The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 26, 1905, Page 27

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\ THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1905. — \WIDESPREAD REVOLT OF-THE CZAYS TROOPS Continued from Page 25, Column 7. Suggestions for Christmas Gifts ment issued by the Admiralty to-night, declaring that the sailors and several units of troops were assembling under the direct supervision of the Socialist immense Furniture Dieplay offers innumerable useful and tasteful pleces, so desirable for gifts. The quality is the best ainable and the prices are very reasonable. Footstools ezt propaganda. The statement follows: Mission Lamps to $40.00 “The events at Kronstadt have found Book Racks to $25.00 echo in the Black Sea fl}:zett. Xtce Aad- M 00 miral Chouknin reports that sailors, un- n::::us::nd. :: :5:.,0 der the influence of the Secialistic c propaganda, have organized at Sebasto- e RS L. pol a series of demonstrations. The Sne Sabhts . to §150.00 movement has spread to several or- etk Tabise --810.00 to $40.00 ganizations of the army. Vice Admiral Ladies’ Desks $8.00 to $150.00 Pisarevski was seriously wounded Curfo Cabinets ..$40.00 to $145.00 while trying to prevent a meeting be- Cheval Mirrors ..§40.00 to $100.00 ing held. The s::uanonpo:f rs:::;l‘c:’l:i though, accordin 0 a re v o gl REBRsSenss s s anae MURDS i, SR Y | o Selonk Fhls> ewertassnio et And innumerable other pleces; also special displays of: | tempts had been made to pillage.” SiIx Comforters $5.00 to $26.00 The revolutionary ferment, in spite ’ Sofa Pillows $5.00 | of the efforts of the officers, is known Panel Screens $60.00 |to have affected a portion of the en- | Jisted men of many regiments and the | Sebastopol mutiny may be the spark that is necessary to wset In flame a widesoread revolt. A dispatch from Sebastopol says that the condition of Rear Admiral Pisarev- ski, who was wounded Friday by the mutineers, is critical. It is not known whether the men attacked other offi- cers. The outbreak at Sebastopol compli- cates the problem of the Government for dealing with the agrarian situa- tion. These disorders are growing and the Governors of five provinces have sent representations to the Government that the troops available are insuffi- cient to restore order and urgently ap- pealing for reinforcements, and there- fore it is not easy to organize a force to be dispatched to the relief of Se- bastopol. The Cossack battalions which are now being mobilized in the Don province will apparently be need- ed in the home districts to preserve order. | ODESSA, Nov. CANTON BAZAAR - =izcss sent from here to quell the disorders increasing. The mutineers have sent And a superd dilplav of Oriental very SLOANFE’ 114=122Post Street priced Domestics. Rugs, reasonably, many as low as which are reported to be WAH CHONG LUNG & CO., Proprietors, the ef admiral a black coffin and have demanded that he leave the town Importers, Wholesale d Retall Dealers In imy Rgilway traffic with Se- interrupted. Uk MAY RULE FLEET. Chinese and Japanese o Fa“cy GOOdS. Dispatches Fail to Reveal Extent of faspost Ot Lise ! BDLIRAY SUGGESTIONS the Schastopol Outbreak. ST. PF RSBURG, Nov. 2%.—In view of the al of ming news received to-day a mutiny at Sebastopol, the proceedings .»r the Zem ngress at Moscow and other devel ments in the Russian situa- OUR PR'cEs ARE RIG!-“" \nnn ;m:-d into insfgnif The for- 1 midable revolt in which sailors of the leet, shore equipages and'infantry i- 616 DUPONT STREET. Sone"are paricipaiing appears. at . t to be beyond the power of Vi PHONE CHINA 24. > the . Admiral Chouknin, commander of Be Californ nd Sacramento. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. | Bleack Sea fleet, to control, as the dis- patches say nothing of counter measures 35 ANOT Being faken oror ik biftusl of (th- 'OWN ORDINANCE other regiments of the regular garrison. 134) Q The mutineers and riotous strikers are PREVENTS BAT “I\G | parading the city with red flags without wreity of Water Makes ‘ 1» co.a: Odessa, that the guns of e et ‘ e 7ip Pateleimon (formerly the Cleanliness a Punishable A niaz Potemkine) and other vessels of Offense mo FEuxine fleet dominate the situation v X and prevent active measures being taken to quell the mutiny; eyen if Vice Admiral Chouknin has sufficlent loyal troops at his disposal. The dispatches say nothing as to the reasons for the mutiny or of the demands of the mutineers and no details are ob the Admiralty, though advanced that demands for better food: e of reservists might partly be responsible for it. The ack of good officérs is frankly given by one of the highest officers of the naval staff as the princival and underlying rea- son for the alarming conditions in the uxine fleet. As at Cronstadt, practically the good officers were drafted for service with the fleets in the Far East ring war and the force of com- manding officers at Sebastopol is now only about one officer to over 400 men and many of these are utterly incapable. LONDON, Nov. %.