The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 10, 1905, Page 1

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Q,""” vnyy . = THE WBATHER. Forecast for November. 10: { 1 San Francisco and \—:r:r,uy—»mmd)] t south winds, changing wi h westerly A. G. MCcADIE, trict Forecaster. be {akfl“ yrorn to ; ry. st ' THE THEATERS. ALCAZAR—“Why Smith Left Home."” CALIFORNIA—Washington ~ Soctety Girls.”" Matinee. CENTRAL—"Uncle Tom's Cabin." 3 CHUTES—Vaudeville. Matinee. COLUMBIA—"The Prince of Piisen.” FISCHER'S—Vaudeville. GRAND—“Ben Hur." MAJESTIC- The Light Fternal™ lORPHEUM—Vludelee_ Matines. TIVOLI—Grand Opera. o+ — VOLUME XCVITI- PRICE FIVE CENTS. SAN FRANCISCO, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1905. TROOPS CRUSH MUTINY OF SAILORS AT KRONSTADT THREE THOUSAND TARS AND A BATTALION OF ARTILLERY DEFEATED IN BATTLE WITH COSSACKS AND SOLDIERS OF IMPERIAL GUARD 8T. PETERSBURG, Nov. 10.—The Governor of Kronstadt telegraphed the general staff at midnight that the mutiny had Been 'crnshed; that there wasno likelihood of any renewal of the revolt to-day; that cape in hoats to the mainland, but they were captured the reports to the effect that members of the guard had joined the mutineers were false, as were the reports that the mutineers had seized the arsenal and the forts. Many of the mutinous sailors tried to es- and are being brought back to Kronstadt. He gaveno estimate of the casualities. JEWS IN AMERICA ASK AID FOR THEIR RUSSIAN BRETHREN Leading Congregations Appeal to Public in Behalf of the Mobs’ Victims in the Czar’s Empire. QUICK SUBSCRIPTION IS URGENT| To the People of California: AN APPEAL. e § ng message received to-day explains itself: ™ On belalf of the national committee for the relief of sufferers by Rus- wian massacres, of which I have been appointed treasurer, we urge you to call meeting of Jewish community to form branch committee und collect immediate funds. Necessity very great. Conditions appalling. “JACOB H. SCHIFF.” n Francisco the na- have published the ian Jews. Whatever ple have been ruthlessly cent women und children 11 for the resentment and »f the millions who in comm the nex is it the time for a systematic canvass. utpouring of sympathy, Paramount is the ans, thousands of families ss by the ies practiced upon. them, iove and compassion. We who are pros- e must help qeofice” AT ONCE! v. always able to help itself, stands appalled calamity. Millions arc needed to re- sufficient Widows and orp ies which were vesterday holly desolate. In this ter- » the compassionate regard 1 Francisco will not let this to P. N. Lilienthal, be sent treasur n B By Jacob Voorsanger, Rabbi . By Henry Wangenheim, President - CONGREGATION SHERITH ISRAEL. . y Jacob Nieto, Rabbi Abtal Aaronson, President. CONGREC ON BETH ISRAEL, y Myer S. Levy, Rabbi. M. H. Wascerwitz, President. ONGREGATION OHABAI SHALOME, By Bernard Kaplan, Rabbi. Maurice Kahn, President. RST 1 ¥V CONGREGATION OF OAKLAND. By M. Friedlander, Rabbi. George Mosbacher, President. . DISTRICT GRAND LODGE NO. 1, . O. B. B, By Hugo K. Asher, President, JACOB GR EBAUM, Chairman Executive Committee. San Francisco, Nc 9, 1905 Delegates from the Jewish synagogues throughout the city and the ding towns of € bay were present last night at Temple -El to consider the formulation of an appeal to the Jewish citizens of ifornia for al aid for the oppressed Jews in Russia. The ap- pea ssued by last night and the first response came fel Meyer, Many othe beral sums. ibed $1000, and A. Aaronson followed with resent at the meeting also pledged themselves he principal delegat ing was held under the au me from this city and Oakland and the meet es of the Associated Congregations, which has charge of benevole charitable movements. The chairman of the . was Jacob Greenebaum. Inpresenting the appeal to the public the de s adopted resolutions deploring the conditions in Russia and at- & the outrages upon the Jews principally to the bureaucracy, which oring to create a diversion of the public mind from its own miser- MRS. AINSWORTH \CLIMBS ROPE LADDER WEDS IN NEW YORK | TO DECK OF A LINER Berkeley Woman Becomes | Plucky San Franeisco Miss Wife of Walter 1. | Cheered by Watching Bradley. | Passengers. Dispatch to The Call 1 Special Dispatch to The Call. RK, Nov. $.