VOL. XXVI NO. 14,653. PORTLAND, OREGON, 3IONDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1907. PRICE FIVE CENTS. REBUILD CITY ON A GRANDER SCALE San Francisco Is Ready to Take up Work. ISSUE $28,000,000 BONDS Charter Amendments to Pro vide Funds Approved. RESTORE FINE BUILDINGS Burnham Plan Will Be Followed Wherever Practical Much At tention Devoted to Better Streets and Waterfront. BY P. A. SINSHEIMER. SAN FRANCISCO. Nov. 24. (Special.) By the special session of the Legislature, the city of San Francisco has been en abled to take the necessary stepB for re habilitation on a big scale. The Legis lature has ratified amendments to the lo cal charter which were adopted by the voters at the last election. The most Important of the amendments to the city at the present time is that which admits of the sale of bonds hearing 4 per cent Interest. Under the charter the city was empowered to issue bonds carrying in terest not In excess of 4 per cent. The local law provides that the bonds may not be sold below par. It was impossible to sell 4 per cent bonds, but now the city will be able to go ahead with 5 per cent securities. Of course It Is not expected that they can be floated under present financial conditions, but by the time the question has been submitted to the voters, and the bonds prepared, it Is be lieved that the flurry will have passed. Will Restore Public Buildings. It Is proposed to Issue o per cent bonds to the extent of J2S.000.000 for public im provements. Of this sum J6.O0O.000 will be devoted to the reconstruction of the City Hall. The building originally cost JT.000,000, but several hundred thousand dollars have already been expended In fitting up two wings in which the munic ipal officers have their quarters. One million dollars will be devoted to the re construction of the shattered Hall of Justice. This structure stands on the historic site opposite Portsmouth Square. It was completely wrecked by the Are and during the Schmltz administration no effort was made to restore It. It will be rebuilt on the old site. One million dollars Ls to be spent for a new County Hospital. Another million will bo used for a public library. Sev eral million (the amount has not yet been accurately estimated1! will be devoted to the erection of new school houses; sev eral hundred thousand will be used for the purchase of lands for park purposes; JB.O00.0O0 will be employed for the recon struction of sewers and streets, and J6, 000.000 will be devoted to the purposes of an auxiliary water system from the ocean for fire fighting. Mayor Urges Prompt Action. Other projects are being discussed, but there ls not the unanimity of opinion which guarantees their acceptance by the city. An effort to carry out certain features of the Burnham plan for the beautiftcation of the city is on foot, but It will meet with opposition. Had there been no special session of the Legislature, these projects could not have been undertaken until a year from January, when the regular session will be held. Mayor Taylor ls anxious to be gin the rehabilitation as Boon as pos sible, and will urge that the bond election be called at once. Public sentiment Is unanimous on the necessary improve ments cited above and the election will be merely a legal form. Several million dollars are now being expended under the bond issue of 1904. The most important of these ls the eleva tion of Market street at Its lower end. The street slopes abruptly from- Third street to the ferry, and work is now be ing carried on to make the street level. At the ferry the necessary elevation ap proaches three, feet, and has Involved a vast amount of work. Hundreds of men are at work there, and a few months will see the undertaking completed. Follow Plans or Burnham. The lower end of Market street has been torn up since the fire. First the ?ewers were reconstructed, then the con duits laid for the telephone and lighting wires, and then the fllllng-ln process was begun. All this time streetcars continued to run without interruption over the street. Now the Ulllng-ln has been al most completed, and the work of paving la progressing. This work is the first undertaken under the Burnham plans and already the Improved effect may be noticed. At the same time that the city is im proving the ferry district the state is carrying on lg undertakings at the har bor front. New wharves are being con structed, the sea wall extended, and the shipping facilities augmented generally. An act passed at the special session calls for the expenditure of Jl.000.000 by the