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HE CALL“PRINYS MORE NEWS THAN ANY THE WEATHER. ! Forecast' for November 28: | ; n Franciseo and vicinity Sh(‘v\rni . T ¥: fresh morthwest winds | 2 e A. G. McADIE, | \ District Forecast A ] ALCAZAR—"My Friend From India™ ALHAMBRA—"“The Millionairs De- tective."” CALIFORNTA—‘The Paristan Belles.” CHUTES—Vaudeville. COLUMBIA—"The Sko Gun." FISCHER'S—Vaudeville. GRAND—“King Richara 1L LYRIC HALL—Outcault Lecture. MAJESTIC—"The Light Eternal.” ORPHEUM—Vaudeville. TIVOLI—Comic Opéra. e ST Vit N2 ! S S VOLUME XCVIII—NO. 181 SAN FRANCISCO, TUESDA¥, NOVEMBER 28 1905. PRICE FIVE CENTS. ADMIRAL CHOUKNIN EXPECTS HIS GUNNERS TO MUTINY WHEN HE ORDERS THEM TOATTACK ODESSA, Nov. 27.—Governor General Kaulbars has received the following dispatch from Vice Admiral Chouknin, commandirg the Black Sea fleet: “The mutineers left the Kniaz Potemkine to- day and the vessel is now in my hands. The sailors, together with the soldiers of the Brest Regiment (who mutinied), have shut themselves in the Lazareff Barracks, with some guns. When fresh troops arrive I shall attack, though I fear the artillerymen may join the mutineers. A very serious state of affairs prevails to-day. Several officers have been killed.” "WARDEN J. W. TOMPKINS SAID/\fK [RIFTS [AMOE BUCKSEA TO BE SLATED TO GO. | yiriwoMh | HELPLESS |- FLEET NOW D, WHO SLEFS N STORN POVERLES —ar— { It 15 rumored that Warden Tomphins 1s slated for removal | as head of San Quen- tin prison and either | Clerk J. M. O/ or Ornrerijf Veale of Conira Costa County cucceed him. In measure, the re- port says, friction be- rween Governor Par- 4 dee a Secretar Mercaif resporn- ble for Tomphkins probable removal. | | i | ' Lillie W'Ryan Appea_rso_.fi‘_]i!ureka Gunlocks Broken . Is Rescued by | Flying Distress | to Foil Plot of | Fisherman. .| Signals. Mutineers. |Craft Is"Torn From Its| Tug Ranger Is Sent to|Admiral Frustrates At- i Moorings By the Assistance of the tempt to Seize the Storm. Big Vessel. Warships. Occupant Launches Cockle and | Gets Hawser Aboard and At-|Loyalty of Treops Semt to Rows in Darkness tempts to Full Ship Quell Sebastopol Rising Until Saved. Out of Danger. Is Doubted. Adrift in the bay on Sunday m;i)l,{ Epecial Dis to The Call ODESSA. Neov. 27.—According to pri- { g i | vate dispatches from Sebastopel, Vice | with the waves ldshed to . white fury | BURE Shortly after 4! sguupral Chouknim has frus i by a gale blowisg fifty miles an hour, ! o'clock ! - s . S Result of Friction Between Metcalt ihis oon the news that gesigm of the mutineers to selze the I the rain tumbling trom an iRk sky i | the steamship: Roanoke was AYing 3is- | Blace Sen flect uad sath for Otenes Be | blinding sheets:and the sait spray dit- | nals of distr and apparently at che ordering all the gunlecss to be brokem. ing and stinging the flesh, Lilii V. mercy of the hig wates that dashed s < over: the bar at iheé entrance to this| TASHKEND, Kussian Turkestas, | O'Ryan, the well-known portraft paint- hiin, ugolie? Teeling of copsternss | 3 B Digmders Aate Mrolen out he nariners-af m}m x Mattalions of riffiemen and e a ST. and Pardee. jer and miniaturist, g;.ad an_experi- | o wast excitemlient 3 dn this distriet. rm:e that falls to: 91 women | jimediately all —exeipt,in Suuday Supplement Stories. ' rapidly as possible aid was sent to the —— T And it happened thusly: _»° | big wessel: Despite the high wind that PETERSBURG, Nov. 2%, 3:10a. m.