—Through the death the aged Lord Leigh, an American woman has become a peeress and been installed as mistress of Stonel Abbey, the magnificent country seat of he Leighs. There she will share with tess of Warwick the position leading hostess of Shakespeare's Before her marriage, fifteen s ago, to the Hon. Francis Dudley who has ‘succeeded to the titie she was Miss Helene Forbes Gaughter of the late N. M. of New York. Besides being | 2 charming woman with all the wit, vi- | vacity and adaptability that are charac- | P VOCATES OF TEMPERANCE teristic of Columbla’s fair daughters, she PAY A VISIT TO MAYOR DUNNE | has two recagmized claims to social pre- uf county nce. is one of the best dressed | The revolt of the Brest reziment is one Demand That Chicago’s Chief _Execu- f women in England and she has some | of the most serious features of the situa- tive Compel the Saloons to Close | amazingly fine jewelry. It was she who | tion. It-is the first time an infantry on Sunday. t fashion of wearing an all- | regiment as a whole has mutinfed and . ewelled crown—a fashion which | the question on the lips of every orfe in he supreme merit of being | the capital is: How long will it be before ed to those who can “make | it f= followed by others, perhaps even g00d” in hard cash. the St. Petersburg garrison? Stoneleigh Abbey is situated near Ken- e = rth, which Sir Walter Scott made tal. It stands on the site of an buflt by Henry II for a congrega- “of Cisterclan monks. Henry VIII, quarreled with the Pope becau ntifical notions of matrimonial oblig: would not permit him vives as he wanted, took the pro; ¥ from the monks and bestowed it on the Duke of Suffolk. teenth century it passe of Sir Thomas Leigh, who w | Mayor of London when Lord | were really elected. The present man- | sion, which was erected in the early ,’ part of the elghteenth century, at first | consisted of a long and imposing range | of buildings in thé Corinthian style. Since | its erection it has undergone numerous alterations and is now one of the finest country seats in the kingdom. The vari- RADICAL PRESS KEEPS UP FIGHT. Now Demands the Removal of the Min- ister of the Interfor. ST. PETERSBURG, Nov. 25.—The Radi- > pursuing the same plan rase of General Tre- e former A tant Minister of the and have now opened a cam- n against Durnovo, Minister of the Intericr, accusing him of being the ene- ——————— e e e Dll.flfl{(}l‘ S REMELDIES. who P tions 66 “Shut your ayes, open your mouth and seo what luck wiil bring you.”” Many a woman is weak and sick, nervous and discouraged. She suffers from headache, backache and other ills. 8he wants to well, but all she does Dr. Humphreys’ Seventy- ous apartments contain costly pictures is to shut her and statuary, Including works by Van-{ Seven breaks up Grip and | ayke. Rembrandt, Holbein, Guido, Ten- b her mouth for fers, Lely, Gainsborough and De WWit. medicine and Among them is a flne portrait by Van- dyke of Charles I, who stayed at Stone- leigh during the last years of his reign. There are also specimens of the sculp- ture of Canova, Bartoleni and Baflly. A feature of the mansion is a beautiful private chapel which has an altar plece of Carrara marble and pictures of the trust to luck for results. She “doctors” month after month, often year after year,inthissame blind, hap-haz- ard {uhlon, and '‘COLDS The Subway Cold. (The “Subway Cold” is the new: variety. Prof. Smith says a new mi- crobe is responsible. Also steel dust.— News ftem.) Achoo! Have you the “Subway Cold?” | The latest of diseases, Passe by Subwaycillus_bold, b ere please fries or freezes? . Y. World. Cold_ was t “L" or Street posure on a country ak it up quicker and wn remedy. A book System of Cure Medicine Co., cor. Wil- New York l!r. Lyon’s PERFECT Tooth Powdler Cleanses and beautifies the teeth and purifies the breath, Used by people of refinement ¥ over a quarter of a century- Convenlent for taurlet& S H G 225 Homeo hn streets, the Subway alr | Crucifixion by Albert Durer and the Vir- ¢in and child by Perugino. In front of | the abbey i1s a superb Italian garden which was laid out by Baron Chandos | Leigh, father of the late Baron. The new Lord Leigh is 51 years old. For some years he acted as assistant sec- retary to Viscount Cross when he was in charge of the India office. a member of the London County Council where, according to Lord Rosebery, a man can do far more useful work than in Parliament. prreard I WRECKED STEAMER ARGO IS HIGH ON THE BEACH Vessel Is So Thoroughly Beached That It Will Be Difficult to Get Her Back Into Water. HOLLAND, Mich, Nov.' 25.