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Show PRESS FULL ASSOCIATED advertise in the DISPATCHES UTAH WEATHER EXAMINER FORECAST the price IT CHARGES. IT IS ADVERTISING MEDIUM the BESTCITY. THE EXAMINCR IN THE FOR INDICATIONS as well reaches the county OUR SUBSCRIPAS THE city. BOOKS ARE OPEN TO AD- WILL BE SHOWERS VOL IV NO, WOOD i4 OGDEN JURY MAY RE COMPLETED BY TONIGHT Defendant Recovered From Attack of Illness Judge Wood Is Determined to Try to Complete Panel Today. BoIm, Idaho, June securing a jury in the H&ywaod. TO work of 2.' cue of Wm. D. legal counsel ha. been secured In charged with the murder of hu Federation of 'Miners had nothing to do with the Steuneuberg assassination. It is charged that what ia known U suffered yesterday morning, he apthe Mine Owners association, which has fought the Western Federation of plied to be in his normalof condition, tbe court Miners for many years, is behind the lie was out early ia front howe and walked in the sun after-vani- effort to discredit tbe officers of the sitting with members of bis federation and further that they will be able to disprove every statement family among the pleasant surroundings of well kept lawns and rose made by Orchard on tbe stand and in his confession, which it is claimed, bathes, fragrant with bloaeoms. Determined to Complata Panel Today. Is a fabrication built up to shield himjudge Fremont Wood has stated self and secure immunity from the that he is determined a Jury shall be consequence of his crime. reared tomorrow if poasible. Forty-fou- r Richardeon Will Open for Defenae. talesmen remain of the venire of El F. Richardson, a prominent at61 aummoned lust week, Ouiy one torney of Denver, will open for the be defense, but It Is understood that - it nan peremptory challenge can exercised and this lies with the de- has been agreed that the case for fease, the prosecution having exhaustthe defense will not be shown until ed its ten peremptory challenges on after the case for the prosecution la two men to all In. It may, therefore, be several This leave Friday. quality, if the defense should see fit j weeks before Mr. Richardson delivers That I his opening address. It is conceded to exercise its last challenge. they will do so la admitted by coun- j that the introduction of the evidence sel, but it is not expected that there for the slate and especially the will be much difficulty In qualifying of Orchard will be contested the two men out of the talesmen yet at every point This will mean probto be examined. Should this not be ably that the state will not be able does within the regular hours. It la to conclude under three weeks or quite probable that Judge Wood will j poslbly thirty days. The case for fold a night session. tbe defense will take equally aa long. With a Jury secured before court It may, therefore, lie estimated that adjourn tomorrow night, the case for the case will last sixty days after the the itste will be opened by Jamea H. opening tomorrow If, indeed, a Jury SixHawley, trading counsel, on Tuesday haa been secured by that time. morning. Thin, the first gun In the teen days of actual work haa been real engagement, will be a lengthy respent in the effort to secure a Jury. dial of the position taken by the atate Counting the adjournments the case of Idaho In tbe effort to prove that has been going on one month. Haywood, together with Moyer, Pettt-bonTwo Hundred Talesmen Examined. glmpktns and Orchard were re This work of qualifying - Jurymen tpondble for the 'death of Frank haa. been tedious and remarkable, Bteunenherg on the night of Decemchiefly on Account of the latitude per. ber SO, ItnG. mitted to counsel on both aides in That Orchard Confession. conducting their examination. Nearly exThis opening address to the Jury two hundred talesmen have been to main the difficulty being will bs the first oflldal amined, of outlining whs tha cue the prosecution hope to secure a resident of the county Fremont prove. Ever since the nrroat of three haa not formed an opinion. Wood, tbe presiding Judge, ia trying men, Haywood, 'Moyer and Pettlbone, The (peculation has been rife and Innum- lita first important murder trial. a erable statements, more or leas well charge has been made by the support-erof the prisoners that the state did founded in fact, bare been punlished. R la, however, true that except In not intend to give the men a fair trial ths most general way no authoritative and It has evidently been the deterstatement has beea given out. It is mination of the Judge to prove at the out tart that the utmost fairness must Bnw nearly sixteen months since Harbe expected throughout tbe trial. In ry Orchard, who by bis own confession, It ia alleged. Is the assassin of fact, tbe detail ae to ths life of the former Governor Steunenberg, made talesmen under examination to which a