— Miss O'Ryan, who. in private life is| Wgs adding to the fury = of white- r?na-dlmwhe-(mm Sebastopo! say that Mrs. Cline, had spent the suminer with | €bped, mountainoss waves that swept | revolutionary orators succeeded yester- Yot DS 5 in s -coky’ ba mohored | Shoreward and broke upon tie bar, ¢he | day in winning over'a battalion of resery- e 3 aginddos {little tug Ranger put out to Sea, dart- |ists and that, In spite of the arrival of at Greenbrae. FHere, with their " four [4g with all the'speed her engines were | reinforcements to the number of several dachshunds, they 'had passed an ideal | capable of toward the big ship. ~The | thousand, the authorities did net dare to summer, but' the approach of winter | tug on her way out picked up the life- | interfere with a review held by the necessitated a change of abode. |'saving crews just inside the harbor ‘{nlmd‘:w;l! b‘:lrol;e the €athedral of St. caEIbal > thoR: chuse ark to | for, while the Roanoke did not appea- | Viadimir, which is in the heart of the APCEEEDEIY. thoyycauned, the Srk ita | L o i any. Imnikilate JARKer, *here | town. Latter Duspleased Over the Berkeley X - _ s =\ R R Appointment. e mpkins of 8an Que P fel el FhE e on Peiirdas, and | was every. lkelihood that in her ap- | So far as known, most of the demands o poilft up. tempdrarily a e Pucific ! parently helpless condition the big - | of the mutineers have to do with service % ; { ] street "f"“‘-M_ £ RS sel would before long be at the mercy | conditions, including the release of reserv = i i a:mm“fl:;-" Reg ORISR hfldl,\nfih kl‘:fle_({ | of wind and tide. | ists who have served their time, increase . Governo i N o-rediviant fo feaVs - tug managed to reach the vesscl | of pay, increase in the allowance of food e - . e | | the d°‘8m1°_§g=!hu iyah delermined pefcre dark and get a line aboard. jand the removal of alleged incompetent t f. Warde was =20 X L e et ey ine MEBL | Hardly had the big hawser been made |and bruta! officers. ; ¥ d by th rence r. )< SSS—— - =z (_;rm“ t""‘h_‘_‘ i stk t-zmeu ”:“d "l;“‘f!r;\q‘ when darkness and a heavy Beyopd a determination to proclaim tween Pardce and Met 3 i o ,Lfil’ . i and thed inickened by a driving mist, martial law, nothing of a definite nature —— % :::nollu:l}:i ";‘" ;s‘lfixu:.fefw sh of the 8€a | ;g the vessels from view. Before they | has transpired regarding the decisions ar- P> { entirely disappeared it was seen that |rived 2t by the Admiralty Counecil, but ANXIOUS FOR NEW HEAD. How, lofig she lay asleep she docs not|p, tyg was bending every effort to get | it is reported that the council agreed as know,” biit; she Was' suddenly awakened | ¢ ‘B WES PERIINE SETEY CUOTE T 8 |0 the justice of many of the qemands by the barking of the dachschunds “““[me breakers and the treacherous cur- | made by the mutineers and would reeom- the comsciousness of motion. Hastlly | [ o that have been the bame of the | mend to the Emperor that immediate donning @ wrapper, she hurried to the |, viners of the coast steps be taken to ameliorate the condition door and discovered herseif adritt on the Mariners who saw the condition of | of the sailors. | | i 1 | waters, the waves Awoeping the decks of | 1o Roanoke when she first appeared | The latest dispatches from Sebastopol | her littie home, the rain 1aling in tor-| oy the harbor say that to thelr prac- | Say that the mutineers forced the officers -3 ! T rents, the mgnt ‘mlfel“cérfl?'y q 40dlticed eyes it appeared that something |and crew of the cruiser Otchakoff to with no possibie method of locaung her | was wrong with. the steering gear of |leave the ship. The crews of the bat T FOR WARDEN TOMP- % PLACE AND OFFICIALS ASPIRAN KINS TRESTED IN CONTEST. One shipping man to-night | tleships Rostislav and Tria Sviatalia, s § position. 3 [ thie vessel. < Scream or nlyt. ok | saia: far as at present known, have not ] 8 R ok the way ot ithis hen I first saw the Roanoke she | mutinied. One reserve battalion, however, plucky young-artist, who has adl her life| i making an effort to get into the | has joined the mutineers. A Ao oAt B tived in the open and knows how . 10|paipor. - She was making quite a| HURRYING IN LOYAL TROOPS. rough it. | st 1 t 2 cizg % W f MAKINE H[AUY &4 Consclous *that the ark could not| yn rchire k:{n-?