state for the purchase of submerged lands at the southern end of the harbor front near Potrero. With subsequent ap propriations these lands will be filled In and a great basin constructed which will give the city eight additional miles of docks. Money has been set aside by the city fir the construction of a new roadbed for the Geary-street railway which has passed to the city through the expiration of Its franchise. The city has not taken possession of the line, but is allowing the private company to operate on a year-to-year license bo that the munici pality can take possession whenever it ls in a position to do so. The greatest demand is for the street improvements. Several hundred thou sand dollars are still available for this purpose, but it will require many mil lions to place the streets in first-class condition. Fire insurance rates are 26 per cent higher In San Francisco than In other large cities, and the reason ad vanced by the underwriters ls the con dition of the streets, which makes it dif ficult for an engine to reach a conflagra tion In quick time. With improved streets and an auxiliary fire system the rate will be restored to normal. Bring Water Prom Sierras. A movement has been launched anew for a municipal water system from the Sierras. This Is one of the arguments Mrs. Howard Gould, Concerning Whose Relations With Colonel Owfj , Helen Mer Testifies. advanced for consolidation. Other cities about the bay desire to take advantage of the Sierra supply, and the local au thorities believe that the entire Bay country should unite In bringing the pure icy waters of the mountains to the Bay region. The cost will be very high. It has been variously estimated from $30. 000,000 to 160,000,000, which is. of course, a far greater' sum than San Francisco can expend at this time. With the co operation of the Bay towns, work can be started at once on the water project, but if left to carry the undertaking through without assistance, San Francisco -rill watt a few years until it has completed the other improvements. GIRLS SWEPT INTO OCEAN HUGE WAVE CARIUES IjlTTDE OXES FROM DECK. Tragedy of the Sea Revealed on Arrival of Steamer President at San Francisco. SAN FRANCISCO. Nov. 24. A tragedy of the sea was revealed today In the ar rival of the steamer President from Puget Sound ports. The officers of the President reported that when off Grays Harbor November 22 three children were presumably washed overboard by a heavy sea. The children were missed about 5 o'clock In the afternoon. After a strict search of the vessel It was recalled that at 2:20 P.- M. a heavy sea struck the ves sel, and it ls supposed that at this time the chjldren. who were playing on the deck, were carried overboard. No one saw them go. The children were. Rita Schotte, aged 12; Ada Sehotte. aged 4; Flossie Buckman. aged 13. The Schotte children were recent ar rivals from Australia, having come with their mother to Victoria, where they were met by the father, A. A. Schotte. who had gone to welcome his family and bring them to their new home In this city. CLEVELAND VERY SICK MAN Confined to His Bed With Relapse of Intestinal Trouble. NEW YORK. Nov. 24. According to a report received tonight ex-President Grover Cleveland is again seriously ill at his home in Princeton. He Is said to have suffered a relapse of the old in testinal trouble which affected him last June. The present attack. It Is said, developed on Thursday last, and although severe. It is said. Mr. Cleveland showed considerable Improvement on Friday. Details of his condition could not be learned at his home tonight. Beyond an admission that he was "very 111 and confined to his bed" no information was given out. Mr. and Mrs. Cleveland, with a party of friends, had arranged for a trip to Auburn. N. Y.. and the start was to have been made on Friday, but the trip was postponed. PLEASED WITH HIS TRIP General Booth Declares He Met With Success Everywhere. LONDON, Nov. 24. General William Booth, the head of the Salvation Army, when interviewed today by the Asso ciated Press with regard to his visit to America and Germany, said that he had met with the greatest success and sym pathy everywhere. "I think I may consider myself." he said, "not merely a harbinger of. but an accessory to peace between nations." He referred with the greatest satisfac tion to the work he had accomplished in the direction of sending a better class of emigrants into the United States and Canada, and told- of offers he had re ceived from several states to finance this movement : YOUTH DIES FOR