—Cupid figured as BOSTON, Nov. —Miss Grace Ww. mance that came to light | Tarbolton, after a wild ride in a cab onn., todlay, through a|across this city, caught the White Star e of the marriage of Wal- | liner Cymric, with the ald of a tug, tn yvoungest son of the late| the middle of the harbor to-day h'-n a the rich New York| thrilling manner. She climbed up a actor, and Mrs. Luella | swaying rope ladder to the deck amid rth of Berkeley, Cal. The cou- ! the cheers of the passengers, who had arried on Wednesday by the| watched her plucky chase. in the Marble Colleglate| Miss Tarbolton arrived at the South- ity street station, from San Francisco, only dley is one of the best- | ten minutes before the Cymric's sailing yachtsmen. It was by time, and the big ship was moving 1w hat from the water |down the bay when she reached the met Mre. Alnsworth. A | dock. It was only by chance that a tug ction followed. Mps. Ains- | was in sight. ned out to be an ardent sailor,{ The tugboat men said she climbed the was noticed that nearly every im- | ladder like a sailor. Miss Tarbolton is salling party thereafter had the | on her way to England to complete her as members. Mr. Bradley’s friends | education in music. had heretofore classed him almost as a woman hater, or at least & man so busy | gy, ) A “ith nis boats that he had mo time to | having fitted out his yacht Arlel for an evote to the fair sex. Their astonish- | all-winter cruise. ment was great to-day when they read | Mrs. Ainsworth’s father was a wealthy the p shed noticé of the marriage of | wholesale lumber merchant at Berkeley, the couple Cal. She was educated in the Western Mr. &nd Mre. Bradley will spend their | University. Her first husband dled about boneymoon om the water, Mr. Bradley five years ago. Machine Guns Used by Troops in Battle With Drunken Mutineers at the Russian Naval Station. Three Hundred of the Rebel- lious Tars Still Holding Out. Conflagration Started During Outbreak Not Yet Checked. Czar Hurries Military Forces to | - the Aid of the Garrison. . . Special Dispateh to The Call | | NEW YORK, Nov. 10.—A cablegram to the Times from St.” Petersburg says: “I hear that the question of autonomy for Poland has been decided in the affirmative.” JRSBURG. Nov. 9.—This city was in a furor of excitement all of and late into the night over the news of the mutiny at Kronstadt. very one of the exaggerated reports of the affair received credence in many quarters, and haif the inhabitants of the capital believed that the mutiny was :ccessful; that the troops sent from here had joined In the revolt; that the ntire garrison of St. Petersburg would follow suit to-day; that the town of Kronstadt had been burned to the ground, together with the surrounding forts. The place was represented as being in the hands of 3000 sailors, who had murdered (heir_officers, seized the arsenal and bombarded the imperial palace . at Peterhof, across the bay. Butchepy was sald.to have prevalled in the 4 streets all during the day. and the rimmors.even went to the .extent of saying that Father John of Kronstadt-had left the bed on which he was supposed to be dying to lead the mutineers. f Many «of these sensational reports were, of course, entirely false, but suffi- cient details have been received .to prove that about 3000 sailors and a battalion of artillery from one of the forts. indulged in a mutiny which was put down by about 7000 Cossacks and troops of the Imperial Guard, hastily dispatched | from St. Petersburg and from the garrisons near Peterhof, and that machine