—p\‘:f‘d‘ft:u::zrblfa\a'sl-lqltirfizi, Several companies of the Vilma Re | - long withstafid ~the smashing of the |} ol = > : ! ment bhave arrived at Sebastopol oman ASSflmeS or EmbGZZler Adamme- waves, she launched a little aory that | . b3t oy vt £ g Theodosia. Martial law has been decla: | ! « iielpless, acting as if her st % - | stood by ‘the Kkitchen door, with the|jng gear had gone wrong. Then the | t1¢ fortress. Reinforcements also have . ¥ g forw = of hards the mea S:\ T' N . coolness and dexterity of an able Sea- | simnale of distress wers holsted.: | arrived at Sebastopol from Stmpheropol, ot the R R oL been, reapppint scond ime IName pOSlts La.rge Amdunt man, piled in her four dachshunds, fol- |~ = (e . { marching trom Inkerman, between whici <ty lowed them into 1., slipped the -ars The steamship Roanoke belongs to D'aft.amj Sebastopol the railroad has C. P. Doe & Co. and was in-command | been forn up. ety of McChesney. - T 0 Y A into the oarlocks, and pulled aw. | I 1w ears. Just where she did not know, but some- | of Captain Dunham. She left here on | GUNS command all the entrances to the - ap - ricley any more JSadz where, jthe 18th inst. with passengers aad a | CIt¥ from Admiralty Point, where the o Tompkins made o - 57 : ‘Then she began to call—to call loud- | cargo of general merchandise. The | Jutineers are quartered. The battleship . he consente Special Dispateh towThe Cail. Speclal Dispatch to The Call. 1y in the-dark silence; and loudly the | Roanoke has been running in opposi- | Fanteleimon (formerly the Kniaz Potem- S When the| REDDING, Nov. 27.—H: N. McChes- = dachshunds barked, while their mis- | tion to the Pacific Coast Steamship ! Xin®) and the cruiser utchakoff are in the - on of & mew postmaster at Berke- | ney, a well-known resident and prop- SEATTLE, Nof. 27.—Superintendent | tress pulled hard against the tlde, that | Company's vessels and stops at Eureka, ; bay and in control of the mutinesrs, who 1 end he was again disappointed, | erty owner Ot thls ‘CIty and & former . Leach of the Francisco- Mint, after | would bear her out through the Gate.| Coos Bay, Portland and Astoria. - She | DPlaced their officers under arrest. The o ranguus (\aldJ:‘;"a";“.‘h»ga.:i resident of San Franoisco, has just re- F h S d Pr two days' w ong . George Adams | For hours, it seemed, no answering | left the last named port on November | :;m:;’;“’:“':::’:n"i;:; :’”' ‘T‘;‘g"‘ are Sooking feriee opp&rn}ru‘- ~olfba e Mcln turned from that city, where he has I‘ellC qfla I‘Oll e° private , has discovered that|call came from out of the darkness. |26 on her return trip. !h“ s - tth-mm m“:"; q <nr i wina. o A pay Met- betnbon business, The most import- 7S since October 1, 1903, the embezazling | The wind blew cold:r. thle“rntlln came| & | nardly ,,,",mm"’,h,, csuld be Thdaced the present Board of Prison Direc- | was of & mathoit) nearsacted pares to Sail for cashier of the assay ofice'hds depositea | 407D heayler, and {he cockleshel was| CREW OF.A BRITISH | fire on their comrades ashore. tors Tompkins had several stanch friends, | brought home with him a wife. ' A. par- In Seattle banks $163,000 mor® than his the oars, when suddenly a voice cried SHIP IS ML'TI\'OUS Refnforcements are on their way to Se- : in response to hers. It was the voiceof | > 1 "‘l:"’h'"‘m';";‘d""m R = ian fisherman who had heard the | an < - ery and the bark of the dogs, ana it| Captain = of Haddon Hall 3:,‘:"’;;,:“":;':’:&:, i B B ney’s matrimonial venture is the fact P ead of the prison. nanee of his elegant home and hi: - that ‘he married his son's divorced will not, it is said, stop them 4 ] splary amounted to. does ' not in- RS w5 Bl ticularly strange feature of McChes- enezue a" A480 dny MOV ke bl OLIVER FRIEND OF PARDEE. wife. pensive habits. 1t is also lished | was not long before he had gathered B 3 . | of 8 On the other hand, Governor Pardee is| A little over & yeéar ago Mrs. H. N. Special Dispatéh to The Call. m:t':teh:u beep.mh‘ lngt:‘o,- SHE aeiw | thats tolll his own strong boat and they | Seeks Aid of Los: An- :rehr:x;ic-e ;l,:ml.iuznzzne imm;:v;zx:y;cmc;r‘:‘rlx; l; eat friend " ¥ ol e T certain. P — 3 A it | = poinied from Berkeley by the Governor | along smoothly on their matrimonial jta mansuvers hasine Detn ooimng 5 | dayy would, have been a fugit % | Reaching shore, Mise O'Ryan and LOS ANGELES, Nov e atieaie’ ek Seae oot amvp and is & member of the Spear camp. 1t | sea and the wife procured & diverce, | L% Mmansuvers, having beén ordered to (few nights before; in'a conversation | fiér pets hastened off to the home of | '1-OS ANGELES, Nov. 28.