The evening world. Newspaper, January 3, 1906, Page 3

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“RED SUNDAY" 10 BE MOURNING DAY FOR THE RUSSIANS Government Will Oppose Any Demonstration and Bloodshed May Follow. ST, PETDRSBURG, Jen. $2 P. M— ‘A general meeting of the Workmen's Council and delegates of all the prole- tariat organizations has, been in wecretly since last night thelr future programme. All that is thus far known ts that they are planning to turn the anniver- sary of Jan. 2 (Red Sunday,” when most serious rioting in St Petersburg oourred) into a day of national mourn- ing during which it {s planned to make Aemonstrations in memory of the “mar- rs.’ All the shops. factories and theatres will be closed and the street-car aut railroad services will be stopped. Requiem masses will be celebrated {and processions, in which the workmen ‘will wear crape o1 their sloeves, will march through the streets. No papers will be allowed to appear except with black borders. It ls proposed to make a gigantic, peaceful manifestation, but if they at- tempt to carry it out the leaders fully understand thet it 1s sure to precipitate plood#hed on w large scale. The Government is putting on the crews tighter and tighter. War Min- ister Rudiger has issued an order ab- @olutely prohibiting officers, privates and employees of the Ministry of War from participating in any political societies or attending Meetings, and prescribing heay {shments, whica will be ini ‘without trial. The use of the telephone between St. Petersburg, Moscow and other points, which has been employed in communt- cations between the revolutionists, has been prohibited to private individuals except by permission of the authorities. ‘The number of arrests are increasing and the prisons are so crowded e Nastc Shisn says, rooms with air space for fifteen are holding sixty persons. So far as ascertainable not one of those arrested during the last three weeks has been released. Prof. Paul M, Milukoff's Narodbaia which yesterday made an ardent appeal to the electors to fre- for the campaign and to o‘gan- meetings for the propasation of the programme of the constiructonal their un ble g, America since the massacres. REBELS EXECUTED BY WHOLESALE. BMOSCOW, Jan, 3.—According to the stories in circulation here, the number of summary executions of revoluttonists is large. Mr. Smith, an Englishman. ““AJAX’’ WHITMAN, SOME OF HIS FEATS OF STRENGTH AND HOW HE WAS How The Aneta a AJAX WHITMAN, STRONGCOP, MANGLED BY RUNAWAY TEAM) = a SOME FEATS OF AJAX, STRONG COP. On his first arrest carried 200-pound prisoner to station-house. Threw team of runaway horses with one hand. Rode a mile to hospital on bicycle with injured man on his shoulder. Carried two drunken men five blocks to lock-up. Lifted car full of passengers off a fallen horse. Lifted (time and again) trucks from car tracks. Lifted 200 pounds with teeth. ‘Arrested broken-down 60 horse- power auto and pushed {t half mile to station-house. Carries pianos up and downstairs. Caught in Wheel, He Has Both) Legs Broken—Feared He Is Internally Injured. “Ajax” Whitman, the strong man of | the Police Department, had both legs| broken to-day in an herofc effort to stop a runaway {ce-wagon at One Hun- red and Twenty-fifth street und Fifth avenue. He was taken to the Harlem Hospital. It 1s feare? thore that he was also internally injured @ has been a Dicycle policeman | for some time and his beat lies along | upper Fizth and Seventh avenues. He waa riding across One Hundred and ‘Twenty-fifth street at 10 o'clock to-day loaded when ‘a ‘team of horses as big as the Sropping Runaway INJURED TO-DAY. as Tilting Car From Tesh YOUNG PATRIOT WHO ENDED LIFE TOASTING POLAND. WEDNESDAY EVENING, f ALL LAWS 60 HERE, SAYS GEN. BINGHAM That Is His Comment on Alleged Tip to Pool- Rooms to Open Up. In his dally talk with the newspaper men at Headquarters to-day the new Police Commissioner, Gen. Bingham, didn't say “damn it" once. Nelther did he say definitely what his course would be in the matter of pool-rooma which are alleged to have had the up to re- open to-~day in full blast, ‘The reporters found him at his desk, smoking a time-hallowed brierwood pipe at intervals and burrowing into a moun- | tainside of mail. Opened and unopened envelopes bad slid down in an avalanche around ‘him. ‘I'm just starting m,” he said, “and trying to save a dinky nickel here and « big dollar there. You boys most eo easy with questions until I get the fang of things better.” Gen. Bingham sald he hadn't oe lected his First Deputy Commissloner yet. He was surprised to hear William M. Iving had commented unfavorably upon his appointees for the other two deputyships, “I did choose Mr. O'Keeffe and