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The Daily record and the Dresden daily : 23.05.1906
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 1906-05-23
- Sprache
- Englisch
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- SLUB Dresden
- Digitalisat
- SLUB Dresden
- Lizenz-/Rechtehinweis
- Public Domain Mark 1.0
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- urn:nbn:de:bsz:14-db-id416971482-190605238
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- http://digital.slub-dresden.de/id416971482-19060523
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- oai:de:slub-dresden:db:id-416971482-19060523
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- ZeitungThe Daily record and the Dresden daily
- Jahr1906
- Monat1906-05
- Tag1906-05-23
- Monat1906-05
- Jahr1906
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i THE DRESDEN DAILY, Wednesday, May 23, 1906. As 91. ROYAL BELVEDERE Grand Concert Daily by the Royal Belvedere Orchestra, under the direction of Herr Willy Olsen. The Concerts begin on Week Days at 7.3° p.m. on Sundays and holidays at 5 p.m. Admission, at the door, 1 mark, or 50 pf. if the ticket is bought beforehand at any of the cigar-shops of the firm WOLFF, Prager Str., See Str., Post Platz. At the Bureau of the Royal Belvedere 10 tickets may be had for 3 marks, up to 6 p.m. Admission to the Side Terrace and Pavilion free. MOTOR CARS. Epoch-making steering gear. Driver starts car from his seat. 4 Cylinder. 12 H. P. From 5900 Marks up. GERLACH & ARNOLD, Luttichau Strasse 23. First-rate institution for Breathing exercises, Hygienic Gymnastics, Singing. Recommended by doctors.—Private Lessons and classes. Bianca Morill, Dresden, Racknitz Strasse 1. 4—5 p.m. Swedish Gymnastics for ladies and children Rosa Bachmann, holder of a Government certificate as teacher of Gymnastics. Rietscliel Strasse 25, part., corner of Terrasseuufer. For sale a lady’s Bicycle, English make. For particulars ad dress B. at the office of this paper. CAMPING WITH PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT. John Burroughs, the well-known nature writer, gives some entertaining glimpses of President Roose velt in the current “Atlantic.” He accompanied him on his trip to Yellowstone Park, where they lived the “simple life” for some weeks. The Pre sident was intensely interested in the fauna of the canons. “I found his interest in bird life very keen, and his eye and ear remarkably quick. He usually saw the bird or heard its note as quickly as I did—and I had nothing else to think about, and had been teaching my eye and ear the trick of it for over fifty years.” One day the word came to the tents that a band of mountain sheep were coming down a wall of trap rock. The President, with coat off and a tow r el around his neck, was shaving. One side of his face was half shaved and the other side lathered. “By Jove,” said the President, “I must see that. The shaving can wait, and the sheep won’t.” So on he went, as he was, hatless, coat- less, and saw the sight. One night in camp the President told the story of one of his Rough Riders who had just written him from some place in Arizona. The Rough Riders, wherever they are now, look to him in time of trouble. This one had come to grief in Arizona. He was in gaol. So he wrote the Presi dent, and his letter ran something like this: “Dear Colonel,—I am in trouble. I shot a lady in the eye, but I did not intend to hit the lady; I was shooting at my wife!” And the presidential laughter rang out over the tree-tops. The President related how, in a frontier hotel, he saw a room full of men terrorised by a half- drunken ruffian, who stood in the middle of the floor, compelling them to treat. “I went and sat down behind the stove as far from him as I could get, and hoped to escape his notice. The fact that I wore glasses, together with my evident desire to avoid a fight, apparently gave him the impression that I could be imposed upon with impunity. He very soon approached me, flourishing his two guns, and ordered me to treat. I made no reply for some moments, when the fellow became so threatening that I saw something had to be done. The crowd, mostly