Attitude Of Poland - Says Sienkiewicz, Ny Tribune, 11dec 1905

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NEW- YORK DAILY TRIBUNE. MONDAY. DECEMBER 11. 1905.

2 Inevitable in

arrested Xrustaleff with

January,

the Intention of deliberately *prefcJPlt*.t!n« matthey ters br challenging the organizations before

w«t fully prepared- This show of strength also itivM color to the report that the Douma eleotlon law. which. It Is now expected, willbe pronrol«*ted next week. Is to be followed by ener-

A CHINESE ULTIMATUM. . \

10.— At a meeting of the of the Chinese guilds and tretlo measures to restore order, even merchants here to-day the former American feecemary to declare martial law In various formulated the following: demands, the granting parts of the empire, on the ground that it would of which, they said, would be necessary to bring be impossible to hold the elections in the present the boycott to an definition of the term laborer. First—A distinct state of the country. At the same time, it Is Second— That legislation affecting the Chinese understood that it is the Intention of the gov- must have the approval of the Chinese governernment to go a step further in the direction of ment. Third—That American consuls In China be for admission to appeasing the peasants by providing for pur- authorized to Issue certificates the United States of Chinese, except laborers, chase by them on the Instalment plan of a por- without hindrances, except In cases of fraud. Fourth— The Issue of passports by the Chinese and the private tion of th« crown appenagss or other governments for submission to Amerestates that have been hypothecated to the gov- ican consuls preparatory to the granting of certificates. ernment land banks and unredeemed. / Fifth Medical examination prior to departure to be conducted by one American doctor and one undoubtedly would European While such a programme doctor, the latter to be appointed by Chinese authorities, with a Bimilar examinareceive the sympathy of that section of the the tion on arrival in the United States If found the restoration of necessary. population which desires order above everything, especially of such busiThe sixth and seventh demands call for most of Bt. favored nation treatment of Chinese residents ness interests as the manufacturers and travellers In the United States. Petersburg, who yesterday passed a resolution exceptional The eighth demand repudiates prosecuting agitators the to the full Infavor of registration. The ninth provides: extent of the law, It would provoke the SocialThe admission of Chinese laborers to the IslPhilippines, provided ists and revolutionary elements to desperation. ands of Hawaii and the willing. the local authorities ere necessary The Moderate Liberals also believe that such a inquiry on arTenth In case of detention, provided sepolicy would be suicidal and would be sure to rival, there Is to be no curity be furnished. Technical errors in papers bring In Its wake repression, then an armed are not to be considered a bar to admission. proletariat finally bloody, a and conflict with the Eleventh -The admission of the families of Chinese residents, the importation of women berevolution.



believe that Count Witte will rot lend himself to such a programme, that his fall is imminent, and that when he goes he will leave reaction and revolution face to face. It Is again rumored that the Premier already has > by General Count r*stpn'»d and wiil be succeeded Alexis Ignatieff. Another rumor is to the effect that Lieutenant General Mistchenko, one of the leaders in the war in Manchuria, who is now on his way to St. Petersburg, will assume the dictatorship.

The Associated Press is unable to obtain confirmation of any of these rumors. On the con-

trary, it 'earns from a higrh source that Count "Wine's position, as far as the Emperor is concerned, is secure, and that his majesty is giving him th1? widest co-operation. Nevertheless, the count's failure to accomplish something tangible Jias caused Mm to los* jrro-.in'i steadily in pHblls opinion. Even "Th» SIovo." the organ of the L*».eal Order?, turns savagely on him, saying that he is a failure. an£ that it will be imoose'ble to restore public confidence until power has passed to the haiil-s of the- douma. when Count Wltte must give way to a Cabinet selected V>ir the na:ional assembly. The editor? of th*> newspapers aro holding a their attitude meeting to-right to determine toward the new prf^i"law. In view of to-day's ' is happenings, it practically certain that they VilW vote to defy the law. Tn an interview yesterday &L Kr;ir=taleff said: It is probable that a general strike will be Delegates who declared just after Christmas. were Mill to all parts of the country report that the proposal for a strike has been welcomed \u25a0with enthusiasm, and in fact that the whole country is ripe for revolution. A vast majority of the workmen are true revolutionaries, though starvation sometimes compels them to subordinate their political aims. for an armed rising 's highly Preparation advanced, but It cannot hope to succeed unless joined by a considerable body of troops. The propaganda, however, has made such strides in th*> army that the revolutionaries are justified in counting on sufficient support from that victory. source to insure everywhere The peasants are willingto join th«? revolutionaries. They are the principal sufoppression from and ferers excessive taxation, and have lost confidence in the Emperor. The revolutionaries have their own postal and telegraph service through which they are able to keep in touch with their organizers throughout the empire. \u25a0