sworn statement, Implicating what counsel for the state and defense hu 1 called the "inner circle of the been permitted to go without objecWestern Federation of Miners in the tion on the part of the court, hue been matter of comment It baa at least plot to murder Steunenberg and in a series of crimes extending over i brought the expressed conviction on conmany years of the history of labor every side that If the case la ducted throughout with a similar imand mining troubles 1c Idaho. W1 this s few days after Orchard made Gils partiality no charge of unfairness can ititemenL Moyer, the president of be sustained. the Western Federation Down of Haywood. , Breaking of Miners, Haywood, the secretary and treasurer first of the prisoners the Haywood, the organization, and Pettlbone, a to he tried on tbe charge of the murmember, were arrested in Denver on der of Steunenberg, 1 a nan of Imextradition warrants and brought to It pressive physics! appearance. this stste on a special train under cirtherefore, a matter of surprise cumstances that have aroused much was, on Saturday, it was announced discussion since the arrest and which when, was too ill to appear the that prisoner are been carried to. tbe highest who were The court. In physicians eonrt In the country In order that the called In were at first alarmed. Haytot of the prisoners might be wood wu suffering great agony and nt times in convulsions and unIntimation of what Orchard has wu conscious.' Opiates were administered, filed In his confession has come together with other medicines, and B one source and another end from a further examination showed that "m to time in the last year, but it there was nothing seriously the maty be stated positively that very e ter. Throughout tbe case so far, t known of tbe contents of the has been a close observer erofeiaion which will figure, it is stat- Haywood detail and has consulted ed, t the most sensational feature of of every with his counsel on every point. While twee against Haywood, the first of a strong man, his surroundings and he prisoners charged with the mur- the tedious progress of the case have der to be placed upon trial. told upon the mans nervous system. State Has Much In Reserve. Since his arrest he hu been acIt is believed that the state tea customed to take a great deal of exmuch in reserve to corroborate Orch-ar'ercise. For the last three weeks he testimony. Orchard will be a has failed to play his customary game ltnee, but counsel for the state do of quolta In the Jail yard or to walk "t propose to rely upon bis evidence. on the lawn. At the same time he B,ery point bearing on Haywoods heavy eater and the hu been a that the nerve strain and Jfmsction with the actual murder of uy steunenberg must, the prosecution failure to observe the ordinary rules tAt. be corroborated before of health, brought on a congestion, The they rim hope to prove their case. In reuniting in Ittltable headaches. and relieved 0Tk of now been has corroboTthis congestion securing the Pinkerton detective agency It la thought that all cause for flured largely. It may be said has been removed. Jj the beat men of their force have One of the possible delays after in"n engaged on It for the last twelve the Jury box has been filled Is the on P0"4- - Captain "Jim McParland, clination on the part of counsel 'r?oa the principal figure In many both sides to go eery carefully over wrtive stories of real life within the record of the men who hnve 'Mt twenty years, now In charge so far qualified. A number of detec"V'ne western division of the Plnk-rUltives have been at work on this, and sgnnev. bus directed the work. It la stated that affidavits have been the statement that he secured and may be used to show jV" makes he has a complete case. On that the court should reopen the exhand, the defense of Hay-- 1 amination of two or three men now TJrt"r has tieen as busily at work aa In the Jury box on account of public " at some tims , pr",utlon. Other scores of de--i expression of opinion bVe followed due and every since the arrest of the prisoners. No niav.on ,;f the Pinkerton admission along this line will be made w-and It may be was doing. by counsel, however, not sufficiently 500,000 for the Defense. that the affidavit are move. t to warrant the strong of money, estlmat much ns laOn.noo, has been .,.h" the members of the WESTERN FEDERATION MEETS. iL. P 'Wat,5B of Miners, nn or-',vith 75.0no members, and Placet of Moyer and Haywood Filled fr !hor organlzationa through-h;- , by Substitute. op. h propaganda in r" r?',ntry- "A Prisoners. Haywood. M..