Poland Remains Storm Center, La Herald, 1febr 1905

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LOS

HERALD

ANGELES

PRICE: DAILY, BY CARRIER, 65 CTS. PER MONTH JAPANESE IN TOKIO CELEBRATE AND RAISE GIANT EFFIGY OF GENERAL KUROPATKIN

LOS ANGELES, CAL., WEDNESDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY

VOL. XXXII, NO. 123.

BARD CHARGES M'NAB DENOUNCES POLAND REMAINS BRIBERY ATTEMPT DENT H. ROBERT STORM CENTER

i,

1905.

RUSSIANS' LOSS WAS OVER 40,000

FILES STATEMENT SHOWING OPENLY ACCUSES EXAMINER WARSAW SITUATION- STILL OF CORRUPTION MOST SERIOUS SERIOUS OFFENSE

MAIN POSITION PERILOUSLY SHAKEN

INDIAN FUNDS ARE DIVERTED DRAMATIC SCENE IN SENATE TRAFFIC PARTLY RESUMED

MUST IMMEDIATELY RETIRE

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Claims That He Was Tendered Assur. Vance of' Political Support in Re. turn for Influence in Be. half of Schools



Interne Cold Augment* Suffering and Hinder* Operation* Japaneu Conduct Revolutionary Aglta. tlon Arr.ong Ru**lan*

Paper Has Stores Are Still Looted, Communlca* tlons Interrupted and Mob Is In Attempted to Wreck the Contl. Constant Collision With', nental Building and Loan

