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The Daily record and the Dresden daily : 13.03.1907
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 1907-03-13
- 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-id416971482-190703136
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- http://digital.slub-dresden.de/id416971482-19070313
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- oai:de:slub-dresden:db:id-416971482-19070313
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- ZeitungThe Daily record and the Dresden daily
- Jahr1907
- Monat1907-03
- Tag1907-03-13
- Monat1907-03
- Jahr1907
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and THE HKWRnEN TiA TT.V tcorb M 335. DRESDEN, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 1907. 10 PFENNIGS. bad albertshof 7, Sedan Straase £ ^ Vi I , - l u i T> g ?^ ath ^ : forladiesWednesday and Saturday 10-1, Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday 2-51; the remaining davs for eentlem An Werder Straase ft Turkish Baths: tor ladles Monday and Friday 6*-l, Wednesday 2-8s the reroainin/days foJgentlemen. BatK JS^S^SSi iljc 4 : iriit Uuih) jJuycr iiubli&ljei) ut (Sminaui) iit <£«jjlisl). Offices: S)zca3eft, Btcvtve Stcasse 51 &tfo / pfaonet i755. -OOc Sw^dceiption fot ®*es>3en «w9 tfie wfloCe of §e&mawy and OLtiotvia: 1 fnavk a month. THE HOUSE OF COMMONS. Ldndon, March 11. The Under Secretary of State of the Local Government Board, Mr. Runciman, in answer to a question, stated that the subject of limitation of armaments had not been in the original programme of the Hague Conference, which was submitted to the Powers in April of last year. Since then the question whether this subject could not come up before the Conference had been discussed. No further statement could be made as to the Pro gramme of the Conference until the final in vitations had been issued by the Russian Govern ment, which was negotiating with Great Britain and the other Powers as to the contents of the Programme. THE BRITISH NAVY. London, March 11. The Daily Chronicle learns from various private letters from men on board H. M. S. “Dreadnought” that the heat in that vessel’s engine room is so extraordinarily great, that the stokers have to suffer terribly, especially in the tropics. The size of the “Dreadnought” results in her being less efficient at manoeuvring at a low speed than smaller ships. The “Dreadnought” is entirely un suited to night manoeuvres without lights in close formation. The same journal learns that the Admiralty is experimenting with a shooting arrangement which, as the inventor claims, guarantees absolute accuracy of aim in any weather. NEWS FROM FRANCE. THE CHAMBER AND THE ELECTRICIANS STRIKE. Paris, March 11. The House was crowded when M. Jaures’ inter pellation relating to the interference of the Govern ment in the strike of electricians came up for dis cussion. M. Jaur6s referred to M. Clemenceau’s decision to employ soldiers in place of the strikers. The latter, he said, had done no acts of violence and bad shown by stopping work what a power their work was. If the Government were accommodating themselves to the power of industry by finding substitutes for the strikers they were denying the right to strike and were giving inadmissible powers to the capitalists. He demanded that M. Clemenceau a nd his colleagues should assume the responsibility. (Loud applause from the extreme Left.) He con tinued that, if the Government were consistent,' they must also refuse to the bakers, the miners, the railway and tramcar employes the right to strike, but in that case the. workmen would demand the revision of their work on a socialistic basis. (Applause from the extreme Left. Great inter- option.) M. Jaures went on to say that the engineers at the electricity works would never have given their onsent to the employment of soldiers in the works. nr the rest, the soldiers would have offered pas- SDe resistance to any such orders. He concluded ->} urging M. Clemenceau to place himself in har- nony with the Republican sentiments of the whole country. Clemenceau in his reply said that pure logic as for him and against M. Jaures. A strike might c justifiable but could not be carried on at the pense of outsiders. The Government had em- h °yed soldiers on the ground of the claim to self th 8S ® rVat * on possessed by human society; it was (A i ^ the Government to support this claim. Pplause in various parts of the house, cries o£ o, no” from the Socialists.) scr'b ^® menc oau continued “What M. Jaures de- of b S aS liberty is the domination of the whole Cot an society by a few individuals. We must We ma ke slaves of the' workmen but neither must Wori^f them tyrants. The electricians struck *°r no sufficient reasons, and by their action did harm to other poor workmen. The Govern ment unanimously approved my determination to fall into line with the mining companies. Does M. Jaures support the Labour Federation which is preparing a general strike? The Socialists are not anarchists and therefore they should not attack the Radicals and the Government at a moment when they are carrying through important social reforms.” {Long continued applause.) M. Jaures replied with much heat, saying that M. Clemenceau had accused him of appealing to the Right, but that he, M. Jaures, would allow no one to use insulting expressions to him. Returning to the subject before the House he said that he was speaking on behalf of the workmen’s right to live; M. Clemenceau was degrading the soldiers by letting them play the role of black-legs i. e. of workmen who belonged to the independent syndi cates. M. Bietry, President of the “yellow” syndicate contradicted this statement. He attacked the Socialists, but was interrupted by violent noise on the extreme Left benches, suppressed with difficulty by the President of the Chamber. M. Jaures then proposed as an Order of the Day “The Chamber is of the opinion that the falling back upon military assistance to replace the electricians on strike is an encroachment on the right to strike and a misuse of the military dis cipline, and proceeds to the Order of the Day.” Precedence was claimed for this motion but re jected. The President then submitted a resolution ex pressing confidence in the Government couched in the following terms: “The Chamber accepts the explanation of the Government, rejects all amend