Mr. Mack and 1 didn’t," quoth the Gen- eral. “I had good advice In these ap- pointments and I took it, Referring to his luncheon with Je- rome yesterday, he aaid: “This department will co-operate heartily with | the Distrlut-Attomey's stat. Dhe two offices will work to- gether.” Referring to (he subject of pool- rooms, he said: “I have nothing to ahout this + Lean only say that all the laws are going to be enforced all of them.” CARDINAL WITH POLICE BLOCKED BLACKMAN PLOT Vannutelli, After Getting Letter Seeking Money, Acted at Once. JANUARY 9, 1806. RT. Pucnagny roprietor of machine works here, sich gore wecidentally bursed yester- | Pécheron variety, scared by a passing POMB Tee ut ccerouials pene ane t e eo P e urrer . day says he personally witnessed @ num- automobile, dashed north along Fifth Vannutelli, Archpriest of the Liberian ber of exeoutions. See ee) nievily: laden hes: | poll ibiens:tnierer ier faa slec) promieed See Ai Lote Dan Wr thenne ie I Ti s t 2 i é A jagon behind them. to, atten: posted in Rome Dec. reatening the f kK When the sores evontionar?) | “William Rudios, of No. 2n8 Fifth ave- | pcAJ8X,, Was married to Mis# Julia | publication of compromising letters sakt n Ime oO rines,. garrivon of sugar factory nue, the driver, ‘was on the cat baed | Benamin, Y Alderman to have boen written by the Cardinal,! ston the supply of coal. |auire by feeding off the balance of considered, fcr “recognition” meant Benjaniln, on June 11, 189. They had | Mved since in a pretty apartmeny at No, 56 West One Hundred and Fifteenth Street. Thoy had no children until a little boy wos born to them on Dec. 28. Since the birth of this baby Whit- man has been the proudest man in the department, and was keen for some heroie effort with which to distinguish the ocoasien. ‘Whitman's first name 1s Sellg, but he has been known so long as “Ajax” that even his parents have forgotten the other nam| | If he did not send one thousand lire ($200) addressed to the Initials "C, B.,” | to be left at the post-office until called for. The Cardinal handed the letter to the police, who to-day arrested a well- ‘dressed man who asked for a letter with the initials “C. 5." "Phe prisoner, whose name is kept secret and who protests his Innocence, proved that when the blackmailing let- ter was posted in Rome he was in dered the officer in command of the reg- ular troops after a few brief questions picked ou the viotims, who were marohed twenty paces in front of a firtng squad, received a volley and @repped without a struggle. Mr. Smith even adds that he thinks he recognised Gov.-Gen, Doubassoff among those present. It is generally etated that the victims were handec that no one be allowed to work but Members of the Labor Trust who Paid dues regularly to support the Labor Trust magnates, and such an act would rob free Americans of their liberty and constitutional right. This did not please the Labor Trust, but by pressure of public opinion tht mines were allowed to open and the people again rupplied with coal, This row forced by the Labor Trust cost the citizens, This work has_ been Stop the supply of Bee ea aie tried and ts going on Tleht DOW. . Stop ins factories’ and waees. Rene Tan has felt the fire and 1s The ‘more the common people) Pesinning to inquire. freeze and starve the quicker they He has borne patiently with the will rise en masse and demand CS eee of the labor union and iden dictation of; zed with the efforta to get g00 employers submit to the Boe rei eT ee aeo ena f Labor Trust, no fier toe toenail or unjust. and good wages. These good results That makes the Labor Trust mag-|have been secured, and the common weighing a cake of ce. At the first Jolt of the horses he fell off on his head. The upper part of Fifth avenue is a great promenade for nursery maids and children, and ‘Ajax’ realized in an in- stant that there was serious danger If the runaways swerved io the sidewalk. He spurted after the lumbering wagon and drew alongside near the corner of One Hundred and Thirtieth street, Caught in Wheel. Stop the supply of bread. e, ever to a firing squad with the com- udolff, the driver of the wagon, was Genoa, where he landed on reaching | b mand ‘take them to the river,” which| Still awheel he caught at the bridle|arwested aed taken to the Harlem Italy from New York. how much the/™Man says, “Now let's have a Square rn wras tantamount to c gentence and’ war-| of the fying horses, One of the big ani-|Follze Satlon. charged wih criminal : cave pew te burned, ** Deal alt around.” tra motes, end one of the Labor om | Fant for thelr i mala jerked up bis head and whisked| Ton Gway. He was held in $1,000 ball But now the common citizen be-| But no; the possession of power |'Trust leaders