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This Paper not to be taken from the Library.++++ et xS s PRICE FIVE ¥ 6 DEOBBINOD D BEG IO IDEDCOA T & FRIENDS OF DREYFUS ARE LD & O PO PO B0 PALT=T N POWER IN FRANCE eyt 2 SOOI - Palace of Justice at Rennes. B0 SR SRS S RSB 0 NSNS S R000 0055555555505 H | cided upon the transfer of a number of (ity for the that Generals officers of the army for “in- |Mercier, Gon Pellicux will not 2 in manifestations unbecoming | be included. rs, withdrew from the group. | Ments at Rennes. Tt is announced that the Dreyfus The T al Socialists have decided | trial will be absolutely public. Former 1o support the Government provided it | President Casimir-Peri ral Mer- | defends the republic. When this de- ¢ier. who was Minister War when known, M. Charles Dreyfus was condemmned, and many | Deputy for Aix, and “ther prominent men have taken apart- \RRA\T l ot ARREST MEY The L1berty of the Citizen Does Not Exist in Idaho. MERE NOD SUFFICES When a State Officer Orders, Inno- cent Men Are Thrown Into the Bull Pen. B DALY Spe Dispatch to The Call, Having suspended the writ of habeas corpus in time of peace it @0 QoG & P e L A McNAUGHTON INVOLVED | 1s, perhaps, not surprising that the men i authority under martial law in Idaho should forego the formality of a warrant in arrest- ing men whom 1t 1s deemed de- sirable to silence or put out of the way for a season. The liberty of the citizen, clearly, is not of| If he particular - consideration. aoes not direct his sympathies in a way satisfactory to the powers that be he i1s not permittea to % have sympathies at all—and keep |* out of jail. ALLACE. Idaho, June Sensational scenes were en- acted in court to-day. At- torney Reddy, in presenting his motion to set aside the in- dictments against the miners, severely | BB SO @:0in: BB & HEBIG NI IN AN OLD [ = alla e e als Sala e et paE g=hes SAN JOSE PEOPLE D R S SR SR SO R S e e e WILL INVESTIGATE W40 404040 4540450404040 4040404040 4043404 H McNaughton Said When Elected That Stories Detrimental to Him Would Be Sprung. plies, and the merchants realize that if the reputation of the school be hurt they would lose from $500 to $1000 per month. The Trustees who elected McNaughten are being openly condemned by the people, as is Gage, who is gaid to have stood in with the plan to turn the to the politic Trustee Leavitt of Oakland was the leader in the MeNaughton boem. Trustees Short of Fresno and Brown and of this city also voted for the Arizona professor. aughton is unknown re and was only in the city for a few hours on the day of his At that time he told several persons stories detrimental to his character would be heard, but if he was given a chance he would be able to clear them up Dr. H. €. Brown, chairr 1 of the Normal School Trustees, says no charges have been filed against McNaughton and no attention will be paid to reports unless charge preforred is. election. LD G & BB LS SCANDAL IS RECORD IN THE EAST 1S CLOUDED | MO {His Friends Say He Was Not Guilty of Wrong Doing. e A thorough investigation of the charges made @ R S < 1es McNaughton, the new principal of the £ - ; a8 rmal School, commenced tc-day by citi Prominent & q ) D 2 men at Council Bluffs, Ta., have been communicated with, and as g2 | Y{J || b 1 : £ i =3 soon as they have been heard from a meeting will be called to & $ consider the matter. The Normal School ha en an important factor in g | = iz ose's busin ife, as out of 600 pupils 1e 0 come other 8| # San Jose's business life, as out of 600 pupils enrolled 400 come from other &2 | Ty Pedagogue Went From Coun- parts of the State. The pense considerable money for hoard and sup- 3 | | cil Bluffs to Arizona to Gat Away From Enemies. aed gt cial ch to The Call. MA The Board Disp: IA, Neb:, ex-members June of the of | 2 O ( | Council B call the fig of Education uffs, lowa, readily re- 1t about ten years ago John G. Ju H. S 1o, the committee appointed to look into | ¢ . 