The evening world. Newspaper, January 25, 1905, Page 3

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Demands Surrender of Strikers Within Twenty-four Hours on Penalty of Deportation to the Villages. | ‘HUNGER FORCES MANY 4 TO GIVE UP THE FIGHT. ) Workers Apply at the Factories for Work but Owners Afraid to Open—Victims of Sun- day’s Slaughter by Soldiers Buried, ‘ye *~ BT. PETDREBURG, Jan, 25.—A notice was posted this morning at @ll the works giving the strikers twenty-four bours to resume their em- ployment, and intimating that those who did not gomply would be deported to villages, f Gov.-Gen. Trepoff was in supfeme command of the city to-day. Al- though @ state of siege has not been actually proclaimed, {t practically ex- ists, the Emperor having conferred upon him as Governor-General absolute power, authorizing him to use the military and gendarmerie and every 4) Other agency of the Government to preserve order, placing under his control the oGvernment works and schools, He has empowered him to exile persons who are inimioal to peace, An official note this morning announces that Emperor Nicholas has ex- (pressed his thanks to Gen, Trepoff, the new Governor-General of St, Peters- burg, for his distinguished and zealous services as Chief of Police of Moscow. HUNDREDS ARRESTID, During the night hundreds of arrests were made, The appointment of Senator Usaee as Becretary of Btate for Finland (announced Jan, 22) just at this time is consilered to be an unfortunate lunder and !9 likely to prove exceedingly distasteful to the Finns, Al- though a Finn himself, Senator Linder {» exceedingly unpopular owing to his active support of the policy of the Russification of the towns of the Baltic provinces. Troops are marching through the etreots of Riga and Reval, but the eyes of all Russia to-day are fixed on Moscow, The appearance of St. Petersburg {s more normal but no more men re- turned to work. - The lack of money and food is already operating against a continuance of the strikes, Weeping women are returning to the clgarette factories pleading to be allowed to resume work, but the managers are afrald to reopen in consequence of the threats of the strikers to sack their estab- Nshments, An official note this morning announces that Emperor Nicholas has ‘expressed his thanks to Gen, Trepoff, the new Governor-General of St, Pe- tersburg, for hie distinguished and realous services as Chief of Police of Moscow. ” ‘ een ioninet pb rintanretin ninenas RIOT VICTIMS BURIED, _ 167 FUNERALS HELD _ OT. PTERSBURG, Jan, 25.—The ¢un- | foot, according tothe Russian cu: pe qxals of mauny victims of Sunday's trag-| Tt was noticeable that in many cases @dy coourred to-day, Pitiful eights were witnessed, In evveral cases & man and ion ocourred, but work- 1 and others ato: wite carried Detween them a wooden|ptrocis as the littio groupe passed with box containing @ child killed, Some of /the deed... Oe, the coffins wece borne on common cart-| warva ates ier bones were towered to ere’ eleighs, the mourners following on‘ their last resting place. —————_—-++-—_—_—_ MAXIM GORKY HELD PRISONER A1 RIGA heen privately advised that Maxim Gorky, the author and Reform party leader, has been arrested at Riga, whither he had been summoned by the illness of his wife, to. CZAR MUST YIELD, THE BRITISH THINK. LONDON, Jan, 25,—The Foreign Office views the situation in Russia mith great alarm. It belloves that while the present risings will be put down the affair of Sunday at St, Petersburg is certain to bring about a change in the form of government, The Associated Press learns that the Foreign Office would welcome a Rurwian government with which it could enter into a treaty slmilar to the ‘Anglo-French agreement, feeling that @ contract with the present regime would be repudiated at will. But fears are entertained of a revolution which might result in interna- tional complications, RUSSIAN BUREAUCRACY NOT TRUSTED. The remarks of War Secretary Arnold-Forster