MUTINIES AT WARSAW.

Entire Garrison of Citadel Heported in Revolt.

—The

"Warsaw. Pec.

ferment among the

troops is increasing. A hundred soldiers of the Kejcholm Regiment headed a procession this morning: sinsrin? revolutionary songs. In Marsralkowska-st. their way was barred by a detachment of the Grochowsld Regiment, the commander of which ordered his n^en to fire. The soldiers refused to do so and permitted the procession to pass. The commanding- officer then

fled.

A rumor is current that the whole garrison of the Warsaw citadel has mutinied. Itis impossible to verify the minor. The authorities refuse admission to the fortress.

WORK RESUMED AT MOSCOW. factory Employes Accept the Condition of

a Ten-Hour Day. strike of th» factory employes is abating-. The majority of the men Jiave resumed work, accepting- the condition that ten hours shall constitute a day's work.

MR. EDDY IN NEED OF REST. (undated).— Spencer F. Eddy, secretary of the American Embassy, will soon leave Pt. Petersburg on leave of absence. He it In poor health owing to the strain of the St. Petersburg

recent situation. After receiving treatment in Germany, he will go to the United States. The Westinghouse company has obtained the first of the series of contracts for the electric street car system of St. Petersburg:. It covers the cost of the cables, $600/00.

TO

EDWARD JORIS.

SAV^

ei tJ* ri

The Orchestrelle

to

Randel, Baremore &Billings Billings Court, Fifth

Its Importance as an Educational Factor and as a Meant of Music Accessible t$ of Making the GreattheMasterpieces Whole Pub He

Avenue :t Thirty-fourth Street

ARTIST AND WIFE DIE. STODI DELAYS CARMANIA. DEATHS NEAR TOGETHER. New IJunard Turbine Steamer, Unale to Make Port, at Bar, Carl Frederick yon Saltzafs Etxh The lfir triple screw turbine steamship Carmania, 3f the Cunard Line, did not reach her pressed Desire Fulfilled. pier yeterday. Unusually rough seas and a

.

D*e. 10.—A group of international lawyers is seeking to Induce the powers to intercede •with the Turkish government regarding the case of Edward Joris. the Belgian -who was condemned to death by a native court at <*onstantinople for alleged participation In the attempt to assassinate the Sultan In July ln*t. It in contended that the action In the case of Joris infringes treaties with the Turkish government Antwerp,

ATTITUDE OF POLAND.

Says

German?/ the

Henryk Sienkiewicz.

WORK OF

z

;.

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for

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IJSK fu SmS^r/^Russia

mmmmm "nubile



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FINDS FIFE STARVING.

;-Sg?S3|SSS|S hawlVoland

Mother and Children Without Food

Roof

mmmsm

. '\^A

The Aeolian Company

° rs;.:^m

-"'^^r

<

Naturally

nonoV

FURS AND FUR GARMENTS

The Ihe

At Special Prices.

TUESDAY.

