The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, March 21, 1906, Page 4

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i THE SAN FRANCISCO 'CALL, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21, 1906 REPORTED MUTINY OF RUSSIAN[IPLOMAT'S - [FRANCE BALKS patches confirming might be accounted for by the Impo . PETERSBURG, March 20.—Sensational reporfs are carrent tonight that the execution of formér Lieutenant \idt, which has male n @eep impression throughoit Russia, has been followed by un extensive mutiny of lors at Sebastopol, the massacre of thelr officers and firing by the fortress upon.the city. the story have heen received, but if the report should prove to he true the absence of these sition of n censorship. No press dis- — MASSA RevoluironistFacesFiring | Squad Wirh Head Up and Eyes Open. —- Does Nor Fail Until the) Fourth Iv(///uj' Is ' Leader in Brack Sea Ou1-| break Is Regaraed as a Mar Ax tramsiated and displarved at offices of the news, % here the tele- w% say, bries at the sailors, in- foristed by the refusal of Emperor Nicholas to parden Lieutemant Sehmidt snd their fellow barracks and majority of thelr officers. dis- patches added that the city of Sebasto- pol was almost in flwmes. November martial w cutioners, | Teretz, say- | people. of ¥ death olley at did HOLD ON. 3 March 20.—No he reported « intention of retire immediately | fre able at the Pre- b s « con- | | the is not admitted. | There is a disposition to treat Count | de Witte's reference to M. Kokovsoff, | wk 1 3 r in the Couneil of | the thr yesterday, as an fronical rweening ambition of | the former Minister of Finance. It is alsc that the condition of Count | de Witte's health desperate, He is| more or less constantly a sufferer, but | 0 symptoms have d(—\-(~1oprd.1\ b ey REVOLUTIONISTS ATTACK HALL. ! | LODZ, R Poland, March 20.—A i of vists today sur- | rounded s 1d fired through the windows at persons who were attending | 2 meeting at which methods of voting eing discussed. The attack cre- | panic 4 when the people in 1she they were fired upon lutionists, several persons d. A detachment of f‘:_\\'—' up and dispersed the two and wounding | DOANS PILLS, WORK WEAKENS THE| KIDNEYS. | Doan’s Kidney Pills Have_ Done Great Serviee for People Who Work in San Franeisco. Most San Francisco people work every day in some strained, unnatural | »sition—bending constantly over a desk—riding on jolting wagons or cars—doing laberious housework; [ift- ing, reaching or pulling, or trying the back in 2 hundred and one other ways. All these strains tend to wear, weaken snd ure the kidneys until they fall behind in their work of filtering the poisons from the blood. Doan’s Kid- ney Pills cure sick kidneys, put new strength in bad backs. San Fran- disco cures prove it. James E. Brown, contractin painter, of 17 Capp street, says: *J man at my occupation requires a good sound back. If that part bf his | snatomy is weak, lame or aches svery move of the brush brings tor- wure. Besides the ingredients used in my calling act directly on the kid- aeys and aggravate those organs. The first box of Doan’s Kidney Pills srought me such relief that I bought several more and continued the treat- ‘ment until the trouble disappeared.” For sale by all dealers. Price so cents. Foster-Milburn- Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name, Doad'’s; snd take no other, Discharged. 8| | CRE SAID TO HAVE AVENGED SCHMIDT wvv—*vv v % R TOOK COMMAND OF THE BAT- SEIZURE OF THAT VESSEL BY IT8 STOPOL. HUST RETURN 10 THER FATE Young Russian Deserters Are Ordered Deported by Secretary Metcalf doom' of Michael Norwala Miko- y and Felix Kosevitch, two desert- ers from the Russian navy, was sealed yesterday by the action of Secretary Met- calf in ordering them deported. Upon their return to_the land of their nativity the penaity of death will be their fate, and there will be no appeal. Many in- fluences were brought'to bear in behalf of the sajlors, but “Inexorable law pre- vailed and the men will be returned to suffer for'their breach of allegiance. When. informed yesterday morning that the degree was against them they re- plied, through an interpeter, that they were willing to die if they could not have their freedom. The men arrived in this port on Janu- ary 14 on beard the French steamer Amiral Dufree, consigned to George W. Th McNear & Co. They had emuggled themselves aboard at Nagasaki after an escape that involved many hardships. They evidently had no intention of travel- ing as stowaways, for, as soon as the vessel left the Japanese port, they pre- sented themselves on deck