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The SAN FRANCISCO, SUNDAY, JUN —Xo0. 2 25, 1899—THIRTY-TWO PAGES. TOVEN MY BE SENT T THE BLL PEN No Limit to the Outrages in Idaho Under the Rule PRICE FIVE CENTS, RECORD OF NeNATGHTO! N THE EAST Charges That Caused Him to Retire From Council 9. VOLUME LXXXVI O TEOS0L 000 ¢ HE0E0S0R0 00 BHTEDENE0E0E 00 0 SSDI0TE0 6 D00 IIHIIT & BEDSED 04 ROOSEVELT WELCOMED TO DOCCIOGLIOTO & BOTOBHF D106 5o SO DIDEDY © DIVSGIN TGO THE GREAT WEST. @ ULTIDLO IO & PODSDOVETIT SO ¢ 080 L0006 GODIIRELI0EQ ROUGH RIDERS GREET THEIR CHIEF. @530 06 o VIOV ITON ¢ LIVIQVVQO00Q DREYFUS IS LSOOV S0 00 LW TSTO 6 YOOOTOGET 0O NEAR FRANCE GOBOHED 6 GoGe GOTEDIVN 6 OB TITE0 I @ 200 @ O ROR AR NN RN R AR AR A R A R RO RN R @ | n every way and that its record fs nub_k-n‘l Of Martlal LaW' BIHfi‘S. IO“ a. | for honorable pride, not only to the members | 34 am proud of you because you never complained | and never flinched. When you went to wnr‘ you knew you would not have an easy tlme:‘ You expected to encounter hardships, and you took them without a murmur. You were all readiness to learn and to show that prompt obedi e which makes it possible to turn the American volunteer so soon into a first-class type of fighting man. Of those of our num- BAX 0N FREE SPEECH Huita All Who Sympathize With the Per- | secuted Ceur d'Alene Miners | CAREER AS i USURER ® Allegations Against New Principal of the San Jose Normal School ¢ ber “h_” 1 ed for the brief rnl:npalxn in the - : $ % 1 o wera MiITed briwonnaiahenal e Are Subject to Arrest. ‘ Now Being Investigated. 24 S | fourths of the remainde t | — | —_— Ol b feinke o e e R [ % el t ot oY on sl yonWra Bnone o | Special Dispatch to The Call | Special Dispatch to The Call. 8 3§ pirit that he does not count fever, wounds | | : ind death el as nothing compared with the | By way of varsety m the out- | The more light that is thrown / y honor of having been able to serve with the | | % § | roximent under he fiag of the United States | pgeS commutted against the /ib- upon the career of Professor s )| century has seen. This was a typical Ameri- | erfy of the citizens in the Coeur James MeNaugh ly elec- ( | erty es wcNaughton, recently elec: ¥ O SVRORRSRXSVRSMRSNN@ | ' Alenes, the Attorney General of ted principal of the San Jose ( :f ldaho announces that he has Normal School, the more it be- 2 1 \ gf grown weary of hearing his acts | comes apparent that there 1s a ( S5 e Nk f§ | eriticized by the wives of miners, — ( cloud which, n the interest of ¥ f 4k S ( 2 () - \ % land that n this kind or criticism ol California public schools, requires o % | aoes not cease there will presently | ) | to be cleared. ¢ ‘| be some women prisoners in the | - e ¢ June -Nearly 3 % Bull Pen. A manly position to Profes James § % was Superinten- | i take, assurealy. The Attorney dent of Public Schools of Coun- < cil Bluffs, Iowa, and the leading P< : 5 7 = 2 citizens remember the professor well. 2 | Some of them 1k well of him and | others denounce him bitter He 3 certainly was a who made strong friends and ong enemies enator William Groneweg, one of the signers of the petition for McNaugh- ton’s dismissal, said to-day: with 2 acquainted Professor 3 McNaughton, but I do not regard m self as his special friend, neither do I wish to be called his enemy. During the latter part of his residence hera he had quite a controversy with tha Board of Education, which finally 3 caused his resignation. It is so long ) ago that I do not recall the details of all the trouble, but at the 4 o / thought it decidedly to the inter ) Noorors Reua benefit of the schools to have hi ok g; down and out. € s s gm0t : ¢-Congressman W. H. M. Pusey ( id: “I knew McNaughton while he E g had charge of our public schools i ) some time ago. He had the reputation i ( GENERAL GALLIFET, th2 New French ot onls instructoet andaigen s / thoroughness and a higher grade of g Minister of War. holarship, which produced more or 3y | @ sfeeientectestesierterionts PR A L P P TAORIMMMNMN friction with the teacher pupils their parents nd led to his dis- g REST, France, June 2. Captain Dreyfus will not arrive here until sal but not betterment of the % Sunday evening at the e