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The Daily record and the Dresden daily : 26.02.1907
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 1907-02-26
- Sprache
- 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-id416971482-190702262
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- http://digital.slub-dresden.de/id416971482-19070226
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- ZeitungThe Daily record and the Dresden daily
- Jahr1907
- Monat1907-02
- Tag1907-02-26
- Monat1907-02
- Jahr1907
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t f>ailn Bectjrir BAD ALBERTSHOF Sedan Strasae * »nwr ie,Werder Strasse ana J.JtLJU UMLSJJUN DAILY. DRESDEN, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1907. 10 PFENNIGS. £ix$t Da tip JJapft: jiubltsijfd in (bcnnamj in (Eitglisl). Office: Qzeoden, Btuiv* Sw»* jL Sttep&otu: 4TSS. Su&otiption fot Qktoden »nd Mi* wkoU of Qt'tAnaAvy and &uiytvia: 1 wa*4 a montH. c=»— THE WRECK OF THE “BERLIN.” f. escue °f the last three survivors of the . Be .,\ n ^ as ent irely due to the courage and initiative of a private person, Captain W. Sperling, of Dordrecht, whose ship is at present in harbour at the Hook Captain Sperling agreed with his iriend, Mr. Vandertak, of the tug “Wodan” to make an attempt to bring off the three women left out W thlS morning before the lifeboat went Interviewed on his return Captain Sperling spoke m ° St modest and simple terms of the rescue The women were alive,” he said; “we could not abandon them. We were obliged to make an attempt to save them.” With the captain went his nephews, M. C. Sperling, and W. Louis Sperling, and M. G. Moerkerk. The party set out in the “Wodan” with a flat in tow. Captain Sperling continued: “As we drew near the wreck the sea was still stormy, and the weather bad There were three or four feet of water on the breakwater. The “Wodan” steamed along the breakwater till she was opposite the beacon.” .. f^ e . Cap *- Sperling, with three men, jumped into the flat and took it alongside the beacon. The captain sprang on to the breakwater with a rope and succeeded in mooring the flat to the beacon' where he found the rope slung the day before between the tower and the wreck still in position. He was thus able to climb on board the wreck, where he tound the three women huddled together under the urricane deck. Ten or twelve corpses were lying about. The women, screaming and crying hysteri cally, threw themselves upon their rescuers, and had to be soothed before anything could be done, ihey were nearly frozen, their clothing soaked with icy water. They were unable to walk, and clung to the necks of the rescuers, hampering their movements. M Tha »urse Lina Ripler called to the men to save iss TJnele first. Capt. Sperling carried Miss lmele to the side, and fastened her securely in a knot Crad * 6 siung on tbe main r °pe with a running tb^i ? h * WaS being fastened in the cradle Miss ihiele s foot stuck in a crack in the deck, and had to be pulled out by main force. When all was ready Captain Sperling shouted to his nephew on e break water, who held the guide-rope, to haul n the cradle and its freight, and Miss Thiele was landed m safety at the beacon. Mdme. Wernburg ol the Opera Company, was landed in the same vay. She was in a pitiful state, weeping and cry- Tif *t r busband and child, who were drowned the Nurse Ripler was then rescued. She was a A?, r ^ ase than the other > and was ab le to walk All three were put on board the flat, which was hauled alongside the “Wodan,” and the survivors ere taken on board. The rescue had occupied half an hour. The “Wodan” then steamed to the oocjc of the Harwich boats, where she arrived at tour o’clock. The rescued women were removed to the Hotel «oek van Holland, where every possible attention u showered on them. Among the inquirers at e hotel was Prince Henry of the Netherlands T ° ass ured the ladies of his keenest sympathy ’ An spite of the terrible tortures they have under gone, and in spite of the fact that their hands and eet were badly frostbitten, the women rescued ’om the wreck are recovering comparativelv quickly. Frl. Gabler, in particular, suffered ter- *oiy from the cold and was delirious when brought , Th e first words uttered by