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The Daily record and the Dresden daily : 15.06.1907
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 1907-06-15
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- Englisch
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- SLUB Dresden
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- SLUB Dresden
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- Public Domain Mark 1.0
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- urn:nbn:de:bsz:14-db-id416971482-190706153
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- http://digital.slub-dresden.de/id416971482-19070615
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- ZeitungThe Daily record and the Dresden daily
- Jahr1907
- Monat1907-06
- Tag1907-06-15
- Monat1907-06
- Jahr1907
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eh. N SI Bassenge&Co Prager Strasse 12. Payments on ail Letters of Credit Exchange of Circular-Notes, Cheques and foreign money at most favourable rates. Postal Orders. English and American newspapers. Offio© hours 9—1, 3—6, Saturdays 9—3. ROYAL OPERA HOUSE. This evening, beginning at 7.30, ending 10.15 Aida. Grand opera in four acts. Music by Joseph Verdi. Cast: The King Herr Puttlitz. Amneris, his daughter Fraul. v. Chavanne. Aida, an Ethiopian slave Frau v. Falken a. G. Radames, a General Herr Burrian. Ramphis, High Priest Herr Wachter. Amonasro, King of Ethiopia, Aida’s father Herr Plaschke. A messenger Herr Erl. A Priestress Fraul. Keldorfer. PLOT. Radamies, an Egyptian general, loves Aida, an Ethiopian slave, who is the daughter of the Ethiopian king Amonasro; but he is secretly loved by Anunieris, Pharaoh’s daughter. Radames is chosen to lead the army against Amonasro and! takes him prisoner. All the prisoners are freed except Amonasro who, after di covering the love of Radames for Ms daughter, is successful in making her induce the latter to betray the Egyptian warplans, while he himself is liiding within earshot. Amonasro then declares his identity; but Amneris has also heard all, and Radames is given into the hands of Ramphis, the High-priest of Isis. Radamies refuses Amneris’ offers of safety on condition that he renounces Aida. He is walled into a tomb, but finds Aida has made her way in before Mim, and they die side by side. Composer: Verdi, bom 1814, died 1901. Tomorrow, Sunday, at 7 p.m. Die Zauberflote. ROYAL THEATRE. NEUSTADT. This evening, beginning at 7.30, ending after 9.45 Kriei» im Frieclen. Lustspiel in fiinf Acten von G. v. Moser und Franz v. Schonthan. Cast: Heindorf, Rentier Herr P. Neumann. Mathilde, seine Frau Frau Bleibtreu. Ilka Etvos, seine Verwandte Fraul. Verden. Agnes Hiller, ihre Gesellschafterin . Fraul. Diacono. Henkel, Stadtrat Herr Huff. Sophie, dessen Frau Frau Firle. Elsa, deren Tochter Fraul. Werner. von Sonnenfels, General Herr Bauer. Kurt von Folgen, Lieutenant bei den Dragonern, dessen Adjutant .... Herr Wierth. Ernst Schafer, Stabsarzt Herr Dettmer. von Reif-Reiflingen, Lieutenant der Infanterie Herr Rene. Paul Hofmeister, Apotheker Herr Gebiihr. Franz Konnecy, Bursche bei Folgen Herr Leichert. Martin, Diener | (Herr Walther. Anna, Kochin > bei Heindorf c Fraul. Schendler. Rosa, Stubenmadchen) (Fraul. Leder. Tomorrow, Sunday, at 7 p.m. Wilhelm Tell. Eltobltohed 1835. ■■■■■■■■I Schramm & Echtermeyer Grocers lOb, Hidonien Utrasse lOb (corner of Prager Strasse). Breakfast and other HHeas. Coffee. Cocoa. Chocolate. English and German Biscuits. Tinned Meat, Fish and Vegetables. Preserved Fruit, Marmalade and Jams. English Pickles and Sauces. Wines, Liqueurs, &c. RE SIDE YZ THEATRE. This evening, at 7.30 p.m. Doppelehe. Schwank in drei Acten von Kurt Kraatz. Tomorrow, Sunday, at 7.30 p.m. The same performance. NEW BOOKS. Tauchnitz Edition, to appear on June 21th: r ®ulein Schmidt and Mr. Anstruther; being the Letters of an Independent Woman, 1 vol. A new volume by the author of “Elizabeth and her German garden.” At Carl Tittmann’s bookshop, Prager Strasse 19. Hugo * Borack Purveyor to the Court. English spoken. 4, See Strasse 4, ^corner of Zahns Gasse. Morley’s and all other kinds of English Merino. oollen 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. == LONDON LETTERS. (From our correspondent.) UNDER THE RED CROSS. London, June 11. We are in the thick of the busiest of London seasons! This metropolitan “village” of ours is very full just now, in fact, full to overflowing. We hear everyday of people being sent away by hotels, boarding- and lodging-houses; flats, I am told, fetch “fancy” prices even in the suburbias of London. Theatres and places of entertainments are “coining money”, as the saying is, and concerts, although doing not so well as the theatres, yet remain “plenty as blackberries”; fifty to eighty in one week ought to be sufficient to satisfy the most voracious music-lovers with Grand Opera running full tilt and musical comedies galore, the Merry Widow at Daly's having taken the place of Hoff manns Erzdhlungen by the Berlin Comic Opera at the Adelphi. I am not speaking of the many shows now going, the attractions of the sea-side and the river: I tell you, London is at its gayest at present and pleasure-hunters not only English, but largely American and Continental, have their hands and their heads crowded up all these days. * * * But no two London seasons are absolutely alike. The London season of 1907 will probably be known to posterity as the greatest of our international seasons. This week, especially, London seems to be given up to the Continentals. The Americans, numerous as they are here at present, appear to be outdone by the people from the other side of the British Channel and the North Sea, and French and German, not to mention other Continental languages, are heard as often as, if not more often than, “pure Amurrican” or “Cockney undefiled” in the London throughfares. Of course, all the Con tinentals in our midst just now have not all come over on pleasure bent. Many of them are com bining business with