guns had to be employed. Drunken Tars Make Use of the Torch. Before the arrival of the troops the sailors, many of whom were drunk on liquor plundered from the spirit shops, had set fire to the market and to several groups of houses. About 200 sailors were still holding out at midnight, and although these are ex- pected to surrender to-day, the authorities became so alarmed that the Paul regiment of the guard was dispatched to Krondstadt at 1 o'clock this morning. The correspondent of the Associated Press at Kronstadt says that the officers estimate the.casualties at 200, which is certainly very conservative, in view of the reports brought by refugees who fled.the town to the mainland. At this critical juncture there is no attempt made in Government circles to minimize the seriousness of the mutiny, and it is admitted that if a battalion of artillery joined the sailors in open revolt the mutinous spirit must have beem contagious. It is admitted that while the Cossacks and guards stood the se- vere test of shooting upon their fellows in another branch of the service, there is fear that the mutiny will have a badeffect on the morale of the troops, whigh already has been badly shaken by the revolutionary propaganda. As soon as the news of the mutiny was received here the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Equipages of Sailors of the Guard were locked in their barracks and the barracks surrounded by Cossacks. The sailors were furious with rage and shouted from the windows that they were ready to join their mutinous comrades. Satlors Murder Some of Their Officers. KRONSTADT, Nov. 9.—The heavens reflected the glare of smoldering fires a® the Associated Press correspondent approached Kronstadt at § o’clock this even- ing. Upon landing, however, hurried inquiries revealed the fact that the troops and the loyal sailors apparently had the upper hand. Fighting had ceased in the streets, and the town was quiet, but fears are expressed that there might be fur- ther trouble later. To-night patrols are engaged in hunting down and capturing the mutineers. g | ; . 7Y ad s The outbreak started yesterday afterncon, when the sdilors of the Seventh | dflfiflgflflgjyg 4 fort equipage revolted and, it is rumored, killed some of their officers. They magched ‘out of the barracks and immediately plundered four spirit shops. Crazed with liquor, they returned and seized their arms and then went on a rampage, firing promiscuously upen the troops and the loyal sailors. Later they were joined by many of their comrades and fighting continued from midnight * until this morning, when the terror-stricken inhabitants began to flee. The AMERICAN CHARGE WHO DEMANDED PROTECTION FOR UNITED STATES CITIZENS IN KRONSTADT, DEPOSED HEAD lowest estimates place the number of dead at Afty. _ OF THE RUSSIAN POLICE AND SCENE OF FIGHTING FOLLOWING THE MUTINY OF SAILORS AT THE CZAR'S GREAT | | blumsc:g::l |$§L‘3“¢‘£fl§m dight mackine suue froak B8 Folpratung abd Ocating, NAVAL STATION ON THE BALTIC. 3 Machine Guns Turned Upon Mutineers. " Tl s During the rioting to-day machine guns were employed against the mutin- X ous sailors, who had been joined by a battalion of artillerymen from the for- tress, and which raised the total number of mutineers to 300. The sailors say their chief grievances are poor food and clothing and an insufficient amount of libertv from barracks. & Roughs joinéd In the pillage, but the workmen did not participate in it. Many of the workmen and the civillan population have already fled or are ; ™ trying to flee the city, and docks are plled high with baggage and household effects. At midnight the fires are still glowing in the market and another group of ‘buildings. The stores and houses are boarded up and troops are patrolling the Prominent Tammany Men Face Arrest for Alleged Election| s 0 e o o s across the waters in order to ald launches in their search for individual