T VOL. XLVI. NO. 14,408. PORTLAND, OliEGOX, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1907. PRICE FIVE CENTS. OPERATORS DEFY WESTERN ONION Chicago Employes Are in Favor of Strike. WOULD AFFECT WIDE AREA Reinstatement of Expelled Union Employes Demanded. HIGHER WAGES WANTED Mass Meeting of 800 Operators Pass Resolutions Defining Their Atti tude Secret Organisation of Union Has Been Active. CHICAGO. Feb. 10. fSpeclal.) Open defiance of the Western Union Telegraph Company was voiced at a mass meeting of Its employes held in Musicians" Hall, 134 Van Buren street, this afternoon. More than 800 opera tors were packed in the hall, and many of them favored calling an immediate strike on the company unless the men who have recently been discharged for Joining the union are at once rein stated. Resolutions practically announcing their membership In the Commercial Telegraphers' Union of America were Hdopted by the operators, and the ex ecutive committee of the union was In structed to notify the company that a continuation of its alleged discrim inating attitude will be resented. Strike May Be General. President S. J. Small and Secretary 'Wesley Russell of the National organi zation attended the meeting, and urged the men in the local office of the West ern Union Company not to take hasty action until the union is ready to act in all large cities. President Small said after the meeting that the opera tors in 22 cities had joined in the movement and that if a strike were declared It would not be confined to Chicago. The men have been secretly organ izing for about two years, and Presi dent Small asserts that recently nine old employes of the company have been discharged in the local office because of their activity in union affairs. Demand Increase In Pav. The first demand to be made will be for the reinstatement of those men, and it is asserted that the operators will insist on having an answer to the request they made two months ago for an increase of 10 per cent in salaries. This petition for a wage increase was signed by more than 00 employes in the Chicago office and forwarded to R. C. Clowry, president of the com pany, in New York. The petition was ignored, according to the employes, and they declare that the time has arrived when they must assert themselves. The operators de clare that the wages paid by the West ern Union Company are 10 per cent less than paid by the competing com pany, and by private concerns. VXION IS READY FOR TROUBLE Portland Operators Say Plans for Strikes Have Been Made. This news, according, to Portland ope rators. Is more serious even than is Indi cated in the dispatch. The Telegraphers' Union for the past two or three years has been secretly organizing in all parts of the United States and is supposed to control somewhere in the neighborhood Of 60 per cent of the total operators of the country. The union is reported to be extremely strong on Puget Sound and in San Francisco. In Portland Its strength Is absolutely unknown even to those who are avowedly union members? There are very few "open" members here. This comes of the peculiar nithod this union has resorted to in proselyting. The union is com posed of two classes of members "open" members and "secret" members. Men who occupy positions with private con cerns and telegraph companies who do not place any embargo on union men induce nonmembers to agree to join. Kach is furnished with proper applica tion blanks, which he forwards to a Na tional officer of the union. This official and the applicant himself are the only ones, consequently, who are aware " that the nonmember has Joined the ranks of the union. These secret members remit their dues directly to this National of ficial, who credits the members, and, after deducting the National organization's per centage, returns in a lump sum the bal ance of the secret members' dues to the proper local unions. Strength Is Kept Secret. It can thus be seen that the union strength of the National organization or of any of the local organizations is ab solutely unknown to everybody save this one man, who is pledged not alone not to reveal the secret members' names, but not even the exact strength in any city or district. This rule is applied so strictly that even the other National offi cers themselves cannot tell, except In round numbers, the strength In a par ticular section of the country. In case of a strike, the service in Port land would be paralyzed in two ways. First, no union operator would work a wra on which the "sending" operators out of Chicago or intermediate points were not union members. In turn the union member at