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VOLUME LXXXVI-NO. @ 0D SAOCILOL SV NOQEAVVEQ S VIVSOEVETS B0 o SOHAR LOGSHIT ¢ DTGNP @ DREYFUS NOT YET ON THE DEVTLL OGO S DOUOLIS VST SOOI DOLIOLIOL © LIOTIGROVISHINC Y SOIL OF FRANCE. BEAUREPAIRE AGAINST THE EXILE G G e N e b . N o s D D D oG DN, RO GE 005500555 RSSO GERGE0000%, SR e A A A A A A Brest, Where Dreyfus Will Land. O O NN VR I NS N Monday instead of at Brest M. Quesnay fatherland. ion of the country My and Brest before or Tuesday. )rient Pari to save yrevius will land at —A Sun honest men to months to prepare for the nal says YORK, June 22— cable from de Beaure- 1 ) ail 1 Says: unite the He says: Ivat on a broad dream has prayers. ’ra been Be without by e plot I have publicly organized, accomplices rank, counse a ch I have sought in every my wil has sowed earnestly. and hopes the country reap the harvest. He ends s screed hat he has witnesses who will incontestably prove at Rennes that Drey- @9 560 0@ G020 06000000000000000606006 2 cape” as they are to the reac- a3 ROUSSEAU HAS the right, who go to tionists of ST | 7 o 5 the other extreme by insisting FGRMED HIS 1)01 l[l(‘s on the infallibility of the court- = i martial, declaring that to upset NEw GAB!NET a court-marital is to assail the 01 I‘R \\(l army. To run to either excess is, in the opinion of the moder- \\1:11\1141\V|f:]\:~ Senator led this morn- Loubet to invite civil war and im- to the the republic. How the Drecfus Affair Has Ty > 2 questcd that he foris a Cabinet ki e Eneénles Extreme socialists, shouting | § !mmediately. This afternoon 22 : LT ) . g5 3 4 v q e R e 1o |8 Senator Waldeck - Rousseau Into Warm Friends. Vive la justice,” reply that the |2 completed the formation: of the T \fety of ®he republic depends on Cabinet. e e Y - = S s The Senator. d by 5 Eeli > punishment of the guilty, thei new’ Cabine pr ile the reactionaires, with to the ce Palace L b RO T AR 9 . m., to nt his col- IRC [ their cry of “Vive I'armee,” insist leagues to President Loubet. turned that the acquittal of Dreyfus The new Cabinet as organized rt s e 1 1 c o : is as follows: il parties tOpsy-tur-4 i) he but the forerunner of S WAool R bhadens, s « olutionists | vl war. Fach party declares president of the Council of Min- S, CONSEr-|that salvation is only to be :‘H’v‘ e e & ) o used to be found on its side. I'he truth M. del ( , Minister of For- 1alists or eve hists. The C 1 < usu vill be found eign Affairs. robably. as usual, \_“1 e tound General Marquis de Gallefit, 15 ( mnlw ay between the two ex s of War | between tl teic | Lanessan, Minister of € heen: : The appointment of General . Minister of Justice. el O 1€ S1AC | the Marquis de Gallifet as Min Caillaux, Minister t : £ sts, compniSing |} jster of War in the new Cabinet erand, Minister of Com- 111¢ 1 1w ] ) on - - ar P f t S an extrs ary example of : ] ‘ i divided IS anRcat] ol ¢ el Minister of Public =0 ; 1€ the way in which the Dreyfus Instruction. 1to C O Ngmg e has revolutionized ]mlili\‘:ll (‘A\I! : z! Crais, Minister of the from consc 1V ) most | .onditions. For years past the M. Jean Dupuy, Minister of 2 p Fa has | veneral has been the bugaboo Agriculture. g i S AT TR e 5 : M. Pierre Daudin, Minister of seized upon the Dreyl i of the extremists, not only be Public Works DPe e oL UG cause of his monarchical ser- -On leaving the Elyse il seckel : 2 M. Waldeck-Rousseau 11ms < ! vices, but on account of the T M. Dupuy, the retiring Premier, giving to it an rtance ) orous part he took in repressing to whom he presented the Presi- o e : 3 dent’s decree naming him the & o the commune. His entry into 2 new Premier. The new Cabinet § Une : the Cabinet is undoubtedly due|g Will meet to-morrow. & to its judicial import 5 . ] o ) i licial iy to his attitude toward the Drey- | @osonouosor \ter twenty-ninc fus case. which has been through- | {he army, the magistracy and ¥ ol o tavorable to Dreyius, the administration. open opposition to that form of | though he holds that the procla- is Dboth da rous ment inno- FEAR THAT DREYFUS WILL BE KILLED mation of the prisoner’s le. Reactionary arties do -, 1 i parties cence should not include placing ot accept it, but thinking it best | ¢ ST G g Sk 3 : : e the Lenon ibility for the appar-| great Excitement in the Town of ot to shout “A bas le republi-) ent judicial blunders upon the Rennes Over the Fortncoming que.” cry “Vive 'armee” on the | general staff, | Court-Martial. 