and offered to pay_ their fare. Upon arriving here they were held as suspected trachoma cases and Dr, Cummings, the quarantine officer, ordered them deported. The ‘attention 0f various soeieties, in-. cluding’ the Polish Soclfety and the Jews ish Soclety, was called to the case and Congressman Julius Kahn was asked to intercede in behalf of the men and to investigate the matter. Dr. A. Hobdy succeeded Dr, Cummings, but his opinion n regard to the cases was the same as that of his predecessor. When this re- port was made to Secretary Metcalf the latter issugd an imperative order and the Russians can find no harbor here. Ore of the men is 28 years of age, the other 27. Both are wskilled mechanies. They will be returned on the French steamer Amiral Magon, which leaves here efther Friday or Saturday. ————————— BOY HUNTER WILL LOSE FOOT AS RESULT OF CARELESSNESS PETALUMA, March 20.—William H. Wilson, son of A. Wilson of this city, was accidentally shot in the foot on Sunday while out hunting with a num- ber of other lads. The shooting was done by Charlie Boysen, whose gun was discharged while he was extracting a shell. The shot lodged in Wilson's heel. His companions rigged up a stretcher out of their guns and carried the wounded boy several miles to ths main road, where they met a rig and had the sufferer conveyed to town. The physicians found the foot so badly shattered that it was deemed necessary | to amputate it. WARNOR USES U W Kuropatkin® Attributes - De- feats in Manchuria to Corruption of Bureaucracy ST. 'PETERSBURG, -March . 20.—Gen- eral Kuropatkin's last order of the day to the. first Manchurian army, printed in the Russky Invalid (the military organ) today, is a remarkable exposure of the causes of the Russian defeats, showing that they were dug to the lack of preparation and equipment and, to’ the fact that no explosives were on hand for the mountain military, ete., in the early stages of the war. Kuropatkin - does’ not shirk his own responsibility as Minister of War before the war broke out, but points out that the causes of the defeats were deeper, namely: the morale of the troops and of the officers, who did not display initiative, independence or enthusi- asm,” fn- spite- of -the iron nerves and perspicacity of the soldiers. ' All this the general boldly annotinces is attrib-, utable to the oppression of bureau- cratic rule during the last fifty years, which, in the case of officers, drove men of independence from the service, leav- ing only worthless drones. He con- gratulated the troops on the advent of liberty and hoped for the regeneration of the people. General Kuropatkin gives the entire lcsses of the.First Manchurian Army, which averaged a strength of 100,000 men and 2200. officers, g8 395 officers. killed and 1738 wounded and 10,436 men killed and_ 56,350 wounded, and con- cludes with expressing the opinion that the army should be so strengthened in time of peace that victory will be cer- tain in time of war, PROGRESSIVE LINCOLN PEOPLE WIN FIGHT. Carry by Large Vote Prope- sition to Bond Town for Improvements. Speclal Dispatch to The Call. LINCOLN, March 20.—The voting of bonds in the sum of $15,000 for sewer pur- poses by a vote of 178 for to 38 against in Lincoln today 1s the greatest triumph of the progressive element of the community in its history and marks a new era of progress for Placer County's leading town, The election passed off quietly. SAILORS AT SEBASTOPOL. | WIFE A BORN POLITICIAN Mrs. Storer Misrepresents the "President in Urging Pope Piug to Appoint Archbish- op Ireland a Cardinal MAKES USE OF ONLY PART OF A LETTER In It Mr. Roosevelt Ex- presses Friendship for Pre- late, but Flatly Declines to Urge His Elevation Pt RS Speclal Dispatch to The Call. CALL BUREAU, POST BUILDING, WASHINGTON, March 20. — Additionat light was thrown today upon the remark- able series of events that preceded the retirement of Bellamy Storer as Embas- sador of the United States to Austria. It is stated that Mrs. Storer, In her ardor to advance the Interests of the Catholic Church and obtain the appointment of an additional Cardinal for the United States, appealed to President Roosevelt. She ad- vocated Archbishop Ireland for the posi- tion, and Mr. Roosevelt, was asked to use his influence in the Archbishop’s be- half.in Rome. President Roosevelt wrote in reply that he would like to see Arch- bishop Ireland a Cardinal and spoke very highly of the Archbishop’s public service and breadth of view; but, the President declared, he would not be concerned in any such politics, and he pointed out to Mrs. Storer how impreper It would