Suche löschen...
The Daily record and the Dresden daily : 15.05.1906
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 1906-05-15
- Sprache
- Englisch
- Vorlage
- SLUB Dresden
- Digitalisat
- SLUB Dresden
- Lizenz-/Rechtehinweis
- Public Domain Mark 1.0
- URN
- urn:nbn:de:bsz:14-db-id416971482-190605153
- PURL
- http://digital.slub-dresden.de/id416971482-19060515
- OAI-Identifier
- oai:de:slub-dresden:db:id-416971482-19060515
- Sammlungen
- Zeitungen
- Historische Zeitungen
- Strukturtyp
- Ausgabe
- Parlamentsperiode
- -
- Wahlperiode
- -
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- ZeitungThe Daily record and the Dresden daily
- Jahr1906
- Monat1906-05
- Tag1906-05-15
- Monat1906-05
- Jahr1906
- Links
-
Downloads
- Einzelseite als Bild herunterladen (JPG)
-
Volltext Seite (XML)
Y^JEPRESpEN miy Office. Struvestr. 5 1 Expedition: Struvestr. 5 1 open 9—6 o’clock. Telephone: 1755. 51® 3' i3- N. Latitude geoffnet von 9-6 Uhr. 130 44' 15« E. Longitude Fernruf: 1755. M 84. 10 Pfennig. DRESDEN, Tuesday, May 15, 1906. “The Dresden Daily” will appear every morning except on Mondays and days following public holidays. It will be sent to any address in Dresden on payment of a Quarterly Subscription of 3 Jt. The subscription may commence at any time. TELEGRAPHIC NEWS. THE NATAL REVOLT. N'Kandhla, May 11, 11 p.m. Native levies are being organised. The follow ing chiefs have offered assistance: Umshnano, Ousethelf, Siswana, Ousenyonga, Matyna, and Ulkulwena. All regard Dinizulu as their para mount chief. A forest ranger who has escaped from Bambaata reports that he has moved into the Mome bush country. After yesterday’s reconnaissance, bands of Siga- nanda’s followers attacked the loyal levies, shout ing, derisively, “You are dogs! Only dogs!” The Natal Mounted Rifles checked the onslaught. The Carbineers Regiment has started for Help- makaar. N'Kandhla, May 12. The facility for the rebels to move from one extremity of the forest to another presents diffi culties for the field force. Yesterday Bambaata was in the centre of a triangle formed by three columns. Durban, May 12. The British forces are being joined by more native levies. The rapid movements of the rebels in an almost inaccessible country make the task of the field force a very difficult one. Troops are being concentrated in the Help- makaar district. The Omelis are restless. They have murdered a loyal native. Durban, May 13. Reuter telegraphs that a fight took place yester day near Hetzemakaar with the Kulas tribe, thirty of whom were killed, and many wounded. The British loss was nil. THE TABAH INCIDENT. Constantinople, May 12. The Porte has answered the English Ambassador today with a note in which the withdrawal of the Turkish troops is announced and a regulation of the frontier by a mixed commission is accepted. The note, however, makes reservations as to the sovereignty, and stipulations as to the English frontier posts. The note as well as its tone does not satisfy the English Embassy. On the Turkish side, however, it is hoped that the Government in London will accept the answer and that the in cident is thereby closed. Constantinople, May 13. The troops occupying Tabah have been withdrawn By order of the Sultan. AN ANGLO GERMAN INCIDENT. London, May 11. Reuter announces from a reliable source that on the 4 th of May a fight took place between German troops and Morenga on British territory inside the Borders of Cape colony. The Cape police made rigorous protests, but the German commander took •to notice of them. Berlin, May 12. With reference to the announcement from Cape iown that the fight between the Germans and Morenga on the 4th inst. took place on the British side of the Cape border, the following semi-official statement has been issued here: —“It is correct that the last engagement with Morenga was fought British territory. Being pursued by the de tachment under Capt. Bech, Morenga crossed the Border with his armed men, and as he was not disarmed by the Cape Police, and as it was to be expected that Morenga would return to German territory at another point, the Bech detachment extended the pursuit to British territory. “The German Government has instructed its Ambassador in London to declare that it dis approves any trespass of German troops on British territory, and that it has repeated the instructions that sense which were given to commanding officers at the commencement of the campaign.” ANGLO-GERMAN ENTENTE MUNICIPALS. London, May 13. About half of the whole number of civic author ities expected from Germany on a return visit to the English municipal representatives who were so hospitably received in Cologne, Berlin, Dresden, and other German cities last year, arrived this evening, and were met by Lord Lyvedon and the other members of the Reception Committee. The visitors, among whom are the Oberburgermeisters of Aachen and Dresden, have taken up their quarters at De Keyser’s Royal Hotel. NEWS FROM AMERICA. THE MURDERER MEYER. New York, May 12. The furniture dealer Wilhelm Meyer, from Meschede, who is supposed to be the murderer of an old lady, Frau Marie Vogel from San Francisco, whose corpse was found in a box given to a Frankfort express-agent by Meyer, was arrested with a female companion on the arrival of the steamship Graf Waldersee in Hoboken. The prisoners were brought to New York and appeared before the commissioner, Mr. Shields, who had issued the warrant of arrest. It is further announced that Meyer offered no resistance when he was handcuffed. His companion, who was entered as his wife in the list of passengers on the Graf Waldersee, admitted at once that her name was Christiani, and overwhelmed the police officer Bernhard who arrested her with all kinds of questions about the crime. [The murder referred to above is that of a lady whose body was discovered in a travelling trunk in a Frankfort express agency. The body was iden tified as that of an old lady who came from San Francisco to Germany with a man called Meyer two years ago. They settled at Wildungen, but disappeared three