil wa Minn i Inte ut on toda fuel fami tl luth id eral ten milar : Sed D Il. manager ov)that the) ACUT i E the trloads C SITUATION : te Der 0 oal vhich, { DPA ure pro- Is to 1 Devil's au hed th last, are le id South ite : tant Great of lakot gen- atH lee tit) "9 . eat h Jowest below to ( } 5 Magazine >= Ei { the v the ses oO Is X ‘ / old An folk ideal t} Ay MAKE A Pp Ce? a (ay 2 Sok ' YEAR'S SUBSCRIP. - rr Pp mas og Af ih ty ‘he @ * TION > NS bday NS N\ YOUR wl reseni sa place pair of to get CHRISTMAS GIFT , at It will be better this year Dakota comers wea than re Union emus al than ever : tes Square :: ee. New York : the iropped temperatut ae Ler \ mereury ' ee: ora | {iba them Want . | ith! val --_-_- | ; : Children The At] North ould ~ A 1 opl ie fast thel ix belo Moorhead th sixteen trying 25 cs Paul " The wa ind Commission Inim Northwest , 1s ‘ Ce eather und = the Se SD dropping can 0 CHI | oda Du | 1th ¢ t » North Peas mercury ads. the the district in which most of the an eat tgs te eat een vat panese restaurants are located, and|about 1:45 p. m., on Sutter etreet: be: arora by both of these officer itween Plerce and Steiner, in front of iS sooh as their attention was the skating rink. as I was on my way i at - | 1 Philbir ad hip - « 1 a notabl victory the promise of E c n superintendent i ific railroad at Dr of thei hour dozens Commerce Commission | ich is igating | n the Nortl st; the | BOY ee f " it \ 1 Blanch 1 ivi irthern J ere aa COAL aes lin , I disturbing iched nor ne : I ; a * at oes ae -Tho aa = , y leer Ime, 2h. ston 1 . { Vee ey ae ee orig rar lah rn t ey ue aie pee Pee eon ay et a Si ard i eon a Di ae nds oa Chi fi a theron nts street, streets, . ed UpeP . ae and , oi a Japan- the I ean 5 Dt re Ave brick Height street l Naan athe das a On the oth and Luke iti such Jap-) blood-stained shirt, duce if necessary.' =e themselves could" J am aera St. ; you CUE ORNAMENTS. upon whieh' tc vielence, the of a a ' zee one XMAS-TREE ( c it Cali- street. 1906, , whee ous moet REPUBLICANS at i ofof police, police Xe Sez CCOradg @ attaeked tas: hae t Cee chure eg, | Emterstate Commerce ranging ay ou Lune roy peuy re; vestiguting Vamine They followed low { } ‘ t.and-t at i th re ae ‘ } Ds vy ith the! ie ks he head ana on. bet een t reportec the pupils attending this school have| ot at least three w cS *ickets Were| of ca be taught the Ex relish language. jstationed in front of these restaurants | J ivestigation will eure = ane Fa oeaneciaan oy Deerent W th: a it will be absolutely impossib I i cine d t lete 5 but Height 21 Oia ‘ reen the|account. the; anal| E d THE REPUBLICAN OFFICE INST., AND YOU GET t O77 ree hodone. Kodono ri alent M PaUe* in|}them, Years disputes . : Gard- % else matter I "fo! other the |" part ment the had united a TO 21st AMOUNT FRIDAY, to| member you they me sociation, the te keepers THAT P. M. by ts MeD. i of 121 and bout eight years of age; and struck the time of m Francisco. the payment Thiof | 7:o restaurant . oe OR BRING BEFORE 6:00 A restaurants on Third street and. disve bee ranineaiiea ate qi Ry * Tt ae an oe tribute match boxes on which was at a time, and, during their} superintendent of ‘hie Vera < Bras: pasted a label as follows Vhite men} maintenance. threats have been. made|byterlan mission. and was advised by |and women, patronize your own race ; and acts of yiolence have been com-|him not PAS aB KS ans ants yle tt tt jthat this was not, strictly speaking, a} mitted. Pickets have been stationed! poll I iipid up ree Be ae Ey pe favor- LOC " ; SEND immigration and Kk <a- victims nothing Inatsu, student eee be but man ote vate did not call for Money LM was informed that it Wars eo Mes ocal Wik | not been pald up to at 1195 Scott street,| 2@Parture from San oe sh» ere aly. | boyeott stopped with J Te passed of os a communication : : round is there are found a complaint of are here given in full Statements Francisco a : and restaurants tnsUluber on Japanese. -troinoctimes. receipt ‘ he ind that! de-| - mr had gath- S Japanest stndentyil! class of University of Since "e the HRI S. San boys wno er interpreter in he ervice at San Francisco. : a and done Clothes to accomplish the purpos« I deemed it best, in order to get res- ‘3 B tnter- : keep- stone restaurants, eas rome OF ute Bs "ie. DOYCOtL was that | s ee men of is not the in San Francisco by Union the. Japanese. ac Phos = him,| (he exact facts, to take the statements pure 98 the Japanese who claimed to have and| °€e" assaulted These statements were taken at the Japanese consulate | it as urged in their meeting ind | 1" Stating that their business had fall- | by different member of the union to} ' oft at least two-thirds duri ig the; } themselves retrain ind to keep the} Period of the boycott set public/a yell, from patronizing such| There have been a number of bov-| and] pestaurant that for three weeks in| colts of whit« restaurant in San} temporary) . of Francisco object restaurants Mhaxeanrotary the elt Lees ) P keting made restaurant that that s entt- | Ct order. of nson There | the ran away I looked ato tiant for a and fostered by| er present at ‘the time this check | policeman, but Een not find one I meeting and yy is paid, S. Imura, G. Sugihara and |W nt to the Y. \ A. and was treatthe different mem-|*°™e members, so Imura id, of the |#4 by the doctor hur { made com- in union iction of public ent thme, and there are no Japanes® children attending any of the on ') public school I visited the Oriental) school in company with the Japanese consul | tlor | : the! trom the apanese consul he at once to-| instrueted captains of police to make en-| every effort ms stop eae ee Ta and he | if necessary, to assign men in citizens' struck | did not f San Francisco yn, of. which Boycotted eo been made upon Japanese subject resident in the city of San Francisco T was informed b. the chief of police hey idmitted however (ee ee oneck the Japanese-Ameri-| by was a dec ided sentiment in|C#" bank on Sutter street in San Fran- | 20 against patronizing Japa n-| cisco the Bheg' beng made payable to|me tw0| fire making the school Japanese the wa he statements throwing window \ssaults Assaulis have the| : Japanese became leaders in pri-| buildings] time seventy-two Oriental School Oriental school, for the Chinese, Korean who that cam ? this subject, disclaimed any | nee Informed me that ‘W.'S. Stevenanese MM C \ 1 October zs of ar formal action being} son as the man to whom the mone pat 7:15 p.m T wa iltacked on the the boycotting of the reg. | *a@s paid One hundred dollars was] ner o agruna and Gian street and one high school was destroyed by au ae sn ; =i earthquake, leaving forty-five schools.) 39° jeadquarters Since April 18 twenty-seven temporary | & Fey ga at by | think the stone was thrown at ,) but that it was thrown for the reso-| pose of .smashing the windows ti lnghtening his customers Korean section of Restaurants viewed o1 knowledge taken for 7| é| twenty-eight schools destroyed assaulted eae of| ‘‘|ment | ese restaurants, and was created r schools or grammar schools were political 12| urant 10! that there' sithe unions 3 of 2 ‘provisions ganizations S| ‘| 1 not keeper stone said anes Nearly 10} 1 ; i were -boycot mi intain d. in ‘Sa Waiters' union of : \ : rane » from Octobe oO Octobe Lamission to membership 24° b members of the Cool and | union, but their application Waiter unlon against Japanese res-| nied taurants:. doine business inthat -citv. | Money Paid 13 : : number they pupils, | jrestaurant behaved.| With the of Jap 13 1 I 1 The that res 1 : 7 First E ne of the tors 19 1 Becond . Por hines¢ Reuaee. the 1 2 Third attending; 12 1 Fourth children wing 14 4 of all 13) studious le Che Franel [lution : 1 iges young he 22, restaurant Keeper were all] by me at the Japanese con-| San Francisco. They all said| ades. All the teachers with] boycotters, but that the efforts of I talked while in San Francis » | boycotters, were mainly directed in the highest terms of the Jap-| W ara preventing customers from children, saying that they were | tering their place of business imong i cleanls . 