is quoted as saying that ae Clestlag: of the Riazan line s0/the big policeman off his wheel, Ajax|for examinatian on Friday. s ins to inquire— “ has made the Labor Trust leaders ar-| “the Miners’ Union ot ad F $16 4 Sm the Somionovaky regiment, was ac. | weld on with both hands until the har- TO Biitviy should I be made to suffer|rogant, and they now use thelr old| 000,000 of this extra money, whieh | fended by much Bloodshed. “At every | ness broke and he fell in such a manner’ AT T EGF) CROOKS ARE to ‘pull the chestnuts from the fire’ | supporters, the public, as a cat’s paW|was not a fair division.” So the | Ser ding iecllcee inven’ iendases Cette | coy oe ieee rere omumne vetnesne for this Labor Trust? and burn the paw beyond endurance. |common people suffer and pay all the | BE Bokionovaley and ‘Andrariete “ware | spokes of the front wheel. In this way NABBED BY POLICE. “why should my sick baby or weak| As an {Ilustration: bills, | captured and sbot, over three him-| the plucky policeman was carried along old mother be kept from the needed) ‘phe managers of the Coal Miners'| ‘The printed report of the Coal Gred persons are reported to have been| for more than one hundred fest before SSS warmth or my family kept from) tnion, a branch of the Labor Trust, Commission was ihe volte ee the peo~ A newepaper roports that a number |® Was shaken loose trom the wheel. Man and Woman with Rogues’ isan: bread and meat? 1|8eek to force the coal-mine owners| ple expressed through thelr. chosen of “Drujinists” were placed in coffins | Both legs were badly broken and he L “Why should the factory where I/t5 discharge all Independent miners| representatives, and has become. ale $24 _smugeied, past “tne In the | was unconscious trom pain. Gallery Faces Arrested by ast Toast for Freedom Was] te pidn’t Appear There To-| work be shut down from lack of c08l/snq ¢o eraploy only members of the|most an annex to the Constitution of Sates suspicious, "s' funcea ‘proosasion | __TW° mounted policemen had come to Suspicious Detectives. Foll icide i PP and my living stopped? inion, and also demand that the|the U.S. and as cuca tue people der 4 Gms stopen and the casker war orenet, | Whitman's assistance and stopped tne spi ‘ollowed by Suicide in Day After His Experience |" “Why shoula the Tabor unton stop |rmincowners keep back trom the|inand'that it be obeyed tad ue SOR Inside soldiers found a man and |runaways. Ajax was carried to a near-| Detectives Beeker and Rein, passing Hi the street cars and prevent me from) jiners’ pay the union dues, to be|page of coal supply be allowed. The é four bombs. Thereafter all suspicious | py drug store and taken from there to] Twenty-third street store yesterday is Room. of Yesterday. going to work? leaders force |t¥rmed over in a lump to the Labor/mine operators have obeyed the sug } and the sokllers even went to the length | the Harlem Hospital. Though he may afternoon, saw coming out a man and “Why should labor leaders thoir| rust magnates. A wily scheme to| gestions of the people made by the ¢ ing the mustaches and beards|be internally injured his splendid a woman whose faces had a familiar me to pay $26 de mors Aiae mo to {force the miners themselves to stay/ Commission, and in all probability F mourners in order to ascertain | physique is expected to pull him through| look. The detectives invited the paid to| After reading to-day that the uprising + ar no | up Rore before they in the trust or not get work. That/will meet the miners and be ready | aie raees cont to | Whitman Is one of the heroes, as | je tquarters. . of the revolutionists in Poland and Rus-| Senator Patrick Tenry McCarren, who) work? will put absolute power in the hands|to go into another 8 years’ contrast j here, The police are gathering ine [Mell as the strong man of the force. | mney turned out to be George Bur- had failed, Joseph Mertsineg, | Was left standing in the chilly at-| “Why should Industries be inter”) of the union managers. So, to bring lexactly according to the rules laid 3] Dersons ‘doubd_ carrying Touded sic | Whenever y POE ia ey Senter tour veers ots ce NG: 90 frectestma] nee74 old, committed gulside | munphere of: he Clty Hat rosterany: fat fered with ae eerste te this about a strike is ordered. and|down by the Commission. | But the West Twenty- street, Manhat- ‘ag-| ms nD 2 e word goes out to picket the|Labor Trust leaders say t oer ba bong ah st The|hundreds by the Labor Trust? mines, interfere with the movement gts Gertie Sterns ner, at No. 813 Cortlandt avenue, the Bronx, He turned on the gis and the policeman found him dead in his room. Mertzineg was a driver in the Bronx, Mayor McClellan, is; down and out. Mayor did not say so much to-day, but there was only one Inference to be drawn from tte statement that "the willing to abide by that decision, but will insist that all independent men be thrown out of work, and demand stiil shorter hours and still higher tan, whb, the eight years old, of nue, Boston, say, !s a noted loore, twenty- lo. 72 Warren ave- “Why does this trust demand that its rules be obeyed as superior to the laws of our common country? of oars, slug the independent work- men (and a number have been killed), march the strikers {n small armies DIVORCED COUPLE WEDS. engt! prowess lives by stopping runaways Mach Had many thrilling résques from the river. 