weeks ago, on April 26. Meyer turned up in Frankfort. He visited the agency and told them he was expecting a box full of clothes from Wildungen, and requested that it might be warehoused for three months, as he was going to Italy. At Frankfort Meyer was joined by a young woman named Christiani, but from the day on which he visited the agency all traces of the pair were lost. Last Wednesday the attention of the agent was drawn to a smell proceeding from the box, and on its being opened the corpse was discovered. The Wildungen authorities surmised that Meyer had gone to America, and enquiries at the shipping- office proved them righr, as Meyer was found to have taken berths in the second class of the steamer which has just arrived in New York as stated in the telegram above. Ed.] REVOLUTION IN PORTO RICO. Washington, May 12. The State Department has learnt that a new re volution is being planned in San Domingo, with Porto Rico as a basis of operations. The Governor of Porto Rico has been instructed to observe the laws of neutrality, which do not permit the fitting- out or departure of a hostile expedition. The United States warships stationed at San Domingo will receive orders to prevent the landing of any such forces. NEWS FROM FRAM E. THE NEED FOR DISARMAMENT. Paris, May 12. Senator d’Estournelles, President of the Parlia mentary Arbitration group, has announced that, when the Senate meets again, he intends to put a question to the Minister of Marine, touching the necessity of an international understanding as to the reduction of outlay in the navy. NEWS FROM RUSSIA. THE DUMA. St. Petersburg, May 12. In the course of the sitting the President read a telegram of congratulation from the Parliament of Finland. The House applauded and commissioned the President to return their thanks to the Parlia ment. The appointment of officials was then pro ceeded with; as vice President Prince Peter D: 1- gorukow with 382 votes and Professor Gredeskui- Charkow with 372 were elected. Prince Schackoffsky was elected Secretary of the Duma by 380 votes, and the election of his five assistants was unani mous. In the debate which preceded this election, with regard to the method of voting which some speakers wished simplified, in order that the House might pass on more quickly to important questions, one speaker remarked that he reproached the Duma The President interrupted the speaker and called him to order, pointing out that such an expression could not be allowed, since the authority of the Duma stood higher than any other authority. A storm of applause followed the President’s words. At the suggestion of the President the House de cided to introduce methods of voting customary in other European parliaments. Towards the close of the session the President opened the discussion of the proposal of Roditschef to send an address to the Czar as an answer to the Speech from the throne and to appoint a commission of 33 members to draw up the address. The address is to contain a declaration that the granting of the general amnesty is absolutely necessary. The Duma re solved that the proposal of Roditschef was a matter of urgency, and, after refusing the motion for ajournment, at once began to discuss the address. After Roditschef, in an inflammatory speech, had declared the necessity of an immediate general amnesty, the peasant deputies Anikin, Aladyn, and others continued the debate and made violent speeches. Anikin declared that it was the first duty of the Duma to demand the immediate am nesty from the Government for all political pri soners. Should this demand of the people remain unsatisfied, the people themselves would liberate the prisoners, and then a revolution would break out in the whole of Russia. He hoped that the Government would not let things go so far, would still come to its senses and would, of its own accord, grant the demands of the popular represen tatives. It was then determined that the words of the address should be edited by a commission of 33 members. The next session takes place tomor row afternoon at 2 o’clock. The commission will then be elected. St. Petersburg, May 12. In yesterday’s sitting of the Duma Roditschef, in his speech about the amnesty, spoke as follows: The amnesty question is not a party question, but a national question. The proposal to grant an amnesty cannot be the object of any Bill, for mercy is the prerogative of the Sovereign. I will not therefore introduce the Bill, but I will call attention to the sufferings of the whole people. We address a petition to the Sovereign, and express the wish of the whole people, that this petition should not become a demand. During the election, on the way to St. Petersburg, and here in St. Peters burg itself, we have heard absolutely nothing but the word amnesty. Those learned in the law believe that there is in Russia no death penalty, and yet in the month of April 99 executions took place. Pardon must be general; we do not want a limited amnesty. The error of the 30 th of October must not be repeated. Let us be unanimous and let no difference of opinion about the amnesty exist between us. All who have committed a crime must be pardoned in the name of love, as the Apostle Peter was pardoned; and general pardon is the tie which unites the people to the Emperor. (Enthusiastic applause.) St. Petersburg, May 13. Today’s sitting of the Duma commenced at 3 p. m. Two resolutions lay before the House whereby the Duma was at once to petition the Czar, by tele graph, for an Amnesty-Decree as, until it was granted, the Duma could not proceed to work. For these resolutions urgency was claimed. The Vice President and another speaker spoke against urgency. The situation was acute and a conflict might easily have ensued. Count Heyden warned the House in preserving its own rights to respect the prerogatives of others. '-vtm i-x m. mam* • —tli—fflrirrtnira , T'~iTffi"''tr trairrf
- Aktuelle Seite (TXT)
- METS Datei (XML)
- IIIF Manifest (JSON)
- Doppelseitenansicht
- Vorschaubilder
Erste Seite
10 Seiten zurück
Vorherige Seite