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THE SAN ANCISCO SUNDAY CALL - "MAN WHO 19 RUSIAS op Viadi- theme of his mind. His constant cou upon by twa of BI 1 ¢ s friends. who asked for an inter- tributions of money, In various sums, view with the doctor. Adjourning to to the neople of his race who sought a0 room the visitors made an of- his aslstance proved a serious drain on E X $12,000 to Ru if he would his income. At times he was penniless, d his fight the DBishop. but the fact did not seem to disturb e sither him or his wife, for their sentl- Sami or replied in o volce that clear- ments were oné in all questions th iy exprosscd his indignation: ted to the welfare of Russian su TeH your Bishep that this fight is It was not an infrequent ex- one of principle. -All the -gold ‘the nee for Dr. Russel to glve his last od has storeda in Is vaults dollar to a Russlan fugitive. He gave etersburg will not sway me,in as he had it and trusted to the morrow Viadimir must go. for assistance for himself and wite. ssla Not a leng while after’ thls incident In’ the latter dart of the 90's Dr. A e the recall of the Bishop came from St. Russel and his wife removed to Petersburg d fbre¢c w s later Ha where he, with the assurance = Viadimir was supcrceded by Archman- of lucrative employment, believed te Innocente. To the majority of the that his life's work could be pursued al Russians who were with Dr. Rus- under equally if not better conditions sel In this fight against Viadimir the thay in this city. Settling in a modest recall of the latter was regarded as a home but a few miles from the base p great victery for the dc f of the volcanle Mauna Loa he fre- in view of the fact that quetly, for a time. corresponded with gitive from home and wis known to his old friends In San Francisea, to be industriously planning to overthrew. whowmn he confided many of the detalls e the existing dynasty of the pire. of the inner workings of his great . The doctor had always malutained w working that the cducation of s countrymen i would éventually bring to them the f z > freedom that they had Jong prayed-for \ nd it was upon this theory that he f rking in the carly '90's In this pe scorned the principles of ni- | S and inarchy, declaring them a mepace to the future welfara peaple and repeatedly cxpressed ition to their plots in the lit- - at was {ssued at regular in- him. 5 To the Russian, who had ‘become n 4 from bis country for other = ons, however, the doctor & nerously disposed, and it that his house on Cali- e et, 1 Polk, was hot af- heltgr to some homeless coun- { It was in that houSe that Dr. sued his untiring efforts to- fting revolt among his pédple i 5 sse W was church 3 when tlon, Tt was impossiblé, of ‘course, for him to Teach the soldiers within the Russian lines, but Infection was heing accomplished among those men from ah entirely different ‘source. Allles of Dr. Russel were secretly en- gaged In that work at various points in Russfa. Thelr influence was constantly telllng and showed Its direct erfect on innumerable occasions, one of the latest and mare notable being the day the news spread through the Russian metropolises that the great inquisitor, Pobledonost: zeff, procurator of the holy synod, than ‘‘whom no man, not even the Czar, was more hated in the empire, Mad fesigned. When the fact became known that Kob- ledonostzeff had refused to acquiesce in the proposed overthrow: of autocracy and had ‘relinquished his post to emphasize this fecling of antagonism, his act was halled with demonstrations by the stu- dents and masses, who, during their shouts of derision, cheered the name of Bulgaria, he ~married shared with k frequent ers, ana At the end as a physi- al the doctor leader in “the later propagandas. $ Since then the mention'of Dr.. Russel has been frequent in the dispatches from abroad, showing that his revolutionary work has been bearing fruit, as he pre- dleted in his recent letter from Japan. wil] of th enter- Dr. Russel e through the —— Dishop V138 | cuinst the tyranny of the Russian scheme to promote retoluyion in Rus: e preceded hy Monarchy. sia. Finally his letters ceass and - bt Aoeraecsded B “He wrote continuously on reform soom the name af el ‘hacame a monieation :"fi‘;bu't’;fl &:";‘;‘“n‘;‘ .. matters, and through friends of his mwatter of memory with those who had TS o T A s ciuse i Roumania, Bulgaria and Aus- been assoclated with him in this clty. 0 ORSEY Bn';l! twl{ ee'l" ns- ?u‘ ‘;.1 tris this literature was smuggled inte Barly in March, 1901, a sfeamer from mmu-y wark of Russ slefl (o Tuissla and secretly circulated among Honolulu brought the news that Dr. Ryg: jCeKies. among whom o obge. Planck: the peasantry. It also reached St sel had been clected a member of the first t70T ROW fl“)‘hd n ':; ”f,i“‘h- "’n“' Petersburg: it was circulated in Mos- Tepritorial Senate, of which he had been Mm“‘: has been worl Fs . n har :;ny cow. Odessa and Warsaw; it was scat- chosen president. With hia love for agl- 100" ‘-‘l\l‘ of Dr. R“S: s in l'”&*:: tered through the provinces of the tation he had drifted into politics In the effrm lterature to the people Steppes and the isolated Amur district: islands and had been persuaded to anter "ILVe ‘h"!tld- Ei 3 ieat 200d it found its way into Poland and even the Senatorial contest, In which he was _ 'he latest achievement ot Dr. Rus. op Viadimir Was 15 Koshk in the Traps-Casplan DPro- successful. As president of the first Sen- 56! Was In the Japanese detention TEcs, but Lhese yinces, and was read by the UnhaDDy ate, however, his career was a short one, FMPS at Hammadera and Himei, 1Uel sults Were people of Khios In Central Asia and 0f His position prohibited him from taking where, since the fall of Port Arthur, Bokhara. - an active part in the debates, as he ea- he and hiz loyal followers have been of the controversy Education was the canstant cry of gerly desired, and finally, when the Sen- WOTking incessantly among the Rus- i, who had beed the persevering Dr. Nicholas Russel. ate was disturbed by a heated contro- 5lan prisoners. Seemingly the Jopanese . took sides with }iis slogan was taken up by his secret versy over some matter of state, the doc- !ave closed their eyes to the efforts of published an at- followers at home, who were wont to tor suddenly resigned the presidency the revolutionists to breed discontent He branded the cccasionally weite him encouragingly and, takipg his place among the “other among the soldlers, who only a few and charged him of the progress of his good work. A members of the legislative body, he was 4ays ago, as already stated, mustered © from his natlve year or so later found the cause of daily found In the midst of the exciting & %rce of thirty thousand for the pur- thing retort Dr. Rus- Russla’'s frecdom being advocated oratory on the flaor. 3 pose of welcoming the doctor and his he Consul as belng strepuously among certaln classes in But the doctor, still wedded to his rev- associates. nk and un- this country und eventually “the Am- olutionary theorles, soon tired -of Ha- __According to the dispatghes from nd in evidence crican friends of Russia,” as they now walian politics and retired from 'the Sen- Iobe, more than thirty thousand Rus- *d his reply with call themselves, and among whom ara ate and was again lost track of .by his Sian prisoaers of war have been organ- us furnishing to the Julla Ward Howe, Charles W. Folke former acqualntances in San Francisco. 1zed under the revolutionary banner revolutionary cause that’ Is threatening the existence of the monarchy. -Even the Czar, through his varfous means of com- were fol- ymunication in the ch ked more bitter criminations and t was feared that bhlood lutimation that he was and other notables of the East and Four months ago his friends In this city and are dafly singing the songs of the eman by birth West, lent their asslstance, morally ¢t were surprised’ by the recelpt of a let- hew party while awaiting transporta- nwhile Dr. Russel had carried his least, to the educational cause. ter from the doctor in which be referred tion to their own country. In his sev- galnst the Bishop of the Greco- Dr. Russel’s life in San Franclsco to the approaching revolution in Russia, eral months’ work at Hammadera and t 7 church to the High Proctor had not been prolific of much profes- and predicted its outbreak would mark Himeji Dr. Russel is said to have been of the holy evnod at St. Petersburg, sional practice, not that bis practice the closing of the Japanese- n war. assisted by the various revolutionary yho was requesied to recall Viadimir, could have been made more general. At that time he was in Japan, in the United States, which fur- endeay- parties while Dr. Russel and his pro- but because his active interest in the oring in every possible - 6 communi- nished him with adequate funds and al P-“‘":r were engaged in thelr affairs of Russia made the