—The steamer Argo, which was wrecked Fri- day during & terrific storm, is high on the beach. The lookout at the life- saving station reported to-day that the storm had abated and the water re- ceded so that the greater part of the stanch ship is resting high and dry on shore. The night was spent by Cap- in Stewart and the members of the crew who are on board without inci- dent. The Argo is so thoroughly beached that it will be a tremendous task to get her back Into deep water. —_————————— CHICAGO, Nov. 25.—A movement has been hcninmwmh‘-umlmu Culb to hold s comvention m Chicage soutatives of all the principal polmeu i X v(l.fllfl“ insurance companies. He is now | receives no per- manent benefit. Women take Dr. Pierce’s Fa- vorite Prescrip- tion with their oyes open to the fact that it cures womanly ills. It cures irregu- It dries debilitating drains. It larity, heals 'inflammation and ulceration and cures female weakness. There is no trusting to luck by those who uso “Favorite Prescription.” “In the year 1903 my_health was poor,” writes Mrs. J. Hack, of 242 Broadway, Buf- falo, N. Y. “I suffered from falling of womb, a disagreeable discha: painful monthly Danods. headache, backache and pains in the limbs. Every month was confined to bed for two or three days. Was weak, nervous and hysterical; 1ife was a burden to myself and I made every one in the hmny \xnhlppy because I was so irritable. My husband got B e D Perpaiaene By scription, an ore. en_the firs bottle I was feeling some rellet. Thc medl cine made me well and strong, i o mnm a nw ousness, pnc.l‘a and glan '8 mi e T nelr l'” certainly !.hn hut tn world.' or womsan who nlcho- g?mn?luuntm: mf“"-u.mn e, and Yo sk ".‘bfynul)rkv!l-u 5:&3 - z | iey—one | Ever since he camz ROOT INTENDS VISITING BRAZIL Hopes to Develop Our Com- mercial Relations With South. American Republics WORKING OUT A POLICY Administration Is Preparing to Better Safeguard In- dustrial Rights of Nation . Special Dispatch to The Call. CALL BUREAU, POST BUILDING, WASHINGTON, Nov. 2.—Secretary Root is going to Brazil, something which no Amerigan Secretary of State, while in office, has ever done. The ostensible pur- pose of his trip is to attend the congress of American republics when it meets there. But his object, as events will show, is not to be a spectator at the con- gres: He has a definite, comprehensive policy. to work out toward which the re- cent secret mission to Brazil of Solicitor Penfleld has been part. Penfield went there to make an investigation prelimi- nary to the development of Secrétary Root’s policy of better commercial rela- tions under a more clearly defined money doctrine. The Roosevelt administration is at work upon two great lines of pol- domestic, the other foreign. great national need as President The Roosevelt and his advisers view the ex- | isting situation is a better safeguarding of industrial rights against the great cor- porations which are filling so large a place in the industrial life of to-day. Events are moving toward national con- trol of corporations, somewhat along the line of Commissioner Garfield’s resolu- tion, after his study of corporation ques- tions. No sweeping change will be accom- plished at once, or even made by the Pre ent, but the first step and one which conditions make immediately avail- able relates to railroads. That will, ac- cordingly, be the chief resolution in the President’s forthcoming message. — e AUTO CHANGES ENGLISH PEER LONDON ov. Never, probably, the possession of a motor car wrought a more striking change in its owner than that which has lately been apparent in the Earl of Portsmouth. out of Oxford his known as that rare thing, a peer with evangelical tenden- c Imbued also with certain soclalis- tic leanings, sport of any kind seemed cempletely out of his line, and if there was one law-abiding citizen in the land it certainly was he. Just how the Earl came to acquire a motor car has not developed, but it seems to have turned Jekyll into Hyde, so far as he is concerned. The Earl has suddenly becomie no end of g “'scorch- er, and to talk to him about the police is like waving a red flag at a bull. He got himself into the papers recently by 2. lerdship has been | posting up a warning to other motorists near a well-known ‘*‘police trap” on the borders of his Hurstbourne Park estate, and he is one of the leading spirits of the newly formed Automoblle Assocla- tion, whose avowed mission it is to fight the rural authorities who persecute car owners. Other distinguished members of | the assoclation are Sir Doyle, who has twice been mulcted in beavy fines, and the Hon. Stephen Cole- | ridge, who recently wrote that