ST. PETERSBURG AGAIN
i i I' ' • I *-.—— DISASTROUS DISAFFECTION AT THE FRONT. ♦»» [N.Z. Press Association.—Copyright.] The latest news tends to show that further sensational events may be reaI sonaoiy expected in the near future. The simmering stage at St. Petersburg, to which the movement was reduced by the conclusive mothoda of General Trepoff. appears to be about to be replaced by a state of things much more nearly measured by the point of ebullition. The capital is being ilooar-J with extreme revolutionary literature, the recent strikers are again leaving their work in thousands, and Father Gapon is circulating a petition for reform. Outside of the capital the most serious developments are the "disastrous ciisaffection" of the army in Manchuria., and a general strike (including the Siberian railway men) at Irkutsk, near the western shore of Lake Baikal. The continued disorder in Poland gains a suggestive sidelight from the stoppage of ail mobilisaI tion of Poiioh reserves.
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Auckland Star, Volume XXXVI, Issue 34, 9 February 1905, Page 5
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156ST. PETERSBURG AGAIN Auckland Star, Volume XXXVI, Issue 34, 9 February 1905, Page 5
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