cause of his cate with Russian prisoners of war and literature for this particular mission. office in the Phelan bullding he was unfortunate countrymen the absorbing arouse within them the spirit of revolu- Where the next blow will be struck tessiona He has been generally accredited to the( of Insuring their perpetual loyalty te the cause of the Russian masses. Since the incidents at the Japane! S detention camps the Kromstadt mutiny has occurred and mutinous manifesta- tions have been made by the troops in Manchuria western portions Qf the Russian. eftpire. plainly suggest- ing that the “revplt against tyranny.” which Dr. Russel dwells upon In his let- ter to his friend in thls city, is spread- ing and-that “suffrage is almost within the grasp of the people.” One great Year has been entertained by Dr. Russel in.his ‘propagation of Tevolution and that Is that, In the absence of strong leaders at home, the - movement , might . limit by the nihilist empire and eventually recofl aster upen the freedvm-loving masses that aré stmply seeking relief from the autocratic piwer that has dominated so cruelly in Russia for centuries. In one of his Fecent letters the doctor refers to this pessibility, which he says would “end in the revolution devouring its own ‘children.” “My hand”trembles wi this. fearful possibility daw mind," he writes 1 Creator and pray tha h an awful calamity will not be the reward for our years of labor In a cause which the world knows is jus Seemingly the recent countless dis- asters to the existing dynasty of Rus- sia have added strength to the purpeses of Dr. Nicholas Russel and increasea his eagerness to avenge the brutal treatment of his father and sister and score for himsel a settiement for thegy wrongs he ‘was forced to suffer. His reveolutionary spirit has developed to an uncompromising point, as a result of many years of hopeful work in the " <directiof - of assured freedom to his *:* cotntrymen, and as the autecracy flees to shelter from the threatening sterm * his mind Becomes exhllarated by the thought that he will seon be able to its pen as s upon my ust in the DE. NICHOLAe" : P ] RUMNEL L » ”»- by the indefatigablc doctar {s 1 mattor he will continue“fo- work upon the cross.twe frontier of the tottering em= of ‘speculation among his friends in prisoners of war up to the time of their pire and again greet these who were this country, but the conjecture IS that transportation to Russia with a view his associates In his younger days. N N N N P N P N N P N S N NN PN TN Unpopular School Girl Margaret E. Sangster's Talks NPT TSS NSNS SN TN NS SIS TS, PO VNN VNN SNS (Copyright, 190G, by Joseph B. Bowles.) habit is the instant she hears something a boy. Your brother may be a tease HEN you tell me, Dorothy, told to make a face of surprise and say a torment; he may be rough and clumey; ‘that you cannot win your way B & Shocked tone, “Why, last week you - he may pravoke you by forgetting his 11 #cRool because the teach- SXPressed an eatirely diferent opinion,” manmpers, but he ¥ not apt e pus om the er 15 hatefw) and the girjs OF, Who makes & polnt of telllng her aira.of other people. He will be fuat are horrid and nobody likes friends on all occasions precisely what himself. yau, I cannot help thinking that the She thinks of them, may be a very good But girls sometimes purpossly and fault mpst somebow il with you. You Sitb but she will mever be popular. sometimes unconsciousty Imitate those tell me With & very mournful look that _Fdse observe, Dorothy, that we are arqund them, and in speech and behavior with a Siar. "Mary ls' popaler. always to tell the truth if we are obliged are not quite genuine. Nobody can have Russell, the former student of =eff, and ) Lo T Lt Tou. Dorathy, o 2peak, but there are many tmes When very much patience with.an affectsd girl; evers : it 1s much more a duty to be silent than a girl on whom ome camnot count, Who Wh every reason that they have f9f it i fo speak. AIl truth is mob Slways boses and acts & part. ¥ou woud bettaidy teacher, are left out In the cold and '0De told. You need mot g& out of your ‘ask yourself. Dorothy, if you are alwaym Ve begun to feel that you will al- WY ta inform Sally Brown that & green simple and sincere and willing to be the Dave to siay on the. edge - of SoEs does not sult her complexion and plais, honest girl that your motner knows While other girls are in the Makes her look yellow, it she has just azd your