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THE SAN FRANCISCO:- CALL, FRIDAY. » NEW CLEW IS FOUND IN THE TODD CASE Attorneys Hope 10 Surrounding the Soon Unravel. Mystery Woman’s Death. IW YORK, Nov ester Todd 4 mangled >_the persons odd on a man 3 who ladelphia last et inti- d be ied as ng jus Lockwood, and legal produced g to convey 'wo of these tgages, the ex- - Mrs were tgage Mrs a cou nds of ferred $40.000 ¢ t was served Tru: Mrs e time DRAGOONS FIG COSSACKS. Many Killed in an Engagement Fought at Chenstopovo. The ntends » asture the f the rymen usal to ns. At mutinied goons 18 8 modern ides—the shirt goes “0n and Cff like a Coat” oruing, afternoon of evening, cor- vies for every occasion—exclusive ‘ast fabries or in white. ¥For B WASHING WITHOUT WATER Is Like Trying to Get Rid of Dandruft Without Herpicide. e any one trying to without soap or wa- Did you wash themsely ter” If you did what would you say of him? 1t is every bit as foolish to try to get rid of Dandruff and to prevent Baldness by feeding the germs which cause it with Cantharides, Vaseline, Glycerine and similar substances which form the principal ingredients of most so-called Hair Growers. 's Herpicide is successful be- e it attacks and kills the parasitic which feeds on the hair roots. It is the original and only genulne scalp germicide manufactured. Sold by leading druggists. Send 10c in stamps for sample to The Herpicide Co., Detroit, Mich. At leading drug stores, or sent pre- x‘;!:l !oroom Detroit, Mich., vpon receipt of §1.00. eve the | the | tation in that | resulting in | R |+ WEALTHY NEW YORK WOMAN, | WHOSE DEATH IS BE! IN: | VBSTIGATED BY POLIC! ! | {DECLARE CHINESE BOYCOTT IS GROWING {Pacific Coast Merchants Mourn Falling Off of Celestial Trade. _The wholesale shippers of the Pacific Coast are complaining everywhere that the boyeott on American goods in China has not been abandoned by the Chinese, ha has as been reported, but is growing ger as the months advance. They > that the fault does not lle with ts of the Orlent, who are to sell American goods, e people of China themselves. say that their representat{ves in ports write that the determined spirit to boycott American goods has be- come 80 prevalent in China that it has| spread to every class, even the lowest M. Thomson, a prominent flour whole- saler and exporter of Seattle, who fs at the Palace on a business trip, said ves- terday that the exportation of flour from Ame to China had decreased 60 per cent since the boycott began. Instead of dying out, he says. the antagonism to n goods is increasing. ific Coast merchants have, how- ever, prospered tremendously since the | peace agreement betwen Russia and Ja- pan was signed. One Northern firm has sent ¥ barrels of flour into Vladi- vostok since peace was declared. Other lines of goods have fared equally as well. According to the reports of the exporters an unprecedented shipment of goods has | been made from San Francisco to Russia and Japan during the last two months. | Merchants say Russia Is looking more and | more to the United States for her sup- plies. |RAIL ROAD CONTRACTOR IS NOT A MURDERER ’Heart Disease, Instead of | Blow, Cause of Laborer’s } Death. | Special Dispatch to The Call. | TACOMA., Nov. 80.—Martin Welch, a railroad contractor on Turn Again Arm. was discharged by Commissioner Goodall to-day at the close of a pre- liminary hearing at Seward, Alaska, to determine the measure of his re- sponsibility for the death of August | Nilson, a laborer, in his camp in an altercation on October 19. The Com- missioner found, as did the Coroner's jury he impaneled the day after ,the tragedy, that Nilson died of heart dis- jease. All the doctors testified that Nilson's heart was n such a state that | he was liable to drop dead at any | moment. This entirely ‘clears, Welch, who had slapped Nilson just before he dropped dead. | HORSEWHIPS MAN | WHO BROKE UP HOME 'Washingumian Gives the Lover of His Wife Sound Thrashing. TACOMA, Nov. 30.—William Wilson better known as “Cayuse” Wilson, & young man of 22, residing six miles | southwest of Walla Walla, to-day | swore out a warrant for the arrest of | W. G. George, a neighbor, aged 45, | whom he accuses of having assaulted | ntm with the 'butt of a buggy whip Tuesday afternoon, after forcing him to throw off his overcoat and hold up his hands at the point of a revolver. George admits he assaulted Wilson, but in justification asserts that Wilson had destroyed his home because of as- soclation with Mrs. George, who is 40 years of age and the mother of four children, two of them grown. —————— The famous salt deposits of Petite Anse, La., are known to have been mined by the aboriginal Americans, as is testified by the stone hammers and other tools found when the deposits were rediscovered in 1814 by John Marsh. MUTINEERS PROVE. POOR Hal{-Hearted Re- sistance at Se- | bastopol. Continued From Page 1, Column 4. reply to the demands of the mutineers, which included the convocation of a con- stitutlonal assembly and the immediate realization of the reforms promised in the fmperial manifesto, Lieutenant Schmidt opened fire on the city from ten