Revolutionary.
PAN-RUSSIAN MOVEMENT. POLICE AND STRIKERS' INJURED [By Electric Telegraph—Copyright] [United Press Association.] , (Received 9 a.m.) St. Petersburg, July 22. The strikes are regarded as a recrudescence of the revolutionary movement, and as reflecting the strike of oil-workers at Baku against inhuman conditions coupled with police tyranny. One hundred and sixty thousand are idle in St. Petersburg. Many newspapers are not being published. The streets are swarming with police and Cossacks. The disturbances were renewed at Vibprg, where barricades were erected and many police were injured. The police fired volleys and wounded several strikers. The movement is spreading and is assuming a pan-Russian character.
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Bibliographic details
Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXIX, Issue 78, 23 July 1914, Page 5
Word Count
104Revolutionary. Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXIX, Issue 78, 23 July 1914, Page 5
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