Show REDS ANXIOUS 70 I J BEGIN SLA L LAD IN OK There Is Growing Attitude Against Foreigners I j in In C. C City City- Ity I By Peggy eggy Hull N. N E. E A. A Staff Correspondent for Russia and Siberia VLADIVOSTOK Siberia larch March 1 Conditions are worse now than when the a allies fes cam came Occupation of Siberia has done good only In the toWns where there are gar gar- Vladivostok tok and a few others A wave ot of resentment agaInst the I allies has swept the entire non non-Bol- i population following the peace conference Invitation to the I to meet with the allies on Princes Prince's I Island To the non Bolsheviks thIs Is partial I II I recognition of the Bolsheviks And AndI I they regard partial recognition of the j Bolsheviks as similar to full pardon I for tor a confirmed murderer It If the Bolshevik leaders make malte Any I promIses at they wont won't keep them They have betrayed the people I so many times there is no confidence left lett That's what you hear here I I The revolution ot of the BolshevIks in in Russia meant to the large shiftless I I class these things No work work- plenty I money easy life Ufe I Ot Of course thEY have been I I poInted SensIble people such as constitute constitute con con- the buIlt of Americans I and II other ally nations would have ha known they couldn't abolish work and i pUne pline I i I EXPECTED FREEDOM WITHOUT RESTRAINT I I Great masses expected and accepted treed freedom am without restriction It meant takIng whatever they wanted i wherever they saw It i 1 If a man saw a box of cigarettes ina in ina a window he didn't bother to walk through the door to get them lIe put hIs boot buot through h the window Anarchy Is everywhere Vladivostok Is fun fuU of anarchism They fume and rage because they cant can't throw the city Into It a massacre They meet in dark cellars and in well I lighted cafes cates They have been whispering whispering whis- whis lately that General Graves and I General wont won't throw the allIed troops into action in case ot of an up- up f I rising No one knows why they want the I uprIsing There Is plenty of food clothing and coal TheIr prIces are I high though I Lenine and raised wages from 2 rubles 1 a day to 12 II rubles every ery Bolshevik thought ire he was rich But when he found his 12 rubles were worth under th new rule only I about a dollar he went wild again and I I wanted to start another I ENMITY FOREIGNERS TOWARD GROWS I There is a growing attitude of en- en toward foreIgners in this city The Bolsheviks hate Us ug because we are spoiling their ns the other faCtions mistrust us be C use of the PrInces PrInce's island island is- is land nd more be because ause the railroads undE control are et j I I I I i I I I I I I tins UnA In worse condition O everyday v e I Engineers have nothing to do but butI ri around d in motorcars I Russians us s see one train after atter another an- an II other discontinued fo foil lack ot of repairs and equIpment and they ask What are the AmerIcans here Ifor I for American railroad workers who v o have ha been here over a year have done little but live in barracks and go hunting Not because they didn't want ant to work but because every effort et- et fort to repair the railroad and get itin it itIn In first class condition has been blocked b by the Japanese Before moving to my present quarters quarters I had put an American flag on the gate outsIde my door The woman who owned the house in high rage tore It down WRITER ATTACKED BY DRUNKEN RUSSIAN Last nIght as I came home from the battleship Brooklyn accompanied by a Canadian offIcer a Russian n in civilian clothes rushed at me just asI as asI I turned the corner into my street In the dim light he thought ht I was a man The Canadian came running to help me The Russian very drunk didn't I succeed in his is evident evi ent Intention ot of otI spitting on me me With a flank movement movement move move- I ment that brought me at his sIde I shoved him clear off the sidewalk I It if he was only angry before he heI I was furious now But the Canadian I captain seized his arm e him across the street and turned him over over I to a Czech polIceman i 1 Recently another Canadian officer was shot at three times by a Russian Now that lIquor is agaIn sold freel freely I it wont won't be any too safe to frequent i the streets alone at nIght I II I There reB could ll be an awful t massacre I It if the Bolsheviks I should o rise I Nearly all allied forces are quartered outsIde the city jl I FEW ALLIED TROOPS IN VLADIVOSTOK I The maIn body of Americans is four 1 miles out Canadians are scattered over a mile fifty front TheIr main forces are fourteen miles away So are the Italians The Japs and Chinese Chi Chi- nese are outside the city limits There are only a few tew Czechs In town for forr guard r duty There are not more than lliO men at American headquarters and that's halt half a mile mUe from irom the Red Cross house with ts nurses stenographers raphers and clerks There Thue is great dissension over Kolchak's Kol- Kol chaks chak's dictatorship Th The Socialists say he Is aping the czar No one wants to mind anyone else over here however and the only way of enforcing the laws seems to be bethe the bayonet I tr r I vj r n Z i r iR iRto HULL to k bb I n tJ sl I The Tho Salt Lake Telegram reporter In her winter uniform I |