t. This was the Jatest news that was character of our schools. His private circulated in ®rest on the receipt of the anncuncement that the character and nly demeanor cruiser Sfax had p: ity continues to ma ntain 1 Madeira yesterday. The population of the the calmest mood imaginable. Red posters displayed at various points heralded a meeting of Dreyfusites to-night in the Hall de Venise, the bigg were never as- while in our cor sailed.” The records of the hool Board show p t dancing hall in Brest, situated in | that James McNaughton resigned Oc- ¢ the vicinity of the arsenal. The demonstration was organized by Socialists tober 16, 1890, the date of its a pt- » | and was attended by 1200 persons, the audience consisting mainly of Social- | an Prior to that time he had been ists and anarchists, together with a few detectives. | requestéd to resign, and this request ifi The speakers, among whom were most of the Socialist leaders, addressed | was based on a petition filed with the 5 | the audience from a balcony. They attacked militarism and reaction. The | board and made part of the record. It t audience enthusiastically cheered all reference to Dreyfus, Zola and Pic- | is dated September 15, 1880, and was g quart. A couple of individuals who cried “A bas Juifs were promptly ned by eight leading cit who of- ¢ | hustied out, but otherwise the meeting was perfectly calm and the squads | fered to prove every statement con- of police who were stationed in the adjacent had absolutely nothing | tained in the petition. They p: to do. of Dreyfus, in order to defend lib The speakers called upon their hearers to e assemble upon the arrival and justice. The audience dispersed r his immediate dismissal. The pecification deals with McN (/| with cries of “Vive social revolution!” “Vive Zola!” and “Vive Plequartt» | Competency, which is serously | 5 | Some shouts of e anarchie!” were heard. i u 2 2 The representative of the Associated Press saw M. Schiron, the leader of | is unfit for the office of superintendent i o (/| the Brest Socialists, who said In the course of his conversation: “We intend |in that he is immoral; that he is in- VIS | @ S MR MR MR NN Mg i | to be present at the landing of Dreyfus, but we do not propose to make any | Solent, ungentlemanly and overbearing shook i ST ¢ | demonstration. We shall be perfectly orderly and quiet, unless the reaction, | i his behavior to his associates and : 10 by the | cortainly entitled to admission to the | (| aries attempt to make a demonstration against Dreyfus. In that case we Fdlusies; hal he S n nent in referring to the | mp o yompers of the party who ae- 5| _ This means that if the anti-revisionists attempt a demonstration there | during school hours; that he resorts to Regiment, L e G S R e (| will be broken heads in Brest when Dreyfus is landed. The military author. | tricks and practices and deceit to ac- mpaiiin iment | e president Morton of the Santa Fe ;g ities are still reticent as to the arrangements made, and it is evidently their | COmplish his purposes . oneltln 0l- | road, of whom the Governor was the 2| desire to conceal the arrival of the prisoner of Devils Tsland until he shal) The third specification neglect ve H.-H uest en route in hi have been safely removed to Rennes, where there is more reason to fear dis of duty and the carrying on of private bu s on the side. he schonl iren at Wagon \1,.,,\:.1 AL S Chi- g cords than there is here. he fourth specification t lepot and sang “MV | .agq Times-Herald; H. I. Clouland A | petitioners further aver th ind the GOvernorsang | correspondent for the Times-H (] @ R MR M TR T RO RR SRR DR OONT R NN, @ | MeNaughton is a violator s cheered all along P S e s e ; of the State of low Siion| i ool ‘,‘v'i]"‘»"‘,‘,"n' AT _:f”’ifl;}{} ns 5 of this. Although a political crisis has | years last past en vowledge the sHehtest! wort thiruih the. Cibas tiarsin 0 been in course for some time, although | 2nd iniquitous pract extended him iy R e e Lt there has been no government for days, | 1S been ¢ 3 r 1 Young, owner of the Towa. St although' the critical mo AYS. | Vien in exacti The first man I recognized from the Capitol, who also went through the 3 o= = 8l moment