Gorham Company 7

absolute^ Indispensable. I refer to the tiring* quartet literature. As every oat knows, nearly all forms of mask: art •oscepdble of bang played on the piano in*th«form of arrangement^ so called, because the original music is not adapted to the possibilities o/

"rqufesce

FIFTH AVENUE and THIRTY-SIXTH STREET and TWENTY-THREE MAIDEN LANE



anything in the idea of the Orchestrelle which can be construed as it all prejudicial to the highest aims of the artist?" "Not at all. In the early days of the instrument, it was sometimes urged against it that it was a always answered that machine. I by pointing out that almost everything was in some sense a machine. Just consider the pianoforte, or the pipe-organ, or the human voice, or yon yourself what are they all but machines? The human eye b a splendid example of en exquisite piece of mechanism from Natare's own workshop. Yon can use any musical instrument as a machine, if yon wish. There are many persona who play by hand and yet play mechanically. But when the Orchestrelle is played intelligently,it is very far from mechanical in its see

YARDS.

'Admiral Capps Reports of Construction.

S/LVERSMITHS AND GOLDSMITHS,

'zi

(Continued fma Tkmvdsy) do yen all, the instruments-are Spaldmg, "Professor

,

Originating with the painstaking the early Convents and highly favored during Colome! times, the Gorham Company's productions in Bead Embroideries are a worthy revival of a weJl-nigh forgotten handicraft. Many beaotift*] examples of this work, in articles of . personal convenience which are quaintly effective both in color and design, may be seen in the new Gorham Building

\~~__

Harvard University

Just

iSL Altman & Clfl.

RUMANIAN Relatives

of

nineteenth Street and Sixth Avenue,

Memorial Services.

MOULE CLOTH

new

SILK LINED

Vorfe.

OVERCOAT

if



sur-

A Revival of Bead Embroideries

The

; AN INTERVIEW With Walter R. Spalding, Assistant Professor of Musical



SIBERIA-ALASKA

KBttOW. Dec. 10— The

EFFORTS

Sue

Recent developments and improvements in this instrument.