Attorney Deotares

Hearst's

Association

The storrri center of the Russian labor disturbances now^ seems to be Poland, A well defined rumor was cur. where the situation is. reported In'; torent In Sacramento at an early day's dispatches as being increasingly hour this morning' to the effect serious. Minor collisions between the that the ;grand Jury of Sacrapolice and the populace nre frequent mento county, now In session, has Warsaw, where the number* of killed In had the bribery cases under con. is esttmated'to be about 100. The mobs sideratlon, and that the arrest of are pillaging shops all industrial Joseph Jordan, the alleged "go. nre closed"; Semi-official rebetween," Is preliminary to the Is. concerns ports received In Pnrls regarding the suance of warrants for the arrest general conditions in Russia nre de• of the four senators Implicated In 'scrlbed as unfavorable. the boodllng charge. ItIs claimed, However, that there ha* Well informed politicians prebeen a partfal, suppression of disorder dict that within the next thirty, In Warsaw, and that traffic has been six hours all four senators will be restored bo 'far as^to permit the arcompanions of Jordan In the coun. rival of some supplies of food. Mursoldiers, ty Jail. derous attacks on however, are reported to be more frequent. In other industrial oenters, InSpecial to The Herald. cluding Moscow and St. Petersburg, SACRAMENTO, Jan. 31.—Gavin ' Mcpractically at an end. Nab, the Democratic leader of San the strike is The Associated Press correspondent Francisco, and .Dent H. Robert, manin St. Petersburg cables that Maxim aging editor of Hearst's San Francisco reform leader, Examiner, met face to face in the sen-- Gorky, the author and in Is no danger. ate chamber, where the boodllng case who is under arrest. expected that, 'he will be released was being investigated tonight for the It is few \ In a weeks. first time, and during the course of the The Japanese are taking advantage proceedings they almost came to blows. of Russia's Internal troubles by means McNab openly accused Robert and of letters thrown into the Russian lines, the Examiner of being directly ;conand are endeavoring to dishearten the nected with the alleged corruption of No additional details of the Senators Emmons, Wright, French and troops. fighting along the Shakhe river are at Bunker. His voice all the While trem- hand, but today's dispatches make it bling with emotion, he pointed his Russian attempted adfinger at Robert and shouted aloud clear that the failure. Toklo rethat he was satisfied in his own mind vance resulted In that according to official advices that . the Examiner had paid Senator ports the Russians left 1200 dead on the as a bribe. Emmons $500 January 25. • emphatically denied • the field since Robert Vladimir,"in the course Grand Duke charges, and McNab then the ' hurled of an interview with the Associated stinging rebuke at him to :the' effect Press, intimated that the people of proof that he would show by conclusive would soon,- be .given. .a "measthat 'the-1Hearst'.' paper, has spared, no Russia representative- government, m£Jof,, ure thVconmeans in efforts' to wreck Its • > anything Vk'e though -he declared tlfle'ntai Bultdihg'aTid Loan association general suffrage was not to be considsecretary',, president, and and ruin its : doing .it has ered. The committee of members dtshimself, 'and. that, ' in ao proposed reforms has pubbeen • the.means of coruptlng the, sen- 'cussing the report with the purpose of ate committee on commissions and re- lished a showing the people that the plans trenchments, of which the four senadecree of Detors accused of boodllng are members. outlined in the Imperial carefully being conMcNab may be said to occupy the cember 26" are \u25a0" . same" positon' in connection with the sidered. report is in circulaAn unconfirmed case now under investigation here as that it has been officially ascerdid Joseph Folk in the St. Louis tion discharge of grape briberies. He has engineered the entire tained that the saluting cannon during' the 'a from scheme for trapping the boodlers and ceremony of the blessing of the waters by developments tonight showed conNEVERFORGIVEN.FORMER January 19, which Im- HAS clusively that he has' a chain of evi- of the Neva on periled the lives of the emperor and to'reMRS.TEVIS \u25a0: difficult dence which it will be members of his family, was a deliberfute. terrorists, act of the their tool beThere were five, witnesses before the ate investigating committee, whose ses- ing a private soldier of the saluting Family of Jilted Denver Man Will battery. sion commenced at 8:30 and continued Use Influence to Limit Popular. until past midnight. These were Clarity of Newly Married SITUATION ALARMS THEM ence Granger, secretary and manager Couple of the Phoenix Building and Loan as- St. Petersburg Anxious Over Economic SCHARF'S EMPHATIC DENIAL sociation; Gavin ; McNab, Managing Poland Conditions in BulEditor Older of the San Francisco Special to The Herald. By Associated Press. States He Merely Reported Conditions letin; i>. H. Robert of the Examiner, St. PETERSBURG, Jan. 31, 2:45 p. m. NEW YORK, Jan. 31.— With Cornelia George Tlqhner, inspector and N. an as They Were —The latert reports from Warsaw de- Baxter Tevis comfortably: married to Special to' The Herald. for the Continental company. pict the situation there and throughout Andrew McKee, :wlth the remarriage .'•"WASHINGTON, Jan. 31.—Prof. E. L. With 'the exception of Robert the Poland as increasingly serious. Minor of Genevleve . Chandler Fhipps to;her husband, Scharf , who Is • charged by, Senator witnesses reviewed the case of the collisions between the troops and police divorced Lawrence W. the proposition prosecution inception from its to Bard with having made ;a and the populace continue to swell the Phipps. a fixture for the early future, to throw the support !of the Catholic time the money is alleged to have been McKee, Hart number of dead. Trade and industry and with Lydia Sutton church to Republican congressmen in paid to the senators fhrough Joseph are completely at a standstill, and the McKee's first wife, livingquietly with return for fan) appropriation for the Jordan, a . newspaper correspondent, presence of thousands of idle workmen her father on the inoome of $300,000 she Catholic Indian 'mission, said tonight who is charged with acting as the "go who have been out of.employment for accepted as lump alimony, society natthe ;Phipps-Tevlsthat, until he had an opportunity of between.". urally supposed this months and are starving and desperate reading Senator Bard's statement he Upon his arrival in " Sacramento adds a factor of the greatest danger, McKee-Sutton tangle was straightened Joseph evening from San Francisco did not care to enter Into a detailed at last. which is not present to.t he same extent ' • ,-, answer. '\u25a0 Jordan was arrested by order of Dis- in St. Petersburg, -where V'J the govern- But from Denver comes the news' Seymour of Sacramento •'.' "If the senator says that Iwent to trict Attorney ment's orders for war purposes have that Gerald Hughes has not forgiven jail. him, up county locked and county, jilting and in the him reDresenting the Catholic church Cornelia Baxter for kept the factories busy. or the bureau of Indian Catholic mis- He will probably be charged with a The American vice consul at Warsaw, that his vengeance hus a reach much sions," Prof. Scharf said, "or made any felony tomorrow for his alleged connecwestern Witold Fouchas telegraphs that many longer than the confines of the • bargain to turn over twenty congres- tion'wlth