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The Daily record and the Dresden daily : 14.11.1908
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v^-ir THE DAILY RECORD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1908. No. 844. GENERAL NEWS, (Continued from page 3.) SEDITION IN FRENCH ARSENALS. Toulon, November 12. A police search in the lodgings and club premises of the members of an anarchistic and anti-Semitic society calling itself “La jeunesse libre,” and which is composed of workmen employed in the Arsenal, has resulted in the discovery and seizure of several bundles of seditious leaflets and papers. “SALOME” PROHIBITED IN RUSSIA. St. Petersburg, November 12. At the last moment the police authorities prohibited the performance yesterday evening, at one of the princi pal theatres, of Mr. Oscar Wilde’s “Salome,” under an assumed title. The house had been sold out, and the audience had assembled. The performance was prohibited in virtue of the statutes relating to the prevention of crime, and the preservation of civic order and public tranquility. ILLNESS OF THE EMPEROR OF CHINA. Pekin, November 12. It is reported that the Emperor is very ill and losing strength; among the people it is even rumoured that he is dead and that his younger brother has been brought to the Palace. The Emperor has suffered for ten years from chronic inflammation of the kidneys, and diabetes has now supervened, in addition to pain in the hip and other maladies. THE ALLEGED DISCOVERY OF ANDREE’S REMAINS. Copenhagen, November 12. Captain Storm of the schooner “Inga” now at Valencia, has telegraphed to Ritzau’s Bureau a statement which in the main confirms the report published yesterday of the discovery of Andree’s remains. Captain Storm says that the discovery was made by Captain Chalker to the north west of Cape Mugford, Labrador. MONUMENT TO LOST AERONAUTS. Strassburg, November 12. The balloon “Zeppelin,” belonging to the Oberrhtinischer Verein fuer Luftschiffahrt, the owners of the balloon “Her- gesell lost in the Gordon-Bennett competition, burst, after making its 25th journey, in landing on the Col de Bon- homme near the French frontier. No one was injured. A monument is to be erected to the two Lieutenants, Koertsch and Hummel, who were lost in the “Hergesell.” THE POWERS AND SERVIA. Vienna, November 11. The Fremdenblatt writes: “The report in yester day’s Petit Parisien of identical action having been taken in Belgrade by England, France, and Russia requires to be set right and supplemented. The facts are as follows. Some time ago the French Government advised the Servian Government in the sense of calmness and peace. Recently that advice was repeated, and the other Powers joined in of fering it, and were thanked by Austria-Hungary for so doing. The admonition of the Powers was the more called for, as Servia had for some time past been adopting comprehensive measures, especially ir. the way of giving large orders for weapons and war material, besides openly equipping bands of arm ed agitators with the object of stirring up insur rection in Bosnia, while inflammatory speeches were delivered by personages in high places. The at tention of the Governments was called to those proceedings on the occasion referred to, and it was at the same time suggested, as desirable that their representatives in Belgrade should continue to speak as heretofore in the interests of peace. Austria- Hungary has in consequence refrained from direct intervention in Belgrade. KING ALFONSO’S NEW CHEF. King Alfonso has just carried off Marechal, the chef of the Paris Jockey Club, who began proceedings at Madrid on November 1. The Jockey Club, says a press report, was loth to let him go, but courtesy to a young gourmet of a monarch prevented the kitchen committee from en tering into competition with him. As a matter of fact, the club has coolly got its own back off another club’ the equally aristocratic but a trifle duller “Union,” that is to say, the Cercle de l’Union Diplomatique, on the other side of the boulevards, almost opposite. Having lost Marechal, the Jockey Club has bought over the Union’s chef. This is the second time the Union has suffered indirectly through Royalty. Some time ago King Leopold, having enjoyed a “canard aux navcts” at the Jockey Club| instantly secured the services of the author of the master piece, who was Marechal’s deputy. The Jockey Club bowed, and went over the way, where it bribed one of the Union’s cooks as a substitute. Now