—The Times | the outlock much less thfea , says ; | the esland. of Guadaloupe for t | at the home of a man interested’in un- | friends, thawed out, got into dry|(Dis morning prints the following | it hlre:m:: et Admg:l gh:“i:ln hr:: = + received orders from etershurg been rumored for some time that fie | The fathet tiring of living alone and K afier the place now occupied by | having formed an attachment for his | Byee cp Tlt:ul:‘;&lly'"’:l‘:;lr‘;: - e . SRR Bl T the accusations of Tomp- | son's divorced wife, led her to the altar i : & arodind the, assay olice, ; 1t \ - men- kine that Oliver and Captafn Russell | himself and for the second time she| > pubiy v imiiation of actual war. g toned that s ‘Drobably s e el - i 2 el wo thousand soldiers are assembled | arrested. The remark was have oon°pired against him may be true | married Into tiie MoChesney household. |y he "forts” with “Tull equipment, | by servant. whe carrien it overheara ot Berids to Lant A0 =g | = awalting orders. They are ready for |home, where Adams,had a frien et v "”: ITI::(I?“(::;(&:Z SCHOOLBOY TIED deplarture with the squadron for Vene- | it reached the cashier's ears, I‘tL :: fo ” m AN M o | Zuela. only on the morning of his arrest that I'0 RATLWAY TRACKS | “Gvery preparation is being made for | e provided himself. with the: 812008 a conflict. The city resembles an ar-|found on his person when he was taken cued From His Perilons |senal and war is in the air. The re: finto custody. . - : = hilling adyenture, and g o e has apont | their quarters in the forecastle, ama| The British Consul is chirtering a ves- warm bed, | armed officers standing guard, the bark ssel to take off the subjécts of Great even as you and L Haddon Hall lies in the.harbor of San | Britain. When daylight dawned Mr. Cline | Pedro, a state of mutiny on board. And | On account of the critical nature of the | B i- | while the ship lies to, Helpl | situation all of the-forelgn Embassadors went in search of his floating domi D A g g Baal ey o i ~ cile. It was found drifting toward ; the sullen inactivity of its crew, its the channel.. Canturing ft. it has been | commander, Captain Dakin, is in the returning to St P":”h‘n‘l’-. It is under- securely chained to a whart at North | city to inveke the aid of the authori- ::f“f, ‘.*;.‘fi..‘é’;.fi‘o‘f - [fig‘;;’:;"p::' A v Vel - Beach, where it may ride the waves |ties to assist him In getting to sea s ot the GRvisiiilly of the: presuce of ompkir 2 story: v%fig" R0 Bicais today ole ""; “With _a_rebellious. crew -huddled in | yield everything. is Sunday night In a snug, Yet tk are close to the adminis- | t Sheriff Veale of Contra tration Costa Cou e man slated for the | . h of the It i wbs Sawen tarlio | it sponse of President Castro is awaited T until the swallows fly again. again. The captain, under instructions » 3s pushing 7 ARt < <. hignd Position Just Before here with extraordinary intorest. WOMAN OF THIRTY-ONE ¢ ————— from the owners in London, I for tak. | thelr Embassadors during the present known to - YEARS A GRANDMOTHER | INDIANAPOLIS WOMEN { ing s ship to Vancouver for another | 'Ll 5. 1se Gazette published a dispatch: a friend o { i ive B e | Train Arrives. BLIZZARD RAGES = 2 & load of lumber. The crew Is for stay- ! JAID TO KEBF “LID™ ON | oo os Angeless " 2% | srom Sebastopol saying that discord had making any change is the fact that he| INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., No: A 8 ‘Weds at the Age of Fourteen and Her s s s @ political fi > 1 3 e o e G it A = el o ST { already broken out among the mutineers has @ political fight in Alameda County | cfal to the Star from Logansport, Ind, | OVER NORTHWEST Daughter Becomes a Bride at Inform the Police of Violations of URA NAY BECONE |and confirming the repart that the Brest next fall and he may want to retain Con- | gays: When six pupils of the Washing. | pririshac S Thirteen., Law Which Provides for Sunday | KATS ke !:cxo. §5 dtuin | ongrming e - . — " | had returned to duty, theugh a company Closing. INDIANAPOLIS, Nov. 27.