1 17 1h { the | those whom spoke o|anese 1 y nding readily | ing i jection to Japanese men at-} ACs the primary grades could very | ®Xamined be met by a simple rule limit-|Swate in of men pic y re very much older [It will be noted | ilezges iS children of other nations,|Testaurant was boycotted for two days that the Japanese students were dis-| but that they were unalterably opposand O. Matsumodo of 1469 Bllis street tributed among the grades as follows j cd lo Japanese young men attending | Stated that his restaurant was boy- | Japanese ative ee he og : F Phi ‘oO *¢ ay ro ‘ lavs Grade pane ees ars Vv ae Heer two. day i: ee | from Japanese the was | breaking that each ener cmaut of the city and would sec that everything Cae ible was done to| rotect Japanese subjects and prevent | Vi¢lations of law | I am satisfied, from inquiries made his) BUILDING Third! at every effort would he wade oy him to protect the Japanese restaurants in| San Francisco, and that all violators ff the law would be promptly arrest-} ed and punished The acting mayor of San Francisco also assured me that he' would co-cperate with the police about| Tamut on detailed HOTEL Protecting Japanese, | chief of police g »d me that] The O'Farrell| restaurant disturbances were the law was committed, eng that after the officers. were ationed there were no disturbances he violations of the r . 2 z } the restaurant attending] the officers KNUTSFORD eS) the Japanese restaurants at each meal} hour, and that the officers were structed to arrest if any violation of statements made by Su-] the = ae if wine ee ene ne ees ae on: the other hand, are daa oe H SUE awe as to | sich! eatlen( csieen ind a rongly opposed to the action of the yreak ng of windows and eens of] , J € i of the nation |San Francisco board of education.| customers a <obayashl, slauré unt] vhie aga ot the cach : Japanese are admitted to the Univer-| keeper at ely Ellis street Ente tha 5 pils attending the|sity of California, an institution main-| his restaurant was boycotted for three >| public schools on the day when the or-|tained and supported by the state,| days only I. Kawai, restaurant keep-| der went into effect ranged from i| They are also admitted to, and gladly| er at 1213 Folson street, stated that} lo 20 years A list of pupils< ittending | vel nee at Stanford university San} his estaurant was boycotted for 21] the schools, which list gives ie name | rancisco, so far as known, is the oniy! days M Shigegawa of 336 Third} of each pupil, name of school. age of| ity. which has discriminated against} Street stated that his restaurant was] pupils, grade, place of birth. and sex | Tens nese. children I talked with a] boycotted for three weeks. Y. Noda| hibit EVENINGS tees Canale eas to street, Imura, proprietor of the White} restaurant, 596 Third street, cor- roborated E j N OPEN called his} a BCS = the noon hour and remained| poe 12 to 1 and watched the place;| erin « Ber Chine: ei here after the| sraduates for the eighth grade titre deena of Commerce and bor Oe cemen Lb ut that the men With} into the High wechool; Or this tonal oe The dlaim im made that white labor | the mate boxes were always there;| upils, 68 were born in J 1 has been almost entirely driven from| that when the policemen came there! oe fhetUMnited cB tates hee' anadithe Hawalian islands, and that the} Were five or six of the boycotters pres-! in the United' Sts ae Lose born | Japanese gradually forcing even} ent at the noon hour undertitution Section of Con | he went| cornet the at headquarters, police and|'t® designed primarily is j system Pupils. Japanese maintained, and If the state should do| °f Pine and Larkin streets; that he On the day when the order of Oc-| this the federal government could not] did not remember the name of the tober 11 went into effect. viz.. October|Ccomplain, since no treaty right could | Officer whom he saw, but that he a 15, there weve attending the public be ae when the children of Jap-| directed by that officer to go to he | schools of the city of San Francisco | 406 treated precisely as the|S0Uuthern station; that three or tour 93 Japanese pupils. hake pupils were children of all foreign nations. days after his vis the police a- | grades in the public schools of San the report on the conditions in_the Francisco, the first grade being. the pawaiae islands as contained in Bullowest and the elghth the highest-|/cU 66 of the bureau of labor, De- lA ( for consul said| the chief of! ae ee P ae "below No D ; ; sd . ees there is searcely a town in northern half of Nort rycen which coal can b had xcept t the ait y Hl ‘ Hf ‘ JENSEN 4 {} ‘ EYESIGHT SPECIALI 0 . See eeera o3 MAIN ST. ok I} ‘ J. H. KNICKERBOCKER OPTICIAN 227 S. MAIN, AND IN JEWELER OURIO SHOP. |