the great Mare chal himself has been captured by Royalty, and once more the Union Club, which never seems to mind, and apparently possesses an inexhaustible supply of cooks, has furnished a successor. Indeed Marechal himself had come originally from the Union. He is said to be un rivalled in the preparation of carp and grouse. He him self said that he has no real rivals in anything. He ■ ■ DRESDEN ■ ■ ■ ■ RICHARD BORN First class ladies’ tailor. An der Kreuzkirche 2, II. Pension Cronhsim Vllla: Eisenstuck ^ vrunneim, Strasse 47, corner of Muenchner Strasse. Modern style. Garden. Excellent cuisine. Best references. Moderate terms. German conversation. Bruhl&Guttentag. WORCESTER HOUSE SCHOOL DRESDEN, 19, Gutzkow Strasse, preparatory for Schools and Universities. Instruction in Classics, Mathematics, English, German, French, etc. in class or privately. — = Boarders received. - H. Virgin, W. H Oxloril. J. H. Halln 10. A. Cambridge. Hugo English spoken. Purveyor to the Court. English spoken. 4, See Strasse 4, corner of Zahns Gasse. — Woollen underwear. == Flannel shirts. Ladies’ Jerseys. Knitted Waists. English and German knitted Goods'. Fast-colour black Hosiery for Ladies, Gentlemen, and children. Shawls, Shetland veils, Wool and Silk, Skirts, Caps, Felt Shoes and Slippers. =■ Novelties of the season. Borack R T(A&fillAli art-painter (married), paints • JLwV*W Ua^I. miniatures or por- traits from photos on ivory or porcelain, and executes orders for any kind of painting on porcelain. He wishes to employ a few more lady pupils in his atelier. Moderate terms. Specimens on view at Werder Str. 11, pt., left, Dresden-A. References given. Ipntitf Graduate from Chicago Col- lege of Dental Surgery Dresden, Prager Strasse lO, I. Specialist in straightening teeth. SCHOOL FOR GIRLS. Classes in English, Arithmetic, jVlathematics, german, french, and £atin. A small number of resident pupils taken. German and French resident governesses. Private instruction if desired. Miss Virgin, Schnorr Str. 80 (Villa). Fiflu/orc fnr Hate vases > bal1 dresses; ostrich feathers, heron IlUlVblu 1UI Hula, feathers, stoles, palms, fruits, flower-papers, etc. from H. Hesse, Scheffel Strasse 10-12. CHURCH SERVICES: DRESDEN. ALL SAINTS’ (ENGLISH) CHURCH, Wiener Strasse. Sunday, November 15th. 22nd Sunday after Trinity. 8.0 a. m. Holy Communion. 11.0 a.m.Matins and Sermon. 6.0 p.m. Evensong and Litany. Offertories for Missions to British Seamen in the Ports of Northern Continental Europe. Monday, November 16th. 10.0 a.m. Matiq?. , Tuesday, November 17th. 10.0 a.m. Mafibs^ Wednesday, November 18th. 11.0 a.m. Matins Ind Litany Thursday, November 19th. 8.0 a.m. Holy Communion. Friday, November 20th. 11.0 a.m. Matins and Litany. Saturday, November 21st. 10.0 a.m. Matins. Annual General Meeting of the Congregration on Tuesday November 17, at the Grand Union Hotel 4.0 p.m. Chaplain: The Rev. C. A. Moore, M. A., B. C. L. THE AMERICAN CHURCH OF ST. JOHN, Reichs Platz 5, at the head of Reichs Strasse. Sunday, November 15th. Holy Communion *8.0 a.m. Sunday School 10.0 a.m. Morning Service and Sermon 11.0 a.m. Address on Confirmation and the Christian life 3.0 p. m. Afternoon Service and recital 5.30 p. m. Friday November 20th. Litany 10.0 a m. Womans Auxiliary 10.30 a.m. J *B isbo P is expected for Confirmation Sunday, December 6, at 11.0 a.m. The Rev. J. F. Butterworth, M. A., Rector. CHURCH OF SCOTLAND (Presbyterian), Bernhard Strasse 2, at the corner of Bismarck and Winckelmann Strasse. Divine Service Sunday morning at 11, and evening at 6 o’clock. Communion on the third Sunday in January, March, and June. Rev. T. H. Wright, Minister. WEATHER FORECAST FOR TODAY of the Royal Saxon Meteorological Institute. Moderate westerly winds, cloudy but no heavy showers warm. ’ acknowledges that King Edward’s chef is a brilliant artist, but “there is just ever so little of a romantic touch about his manner.” Now Marechal does not find fault with romance and poetry in cuisine. “But, after all, is not true classicism the real thing? I am a classic.” THE PROBLEM OF A CIGAR. The Paris correspondent of the Telegraph reports the following amusing legal anecdote:— Was the cigar alight or out in a carriage of a train to Versailles on an early day of July, 1900? A suit for £2,000 damages hangs by that question. On the day mentioned a M. H., a railway inspector, and a M. de M., described as a clerk, were travelling together in a non smoking carriage, the former being with two ladies, while