the, boodllng case. stores, chiefly Russian, have been pil- town is likely• to be realized by Mrs. Attorney Seymour Is hot on sional districts to the Republicans, he District laged by Russians, and that the shops Tevls-McKee. states what, is not true. ,How could the trail of the boodlers and says he and factories without exception jare It is asserted that Hughes' wrath \u25a0" ! turn, over any congressional districts will use every legitimate means to I closed. A general strike Is In effect. followed Mrs. Tevls from Denver lto to either party? secure their conviction. .willingto walk out Pittsburg, from Pittsburg to PhilaThose who are not JOHN T. PARKERSON. delphia, from Philadelphia' to New ' "Ihave no connection with the Cathare compelled to join the strike by York, thence to Paris and back to 'ollc Indian bureau, but for many years threats. Mr. Fouchas Baw no improveHughes now said all Itis the TELLS OF SETTING TRAP 1 have been Interested in the work ment in the situation up to last night, America. Influence will be used to limit family's and have done a good deal for it. For and reported the receipt of bad news the popularity of the McKees on both years and years the various denomina- Secretary of Phoenix Loan Associa. from Lodz and Radom. Bides of the water.. tional schools were supported by tion Is First Witness the It is estimated that the number' of The Hugheses were strong enough to government and no question .Associated Press. was BySACKAMENTO, killed or wounded- at Warsaw is about make Denver a cheerless abode for Long Jan. 31.— be- 100, which is a conservative estimate. the Gradually raised. Protestant and Cornelia Tevls. schools dropped out for the reason that fore 8 o'clock, the time set for the in- The rioting In Poland willlargely af- the Baxters Whether they can carry this war into bribery churges of the vestigation the Catholic schools were economically the economic situation. The fac- this city Pittsburg and Paris successfect superior. Then the A. P. A. cry was against Senators E. J. Kmmons of tories at Wursaw, Lodz, Petrokoff and fully remains to be seen. mined against the Catholics and the Kern, Harry Bunkers and Frank other Industrial centers in Poland have French, of San Francisco, and Ell schools were cut off.'. i.'..'\u25a0••'-, been compelled to gradually reduca lobbied In the in- Wright of Santa Clara, the supreme their output and decrease their working CHILD'S PLEA DECIDES CASE './/Two years ago I terest of a bill to extend the appropria- court chamber, where the Inquiry was forces since the outbreak of the war, and Countess Zvonsky Lose tion for two years. I went, to a num- to have been held, was crowded to which has almost entirely closed th-3 Count Custody of Little Girl ber of congressmen and they told 'me standing room. > While the largest por- Siberian and Manehurian markets. The tears of Mine. Pascalina Carruthat, while' they would like to .vote for tion of the crowd was clamoring for ad- The result has been that thousands of It, they, were afraid on account; of the mittance, the !special committee ap- workmen have been thrown out of caburu were quickly brußhed aside yes'A, P.- A. movement. -I then made a pointed to conduct the_ investigation employment for many months, furnish- terday when Judge Wilbur in the sudraft- of the 'conditions in fully seven- came to order and soon after announced inga horde of hungry, dissatisfied, des- perior court granted her the custody of Salt ty-five throughout the coun- that the proceedings would be held perate men, among whom . the news her godchild, little Pascaline try, 'showing the Catholic vote, and In the senate chamber. from Ml. Petersburg produced an out- Pedro. and, ' Zvonsky up to Countess told these men that Ifany of them was The senate lobby was soon filled with burst of riotous and Incendiary spirits. Count * attacked because of voting for the a curious throng and nearly ail the It Is feared that a large proportion of yesterday had won an advantage In contest for the affections of the litbill I would see to U that their posl. members of the upper house occupied these thousands may be utilized by the the one, but after yesterday's testimony tlon was mado'cleur. Iwont to Sen- their regular seats. A large number revolutionary organizations in Poland, tle ator Bard, and a great many others. of women filled the seats in the gallery. which is the hotbed of socialism, and luid been Introduced Judge Wilbur siJust now iforget just what I showed The accused senators took seats with the movement may develop a purely lenced their claims. him, but I had this list and It was for their attorneys at the bar of the, house. political:character though there Is no In the petition for letters of guardgodmother says the child purpose the represented The Investigating, committee, composed Indication* bo far of any co-operation ianship the . mentioned. I in her custody, since October, no person but myself, but I ,Rai- on the part of the intelligent classes has been do.not of Senators Belshaw I(chairman), ' 1904, at which time she brought Faoca(Continued •\u25a0 !•»«• Tor**.)
TBr Ansoclnted Press. 31.—SensaWASHINGTON, Jan. tional disclosures In reintlon to the alleged use of Indian trust funds for thfe support of sectarian schools were made today by Senator Bard of California In a statement to the senate committee on Indian affairs. Inaddition to the charge that Roman Catholic schools have received 98 por cent of the money expended under contracts made by the Indian commissioner, the senator said that he had been approached by a representative of a Catholic association, with a promise of carrying a certain stated number of districts in California for him In return for his influence In bringing about a continu.ance of such favorable contracts. .The statement' of Senator Bard created a stir in the committee and he was asked to give a detailed account of the transaction as well as any other matters relating to the use of trust funds for sectarian school purposes on which he' was Informed. He filed with the committee a statement covering the conversation and also a list of the districts the Catholic' association proposed to carry for him. He then dls-i cussed the statement of S. M. Broslds, agent of the Indian Rights association, and also quoted from a circular issued by M. K. Shiffen, secretary of the association, charging that the discrimination in favor of Roman Catholics was by direction of the president. Senator Bard' said that he attached great importance to the act of congress of June 7, 1897, which declared that.it was "the settled policy of the government to hereafter make no appropriation whatever for education In any sectarian school."' The senator stated that he had .been informed that . there was * no record \u25a0at the interior department :t>f for -the" diversion of these trust. funds to the support of Catholic tnislons, but he had the statement that 1 !Ifwas -done on an -oral order, which agents of the Indian Rights association allege tohave been issued by the president. .: : •' sevThe committee" took the statement riously and it was" the sentiment that at the, next meeting an amendment would be' j offered to the Indian appropriation bIH prohibiting in the future the use of the Indian trust funds in the manner charged. Senator Bard said that he informed that a very small had-^been percentage of the Indians interested gave .their consent to the application of their funds to the support of sectarian schools, and that a large majority of the Indians were communicants In the various Protestant churches located within the various reservations.

