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The Daily record and the Dresden daily : 09.04.1907
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 1907-04-09
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- Englisch
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- SLUB Dresden
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- SLUB Dresden
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- http://digital.slub-dresden.de/id416971482-19070409
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- oai:de:slub-dresden:db:id-416971482-19070409
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- ZeitungThe Daily record and the Dresden daily
- Jahr1907
- Monat1907-04
- Tag1907-04-09
- Monat1907-04
- Jahr1907
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355. ished by rill play ’row the Infantry y in the 2th: , author ’asse 19. SDEN >f. Hof. f. cher Hof. sr Hof. icher Hof. xrop. Hof. tiat ou, the and 5 of the whether the pro- e Work- ns sharp planned pend on iiz and ation of ue Con- against that the circum- 'he Acte et been received ir which ie Porte. )rte will rch 18th he mail- md Sim- t former ther, an DAY Lte. ae over- mer. ®he l^tUn Betwb 1 856. and THU DBUSDUN DAILY. DRESDEN, TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 1907. 10 PFENNIGS. * Werder Straaae; 8 Tnrkish Baths, tor ladies Monday and Friday 6|—1, Wednesday 2—8; the remaining days for gentlemen. Baths of every description. !. ident in Monday Anglo railway ed from hitherto -shi-kai chosen because of the has re- li: “The foreign if erect- ling the of War, ;o for a 1 in his gland, g of the olved to a marks, in some del Yal e at the l of the id. His nfidence lier, M. ie Duma it direct tvos, as i of M. nee that of the let him \irisien, ion, will ue Con- rith the mrgeois, re at the Wft JitBt Dflilt) {taper pnblt0l)(b tit <5erraatnj tit dtt0lt0l). Officnt S)«eodon, Sfewe* Sham £ $t*UpAon«: iT££. foe Skeand tfi* wficto o| 8evmany and duAvla: i—i 1 -mflnA a month. i= THE ROYAL MEETING IN CARTAGENA. [for annexation; but it is not supported by any- , J mng worthy to be called evidence. There is* in- ^ ee d, the best reason for believing that Acting overnor Magoon’s policy has the full approval ®. Q d support of the President and the Administra tor!. That policy is to hold the balance true as J etween the contending factions in the island, lading the elections which are to take place next Un e, and to accept the verdict which the Cuban ^ e °ple will then be called upon to give upon a tional as well as upon local issues. The King and Queen of England and the King of Spain with the Queen Mother, the Infante Ferdinand, and the Infanta Theresa arrived in Cartagena on Sunday. The Gazeta de Madrid of Sunday published the decree by which the King of England is ap pointed Captain General of the Spanish Army, as a proof of sincere friendship and heart-felt esteem. THE MEDITERRANEAN SQUADRON. The Esercito Italiano announces that the division of the mediterranean squadron commanded by Prince Louis of Battenberg, will arrive on the 16th of this month at Syracuse to greet King Victor Emmanuel. The Prince will visit the King on board the Royal Yacht “Trinacria”, and His Majesty will then return the visit on board H. M. S. “Venerable”. A SCOTCH COAL COMBINE. Information has reached London from Dunbar that negotiations are going on for the formation of a combine of coal interests, in which a number of the pit owners of East and Mid Lothian are taking part. It is said that the combined capital amounts to iy 4 million pound's sterling. The pits in question employ some 7,000 men. NEWS FROM AMERICA. TERRIBLE FIRE IN NEW YORK. The power station of the Street Railway in New | York was destroyed by fire on Sunday morning. I Seven firemen were killed by falling walls. THE CUBAN PROBLEM. Considerable interest has been aroused in New York by the cabled extracts from Lord Cromer’s report on the political situation in Egypt. It has come as a complete surprise to find Britain’s greatest living Pro-Consul pronouncing against a British protectorate in Egypt. It* had been assumed that in due course, and, indeed, at no very distant date, England would in that manner solve all her difficulties in the Nile Valley, and that America could find no better example to follow in respect to her position in Cuba. The New York Herald, in particular, has been advocating an American Protectorate of Cuba for months past, and had undoubtedly converted a good many of its contemporaries to its views. The fact that the Liberal party in Cuba is