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The Daily record and the Dresden daily : 16.05.1907
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 1907-05-16
- 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-id416971482-190705160
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- http://digital.slub-dresden.de/id416971482-19070516
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- oai:de:slub-dresden:db:id-416971482-19070516
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- ZeitungThe Daily record and the Dresden daily
- Jahr1907
- Monat1907-05
- Tag1907-05-16
- Monat1907-05
- Jahr1907
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THE DAILY RECORD, THURSDAY, MAY 16, 1907. M 387. ROYAL BELVEDERE Grand Concert Daily by the Royal Belvedere Orchestra, under the direction of Herr Kapellmeister Willy Olsen. in (lie “Grosser Garten”. Grand Concerts daily and Double Concerts. Begin at 4.0 p. m. Dinners cd Suppers from 2 marks upwards. A charming: furnished Home in Villa Sedan Strasse 37, I. 5 rooms, kitchen, bath, servants’ room, large garden; m ost beautifully situated in the best and healthiest quarter. Apply at Frl. Riese, Sedan Strasse 45, n. Victoria Strasse 20. CHates aid Sweets. English spoken. Helene Friedemann. SCHOOL FOR GIRLS. Glasses in English, Arithmetic, Mathematics, German, French and Latin. A small number of resident pupils taken. German and French resident governesses. Private instruction if desired. Miss Virgin, Schnorr Strasse 80 (Villa). Dresden-Strehlen Josef Strasse 10 Sommer Pension Comfortable rooms for ladies and families with children. Opportunity for instruction in music, German and French. Terms moderate. MINIATURES.: Portraits on ivory from life or photograph. H. M. Mist. Studio Helmholtz Strasse 2.1. Every shop where English is spoken should take in and advertise in The Daily Record Struve Strasse 5, 1. Harry 91. Field Master-school of piano playing. After the methods of Frans Liszt and Hans von Billow. Studio: iAndenau Strasse 35 II. Pension Hahnefeld Luttichau Strasse 23, I. = Excellent table. = Comfortable home. = LOCAL. The Dresdner Sport Club, which is shortly to play a football match with the Portsmouth Foot ball Club, is one of the oldest sporting societies of Dresden, and far above any other in point of efficiency. It may boast of several good footballers and numbers among its ranks some resident foreigners. In the summer months the Club cultivates cricket and athletic sports. The first cricket match of this season has already been fixed for Monday the 20 th instant, when the Anglo- American Club of Freiberg is to bring an eleven, and a game will be played between them and the Dresdner Sport Club. The names of the elevens and the hour when play begins will be duly noti fied. The Portsmouth Football Club, whose coming was expected on the 18 th instant, will not arrive until Friday the 24 th. This team includes some “internationals”, and is the strongest that has ever come to Dresden an yet. Their match with the Dresdener Sport Club will be fought out on the Nossener Brucke ground. This high - class fixture is due in great measure to the support of the Dresden Football Club and of the Verein zur Forderung Dresdens mid des Fremdenverkehrs. On the 15th of September the Teaching and Ex perimental Institute for Photography, Reproduc tions, and Photogravure, in Munich, will commence its 8 th school-year. In its photographic depart ment it provides, in a two-year’s course, complete instruction for an art - photographer, or in the graphic department, for technical reproduction of all kinds. Young people with a talent for draw ing are particularly suited for such employments. Since 1906 ladies have been admitted to the photo graphic department; in 1906 the institution was awarded the Gold State Medal at the Nurnberg Exhibition. The number of students is limited. The statutes of the Institute will be sent gratis to any one who will apply to the offices in Munich, Rennbahn Strasse 11. The guards in the city today are furnished by the 2nd Grenadier Regiment No. 101. The band plays about 12.30 p.m. in the Neustadt. The Concerts begin on Week Days at 7.30 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 WOLF 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. HOTEL BRISTOL. FIRST CLASS, situated on the Bismarek Square, the healthiest and finest part of Dresden. msuiv rBcommeDdBd by English and American Families. Real English Hume comfort. LIFT ELECTRIC LIGHT. MODERATE TERMS. PENSION. GRAND UNION HOTEL. FIRST CLASS HOTEL, patronized 6y English and American Families. Situated In the flnest part ot the Town, dose to the English and American Churches. Very favourable Terms en Pension. Elevator. Telephone. Electric Light. H. Schnelle, Proprietor. SENDIG- DRESDEN, SENDIG- NURNBERG, SENDIG- SCHANDAU, (SAXON SWITZERLAND.) HOTEL Europaischer Hof 265 ROOMS. HOTEL Wurttemberger Hof 250 ROOMS. SENDIG’S Hotel Quisisana &c. 150 ROOMS. BERLIN. Unter den Linden, 17-18. BERLIN. Hotel Westminster QUIET. FIRST CLASS HOTEL. SELECT. Rooms from 3,50 marks upward. Lift. Favourable Terms for Board. Grand Hotel deBome BERLIN. Unter den Linden 39, opposite the Roval Palace. Baths — Splendid B.estaurant and Drawing Rooms. — Lift. Mostly frequented, by English and American Families. Salzquellenstrasse near the Morgenzeilpark. m Modern, distinguished, first class Hotel managed by the Proprietor Mr. Kopp. By appointment to H. I. H. the Archduke Franz Ferdinand. Hotel Hr oh I. Cl. House. Marienbad. Bohemia. Season from the 1st of May to the 30 th of September 30,000 Visitors, 00,000 Tourists. Prospectus gratis from the Biirgermeisteramt. Marienbad. Park Hotel Waldmiihle. First class, splendid position in the midst of its own park. World-famed Restaurant. Motor Garage. Own Automobile. Heinrich Krause, Proprietor. Marienbad, HotelWtimar Temporary Residence of H. M. King Edward VII. PRAGIIF Hotel Archduke Stephan. Wenzels- • nnu U L. platz. First Class. The only new house in the town, with every comfort possible at low charges. Mostly frequented by English and Americans. 