have given an impetns to the growing interest

heavy Drthweat gale made itImpossible for the Carl Frederick yon Saltza, an artist, well known big; tuclner to reach quarantine before dark. In this city, father of Philip yon Saltxa, Columbia's Up t 8 o'clock yesterday the Ounard Line left hal* back, died last night at St. Luke's HospitalMrs, yon Saltia died laat Thursday In the same believe that the steamer could be brought up yon Saltza had often to herpler, and an unusually laxee crowd ashospital of heart disease. Mr. quoted, "As we shall always live, so shall we die semble to see the steamer warp in. At 4 together." When he <3ied the husbar.d did not know nngcr-occciiooii. was received that it was lmwhen word o'clock how jropbetlc his words had been. posslbt to put a pilot aboard, because of the wife were taken to St. In the case of cfoborato string yon Saltza and his Mr. It was announced that the steamer Luke's Hospital, at about the game time, nearly heavysea. however. like d*9 P Major «fuaftats morning. two months ago. The artist suffered from a com- woulonot dock until thla Quartet of Beethoven (Op. 59, plication of diseases, while Mrs. yon Saltza was afThe> was considerable disappointment among: No. l), for instance, it is all bat flicted by heart disease. Although his condition was the peons who had assembled, and not a small ing safeguarded. for even the most skxlihl impossible precarious to permit him seeing his wife, he numfcr remained for an hour longer, hopinif too to the TJnitea Twelfth— Tha re-admission received daily several reports of her condition from that y some chance the steamer would come player to give an adequate idea of States of Chinese who have been deported for non-registration, on proof of their possession of the physicians and nurses. up toier pier. Many had come to greet friends the work by band. The parts freThese reports from her bedside ceased four days who ere on board, and a large number were quently property in that country or that they are creditEc so closely together as to sighed and their faces ago. The hospital authorities ors tliere. mero curiosity to see the docking* of impossible thereout be of performance. were expression th*y when wore an unusually sad arranged (i. c., die ports iliitmbcd asked by the Datient for some news of his wife. of th first turbine merchant steamer to enter this ->rt. conveyed to tha suffering man Their evasiveness and given a new position editable to On old gTaybeard. who declared that he had the truth, and the shock, it is thought, hastened the fingers ofthe pianist), the bel, the present, but says such an increase willbe impei ago, and that her husband, SQUIRREL COATS; CLOTH PALETOTS. FUR LINED: peared, leaving her to take care of the children. from tlve before long. F-ench engineer, for the building of a railroad by the *tusAlaska, approved They slept piers has had in and on the until to be<=n stables Siberia COATS OF ALASKA SEALSKIN AND A SELECTION OF has named a commission Wednesday, when she discovered the vacant sian government, which JEWS MOURI last to formulate contract regulations. house in Union-aye. What little money she had FUR MUFFS AND NECKPIECES IN A VARIETY OF was soon gone, and for the last four days she and the children had nothing to eat. Baron de l»bel represents a group of French STYLES. * The police turned the children over to the capitalists, who propose to build a railroad from Russian Victims He Society by for the Prevention bridging tunnelling Cruelty by and care of the of Siberia to Alaska to Children, and detectives were sent out to find under Behring Strait. It Is said that the enterprise $300,at between CTiO.OOO.OOO and the father. He was found in a hotel at Wythewill be capitalised the money centres of France, ;ue. and North 6th-st., where he had been living 000.000 and thatUnited to take be asked States will Russia and the Memorial services for the dead and sufferi since leaving his family. He was arrested on a bO!''lp. Jews in Russia were held yesterday by the F*i: charge of vagrancy and taken to the ManhattanWhen Magistrate O'Reilly Rumanian American Congregation, Shaaral St ave. police court. SPANISH TORPEDO BOATS B of the condition in which the family had moyini, at its synagogue at No. 03 Rivington- heard Sharkey in $300 bail for a been found he held The synagogue was draped in black, and lo further hearing, and ordered the police to make Heavy Damage at Carraca Ar- before the hour set for the services was crowd an Investigation. Fire Causes with East Side Hebrews, among whom w senal—One Man Killed. some who had relatives among the victims MODEL AS NTJRSE matter TROUBLE. InBlack or Oxford. We make tte edges plain, smooth, without stitc&iaff, felled Dec. 10—A fire at arSpain, the Carraoa the outrages in Russia. Their grief was intei Cadiz. Louis Dramant presided at the meeting, a senal to-day destroyed two torpedo boats, which hand. It looks and wears like a $i?o Overcoat. Let us prove It,a trial costs jw in Yiddish were made by Profess were under repair, and caused other heavy dam- addresses Sohachter, < Wants Husband Invalid Wife's Sister Seminary; Arnothing. ago. of the Jewish One man was killed. Solomon Rev. Dr. Radin, of the People's Synagogue, a rested Process Server Also Figures. the Rev. Leva Riskis. The style In our Fell Dress Suits at $40, or Tuxedos $35, silk lined, cannot it [Ey Telegraph to The Tribune.] W. A. Seigel and a male chorus chanted Ps? passed at any price. A liberal collect XC, the prayer of Moses. Allentown, rvr.n., Deri. 10.—James Jefferson Gilv/as taken up for the aid of the sufferers. to retain Mrs. A desirable Christmas gift, an order for a suit of clotnes or overcoat, w&icn cat Be Marguerite determination lespie's Under Sheriff Julius Harburger made an i dress in Knglish, in which he told of the s1 Semmel, the former Xew-Tork model, as nurse for obtained without risk. Money deposited willbe returned If receiver desires. We CM ferlngs of the Jews in Russia and the work ti his invalid wife, led to trouble here to-day. Bemeasures for country for their relief. cause his slßter-!n-laipt. Miss I.lille Richardson, of refer to taken the past twenty-eight years. has been done in this Chicago, re-entered the house this morning, GllSamples, with our "Pointers on What to Wear," given or mailed. her arrested, but Pennsylvania WILL ASK PRESIDENT TO HELP JEV lespie tried to have law prohibits a criminal warrant on Sunday for Detroit, Dec. 10.— Nearly fifteen hundred perse anything less than murder. To-night Miss Ri^lmrdKon changed her plan of crowded the Detroit Opera House this afternoon and started for Chicago to bring her campaign, meeting against called to protest a mass the Jew here. At th* station a process server held outrages In Russia, and adopted a memorial parents up until 6he paid the fee of $100 demanded by her asking him. to take action her lawyer here. President Roosevelt workers in Becure the Intervention of the Russian governm^ to prevent a recurrence of the attacks on the Jo's



Many persons

musical temperament.

