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TROUBLE IN RUSSIA.

PRESS ASSOCIATION-COPYRIGHT Bt. Petersburg, Sept. 18. Many servants of the Czar’s palace have been arrested for showing active sym» patby with the revolutionaries. Two hundred people arrested athepzard at Siedice will be tried before a courtmartial oomposed of officers implicated in the massacre.

Representatives of British Jewß appeal for the prevention of terrible crimes. Socialists at Odessa have issued a proclamation setting forth their intention to kill three officials for every patriot executed by drumhead oourt martial. The first victims will be military judges, governors, and oommanders-in chief.

JEWS PETITION KING EDWARD

PRESS ASSOCIATION - COPYRIGHT Received 11.9 p.m,, Sept. 19. Bt. Petersburg, Bept. 19. Seventeen sailors, sentenced in connection with the Sveaboag mutiny, were shot yesterday. Eighty others were sentenced to penal servitude and service with disciplinary battalions. Eleven were acquitted. Gunboats and troops stopped Warsaw traffic on river and streets in one district while soldiers searched nine-hundred inhabitants: London, Sept. 19. Jews have petitioned King Edward to intercede with the Czar regarding the Siedice Jews. Sir Oharle3 Hardinge, in response to the depntatioD, telegraphed to Sir Arthur Nioolson, British Ambassador at St. Petersburg, concerning reports of prepara tions for massaoreß at Warsaw and elsewhere. Received 11.21 p.m., September 19. St. Petersburg, Sspt. 19, M. Stolypin, the Premier, informed a deputation of Jews that he had telegraphed it was not desirable to summarily deal with Jews at Siedice. The Czar's abandonment o! his intention to shorten hiß cruise in order to attend General Trepoff's funeral is interpreted as oonnected with fears of an attempt on his life.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GIST19060920.2.13

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Gisborne Times, Volume XXIII, Issue 1865, 20 September 1906, Page 2

Word count
Tapeke kupu
260

TROUBLE IN RUSSIA. Gisborne Times, Volume XXIII, Issue 1865, 20 September 1906, Page 2

TROUBLE IN RUSSIA. Gisborne Times, Volume XXIII, Issue 1865, 20 September 1906, Page 2

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