UNREQUITED LOVE Boy of 19 Madly Loves Girl of 16. ADVANCES ARE REPULSED Miss McCarthy Will Have Nothing to Do With Him. THREATS TO DO MURDER Goes to Hospital Where Girl Is Nurse and Menaces Her With Death and His Own Suicide. Disarmed but Shoots Self. ABERDEEN, Wash., Nov. 24. (Spe cial.) Henry Potter, aged 19, shot himself in the head late Friday night because of love for Marguerite McCarthy, a 19-year-old girl, employed as an assistant nurse in St. Joseph's Hospital. Potter died without regaining consciousness. It was first believed that he had acci dentally been killed while carelessly han dling a revolver, but later it developed that Potter had gone earlier in the even ing to the hospital, inquired for Miss Mc Carthy, threatened to kill her on sight and then put a bullet In his own body If she chould not reciprocate his affection. He was disarmed, and left the building shedding tears. An hour later he was a corpse. Deserter From British Army. From letters in his trunk and from some on the table in his room, just writ ten, it was learned that he deserted an English warship lying in Victoria, B. C, harbor about a year ago. To those close ly associated with him here he had com municated this fact, and also that he left the ship 'with three other companions and they hid in the woods until finally they were separated. Potter drifted here and had worked in logging camps and in plumbing establishments. It ls also learned that his mother lives near Lon don and that he has an o!.i--r .brother in the navy. Comes From Good Family. A cablegram has been sent to his moth er notifying her of the tragedy and ask ing what disposition is to be made of the remains. The body will be held until an answer is received. From talk which Potter's companions had with him re cently he alleged he had a wife In Seattle. Miss McCarthy says she met Potter only recently, and she did not know of his mad love for her. It is the general opinion that had not Poter been dis armed at the hospital, he would have added murder to his crime of self-destruction. Potter was a fine-appearing young fel low, and It Is thought from letters re ceived from his family and photographs that his relatives are well-to-do English people. DETAIN SHOOTING EDITOR Police Hold Home Awaiting Con dition of His Wounded Victim's. KANSAS CITY. Nov. 24. No charge has yet been preferred against General R. C. Home, the stockholder and edi torial writer of the Kansas City Post, who yesterday shot and wounded O. D. Woodward, president of the Post Com pany, and H. J. Groves, manager of the paper. General Home is being held at the police matron's office at the City Hall, awaiting the outcome of the In juries suffered by his victims. Both patients are resting well tonight. The bullet which struck Groves has not been removed, nor has it been definitely located, although It Ls believed to be in the muscles of the back. Unless un favorable symptoms develop no effort will be made to remove the bullet for several days. The bone in Woodward's arm was shat tered and the necessity of amputation may develop, but tonight his physicians state that It Is too early to determine whether the member can be saved. NOBEL PRIZE FOR CR00KES English Scientist Honored for Dis coveries In Chemistry. STOCKHOLM, Nov. 24. The Nobel prize for chemistry will be awarded to Sir William Crookes, of London. Rudyard Kipling has been designated for the literary prize. m Sir William Crookes Invented the rainometer in 1874. He was knighted in 1897. and ha been closely Identified with many of the most Important advances in science. Professor Crookes recently dis covered a process of extracting nitric acid from the atmosphere, which It was announced would soon be available for commercial, industrial and agricultural purposes and would revolutionize the ni trate Industry and the world's food problem. TIRED OF THE STRUGGLE literary Couple In London Give Vp and Drown Together. NEW YORK, Nov. 24. A special cable from London to 'the Times says: Another story reflecting the bitter struggle for existence of a section of the literary and artistic life hers came to EVENTS OF COMING WEEK. Much IHHngr In Washington. Preliminaries to the opening- of the Sixtieth Congress wtU be the domi nant featured of the week In Wash ington. Speaker Cannon will confer during the week with Congressmen on the prospective personnel of House committees and work to be taken up by them. On Saturday Democrats and Republicans will hold caucuses for the election of candi dates for officers of the House. One of the Important meetings is scheduled for Monday that of the Inland Waterways Commission. Cm Saturday bids for the S5O.O00. 