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Neue Kansas Staats-Zeitung from Kansas City, Kansas • 1

Neue Kansas Staats-Zeitung from Kansas City, Kansas • 1

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Kansas City, Kansas
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Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

It 91 v. 22 anfa (Situ, 18. Samtar, 1907, and the slack spells may fall on (Sin aufd)blatt bemerCt.bag Ob ft3terGtorp ber grojjen ambur qer ampfergefefllcijaft fei eine litetruppe, beren Suchtigfeit Pon bem Of fiierg Sorpg tetner ante ren itbertrotten tuerbe. SidjtS liegt un turner, al3 bie SRiditipfett biefer Sefjauptung beftreiten gu rooflen. Um fo mebr ous.

This is what the Democrat has to say in a recent issue: "Topeka sets herself up as the "Holy City." The people are all goody good. One minister became famous preaching temperance and published the Capital one week as "Christ would edit the paper." He is now over in Fng'and preaching prohibition, but from the following clipping taken from last 8a turday's Topeka Journal we think Der unb ber eitfdje bebrotjt. 2llg 'Suile mit etnem anl)ern ent roifdjen fudjte. rourbe ec Don bem f)tlfgf)eriff Satec etngebolt, oor benS3urgermeifter Sft abcltff flefutjrt unb Don biefem 20 XaQtn $tet tentjaft Derutttjeilt. 3m efang niffe rourbe ttjnen etn brttteS Op fer gugefteflt, bag con ten Sfla oenbaltern auggepeitfdjt roar, bafj bc3 iletfd) tn een Dom 2etbe ding.

3m efdnqniffe Derftel 93urfe come of the husband if husband there bej is only fifteep dollars. So it takes over two week's work to pay one month's rect. As the average fsmily is four or five, it needs no higher mathematics to sse that every expense must be whittled, and every asset made to count, if even hunger i3 shut out. Long, lowering tenements are yielded up to our sweatshop infernos. There are twenty-three thousand licensed "home factories" in STAATSZEITUNG Is published every Friday.

Subscription $1.50 per annum. F. GEHRING, Editor. Alt communications to this paper should be addressed to F. Gehring OZr; Western ewspaper Union, Tenth and Central Street, Kansas City, Mo.

Home P'lione Iairi. KANSAS ITattrt la9 in lirfem 3arc tbgealtci uicriicH? STrringtmfMt5cimitc gntc 2Jt SnbianapoItS, 14. anuar. a3 angerfeft be3 angerbunbeS, ba3 in biefem om-mer ter ftattftnben foil, mirb jeben faH3 uerfdjoben roerben miiffen, iteil faum baran gu benfen ift, baft bic aHe bt sum DJionat ul fertig lutrb. ie Stabt nbianapoltS roolltc bte afte felbft erbauen nb bai angerfeft foflte fie etnroeten.

ie alte 2ttarftljaIIe neben bem IRatrfjauS foflte einem 2Iubttortum umgeoaut toerben unb am 21. 3anitu foflten bie SIngebote entgegengenommn text ben. 5Jcun ift aber bte alte S3ube nod gar nidjt abgeriffen unb aufterbttn bte bie einen tanb in ber aftarftfjalle fjaben, etn Sin r)aItoerfat)ren etngelettet. Jfliirger metfter 23ootroaIter erflarte f)ute, baft bte tabt Don ben Strdjiieften bte 3u ftd)erung erljalten I)abe, baft bie QaUt bt gum 1. Sunt fertig fein tnerbe.