Chester Billings &Son

I

It represents the orchestra and reproduces

mask as no other single instrument con, save only tho Aeolian Pipe-Organ. The Orchestrelle appeals to the higher

orchestra]

in Gold and Silver Establitktd I*4»

the Boycott.

Hong Kong, D«a

automatic instruments.

Holiday Gifts

Jewelled

List of Concessions Needed to End

if it he boyoott committees

The Orchestrelie is distinctive, differing radically from afl other

Diamonds and Pearls

ARNHEIM,

UNIONS TO HONOR JOHN SWINTON the meeting of the Central F

Shortly before

-

ETTMANIANS STJPPOBT EMPEROiR.

1

\u25a0

Movement to Drive Out Hungarians from Robert Border Provinces. Union No.

crated Union adjourned yesterday Campbell, delegate of Typographical said that It had .come to his knowledge that body of John Swinton, who was such a friend labor, and who died several years ago, had nebeen burled. His body was placed in a recelv vault In Greenwood Cemetery when he died, wh It still remains. Herman Robinson, financial secretary of the C tral Federated Union, Bald that shortly after 3 Bwlnton's death a committee was appointed by 1 Central Federated Union to get contributions foj monument to John Bwinton as a tribute from tanlzed labor. The committee applied the c officials for a site, and they promised to to consit the application, but apparently have done nothli discussion, After some a committee of appointed to take charge of the matter three « and rent v next Sunday. \u25a0

Broadway & Ninth Street.

\u25a0

Vienna, Dec. Reports reached Vienna to-day of the beginning of what may prove to be a serious movement among the Rumanian Inhabitants of Southern Hungary in favor of the Emperor-Kinr against the Magyars, who in the name of Hungary are lighting against the crown. The Rumanians living in the border provinces of Temea, Arad and Bihar are holding secret meetings and campaigning against the Hungarians, crying- "Down \u25a0with the Hungarian gentry!" and •'We -will not let barm befall Francis Joseph." One Hungarian who opposed a Rumanian candidate for membership in the Chamber of Deputies hus been murdered, and gendarmes have bc*n asked for. Many Hungarians are leaving the country districts for the towns, while others ere armIng themselves. The Rumanians arc ©yon declaring that they will drive out till Hungarians from Headache* and Kettralsta from Cola* the provinces bordering on Rumania, Laxative Bromo Quinine. th« world wide Cold m. The Rumanians number two and a half millions Grip remedy, removes . the, cause. Call for "the t- In Hungary. as ocrainst six and a hall}million* of tame and look for alroatum of a W. Prove, 28a. Magyars. I L

KELLYS ON HIS TRAIL! Man Seehs Island Sentence Refuge from Gang.

as

A well dressed man rushed Into the "West SOth-at. station last night and told Sergeant McGowan that he was being hounded by the Paul Kelly gang and asked that he be locked

up for safekeeping. "That gang has been making my life miserable," he said, "and no matter where I go, some one of the band Is on my trail, why, they

even tracked me to the station house doon 1*"*» if you would be kind enough to send m« to the island for six months I would be out of thatt way. The Kellys believe that I 'squealed* oa them, but I never did. They'll certainly *do's»« If you don't lock me up." The man. who Is about thirty-live y«ara e&id he belonged to a good family, and &** dress and manner bore out this statement. B* said he was a personal friend of Inspector 3ftClusky and was acquainted with many to**" entlal persons In this city. He gaT« ths naa« of Michael Conway and said he bad no Warn. but afterward said that this was false. He w«» locked up on a charge of vagrancy. He had •*>' been drinking.

•**

ftromg ftuimne *f™fm^wf Cores a ColdiaOceDay, Crip 3 Day, ©» Sf?j£?rV*r**o> fc& 3*» Always .Remember

graxative

~

the Full Nam© in

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