000 Issue of Panama Canal bonds will be opened. The trial of Mrs. Annie M Bradley for the killing of ex-lnited States Senator Bvown will be resumed Mon day. Urge Publicity Law. The National Publicity Law Asso ciation, which meets in Washington Tuesday is expected to advocate the parsage by Congress of a law com pelling the publication of contribu tions and expenditures of National and Congressional campaigns. The Inland Waterways Commission at its meeting Monday is expected to formulate a report on its Inspection of the Mississippi River in October. A dinner in honor of William J. Bryan ls to be given in Washington Tuesday evening. A social event of importance in Washington will be the wedding on Wednesday of Miss Edith Root, daughter of the Secretary of State and Lieutenant Clysses S. Grant, son of Major-General Fred D Grant. Kvents in Foreign Lands. The first general debate In Russia's third Douma will be begun Novem ber 2ft. when the text of the address to the Emperor, as drafted by the Octoberists, will be dlscussea. Hearing of the perjury charge brought by George M. Hollamby Druce against his half-brother, Her bert Druce, will be resumed at the Marlyebone Court, London. Novem ber 27. The Canadian Parliament will be convened November 28- This session, the fourth of the parliaments of the Dominion, will be lengthy and ardu ous. Banquet to Magoon. A banquet in honor of Governor Magoon will be given by the Havana Chamber of Commerce. November 30. The preparations have been made by the merchants, of Havana to accord him the biggest demon stration ever seen In Cuba. A dinner in honor of Secretary Taft will be given at Moscow, Sat urday night. light today with the discovery in the Thames of the bodies of Alexander Good and his wife. Both were authors, and Mrs. Good was also a painter of con siderable talent. The couple tied themselves together and Jumped into the river after losing hope in a battle .against big odds. Care fully encased in waterproof paper in the garments of both were found letters ad dressed to the Coroner. They have not been opened as yet. The couple dis appeared from the cheap lodgings to which they had moved on November 4, leaving their last pennies to their land lady, and a letter to a friend, saying in part: 4'If you think of us in the future, do not do so sadly. Remember that we shall be asleep together, and what is better than sleep after the long day's work?" Mr. Good was author of several books which were meritorious, but not popular. His wife wrote under the name of Furz Walsh. KAISER TO PROLONG VISIT German Emperor Finds Trip to England Beneficial to Health. LONDON, Nov. 24. Emperor William continues to Improve In health and en joys the dally walks and drives about the neighborhood of High Cltffe. He has decided to prolong his stay for a week or two beyond the fortnight originally contemplated, and Is planning short sea cruises In addition to the motor drives. The weather ls still fine, and Emperor William today attended the village church, joining heartly in the singing of hymns. He was much improved in ap pearance, and has lost the sallow looks and careworn air which were noticeable on his arrival in England. CONTENTS TODAY'S PAPER The Weather. YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature, 53 degrees; minimum, 48 degrees. TODAY'S Rain; southwest winds. Financial. Plans for currency reform discussed at length. Page 2. New York bankers believe normal conditions will soon return. Page L Bryan says free silver would not have averted trouble. Page 2 Foreign. Clash reported between troops and Insur gents In streets of Lisbon. Page 2. Recent mutiny on Russian gunboat incited by four girls. Page 1. Domestic. Helen Mer tells of relations between "Buf falo BUT and Mrs. Howard Gould. Page 2. Bradley trial will continue remainder of week. Page 3. National. Completion Cuban census first step toward home rule. Page 10. Pacific Coast. San Francisco ready to begin work of re habilitation. Page 1. Three little girls swept Into sea. Page L Ashland Police Chief kills hobo by mistake. Page 4- Adams Jury disagrees. Page 1. Boy of 19 kills himself because of unre quited love for girl of 16. Page 1. Portland and Vicinity. Burglars rob Methodist parsonage for fourth . time. Page 14. Fortieth anniversary of death of Manches ter martyrs celebrated by Hybernlans. Page Dr. Clarence True Wilson preaches against President Roosevelt's change of motto on new coins. Page 13. Baby