4 were: eee sme A Proud Father. seat RAYS, med, ut in no wise fat-| where there is @ colony ‘of ha cbuntry-| Brookiya organization had not made any| “Why does the Labor Trust insist|into the cities, terrorize the people,| wages, So, if the coal supply is cut \ “ Parted from New Mates, lery. On Burges: person came here at the outbreak of | recommendations regarding the appuint- |} upon an anti-injunction law to rob|destroy property, thus keeping theloff trom the people and they are 4 ‘When stationed on the lower east side terror to. evil-doers. the courts of any power to issue a restraining order to prevent the as- saulting of ‘men and the destruction of property? “Why should a trust established for the purpose of selling labor de- mand that no one buy labor except from the trust and subject only to its poor, needy and sick from coal, make the factories all over the country shut down, and therefore take from workmen their wages, Then, from lack of money to buy food, hunger and cold will join with general dis- tresa to make the common_prople 4 suffer. Babfes and the sick and weak terAviiy should a tew men (less than may die, but that seems a necessary 20 out of every 800 citizens belong |Part of the programme, to the labor unions) arrogate to ake them su a unt! pee ate ernment and con-|tremity, they send up a a See een aetnt the employers bow in submission to the great majority who are wen embers or the labor untons?" any demand of the leaders of the La- men. i two new sllk waists and the Internal trouble in Russia and Po- (Boecial to The erguine Sree) pitas aia atin appr know: onnid glov PONE inl sepeeat al nas Sithoneh a student, ‘fe took, the A) sf ‘was sa! a e close re- was 1 im. ui The mar. the erenath Os his right and left, lance to @ man who snatched a/°f driver for a contractor. Then he be- ir of made to suffer again as in 1902 it will =| be directly the act of the Labor Trust, and the public will hold them responsible. It may interest the reader to know that the Common People have begun to organize to protect themselves from the out- rages put upon them by various trusts, including the Labor Trust. There are now 487 local organizations in the different cities co-operating |with the Nat'l Citizens’ Industrial 1 Association to bring about industrial peace, The plan is to restore to the citi- ment of deputies In that borough.’ There is a Deputy Commissioner of Bridges to be appointed,” the Mayor said, “and there is also a Deputy to be appointed, to Fire Commissioner Deyte. { have not been asked to use my in- fluence for any particular individual, but I presume that Brooklyn men will be appointed. That is customary" enator McCarren Was not around the City Hall to-day, but Michael J. Garvin, of the Thirty-ffth Assembly District, was, Mr, Garvin succeeded Louls F. Haften as leader up in the Bronx, and @a been downtown every day since election to see the Mayor and gather in vlage to-day of Alfred J. George, a| dif | by Often he wou ing to 1e@ station- |-ken ‘ho! his "4 ” 000 Abbie Bi gan to spread revolutionary doc! Siarwarse Inte ot New Faria neteeain | Raat Gane atea Tiscraaritea,” one ee a eee ase aL NG 160 [among ters, Nate Ten ae soRARne cam’ he it le 2, Bair who sloped antere is a singular! yn ahe came 10 her door tt hey No [over the failure of lin mission to, thi ago sivoroed to the Injury bed again and saloon near his home and invited countrymen to have thelr last drink him. They thought he meant ha w going back to the o'd country, as his mission had failed. They all drank $0,008 health of th nemeoners and ‘e were many expressions of hope that with the spring would com: freedom from the Czars rile oe? The young man had made an effort he to end his Ife on the night before last. | “third. street last year to a P ure West Pty icnock, and who was cap-|Country, Last night he. went into for it had been arr: next day while trying. to in five-day-old baby on Ri egeerare| Burns) pe a ransom for eT z 8, He nad invited g seore tnd ie Goth prisoners were arraigned in Jef- Halt ‘prominent ferson Market Court, Mrs. Wagner, coming home late. | (ie to which he thinks he = .