- -, Denver. June 2. An increase of a!lrt Pett-bonhas been Wide-- 10,040 in the membership of the Westsmive and much aym- -' ern Federation of Miners will, be is ben aroused. The best shown by the reports to be presented s, y e. I pre-erw- lit-fl- 1 phy-alcla- ss B !' n UTAH. CITY, at the annual convention which will meet In Denver June 10th next. Tbe executive board meets here tomorrow to audit the accounts and consider other routine matters. In the absence of President Charles H. Moyer, who la in prison in Idaho awaiting train an the charge of complicity In the murder of former Governor Frank Steunenberg, C. E. Mahoney, first will preside. Jaa. Klrwan la acting secretary in place of William D. Haywood, who is now on trial at Boise for tbe Steunenberg murder. The other members of the executive board are J. C. fjowney, Butte; Marin W. Moore, McCabe, Arizona; Charles E. Schniiu, Silverton, Colo.; Ernest their behalf and six lawyers are daily In court actively conducting their while two or three others are la reserve. Counsel for tbe defense claim that Orchard's implication of their clients was made out of the whole cloth and that tbe Western former Governor Steunenberg will be returned tomorrow morning nt 11 a oclock, nnlena tbe prisoner relapse. Today Haywood ia hinprlf again. Although a little drawn and pale as a result of the medicine and the opiates administered to relieve him from the scute pain which he MON- DAY; TUESDAY PAIR. - TION THERE ARE B. Mills, Greenwood, C IN PARIS. Widow of Napoleon III io the Target for Much Abuse, PLANS T i eration of Miners, accused of complicity lu the aaaasstnation of Governor Steunenberg of Idaho, and denouncing President Roosevelt and Secretary Taft. Among the delegatee who sat In the convention was Harry Wells, a eon of the. late founder of the city of Well-stoOhio, and a nephew of Senator i Foraker, Th resolutions adopted are in part as follows: Where, tha Socialist prophecy of S clasa struggle haa crystallised into definite class war In the west-er- n states, as shown b the persecution of Comrades Moyer, Haywood and Pettlbone, against whom the capitalist class Is using all the weap ons in Its armory, namely, biased ' judges, a prostituted press, military force and Pinkerton detectives, to crush the labor movement; be It, therefore, Resolved, That we, the Socialist party of Ohio, In convention assembled, do support with unswerving fidelity our comrades, Moyer, Haywood and PeUibons, during their trial. Further, be It Resolved, That we denounce the,' action of tbe Tint servant of tbe people,' Theodore Roosevelt. In sending hie errand boy, Taft, to Idaho and denouncing Moyer, Haywood and Pet-- , E n, , O O O O O O O O O O O DESTROYED. O O today O O O O O O O SNOW IN NEW YORK. : New York. June 2 Snow fell In New York today. The flakes did not fall aa snow all the way to tbe pavements, but, coming from a colder tempera- ture, they swirled about the tops of tbe sky serspera and before dissolving added a mid- winter touch to the most no- markable June 2nd that New Yorkers have known. At the wannest moment of the day ths temperature was officially recorded ti 51 degrees. At 10:20 a. m. tbe mercury had dropped to 45. At 8 o'clock tonight It was 47. ooaooooooooooooo O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O jt PUBLIC OF 's Practically nothing haa hern ed out in advance. The arrangemeuu up to tbe present time simply cover tbe opening session, when Mr. Neli-dof- f, the Ruaslan ambassador to France, will call the conference to r, and make an address extending hia sovereigns greetings to the delegates. Dr. Jonkheer D. A. W. Van Tela Van Gourdraln, ths Ihitch minister fur foreign sffalN, will replv in an address of welcome on behalf of Thereafter it WHhelmlna. Queen will remain for the conference to decide how It trill proceed. It la safe to assume, however, that the general line of procedure of the former conference will be duplicated. The first thing In order will be the appointment of coramiitees to consider the various subject Inscribed upon tbe Huastan program. These will hardly numlier more than five. I'uteae ths question of tha reduction of limitation of armaments It Injected into the proceedings at the out Met, In which event the main struggle mey be at ones precipitated, the plenary body will probably not meet again for ten day or a fortnight, In order that the committees have an opportunity to prepare reports for submission. In general, It ta not expected that tha full conference will meet more than once a week until the work of the committees justifies more frequent session Publicity ef the Congress. The question of giving out a public statement of the progress made will be' decided by the conforecne itself. In 180V Busin attempted to shroud the LAND proceedings Is mniery and secrecy, but after a fortnight It was found that this course led to the publication of so many mlachevious rumors that ecreral statements ware Issued. This year many of tlw deles ales, realising tbe advantage of slopping the mouths of ths sensation mongers, favor tbe issuance, daily if possible, of