sheep-herders and small grangers, sat or stood back against the wall, afraid to move. I was unarmed, and thought rapidly. Saying, ‘Well, if I must I must,’ I got up as if to walk around him to the bar, then, as I got opposite him, I wheeled and fetched him as heavy a blow on the chinpoint as I could strike. He went down like a steer before the axe, firing both guns into the ceiling as he went. I jumped on him, and with my knees on his chest, disarmed him in a hurry. The crowd was then ready enough to help me, and we hog-tied him and put him in an outhouse.” PARIS TAXES. Paris is face to face with a great revenue ques tion. The octroi system of the city has enjoyed that longevity which is said to attach to most threatened lives, but if reports be true, it is really doomed this time. Its suppression is said to be only a question of a few months at most. This will mean a loss to the city of four and a half millions a year, and the question of the day is— how to raise it by other means. Two schemes are before the municipal council, both of them marked by features which to an English mind seem fan tastic, but which appear likely to receive serious discussion. The curious feature of one project is a proposed tax on house removals. The other con templates neither more nor less than what the Zulus would call a hut tax, from which not the poorest hovel in Paris would escape. Telephone 4413 3 Elbberg 3 Telephone 4413 (close to Amalien Platz) Trains to all parts of tlio town. ming BaM Lai open all day long. ^Competent Swimming Instructors. Season Tickets. Irish-Roman and Russian Baths (reserved for ladies on Wednesday). Private Baths. 2 Classes. Special room for washing dogs. irirtC variety. Guaranteed old and genuine. CARL SCHULZE, Marien Strasse 32. Wanted Members to form an American Pleasure Club. Apply Hotel Pirnaischer Hof, Schreibergasse. Established 1835 Schramm & Echtermeyer, Dresden-A. 18, Seestrasse (Minister Ilotcl) Telephone 9506. 27, Landhausstrosse Telephone 3289. 500 brands of cigars from 24 Marks to 15000 Marks per thousand. Direct importation from Habana, largest stock, lowest prices. 250 kinds of cigarettes. Tobacco. Briar Pipes. Catalogues sent free on application. ALEXANDER RABENDING Toilet Articles. HAIRDRESSER Toilet Articles. Mosczinskystrasse 1 K Corner of the Prager Strasse Firstclass Hairdressing saloons for Ladies and Gentlemen. Ondolation. American Manicure. Shampooing. Electric Hairdrying Apparatus, hot or cold air. English and French Perfumery. LATEST TELEGRAMS. London, May 22. The Morning Post hears from Shanghai that the Chinese are forming a corps of Volunteer troops after the pattern of foreign armies. The assembling of the force which consists of both cavalry and infantry took place yesterday on the exercise ground, in the presence of the Taotai and the Chinese naval and military officers. Stuttgart, May 22. The employees of all the bookbinders here have stopped work. The strike affects some 1,000 workmen and workwomen. Kiel, May 22. Preparations are being made to shorten the hoists round torpedo boat No. 126 in order that it may be berthed at the Imperial wharf. St. Petersburg, May 22. In yesterday’s sitting of the Duma, M. Korniloff proposed, as the first business of the day, to discuss a project of law for the release of all political prisoners. As the project had been distributed the discussion need only occupy a short time. The President said that he knew nothing of the project, perhaps the dis tribution had been effected privately. Moreover, the debate on the amnesty question would not be carried on now, as the majority appeared to be opposed to it. An article by M. Suvorin, which threw light on the amnesty question and_ on the utterances of For the Anaemic and NervoilS Of Klnnfar’c (Pure albumen with Lecithin.) LSI. (MUpiCI O IT till I a. □ Cost about 25 A dully. d At all chemists and druggists, ooaoooaoaoo Dr. Volkmar Klopfer, Dresden-Leubnitz. Piccolo-Automobile 2 Cylinder. Magnificent hill-climber. 