3 BB i MeNaughton's char r. will meet to-morrow morning and start in on which resulted in the resignation eir work. Reports will be asked frem Iowa and Arizona. They will be ¢ s McNaughton as super= ed in the work by the entire alumni, and it will be rushed along so of Jame ']‘_ Naug LSt the result can be laid before the trustees at the meeting on July 19. intendent of the public schools. g r0%oN O G% 0% O % ORORORONGT HonOnowokee | They say he had held the posi- tuted authority. The plan of the mine- | union has been collecting subscriptions | tion over five vears, and that owners, aided by the Governor and his | to aid the union miners and their famil- gt > ol P G : : - 3 when a fight subordinates, to railroad to the gal- |ies in the Coeur d'Alenes. Governor | PTIOT to the time whe g Smith sent $5. s o Tarten e criticized the action of Coroner France | lows and to the penitentiary those ac- To-day the Governor |was made upon him he was a Tt T | b nt to Butte. H ited b : s: “The compesition | in summoning grand jurors whom he is becoming more apparent |came to Butte. He was waited upon by | Fie . - 4 - et may appear ex ~ ZOLA TO DRAMATIZE | knew to be blased, and who had pub- | day. Acting under orders from|a committee who returned him his|Very successful instructor and face of the material tran- | licly expressed opinions as to the de- | Acting Sheriff Sinclair, every one Who | money. The ground for the action was e enerl aatistact Tl < [ z ral satisfaction. he ing, but, unhappily, THE DREYFUS CASE| ants’ guilt. | is suspected of giving assistance to the | that the Governor had approved the | 8a'C E€N€ : E P lity does not prevail in the samc s ; i ‘ In support of the motion the affi- | defense is summarily thrown into the | course of General Merriam in a letter | reason for Dr. McNaughton's = abir v Play of_thn Novelist's Creation Will | qavits of the defendants were filed, in | Bull Pen. to that officer in allowing men to be TR : 'y e by ament : : Receive Its First Presentation each of which it is dlleged that France | To-day Thomas Henry, a former |taken out of the State without requisi- | FeSignation i 1890 was. given solution t Dre in New York. | is a bitter enemy of the accused; that | Sheriff of Shoshone County, was ar-|tions to answer charges of rioting at this evening by Finley Burke, a i E chiefs s of its po NEW YORK, June The world- | he is an employe of the Bunker Hill | rested in the courtroom by a man who | Wardner. | s 2as F ; 5 useful work | ramous Dreyfus case is to be drama- | Companys that he vefised the defe id he had orders fro nelair to e prominent citizen. inst the im- i none other than the man | dants the right of counsel until they | “send him down.” Henry asked why | MEN TO TAKE “In those days,” Mr. Burke a ralization nguage red in it prominently— | were brought into court: that he hm{, he was arrested and if the man had | PLACE OF STR"(ERS‘ n_thosc - ' 1 the againat the the calebrated nhvelist and playwright, | imprisaned these who had fiot testified | a Warrant. He was told that Sinclair's | Al | said. “the School Board was in la’s American repre- | as he desired, and that he packed the | order was all that was needed to arrest | - 1o * ;i ¥ and by the protec- mund Gerson, sign®d a | Grand Jury with persons he kna\'.-‘ any man. The real and only reason for | BURKE, Tdaho, June ~One hun- | a constant wrangle, not only over court-mart erday with z 11-known | wou ict at his direction. Henry's arrest was that he i dred and fcur miners arrived here last = = n - ver ) some and the or whe Zola, is to | co was subpenaed and asked tn‘ pathizer with organized labor. night from Joplin, Mo., to go to work | tN€ superintendency, but over it ve a five-act drama und the | take vitness-stand to explain his| Last night 100 men were brought up | in the Standard mine. They are the | the treasurership. This fight was s rumored that Parli trials and tribulations of the French | action in summoning the Grand Jury, | the canyon to take the places of mem- | first lot of men imported from the Ea: A . L Gl gued ‘within a few d ter enable | army officer | but his counsel, who are the private | bers of the Miners' Union. Yy are to | for this purpose, but will be followed by | invariably fostered by the banks, 7 ; ernment to cafly out its M GoriAn v ted 10,000 krrencd cutor ployed by the Governor, | g0 to work at the Standard, and are | others. The managers of the Standard | ..1.c . poa Y me unhampere to Zola as part payment. He received a | objected on technical grounds, which | said to have been of the party which | mine say they have 200 more men, who | hich wanted to control the de- s he actual nar f the officers who f cable dis fr Zola last | ined by the court. | came from Missouri, a portion of which | will start for this place next week from | posits of the school fund, and in ire to be tran vill not be pub- | night acknew ng receipt of the| The prosecution are using every | is in Spokane and refuses to come fur- | Missouri. All the men who came in last | 3 e i Kir ¥ k until in th = means in their power to conceal the | ther. - 2 et | order to win one faction or the =T al. The author. Continued on Second Pag famous onduc o self-consti- | BUTTE, Mont., J I Co ed O ond P: : . ‘ i t " n Secor Age. \ in uj 7\17 A conduct i_ -<71('an ti il T E, Mon une niners’ ntinued On Second lagf | other would l»rmg the superin- f R s and Drumont’s tendency into the fight, if by so is true, but | doing they could gain a point. Their rents ‘:" McNaughton was not the only heter | superintendent of schools to get s | . . - ‘ s | caught in this snare. For a term T | of vears the fight seemed to be a ¥ 2 ! incessant; McNaughton was not B ? & | the bone of contention. He was % | rather the victim of the local jeal- s % | ousies incident to getting pos- : 4 | session of the school money. The o 3 < inks. H +|law, in recent years, has prevent- §iis 11 <6 Sy : AR - g :;‘ ed such disgraceful proceedings, : Sl % which did needless injury to t € 3 7 Biatan % | good men other than McNaugh- Flton. My recollection is that & + | there was nothing in the charges is als 4 filed against him that reflected 7 : X upon his personal character, and g of : + | T never had personal knowledge e g £ of any wrong-doing on Mec- 5 + | Naughton's part. : : : Your correspondent made in- Hicers | quiry of other citizens, who told eir dut; Dase 1 s him that formal charges of a seri- . on active service I held . talks too I BLOEMFONT T:l N. Junc 23. $199.750 fo ar material. bz ton amt in! The Volksraad of the Orange Trade with Cape Town and Jo » major atic C B =5 g 5 % y % % ' Free State has voted $4¢ hannesburg is at a comparative Che Tt Gaplict Y the increase of artillery, tents and standstill. Ministry was held a : £ 7 o 3 2 . ce to-night, President Loubet presid- other military supplies. A reso- Ihe Germans, who are in sym- At this meeting the general lines | 1,400 \wa¢ adopted directing the pathy with the Transvaal, are declaration to be made by 3 on Monday were decided | Government to adopt the Mau- holding meetings at which they rnment ipon ‘A n,m.\-v,:i;;)x ’ :l")" o i!”\r:v ser rifle as the national weapon. adopted resolutions urging Ger- drafted at a counc < e « § -, o 2 : ! 0 day. The Volksraad also voted many to intercede in behalf of At the instance of General de Galli- : i 5 . s & the council de.|S112,500 for ammunition and Pretoria. fet, Minister of War, I()\\ N, _[vmc The British second-ci Doris, with Rear Admira Robert Hastings-Harris, com- mander-in-chief of the Cape of Geod Hope and West African squadron, left Simons Bay to- day for the east coast. LONDON, June 23.—The Shropshire Regiment has been ordered to hold it- self in readiness for immediate em- ot oo o] il . 4 Bavkatlon ire being to refrain The of State for the from embarrassing the imperial au- Chamberlain, in the thorities. House of ¢ 5 to-day, in answer- ing a quest ed that the Govern- ment was reinforcing the British troops in South Africa to a total of 40,000 men. A dispatch from Cape Town to the Outlook s 2 “The h".l<|fll is extreme. Busin at a slandstill and the general fecling is that England must promptly bring matters to 4n issue. The league will have no difficulty in preventing meet- ings supporting Sir Alfred Milner's “The Orange Government is urging | the Transvaal to make further conces- | sions. Many people consider that Sir | Alfred Milner's franchise proposals are seats in the mining centers and the right to speak Eunglish in the Volks- raad. Otherwise it will be impossible to select representative men. Failing these concesions, the Johannesburgers say they prefer a treaty providing security and judicial and educational reforms." useless without the granting of twelve | | ous nature were filed against Mc- | Naughton before the Board of | Education reflecting upon his personal character, but it was too late to get at these records. Still | viewed., they had a good word to say for McNaughton and he apparently stands well in the community, re- gardless of the specific charges made against him. Mr. Jenkins said: “Tt an ‘outragc that this man should be \ pursued in this way for ten vears; Ithe last time they hunted him down was when he applied for a | school in Arizona, whither he went to get out of reach of his | persistent enemies, and I told them that if any man or set of men should ever follow and |hound me as these men are hounding McNaughton I would shoot them down in their tracks.” seriously °n were inter- and for' the most part other is A