JUNE statement. Tbe BE HELD IN DENVER, a brief 1840. French language, ms in 18V9, will be the official language of the conferof Colorado, Bay ence, although the advent of the South Governor Buchtsl, Will That Ns Politics Bs injected Americana and ths growing Influence Inta ths Gathering. of English, may lead to soma relaxation of the rule with regard to the Denver, June X. Governor Henry debates, and may result In a compromise such a waa arranged at tha A. Buchtel, who tamiedjtbe rail, In acpeace conference at Portsmouth, cordance with resolutions adopted by whereby tbe protocol, or mlnutoSj the general assembly of Colot ado for were Inscribed In both French and Kng ; tbe public lands convention, to bs llsh, although the French text wae to held in Denver, June IS, snd 20, he regarded as official In cose of distoday that ther shall bs no pute. politics injected into the gathering, If Tbe government's official entertain- he esn prevent It. When he sent out lavbe not ment of the delegates nil call he distinctly and emphatic!-- I the asm In good ish, but rather will lie the that tbe purpoae of tha eon stated ly teste as Its attitude with reference to j ventlon waa In no war to antagonize the program. Nothing will be arrang- ' President Roosevelt and hi adminised which could 4n any manner Interwith reference to the public fere with the work of the conference, tration The program preparliament baa appropriated 100 W0 toad question. convention by a comtbe for pared of for the ((40,000) reception gulden of which United Btatee Senmute the countrys guests, but this cover ator is chairman, provide for Teller In with the connection the expense the shaping of a mors liberal policy sittings of the Hall of the Knights. In addition tbe government will give to be submitted to congress tor the an entertainment, the nature id which enactment of laws which win make has not been definitely determined, for the development of the western except that it wiU not be an evening Mates by bringing more people to reception. More probably It will take then take up lands and till them. tbe form of a day trip or excursion to Stock Growers Interested. son Interesting historical spot. The Block Amerlran National Ths municipality will give a formal recep- Growers' association. whossilast contion. Queen WHhelmlna out of her vention endorsed the graslng and forprivy purse will also entertain the del- est railway policies of the administra1891 receivIn aha a a body. egates will be a factor in ths coming ed them in tha old royal palace at Am- tion. convention. will offer till she year sterdam, but Secretary T. W. Tomlinson, of the her hospitality at Het Loo, her counassociation, has been making a cantry neat, about an hours run from The vass by letter of tbe members on the Hague. to com before tbe convenquestions of Palace Peace. Camcgie'a tion. Borne of the questions hs put Beyond these official functions there to them were: will be much private entediainlng by favor some form of govern"Do the Dutch aristocracy and among tha ment you of the publie grazing control diplomats themselves. In addition ths tends under regulations that will fit not for distraction lack will delegates the conditions for our district? In their Idle moments. Tbe city Is "What arrangements will bs best Hea summer. Ideal In It almoKt picturan absolute to suited lan dec ape lease with your section; or a permit esquely In a low green righto, fencing (breaded with canals and dotted with to run live stock on the public lands characteristic windmills and ia always coled by tbs breezes of the sea twe with proper protection? "Are you familiar with tbe system miles away. The streets ore quite stock on and the homes of the Dutch aristn-cscy- , of general grazing ofdo live and approve yon forest reserves, forto ths hearing testimony tunes ammsteed in tbs West Indies, it? If not, what are your objections and what would you suggest? give it sn air of elegant cosmopolitanTo 1.008 tetters Mr. Tomlinson has ism. Minister Hill to extremely anxious that tha ceremony of tbe toying received nearly 200 replies, and they of tbe corner stone of the palace of are favorable to some plan of govregulation of nil peace, to which Andrew Carnegie haa ernment control and cases out of ten. subscribed (1 .500.000 shall take place public lauds In nine before the conference adjourns. The Most of them want the government site of the building haa been chosen leasing system with fencing priviBorne want grazing permits in a park called "Bmoordenlunitacbe leges. Peider, but the plans have not yet from the government. Ninety par cent believe that the government control been definitely approved. Tbe lowest estimate of the duration will give the little az well aa tbe big of the conference ia six weeks and the stock growers a square deal. Bo fabelief to tbat It will be