was| tionate and usurious 3 ¢ drawing near for the settlement r Capts Luna said the | campaign; Captain Day, Lieutenant Y judicial A ent of a | from the poor and di: v r, as he stood on the end of the | Ferguson: Licutenant Goodrich and | & :hn fnfl“nuuesltmn that has distracted | made on short-time paper s car and t with the members of | Corporal Knaubler of New York. @ L LT N NG N N T N M T N NN ST S @ atlon close upon two years, lheirhnnr_'l mortgage: !h-n[ he has € X B i ¢ S T T S S i o R e OV S S current of public business flowed unin. | and received scores of chattel mort- command z witl ¢ ‘x Along with the ' regular appointed | can regiment. The majority of its members| Bonopaf oloapfy, has not the cour- terruptedly. gages from the poor and weak upon all dents of the Cuban campaign, all|committee on reception to greet Gover- | came from the Southwest, but not all. We s : “This proves that whatever di | kinds and characters of property; that of a humorous nature. nor Roosevelt were ex-Governor | had in our ranks Easterners, wewmm.wge of his bayonets SRy i ever disturb- | ¢, conceal his identity and connection coming from Wagon Mound | Adams, tenresenting Governor Thomas | Northerners, Southerners, Catholics, Protes: . : v manifest themselves are| with these disreputable practices he was spent by the Gov-|of Colorads: AQjutant. Géfietal-Over- | Jews, Gentlles—men -whose parents ——— merely bubbles on the surface. It|has had in most instances the papers 1 3 c slorado and aids, L - | whose parents were born on the banks confidence in the virtue of th. _llaw, M. A. Wilson, sometimes in the S . s - 2 e State orities - the repul 2 ends and the members of the | ants Willlams and Ream of Denver: | James, the Hudson and at Plymouth Rock | "1;:‘1 el ba,:i”‘”rx'l“e: and ;‘;‘ Archbishop Ireland Be- |iican regime, and that aiee, ar ro 'd‘:d’ names of janitors of the public schools ational Guard, and he kept ip & con- |iGovernor Otero and his staff, éonslgt- | nearly thies centuries axo; and sll wete Amer: | I e belanns el the Dreyfus affair, Justice will be donc. | 04 once only in his own name. The stant conversation with the members of Adjuta Seners "hitema cans In heart and soul, In spirit a % i i >, | amount he and his associates received tant conversation with the members |ins of Adjutant General Whiteman. |85 LT A0 0 L P SEL TG 1o hecmime rem b | llevesltisSafe Erom andithe verdict at Rennes will be re’ | Snopnt he and his assoclates recelved 1 pary. e A Judge Advocate General Twitchell | inction of creed. birthplacs or residence. All| ornog.o o people, in spite of the press ithi ceived with satisfaction and accepted |3 to 11 per cent a month. This be n's car until he was apprised o b | Colonel W. Dobson. Colonel E. G. | we cared for was that a man snould do his | ZHETICRR PEARIC, In FRLE OF (he Dross Assaults Within. loyally. S frated b7 the fack Yhat ho and b t that Juncheon was awaiting him. | Austin, Rough Riders Lieutenant Dev- | duty, should show himself alert, patiem and sor e A P 3 aastalates Have pecctcedia =h as $77 & ol A Ptk 20| olvnera) oveen o} sippress (thal truth’ T will say that my observations of | associates have received as high as $i7 After luncheon the Governor put on On observing his change from citi- ux and Dr. Charles Wilson of Colo- | er ter of Prescott, Lieutenant William vallant in battle. greeting. But when we come to speak of our dead comrades, of the men Wwho gave their and with that knowledge comes the are resorting to the most abominable practices in a last effort to exterminate him and asked, “How does the political situation here impress you? Not as French political institutions have given electors returned by direct vote of the people a more truly democratic method for the use of $100 for a little over nine Ida Washington on her household fur- | niture, including bed and bedding. Al ) 2ough Rider uniform and then pro- | rado Springs, and Lieutenant Leahy of | s Special Cable to The Call and ‘the New Yo e 3 s, @ poor debtor has suf- o o S ‘r.‘r Ve i | Rabonia macie b TG ~| Let me ey a word of thore to whom our | Tealization that they will not be per-| =" ““L“',?' SEryHisiog i byilanes e et :n‘rer:hire:il:;m:dm;mm" it [T e poverty in or- rore aE Rk R A e .