crushed to death in accident at Llnn- ton. Page 5. Landscape architect says Portland should provide for future by perfecting her park system Page 7 Rev. J. D. Corby preaches on hospitality Page 12. Rev. W. H. Heppe preaches on need for purer soul life. Page 13. Heavy gale causes collision in harbor Page 13. j JURY IN ADAMS E Reports to Court and is Discharged. EIGHT MEN WANT ACQUITTAL Other" Four Firm for Convic tion Out 21 Hours. BALLOTS ARE ALL ALIKE Five Taken, All With Same Result Adams Xot Yet to Be Taken to Colorado State Not to Oppose Ball Hawley Disappointed. SPOKANE, Nov. 24. A special from Rathdrum, Idaho, to the Spokesman Re view saya: The jury in the Steve Adams murder case was discharged at 5:45 o'clock this afternoon, being unable to agree on a verdict, after being out since 8:30 o'clock Saturday night. The jury stood eight for acquittal and four for conviction. Jurymen J. F House, Charles Dittemore, D. W. Gar wood and S. A. Varnum were the four men who believed Steve Adams guilty of the murder of Fred Tyler in the Marble Creek District of Shoshone County, Idaho, in August, 1904. Only Five Ballots Taken. Five ballots were taken, all with the same result. The jury was ready to re port at 3 o'clock, but the court conferred with attorneys for both sides and It was agreed to keep the Jury out a little longer. Clarence Darrow, chief counsel for Adams, tried to obtain concessions of bail for Adams and of Immunity from arrest by Colorado authorities until the Tyler case is disposed of. No promise was given him. Sheriff Bailey, of Sho shone County, ls here with a warrant for the arrest of Adams on the charge of murdering Ed Boule, near the same place and at about the same time the Tyler murder occurred. Adams to Have Bail. It is understood that Adams Ls not to be taken to Colorado at present, and that the state will not oppose efforts to get ball for Adams In the Tyler case. Dar row will later make an application for bail for his client, but will now hurry to Boise for the Pettibone case. Hawley, chief counsel for the state, de clared the disagreement of the Jury will have no effect on the prosecution of the Tyler case again, or will It lessen the efforts of the state to prosecute In other cases wherein the Western Federation of MinerB officials and prominent mem bers are defendants. Mr. Hawley is dis appointed at the verdict. Darrow says the defense expected an acquittal. SCANDAL GROWS GREATER Criminal Libel Threatened in Brem erton Political Mix-Up. SEATTLE, Wash., Nov. 24. (Special.) Criminal proceedings, the charge being libel, are threatened as the result of the political scandal which has developed at Bremerton. George W. Trapey, foreman in the shipbuilding department, former Councilman of the First Ward of the Navy-Yard town, and who has been un der fire from the civil service for "undue political activity," is the man who now has a number of the prominent citizens of Bremerton on the anxious seat. Since the authorities at Washington, D. C, have ordered an open hearing of the charges brought against Trapey and A. H. Freerksen, former Mayor, those who testified at the star chamber ses sion have come to Trapey and admitted that they testified to things they cannot substantiate, and are asking his mercy. Trapey declares, however, that he will Institute civil action for damages, and that If the testimony develops what he expects it will, he will force crim inal prosecution. MOORS CAUGHT IN AMBUSH French Troops Administer Sharp Defeat to Arab Forces. ORAN, Algeria, Nov. 24. The French troops have administered a sharp lesson to the force of Arabs which ambushed a French reconnoit erlng party yesterday in a gorge near Port Said. They have ravaged the country, shelling the villages. Thirty Moors were killed and many wounded'. All the Inhabitants have fled to the mountains. TANGIER, Nov. 24. A dispatch from Rabata announces that General Bag danim. chief of Sultan Abdel Aziz' army, has defeated the forces of Mu lal Rachld. INCREASE THE EXPORTS Report or Bureau of Manufacturers 19 Made Public. WASHINGTON. Nov. 24. Fifteen bil lion of dollars represent the value of the annual production of manufactures in the United States. After careful estimates made by experts. John M. Carson, chief of the Bureau of Manu factures, was able to make this state ment in his annual report. The figures do not represent products entirely hut GAS DISAGREES Include products In various stages of production. Last year the aggregate value of do mestic merchandise exported was $1, S54,000,000, an Increase of