father loves with such pride, s fi“g‘: errer ‘; your 91‘:0 to m-:z‘ because if you are, the giris will pre- " ones uncomfortable comment- gently begin to love yow, too. i “"f'“y fame sirls get o "';‘: ing on ‘the unbecoming style of her new Real people who belong to the realities an. others 1n & maw oy lEonmets hat. Whith she must wear all winter. of life, and who are not.trying to maa- '‘There is Margaret, who Is so magnetlc. "4’ good rule all through life is to say querade in characters that are pot their $o sweetly attractive that every one £a11a o, 1ove with her entioncss SBd (Goereitaia'things ealy whon o Teme Seibire and atier seicom comes efestion grace. There i3 Stola, whose scholar- No gipl will ever be popular who has no There is just the possibility that the ship is so accurate that teachers feel iaoe” The taciful girl is more ltkely to girl who mourns because she is unpopular delighted to have her at her dask Whed o' favorite than the beautiful, the gen- cares too much about it, and is too anx- they are explaining 1e830ms or OB aroug or the clever girl, who lacks this fous to have the conspicuous places. ucting recifations. There is Eva, .who a4y s Your older sister could tell you of a girl is never at a loss for the FIght WOvd “gqq” seircentered girl, too, is. Nkely in her class in college who was lovely, and who never Is bothuruli With her ¢, %s unpopular. Sbe sees things ex- provided she could be pushed into a posi- t\x:x‘gg:_ and feet as some girls are with cm’l“lyk?‘:a;y ,::cthh.m". s:ha;’ "“uo'n::de:htz h:: mg. Qv;ryt o:: e S0 oceu; W e wishes to do. woul u " what It Is not really worth while to look with h.‘: own plans, :m.bm:nu and ends. thought, and give her the casting vote, too long at thdse fortunate girls, the (hat there is no room beside her fire nobody could compare with her in cour- trouble being in your case, that you for anybody else to sit down. This girl tesy. But pass her over, ask her next do not belong to that group, always makes herself comfortable and door neighbor to walk with you, or take May it not be that you are over- does not care a g whether or not others the chair at a committee meeting, and critical? Occaslonally a schoolgirl falls suffer. In a street car ‘she pounces this girl froze and was as cold and dis- into & kabit of saying disagreeable upon the best vacant seat, and never tant and hard and unresponsive as an ice- things about other girls and putting thinks of offering it to an elderly lady bound breok in January., Let her lead, rong constructions on their motives, or & woman burdened with a. child, or and she was fascinating; omit her from ‘e have all seen the girl who is ready body else who looks tired and worn. the programme and she nnmediately be- to say something mean about her sends her brothers and sisters all came a sphynx. A girl who is bound to neighbor, and who stoops to the great- oyer the house on her errands, but it be foremost at any cost may be admirad. er meanness of, sa)'l,l,lf uncharitable does not occur to her to run upstairs but she will not be the most dearly loved things about those who’are absent. If for the book her mother is reading, the girl in her class. vou do this you cannot expect that shawl her grandmother needs or the box —Sometimes it Is a disgrace to be popu- people In general will be very fond of of toys that may amuse a visiting i:;-nt- lar. If sae becompi: prnpular ;hrdou.h you & N “ " 7 Sfer, " She does net mean to be Selfish, courting other peaple’s favor and doing 1'have seen girls who prided themselves and she very willingly divides a treat what Is called toadying, she has no rea- so much upon’ belug candid and telling with or gpends monmey for her friends, son to be proud; she ought rather to the {ruth that people were actually but she thinks primarily of No. 1. Take blush. A girl who is true and loving and afrald of them. They use the truth as care of No. 1 is her Nobody wno gentle, considerate, thoughtful and a4 boy throws stones. One, never knew makes this her motto. will ever to do the mext thing for the next when some hard little pellet would hit .have many friends. with that politeness which aprings from one in the face. ' ‘Another thing that makes a girl unpopu- a good heart, need not ba that ver be the unpo) “sirl In For example, a girl may have entirely lar is affectation. This is especially a she will too good a memory. The girl whose girl’s defect. One hardly ever sees it In her eircle.