—Every | Marquis ito Mentiomed as His Sueces- | of sappers remained with the mutineers. gressman Joseph Knowland and Secre- | ton School appeared in Police Court to- | Q 7 i COLUMBUS, :Ohio, Nov. 27.—In tary Metcalf on his side. 1t s said that | day 1t was learned that they w‘;rre tbo thl‘fll “eeps Mlnnesota a’nd to Columbus newspapers,- i‘n whi‘cx:e!:;: the Governor has a hard fight before him | answer for ‘a “joke” perpetrated . u N and ;| - - L pon North South takes exception. to the claim of Mrs. n who lives near a saloon in this sor in the Premiership of { The artillerymen in the forts are neutral. and that ::;:r‘“l “:‘d :"';he‘ friends that | Carl Hilton, a fellow student of about the - Mary Scott of Mount Vernon, Ohfo, to xzo;’:mae it her business vesterday to ‘Japan. | This dispesition, however, Is causing he car, mus 0 do battle for him. same age, who, it is alleged, was bound le0ta. be called the youngest grandmother in | assist the police in keeping the “1id” on. TOKIO. Nov. 27.—Several names are | alarm among the officers. = S with a wire to the Wabash Rallroad the United States, Mrs. Kathrine Hair-| As a result seven arrests were made [ mentioned for the Resident Generalship, The Bourse Gazette dispatch also re- for illegal sales of liquor. Before |at Seoul, but nothing definite will be ports that the Black Sea fleet, with the noon women had telephoned the police | known regarding the appointment un- ! exception of the Panteleimon and the Admits He Gave Bribe. | tracks on Saturday night and who was | ST. PAUL, Nov. 27.—The first blizzard | ston of Bassetts, Henry County, Va., MILWAUKEE, Wis., Nov. 27.«' rescued from his perilous position by |of the-season strack St. Paul late this | sa; Charles Madder of Chicago to-day ! Enid Alexander and four other girls just | afternoon and to-night Is raging with [ I was a grandmother at the age of 31 of five violations of the law, and in[til after the return of Marquis Ito.!cflgm Otchakoff. remained loyal, and ’ pleaded gullty in the Municipal Court | before the Toledo and St. Louls express | unabated fury. High northwest s | vears. I was married at tas age of 14 and | every case the saloon was found doing ! It would not be a surprise should Kat- | that the mutiny on board the latter ves- to having giving & bribe of $1200 for a | passed. sent the snow in such terrific gusts that | my daughter at the age of 13, and I am | business on the sly.- sura, ‘the present Premier of Japan, | sel is practically suppressed. Throughout the State there seems to | be appointed to the position. The Pre- | o0 uwns coNGRATULA’ contract for roofing an addition to the | The boys, Who gave. their names as Ar- | pedestrians were all but blinded. From |entitled to take precedence. 'L am now en either to 1 the same vigilance as is ex- [ miership would then go ei! Mar be sbous . F The Workmen's Council has telegraphed County Hospital in 1961, He was fined | thur Hewltt, Fred Gebhardt, George Pal- | all parts of Minfiesota, North and South | grandmother of . two children and I am §1000. Madder at the time was agent | mer, Arthur Montgomery, Henry Burgess | Dakota come reports of heavy snow and ) still under 33. If any other woman can il ercised here, and all ‘cities ‘and towns | quis Ito, now president of the Privy for & Chicago roofing firm. He was in- | and Waliter Burgess, were released with | wind, and with & 1 mfil de- | beat this I would be pleased to hear from | report that the “ld” is on to a de- | Council, or to Marquis Salenji, the dicted by & Grand Jury two years ego. | a reprimand. moralization of rallroad 2 E “ler her” s " -] gree that has never before been known. ' president-of the Constltutional party. Continued on Page 3, Columa &