any intermediate point would refuse to handle any "scab" mat ter filed with him which had been received from Chicago or from a nonunion ope rator at any intermediate point. The sec ond way would be that in order to break the backbone of the strike, the Western Union would probably call in from the outside Portland as well as other towns all operators who remained faithful to the company. Operators Now in Demand. At the present time there is a great scarcity even of mediocre operators throughout the country, so great has been the expansion of the telegraph busi ness in the past few years, and the with drawal of very few operators from the "provinces" would seriously handicap the expediting of messages. What the out come of the strike would be is problem atical. If the operators had waited another three to five years, at their recent rate of organization, they would prob ably have had no difficulty In enforcing any demand they saw fit to make. At the present time they have to contend with 2f f tt fa'". Mayor Schmitz, of San Francisco, Who Is I'rarf d to Take a firm Stand in Conference on Japanese Question. the fact that many of the operators re member with wholesome respect the ter rible strike of 'S3, when the Western Union succeeded in disrupting the Teleg raphers' Union, and also, -according to recent issues of their monthly official paper, they have in their strike fund something less than J50.000. a mere baga telle to what would be required to make a fight against their huge opponent, the question, in short. Is whether they could sufficiently cripple the telegraph service so as to speed ily bring matters to a head. The union appears confident that It can, while the telegraph company Is confident it can maintain a semblance of a service until it has exhausted the union's resources. GERMS IN PICTURE HATS EXPENSIVE HEADGEAR MADE IX VILE SWEATSHOPS. Miss Helen Mahon Denounces Condi tions Under Which Art Crea tions Are Manufactured. CHICAGO. Feb. 10. (Special.) Beware the picture hat; it's full of germs.1 Also its cost to the purchaser bears no fair relation to the wages paid those who made it. The ornate bonnet of the kind that costs from ?35 to $50 was held up to public scorn and, denounced as a "sweatshop .cre ation" this afternoon by a woman milli ner. Miss Helen Mahon, in an address be. fore the Woniens' Trade Union League at Hull House. Miss Mahon. gave statistics tending to show that the. labor conditions in the millinery trade have deteriorated during the last few years to the level of some of the worst sweatshop conditions in the slums. When the Federal authorities hold ses sions in Chicago for the investigation of the "Social, moral, economic and physi cal conditions." under which women and children are employed in all the great cities of the country. Miss Mahon will, she said, take the witness stand and tell the story of "the slummizing and sweat shopping" of the millinery trade. . "It would shock, or at least ought to shock the society queens and debutantes who wear the American-made rival to the imported picture hat to be -told that these magnificent art creations are made in this city under conditions that are about as degraded and squalid as the worst slum sweatshops in which women and children make the cheapest garments thrown on the market for the shoddy trade," said Miss Mahon. "There are no more abject industrial slaves than the Chicago sisters of the women who In Paris and London are called art milliners. The four employes known as the copyist, the maker, the pre. parer and the saleswomen, get between them J49 a week in pay and they produce exclusive of the work of the buyer and designer. 48 picture hats in six days. These hats average $25 to $30 each and bring about $1000 in the open market. It Is clear, therefore, that the real worker does not get any adequate pay for her toil, especially as she gets work only in certain seasons of the year, and is liable to be unemployed more than half of the time. THIRSTY 0HI0ANS CAUGHT Springfield Police Make Sensational Raid on Saloon. SPRING FIEIJX O.. Feb. 10. The police, with the aid of the fire department, this afternoon raided a saloon and with lad dens scaled the walls of a five-story build ing and captured 31 men who, had escaped from the place and taken refuge on the roof. The police attempted to go up to tha roof through the building, but found their way barred by a steel trapdoor. The men on the roof refused to surrender, but when the fire department arrived with ladders the officers ascended with drawn revolvers and no further resist ance was encountered. t 1 f SCHMITZ URGED TO Hundreds