vesseis. Vice Admiral Chouknin replied from the | loyal warships and General Baron Meller Gakomeisxie from the southern forts and | Tne mutinous | | with the coast artillery. sallors usea rifles and machine guns upon tne intrenched nfantry. The fight, the Slovo says, lasted two and a auarter hours. ‘rhe mutineers made a herolc struggle, but the odds were too heavy and when the Otchakoff, bat- tered to piecer and on fire, sank with the cruiser baieper and a transport, Lieuten- ant Schnudt, who was mortally wounded, surrendered the mutinous squadron and the mutinous regiments. According to the Russ, Ad- however, miral Chouknin and General Gakomelskie | called on the mutineers to surrender, whereupon, under the orders of Lieuten- | ant Schmidt, the mutinous vesseis, which had replaced the fiag of St. Andrew with | tle flag. When the battle was begun the bat- teries on the north side, which were sup- | posed to be loyal, Instead of firing upon the mutineers, the south side batteries. | men thereupon stormed the northern batteries with fixed bayonets and the | guns were soon turned upon the ships and | the barracks of the mutineers. The Listok says the conspiracy which | |lea to the mutiny went on under the | noses of the officers, and that even Vice | Admiral Birileff, the Minister of Marine, who was at Sebastopol a fortnight ago, suspected nothing. The sailors waited until they were assured of the support of the troops, most of whom, however, re- fused to go over to the mutineers when the die was cast. During the first three days the mu- | tineers were orderly. They sent delegates | to the shopkeepers requesting them not to close, &5 there would be no disordets, and s | asking the inhabitants not to leave the | city. They also sent out patrols with in- { structions to arrest the roughs who were | seeking jo take advantage of the situa- tion. In all their demonstrations the | mutineers intentionally sang the national | hymn in order to prove that thé only | traitors were those who refused to satisfy ‘! their demands. £ | et CZAR BALKS DE WITTE. New Premier Alrendy | Shora of His Power. | BERLIN, Nov. 30.—The St. !burg correspondent of the Peters- Vossische | Zeitung, who talked for five hours with | | representative leaders of all political land soclal classes outside the court | circle, cabled by way of Stockholm un- der yesterday evening's date as fol- | Tows: “The results of these interviews is | the conclusion that the action of the | Zemstvo Congress in recognizing the Socialistic organization as the strong- est has driven many wavering elements to join the Socialists, although these | openly proclaim that the | ernment 1s displaced. A rich merchant | informed me that. he pays $50 weekly /to the striké leaders, who give him a permanent guard of workmen. | “onfidence in Premier de Witte's | Cabinet is disappearing in political and | commercial circles, since it Is growing dally more evident that De Witte is without the necessary powers from the | Emperor. These circles belleve right- {1y that General Count Ignatieff’s influ- ence is growing. % “Partisans of the reactionary Interio Minister Durnovo confirmed to me the statement that Prince Tcherbatoff is | organizing a loyal militia and | that Durnovo and Tcherbatoff | trying to force matters to such an ex: | treme that at a given moment |can fall | temporary militla. These classes des- |ignate Durnovo as De Witte's successor. |In a very few days a crisis must de- | cide whether the autocracy will be | resurrected. “The Soclallsts are very optimistic. | They hope soon to spread a general | strike throughout Russia, except in Po- |land. They regard all the technical troops as pledged to them. Of the | other troops they do not yet trust the | division of guards. “The Soclalists say that the activity of thé reactionists comes very oppor- | tunely for them, since it drives the | Liberals to the Soclalists, which facil- | Itates their fight against the capital- ists. They assert that they have no | doubt that the proletartat will be su- preme in St. Petersburg within a very | short time, although only part of the lower officials of the post and telegraph departments have hitherto joined the | strike. The railroad operatives .also | will strike soon because Durnovo, ar- mested thelr representatives contrary to the Government's promisé. “In some quarters there is a demand for the Emperor to come to St. Peters- burg and issue a manifesto to the peaceable elements. It seems to me that the moment for this has passed. | The Emperor's entrance into the city | could only lead to a catastrophe which | may be postponed or perhaps be avoid- | ed by his remaining at Tsarskoe-Selo. | “According to my personal convic- | tion the situation grows hourly worse. | Events cannot be stayed and new bloodshed is unavoidable, since the re- | actionists and Socialists alike wish it. | The imperial house and the bourgeols will be the losers.” RS e | POLAND EXPECTS A CRISIS. Any Moment. WARSAW, Nov. 30.