31m 21. 3-anuar foUen bie Sontrafte oergeben tnerben unb eg feien alle 23orfeI)rungen getroffen, bie VIrbeiten mit moglidift grofter Snergte 311 be tretben. ie fcfjott oor einiger gegen bie Stabt angeftrengten Stlagen, beren tued tuar, bietabt an bem S3au ber atte 3U oerbinbern, feien gegen bie it'feiger entfrfjteben loorben unb bas toiirbe aud) in bem erft jetjt roteber angeftrengten rojeft gefd)c r)en, ba bie inooloirten Jyragen mit benen in ben anberen rojeffen iben-- If Gcv. Hoch or his attorney-general were really desirous of getting at the bottom facts in regard to the rotteness that existed among all the public officials connected in fj one wuy or another with the execution of the prohibition laws in Wyandotte county, the books of the Kansas Cit' brewers would, as we are assured by one of thera, furnish overwhelming evidence of the various methods by which they have been bled by those officials year in year out. High license is no comparison to the sums thus filched trorn them for the privilege of seising their product on the Knnsas Side of the State Line.

any day. Poverty walls the children from play and school. When the wolf whines at the door, all hands must hold the bar. Every finger can do a little. A child under three can help at sorting beads for embroi dering slippers and purses, or at stringing petals for artificial flowers.

A child a little older can sew buttons on cards, or sew buttons (twelve to a pair) on the endless pile of trousers is the tenement name for them) that are continually being sent out for finishing. Girls of ten or twelve can hem towels or make plain aprons. Older girls can make boy's summer suits of reefers and trousers for which they get thirty-five cents a dozen. For a dozen kimonos the' get sixty cents. A girl can run a sewing-machine all day for a number of years.

She may imperil her health, and destroy her usefulness as 'a mother of children. But never mind: she can sit in a corner by and by and work eyelets in shirt fronts at four cents a dozen shirts. A vonng bov, his bones yet in the gristle, may run a buttonhole machine, one foot only on the treadle. He is threatened with curvature of the spine, owing to constant pressure upon one side of his bodv. But.

never mind: there are hospitals forthoee who get too crooked. And, as one of these tired mothers said, "the graveyard always stands the friend of the poor." The sweat-shoparmv works long hours, and does work neceesary for the comfort of us all. We have seen how it is paid; let us see how it is housed. In a true civilization property would be based'on service, and the workers would live in beautiful homes. Only idlers wculd live in hovels.

But what happens to our useful needle-folk? They are often driven into ramshackle-buildings to be near neighbors to the rats in the sewers and the worms in the rotting wood. In these homes, discomfort is lord chamberlain, and disease the bedfellow The houses are ice-boxes in winter and ovens in summer. Every door is death's door; for the bacilli of consumption are a dust on the walls and ceilings. Three out of five of these doomed workers who are making our clothes are led down to death by the white plague. Are there not other places with cleaner, lighter, airier rooms? Yes; but the sweatshoppers must be near the work that gives them their short leave to be alive.

The sew ing trade is highly specialized: it is spasmodic and shifting. Therefore the contract shops must be close together, and close to a central market. The locality is thus conditioned by the trade. The tenements provide the accommodations that the wage of the worker can command. He must be where he can pay the rent that is his terror the rent that the "cockroach" landlord(the subletting landlord) is forever raising as the slender fortunes of the needle-folk go up.

Only those who know the hard grind can understand the dread of dispossession forever haunting the minds of the workers living ou the crumbling verge of the abyss Food and clothes they can minimize; but the rent-taker, like death, must have his dole. These unlit, unlovely homes, which the sweated garment workers struggle so hard to hold, have only an average of three rooms. Thousands of rooms in these tenements depend upon grimy air-shafts for their scanty light. The room where the light comes in must be the place of cooking, eating, and working perhaps also the place of mattres-res spread out on tle floor at night for boardeis. For even these three rooms must often be shared with boarders to reduce the rent.