|bor Trust, no matter how tyrannous. smelted gas and traced ft to her boatd- tied. “Tne” Mayor "hag always “been ree eettt ned a government “ot | All this occurred In the coal strike of ens of each community thelr. old v en turned on | “too busy’ to see him. Wien Mr, Ga | ¢ by ‘0 control. jo «effort ts & short time and he young man wes | vie wan asied to-day it the Mayor waa) the people, by the people and for the|1902, until public opinion demanded | MEI 10 seennos | tO Te oe ‘They made just laws for|& Settlement. easily arous Last night sure to accomplish his end. He the tips out of the gas jets, stuffed up every crack and crevice in his room, and also tied a rudder tube into hig mouth, He was dend when found. Saloon-keepers in the neighborhood to the number of a doz- en said that before he went home to K-himself the young man had taken what he sald was his Inst drink In the various places, From the last saloon he entered he went direct to his room and prepared his suicide. he mi stil busy he simply giared, thea turn away, people.” their own government and_protec- tion; elect and pay their officers to carry out those laws. So the President of the U. S., act- capital trusts, but to keep them prop> ing as the Bxecutive of all the peo-/CTY Sig peor nan Tee ple, appointed a commission to care-|thousand members of the Citizens’ Under the laws of the people's gov-!fully investigate the conditions and| Associations employ in the aggre. 4 ernment soclal and business organi-| lay the facts before tho people. This|2\f0"anout. $600,000 people. The | zations can exist, but all and every|able body of men, representing the | vint tg growing at rapidly, organization must be subject to the| people, spent weeks in careful work, en Tea Maeasine ds th laws which protect all people. land reported that many of the miners| The Sauare, Deal Magazine Is the 9 — Citizens would be absolute slaves|worked but 6 or 7 hours a day, that Orso of the Citizens, and its mission and the government itself totter and\they had comforta: » houses, and !8 to present and discuss the ques | fall if small but powerful bands of|further, that every citizen must have tions before the people in a plain men were allowed to rule the great|the right under the Constitution to| Way, that the common man may un~ majority. work, free from molestation, even if| derstand his rights and how to main~ Suppose one band takes to itself|he did not choose to bend his neck to|tain them It Is on sale at news- absolute control of all beef, another |the dictates of the labor leaders and stands, 10 cents, and sent monthly @ of flour, another of coal and wood jjoin the Labor Trust. A recommen-|year for $1.00. and another of all labor, These|dation was made for a moderate in-| Citizens’ Industrial Ass'n, St, James crease of wages, which the mineown-| Building, New York. a WIDOW’S $50,000 SUIT JOKE TO HIM. (Special to The Evening World. COATESVILLE, Pa, Jan. 3,—"Let me introduce you, friends, to Mrs. Pear- gall, the charming widow—the $50,000 beauty." So excliimed Supt. Joseph L, Gallup, of Worth Bros.’ steel plant, as he and some companions on Sunday eve: ing came unexpectedly face to fa with the pretty widow, who has sued World Advertising Magic! DEMONSTRATION IV, First: Set.down the following figures + 1,134,959. The number ‘of World Advertisements printed last year. Second: Remember that this is 206,316 more than in 1904, Third : Now start at “‘one’’ and count slowly up to i 7,944,713 : : R. 8, Brown to Wed Naltimore Girl, BALTIMORE, Jan, 8 —The engagement was announced yesterday of Miss Cha: Jotte Grimshaw Garrett, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Canby Garrett, of Bal- tuore, to Reginald Stewart Brown, son’ and (7 ctf ’ Ue ayaa stows brown, Of New * would be trusts of either Capital or paid en taahh poles of the number, of ANSWERS" re. York. | Misa Garrety is widely known in| him, for hear’s ease In the #um of/7 thor or both, and conducted only|ers agreed to, but the demanded “rec- + C. W. PosT, Last Year's World Advertisements as estimated from the for the gain the members would ac-|ognition” of the union would not be President. q 'mers at the country homo of her mother. ‘They met at a rosdhouse not far from Who was a Mixes Tce. and la related to} Coa! the oldest families I that State. ee fy a eraduate of Harvard. ig SESS ile, and with the $50,000. plain- Gallup delightedly observed, at was one of her fonmer admirers. ay apparently embarrassed. Her ee] THE PINK EDITION OF THE EVENING WORLD bin. ond) CONTAINS ALL. SPORTING ¥ZWS OF THE DAY . — known “‘Results"’ of World Ads. bearing World Office Addresses. O P| \ ii suey Bi Sa:

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