By Araoelsttd

da£«

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Jand

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JAPANESE

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HUGHES TO WAGE WAR ON M'KEES <

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Continuous Attacks

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Associated Press.



ST. PETERSBURG, Jan. 31, 6:15 p. m. Although the Russians have aban- • doned their advance, the latest' official dispatches received here Indicate that., the fighting is not over. Tha Rus- .*,\u25a0' sianß continue to hold the captured ' ' villages. The Japanese resumed the January 29 and desperately;*"^ offensive assaulted the Russians but were every- V^> where repulsed. General .Kuropatkin. .in• .dispatches)

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and 30,Lreports

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line ttorn ,Urepel,>asmall ''city In*the south^of France. ' San Llttffe Pascaline Pedro took the stand herself yesterday, and Itwas evident that the "child favored her god' mother.; ;

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"."Iwant to go to my godmother, tearwalled the little one, whereupon Judge Wilbur granted her plea, and the reunited family left.the court- room refully

joicing.

, DRIVEN MAD BY STUDY \u25a0" OF WIRELESS TELEGRAPHY Patient Declares 2400 Volts',We re Sent Through His Body by Local Company Rendered insane by. excessive .' study of the science of wireless .telegraphy Edward Parker yesterday / was committed to an asylum by Judge Wilbur In.the, superior court. ParkVr asserted that he_had consulted with the man In' the moon fon several occasion** through his system of wireless telegraphy, and when the J tourt endeavored to disabuse him 'of this delusion he became angry., ' Last Saturday afternoon he applied to the ;district attorney for;protection, saying' the local managers of the wireless telegraph company had cause'dhlm to suffer pain by sending 2400 volt's of the invisible current through his body.

NEW YORK POLICE SCANDAL City Club Appoints Committee of Nine to Investigate By \u25a0

Associated Frets.

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ALBANY,N. V., Jan. 31.—President New York City, club,'

A". G. Fox of the

announced here this afternoon the committee which he was directed* to;appoint by the meeting held In New, York yesterday for the investigation of the The nine men New York police. named are as follows: Milburn, Elihu Root, Isaac N. John G. Sellgnuin, William Church, Jacob H. Scheff, George McAneny, Henry tie Forest Baldwin, James McKean, August G. Fox.

HERALD'S CIRCULATfON > iN LOS ANGELES:

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Attention of the public,is called to the fact ».*at the circulation of The Herald in the cliy of Los An. geles Is g -eater than that of the Examiner and second only to that of the Times. This circulation Is permanent, delivered at the homes as specimen and not thrown about copies or swept Into the gutters. The Herald, as the oldest mom. Ing newspaper in Los Angeles, Is more widely read than most of it. contemporaries, and Its value at • an advertising medium Is corrs. spondlngly greater.

