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DRISLANE, Contractor and Ballder Plans and Estimates Furnished. 210 Miller St ET ier Gives Out Roosevelt's : Letter to His Wife. | ELECTED NENBER OF“ AY3NIAS CLUB" I i | President, In Private Letter to Ex- Ambassadors Wife, Speaks Preely MN His Administration Seerveiarvies, { UINCINNATL Dec. 11. — Bellamy | Storer, former ambassador from the | Bauited States to Austria-Hungary, r= plied briefly to the statements contain ‘od in President Loesevelt's letter te Secretary of Smite Root. which was [given ta the press. fusisting on the po i sition he bad heretofore taken and re- i erating the statements made by him {in the statement to the members of the foreign relations committees of i cotigress, made public last week Mr Storer sald: "1 seem to have Leen elected a mem: {ber of the ‘Ananias club’ like all oth- Lor who have come into dispute with : President Rossevell. | am now to be {classed with Senators Chandiée, Till Bn, Bailey aud with others who have i questioned some act or word of LMA. S s $ i Fi i MES. BELLAMY STORER. | president. Like eve ry other American | gentleman who has a wife to protect, iI undertook to defend ber name from {insinuations and charges of false { hood Mr. Storer then relternted much that { appeared In his firet statement intend- {ed for private circulation, be says, and added that be bas four letters bearing on the controversy as to the promotion of Archbisliop Ireland, all of which, he says, tend to bear out his contention that he obey] Cie explicit Instroc { tious of President Roosevelt In acting jas he did with regard to the promo- { tien. Continuing, Mr. Storer sald: | “Archbishop Ircland told me also | that the president on several occasions {a conversation with him took crelit for the action he vow repudiates, | “Everything was all right until a sec. ition of New York churclimen began ‘to agitate the elevation of another Archibishop than Mgr. Ireland. They York prelate had at least as much (claim to the red Lat as the archbish wp {of St. Paul. : “This resulted In much perturbation {at the White House, and letters were {sent to me by Roosevelt polutipg out that what might be very appropriate as the opinion of a private citizen i would come with a very bad KTACe as president of the United States. “Every one with a grain of sense knows that. There has never been a {question as to that. I knew In the { entire transaction that I was not pre | senting the official views of the presi dent. This separation of oficial and personal sides of the matter is no unique, “McKinley did the same thing. He favored the elevation of Mgr. Ireland, but he did not do so us president of the United States. | “There was no need of violent and Insulting adjectives to show that the | president dislikes me and did not wish { from It in any costomary way { “While the past has shown that few | meu can differ with either the wishes {or the wemory of Mr. Roodevelt with j out at once becoming a scoundrel and | i ZF srm— seen that I Bave asked them all to stay. The secretary of war, Root, is one of the very sfrongest en Leflore the people In our whole party. {lis delivered in the campaign last year *“ ‘Mis advice Is Invaluable. not mere | ly In reference to his department. but | In refersiice lo all Lenuches of the service. As for his department, it Is | At the preseM thee most huportant in | the entire government. [1 would le a i phblic enlamity (6 have him leave the | cabinet ‘mow, and I use the wonls public calamity adviselly, He is a sick man, a condition that. gives me | great uneasiness, not beonuse there In | the fear of bls death, bat lest he may | went out 1 should have to consider | nothing whatever but ihe fquestisn of | getting the Lest pian the entire coun. | try afforded to do the work neCessars fo be done. IL may be fiat after care fully looking over the matter I should conclude that Bellamy was the man for the purpose “'1 do uot believe that Secretary long Intends to leave the navy. In this departinent 1 am sure without further thought that Bellamy would be Admirable. Bot In Alling any vacan- cy In the cabinet 1 would have to take note of all kinds of considerations. | should count Bellamy's religion In his favor for a cabinet place. Other things Catholic tu the cabinet. | am sure that In the navy departivent he would do exceedingly well as secretary. do not know whether geographically he would be right man. For instance. I should like wuch to get a Pacific slope man Into the cabinet and partic ularly in the navy department, and 1 do not wish to leave New England un- represented. Af present I see no Pa- cific slope man who would be compe: tent to fll the itlon. Moreover, if poasible I sho like to get one or more members of the cabinet who are | weight when they explain the policies | purposes and acts of my administra. tion, “ “This is the ope point In which the | I do net believe that a of public servRnts was ever got to | gether atound =» president. But there | Is not one of them, with the possibile exception of Root (who is so busy that | he can hardly ever spenk). who can ap- | pear before the country with the pres tige of a great political leader to ex plain And champion my administration “'Of Porter, In France, 1 henr noth. | Ing bat the strongest praise, He seems | to have done peculiarly well. It would be an injustice of a flagrant kind to | turu him out at the present time It | is, of course, always possible that 1} may make a shift, and If in doing so France should become vacant | should ler it to Bellamny at once unless it liappened that I was able to offer him 4 cabinet position. But as things Are | Just at this thne 1 do not see the like | lho of such a condition arising" SPELLING IN CONGRESS. | Clark Says Ne Man Can Sit as Chier | Executioner of Kuglish Language. WASHINGTON, Dec. 11, ~Simplitied spelllug bell the atteutiol of the house for an hour or more, the paragraph in the bill fixing the orthographic stand ard In some recoguized authority fur mishing Mr. Clark (Mo, Mr. Gillette (Mass) and Mr. Livingston (fia.) an Opportunity to express themselves on the merits of the president's onder to the public printer relative to the mod! fled spelling of S00 words ln common use. Mr. Glllette declared that the 300 words advocated by the president was a very wodest reform and in line with reform in progress in newspapers and magazines. Mr. Clark (Mo) humorous Iy calculated that it would take 400! Years to reform the English language by adopting 300 wonls a year. He thought the reforin was puerile, and hie suggested that he would make only | one bite of the cherry and adopt the | phonetic way of spelling aud (be short | hand system of writing i ‘Some time before very long,” he de i clared, “the people of the United States | are golng to Insist on having a presi dent that will attend to his own busi nese. He declared no one man could | sit us “chief executioner of the Eug DOOM OF GILLETTE, Die Jan. 28. Prisoner Accepied Sentence In Same | Calm, Cool Manner That Asfon- : ished Herkimer Audiences. New Trial Denled. HERKIMER N.Y. Dec 11. —Chester E. Gillette was sentenced to die iu the | the week beginning Jan, 25 He will! be taken to Auburn at otice ! The you bh. convicted of the murder on Adirondacks, of Lis discarded sweet heart, Grace Brus a of South Otselie showed no sign of emotion when Jo ce Devendorf provonnced sentence. | His face was pale, but Lis step was steady, and bis volee was unshaken | when, in reply tu the formal question ! 48 to whether be had anything to say | before sentence was pronounced, he | replisl, “I am Innocent of the crime | charged in the indictment, and there | fore it should not be passed.” i “Anyililog more? asked Judge De veudorf, “No, 1 think not.” he answered and | resumed his steady gaze at the court. Sentence was then pronounced. Gillette sald he was boru at Wicks, Mont., resided at Cortland. is twenty three years old, stock clerk by oern- pation, is single, bas a comwon school sducation and had not previously heen convicted i i i i Immediately after he had been sen | tenced Gillette loft the courtroom, not even speaking to his mother, who sat Just bebind him in court. She had come 2.000 miles to comfort ber boy In the forenoon. ‘While the =an was led wire a news dispateh to a Denver and a New York newspaper that hare ge. | i earrespondent In | the case | “Oh. don't scar hiar=hiy of me™