130 Rooms and Salons (fireproof). Fitted up with Electricity, Lifts, Steam Heating, Telephone &c. Grand Cafe a speciality. Centre of the town. Close to the Royal Museum. 6 minutes to the Station. English spoken. Cook’s Coupons accepted. W. Hauner, Prop. family Hotel. Moderate Prices. Private Hotel and Pension Trefzer. Prague, jjotel Victoria, Nuremberg. First class family Pension situated in the best and most central part of the town, close to the station. Large, airy rooms. Good cuisine. AH home comforts. Electric light. Baths. Pension by the week or day. Moderate prices. Marie Trefzer, Proprietress. J. J. Rupprecht sel. Sohn Konigstrasse 76. = NUREMBERG □ Established 1727. Purveyor to the Bavarian Court. Importer of Cigars, Cigarettes and Tobacco. Directly imported Havanna Cigars. German manufactured Cigars. English, American, French and Turkish Tobacco and Cigarettes. American chewing tobacco. Agent of the Red Star Line. TffPT IT7 Altes Rathans. In the best position. Highly J.M Mill, recom. to English & Americans. Mod. Prices. English spoken. Auto Garage. Franz Dittrich, Prop. Pension Weidmann Reichs Strasse 2, II. Best situation. Excellent board. Comfortable rooms. 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. Gutzkow Strasse 19 Pension Kosmos "TSMShMS* Comfortable home, excellent board 4 marks a day.—English cooking. Pension LE RICHE Niirnberger Platz 3, II. ■ ' — First-class Family Pension. —"• 1 Excellent situation. Splendid board. Pension Unity, Luttickau Strasse 26, |. Highly recommended. EiUbllfhed 1835. Schramm & Echtermeyer Grocers lOb, Stdonien Strasse lOb (corner of Prager Strasse). Breakfast and other Teas. Coffee. Cocoa. Chocolate. English and German Biscuits. Tinned Meat, Fish and Vegetables. Preserved Fruit, Marmalade and Jama. English Pickles and Sauces. Wines, Liqueurs, «&c. RELICS OF THE BRONZE AGE. A second hoard of nine gold bracelets, found in a pit-dwelling of the seventh or eighth century B. C., in a field near Bexley Heath, have just been placed in the Gold Room at the British Museum. They weigh roughly 10 oz. in all. The first find on the same spot comprised eight bracelets, weighing in all 24 oz. Both hoards be longed to the Bronze Age, and were bought as treasure trove. A series of antiquities from Ravenscliffe Cave, near Bakewell, includes two gold bands, mounts of a dagger sheath. These last are in the Gold Room, and the remainder in the Prehistoric Room. Novelties in the Terra cotta Room include a portrait head 3 in. high, re presenting Agrippina, wife of Germanicus, the General of Tiberius. AFTER FORTY YEARS. An amazing case of alleged pillaging the funds of the poor is occupying police attention at Grenoble. The accused person is M. Auguste Rey, who is an old man occupying the position of director of the Assistance Publique for about half a century. The charge against him is that of having year by year falsified his accounts to the detriment of the fund. Investigation is said to have brought to light losses to the extent of some £20,000, but the auditors are by no means satis fied that they have got to the bottom of the scandal, and every month’s account has to be gone through for forty years back. This inquiry will prevent Rey being brought before a jury this year. But he is in custody. ROME BY THE SEA. Rome is now beginning to devote attention to a question which doubtless only the nation’s absorp tion in the deeper politics has kept out of the field up to the present. It is probable that no other great city would have been for so many years so near to the sea, and yet so completely dissociated from it. The city and the Government now begin to show some consciousness of this problem, and preliminary action is being taken for its solution. “Rome a seaport” is the ultimate aim, and credits are being voted for the necessary studies and estimates for realising it. WHICH EYE DO YOU WINK WITH? Sir James Crichton-Browne, in the course of 8 lecture at the Royal Institution, said that sou# time ago he issued a number of circulars, one of the questions in which was, “Do you wink with tl# left eye, or with the right?” The majority winked with the left eye; and a number of ladies #1# responded to the appeal were equally divided 88 to the use of the right and left eye. Rather woi’ e than 30 per cent claimed to be proficient in tl# use of both eyes, and 9.13 declared they could not wink at all. WEATHER FORECAST FOR TODAY of the Royal Saxon Meteorological Institute. Strong westerly winds, variable skies, rain in places, cooler. Proprietor, Publisher and Responsible Editor: Willie Baumfelder.—Printer: Buchdrttckerei der Dr. GhunUsschen Stiftung.
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