The average rent is nine dollars a month. The average monthly in- abec miiffen roir bie tjatfadje be Efagen, boft bie 9iitglieber biefer (Slitetruppe in nod) hoberem rabe bie flaoen beg Seibiacfg ftnb. alg bie gerodrjnlictjen c-ageli3t)ner unb g-abrifarbeiter eutfchlanbg, benn bag DrganifattDngrecrjt eytfttrt fur jte ntcbl. te bticfen tetnem etn bettreten, ber ben mafegeben ben Don ber amburg i'lmertfa atn fergefellfdjaft etu orn im Vluge ift. 8ie miiffen fid tfjr rot mit irjrer jyreihett erfau fen.

ag ift ber 9iefpeft beS elb facfg nor ber fjofjeren jntelltgen unb ber perfonltcben liicbtiqteif. 2)ie Seictjen unb jyiieuijof'Or5 binang ber batrifdjen tabtStrau btng befttmnit auf Slnorbnug beg btfdjofltctjen Orbinariatg burg, bafc ungetaufte ftmber md)i auf bent tatboltfdjen gtiebbofe, fonbern auf etnem befonberen beerbtgen finb. SemerEengmertbe sittorte fprad) 9vabbtner rorone tn etner iftero g)jifer gnagoge gelegentltd) etneg 93ortragg tiber 3erfirj-' SKebner gab bie Sdjuib an Der SSermdjtuna, ber raelttifdjett 2etropole unb thteg rounbernoUen jEempetg bem lteber tjanbnefjmen beg sJtettt)tfjitmg unb befonbeag ber bebtngungglofen 21nbetung beg iKetdjthumg. cts tirt etfptele aug ber2Beltgejd)td)te roelctje tlluftciren, ban bte Slnauf5 ung trbttdjer titer blinben 9Jia teriaUgmuS unb biefer roteDetum ben Untergang beg Solfeg berbet fiifjrte, unb roanbte ti) banti Dett tn unferem iianbe beftel)enben Sert)altntiien rote fofgt er retdje ftsht fjeuru tage auBecijalh Der (jtn iorerj mag fid von feiner eblen fytau fcfjetbeu laffen, bte efell fdjaft" t)olirt ibn nidjt. (Sin SBhtte mag unfcbitlbigeSltnbec oerberben, fetn Zob tuicb Don eben biefer fellfdjaft brjftertfd) betrauetf.

(Sin epero mag aug ber (iqmtabte Saufeube unrecfjtmafjig fjtnatjg gietjen, unfere Senatoren tjalten, bafj er fentein Stucjle Sljre madjt. ebeg epartement, roelctjeg ber frittfdjen 2upe unter rr.orfen routbe, aeigte faule d)d ben, ratr fiumnern ung nidjt ba runt. biefer eift, bte SXn betung beg 3Jiatnmong unb beg turd) ibn ermtrttett (Srfolgeg fid) auf bie foattnenbe eneratton Dec erbt, fo ift unjer 2anb Derloren." Unb nun fommt etn Diann, ber reidjer fetn mill, ber fremtne 3obn 5etn Statue ift yreberid! SBetjertjuufer. erfelbe foil fid) itn 2aufe Don 50 3aljren unennefilid)etrecfen SSSalblanbeg, bie fid) Dom Staate SBigconfin big nad) ber pacific Stiifte I)intet)en, gefidjert tjaben. eren SKerttj roirb auf mebirere Silltonen oflarS ger fdjaft.

roerben fiinfttge SDitllt onen um tt)r eburtgredjt cuf 2anb, 2uft unb SBaffec beraubt. 2Bie fdianblidj felbft roeifee 5Ir beiter im iiben bebanbelt roers ben, baritber gab eine SSerhanb lung Dor ben rrfjgefdjroorenen in (Jrjarlotte, 9t. erne let)creidj2 lugfunft. Ingeflagt rouren ber 33urgermeifter 9iabcliff Don 9Jiari on, k. (5., ber ilfgfbenff Safer unb eine Slnatjl iSeamter ber (Carolina Sonftruction roeifte Slrbeiter rote StlaDen bes tjanbett gu t)aben.