at Croydon last night when he expressed the sympathy of the people of the United Kingdom with the people of Russia and sald he was sure Britons desired the peasante of Russla to enter upon the heritage of liberty and freedom which all Britons } enjoyed and obtained through tho sacrifices of thelr forefathers, are excit- ing considerable comment coming from a Cabinet Minister, He seemed to voice the general suapicion that the British Government has of Russian bureaucracy: Mr, Arnold-Forster also made the astounding statement that it would be a bold man who would say whether this movement would be Hkely to help or hurt the British nation, but we must be on our guard,” The British press as a whole takes a no less gloomy view, Tho papers have been given up almost exclusively since Sunday to: alarmist reports from Russia, hostile articles and scathing editorials on the “massacre,” one of the mildyst terms used for the affair of Sunday, and the Russian Emperor and ‘his Government are generally compared to “beasts ” The whole discussion of the situation in Russta serves again to reveal fl the poorly disguised hostility of the British preas to everything Russian, The despatches to the London papers all report the conditions prevailing in Russia to be worse than the Associated Press accounts, | LUDICROUSLY OFFICIAL, The Russian official figures of the killed and wounded are stigmatized as “ludicrously offictal.” The number of slain reported ‘here in Monday's | papers ranged from 2,000 to 8,000. One prominent paper announced that the dead alone numbered 2,000 and another said 8,000, The Associated Preas Scgures, 600, given on Monday, are now considered at the embassies | reports, a WORKERS OF SARATOFF JOIN THE STRIKE REVOLT. BARATOFF, Russia, Jan, %—-The A larg» village, Pokroyskaya, of 25,000 | ‘ men in tho railroad shops and other | Inhabitante, situated on the opposite establishments here have gone out on} side of the river, forms the suburb of | ki atrike, Saratott, 1h bt — ‘Phe Intter {8 an important contre tor Garatoft ts the capital of a govern-| four mills, distitlertes, 7 @ ment bf Southenst Russia situated on eeu wrote Mi tobacco factories, and = fhe right bank of the Volg, ‘The ct | aldcrabie trade in corn, oll Mae year ; ) f» 682 miles by rail southeast of Mos- QT. PETERSBURG, Jan. 26, 445 P, M.—The Associated Press has es mere as the maximum, Simflar exaggerations are noticed in most of the! « By T. E. Powers, Par JAPS GET POINTS ON CIVILIZATION. 3 AAR ATEN AAS BALTIC FLEET AND JAPS MEET? London Hears Russian Fleet Is Victorious, Having Sunk a Battle-Ship and Two Cruis- ers of Foe in Indian Ocean. —— LONDON, Jan. %-A despatch from Bt. Petersburg, by way of Paris, has reoalved here, declaring that the Russian Baltic squadron had met and fought with the advance guard of Vice-Admiral Togo'’s aquadron in the Indian Ocean, The report is not authentic, but in pome quarters it is credited, because It ls known that the Japanese went out bo meet the Russians on the high seas, and for the past week or more it has been thought that an encounter was {muminent, The deypatoh says thet after a furious battle the Japanese retired, losing a and two ns, going to meet the Russians the ipeeneee ave sent their fleetest ships advance of the main fleet, Theso were expected to sight the Russians, then return to the main fleet, which it Was believed was sufficiently large: to give creditable report of a battle with esvenzsky, the Russian Admiral, Ih some quarters here the despatch ta ved to have been Inspired by st. Petersburg, the Russians hoping to throw cold water on the rumors that the present revolution in Russia will on to the war in Manchuria, It \s charged here that the Paris news Agence Caaad that meeting the Japanese ships, is subsidized by the Russian Government and Is unre!inble, War experts say that it would have been impossible for the Russians to have overtaken the Japanese ships un- leas the Jupanese were taken by sur- rae, SBYCHPLLES ISLANDS, Qcean, Jan, %--The Frengh Capricorno reports that the woeond Puolfic squairon was wandave, fay fan, s Indlan gunboat Russian at Pas- porliwest coast Senet: pascar, 2, was thought the squadron intended to go to the east coast of yh leaded owing to the hur- ‘The Seynhelies Islands are about RUSSIAN FIRE ON FISHERS TOLD North Sea Steamer Captain Testifies Before the Inquiry Board that Warships Were Out of Their Course. PARIS, Jan, 2%.