Frl. Schroder 9 \ WG are 80 hangr ^ When ^e disaster purred I cannot say, but I can never forget the mirs of anguish and torture we passed through , me we watched the heroic crews of the life- oats and the tug battling with the waves in their demurs to save us from death. Our agonv emed to be at its height on Thursday night. The ** seemed to be more terrible than before; icy waves, high as a house, broke over the'ship Turkish every mmute and the comforting sight of the Hook of Holland lights was blotted from our gaze. At about 6.30 p. m. we heard the shrieking of the FrrLl? i 8ister shi P the “Vienna”. i W i? strength of despair, shrieked into the howling storm ‘We are here’. Whenever we saw or heard a steamer pass we cried aloud, or we feared that it might be supposed that there was no one left alive to rescue. I was forced to ™Zl r A U Bertram aud nearJ y a H niy acquaintances washed away by the sea and drowned. When our rescuers arrived we watched their actions in breath less suspense, and when at last it became clear to us that their endeavours were directed to savins our lives we could hardly believe our eyes We exha ?? ted from C °H hunger, excitement b u Ven the joy of again be ing ^ranted life brought no smile to our faces no word to our lips. The first thing we did after we were,saved was to tear off our clothes long frozen Fifteen more corpses, among them that of a I- » ave mJ ee ? . taken off the wreck of the Berlin . The bodies of the crew are to be con veyed to England for burial, those of the other persons were to be buried today, Tuesday. They later photogra P hed to facilitate identification All the Dutch papers are full of praise for the share takeh m the rescue by Prince Henry of the Netherlancls The President of the Amsterdam Chamber of Commerce has sent a telegram to the Prince expressing, in the name of Amsterdam com mercial circles, their grateful esteem. On Satur- djiy evening a crowd some thousands strong as sembled before the Castle of Huldegingen and gave Prince Henry an enthusiastic ovation The appearance of the Queen and Prince Henry evoked deafening cheers. The Prince expressed his thanks and called for cheers"for-^K'ra've rescuers^ re- enfhusia sm° n d 8d t0 by tbe crowd with the utmost The Hook of Holland authorities contradict the report that gangs of thieves were found to be plundering the corpses washed up by the sea. The men in question were policemen in civile who were ordered to remove valuables from the corpses and hand them over to the authorities. THE UNREST IN CENTRAL AMERICA. rpi , „ New York, February 24. The news from Central America shows that the disturbances m Honduras and Nicaragua are more serious than was at first realised. Mr. Root at the outset grasped the dangerous possibilities of the dispute, and telegraphed to both Presidents a warnmg, and urged that they should agree to shows S h Nows already published, however, shows that his advice has been disregarded, and at both parties, while anxious to throw the blame for the beginning of hostilities on the other can ThToh^ ** 38 vig ° rously “ *5 can. The chief anxiety at Washington centres on the question of possible complications with any de U bt° P f„d ,r eV - , NiCara 8“ a has a large foreign debt and the continuance of hostilities for any !® n f h beaed P®*? od might * ead to difficulties similar • wblcb caused the Government so much trouble in San Domingo. Hope of a settlement by Mr Root m ?rj b0Wever ’ need not y e t b e abandoned Mr Root is determined to take the fullest ad- UnRed e st t \ inf0rmal “P rotecti °u” which the Si p I, turned over the other Con- wWB ?t? Ub s , t0 P revent a disastrous conflict which might involve other of the Central American States m general ruin. wn ' CHURCH AND STATE IN FRANCE. MR. HALDANE ON THE ARMY. u ,, London, February 24. Mr. Halciane made a speech at Portsmouth on Saturday evening, in which he said that he in tended, with the approval of Parliament, to appeal to the country for the formation of a national army not in a spirit of militarism, but because he was convinced that the male population of the country organised for its defence was one of the best guarantees of peace. NEWS FROM AMERICA. THE PRESIDENT ON THE CORPORATIONS. Cambridge (Mass.), February 24. President