while mo- toring in the Andover road he ‘“fell among magistrates,” thus paraphrasing the Bible anecdote. The Earl of Portsmouth, who is also Viscount Lymington_and Baron Wollop, | is 49,’and one of the richest men in his section of the country—Hampshire. His estate there comprises 47,000 acres, and besides Hurstbourne Park house, he has a big town mansion in Westminster, and another country residence in North Dev- | onshire. One of his ancestors was Vice | Treasurer of Ireland under Elizabeth, and | another sat to try Charles I, but de- cllmed to sign the monarch’s death war- rant. Now that the Earl has caught the mo- toring craze he reminds one more of his father, the late Earl, who was famous as a dare-devil huntsman and oWwned the finest pack of hounds in Hampshire. Even in his carriage he always drove at break- neck speed. In London he was the ter- | ror of the eabbles, who could never go | fast enough to suit him. One day, how- ever, the Earl met a jehu who was | rather more than his match. He was | driving down Piccadilly in a hansom when the street became badly blocked. The cab stopped, whereupon the noble- man became wrathy and demanded to be hurried forward at once. The driver | pointed out that the street was impass: ble. “Rubbish, man, clear the road, cried his lordship. “I'm the Earl of Portsmouth!” “It's no good, sir,” turned the cabble, “you may b -}.ord Portsmouth in the country, but you“ain't Lord Almighty up here.” —_— my of the constitution and the supporter of reaction. They also join in a general demand for the immediate trial of the Governors and other officlals thus far removed, making a special point against Niedhart, the former Prefect of Odessa, who {s called the “Russian Nero,” and who,. although removed from the pre- fecture, remains in the Ministry of the Interior. “All the military satraps must be brought to justice,” Is the cry of the Radical papers. The new appointment of Baron von Nol- ken and M. Reinbot, to be acting Gover- nors - respectively of Tomsk and Kazan, are likely to draw their broadsides, Nol- ken being the deposed Chief of Police of ‘Warsaw, still limping from the effects of the explosion of a bomb thrown at him, and Rheinbot being the former Governor of the province of Nyland, Finland, who ttrew the capital into a fever of excite- ment some time ago by sending a dis- patch announcing that a St. Bartholo- mew’s night was to e place at Hel- singfors, the chief town of Nyland, for which he was removed from Finland. The approval of these appointments is charged to Durnovo, Minister of the In- terior, and not to Premier de Witte. The fact is that under the present conditions the Government is embarrassed by the paucity of material to flll responsible po- sitions, and it is largely a choice be- twéen men practically all of whom have done something to’ arouse popular re- sentment. A popular address is being Dl‘cplred tendering the.thanks of the country to Count d@e Witte for his services at Ports- mouth and for his present endeavors to pacify and regenerate Russia. PRCE TS TR Pritish Embassador to Russia. - LONDON, Nov. 25.—Sir Arthur Nich- olson, the British Embassador at Ma- arid, -nocudl Sir Charles Hardinge as Embassador of Great Britain to h-l-. Arthur Conan | | ADVERTISEMENTS, In Thousands of Homes e-fu-na Is the Family Doctor. A Happy Family, Kept Well and Hearty By Taking Pe-m-ua. of Peruna and bae of Manalin. An Enemy to the Home. ATARRH is the natural enemy of every home. Over every home hangs the in- evitable certainty of catarrhal invasion. No home is entirely free from it. Every person is subject to it. It would be no exaggeration to say that two-thirds of the homes of Amer- | ica have suffered more or less from this | invisible, almost omnipresent, enemy,! climatic catarrh. Peruna is_the natural protection of | the household. | It is intended to relieve catarrh and | catarrhal a ses in any and all of their phases. i A saf guad Agalzs: Colds -Woud | Not Bz Mrs. Anns treet, Karn: y'1 would not for a bottle of your he house. “Your medicine is a against colds, for I have given it to my v ithout Pe-ru-m:, ing do w una and Marn safeguard | children and they arc in the best of health. H “My little daughter, Catherine, the | one you have been treating, has such | un appetite that I enjoy watching her eat. “Before taking your treatment, she would cat scarcely anything. I can never be grateful enough for what you ave done for our darling, Catherine. “My husband and eh’ldeen are also in good health. thank you a thousand times for your advice.” ! monials from heads of fam Mrs. Alvina Plamann, 1719 Walnut street, Milwaukee, Wis., writes: «] am now able to do my housework again, apd have a good appstite. “I think your medicine and treatment will do just what