of Messages Sent to Him. EXCLUSION IS DEMANDED San Francisco Will Not Be Satisfied With Treaty. WILL NOT YIELD AN IOTA Roosevelt and Root In Conference. President Proposes Compromise, but Schmttz Denies Any Propo sition Has Been Offered. ' WASHINGTON. D. C, Feb. 10. Mayor Schmitz and the members of the San Francisco School Board were in confer ence twice today, and formally agreed on the policy they will pursue in connection with the question of the Japanese and San Francisco schools. The Mayor and members of the board have refused to make any statement as To what position they will take when they call at the White House tomorrow to confer wrth President Roosevelt and Secretary Root. In a telegram, however, to the Califor nia Exclusion League tonight Mayor Schmitz declared the legation has not made 'any arrangements up to date of any kind. More than 300 telegrams were received by. Mayor Schmitz and the mem bers of the board today urging them to stand firm for the exclusion of the Jap anese coolies from the United States. Message From Exclusion League. A telegram received today by Mayor Schmitz from the president of the Cali fornia Exclusion League in part reads: Morning papers announce In big head lines that "Schmitz deserts labor for Japan. Mayor and School Board make complete surrender." We cannot and will not believe It. Exclusion League demands exclusion by act of Congress. Treaty will not exclude. Sovereign rights must not be bartered away by promlM and . should not, be basis for compromise. We will not yield one lota of our rights as a sovereign people, regardless of cost or consequences. Mayor Schmitz' reply in part follows: Telegram received. Announcement in morning papers absolutely false. Have made no arrangements up to date of any kind. Story false like all other statements made about me. Have refused to give any state ment to reporters. President has refused also until conference completed, and he is show ing friendly spirit. I am a Californlan try ing to do my duty to my state. Cannot suc ceed if hampered by hostile press or San Francisco. Sleet Roosevelt Today. At tomorrow's conference the Califor nians will present their views to Presi dent Roosevelt in writing, and a final and definite agreement probably will not be reached until Tuesday. Secretary Root spent two hours at the White House to night discussing the school question with the President, and it can be authorita tively stated that the President tomor row will assure Mayor Schmitz and the School Board that if they will agree to end the agitation by abolishing the Ori ental schools, the President will in turn use his influence to secure a treaty with Japan that will exclude the coolie labor from this country. "It can be stated positively," said Mayor Schmitz tonight, "that President Roosevelt has made no definite proposi tion to us. We discussed the matter with Mr. Roosevelt yesterday, and he under stands our position. There has been no change in the situation since that, and cannot be until after tomorrow's confer ence." POLICY FUNDS NOT USED President Orr, or Xew York Life, Issues a Statement. NEW YORK, Feb. 10. A circular let ter to policy-holders by Alexander E. Orr. president of the New York Life In surance Company, was made public to day. Mr. Orr declared the company's affairs are being economically conducted. Concerning the reports that the policy holders' funds were used in favor of one of the tickets for trustees at the re cent election, Mr. Orr declared the com pany's representatives were forbidden to use such funds or to take up the time of salaried employes in business houses and that to the beet of his knowledge "not a dollar of the policy-holders' money was improperly used." On the subject of the company's finances, Mr. Orr says that In 16 there was a heavy shrinkage of bonds of un exceptional quality, but the company suf fered little as a result, because its state ment placed the bonds at their book value. About this depression, he asserts thai the assets of the company increased nearly $3,000,000 in 1903. and the gross as sets over legal reliabilities are nearly $10,000,000 more than they were at the close of 1905. FIRST TRAIN WEEKS Snow Blockade in Montana Finally Raised. MISSOULA, Mont., Feb. 10. The first train from Wallace, Idaho, to Missoula for two weeks arrived today. The snow blockade on the Coeur d'Alene branch of the Northern Pacific has been the worst ever experienced. ' In many places the road was covered by 40 feet of snow, particularly in the Bitter Root Mountains. The train which arrived today had four tfeet of snow on top, from which may be