be for him to advocate to the Pope the selection of any person for such a place. Mrs. Storer, it is sald, made use of tne expression of the President that he would like to see the Archbishop made Cardinal, and caused it to comie to the attention of high dignitaries in such a way that it appeared to be the wish of the Pregident that action should he faken. When the information came across the sea *hat the President had been interest- ing himself to have Archbishop Ireland elevated, Mr. Roosevelt wrote to Mrs. Storer, expostulating, and there was a spirited but friendly correspondence be- tween him and the Embassy. The Presi- dent had to call attention to his original note, in which he said he would like ‘to have Archbishop Ireland appointed, but could not meddle in 'such affairs, and pointed out that quaumrcation had not been made use of in connection with the apparent indorsement of the proposed new Cardinal. . .. = Other questions argse, and the adminis- tration found itself embarrassed in other ways, and the final result was that the connection of Storer with the diplomatic service ceased. Sve salin ) President Roosevelt Las begn,annoyed, by the incident and also rather amused, and he laughed about it when he read the entire correspondence. to the Cabinet at & recent meating. , s MINERS WEET THE OPERKTORS INDIANAPOLIS, March 20.—The second joint conférence of the coal miners and operators of the district comprising the States of Illinots, Indiana, Ohlo and West- ern Pennsylvania, which was the result of the efforts of Président Roosevelt to effect a permanent peace in the coal In- dustry throughout the United States, ad- journed this afternoon-after referring the demands of the miférs to the joint scale committee, which will begin its delibera- tlons tomorrow morning at 9 o'clock. After the conference had effected or- ganization, President Mitchell delivered a brief address. He outlined his views as to the purpose of ‘the extraordinary joint conference, at the ‘close -of ‘which he moved the adoption of the scale of wages déranded by the miners in the joint con- ference which adjourned on February 2. The scale provides for andJncrease of 12% per cent. The motion was lost on a strict party vote, the operators votig unani- mously in the negative, while the miners voted &s & unit in favor of its adoption. John H. Winder of Ohlo, the newly elected chairman of the operators, moved the adoption of a resplution which pro- vided that the present scale, with all its attending conditions; -be adopted for a period of one year beginning April 1. The motion was defeated. - The miners voted against the proposition to a man. The operators voted “aye,” with the ex- ception of those from Illinois. Robbins then moved that the matter be referred to the joint: scale committee, which will meet tomorrow morning at 8 o'clock, and that the conference adjourn to reconvene-at the call of the corimittee. Mitchell seconded the motion, which was carried unanimously. NEW YORK, March 20.—There will be a conference between the two committees of seven members each, representing the anthracite coal operators and the miners of the hard ‘coal disteict. This was de- cided upon at a meeting in this city to- day of the committée of operators. Later President G e F. Baer of the Philadel- phia and Reading ‘Raflway forwarded a letter to President Mitchell of the United Mine Workers of America, notifying him that the operators’ committee is willing to meet the miners' committee at any @ate Mitchell may select. President Baer's letter s in reply to a communication -from - President Mitehell, in which the leader of the miners ex- pressed diséppointrhent because the oper- ators had rejected: the demands of the miners without calling their committee into conferenée. Mitchell asked for an- other conference. In reply Baer says that the operators fully expected to have an- other conféerence with the miners, and as- serts that President® Mitchell has not replied to a eounter-proposition made to him by the operators’ committee to the eftect that the niiners allow the present conditions- to prevail. - Baer says the operators belleve fhat nothing can be done to § existing conditions, which, he says, aré as favor- able _to the miners of the anthracite re- glon as it 1s possible to make them: The qm; of the meeting s léft to the miners to fix, i _ Actress Wants Damages. Blanthé Stmmerly, who was injured cfim-g-h the collapse of a staging at the Central Theater, where she was The bonds will run for 40 years and interest at & per 18 great re- joicing in Lincoln' tonight. The store that has always ;oen well advertised comes to have a strong “oonmumon'fi‘;l l.nduv:?’u"l!nufle“. ness” comes along throu, t triumphantly. 