the latter’s only companion was his cigar. The ladies objected to the cigar. M. de M. said it was out, M. H. said it was alight, and a row ensued. To this day M. de M. maintains that the cigar was not alight, and M. H. affirms that it was, and the point is not yet settled, if it ever can be. The row of July, 1900, be came so violent that M. de. M. complained to the com pany about M. H., who had informed him that he was a railway inspector. M. deM., described as a clerk, must be a peculiarly influential clerk indeed, for the result of his complaint was that M. H. was cashiered, though at the time the latter was unaware of the reason of his dis missal. It took him five years to find out that he had been cashiered owing to the cigar incident, and over three years more to get his case into the courts. He is now claiming £2,000 damages from M. de M., because, through the latter’s complaint against him, which he maintains to have been baseless, and which he was never given by his employers an opportunity of answering, he lost his situation eight years ago. SOUTH SEAS PIRACY. CAPTAIN AND MATE MURDERED. London, November 12. Intelligence reached Queenstown last night of mutiny and murder on board the schooner “Neuvre Tigre,” while on a coaling voyage in the South Seas. An English lad, now in prison at Suva, the capital of the Fiji Islands, with the cook of the vessel, are charged with the murder of the captain and the mate, and with the piracy of the schooner. It appears from a statement made by the lad that when the ship was two days out from Callao the cook, who is a powerful man, camQ up on deck with a meat-chopper in his hands, and attacked the captain and mate. After dodging him around the deck for some time, they were forced to climb into the rigging to save their lives. The cook shouted to them to come down, and as they would not he brought a gun from the cabin and threatened to shoot both of them if they did not jump into the sea. They begged hard for their lives, but the cook was obdurate, and had levelled the gun to fire when both men jumped overboard. The schooner continued to sail away, leaving the captain and mate in the water, and as land was then out of sight they must have perished soon afterwards. One of the first things the cook did was to obliterate the name of the vessel, and substitute for it that of “White Rose.” Then he headed the schooner for the Gilbert Islands, where she subsequently went ashore on a reef near the Apamama Lagoon, the cook looting her of all valuables. The English lad further stated that he had no part in the crime, and was coerced by the cook under pain of instant death. Traders on the island were not satisfied with the cook’s explanation as to the loss of the captain and mate, and having in formed the Fiji authorities the two were arrested. • The cook is a Belgian. ALL SAINTS’ DAY. A Paris contemporary points out that the obser vation of All Saints Day has not always been ob served on November 1. In 608 we learn that Boni face IV., having obtained authorisation to convert the Pantheon into a Christian Church, dedicated the temple to the Holy Virgin, and, secondly, to all the Saints, and fixed May 12 to honour their memory. In 1837 Gregor IV. visited France, and he changed the date of the festival to the first of November, and since then All Saints’, one of the greatest of the Church’s festivals, has always been observed on that day. A council in the eleventh century ordained a vigil, and in 1480 Sixtus IV. assigned an octave. * STEAMER BELL AS CHURCH BELL. The Minister of St. Columba’s United Free Church in Edinburgh is appealing for a new church bell for St. Kilda. For many years the people have been summoned to worship by a bell which was washed ashore many years ago attached to a part of a wreck. It was an ordinary steamer bell. They had it put up in a rude wooden frame near the door of the church, and it did splendid service till now. 'Un fortunately, it is now broken and useless. Mr. Mac- Lennan gives a glimpse of the islanders descending and ascending to their dizzy crags, now suspended at the end of a rope, now hugging the overhanging precipices, now laden with a load of fulmars; con vening in their primitive Parliament, and determin ing in what particular work the day is to be spent. It is unlikely he will appeal in vain. Proprietor*, Printers, and Publishers Record Verlag G.m.b.H.in Dresden.-*Responsible Editor Willie Baumfelder.
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