you say they will, It your excellent advice is carefully fol- lowed. May you prosper in your good work.” The Many Phases of Catarrh. Catarrh may appear in the household in the form of a slight cold or cough, an attack of la grippe, or even hay fever. Peruna meets these invasions square- 1y and repulses the enemy before it gains a foothold, Therefore, Peruna is a household remedy. Used at the correct time it often obviutes the necessity of contin- ued doctoring. Perhaps in no other way can the wis- dom of economy and foresight be so forcibly expressed 2s in keeping on hand a bottle of Peruna to protect the various members of the family against the encroachments of catarrh. We have on file thousands of testi- s, located north and south, east and west. These letters praise Peruna for its | efficient protection of the against catarrh. Young and Old/Take Pe-ru-na. Mrs. Lotty Carr, 1194 6th avenue, Des es, Ja., writes: “It gives me great pleasure to write you a few words of the great good Pe- runa has done in our family, both for ung and old. family We always keep Peruna in the house. I 1 havo'nud' thirteen bottles “We gave it to our three-months-old babe. He was In such misery that he was having convulsions every few hours. “We commenced giving him Peruna in ten-drop doses and he is now a strong, healthy boy. “We never fail to speak a word of praise for Peruna when the opportunity affords.’ Uses Pe-ru-na In His Family. Mr. Frank W. Harris, box 23, Basie City, Va.,, member A. F. & A. M., writes: “l have used Peruna in my family with very satisfactory results for the last two years. “Besides, I have recommended it to all whom I think are in need of it “1 urge all who are afflicted to buy a bottle and begin its use at once. “I have never heard of any who have used it to be dissatisfled with the re- sults.” The Family Endorses Pe-ru-na. Mrs. Theodosia Cox, 225 Nebraska Ave., St. Joseph, Mo., writes: “I can highly recommend your medi- cine, Peruna, as I believe it has done more for me than all other medicines I have ever taken. “You will always find me praisi your medicine and usiag it In my f {iy. We all endorse it.” SARAH BERNHARDT TO BUILD THEATER IN NEW YORK CITY New Playhouse Is to Be Named After the Noted French Tragedienne, Says Her Manager. CHICAGO, Nov. .—Sarah Bern- hardt, the ‘French tragedienne, Is to build and maintain a theater in New York, according to her manager, W. F. Connor. The new playhouse, which is {to be named the Bernhardt Theater, will be locatd opposite the Metropoli- tan Opera-house at Thirty-ninth street and Broadway. ———— Alleged Murderer Traced to Tuecson. ALBANY, N. Y./ Nov. 25.—Evidence has developed through an intercepted message indicating that John Ham- mond Is in Tueson, Ariz. Hammond is the 24-year-old carpenter wanted in connection with the murder of his 57- year-old wife, whose body was found tied up with clothes line and covered with chloride of lime in an old trunk in their flat here on Thursday. De- tectives have been ordered to Arizona. _———————— WASHINGTON, Nov. 25.—The ComptroMer of the Currency was advised to-day that *he First Natfonal Bank of Lineville, Ala., bad been closed by order of the board of directos. National BankeExaminer S. H. L. Cooper »as been appointed receiver. pecial Prices on Girls’ Coats Pretty Three-Quarter Lengths at $6.45 and $8.50 (@, Our object in this special sale is to get every mother ments. cheviots, cheviots. pretty patch chevron on the left sleeve, and most of them have a stripe of honor .on the right. coats are man-tailored an with materials consistent with the quality of the cloths used. The styles are for girls from 4 to 13 years blue serges Each garment in San Francisco acquainted with our Girls’ Coat Depart- The mather who once sees the excellent variety to select from and Icarns the low price on every gar- ment will always rem>mber these stores whenever she is to purchase a gu'l s coat. . We make these coats in our own workshops and sell them to you at but little above their actual cost. next week we have lowered the prices still more and will sell two very pretty styles at $6.43 and $8.59 respectively. @ The garments are the stylish three-quarter length in blue worsted and fancy has a But The trimmed and for young ladies from 14 to 16. Th $6.45 and 38 50. cial prices next week will be These coats are on display in our show windows, S but you can look at them inside the @ Our exhibit of novelty suits and overcoats for little boys from 2% to 6 is meeting with great favor, as the mothers ad- _mire our fetching styles and appreciate our surprisingly low prices. We would be pleased to show you garments from $3.50 up Mail Orders Filled— Write Us store with equal freedom.

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