in session be- vorable bsve been tbe replies to ths administration's policies that ths big tween two and three months. asKociatlon is now considered to be THE ENGLISH VIEW. fully enlisted in the championship of the Presidents cause. British Delegates Hava Not Yet Been SULTAN'S TROOPS IN MUTINY. Instructed. or-do- seml-offlci- a semi-offici- 1 i u Kansas City, June 2. Fire lestroyed tbe repair shop of ths Sant Fs Railway Topeka in Argentine, Ka., causing a loss of (50,000. The blacksmith shop and the store room, containing much valuable material, were destroyed, but the roundhouse was saved. Campbell-Raagermaa- Fet-tlbon- e, WEEKS NEWS FEB' SHOPS OF The Hague, June 2. The general Coluubua, Ohio, Jane 2. The Socialist party of Ohio at the closing plans of the preceding at ihe second session of its slate convention here peace conference probably will follow today adopted resolutions extending c lonely the procedure of the proceeding iff the first rongreu held in sympathy lo Moyer, lUywnod and officials of the Western Fedwork- I SANTA the cabinet busy and the difficulties tbe government has hod since the collapse of the Irish council's bill. Even Prime Minister propuMl for a reduction in expenditures for armaments haa not yet been outlined, and white those member of the government favoring discussion of the subject, still maintain that It should be brought up, there is a strong feeling that after all it might be better tu drop the matter or leave It for eutne other power to Introduce. The government certainly Is disappointed at the manner in which the question has been received, the United States and Spain being the only enthusiasm powers showing any for It. Great Britain to anxious to Jo nothing at which Germany would take offense and it to possible, therefore, that another power, probsbly the Inlted States, will he urged t bring up the question with a promise of Great Britain's support. Great Britain will, of course, do everything la her power to increase the efficiency of the court of arbii ration snd the government ta being pressed hy Its supporters to move for the throwing open of Ths Hague ar hit rat ion court to all gallons and for the extension of ths processes of mediation and investigation, but on this point as on other points no decision has been reached. The delegates wtll be Instructed to give support to suggestions for the alleviation of Bufferings caused by warfare, but they will rwrefully examine any question of international tew, euch aa the rights of neutrals, the possibility of exempting private property from rapture at sea, contra-bau- d, tbe limitation of the right of search, commercial blorkade, ihe or ganixatkm of prize courts, floating mines, etc. There is an element of the liberal party, represented in the cabinet that had made exemption of private 'property at sea one of tbs plaakz in It platform since Orest Britain opposed the suggestion at the fast Hague conference so there Is a possibility of the government making some concession under this head tf It svetvoms the opposition of permanent offiotola of th foreign office. Although Great Britain, of all powers, to affected of the application of the principle that public debt cannot Justify armed interventloa, Sir Edward Grey baa practically agreed that should the United States propose tbe application of th Dr ago Doctrine to the South American repuhllea Great Britain will got object to IL Anarchistic Resolutions Proceedings Will be Similar to Those of Adopted at Columbus First Congress Convention Paris, June 2. The 111 feeling of the French masses toward the former Empress Eugenie, widow of Napoleon III, haa been strikingly illustrated. The who, since her return from exile, haa divided her time between the Hotel Continental in Paris, whence she could look out over the gardens of the Tuillerea, where she once reigned supreme, and the watering reaorta of tbe Riviera, some months ago brought suit to recover a Urge numlier of articles now housed in the French national museums, on the grounds that they bad been the Ubone. Resolved, That we call upon the personal property of her husband and were of no historic and had lit- working class to remove by its votes The caae at- not only this political mountebank, tle Intrinsic value. tracted no attention at the time and but all others of hia Ilk. practically went by default, hut re-- jI eently, when tha couffBecldsd In the empress favor, a tremendous outcry waa raised.. The popular newspapers took the matter up, the rmpreaa waa called an adventuress and many of the old stories prejudicial to her fame ' were revived. The Martin, under the caption, An Voleur (Stop Thief), investigated the empress claim and found that the articles given her by tha court in- TELEPHONE COMPANIES TROUcluded gifta to Napoleon III hy sovBLES TO BE --SETTLED. ereign and foreign