| ernor Roosevelt rode had vellow | thoushts should turn at such a_time, both | mitted much ]nngor to oppress, impris- don Bennett. et = 2 wis of our own| ger to carry to Mr. Vien, McNaughton's aere thy Wl d % bigrssd f among the Iiving and among the dead. to our | on and maltreat innocent men or to| PARIS, June 24—Archbishop Treland | AMeTican constitution. I realize bet- | partner, the $8 a month i charged mittees were, On entering he re-|streamers floating to the breeze tied on | aneent Iiving comrades, and especlally to our | use the power of the United States . Nord 3 ter than ever how strongly and wiseiy | him for the use of the $100. marked, “Now I feel just like saying, | at conv nt places. former commancer, now Major General Leon- | a;m e e t‘ (h. lgt’t the Gare d.u' ord to-day fur RS FounderslOfionaiA s repu‘hli- "I ey be further Diastrated by tter out and go after them like | meeting of the Rough Ar1 Wood, whose administration of the prov- | afi ¥y d ! from State the| Calais, on his way to ‘Lnnd.nn. “"h'bunn €| fact that there now remains uns: *%) ‘This sally, and hisiappear- | Riders Regimental iAssociationl Was ||Liciot Santisgo has renfetad mich high credit | friends fof jorganized dabor, s Bealieing i)shon Ogerman, and wll sailiforNew s 0y e fied of record a chattel mortgage ir ance, called forth hearty cheers from | held in the Duncan Opera House, and | oo e o e O e s, | that their S eryy slen S Al sen [ ondion July 1800 U BergrelleavE | l»\'“:h;m‘\’mr; .,rc‘fmselpfiu"g £ el mother e e LBV e in the car. {mxing to the absence of Secretary Car- | We send to them the heartiest and most loyal terminate, in their desperation they | {he Herald correspondent interviewed G a college of | son, given by a colored woman named | | sens’ clothes to the Rough Riders’ cos- | 1c me Lieutenant Devereux said, “He Dame of Santa Fe was chosen secre- tary pro tem. An aadress of welcome | on behalf of the citizens of Las Vegas 1lvs in the flerce jungle, fighting, or who wasted In the death in the fever camps, we can only unionism and to convict men without regard to their guilt or innocence. a warm friend of France—every one knows that you are that—not even as than the one followed in France, whers the President is the choice of the As- | | sorts and conditions of men and women were contracted with, and some of the records £nd facts connected therewith ks just like the same old thing,” to f etand with bared heads and pray that we may Not satisfied with packing the Grand b s sembly Nationale. It seems to me, too, isgus and inde: B feh Teddy immediately retorted with | was made by A. A. Jones, a prominent |z live ar at the end to die as worthiy as | 50 0" S G0 ey Geputies and spots L Slellt RRNG Blnvlvo9e Snlotus ivsteniiotiee g Sebat| S (ouioeusting and, ipdecent (o ret 3 Xt da z i Z is e 'safd | _ | these our brothers died. en Capron, in the 1 T ? : % 2 g & (2 0L 081 augh, “It is destructive of all dis- | attorney of this place. He said in con- | these our beothers 4166 - SHeh, €apron, I the | borg i the employ of the Bunker Hill| “Well, if T understand aright your |ies of State from outside the Senate | be given of the same if demanded, line to allude to the ‘colonel’ as ‘the | clusion: | strength and his beauty; ‘“Bucky” O'Neill, | Company, they have now inaugurated | question,” he replied, “you would like | and Congress is preferable to the| These charges we and ready to me old thing. iovernor Roosevelt and Devereux ked together for ten minutes, calling of the old campaign reminiscenc Montauk Poi al inquiries as to individual mem- , and answering mu- | “We are more than grateful to have assembled here from the various States join us in extending to you our hos- pitality, love and affection.” | " Colonel Roosevelt responded as fol- and Territories this happy throng who | than whom in all the army there breathed no more dauntless soul—of these and other gal- lant comrades, the men who carried the rifles in the ranks, all we can say is that they | proved their truth by their endeavor that in the hour of the nation's need, these rose level to the need and gallantry and cheerfully gave | a policy of arresting and confining in