2 ¢ e 3 Al 8 5 - : LONDON, June -The correspond- tl corv tha party \}‘huh ha I.e Courrier du Soir publishes | ent of the Daily Mall at Rennes, de- the an at its back will have a'! ., interview this evening with “;'V‘ih_iw: l[h'-l-.\lrur-mr'n; in the town and formidable wean: Aeainst > A 3 k | the fruitless efforts of new S formidable weapon against the | General the Marquis de Gallifet, | to obtain information, say ruling powers the new Minister of War. who is/ thing is shrouded in mystery. The cell () ”~ » other hag l lh(‘]-(. are g p for Dreyfus is comfortably furn n the other hand, . e represented as saying I amin the usual style of officer's quarte many under the republican ban- reproached for my attitude in |t has two windows, one of them over- S Dicvi e el o8 2 looking the street. He will be treated ner who, as reyfusards, 187 At that time I served the | with every consideration, and ail the likewise taking advantage of the! majority, the constitution 1(l | formalities due his rank as a captdin Jasr s vane e P TS 3 .| of artillery will be scrupulously ob- | situation to advance their tavor-|the law as a soldier on the active | served. ite objects, for which they have | list. - I have remained silent until| “Mme. Dreyfus has not arrived, but : 3 o Bl e s X 2 body éxpresses the greatest sy heen long openly fighting. They | now. o-day I find the army | pathy with her. M. Basch, the Jey cry, “Vive la justice,” which with | talking far too much. 1 am, as| 8entleman who has placed his house ey at her disposal, is terrified at the ran- I was thirty years ago, at the ser-| cour of the anti-Dreyfusites. 1 vice of the majority, the constitu- | the sreatest difficulty to persuade him ; e | to speak. He says his house is watched tion and the law. | day and night and that he and his wife them sociale,” means 1 “Vive la revolution ‘A'bas les clerica.” | 0 The socialists claim, through i the Lanterne and their other or-| The new Minister of Com- ""“’ been insulted to such an extent B S S s % that he has had to challenge a local gans, that the key to the situa-| merce, ~Alexander Millerand, | editor to a duel. The editor, however, tion is held by “the moderates, | radical socialist, in an interview | ‘”’r“r‘ to make a public apology. ¥ *h's apprehensions are main- dpmm Dreyfus, as he believe: and on them must fall responsi- pnlleshcd l)\ 1hc same paper, is{ly fm { failure. The moderates retort| publicans have concluded an m-‘““ 2 ‘ihe Procurator General has gon mysterious mission to-day, which mistice, in order to meet the ene-| M. Basch believes to mean the arrival of Dreyfus. Several members -of the mies of the republic and restore | [P League are already here and | M. Drumont, editor of the Libre Parole, things to their proper places inlis’expected here to-night,” that they are as strongly opposed | to socialists of the extreme left who cry “Let no guilty man es-| atriotic had | s | LIBERTY FOR SALE IN DA |Four Dollars Will Buy a Man’s Freedom Under ‘ Martial Law. THE PROOF IS PLAIL Missouri Mmers Do Not Like t0' Take the Places of | SlENE Special Dispatch to The Call. Striksrs. { ¢ @ LTI & DS OIS DO 50 B0 000 & BOL+ OB 0o @ THE BOERS ARMING @IS DITHOIO S DIVIOI0I0 CE0O0P0 S VICOLINOG0Q TO RESIST ENGLAND [ e K e R R b SRR Ee O c.ym.,,o«c. S < SS@ | —— 00N PALL INVESTS IN ~ KRUPP CONS ) \ SeCie Jegoe @ 0 Will Have Quick - Firing Weapons for Use in the It does not lessen the wrong| commutted against the civil law in | laaho to reflect that the men en- | trusted with the enforcement of | the decrees of the military author- | tties are purchasable—and pur-| chasable at a cheap rate. Prison- ers brought from the Bull Pen at| Kellogg may escape the indignity of confinement m the County Jail|?) at Wailace upon payment of a pal- try 84 each to their jailer. If aman | does not pay the $4, back he goes | [ into jaul. Military rule 1s certainly | baa. Military rule tanted with | corruption rs atrocious. Idaho, June 22.