—The International Commission to inquire into the North Sea incident began hearing witnesses to-day. The meeting of the Comnils- sion was attended by a score of seamen and fishermen from Hull, giving the session a somewhat nautical aspect. The first witness was Capt. Wood, of the steamer Zero, plying between Hull and Copenhagen, He said that on tho ‘afternoon preceding the occurrences of Oct, 22 he saw two Russian squadrons proceeding westward, The locality was unusual for warships, “Were the warships following the habitually taken?” he was course lny were to the west, and not in tho ne 1 course,” ‘Tha witness added that tho squadrens were proceeding at about twelve hnots, He did not ses any other warships during the yoyage, ‘Vice-Admiral Doubassoff (Russia) cross-examined the witness and asked what distance the squadrons were out. side the usual course, Capt, Wood answered that the shine were ten to twelve miles from the ord!. nary route, —_>—. SPECIAL SERVICE SQUADRON FOR JAPS, TOKIO, Jan, %—2 P, M—The Navy Department announces the formation of a special service squadron, No details aro given. ‘ keep abraast of the times.one must be well informed ‘on all eopics of the day, No better way than by using The eeven red miles north poet east of World Almanac for 190 works are now closed, ‘The strike is spreading. Additional police have been stationed dn all the streets, The Industrial district on the other side of the Moskva River was parolied by troops and police all night and euraded by bodies of workmen, but no counter occurred, The barristers at a meeting to-day decided not to appear In court for the present, Owing to the disturbed conditions the |celebration of tho 140th anniversary of the foundation of the university here, the first to be established in Russia, Was confines a Migious service in the university A correspondent of the Assovinted Press who amtved here to-day from St, Petersburg found no signs of troops at the depot or in the surrounding street. The street curs aro moving, but, many of the stows are closed, and there Is scarcely any of the freight trame which ordinatily fille the streets, i eow and ts picturesquely and well built ‘The population of the alty 1» about 150,000, "the government of are fea high dille whioh slope to the Yolgn, ees arc ee ® Population of about caine cua is At all corners were posted bullets aigned by Polloe Chief Volkom, warns bh STREETS OF MOSCOW. MOBCOW, Jan, 2%—All the printing Ing the people against the possibility of disturbances and forbidding them to assemble in groups. Alongside thess was posted a London telegram saying that the disturbances at the Russian stockyards and arsenals | the elty, jure forming a cordon on t | 10 prevent the stnicers who are holding ja meeting in tho factory distriats out. J olde fram’ coming in The correspondent drove slavia thoroughtors and f¢ omp erno outskirts Pp the ‘Tver- 1 it almost the Goy- rglus, the former Goy- evnor-Genentl, 4s to have taken refuge in the palace of the Kremin, An air of suppressed excitement pre- vals everyinticre, ‘The towns full ot {rumors among which Is one to the ef. fect that the strikers intend mairchin, to the aka nebay Fehe » outside Moscow, where Grand Duke Sergius meriy, fealded, ed ‘wer due to Anglo-Japanese instigation, both Great Britain and Japan spending vast sums to prevent the Russian Bee- ond Pacific Squadron from reaching} the Par ind adding that all “Rus- Suan who strike refore In cons niyane enemy. Tuer in the centre af |§ ported that they} ACTRESS GAUSE OF A