nearly $136,000,000 over the preceding year. The report of the bureau groups this classification with those of "food stuffs partly or wholly manufactured," and "manufactures for further use In manufacturing," the aggregate exports of which lasti year were $606,000,000 and this amount added to "manufac tures ready for consumption" makes the aggregate value of manufactures exported In the year ended June 30, $1,306,000,000, or more than 58 per cent of the entire exports of the year. Special significance ls attached to the increase of nearly $20,000,000 In the exports of completed manufactures in view of the fact that the exports of cotton cloths declined more than $21, 000,000, this loss being entirely In the cotton trade with China. The popular feeling aroused In that country grow ing out of alleged outrages against Chinese residents In the United States ls assigned as a contributory cause for this decline. The cotton seed products exports for Mr William Crookes, Who Has Been Awarded Nobe! Prize for Discov eries in Chemistry. the year were more than $30,000,000, an increase of $!.500,000 over 1906. The success attending investigation ,by experts sent abroad has led to the adop tion of the policy of specializing In vestigations of trade conditions in for eign markets. One of the obstacles to be encountered in the export trade is the uncertainty of transit between places of production and the seaboard. Merchants in the Orient especially complain that calculation cannot be made as to when goods ordered hi the United States will be delivered, and In consequence orders go to European houses that should come to this country. The bureau has been in correspondence with members of railroad and steamship companies with a view to securing more reliable and more rapid transit for mer chandise for foreign countries. WOMEN START THE MUTINY INDUCE RUSSIAN SAILORS TO SEIZE DESTROYER. Four Girls, Who Are Afterwards Killed In the Battle, Are Active in Revolutionary Propaganda. VICTORIA. B. C, Nov. 24. The steamer Kumerlc brought advices that the recent mutinies at Vladivostok were caused by four girls, who went on board the destroyer Sukurni, and in stigated the bluejackets of the destroyer to seize tne omcers oi tne steamer ana escape to Japan with the vessel. They agreed, but decided to shell the city from the roadstead before leaving. A red flag was hoisted, and the destroyer opened Are on the admiralty office and the Governor's residence, and then ex changed shots with the cruiser Mandjur and three destroyers, as well as the forts The englneroom of the destroyer waf struck by a shell from the forts, and the vessel was run ashore to prevent Blnk Ing. The four girls who instigated the mutiny were all killed, as well as a num ber of the bluejackets, the remainder being arrested. The mutiny was followed by a most active campaign on the part of the authorities against the revolu tionists and consternation prevailed. The British steamer Mary, which left Vladivostok on October 31 for Nagasaki was thronged with refugees. The Vladi vostok correspondent of the Osaka Asahi says the revolutionists, who are held under strict supervision, were using their wives to spread the revolutionary propa ganda among the men of the army and r.avy. outbreaks are expected. SIGN PETITION FOR NASI Italy United In Demand for His Reinstatement Escape Feared. TRAPANI, Nov. 24. At an imposing meeting of 10,000 persons today it was enthusiastically and unanimously voted to petition the Chamber to permit Slg- nor Nasi to exercise his office of Deputy. so rar no disorders have occurred, but further reinforcements of troops have arrived from Calabria. PALERMO, Nov. 24 A committee of Nasi adherents has Issued a circular urging all the Mayors of Sicily to go to Rome and assist at the first sitting of the Chamber of Deputies in asking for the revocation of arrest of SIgnor Nasi, re calling the fact that last Summer the ex-Minlster first obtained the right to be Judged by the Senate and later In securing better conditions of Imprison ment when all Sicily practically had arisen in insurrection. ROME, Nov. 24. A stricter watch Is being held over Nunzio Nasi, the former Minister of Public Instruction, who has been on trial on various fraud charges. hi Intention to escape being reported from several quarters, although Nasi himself strongly protests against such assertions. Brings Suit Against Japan. VICTORIA. B. C, Nov. 24. News was received from Tokio that John Hartley, a Britisher who went to Japan In 1864 has brought suit against the Japanese