ments and proceeds to the Order of the Day.” This was carried by 378 votes to 68. NEW HUNGARIAN SHIPPING LINES. Vienna, March 11. The Fremdenblatt learns from well informed quarters in Buda Pesth that the Hungarian Government has concluded its negotiations with the chief continental ship owners with regard to the organisation of a Fiume—America service under the Hungarian flag, as well as the negotia tions with the North German Lloyd and the German Levant line respecting the thorough or ganisation of the Hungarian Levant Company. The new regulations of the Fiume- Levant line will provide for the cessation of the existing agree ment with the Cunard line and will bring it about that the leading ship owners of Germany, Belgium, Holland and France will take over the arrange ment of a Hungarian shipping line between Fiume and New York under the Hungarian flag, the N. D. L. taking 40 per cent of the shares, the Hamburg-America line 20 per cent and the other members of the concern the rest. The service will be fortnightly; three Cunard steamships will be employed and four new steamers will be built. The line is expected to remedy the difficulties in the emigration guestion; it will not, however, carry steerage passengers alone, but ac commodation will be. provided for, first class pas sengers and special attention will be paid tb Hungarian - America cargo transport. The new Hungarian Levant line, which will in no sense be in rivalry with the Austrian Lloyd, will be chiefly concerned with the traffic from Braila westward. Based on agreements with the N. D. L., the German Levant line and the Hungarian Levarit Shipping (^ompany,. the latter has been formed into a new large Undertaking with the name The Hungarian Finest handpainted Dresden China A. E. Stephan 4, Reichs Str. 4 - ® — Succ.to HelenaWolfsohn Nchf. Manufacturer & Exporter to the American & English trade. 2 minutes from Tfttuptbahnhof. Highest recommendations. Most reasonable prices. Central Heating. Electric Light. Electric Lift. 47 Prajr Strassa 47 ^ i& ^ e pposite the main Railway Station. __ Telephones =5= Visitors received in every room, en pension. Baths. Levant Line, with a capital of 15 million kronen, and subsidised yearly by the Hungarian Govern ment to the extent of 1,200,000 kronen. The new fleet consists of 11 steamships. In favour of the new line the German Levant line will discontinue its service from Braila westward, and the N. D. L. will cease to run its Braila—Genoa boats. THE BULGARIAN PREMIER MURDERER. Sophia, March 11. A dismissed official fired three revolver shots this evening at the Prime Minister, M. Petkoff, as he was walking with the other Ministers in the municipal Boris garden. M. Petkoff was killed o« the spot, the Minister of Trade, M. Grenadjeff, being wounded in the arm. It has transpired that the murderer is a man named Petroff, who was a clerk in the Agricultural Bank at Widdin. Some weeks ago he quarrelled with the bank manager and fought with him 1 , whereupon he was dismissed. On Monday evening at 6 o’clock Petroff forced his way through the police accompanying the Ministers near the Adler bridge, and fired two shots at M. Petkoff and then at M. Grenadjeff. The former fell dead at once. The murderer fled, firing more shots, in the direc tion of the town. He was captured in a beer house by some police and soldiers who pursued him. He said that for the past 20 days he had been obsessed with the idea of shooting the Premier. He was neither a socialist nor a ter rorist, but none the less no ordinary criminal; on the contrary, he had shot the Premier in the name of the people. In spite of the official anouncement that the murder in Sophia was the work of a dismissed bank clerk, initiated circles in Vienna are con vinced that there is practically no doubt that polities played a role in the matter. In well in formed quarters it has long been expected that the discontent with the Bulgarian Government would break out in some way. Prince Ferdinand who was on his way to Paris, is returning to Sophia at once. The Prime Minister at the close of the Labour sitting of the Sobranje was taking a walk with several Ministers in the Boris garden. As he was about to return to the town he was attacked by two individuals. Shots were first fired at M. Grenadjeff, who, although wounded in the right hand, threw himself on his assailant. Meanwhile a second individual fired two shots at M. Petkoff, one of which entered his right shoulder and came out of the left breast. M. Pet koff fell to the ground; he was lifted into a car riage and conveyed to his house, but died soon after reaching it. M. Grenadjeff is severely bruised, the murderers having fired at very close range. A cavalry officer who happened to be passing drew his sword and struck the murderer’s arm causing him to drop his revolver. A huge crowd gathered before M. Petkoff’s house and waited .in respectful silence. The murderer, whose name is Alexander Petroff, was born in Widdin. When cross-examined by the police he alleged that .he had no accomplice and had done the deed in order to free the Bulgarian people. On the other" hand it is certain that the murderer was seeft hi^qbta- pany with three other persons. , CHARLOTTE CORDAY’S HOTEL. A good deal of old Paris is disappearing just now, and among the latest bits of the antique city' to be threatened is the little spot upon which Charlotte Corday found a fleeting place of rest as she entered the city oh her errand of death. It stands on the street which prior to the days of the Revolution had been known as that of the Vieux Augustins. It now is the Rue d’Argout. The building is the Hotel de la Providence. Charlotte arrived in Paris from Caen on July 9, 1793, slept at the hotel on that and the following night, and on the morning of the 11th walked quietly out of'- it to slay the monster Marat. The bedroom is still pjinted out which the Norman heroine Occupied, and some regret is felt that the place has to be demolished. But the march of progress is merci less. The buildings are needed to extend the Rue du Louvre, and soon human feet will tramp on the spot where the Norman heroine slept her last calm sleep of maiden freedom. WEATHER FORECAST FOR TODAY of the Royal Saxon Meteorological Institute. Strong westerly winds, variable skies, passing showers, somewhat warmer.
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