states, priceless tapestries, paintings and other objects Conference In Chicago Thlo Week of art, and, what most aroused tbe May Bring About This Ire of the populace, some relics of the Result. great Napoleon. The experts employed by the paper appraised the value of-- ' An effort to decide upon a plan the "plunder aa close to a million dollars. The result ie that the govern- which will bring to an end the long ment, in deference to the clamor, hsf continued struggle between the Indeformally entered an appeal against pendent companies and the Bell Intbe decision. terests will. It is expected, be mads at the annual convention of the InPARLIAMENT. TO GO TO WANTS ternational Telephone association, London Frees Says Croksr Cherishes be held in Chicago neat Tuesday. That Ambition, More than a thousand delegates from all sections and Canada and repreLondon, June 2. The newspapers senting more than (350,000,000 of the are reviving the report tbat Richard capital of the Independent Telephone com panic are expected to attend the Croker cherishes an ambition to enter the British parliament aa an Irish convention. The American warships which came Nationalist member. Recently Mr. to New York after taking part in the nn Interest In the naval Croker has taken tbe at display opening of the work of Die Nationalists, made con- Jamestown will sail for exposition tributions to the party funds, lent Roads on Wednesday. Hampton automobiles for electioneering purNational Organisations Meet. poses and identified himself with tbe party by appearing on the platform Several important national organiat the recent convention in Dublin. It sations will hold their annual conia doubtful, however. If Mr. Croker ventions this week. The annual meetwould be willing to foreswear bis Am- ing cf the Sons of tbe American Revoerican citlsensbip and more doubtful lution will begin at Denver on Monif he could find a constituency desirday and continue until Wednesday. ing to take him up aa a candidate, or The National Educational association if the party leaders will welcome the will meet at Los Angeles Saturday acquisition of a politician or such a and continue for five day. - On Wedmasterful nature. nesday the general synod of the ReAnother of the Irish Nationalist! formed church In America will meet remarked to tbe Associated Press that at Albany, N. Y. On the same day the party would not welcome any at- the National Confectioner associatempt to Introduce "American ma- tion will begin n three days meeting chine methods Into its politics. . at Cincinnati, Mr. Crocker's health, moreover, la of Oscar and Queen Sophia King in ac- Sweden a barrier to his will celebrate their golden tive work of any sort Ha shows the wedding on Thuradar. weight of his 64 years, although he The 40th anniversary of the ascenIs still vigorous. Hia recent Illness sion of Emperor Francis Joseph to was more severe than published re- the Hungarian throne will be celebratIndicated. The doctors pro. ports ed Saturday. The festival will be nounced It Brights disease, and at continued for two weeks. one time almost gave up hope for hia Frederick and Queen Louise King recovery, but they finally declared him of Denmark will pay visits to King cured, although they warned him that Edward and Queen Alexandra at Buckhe must take greater care of himself ingham Palace from June 8th to 13th. In the future. The ceremony of transferring the body of Emile Zola to the Pantheon TREATMENT OF JAPS IN AMERICA In Parti will be held this week. Tokio, June 3. It is reported that members of tbe progressive party will soon hold a meeting specially called to consider tbe American question and to formulate demands upon the American authorities through tbe Tokio government relative to the treatment of Japanese in America. It ia alio reported that, if necessary, a mss meeting will be called to demonstrate public feeling against the reported persecutions of Japanese in 8an Franeizco. PRICE FIVE CENTS 1907 ROOSEVELT Kir-wa- EMPRESS EUGENIE JUNE MORNING, SOCIALISTS mid Joe F. Hutchinson. Burke, Idaho. 200 Delegates Will Bt Present About SOU delegates, the largest numlier in tha history of the organisation, are expected to attend the convention. The states that will be represented ere California, Colorado, Nevada, Montana, Utah, Wyoming, Arison, South Dakota, Minnesota, Michigan, Missouri, Washington. Oregon, British Columbia and Alaska. There will be two or three delegates from Alaska. Nearly every member of the fedn eration, said Acting Secretary today, 1001 secured an Increase nt wages during the past year. In addition, an eight-hou- r day has been established in districts where the ten and twelve hour day waa In fotce. We have had a number of strikes during the, year, and were successful in winning all of them. Several are on now but we are confident of an agreement