7 ’ playing, filed sult ~yesterday against Belasco & Mayér, formérly proprietors of the playhouse, to recover $20,000 damages. mw'slmmfii.g-nthe er back was everely injufed and places the blame for the accident on ti rietors, who, she Paxer cave to-see that t secure. 5 AT HEW PN Slight Concession by Ger- many Does Not Bring a Settlement at Algeciras CZAR LOYAL TO ALLY e Sets at Rest Réports That Russia Is Wavéring in Her Support of tke Republic —— ALGECIRAS, March 20.—A basis for the adjustment of the rival claims of France and Germany before the con- fefence on Moroccan reforms has not yet been found. The Austrians are preparing a further police project which, it is hoped, will contain a sug- gestion - less objectionable to” France than the Casa Blanca proposition, while at the same time safeguarding the in- ternational principle. The proposal suggests the appointment of an in- specting general with full power, nom- inated by the powers, to which he shall be responsible. Should . this scheme not effect a reconciliation of German and French ideas, then Russia wiil introduce an amended plan, which will be discussed simultaneously with the Austrian plan until a firal understanding Is reached. Henry White, chief of the American delegation, is taking the lead of the other neutral delegates in active en- deavors to effect a speedier settlement than the one suggested. BERLIN, March 20.—Herr von Rado- witz and Count von Tattenbach, the German representatives at Algeciras, have been Instructed by the Foreign Office here, provided France meets the German views on the question of the Moroccan Bank, to yield on the police question to the extent of giving up Casa Blanca as the headquarters of the inspector general, but retaining a neutral inspectorship, with real powers of control over the police. Dispatches received at the Foreign Office from Algeciras tonight indlcate that an agreement is probable, but not yet an actuality. The details remain- ing to be settled form opportunities for a disagreement. The tone of the French delegates, the dispatches say, is ‘not altogether satisfactory. PARIS, March 20.—Owing to reports that Russia was wavering in her al- legiance to France at Algeciras, the Russian Embassador here, Nelidoff, to- day delivered to Foreign Minister Bourgeois a copy of a dispatch which Forelgn Minister Lamsdorff has just sent to Count Cassini, the Russian rep- resentative at Algeciras, declaring that there was no truth in the statement that Russia had counseled France to accept the Austrian plan or had ad- vised her to submit the control of the police at Casa Blanca to a neutral power. The dispatch added: “The Imperial Government has never ceased and never will cease to act to- ward France as a faithful ally, desir- ing thus to promote a successful so- lation.” | —_———— BRITISH SUBJECTS FLEE “wd® & © FROM NORTHERN CHINA Expect an Amnti-Foreign Outbreak on a Lurge Scale in the Near X Future. HONGKONG, March 20.—English merchants trading in'the northern- dis= tricts of the empire say the Chinese everywhere expect a rising on a large scale in the immediate future. British familiez are leaving as fast as they can, and Chinese and Manchus are sending their wives and'children away. Steamships at northern ports have all their accommodations taken for three months to come. The whole of the Yangtse Valley is In a ferment. ———— e —— Gendarmes Charge Upon Strikers. LENS, Department of Pas de Lais, France, March 20.—The miners' con- gress is expetted to reject the op- erators’ terms. The strikers now number 51,000. Striking miners and gendarmes had a severe encounter to- day in front of the Town Hall, where the miners’ congress was in_session. The gendarmies charged several times, and a nhumber of persons were (rample& under foot and many arrests were made. —— MADRID, March 20.—Premfer Moret, having announced to- his collemgues ‘ his intention to resist passage of the judicial reform bilf™ all the.Cabinet Ministers today placed thelr resig- natfoné in His hand. . The Ownership is an evidence of the highest in the choice of a It is a strking whether pianist, vocalist, or in rom, the A. B. Chase, the einway later on. way eventually, and you will the time: We have new pianos in our Oskland Store, Broadwa Piano Elegance At our store there is a_ piano elegance you don't find elsewhere in San Francisco. Ec.tn li\at. the world’s greatest musicians, jano from choice wherever obtainable f Estéy. the Emerson, or_other ianos in our stock, with the privilege of exchanging for a In this manner you may own a Stein- $250, $275, $300, $400 and up. Pay by the month if you wish. TAKE ELEVATOR TO THIRD fLOOR SHERMAN, CLAY &.CO. STEINWAY PIANO DEALERS. Located for thirty-five years at Kearny and Sutter Streets, San Franciseo. of A Steinway taste or the best guidance , use the Steinway ; -or you may choose have the use of a piano all stock as low in price as $200. A =% y and Thirteenth Street PACIFIC COAST HOP POOLS WORRY BRITISH Question Brought Up in the English House of Commons. LONDON, March 20.