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SIBERIA

1884.

Jan. 15. The street sales of the St. Petersburg Listók are forbidden.

Jan. 15. The street sales of the St. Petersburg Sufflér are forbidden.

Jan. 22. An application for permission to publish a monthly magazine in Tomsk, Western Siberia, is denied.

Feb. 1. The Rússki Kuriér receives a second warning.

Feb. 1. The Vládikavkáz Térek suspends publication voluntarily as the result of an order transferring the censorship of it from its place of publication to Tiflis. The editor announces that he "will suspend until a more favorable time for newspapers."

Feb. 19. The street sales of the St. Petersburg Nóvosti are forbidden.

March 1. The Gazéta Gátsuka receives a first warning for its "unquestionably pernicious tendency." The street sales of the Sovrémmenia Izvéstia are again permitted.

April 22. The St. Petersburg Vostók is warned a third time, and is suspended for four months on account of its "continued and audacious attacks on the higher clergy, and its unpermissible judgments concerning church government."

April 29. The Annals of the Fatherland, the ablest and most important review in the Empire, is permanently suppressed on the ground that its policy is hostile to the Government and to social order.

May 6. The Gazeta Gdtsuka receives a second warning for the "prejudiced character" of its editorials and "for presuming to question the justice of the first warning."

May 20. The street sales of the Mirskói Tolk are forbidden.

May 20. The street sales of the Svet i Téni are forbidden.

May 24. Constantine Staniukóvich, the editor of the St. Petersburg magazine Diélo, is exiled to Western Siberia and the magazine suspended.

June 10. The street sales of the Moscow Rússkia Védomosti are forbidden.

June 13. The St. Petersburg Eastern Review receives a first warning for giving false information with regard to the actions and dispositions of the Siberian authorities.

July 1. The St. Petersburg Nediélia receives a first warning for speaking with approval of the French Revolution, in an editorial article entitled "A Great Anniversary."

July 8. A correspondent of the Irkútsk newspaper Sibír [Eastern Siberia] is arrested by order of an isprávnik, to whom one of his letters happens to be distasteful, and sent under guard by étape to his home one thousand versts away.

July 29. All the numbers of the magazine Annals of the Fatherland, for the last twenty years, are excluded from the libraries of all ecclesiastical schools.