STAND FIRM EEK At the close of the last week the naval bill was before the Howe and the Army in the Senate and both will be proceeded with at the earliest opportunity by the two houses re spectively. The Senate will continue its work on the Army bill, but the House will devote Monday to legisla tion for the District of Columbia and will not resume work on the appro priations until Tuesday. When the Army bill Is again taken up the first subject of consideration will be an amendment authorizing the Army officers to accept reduced or free transportation and it Is ex pected the debate on that point will continue. This matter disposed of. the bill will be speedily passed. The general debate in the House on the naval bill will give place on Tuesday to speeches under the five minute rule, and It Is not expected that the measure will consume. much more time. In the House the pos-t-office appropriation bill will next re ceive attention, while In the Senate the District of Columbia bill will follow the Army bill, and It will in turn be followed by the agricultu ral appropriation bill. Senator Todge will make an effort in the Senate on Tuesday to se cure consideration of the Philippine agricultural bank bill. Resume Thaw Trial. Monday morning the trial In New York City of Harry K. Thaw will "be resumed with the defendant's wife on the stand. District Attorney Jerome will probably begin his cross examination of Mrs. Thaw on Tues day. In Boston on Tuesday evening. . Representative Julius Kahn, of Cali fornia, will discus "The Japanese Question," and will argue in favor of the exclusion of Japanese coolies. Opening of Parliament. The British Parliament reassem bles February 12. in the presence of King Edward and Queen Alexandra at a full state ceremonial. The re opening has aroued intense inter est in London as the government intends Immediately to Inaugurate measures to check the powers of the House of Lords. King Edward has Insisted that the speech from the throne be kept secret, and while the address will doubtless refer to the long list of pending Parliamentary measures, it Is probable that some ref erence to the House of Peers may be included. The Irish question also is likely to occupy the attention of the session, the government being about ready to. submit the proposed reform measures. Elaborate preparations have been made for the street pageant and the gorgeous ceremony in the House of Lords. Take Up Colonial Issue. The modus Vivendi arranged last year between Great Britain and the I'nlfed States will be discussed at leugth in the Ntrtovlildland legis lature. February 12, when Premier Bond will make an address on. the subject to the BrltlBh Ministry for the colonies. The arrangement Is un popular In Newfoundland. - Thursday the National American Woman's Suffrage Association will meet In convention In Chicago. judged the amount of snowfall during the time the trains were held in the drifts. Although the road is now clear of snow, there is still grave danger to bridges and to the line in the mountains from snow besides the floods that may be experi enced when the thaw comes. JAPANESE TOLD TO LEAVE YVOODBURX SECTION' CREW DE LIVERS ULTIMATUM. White Laborers Object to Southern Pacific Filling Their Places With Little Brown Men. WOODBURN, Or., Feb. 10. (Spe cial.) Considerable feeling was en gendered here by the Southern Pacific Company laying- off white men em ployed on the railroad section at this point, and replacing them with eight or ten Japanese. The feeling ran so high that from 60 tc 75 Americans called at the sec tion house last night and warned the Japanese to leave the town. There was no violence and he brown men promised to leave. They were given until this morning to depart, and left for Portland within the limit specified. A. Schwabauer, tlje section foreman, refused tt, work with them, and resigned his position yesterday. The Japanese decided to go before the promise of a visit from 400 to 500 citi zens was carried out. It Is reported that there will be war rants sworn out tomorrow for the ar rest of the ringleaders of the crowd that drove the Japanese out. WILL DROP 38 MIDDIES Xaval Academy Reports Many Oth ers Deficient in Studies. WASHINGTON. Feb. 10. A report re ceived at the Bureau of Navigation of the Navy Department regarding affairs at the naval academy, shows that 38 mid shipmen will be dropped on account of deficiencies, 15 will be turned back and 77 slightly deficient will be warned and continued with their present class. The 3S vacancies will be filled by appointments between now and March 1. CUT THE TARIFF ON WHEAT Mexico, Fearing Crop Failure, Wants Cheap Breadstuffs. CITY OF MEXICO. Feb. 10. Fearing a wheat famine in the ' country in conse quence of the bad crops, the finance de portment has considerably decreased the customary duties on wheat imported from the United States. The duty That wheat will have to pay from. February 15 to June 1 will be tl.90 for 109 kilograms.