—Ru- s that the actions of officials under martial law were largely controlled by money have been prevalent here all along, the first authentic instance of bribery | came to light to-day. Prisoners brought from the bull pen to attend court are | confined in the County Jail while in | Wa . but those who are able and | willing to contribute $4 to the deputy may escape this confinement. Sheriff Young and the Commissioners thus purchased their liberty for last night, but to-day, on refusing to be further | “held up.” they were compelled to go back to jail. ¥ ghty miners brought from Missouri, | ‘hing Spokane andilearning they would bé compelled to aiahl Permits be- fore going to work, refused to come further. They are mostly union men, | and were uced to leave their homes | wances that they would not be | asked to supplant members of organ- ized labor unions. Very few miners are coming in and the mines apparently will not able to resume operations for many months unless union labor is Another party of Missouri miners, for the Standard, is expected to-night, | coming from Tekoa on a special train. Part their baggage arrived to-day. When this party left Missouri it num- bered 130, but a number deserted on the 1y, All the way along the line repre- ntatives of labor organizations have he come To-morrow and some have is the stopped over. last day allowed the eight defendants arraigned on Tuesday to plead to the indictments against them. Their attorne will | motion to quash the indict- each case. The principal metion will be that the selected and summoned present a in for the Grand Jury w men grou pany, although France was ordered by the court to go to distant parts of the county ond select men who would be ast likely tc have any interest in the Should the motion be sus new Grand Jury would ha imoned, which would delay the a month. to be trials probabl THE NEW CABINET HAS MANY FOES | | the | ¥ but | ¢ n trying to induce the men not to| Freely Predicted by Tt Enemica That| | Field. ARMS FOR IS FORTS Done at Lloyds in War Risks. Special Dispatch to The Call. ERLIN, June ‘22.—The Kolnische Zeitung pub- lishes a dispatch from The Hague asserting that Dutch offi- | cial circles are aware that the Transvaal Government pre- paring to make a most stubborn defense in the event of war with Great Britain, and is arming in the most complete fashion. According to this information (| Pretoria has just ordered twenty- five quick-firing and several | heavy caliber guns for fort artil- lery from the Krupps. { LONDON, June 23—The /| Daily Mail this morning says an extremely brisk business is being {done at Lloyds in war risks. |daily adv "mcmn in rates. > is 0 A,;,;CONDITlON OF AFFAIRS S IN THE TRANSVAAL \ The following extract from a letter | written by Howard Bridgewater, a | young Englishman residing in Johan- nesburg, to a relative in this city, gives an excellent idea of the feeling at pres- ent existing in the Transvaal: Here we are in imminent danger of war ) | (in which case poor men would suffer ter- bly), which state of things the capital- | ists_are responsible for. The people are contented enough and there would be no suggestion of war but for the newspapers, which foment bad feeling. Few Brit- ishers want the franchise or would take it if offered them, for how many desire for a mess of pottage to renounce giance to_the. Queen? The worst of it is that the Pretoria Government rupt, and that the capita case which they can magnif. | are doing, for {heir own end . help of newspapers, which state that it is the people It is a lie Most of the gri the mining magnates, who, because they can’'t get | them ned,” use their money to cre- ate ‘“crises” ~with the idea of bullying Kruger to climb down. I am no upholder | of bad government, whether it affects me or not. but if one has a grievance I think « ) | it should be complained of by that man. () | Tt does not strike me as just that he should complain of it behind a dummy. The poorer people of the Transvaal con- by Coroner France, who had for years | Stiture ihe "ummy. in the. present. In: been an employe of the Bunker Hill | () stance, and If there is any suffering to and Sullivan Company, whose mill was | follow iispor Ny v oanBeee T destroved, and that every member of | | “"Phe mine meetings that you read of are the Grand Jury was either an .wnvv}‘, all organized by the magnates, who are supporter or an _employe of the com- | ¢ secure from anvthing like united opposi- Johannesburg and tion because every one in is more or less dependent upon them, (but in a much I¢ r de; ) bhecause L) people do not, a id, care to say anything abolit grievances. But the peo- ple are distinctly against these capitalistic grievances heing made to abpear as theirs and being made a casus belli i thelir name—which is the position here to-day. The more I study this business the mora I am convinced that Rhodes i t the bot- ; (| tom of it. “Although he is, of course. in- ) \ sted to 8 e ex e e () 1 | the rest o v‘)fl_(’\?. 