ithat

the Japanese losses in the recent fightmany being bayo- , The total number of Japanese prisoners has hot been aa- . already eer tained but they exceed 300." The Russian losses January 28 among posts the advance .were five officers and fiftymen. •\u25a0".'; General Kuropatkln says the Japanese offensive was Indecisive jand that the Russians,, who j| were in excellent spirits, continue to occupy the villages on their right flank captured during the .\u25a0.\u25a0•',•;*- . ;>, recent fighting. HEARS: BOGUS LETTERS FROM The Russians continue to successfully bombard Sandepas, where many Japan-ISADORE RUSH ese have been frozen .to death." .; j,\';•.' The' Associated Press telegrams from do not indicate .developLest News of Daughter's Death Prove Manchuria ments .of Importance since General Forged Grlppenberg's Communications order to abandon tha /Fatal, yesterdayadvance. The Japanese Are Read to the Sick' . made a demonstration In the Ieastern Woman district, but apparently it was not serious. The operations on the Russian ' ' ' 'right will probably not occasion fur« 1_ Special to The Herald. t i 31.— jWIL.KES-BARRE, Pa., Jan. Relatives here have received word that the- news of the death of Misa Isadore Rush, * the- actress who' was drowned while bathing at Coronado Beach three months ago,., has not yet been Imparted FORECAST to her mother, who is .in New York Southern California: Cloudy, un. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0• . city. . '. .weak, settled, weather. Wednesday; prob. and It is p Her mother- is very ably showers; fresh south winds. shock ,ofJ knowing of her feared the : Maximum temperature In Los An. daughter's death would kill her. geles yesterday, 64 degrees; mini, Consequently they guard her from the mum, 52 degrees. news with the:utmost care. "When she asked .-, why,'Mlss ;Rush did .not \ come home? for the \ holidays, it was explained .that her company Is still In the l—Bribery charges. west and will make a long stay there. 2 Russia's enormous loss. letter, purporting to 3 New engine pump. .'. Each week ja : actress," her, come from the Is read 4—Farce behind scenes. ' to It>having:, been Mlss^Ru'sh's habit "."to 6—True religion aim of leaders. write her jmother weekly. letters. 6—Editorial. 7 Mantelli's art saves opera. B—Clas ifed'8 Classified' advertisements. OPERATION IS PERFORMED 9 Southern California news. ;• ,

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ing: were very heavy," noted and sabered.

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CASUALTIES LARGE

Kuropatkln Claims to Have Repulsed By

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Prcs*.

TOKIO, Jan. 31.— The dUpatches from the correspondents with Maraut* Oyama's army In Manchuria place tha Russian canualtlen In tha fighting,' Ing from January 26 to January 23, nil from 36,000 't0 42,000. The Japaneaa looses are placed at 7000. Fighting 19 , still continuing. The defeat admlnls-j tered. General Kuropatktn wassevera and affects Ills main position on tha Sluikhe river so seriously that Una predicted his retirement to Mukden or, beyond Is Imminent. Manchurlan headquarters, telegraph., ing yesterday, report that In'the flght«c Ing which has occurred since January;*' 25 at Llkaje'ntan, Chenchiehpao arijl Helkoutai, the Russians left'overi 1200 dead on the field. The Russians yesterday shelled the Japanese center, using field guns and, mortars. Simultaneously they shelled a portion of the Japanese left, usinjf * twelve heavy : field guns. There had been a series of small Infantry encounters in front of the Japanese center and left.'

MOTHER NOT TOLD OF ACTRESS' FATE .

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THE DAIS NEWS

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ON F.JNCESSiVICTORIA

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King-Edward's. 'Daughter Treated for 12— To oust fakirs. Appendicitis by Sir Fred.

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• «... crick Treves • Gerald Hughes of Denver will wago social , war on Andrew H. McKoe and brldf. of actress drowned three months ago LONDON, Jan. 31.— The Princess Vic- Mother yet \ not been told of death, and bogus lettoria, !daughter of King,Edward, un- has tels are read to her. Senator Bard declares an attempt has been derwent an. operation for appendicitis made to bribe him. at Buckingham palace this morning. FOREIGN The operation was performed by Sir Russia's losses In fighting- of past few day* Frederick Treves, surgeon In ordinary amounted to more than 40,000 men. Princess Victoria undergoes an operation for to the king. .A bulletin subsequently appendicitis. Warsaw continues to
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By,Associated Press.

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Wealthy eastern woman dissolves' matriRich Gold Strike In Nevada monial alliance In I^os Angeles dlvorca court. new courts RENO, Nev., Jan.' 31.— Mining excite- Question of Ihe location of the judges and attorneys..'.-is perplexing local ment that promises to exceed , even Taxpayers object >to' proposed distribution oC tunds. , the boom at Timopah has started in school Spirit of revival Is spreading throughout Xxw the Peavlne district, four miles from opiriapply to civilservice Reno. Immense bodies, of' free mill- mlislon forofficials chance lv rules. • ing,ore averaging .'from 12 to ,$2000 per Polio* uommlsalon appoints thirteen addt- ,; ofneers. ton have, been uncovered and the hills tlonal Street fakirs at SUth and Main streets called are lined with' prospectors.* to council's alteutluii.

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