- EVENTS OF COMING WEEK GIGANTIC THEFT E POSSIBLE No Record Burning of $5,000,000 Stamps. LAX SYSTEM IN TAX BUREAU Comptroller Glynn, of Albany, Makes Investigation. ' WERE IN CHARGE ONE MAN Xo Attempt Was Made to Guard Tax Stamps and Only Record of Their Destruction Is Word of Single Employe. ALBANY. N. Y., Feb. 10. Comptroller Martin H. Glynn made public tonight the results of an investigation which he has been making Into the condition of the Stock Transfer Tax Bureau of his office with reference to the handling and dis posal of $7,000,000 worth of the stamps Issued by the department for use in the transfer of stocks under the act of 10O5. According to the Comptroller's state ment, more than fcV.OOO.OOO worth of the stamps have been destroyed, either in process of manufacture or by actual burning, without adequate record or su pervision in the two years since the act was passed, and there wag only the per sonal word of a single clerk, salaried at 12500 and not under bond, to certify the fact that they were destroyed at all. Under Ordinary Lock. The stamps were printed by Quayle & Son, of this city. The plates were In the custody of the Comptroller's representa tive, and each day were delivered to Quayle. The paper first used was of an ordinary commercial sort, which Comp troller Glynn said was stored in the Quayle shop, under an ordinary lock, tn an ordinary room, and, while sheets were counted out before printing, there was no safeguard to prevent their being ex tracted. The Comptroller declares the count of sheets does not tally, the explanation being that some of It was used for other purposes.' The first issue was found to be susceptible of counterfeiting, and In May or June of last year the printing of these was stopped, and a new issue was begun on patent paper. "When the new paper, which was to defy counterfeiting, came to hand," said the Comptroller, "it received no better safeguard, but was left in the Quayle shop. And the Comptroller's seal with which the bundles were sealed was ap parently as carelessly treated." A statement was made to him by Wat kins, the Comptroller said, adding: "He says that early In October he took alT that remained of the. old issue of stamps from the vaults down to Quayle's shop In Green street, boxed them up, and they remained there without guard or watchman at least one night. The safe - deposit - people say, however, they were not returned until December 26. Burned Without Counting. "There were over 2.000,000 In this lot 1.256.211 which had been returned by the Bank of Manhattan County to the offi cial distributors of the stamps, and 1.027, 386 which had never been issued. I do not know how long they remained at the Green-street shop, but, according to Watklns' statement, they were brought back here to the Statehouse on December 29. Two days before I assumed office they were burned in the furnace downstairs without being counted or checked up, and without witnesses save a clerk, who was in no way legally responsible for their care. The record of the burning of De cember 29 was not entered until Decem ber 31, the day before I took office." RIOTERS BEAT ITALIANS Assault on Motorman Enrages Pas sengers on Streetcar. SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 10. Police re serves were called out tonight to quell a streetcar riot on Sutter street be tween Fillmore and Devlsadero streets. The motorman of an outbound Sutter street car, obeying an order recently issued by the United Railroads, stopped his car because four Italians persisted In hanging onto the running board on the locked side of the car. They were finally Induced by angry passengers to come Inside, and the motorman threw on the current. One of the Italians then stepped up behind the motorman and knocked him senseless with a blow of his fist. A quick-witted passenger succeeded In bringing the car to a stop within the block, and the passengers, about 100 in number, proceeded to give the Italians a fearful beating. The police reserves were called out, and they had to use their clubs to restore order. PRESIDENT SENDS ADVICE Writes Letter Setting Forth Ideas on Duties of Mothers. SYRACUSE. N. Y., Feb. 10. Mrs. E. H. Merrill, of this city, president of the New York State Mothers' Assembly, is in re ceipt of