—The deadlock in the postal and telegraph service be- tween Warsaw and the interior of Rus- sia is practically complete. The latest information from Moscow is_that the soldiers of the telegraph battalion nave refused to fill the places of the strik- ing telegraph operators. The greatest anxlety prevails here, where it is feared that a general strike, Involving the whole of Russian Poland, will break out. The arrests of numbers of promi- nent persons and thelr exile without trial continue. According to the few detalls which have reached Warsaw regarding the sea and land battle at Sebastopol the rebel fleet on the evening of Novem- ber 28 opened an attack on three loyal COMBATANTS sailors on shore hauled - down their flag to the Brest and Bielostok | a red flag, responded by holsting the bat- | ! jolned cause with them | | and directed their fire on the city and on | | The Brest regi- | Practically capitalists | | will be aholished as soon as tne Gov- | added | were | taey | upon the Liberals with thfs | | General Strike May Be Proclaimed at , DECEMBER 1, 1805. the:e garments at $11 are Christmas so near, that $3 (. Do you know how we stores. the cloth—take it direct from there it comes to your purchase. head to foot. comfortable skirt. like picture shown. Pretty Coats (. Other styles for girls of 4 and $12.00. than clothes selling at other stores for $15. . With your present need of new clothes and ing of us will probably be of more benefit to you now than at any time of the year. this saving on your clothes?, (@ We will tell. you why. putting them before you is less hefe than at other @&. We simply pay the mills their lowest price for where we manufacture all of our clothing. At $3.45 they will go quickly. full asscrtment to choose from. the equal, if not better, or $5 saved by purchas- are enabled to afford you Because the cost of to our own workshops Straight our stores here in. San for Girls vp Overcoat Cravenette or$ Suit—*% 1 5 Valyes Elsewhere (. The man who has clothes to buy during De- cember, when his money could be used in so many other ways, ought to be interested in the fact that Francisco, or to the trade in other cities—but no matter where we sell, it goes at the same price to you as it does to the trade elsewhere. . This system of clothes making and selling applies to every suit, overeoat and cravenette in our stores, and thus we save you from $3 to $5 on Boys’ Warm Overcoats That little fellow with the short trousers is the one that needs attention this cold weather. * He should have one of these nice long, warm over- coats that come down to the shoe tops, thus protecting him fully from You can certainly get the boy one of these long overcoats, for we are selling them for only $3.45. They could easily sell for more, but we want you to buy of us, so we have made a special price which is sure to appeal to your ideas of economy. . [ They are made of a handsomeall-wool material, in the stylish Oxford gray, with close-fitting velvet collar, smart, natty-looking lapels and long, The coats come in sizes 7 to 14 years and are just In buying early you will get the at Only $6.45 . And the'daughtcr, too, should be remembered—she would appreciate a new coat right now while the weather emphasizes the need of warm garments. @@ We are selling stylish three-quarter coats as pictured for only $6.45. The materials are blue worsted cheviots, blue sergesand fancy cheviots. has a pretty patch chevron on the left sleeve and stripe of honor on the right. The ages are from 4 to 12 years. to young ladies of 16 at $2.50, $8.50, $9.85 SNWO00D 5 (D Each garment P T ‘ Mall Goods | brdars Delwvered ‘ Filled— Manufacturers Wholesaiers and Retailers of Clothing Free Within | - Two Large Stores 50 Mies _Co"rner.Powell and Ellis and 740 Market Street warships—the battleships Rostislav, the torpedo gunboat Captain Sacken and the armored cruiser Azova. The latter replied briskly, damaging the rebel torpedo-boat destroyer Svir- epy and sinking a torpedo-boa:. The coast batteries also joined in and set fire to the cruiser Otchakoff, com- manded by the rebel leader, Lieutenant Schmidt. The latter, with his mutin- ous followers, tried to escape In boats, but were captured by loyal torpedo- boats. \ At the same time the Bielostek regi- ment attacked the barracks occupled | by the mutineers. Fifteen hundred of these, with ten Maxim guns, surren- dered during the night. The number of killed and wounded is not known. DLl STRIKERS DECEIVED BY RUSE. St. Petersburg Government Succeeds in . Reopening the Cable. ST. PETERSBURG, Nov. 30.—Com- | munication with the outside world | censed at 3 o'clock this afternoon, when a strike was called in the general tele- | graph office. By a ruse, however, the | management succeeded in reopening the cable shortly after 6 o'clock. At 3 o'clock. when the strike went into operation, many of the Russian operators were reluctant to leave, but a walking delegate promptly smashed a bottle of hydro-chloric acid on the floor and the fumes soon drove the men The Danish cable operators remained at theilr posts, but, the receiving clerks | having fled, messages were refused for three hours. Although troops occupied the building, the employes who were will- ing to work were terrorized and were afrald to return. . Sevastianoff, superintendent of Posts .and Telegraphs, declares that the Govern- ment has ample evidence to prove that the strike Is a political conspiracy the discharged leaders of the telegraphers’ union at Moscow being a mere pretext which, how- ever, has decelved many operators and other employes of the service. M. Se- vastianoff declares that it is impossible Pamiyat 1 for the Government to yield or to be| W. M held up by its own servants and that it is determined to fight to the bitter end. ki 5kl ODESSANS READYX TO FLEE. Fear Mutineers’ Sh.ps Will Arrive to Bombard the City. LONDON, Nov. 30.