government for 1,000,000 yen damages for having impounded opium imported by him in 1875. while allowing Dutch firms arid other foreigners to Import the drug. !E IS FAST RETURNING Cash Piling up in Cities of Interior. NEW YORK BANKS ARE FIRM Steady Flow of Gold Out of Town Has No III Effect. STOCK MARKET IS FIRMER Sales of Low - Priced Securities Bringing Out Hoarded Gold. New Duties of Clearing-House Having a Salutary Effect. FIN AW I AL SITUATION. NEW YORK Feeling of distrust- in banking circles is giving way to confidence. Bankers axe awaiting: the next call from the comptroller of the ourrency with the growing conviction that the reports will show a very general im provement. A prompt resumption of normal conditions Is looked for. Hoarded gold getting hajrk Into circulation In purchase of low-priced stocks. NEW YORK, Nov. 24. Announcement before the beginning of last week's opera tions of the Government offering of J50. 000,000 of Panama bonds and of J100. 000.000 of one year 3 per cent treasury notes aroused bright expectations of decisive results In breaking the currency famine by the attraction that would be offered to hoarders of money of an absolutely secure Government obligation during a period of distrust of usual investments. The measure in sentiment waned during the week principally by reason of the complexities discovered in the working out of the project. Detailed Information was not made public of the amount being subscribed by private capital. On the part of the banks the prepara tions to participate in the Issue were found to affect the money and currency markets to some extent and there was much confusion in estimating the work ing out effects of the transaction. Mean time the Inflow of gold from abroad continued In a steady stream and iargo additional engagements con tinued to be made. For the first time during the present movement the Bank; of France furnished part of these sup plies, the transaction being based on commercial bills of exchange. The new source of supply thus opened up is con sidered of great Importance. Distributing the Cash. Various indications prove how far the banking situation had been strength ened by the heavy wlthdrayals from New York and the forwardings of incoming gold as it arrived. Thus the reports of conditions of Illinois state banks in response to the call of the State Auditor showed an Increase of many millions In cash holdings compared with the previous report In August, while outstanding obligations had been heavily reduced. The Canadian banks made re ports in response to a similar official call during the week, and these revealed a like showing, which proved the large drain from New York to that destination, with an accompanying scaling down of loans on call without the Dominion, large ly placed in New York stocks. Confidence Is Returning. Bankers are awaiting the next call from the Cnlted States Controller of the Currency, the usual period for which Is now passed. There Is growing con viction that response to this call will show the general banking position so fortified by the strong current of cash which has flowed out of New York and out of foreign sources that the feeling; of mutual suspicion and distrust which have been by far the most potent factors In the recent embarrassment will quickly die out. A prompt resumption of normal bank ing conditions will be looked for as a consequence. Drain on Banks Shows Letup. The weekly bank statement of the New York Clearlng-House Association banks was heralded as decisive of the definite turn toward betterment in the banking situation. Loans contracted for the first time since the crisis developed and the small cash decrease s evidence that the concealed drain on' the banks has come to an end, the decrease proving less than was promised by the known movements of money, in spite of the throwing out of the computation of the $13,000,000 gold arrivals on Saturday, which were belated for a day by fog. The stock market was under intermit tent pressure last week, which was shown In special stocks and at Intervals of time. At other times the stock mar ket showed symptoms of resiliency. which was slight, however, and attrib uted In large part to covering operations by professional bears. The weakness was assigned by general belief to a re sumption of liquidation of a kind which was withheld from the market during its period of demoralization by the pow erful Influences and resources of Inter ested parties, but on condition of closing out of the accounts and payment of in- CONFINE (Coacluded on Pag 3.) L