the “bull pen” any men whom they think might be of service to the de- fense. This was the reason for the ar- rest. of Thomas Heney yesterday. He is one of the most respected citizens of to know how French political life, as a whole, presents itself to me as an American? In the first place, in spite of all superficial indications to which a foreigner might be inclined to at- tach undue importance, the republic French policy, and no time is wasted in idle interpellations. “In America we have a true concep- tion of liberty, of individual and politi- cal liberty. Each citizen demands his rights, but at the same time accords | prove, and in the name of good gov- ernment, morality and the interests of our public schools we demand that this { man be tried and that one so incompe- | tent, so unfit and so indifforent to the tender and important interests in his charge be dismissed.” of the regiment. In conversing |lows, his remarks at times being en- | to thelr country the utimost ‘:flllfln"l;"m“"?" Shoshone County and was not at the | seems to have become firmly estab- “)Flm lf; others (;lrlm“llhv manly prin-! The charges were signed by William A 3 3 | ve— s, ve res oly < % 3 'S “live ive.” 3 v a 2 Nei . M - th Governor Otero Governor Roose- | thuslastically applauded: | g“_‘r;" ‘A,,',‘.'h'm s ater love Tath mo man thay | Scene of the riot, but he was a friend | lished in France. Clg;;pom.};x;perzaxgidl;(nlxl‘reAmerlcan idea S;?{‘,e“segi;“\?a s\(\?n?xh”'(:\o‘nrg‘g \}L(: in the course of his remarks, re- | Just at this time 1 would not have left| " 1 lay down his life for a friend” And | Of organized labor and might have en-| “It is possible that democratic ideas | of Jiberty spreads through the siste kol : a rred to the just claims of New Mex- statehood, and put himself on 5 follows: I'm for New Mexico for statehood, 1 am ready to go to Washington at time and push the claims of New xico,” and then spoke to the effect a Territory \hat can furnish such ters as he commanded in Cuba was New York State for any purpose save to at- | tend the reunion of my old regiment, and for that purpose I would have gone to Alaska or anywhere else, for the bond that unites us one to another is as close as any bond of human friendship can be. It was our good fortune to be among those accepted when the country called to arms a year ago last spring. and when ten men volunteered for every one that could be chosen. I think I may say with- out boasting that the regiment did its duty | these men =0 loved tleir country that they gallantly gave their lives for her honor and renown and for the uplifting of the human | race. Now their work is over, thelr eyes are | closed forever, their bodies molder in the | | Qust, but the spirit that was In them cannot | | die, and it shall live for time everlasting. | | So much for our comrades of the regiment. | Continued on Second Page. deavored to assist those he believed to be innocent of crime who are re- strained of their liberty. The entire community is indignant over the out- rage, but no man dares to give expres- sion to his feelings publicly. Free speech has been a thing of the past in Continued on Second Page. are not absolutely welcomed by every class of the French, but they are cer- tainly dear to the vast majority of the people and openly opposed by but an infinitesimal few. They have thrust down roots deep into the soil, and are thriving vigorously and healthfully. It seems to me that events last week furnish a most impressive illustration republi the better it will be for their stability and welfare.” Death of Watson G. Green. STOCKTON, June 24.—Watson C. Green of Lodi, a member of the Republican State Central Committee from this county, died this evening at Lane's Hos- ital in San Francsico, where he had Peen taken to undergo an operation. calf, E. E. Avlesworth, D. B. Dailey and G. A. Holines. There is nothing in the record to show that a trial was held, and the pe- titioners were never forced to prove | their serious charges. J. J. Stewart | says he investigated the case at the | time and that as a matter of fact there was very little basis for the charges, | and further that if James McNaugh- | ton were to run for office in Council