vehemently opposed to a Protectorate—Gen. Eloinaz del Castillo, one of the leaders of that party, quite recently de clared that any attempt at annexation or at a pro tectorate, would result in war, “a colossal war with out quarter, sparing neither lives nor property”— | s not apparently regarded as of much practical nnportance. The Liberals, it is urged, have been petted by Acting-Governor Magoon to such an ex tent that they have been afflicted with chronic ^veiled head. All the “solid” classes, it is con tended, would welcome a protectorate, and so the fhing to do is to go ahead and make that solution a n accomplished fact. A month or so ago a Washington journal pro fessed to be in a position to state that President Roosevelt had become tired of “the noisome, in- c °nipetent, and rascally politicians” of Cuba. The suggestion is again made, now that the President aas changed his views, at any rate, to the extent m admitting that there is something to be said Mr. Taft, Secretary for War, is proceeding to Cuba at the request of the President to study the situa tion on the spot. It is believed that he will find it greatly improved since he was installed in the Palace at Havana; and it is confidently expected that he will approve of further large reductions in the strength of the American army of occupation, if not in its entire withdrawal. MR. ROOSEVELT AND THE TRUST MAGNATES. According to the Washington correspondents, President Roosevelt has contemptuously refused to take any notice of Senator Penrose’s denial that he has been concerned in the now famous five million dollars plot for “nobbling” the Republican and Democratic National Conventions next year, with a view to having installed at the White House a President more agreeable to the Trusts than the present occupant. This is taken to mean that Mr. Roosevelt did actually intend to refer to Mr. Penrose as one of the conspirators. Mr. Penrose is a leading light in the Republican party, so that the position is be coming more awkward daily. There is, indeed, a growing belief that Mr. Roosevelt has displayed less than usual of his political acumen in con nection with this squabble with Mr. Harriman and its developments. Among professional politicians there is practically a unanimous opinion that the President has already done much damage to his party, and that the thing is to “close down” the whole controversy. As far as can be ascertained, Mr. Roosevelt is by no means disposed to let the matter drop. Certainly it is not his way to let go anything that he has once got a good grip of, and in this fight with the Trust magnates he seems to think that he has so far had the advantage, an opinion that is certainly not shared by public men generally. , A DESTRUCTIVE TORNADO. A tornado of great violence visited the states of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama on Friday, last; 25 persons are reported to have lost their lives and 50 to have been seriously injured. AN EX-PRESIDENT MURDERED. The Associated Press announces from Mexico that a young man from Guatemala by name Cabrera has murdered the ex-President of Guate mala, Sen. Barellas, in the Chamber of Deputies. THE UNREST IN CENTRAL AMERICA. A conference was held in the State Department on Saturday at which the representatives of Mexico, Costa Rica, San Salvador and Guatemala were present. It is hoped that an agreement will be arrived at by which peace may be secured in Central America. Mr. Secretary Root has stated that this Con ference is of opinion that the time has arrived when by mutual action an end may be put to the hostilities in Central America. If this result can not be attained by the joint representations of the United States, other means will be employed. NEWS FROM FRANCE. THE GENERAL STRIKE. In Paris the Committee of the Workmen’s Union of the Food branch, fearing that the telegraph ad ministration might make difficulties when the order to strike is given, has resolved to at once issue in structions to all the branches of the Union that all work is to cease on Thursday, April 11. On that day meetings will be held everywhere, in order to decide upon a line of conduct. The fol lowing trades will take part in the general strike: bakers, butchers, millers, waiters, cooks and others. The employers are maintaining a rather sceptical attitude towards the strike threats. According to information which has been re ceived from various provincial towns, the strike orders issued in Paris will be by no means uni versally obeyed. NEWS FROM RUSSIA. THE TSHERNIAK AFFAIR. The St. Petersburg