muti- vl neers who are trying to escape to the mainland by boat. Frauds and HearSt ay Become Leader' Though a majority of the mutineers have surrendered, several hundred are still holding out in the eastern section of the town. They have thrown up barricades, but are surrounded, and Maxim guns are posted at all the streets leading to their strongholds. It is expected that the remainder of the mutineers will submit to-morrow. - Continued on Page 2, Column 1. + ] | Special Dispatch to The Call. Ballot boxes used in the New York City election last Tuesday have been fished out of the North River. Prominent Tammany men may be arrested to-day as a result of disclosures. NEW YORK, Nov. 10.—The Tribune cuss the reported finding of the ballot- oy A r WOMAN MURDERED GOES TO NEVADA ¥ XQRE; Nov. 10T B0 arut he el guiing ot fore, a ballot-box unsealed ahd unlocked IN OWN HOME! TO GET A DIVORCE says: am R. Hears e result of bdxes in the river, further than to say |and filled with ballots. The case was it the political head-on collision with Tam- that such repecrts had come to him, it be- Y 7 i F 1 many on 'hz;tdflyi. m;y be gu next ilm ing sald the boxes were picked up by a :::;"B‘(’:yt:r':: :l:ct:n:::: :' fi::;o,r:::;g;: H“sbfind, Who e%asf gmp' sa]l‘ anc‘sco “ oman Fllefl er of that historic day-by-day reminder | tug. R . . ¥ pee & i i A of political brigandage. Such . a thing | A ballot-box alleged to have been stolen | 1o Was immediately hegun. The inspec- peare(l, Sus_ ted of Hav Complaint Against Ab- seems like a fantastic dream to many at | and discovered by accident last night was | t0rS Of election, the poll and ballot clerks mg Killed Her. N sent, Husband. this time, but so 2lso did the possibllity | taken to District Attorney Jerome's of-|and the policemen detailed in the polling o= oy of Hearst becoming a serious political | fice and closely examined. Ty wpte. Seniinad ot lenaih Ty e Spectal Dispateh to The Call. Spectal Dispatch to The Cail factor in the city of New York. The in- |y .0 o0 o e ice District Attorney Jerome and George W. pated dicatlons are that Charies F. Murphy “;"‘; °n’N £ ll‘ :Hm o e e ety eo;| . TUCSON. Atiz, Nov. 9.—The body of| RENO. Nov. e Ida Seminario, will not last much longer as leader of 'ORK, Nov. 9. — Despite Tam- ns, e e case probably , Humphkrey O'Sullivan, the wife of a | Who arrived in t! city some uths Tammany Hall. Two hundred and ‘s protests that in all election dis-| be presented to the Grand Jury. ::‘l_m conteactor; :"“ found in her | 280 from San Francisco, w‘“ fid & twenty-five thousand .men voted s every detail of the law was ob-| The polling place in which the ballot- '_&‘ The head anq | *Uit for divorce againsc hér Rusband on Hearst. Of that number probabily by inspectors and the police on|box was found is in the Twenty-first As- | home to-day near this city. and | oo grounds of extreme cruelty and de- 000 were Tammany Democrats. ay. and that the efforts of William | Set Tu s district, heretofore | body show marks of fatal wounds inflict- | serion. . Her h trict. Attorney General Mayer 4 1 “to contest’ the election are en- | Mmhn As-|{ed with a hatchet. Apparently the . where he is night that he had received i t basis, charg: gross & 1 a ’*fih woman had been dead a week. Dogs and | copnected with a large mining company. of the recovery from the North & 2 n- T Mme. Seminarfo, since her arrival in certain ballot-boxes used in the n | ti the criminal authorities and in-|ity. 1000 £ M. s ] this eity, has been quite prominent in all of Tuesday last. He sald the matter s | dictments against policemen and y a wa2 ? society events, and the news of her di- under investigation. ‘bers of a b ¢ r I 6203, Last oceedings created considerable c e Grand 3 - comment in society circles. She is a vo- remarkable ability and her veice principal attraction at many She 13 & strikingly

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