DIVORCE ‘Decree Granted by Justice Bischoff to Mrs. Minnie Nolte —Pretty Elizabeth Bischoff Named as Co-Respondent. —_—- If Justice Bischoff took note of the fact that the name of the co-respond- ent mentioned by Moses Stfassman, in the Nolte undafended divorce case, tried before him to-day, was the same as his own, he did not betray it, and at the close of the testimony the indicated that the proof convinced him that Mrs, Minnie Nolte, 4 handsome women !n a faflor-made costume of black broad- ojoth, with a broad fur oollar and revers on her snug-fitting jacket, was entitled to a divorce from Cam Fred- erlok Nolto, who is eaid to be Hving now with pretty Elizabeth Bischoff, of the Bijou Theatre, in thlladelphia, Mra. Nolto testified that she was mar- red to Nolte in Germany in 188, came to New York three years later and was deserted by Nolte seven years ago, She has a millinery establishment at No, 144 East Fifty-elghth street, and says that "Carl Frederick's only busi- ness was my business up to the time he Joft,"” Mrs, Hugenle Strobach, a very sweet- mannered German lady, and Ladolph, her husband, of No 1417 Greene avenue, Brooklyn, testifled that on viskts to thelr old friend, Mrs, Ehler, at the Ger- man theatrical boarding-house, No, 636 North Sixth street, Philadelphia, in October and December last, they had found Carl Frederick Nolte and Mrs, Nolte occupying the parlor ay whe star boarders of the house, “Mrs, Nolte ts an actress in the Gers man company at the Bijou Theatre," airs, Strobach testiied, and when asked when she saw Mr, and Nolte last, replied: “Last night. from a vie.t to Mrs, Bhler “And is this Lhe Mrs. Nolte you eaw?' asked Justice Bischoff, nodding toward the pretty milliner, “Oh, no; I don't Know this lady,” pitied the witness. ‘Then came Richard Klar, a six-footer, of athletic bulld and an engneer, who caine to America from Germany 10 ober for st and testifled through iebank, the polyglot interpr wt he found board at the Philadelphia house where he had for his ‘boarders the beautiful blonde dp Hllzab Bisehof, and her hu “submit youu a Storm Stops Speed Trial, BOSTON, Jan trial of the new hullt for the United Stat evhment by the No ews Shipbuilding and Dry Dock hich was have been t oft Thateher's Island to-day poned on account of the Diigeard which vee raging asiers oat tovday | Tt has not yet been ly decided when the itrial will take placa ast | Mrs, | 1 have just returned) jy) Pe | house by her husband I never saw her be thletle student, and on | sta he bowed ver low to J Bisehot amd tack fed himse ain to the interpre iile Justice Bischoff sald te Mr, stra f trlal course | earised » Was Post: | for obtaluing money under false pre- | DUKE DOES NOT ASSIST WIFE) eee Telephones His Lawyer that He Is Indifferent as to'’Fate of Bride Who Is In Tombs on "EDUCATION SPOILED HER D’'Zon Telle of His Wife, Upon|Jerome Urges Maximum the Improvement of Whose Mind He Spent Saving of Fif- teen Years. \ Abram D’Zon, of Hast Orange, N. J, {9 no longer a bellever in the higher education of woman, He had antent faith In the theory once, and was #0 foolish as to make a practical experl- ment of it with his, wife as subject. He spent the income of fifteen years upon the process of raising her from a state of feminine ignorance to & high step on the ladder of mentality ‘and inbelligence. Then the lady found, after eighteen yearw, that her husband was a badly elected affinity, that he was not her soul's ideal, her heart's mate or her mind's equal, She refused to be his better half and has left him to @ life of single-blessedness again, D'Zon ts suing his wite for divorce on Abantonment, The suit is 6 Special Mas- ‘ter in Chancery, as ceferes, The Beginning of Trouble. “My mertial troubles," “are the wesult of the working out of give her all the advantages that bring breadth of thought “A woman has no chance in Russia, Bought Her a Dictlonapy. All the time Kare H was Is wife etudy’ bea “ks y while she over Wer he first