that will be eatlsfactory to the MONDAY FRENCH VESSELS TIED UP Seamens Strike Is In- juring All Kinds of Commerce Porte, Jane 2. Th striking i re displaying extraordinary unant-arit-y. It to the aame tote la every port in France. Not' only are ships unable to atari, owing to desertion by officers and men, but ths men aboard French vnmIi arriving immediately throw In thsir lot with ths strikers, eves though their voyages ore snd they ora liable to prose, cution for so doing, Ths techtow ot ths government to tend blue Jacket at the request of ship owners ur-plac- e strikers bos prove abortive up to the present The fliet vessel on which they entbarked, belonging at Marseilles, was unable to sail boeauM bs officer refused to navigate It lp to the present few acts of violence have been reported. The director of the French line ora mast ae to the outcome ot (he strike and have arranged with the Hamburg-Americo- a line for Its vessel to call at Havre during the strike for passengers. Torpedo Rosts WIR Be Used. Meanwhile torpedo boat destroyers will cany on th postal and passenger traffic between the Mediterranean and colonial ports. Many ef tha striking skippers or placed 1b a peculiar position owing to tha action of tbe autboritloa In tefue. Ing to accept their paper when pro, rated unless accompanied by th ship owners' wrltjra consent, which In not forthcoming. Those men, therefore, are liable to punishment for dnoartiom ae technically they ore Mill In d and are reaponslM for their eom-man- - The seamans delegatee- - from alt porta haws arranged a meeting to be held here tomorrow, Th ara understood to have received not to aocwpt n compromise. Ths difficulties of th government have increased owing to the strike coming at a time when the- win growers in the sooth ara protesting vigorously. Th public ara clamoring for a hasty solution of ths strike, because of the enormous sonsternatlon It in centring trad. - Situation at Havre-Havre, June 2. A large body of strikers today boarded th steamer Suzanne Marie and compelled her crew to disembark. They then put ont the Area under (he butlers of th vessel. Ths polios arrived and cleared the ship of strikers, e Refused to Navigate Vassal. Marseilles. June 2- - Ths stnamer Isly, having on board a crow of bis Jackets, woe unable to tears port to day, became the officers of tho team! refuted to navtgato bar. All tbe troops ore confined to tun. rack In readiness to suppress distort bsncesL Bhlps Crewe Join ths Strikers erews of Bordeanx, June 2. Th nine incoming vessels today Joined the striking seamen. Ftohermcn Alee Have tha Fever. Havre, June 2. Disturbance took place this afternoon between striking fishermen and fishermen who' had not cessed work. Eventually, however, (he latter Joined tbs movement. DISABLED VOLUNTEER SOLDIERS President Murphy of Board of Man. agora isouss Statement. , I ' The I. Although conference will meet within a fortnight, the British delegates have not yet been Instructed as to the attitude they shall maintain. Thla delay In notifying the delegates la the result of the heavy parliamentary program, which keeps tbe members of London, June Los Angeles, Col., Juns 2. Franklin Murphy, president of the hoard of managers of the government home for disabled volunteer soldiers, said today: "To a men the board Is In favor of the restore t Ion of the canteen In the soldiers' homes. "We take this stand In the Interest of temperance. Results since the abolition of the canteen In March last year have demonstrated clearly the necessity of IL Our report last year recommended Its restoration and, while I cannot predict what we will do tbla year, it is likely that ths report will be along ths aame lines. "However, we hive great plans for the future. A number of prominent women In Washington have Interested themselves in rar side of the cause. They are branching out all over the country. "The W. C. T. IT. wo responsible for tbe canteen bring abolished and tbe question has practically developed into a fight between the two organizer tioGi of women. The me sure to do away with the canteen carried by only four votes. In view of this fact osq hopes for a change of sentiment to congress cannot help but bo high. LONGSHOREMEN REVISE MANDS. DE-- . . New York. June X. At a meeting Tangier. June 2. A serious mutiny of the Sultans troop gt Casa Blanco, today, at. which were represented IS haa broken out. The trouble arose branches of the striking longshore over the oqthe men. The mens unlun, demands mode e month mutineer! attempted to feeixe merl or so ago on the steamship companies, chandtoe lying In the custom house, were revised, and tomorrow the new but tbe authorities murqeded in pre- demands will be submitted on a bai venting tbla by payt .)fhe men half of 35 rents for for day work and 50 cento for night work. that w as due (hem. |