—Private advices received in London from Odessa tell of a most interesting situation there. ‘While there is no disturbance at Odessa, | the inhabitants are in dread of the ar- ships from Sebastopol and are prepar- ing to flee on sighting these vessels. As to the actual occurrences at Sebastopol the people of Odessa are ignorant. ——— BRITON NOT ASHAMED OF COLORED SPOUSE Englishman Resents Pub- li¢’s Interest in His Wife, a Mulatto Waitress. Special Dispatch to The Call. SPRINGFIELD, Mass., Nov. 30.—Henry Martin, an Englishman of means, who married Miss Nora Dedman, colored waltress, yesterday, does not consider the alliance anything out of the ordinary. “I don't see why the public should med- dle in my affairs,” sald Martin to-night. ““My wife Is respectable and I haven't any court record, and that's more than the principals in some Newport weddings can ey Martin is 28 years old and his bride is 2. Mrs. Martin is an attractive mulatto. Martin's romance began in a restaurant in Bridge street, in which his wife was employed. The second or third time Mar- tin visited the restaurant he proposed a walk some pleasant evening. Miss Ded- man refused and Martin’s interest in the waltress increased. On Monday Martin procured a marriage license. With the waltress he visited a Congregational cler- gyman, who it is sald refused to marry the couple until after he had had time to sleep and pray over the proposition. Rev. rival of one or more of the mutinous | i absolutely necessary that convinced that the standard is lowering, | and T wamt to see it raised, for this coun- try should always be easily the first in golt, and if things go on as they are there is a danger that it may not be so In the tuture.—London Goif. —————————— wish to play a good game they should | -Stoler. dogs are said to be sold In Paris avail themselves of the services of a real- | to butchers, who sell the meat,” particu- Iy good and competent teacher. I am | larly the hind legs, as “lamb.” PURE M'LK AS CERTIFIED TO BY COMMISSION OF PHYSICIANS. The Walnut Grove Dairy Company is now delivering cértified milk in San Francisco. - The purity of this milk is certified te by the Home Club Milk Com- mission. This commission consists of five well-kdown physicians of Oakland. near where the dairy Is located. FOR BABIES. ertified milk means that to the knowledge of the members of the Com- mission, and their jnspector. chemist and bacteriologist. the milk is obtained from healthy cows and handied in the cleanest and best possible manner. This makes it a desirable food for bables, small children and delicate people. Since the first of last January the Walnut Grove Dairy has been suc- cessfully operating in Oakland and Berkeley, under rules and regulations adopted by this Commission. These include a healthy herd, all the cows of whieh have stood thé tuberculosis test and are examined monthly by a com- tent veterinarian; a thoroughly clean dairy barn; the cleaning of the cows efore milking; cleanly attendants, wearing clean uniforms during milkin hours; the discarding of the first streams of milk, which contain an excess o bacteria; the use of covered milk palils; the rapid coollag and bottling of the m'l::; and the smlmm‘h cleansing and sterilizing of 2l bottles and utensils used about the dairy. In order to see that ifs rules and regulations are carried out, the Commis. sion employs a veterinarian of recognized standing to examine the cows and inspect the method of handling the milk. Before issuing its monthly certifi- cate the Comiission also recelves reports .from a chemical analysis and a bacteriological examination of samples of milk obtained either just before or Just after delivery. HIGH STANDARD. These reports have constantly shown the Walnut Grove Dairy’'s milk to be pure, of g quality and to contain from 93 to 9S per cent less bacteria than the average milk delivered. . It costs much more to produce milk in this way, but then it is worth more to get mitk produced under such conditions and the purity of which iIs certified to by competent, reliable and disinterested people. Any one desiring certified miik, in tin-fofl-covered bottles. filled at the dairy, can have the same dellv&red at eight cents per pint, thirteen cents gr quart. Thirty per cent certified cream will &8eunnd at the rate of rty cents per pint. W, WVE DAL CO., Frelephons Jessie 849, - San FrAcioes A adices, 301 VA Nass Ave N. Deberry, a negro clergyman, fin: 1y tied the knot. A Painful Prospect. The majority of golfers in these days do not begin as little boys. Thus it is if they ever |