husband earned he ho: ly, wit @ big ebster diction; ed under his arm t ho hi %6 for. f faa ahd tert tne esd tN ding ‘abroad (> study ue wld her a: that the echools and o thane Sbrowd, Bo her kind spouse anys val aay ie, departed toa the followin 4 of fttoon Bahan Pe cee Hae came, back Switzerland in three desire to study medicine, and her huwband ‘or her tultion ct the Woman'a New ‘ork, Li for her hi, she expr joal College near the butidi a rooms ih Brooklyn, too hum- Texas Charge of Fraud, Mrs, Brodie L. Duke epent a miserable night in the Tombs, after her arraign- ment in Centre Street, Court on a war- rant charging her with fraudulent tran: sactions In Texas. She slept but little and cried aloud at intervele throughout hed night that her husband had deserted er, ‘This last statement, acording to re- port about the Criminal Courts Bulld- ing to-day, fs based upon foot, Champe Andrews, attorney for Mr. Duke, ts said to haye telephoned the District. Attorney that Duke {s indifferent as to the fate of Mrs, Duke, A representative trom the office of Levy & Unger, her counsel, called upon Mrs, Duke this atternoon to male prep- erations for her arraignment for ex- amination before Magistrate Mammer, The lawyers assert that the tndlotment | °, found by @ gtana Jury in, Nacogdoches, ‘Tex., against her for obtaining §3,000 from a bank president by fraudulent mierepresentation 1s without effect, and that !t will be found impossible to ex- | to tradite hers Requisition e's have not as yet heen issued by the Governor of Texas, Application for them was made yeste) day by the District-Atornoy of Neoos doches, but {t was not In proper form and was returned for correction, MRS. BERGIN RETRACTS PLEA OF NOT GUILTY. Doctor's Wife to Bo Sentenced tor Giving 82,500 Check Said to Be Valuelens, Mrs, Irvino’ Bergin, of New Haven, who {s under Indioiment for obtaining moeny under false pretenses, was ar- ned to-day before Judge John A, air in the County Court here to plead to the indictment and have a hearing In the case, Sho was accompanted from the Hud- n County fall to the county court. Dr, ‘Thomas Bergin, her counsel, John W. Zlsgen, and Detective Sergeant Frank Bennett. She retracted her former plea or not guilty and pleaded non vult to the Ho sald he would pass n_ to-morrow. by hee husband ave out a state effect that when d that she had on Pank in New i 1 made a deposit of that amount Inthe bank,This eheok for 4) was given her by a porson who vhase some stock « to be delivered had been deposited esited the cheek and md to purchase the stock nanded, Bergin satd Howard Grinds i of the M. B, Cushton Oy prevented at ima bank the % no funds to meat It amd it hem arest and sho was Indicted tenses, w Judgo Blalr remanded her} was an Tt seems support fee anal o nse, But whe Ge Sees "he craves to ahtne: @ souel star, and pho tion for any one but Left Him, and 80 Did $1,000, ‘When Dr. that cate New unsuccessfully aued me voroe on the ground of desertion, jad me into the red Eo ara enon inj 4g whe wi Sy he Pngland five oe ai jestroyed the Tam 1 ng thie my hands of her, of her, and sult for divorce just so that she may trouble m6 no more, “The trouble is that while she finds herself an socomplished linguist and thinks herself @ citizen of the world, J am still @ good deal of a Russe. I have been able to study in the even- ings, that {s all, and she has beaten me at the intellectual game. “My experiment has failed, ao far as Iam concerned, I have made her into ‘a cultured woman, but she has outoul- tured me and finds me of no more use," ———— TENT HIS SANITARIUM. —_——— Hegelein Sleeps Under Canvas to Fight 0@ Consumption, Determined to fight off threatened tuberculosis, William H, Hegelein, of No, 57 Prospect avenue, Bronx, has erected a tent in his back yard, in which he sleeps every night, with only a blanket and the canvas covering of the tent protecting him from the se- verity of the winter, ‘Three months ago Hegelein’s left lung showed signs of