correspondent of the Temps communicates to his journal information as to an interpellation which the revolutionary socialist mem bers of the Duma intend to make with reference to the Russian revolutionary Tsherniak who fled to Stockholm and after his expulsion from that country died on the steamship while en route to Belgium. This interpellation is said to be based on so-called indisputable documents which prove that a correspondence exists between the Minister of the Interior and the Minister for Foreign Affairs as to the grant of a reward to the police agent who is named in connection with Tsherniak’s death. The correspondent of the Temps states further that a letter was written by the Crown Prince of Sweden to the Czar on the Tsherniak affair. This latter statement has already been expressly denied by the Swedish Foreign Minister, and the P. T. A. is in a position to affirm that all other statements on the matter in the Temps are equally devoid of truth. SUICIDE IN GAOL. A female prisoner in the SS. Peter and Paul fortress arrested for belonging to the Maximalist group and charged with complicity in the robbery of the custom house on October 27th last, has hanged herself. It is believed that her name was Dorothejeff, but the authorities refuse to give any information. THE REVOLUTIONARY MOVEMENT. The enquiries made by the police in consequence of the incidents of the last few days, have re sulted in the discovery of an organised band; up to the present 12 members of this band have been arrested. In the house of one of them, who having left the State school was about to enter a military academy, was found a whole store of loaded bombs, dynamite and gunpowder. Serious fighting has taken place at Lodz be tween Socialist, National-democrat and Christian- democrat labourers, ten men being killed and five mortally wounded. The emeute took place at 7 o’clock on Saturday evening as the workmen in the Posansky factory were returning home. Some 40 men armed with revolvers met them on their way, and having ordered the women and children to go away, opened fire. The firing continued well into the night. THE MOROCCAN CRISIS. A rumour is afloat in Tangier that Raisuli and his adherents have reached the neighbourhood of Seluen and have been accorded a ceremonial re ception by the Pretender. Announcements from native sources state that the Shereefian Govern ment has caused the commander of the Mahalla that operated against the Beni Aros, to be. in formed that the occupation of Udjda is consequent on an understanding between France and the Sultan in order to restore order, to checkmate the Pretender and to enable the Shereefian Go vernment to concentrate all its forces against the rebels in the North. The commander of the troops stationed at El Ksar, El Mrani, is said to have stated on hearing of the occupation of Udjda that the ammunition given him by the Sultan was meant for a campaign against the Christians to avenge the insult inflicted by the occupation of Udjda. El Mrani has sent messengers to Tangier, to ascertain if this information is correct. LOCAL. After much arduous rehearsing those members of the British community who are taking part in the Amateur theatrical performance at the Bristol Hotel this evening at 8 p. m., are ready to submit the result of their labours to the verdict of a public audience. A large number of tickets have been sold, but there are still some left which may be obtained at the doors. Anna Schoningh, in her folk-song concert at the Palmengarten on Saturday evening next the 13th instant, 7.30 o’clock, will perform the fol lowing programme: Old Dutch folk-songs: “Wilhel- inus van Nassouwen”, and “Tagelied”. Old German songs: “Heimlicher Liebe Pein” (Weber); “Tandara- dei” (Riedel); “Amor im Nachen” (Gastoldi, set by Max v. Haken). Swedish folk-songs: “Der Taube Gesang auf dem Lilienzweig”; “Ungltickliche Liebe”. French folk-songs: “Le pauvre laboureur”; “Ma fille veux-tu un bouquet”. Dutch folk songs: “Ein Lied von einem Madchen und einem Schiffer”; “Das lose Magdlein”. Finnish song, “Der erste Kuss” (Sibelius). A. Mendelssohn’s “Waigenlercken” (Rhenish), and “Maidag” (Rhenish). Dutch nursery songs by Catte van Renners: “Ein Tanzchen”; “Spazierfahrt im Sonnenschein”; by Hendrik van Tuisschenbroek: “Lief leisje liep in de Linde laan”. Songs in Low German: “Min Johann” (Grimm); “He sii mi so vel” (Riickauf); “Matten Has’” (Jansen); “Liitt Anna Katrin” (v. Holstein); “Min Antje” (Grimm). At the pianoforte Herr Max v. Haken.
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