—In the House of Commons today Premier Campbell-Ban- nerman satd he geclined to embark in a crusade against ‘“hop pools” in America or elsewhere. A member asked for information about an alleged pool formed by a hop exporter of Wheatland, Cal, and the employment of Chinese coolies by order of hop-grow- ers, and expressed the hope that the Brit- ish Government would take steps to pre- vent the pool from destroying the British hop industry. The Premier said he had no informa- tion regarding the pool referred to, and added that he had been .informed - that Chineege labor was not largely employed by the Oregon hop-growers and he had no reason to suppose that where it was employed it was under other than free conditions. The Premier therefore de- élined to take amy action in the matter. ship Tartar '1 afternoon and ¢ crew_taken to Vancouver. Caj and Engineer Gould were the only members of the detained company who were réleased. A Friend HAT thin, little, 10-cent Box of Cascarets. When carried constantly in . your Vest Pockst, or, in “my Lady's” Purse it willward off ninety per cent of Life's ordinary Ilis. F Eat.one of the six candy tablets con- tained in that ‘‘Vest Pocket Box"' whenaver you suspect you need one. Z It can't hurt you, and is sure Insurance against serious sickness. P Want of Exercise, indoor Efiployment, weaken the Bowel Muscles, just as they weaken Arm and Leg Muscles. The Muscles losé tone, tension, strength, to forde the food onward. And the longer they stay in that state the weaker they become, because the less exercise they get through the slow pass- age of food. % ‘ 4 Cascarets contain the only combination of drugs that acts on the Muscles of the Bowels and Intestines, just as Cold Water, or Exercise, act on a Lazy man. They act like Exercise. o When you have Heartburn, Colic,Coated Tongue, Suspected BreathyAcid-rising-in- throat, Gas-beiching, or an incipient Cold,. take a Cascaret. < e T Remember, all these are not merely Discomforfs, but indications of a serious | Nip them in the bud—eat a Candy Cascaret. Cascarets don't purge, nor into Food. in Need— p e Rheumatism Faundice Catarrk Nausea . Colic - Vértigo Scrofula Pimples Womanly Troubles Worms Blotches Piles Ecsema Ulcers Dysentery In such cases a little Cascaret in time is worth fifty dollars worth of Treatment later on, to.say nothing of the suffering, discomfort, loss of Business Energy, and loss of Social Sunshine it saves. - * - A coming Headache can be warded off in short order, by a single Cascaret, and the cause removed. £ Heartburn, Gas-belching, Acid-risingsin the throat, and Colicky feeling are sure ! s LOS ANGELES TIMES SAN FRANCISCO OFFICE ROOM 41, CHRONIGLE BEDS. . " elephone Matn TR Arthur L. Fish, Representative The Times is the advertising medium of the Southwest, OCEAN Steamers leave Plers § and 11, San_Francisco. For Ketchikan, W) Juneau, Treadwelil, ers P‘haml to N. P For ::nn (Humboldt Bay)—Pomona, 1:30 e m%umhnnm Topoiobampo, (Mex), 10 & m., TeA month. ALASKA EXCURSIONS (Season 1906)—Ths palatial Alaskan excursion steamship Spokans - Seattle 'll‘“&"l June TICKET . (Palace Hotel). 10 Markst st. and ghn'vm FREIGHT OFFICE, 10 Market st. Broadway. "' 10 Market st.. San Francisco. TOYO KISEN KAISHA (ORIENTAL 8. 8. C0.) Steamers will leave wharf, corner First Brannan flm l.g- m., Iuolr"ft‘)::l:l(-‘ n;i oy D ; cargo recetved on board on day of salling. « 3. 8. America Maru, Saturday, Apr. 14, S S Nippon Maru, Thursday, May 10, S. 8. Hong! Maru, Tuesday, June 5, gaunft:;?‘: - at reduced rates. or ight and passage apply at company's seventh floor, Merchants’ Exchangs. signs of bowel trouble from food poisons, 2nd Should be dealt with . One Cascaret will stop the coming trou- I ble, and move on the Bowel load, if taken Don't fail to carry the Vest Pocket Box of Cascarets with you constantly. P TN AllDruggists sell them—over ten million boxes a year. A “ Be very careful to'get the made only by. the Sterling panyand never sold in bulk. Every tablet

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