Roosevelt yesterday delivered an ad dress to the students of Harvard University in the course of which he made some remarks which, it is inferred, will receive considerable attention as a statement intended to reassure tho owners of cor porations stock. He said: “Those railway com panies, whose methods are honourable and just, will not lose by a suitable control by the Federated b , ut . w :" I lay great stress on the fact that it is the duty as well as the interest ot our people to treat such corporations with fair ness and to take care that a premium may be placed upon honourable business methods and that those who invest their capital in such concerns shall enjoy complete protection. The individual otates have shown that they are not capable of restraining the power of the wealth shut up in the syndicates and therefore some action on the part of the Government is imperative in the interests of the people.” AMERICAN MISSION IN TURKEY. . Constantinople, February 24. e American Ambassador, who has recently made repeated but fruitless applications to the i'orte for the carrying out of the recognition ac corded formally in 1904 to the American missionary institutions in Turkey, again formulated his demand at his audience with the Sultan on Friday. The Sultan agreed to give the necessary instructions to the Grand Vizier, but a complete settlement of the matter is hardly to be expected in the imme diate future. -r r> , i. . , Paris, February 24. In Republican circles the view prevails that the , h ®Y erament under no circumstances give up their demand in the matter of the Church lease arrangements that no priestly office is to be given LT ! °f dissolved congregations nor to for- % ecclesiastical circles this demand is now, as formerly, regarded with the same de- * as ^ quite impossible of acceptance, as being derogatory to the dignity and patriotism of the Bishops. The ultra-Radieal journals, comparatively openly, express their satisfaction that under the circumstances no further negotiations can take place between the Prefect of the Seine and the re- prese ntat ^es of the Archbishop. Thus Senator vltLT d }n - e Au r yve: “ The Bish °p s aad thc l lie “, d , esire m the name of the Catholic hieraichy to impose upon the communities, for the Tven if ?r atl0n B ° f ii h u lea8e8 ’ priests of their ch oice, he Vm -t n be of a for eign nationality or f / ^ f S or Ca Puchins. M. Briand has formally pledged himself to impose the Government veto on any e aim of that kind. A breach seems, there- aii re hi« na J° > G ' f’ ^ riand> a PP arenfcl y has shown all h s suavity and the Prefect of the Seine M CablneTr hjs diplomatic skill, in vain.” At the ? b ‘ , Coun f cl | held today M. Briand stated that ?hV a S 6 Prefect of the Seine to inform the Archbishop of Paris that his proposals were unacceptable both with regard to the If thp Ar?hH- t the conditions Put forward. If the Archbishop chose to make new proposals in the sense of the statements made by M. Briand and approved by the Chamber, he, the Prefect of the Seme, would examine them. NEWS FROM RUSSIA. THE REVOLUTIONARY MOVEMENT. rp, r> r P , St Petersburg, February 24. ine F.l.A. announces: “Certain St. Petersburg b l la I e 8tated that legal enquiries have established the harmlessness of the infernal machines Wp dlsaovared 111 the house of Count Witte. We are authorised to state that the examination by experts on the 24 th demonstrated that each of the bombs contained 3 V, lbs. of an explosive of high power and they would certainly have exploded if warmed or shaken. The clockwork introduced into the bombs could not have caused an explosion the mechanism was clumsily made. Had an explosion taken place, part of the house and even destroyed^’ ° f ^ h ° USe W ° Uld have been Two local factories have bee^ttLtd^ ele 30 armed men, who escaped, after stealing large sums of money and mortally wounding the son of one of the owners of the factory. Yesterday afternoon the^Head of^the^Pohce M. v. Hosberg, was slightly injured by a bomb’ to ttlTcarrial PO ', iCe ’ Wh ° Sat with him in the carriage, was severely wounded and the c^riaJT 8 ™ 116 ^ ^ b ° mb WaS thrown under the carriage. The perpetrators of the outrage escaped
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