1¢ r\u‘ ess. act Ustes OVER THE DRAKENSBURG MOUNTAINS. /i iahii i sl The only road from Delagoa Bay into the Upper Transvaal runs for mover _of the raid o which failed. It Will Not Last a | 4 200 miles up this range. he Boers here would make a desperate stand And ‘I submit further that he is not the Week. | against the Hri“ 3 man to down under failure. |rydfl';mx]1]~ PARIS, June 22—The Cabinet is a strong combination and is wholly in fa- | vor of Dreyfus, but since it contains | such extreme men as Marquis de Galli- | fet and M. Millerand, it can hardly be | expected to have a long career. The | Socialist party has already declared | that it will not in any way be bound | by orresponsible for M. Millerand's acts as a Minister. The latter, however, | is a powerful debater, who will share | with M. Waldeck-Rousseau the brunt cf | defending the Cabinet in the Chamber, | most of the Ministers being far less| skilled in debate. | M. Waldeck-Rousseau, who is perhaps | the most successful pleader at the | | French bar, loses an income of £20,000 | by becoming Minister. M. de Lanes- | san, Minister of Marine, is famous for his advocacy of the Anglo-French en- | tente. M. Jean Dupuy, Minister of Agricul- | ture, no relative of the former Pre- mier. EXx ot in connection with the Drey- fus affair, the néw ministry has little interest and is received rather coolly. The Dreyfusites are delighted and the anger of the anti-Dreyfusites knows no bounds. Its opponents predict that the Cabinet will fall next Monday, owing to the incongruous combination of Mar- | quis de Gallifet and M. Millerand. It is understood no Cabinet will per- mit . meeting between Dreyfus and his wife. Brest remains calm. Its inhabi- tants are for the greater part Dreyfus- | ites. and it is said there would be no danger of a hostile demonstration even if Dreyfus landed during the day time. this attempt on the country’s ill_succeed remains to be seen. Per- > T think not. There is not enough of the true ring in the agitation in spite of the fact that as much local color possible is put into the pieture. T read, for instance, in to-night’s Star that this is “esselially a workingman's < struggle for THE COLONIES sumption in England. Porter Heads New De- H. Harrineton.) drawing on the spot by = ST ANERICANISH TE SPRIT OF PROGRESS Archbishop lreland Re- | CENTENARIAN GRANTED A DECREE OF DIVORCE George Wray, 103 Years of Age, Separated From a Wife of 30. Ind., June COLUMBUS. —George futes Some of the | partment, and Hawaii |y ased 10 vesrs, wag ernted o di- | : ar vife. Susan E. Wray, aged 30. Wray i Slanders of the and Porto RicoWill | Tiif fechie, and on account of extrems French Clerics. : Be Territories. B rrinea et haiwas BORIRI oMt | derry, Ireland, 103 years ago and was a — . | —2— | son of very wealthy parents. He came to this country with his fathe: ning of the century and rememfbers well Special Dispatch to The Call. at the begin- Special Cable to The Call and the New Yerk | Herald. Copyrighted, 1889, by James G < | G vemnett. L ALL HEADQUARTERS, WEL- | the war of 18i2 and cvents leading up to S 2 i - Trel LAINGTON JASHING- | that struggle. PARIS, June 22.—Monsignor Ireland, LINGTON HOTEL, WASHING- | that s : : Archbishop of St. Paul, has made some | TON, June 22.—“A Department of | He spake of the ravages of the cholera highly interesting statements on the Gofonlpl SaAttairs atide xioréten; | 1 this connanyaty RIS end Jswnie e resided on Long lIsland. He moved to | Indiana more than forty years ago, set- tling in Brown County, where he lived ever since, until he recently moved to Indianapolis. ‘Wray had been married four times, out- Commerce.” A new’executive branch of the Go ernment, with this title or something similar to it is deemed by the admin- | subject of “Americanism” t¢ the editor of the New Era. Some extracts from the interview, of which advance proofs have been placed at the disposal of the A P 2 : istration absolutely necessary to meet | living his other three wives. He said this Herald;Sgive a, clear. idea: o what | padi o Fiie narmap oo iy the | last wife came to him and offered o take ‘Americanism’ really is. | United States as a result of the war | care of him if he would marry her, but Monsignor Ireland “says: “If, by|with Spain. The word “colonial” is re- | fhat she robbed him ot over $10 i gold since they were married eight years ago. Wray is reputed to be very wealthy and a band of gypsies almost succeeded in kidnaping him this afternoon and rob- bing him of 51'\0‘1 which he persists in carrying with hi; Americanism, we are to understand the theological errors ccndemned in the pugnant, for political reasons, to some members of thz Cabinet. It smacks of | Continuad on Second Page. Continued on Second Page.