pleasure whilst others are here for business purposes only. Among these I would certainly range the 150 foreign delegates who, from every part of the civilised and even uncivilised world, have flocked to London to attend the eighth International Red Cross Conference, the first sitting of which was opened this afternoon by Lord Roberts at the Examination Hall on the Victoria Embank ment near Waterloo Bridge. * * * The origin of these International Red Cross Conferences is, of course, well remembered. The first Conference was held in Paris in 1867, with the primary object of affording Red Cross societies troughout the world facilities for meeting together through the medium of delegates appointed by each society, while the Governments of the countries signatories to the Geneva Convention have also been represented at these Conferences. Every five years a Conference has been held in one of the European capitals, to discuss questions having for their aim the best methods for the amelioration of the condition of the sick and wounded in time of war. Conferences have been held in Berlin, Geneva, Carlsruhe, Rome, Vienna, and St. Petersburg. On each occasion the delegates have been received and entertained by Royalty, and this year’s Con ference, which will mark the first occasion on which an International Red Cross Conference has been held in England, will prove no exception, as the delegates will visit Buckingham Palace during their stay. When I reached the Examination Hall shortly before noon I found the outside and the inside of the not over-large building gaily bedecked with flags of all nations, but yet submerged by more numerous Red Cross flags everywhere, as suited, indeed, the occasion. The hall where the meetings are held presented at that moment a most gorgeous spectacle, the variegated uniforms of scores of English and foreign officers contrasting with the dainty-hued and rich toilettes of the equally numerous ladies. The arrangements for the Press, seated at a large table immediately under the platform where the International Bureau sat, were exceedingly well conceived. Nor did I expect anything else from the Army Medical Department and the British Red Cross Society acting in unison. We reporters were fairly numerous and the foreign Pressmen were almost as numerous as the English. On taking our seats at the Press table, we had given us a ponderous and magnificently executed Programme, in the French language—one of the two Conference languages de rigueur—and con taining, besides much useful information, plans, &c., the names of all the delegates, and the full Pro gramme of the Conference. * * That Programme is so elaborate, embodying also the many important proposals to be brought for ward during this week, that I must be satisfied with reproducing the following extract in English :— Monday, June 10 th.—Reception by the President of the British Red Cross Society, Lord Rothschild, G.C.V.O., at 148, Piccadilly, W., 10 p.m. Tuesday, June 11th—Meeting of the Special Commission at the Examination Hall, Victoria Embankment (near Waterloo Bridge), at 10 a. m. (Private.) The Red Cross Exhibition in the Prince’s Hall, Earl’s Court Exhibition, will be reserved for the Press, 11a. m. to 2 p. m. Opening Meeting of the Conference at the Examina tion Hall at 12 noon, Earl Roberts, K. G., presiding. Afternoon Reception by the Marchioness of Lans- downe at Lansdowne House, Berkeley Square, 5 p. m. The Red Cross Exhibition in the Prince’s Hall, Earl’s Court Exhibition, will be reserved for Dele gates during the afternoon and evening. Viscountess Iveagh’s Reception at 5, Grosvenor Place, S.W., 10.30 p. m. Wednesday, June 12 th.—Sitting of the Conference, at 11 a.m., at the Examination Hall. Lord Burton’s Luncheon at Chesterfield House, 2 p.m. Thursday, June 13 th.—Sitting of the Conference, at 11a.m., at the Examination Hall. Visit to Windsor Castle in the afternoon by in vitation of His Majesty the King. Reception of the Delegates at the Mansion House by the Lord Mayor of London, 9—12 p. m. Friday, June 14th.—Sittting of the Conference, at 11 a.m., at the Examination Hall. Banquet to the Delegates by the Council of the British Red Cross Society, at 8 p. m., at the Hotel Cecil, Strand, W.C. The American Ambassador and Mrs. Wliitelaw Reid’s Reception at Dorchester House, 10.30 p. m. Saturday, June 15 th.—Concluding Sitting of the Conference at the Examination Hall, at 11 a. m. Reception of the Delegates by their Majesties the King and Queen at Buckingham Palace, 3.30 p. m, * * * Before going on, let me state that among the subjects to be discussed at this Conference are the abuse of the Red Cross badge, the position of women in war time, the attitude of neutrals to wards belligerents, tuberculosis, the reports on the work of the Russian and Japanese Red Cross Societies during the late war, and the employment of dogs (proposed by the British Society). Hungary proposes a unanimous expression of homage to the name of Miss Florence Nightingale, as well as the creation of a Nightingale Fund, with the object of offering medals to those ladies who have shown distinction in the care of the sick and wounded in war. The proposal to employ the international forces of the Red Cross organisation in a world-war against tuberculosis, to be submitted at the Con gress, originates with the German Red Cross Society, which, with the German Governments, is well represented here. The German delegates will propose that the Red Cross societies of the world, instead of waiting for war, pestilence, earthquakes, or floods, should devote their gigantic machinery to a systematic and comprehensive crusade against the “white plague.” The father of the project is Professor Dr. Pann- witz, Berlin, the celebrated tuberculosis expert, who is also head of the Red Cross of the Father land. * He * The distinguished company present, representative of all nations, was welcomed by Lord Roberts, who, looking as dapper as ever, said the Queen, as
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