a letter from President Roose velt In which, he defined the place of the MAD father and mother In the home. The let ter was in response to questions from the Council of Mothers recently held at Newburg and the state convention to be held In the Fall. The President says: "For one of our topics why would it do to speak of the place of the father In the home? Now and then people forget that exactly as the mother must help the breadwinner by being a good house wife, so the father in his turn., if he is worth his salt, must in every way back up the mother in bringing up the chil dren. "After all the prime duties are element al and no amount of force and sagacity will make the average man a good citizen unless he be a good tousband and a father and unless he is a successful breadwin ner, is tender and considerate to his wife and both loving and wise (for to be lov ing and weak and foolish is utterly ruin ous), in dealing with the. children. "I think it a crime for the. woman to shirk her primary duties, to shrink from being a good wife and mother. Of course, the woman should have the same r srjlit as the man to train her mind, to better herself and occasionally a woman can and ought to follow some special voca tion in addition to (never in substitution for) her home work. "But Just as the highest work for the 81 Arthur Conan Doyle, Who Is Playing Role of Sherlock Holmes in KealHy In See-king- to Release (ieorge Edalji From Prison. normal man is work for his wife and children, so the highest work for the normal woman is the work of the home, where, heaven knows, the work is simple enough. "But I also feel she can do her best work in her home if she has healthy out side interests and occupation In addition, and I most firmly believe that she can not do her full duty by her husband if she occupies a merely servile attitude toward him, or submits to ill treatment and that she Is quite as bad a mother if weak and foolish as if hard and unlov ing." TRY SIEVE ADAMS TODAY IMPORTANT MURDER CASE TO BEGIX AT WALLACE. Man Who Made Confession In Steu nenberg Case, Charged With Death of Fred Tyler. BOISE, Idaho. Feb. 10. (Special.) The trial of Steve Adams will begin at Wal lace tomorrow. He is charged with the murder of Fred Tyler, on the 9t. Joseph River, in August, 3904. Adams is the man who made a confession In the Steunen- berg case and afterward repudiated it and sued out a writ of .habeas corpus to es cape from the hands of the state, though he would have been released at any time upon making, a demand. ... In his confession he told of this Tyler murder, saying It was committed at the Instance of Jack Slmpklns, the man who Is so badly wanted In connection with the murder of the former Governor. That was the first knowledge the state had of the facts of the crime, though It had al ways been laid to the door of SSImpklns. Adams told several persons the story, and two or three of these will go on the stand and testify. It Is not believed by the prosecution that the defense will attempt to delay the trial. Though D. F. Richardson, of counsel for Moyer and Haywood, is de fending him, and J. H. Hawley, counsel for the state in the greater case, is as sisting In the prosecution, it is not thought the policy of delay will be adopt ed, as In the other cases, it being the theory that the defense hopes to get some points In this trial on the extent of the state's information, thus affecting the Moyer case. CONTENTS TODAY'S PAPER The Weather. YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature, 53 degrees; minimum, 44., Today's Fair; southeasterly winds. Foreign. Letter of Cardinal Hohenloh to Pope Leo made public. Page Election In Russian cities Indicates opposi tion victory. Page 2. National. Haskln writes on rapid rise of the automo bile. Page 'Z. San Francisco Exclusion league urges May or Schmitz to stand Arm in conference with President. Page 1. Iomestlc. Evelyn Xeshft Thaw will probably not be able to take the witness stand today. Page 3. Chicago telegraph operators bid defiance to Western Union. Page J. Gigantic theft of tax stamps made possible at Albany. Page 1. Ftcture hats denounced as full of germs and. made in sweatshops. Page 3. Pacific Coast Boy who escaped from reform school fol lows In Tracy's footsteps. Page 4. Lobby for Chaptn bill by Chamber of Com merce frightens s..ay support. Page 4. Portland and VlcinJty. Candidates for city offices line up for com ing fray. Page 8- Senator John M. Gearfn return from Wash ington; ambition is satisfied. Page 9. Sheriff Stevens takes steps to prevent Jall break by postofTice robbers. Page 12. Major Schoof denounces King Leopold's pol icy in Congo. Page 9. Labor unions protest against imprisonment of Moyer, Heywood and Pettibone. Page S. Steamer Nome City passes through bridges; traffic oa riverfront resumed. Pa-go 12. A I Vi STRANGE CASE GEORGE EDALJl Conan Doyle Turns Detective Himself, MYSTERY NEW DREYFUS CASE English World Stirred Over Re cent Startling Disclosures. EFFORT TO RIGHT WRONG His Majesty's Criminal Courts Be. lleved to Have Blundered and Young Lawyer Has Suffered an Unjust Imprisonment. Special Cable to the Xew York Times. Copyright, 1907. LOXDON". Feb. B. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, the creator of that wonderful and world-beloved character, Sherlock Holmes, Is walking In the footsteps of his literary child and practicing the art in which Holmes so greatly ex celled. He Is endeavoring to right what he conceives to be a grievous THE HASKIN ARTICLE. The Haskln article on "Re markable Rise of Automobiles," usually found in this column, is printed today on page 2. wrong. With all the energy and all the skill he can command, and with no other motive than a desire and a de termination that justice shall be done the man who, he believes, has suffered and is suffering punishment for an other's crime, he Is working day and night to vindicate the character of George Kdaljf, a young lawyer of Bir mingham, restore to him his good name and secure for him satisfactory tepa ra tion for the great injury done him through the blundering operations of one of His Majesty's criminal courts. '. "A Dreyfus Case in I.itt'c" ls the phrase which inevitably suggests itself to any one who follows the ramifica tions of this Staffordshire tragedy. The victim oi an anonymous but daring hostility for years, young Kdaljl was In J903 convicted of serious crimes and sentenced to seven years' penal servi tude. At that time the nelgb.be rhood of Great Wyrley was in a state of panic over a series of outrages, chiefly the brutal maiming and slaughter of horses and catlle and the circulation of unsigned letters spreading scandal and threats. The police of the district were active against Edaljl. Expects to Kelease Kdaljl. Sir Conan Doyle has summoned the attention of the whole English world to the events of the Great Wyrley countryside, the proceedings of the. Quarter Sessions Court which convicted EdaIJi, and the persistence in support of his sentence of two Home Secretaries and their advisers. As a result of his efforts, Sir Conan believes that he will succeed in his aim, and that within a very short time Edalji, who now is liv ing the life of a convicted felon, re leased from prison on tlcket-of-leave, will stand among his fellows a free man purged of the disgrace that has attached to him since October, 1903. The method adopted by Sir Conan was of the kind he has made famous In. his literary work. He visited the scene of the crimes, saw the accused, studied tha contemporary accounts of the trial, and then sat down and wrote for the Daily Telegraph an analysis of the evidence, applying the principles he has made fa miliar through their employment by Sher lock Holmes. His story of "The Strange Case of George Edalji" reads like a new adventure of Sherlock Holmes; the keen ness of Its scrutiny of facts, the brilliancy of its deductions, the literary art which builds up in the reader's mind a pro gressive conviction that the accused man Is innocent, make a tale which, were ic fiction, would be as breathlessly Interest ing as any of the author's stories, and which, being an accurate statement of an actual case loudly calling for rectifi cation. Is doubly thrilling. Makes Case National Isue. Sir Conan has made a national issue out of an affair in which, until he took It tip, the British public had only a lan guid interest. A month ago there were comparatively few persons who knew, enough about the matter to form opin ions on the merits of the contention that Edalji was guiltless of the crimes of which he was convicted that of maim ing a horse and that of writing a letter threatening the murder of a police ser geant. Today it seems to be the general belief of Intelligent people in this country that Edalji had nothing whatever to do with those offenses. Dr. Doyle apparently has convinced the British public of Edalji's innocence, and it is believed that the Home Office is rapidly advancing toward the same conclusion. They told me at the Home Office to day that recent developments In the Edalji case were being minutely exam ined, and that a decision would be an nounced as soon as possible. A decision favorable to Edalji is generally expected, (Concluded on Page .2.)