weakness, Physicians informed him he was threatened with consumption, Hegelein Is a man of considerable courage, and made up hig mind to follow out a herole line of treatment, The tent Js furnished with a bed and a chair. URGE ARBITRATION. —$$———— Doard of Trado and ‘Transportation Want Principle BExtended— Also Favor Lighting Bill, = 1e swan |Under Physicians. j i 1s —— tence for Man to Whom Assistant Guaranteed Innis ’ nity in Return for Revelatio Although he was prominyd tmmu when arrested nearly a, ghange of taking money uni omni of necuring appointments to the Bol and Fire Devartments, Willem was sentenctd: to serve six mo in Special Sessions Court to-day trtct-Attorney Jerome tried to maximum @entence—one year fine—imposed. Duke wae arrested in May complaint of John Fitspatridie, 156 Hast Porty-elghth street: rho went to Duke in Aust, a letter of Laois from © Lexow, a Repub! Alatrbot, whose influence he had solicited mit view of getting Into the Ite ‘De ment, Duloe promised to wet Fil & Civil Bervice rating and an ap mont for $000, E wave it to Duke. He got neitt fob norNnls money back. was arrested he sald he Had ‘gi money to Bini! Bonner, Told of “HigherUp” Man. Duke then told an amasing ‘story 8 close combination that has been, & years, holding up applicants for in the fire, police and health ments, He was the direct agent ing with the applicants, but he in then, and always has insisted, the turned the money over to Bpoonet, passed ft to a man “higher up, Sonner was arrested, tried, 0 arid sentenced to serve three m prison and pay @ $500 fine, Then T who hed understood the case him was not to be pushed, was statements. ve Diatrict-Attorney Jerome took interest in the case to male @ appeal for heavy punishment for Judges as policemen or firemen or oivil-nervice places, One doctor i Island City, he said, paid Duke for an appointment as polles immunity knew about the system o! to frlot-Atorney Garvan tee eh wositions, ; BS) to}. ‘I.gave them everything I Q th 4 Dat, pao ae gave tl that oonviated i ey have tumed around an @ cose aginst me on my. a Bey sent for Mr, pitas ie mitted he had promised id the or munity to “T want this oourt to ts es body. unless he is Attorney, Justice Wyatt replied the sentence sdequate cumstances, Months, Went Bad to Worse.’ CURED BY CUTIC Wonderful Change in One In a Month Face Was Clean NAS Ever, “Tyas troubled with ecrema : face for five months, during, time I was in the care of phys My face was in euch a condit I could not go out, It was from bad to worse and I gaye u hope, when a. friend of vn recommended Cuticura rem: " firot night after I washed m Cuticura Soap and ued t Ointment and Cuticura Resol: changed wonderfully, and continul the treatment it removed all ecal and scabs, From that day I wad abl to go out, and in a 2 317, Stage & was ag clean as ever,’ THOMAS J. SOTH, Brooklyn, N.Y. Itching and Burning of the § As in eczema; the frightful scaling, a in psoriasis; the loss of hairandé ing of scalp, as in scalled h facial disfigurement, as in, pin and ringworm; the awful sufferings infants, and anxiety of wornout ents, as in milk orns' d rheum—all deniand a remedy. most superhuman virtues to At a meeting of the Directors of the | Boant of Trade and ‘Transportation, at No, 203 Broadway to-day, resolutions unging tho ralification of the treaties of arbitration were prosented by Osoan us and unanimously adopted, ne resolutions staite that the board rs the extension by this Goyern- of the principle of international | a thon, and a tho representa: | tves tn the United States ate to use thelr best efforts and influence on behalf of the tneatie, ‘The board's Committee on Clty At. aaa fully cope with them, That Cutt Soap, Ointment, and Pills are ew stands proven beyond all doubt, purity and sweetncas, the po ee Santas relief, re of apeedy ani Tmanent cure, abeolnie satieys iid great econ have made them the cures of the civilized Intely pure,

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