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The Daily record and the Dresden daily : 05.09.1907
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 1907-09-05
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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-id416971482-190709053
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- http://digital.slub-dresden.de/id416971482-19070905
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- ZeitungThe Daily record and the Dresden daily
- Jahr1907
- Monat1907-09
- Tag1907-09-05
- Monat1907-09
- Jahr1907
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THE DAILY RECORD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1907. 482. LOCAL. A new opera: “Die Schonen von Fogaras”, by- Victor Leon, music by Alfred Priinfeld, will be performed for the first time on Saturday next at the opera-house; the proceeds will be devoted to the objects of the “Pensionsanstalt der Genossen- schaft Deutscher Biihnenangehoriger”. The close of the second act is a ballet arranged by Herr Berger, comprising 6 dances, each in a different Hungarian costume. The opera will be conducted by Herr v. Schuch. * It seemed at the Central Theatre on Tuesday evening that the public are beginning to appreciate the splendid display of wrestling that is to be seen there every evening this month. Though there was a great array of empty benches in the dress and upper circles, the floor of the house and gallery were fairly well filled by an audience who followed the contests with close and lively interest. Of the 18 wrest lers engaged, representing 12 European nations as well as the United States, all but 5 are champion wrestlers in their respective countries or cities. In the contests on Tuesday evening: Petlivan, the Turkish champion, had a worthy foeman in Hansen, of Denmark, but overcame him in 18 minutes; the champion of Russia, bearing the Imperial name of Romanoff, floored his opponent in fine style in a minute and a half; Sauerer, the Bavarian champion, was opposed to a very formidable antagonist in Winzer, the champion of Hamburg, but defeated him after an exciting struggle that lasted 37 minutes. Sauerer is a fine wrestler and won the special favour of the audience, as much by his conspicuous fair-play and good humour as by his cat-like activity and masterly skill. Among the most interested spectators were many ladies. The programme has been strengthened since the opening evening by the addition of the sisters Julian, who are ac complished dancers. * The programme of this evening’s orchestral concert at the Royal Belvedere will be as follows: (1) Veni, vidi, vici! Marsch, v. Blon; (2) Ouverture zur Oper “Ein Sommernachtstraum”, Thomas; (3) Konzert-Etude (C-dur), Rubinstein; (4) Ballett- musik aus der Oper “Austin”, Marschner; (5) Ouver ture zur Oper “Der Barbier von Bagdad”, Cornelius; (6) Einzug der Gotter in Walhall, aus dem Musik- drama “Das Rheingold”, Wagner; (7) Tonbilder aus der Oper “Die Zauberflote”, Mozart; (8) Ouver ture zur Oper “Dichter und Bauer”, v. Suppe; (9) Der Engel Lied, Legende, fur Violine und Cello, Braga; (10) Patrouille Espagnol, Desshaies; (11) Auf dem Meere, Walzer aus der Operette “Der Dukaten- prinz” (neu), Triebel. ROYAL BELVEDERE Grand Concert Daily by the Royal Belvedere Orchestra, under the direotion of Herr Kapellmeister Willy Olsen. 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 JWOLF 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. □ Royal Conservatorium Instruction given at: Eandliaus Str. 11, II., Werder Str. 22, pt. Bautzner Str. 22, I., Haydn Str. 9, I. 52nd year. All branches of musical and theat rical instruction. Full courses or single lessons. May be commenced at any time. Terms begin April 1st and September 1st. Prospectus and list of instructors from the Directorate. Great Bargains! I Clearance Sale of useful and ornamental hand-painted CHINA designed and painted in own studios. Heufel & Co. Biii'senviese 8. Show-windows: Portikus Strasse. = No shop. —" = MINIATURES. = Portraits on ivory from life or photograph. H. M. Mist. Studio Helmholtz Strasse 2.1. f’S I. Dresden Special brown bread Dietetic food bakery Dresden^ Ammon Strasse49 Corner of Rosen Str. Tel. 6640. Annpn’c Graham bread "Hyul ® for Stomach troubles as supplied to the Court of Saxony. AlHIPP’C Aleuronnt bread, Hllyul a Paste and Maccaroni for diabetes and bowel disorders. Unnpn’c Kindei'zniebarit Hliyul 0 Forwarded to all parts of the city and abroad. 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. 3ft In the Fundamt of the Konigliehe Polizei- direktion, Schiess Gasse 7, found articles—such as jewellery, gold or notes, purses, umbrellas, sticks, boas, clothing, bunches of keys &c.—which have been lost in the streets or squares or left in droschkes, and been given up, are kept. The public are hereby informed of the arrange ments of the Fundamt, and in particular that it is advisable to enquire for lost articles frequently within twelve months after the loss. Finders of articles are reminded that they are compelled by law to give immediate notice of the finding of any article of the value of from three marks upwards, at the Fundamt or at the office of the Police district in which the finder resides. It is urgently recommended that the loser of an article should make enquiry at the Fundamt per sonally, and not by a deputy who is insufficiently and perhaps not at all acquainted with the lost property. Special lost property offices are established: for the tram-lines at Georg Platz 5; for the omnibuses at Werder Strasse 35 and at the Hauptbahnhof. KAISER OBSERVES AN OLD CUSTOM. In accordance with a custom dating from the time of Frederick the Great, any officer in the German Army who falls from his horse at a review is bound to offer a banquet to his brother officers in the regiment. As soon as he had risen from his fall the other day the Kaiser expressed his intention of carrying on the tradition. LATEST ARRIVALS IN DRESDEN up to the 4 th of September 1907. Mr. F. Lord, London, H. Weber. Mr. and Mrs. A. Noble, Chicago, H. Weber. Miss H. Murray, Hampshire, H. Weber. Mrs. A. Hull, Chicago, P. Ackermann. Miss C. Hull, Chicago, P. Ackermann. Miss B. S. Mowry, Boston, P. Schadewell. Miss L. P. Anthony, Providence, P. Schadewell. Miss H. S. Barnes, New York, P. Schadewell. Miss J. Soderberg, New York, P. Schadewell. Pension - Internationale 6 5 ® First class family home, gam Excellent board from 4 marks a day. Travelling Articles. .JgiBas. 