2500 Marks. Gerlach & Arnold, Lilttielian Strasse 23. WORCESTER HOUSE SCHOOL preparatory for Schools and Universities. Thorough English education. ■ Instruction in English or German. = Boarders received. Private instruction if desired. H. VIRGIN, M. A. Oxford. Gutzkowstrasse 19. several of the speakers in last night’s sitting of the Duma, was the subject of much comment. The article protests, from the standpoint of policy, against anarchy and systematised murder, as well as against the defence of these crimes. The Duma, by its attitude, was indirectly giving its assent to the tactics of murder and political brigandage, was approving in a certain sense of anarchy, and was appearing to use anarchy as a support in its attacks upon the Government, since only 78 members had joined the 5 protesting against their decision. This article produced a deep impression. M. Schipoff, and the President of the Committee of the Warsaw Exchange M. Krestofnikoff, two Members of the Imperial Council, said that the Council is endea vouring to avoid a conflict with the Duma, in spontaneously renouncing the initiative in legis lation. LATEST ARRIVALS IN DRESDEN up to the 21st of May, 1906. Mr. and Mrs. F. Hermann, New York, H. Bellevue. Mr. S. S. Steiner, New York, H. Bellevue. Mr. and Mrs. M. Weinberg, Chicago, H. Bellevue. Mr. J. O. Gonnell, New York, H. Bellevue. Mr. and Mrs. F. Forsch, New York, H. Bellevue. Miss A. Forsch, New York, H. Bellevue. Miss E. Forsch, New York, H. Bellevue. Mr. H. Horwitz, and Family, Cleveland, H. Bellevue. Mr. and Mrs. G. D. Clark, New York, H. Bellevue. Mr. H. van Dolsen, New York, H. Bellevue. Mrs. M. E. Badeau, New York, H. Bellevue. Miss A. Earl, California, H. Bellevue. Miss F. Poppelstone, Plymouth, H. Bellevue. Miss R. Poppelstone, Plymouth, H. Bellevue. Mr. W. Marsh, Brighton, British Hotel. Mr. L. Leiner. London, H. Continental. Mr. and Mrs. T. Barr, Glasgow, H. Continental. Dr. C. Dowman, Baltimore, H. Curlander Haus. Mr. H. Berger, London, H. Deutscher Herold. Miss A. Bele, London, P. Donath. Miss L. Rutherford, Hereford, Kelso, P. Donath. Mr. H. A. Meyer, New York, H. Europaischer Hof. Mr. and Mrs. M. Bernard, Philadelphia, H. Europ. Hof. Miss M. Shaw, Philadelphia, H. Europaischer Hof. Mr. F. Woodruff, Chicago, H. Europaischer Hof. Prof. J. W. Pledge, Crawley, H. Europaischer Hof. Mr. O. E. Philippi, and Family,. Crawley, H. Europ. Hof. Mr. and Mrs. H. Bayersdorfer, Philadelphia, H. Eur. Hof. Mr. J. Hanly, Philadelphia, H. Europaischer Hof. Mr. and Mrs. P. Meyer, London, H. Europaischer Hof. Mr. H. Walters, London, H. Europaischer Hof. Mr. A. Lazenby, London, H. Europaischer Hof. Mr. and Mrs. M. Samuel, San Francisco, H. Europ. Hof. Mr. and Mrs. E. Middleton, London, H. Europ. Hof. Mr. S. Scheuer, Newark, H. Europaischer Hof. Mr. D. Wylee, London, H. Stadt Gotha. Mr. J. Estey, Brattlebore, H. Stadt Gotha. Mr. J. Brunner, Liverpool, H. Grand Union. Mrs. G. Moore, Detroit, H. Grand Union. Miss M. Moore, Detroit, H. Grand Union. Mrs. S. Carlowitz-Ames, Londpn, H. Grand Union. Mr. L. A. Porritt, London, H. Grand Union. Mr. F. Thomas, Leeds, H. Grand Union. Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Garde, Philadelphia, H. Grand Union. Mr. and Mrs. R. O’Dorn, New York, H. Grand Union. Mrs. R. Mortimer, London, H. Grand Union. Mr. R. Loving, Chester, H. Grand Union. Mr. L. Bartlett, Plymouth, P. Ilm. Miss C. A. Bratl, Romeo, P. Ilm. Miss L. Smith, Morlette, P. Ilm. Miss M. E. Jones, Hudson, P. Ilm. Miss E. Shotwell, California, P. Kinze. Mrs. G. Batschfelder, New York, H. Savoy. Mr. C. A. Austor, Ohio, H. Savoy. Baroness L. v. Meyer, London, H. Savoy. Mrs. Betri-Baleau, New York, H. Savoy. Miss E. van Dolsen, New York, H. Savoy. Mr. E. Chabant, Bombay, H. Savoy. Mr. W. E. Gill, Boston, H. Savoy. Mr. R. Lochhead, Victoria, H. Weber. Mr. G. Bowden, Victoria, H. Weber. Mr. and Mrs. S. Schulein, America, H. Weber. Miss L. Schulein, America, H. Weber. Mr. J. Schulein, America, H. Weber. Dr. H. Schlesinger, America, H. Weber. WEATHER FORECAST FOR TODAY of the Royal Saxon Meteorological Institute. Weather, clearing up. Temperature, normal. Baro metrical pressure medium. Wind, S. Proprietor, Publisher and Responsible Editor: Willie Baumfelder—Printer: Buchdrwkerei der Dr. Giintzschen Stiftung. next the J Gern whic publ •lorn i no 1 Eng] vefei
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