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). Harry M. Field Master-school of piano playing. After the methods of Frans Liszt and Hans von Billow. Studio: Undenau Strasse 35 II. Pension Kosmos stl V l,len er Strasse 10,1, ABU91UU AUBIUU9 close to Hauptbahnhof. GomfortabiB home, excellent board 4 marks a day.—English cooking. 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. Hotel Victoriahof Rendezvous of English and Americans. English spoken. American Drinks • 11CW • Victoria Strasse 3. M ©W ! A NEW ZEALAND DREYFUS. The New Zealand correspondent of the Morning Post tells an interesting story of the condemna tion of an innocent man and his vindication after many years. He says:— Dreyfus was convicted on false evidence in 1894, and not fully reinstated till twelve years later; Adolf Beck was similarly wronged by a British court in 1896, and again in 1904, and received a jjjn free pardon and compensation within a year after the second miscarriage; and Edalji also has re ceived a free pardon within four years after a con viction which, whether right or wrong, has now been pronounced “unsatisfactory.” But the wrong of John James Meikle, who was found guilty of sheep-stealing on perjured evidence, dates from seven years prior to the conviction of Dreyfus; and after engaging year by year the at tention of the courts and of Parliament, and finally of a Special Royal Commission, remains in its twentieth year still unredressed. Again New Zealand leads the world! In the year 1887 Mr. Meikle was the owner of a well-stocked farm of eight hundred acres in South land, with the Islay Station of the New Zealand Mortgage and Investment Association adjoining him. There had been all sorts of neighbours’ quarrels between them, in the course of which Meikle proved himself a most pertinacious and, as the owners of Islay believed, a most unscrupulous antagonist. Naturally, therefore, when they missed large numbers of sheep from the station, their suspicions fell upon Meikle, and these suspicions were presum ably communicated to a man named Lambert, whom they stationed in a hut near Meikle’s boun dary to discover the thief. The terms of Lambert’s employment were peculiar. His ordinary occupation was that of a “rouse- about”—a Colonial term for a man of all work on a station—and his normal wages were £1 a week, all found. But on this occasion he was to get £50 in addition if he discovered the thief and secured a conviction against him. There were already three convictions against this private detective ’ himself. Lambert soon claimed to be in a position to earn his money, and early in November Meikle and his son Arthur, a lad of fifteen, were arrested on a charge of stealing the company’s sheep. The case came on for trial on December 16, 1887, in the Supreme Court at Invercargill before Mr! Justice Ward and a common jury, and Lambert told his story and Meikle was sentenced to seven years’ hard labour. In 1892 he was discharged from prison, and after a three years’ struggle succeeded in bringing Lam bert to book and getting him sentenced for per jury. Meikle at once petitioned Parliament for redress, but all the Government did was to pay his costs) £294, and place £500 to his credit, though he had lost a farm worth £3,000. In 1897 Mr. Seddon, replying in the House to a taunt that the sum was either too little or £500 too much, stated that it represented payment for bringing a perjurer to justice, and not compen sation to a man whose innocence the Government did not admit. But public opinion was too strong for Mr. Sed don, and in May 1906 a Royal Commission was appointed, which has just reported that Meikle ought to have been acquitted on the charge of sheep-stealing. Mr. R . Boy. Mr. R . Boy. Mr. R . Boy. THE RIGHT ANSWER. Boy, is there any fashionable wine-parlor here in Dresden? Yes, Sir, the very nice people go to the Moselterrasse, 27 l.nndliaiis Strasse. Can I take ladies there? Certainly; the rooms are beautifully furnished and quite according to American taste. And the cookery, it’s German, I suppose? You can dine there, Sir, just as if you were at home. PEYER WINES House founded 1775. Scheffel Strasse 2. Toilet-ReniliQifPQ Geo,, S Hantzsehel I migj 2 Struve Strasse 2. en, Winzerstuben, £££ t sre*»< 0 American drinks. Meals served a Vanglais. J. J. Rupprecht sel. Sohn Komgstrasse 76. o NUREMBERG a 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. BAD SALZBRUNN. Bad Salzbrunn, in spite of the comparatively cool summer, has been very well patronised. Up to the end of August 8,227 cure-guests and 7,113 passing visitors, in all 15,340 persons, had been officially reported. The games for children came to an end with the holidays. That new institution found great favour among parents and children alike.—The place was thrown into sincere mourning by the death of its owner, the Duke of Pless, since it owes its whole development to his active interest and princely munificence, which have brought the health arrangements of the Baths to their present height. Within the last 15 years the area of the Bath has been brought up to 600 acres, of which 240 are laid out in ornamental grounds; the large “Wandel- halle”, the pneumatic cabinet, the meteorological station, the two “Gurgelhallen”, the chemical and bacteriological laboratory, the theatre, and above all the grand bathing establishment, have been newly erected, and have gradually raised Salzbrunn, in respect to the number of visitors, to the position of the first Bath not only in Silesia but in the whole of East Germany. A< in W brol that on A the stric four mov of tl T1 fearj of a peac enga A plac< ship Redi refoi laws for : pres Bril in vot( trac in 1 thos Aus of ( has affi refi par Tl tha Coi paj yea me pri tha for the he; so tui the an Proprietor, Pub.iBher and Responsible Editor: Willie Baumfelder.—Printer: Buehdruckerei der Dr. Guntzschen Stiftung.
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