giner ber $eugen, SBBtlltam Surfe Don 22ilf2gbarre, er gatjlte iiber feme rlebniffe fotgen beg: S3urfe roar Don etnem yiero porter 5lrbettgnadjroeigbureau fur bie (Sonftruction So. alg Gterf an geroorben. Sr rourbe aber tro fetneg Srotefteg mtt anberen unnelarbetten cjerangeflogen. ie SSeten mufeten mit 92egern ber unterften Sllaffen ufammtn fen unb rourben mit bem 9teDol that the Rev. Sheldon should come home and get.

busy reforming the "Holy City," and rescue the children from the terrible curse of drink. The Journal says: "In his attack upon ChiefDono-van at the teachers' meeting at the Presbyterian church JudgeHayden placed the blame of the criminality among the children of the city of Topeka upon the police force. He said that it was their fault that the places which caused the downfall of so many young boys and girls of thirteen and fourteen years old wTere not closed up. The judge of the juvenile court advocated the closing up of the places instead of punishing the children after allowing them to go into such dives. "Chief Donovan was somewhat wrathy over the judge's speech and said this morning: is not a sicgle arrest for drunkenness of boys under sixteen years of age.

You can look on the books and you will not find a single one. It is not our business to arrest boys under sixteen that belongs lo the juvenile "Judge Hayden said this morning: 'There may not beany sixteen year old boys booked at the city jail but plenty of them are brought in here. The police do not do it, but I have to send my deputy out to get them. I have five hundred boys brought in here for being found drunk in low resorts, One little fellow under ten years of age has been before roe at least ten times fortius offense. They and the little girls start down hill first in the restaurants, then the dance halls behind them and are graduated into the low houses.

Why, now here except in Topeka and the wild west yon find dance halls. They are a thing of the past and have been banished from Kansas City and other bi cities long ago." Judge Hayden is a regularly constituted official, and certainly he would not assert, that children got drunk, if it were not so. Just think of it. in tnink ot u- 1,1 llus prohibition blessed, rum banished state, with such a pious, sanctimonious temperance pouter as Gov. Hoch for governor, hat such things exist.

If there is a friend of prohibition in Kansas who can and will defend such debauchery, let him come forth. Such things do not exist in Kansas City, where saloons are licensed. We repeat our past, assertions, the prohibitory law is a farce, a fraud, and a disgrace. It never has been enforced, and never will be. Gov.

Hoch whs elected by the joint element and those who don't want the law enforced. The hypocrisy of Topeka, the "Holy City" of Kansas, is the limit." (Continued.) In three hundred out of five hundred homes, women aud children must work to eke out the living. Fourteen to sixteen hours is the usual stretch of this working-day. A child frequently earns only one cent an hour: while the sweater figures so that a wo-man shall not earn more than ten cents. The average iucome of the whole family is five dollars and seventy-five cents a week.

Sometimes in a rush order the elders cau sleep only five hours of the twenty-four. An order must be finished on time and be back on time, though all other activities of the house should ceas9. The sewing machine must whir, the fingers must fly. Little and big must toil, eyer-hastening, never-resting, to get the work out and to get home more work to hold the job. For worse than all work is no work: auf ben glurilidjen ebanfen an bag tn 'afbtngton fdbretben unb ben acboerhalt bar juftellen.

er S3rief rourbe etnem Doriibergefjenben Unbefannten gu geioorfen, ber if)n audj rtdjttg an fetne SlDreffe roeiter fpebtrte. Sine Unterfudjung ber 58unbegbeamten folgte, roobet fid) fjeraugftellte.bafe unter anbern etnjjm ber roeifjen Sflaoen Don bem flaDenDogte mtt einsm Slnitppel beibe 23etne gebrodtjen roaren, fo baf? ber Un glitcflidie Reit fetneg 2eben2 etn JRriippel bletben roirb. aufenbe Don roeifjen 2lcbettern foflen in je ner egenb atjnltdje Sdjicffale er lebt tjaben. oldie SBortommniffe locfen ftd)er nid)t jurugroanoerung nad) bem iiben, obroccjl aubererfeitg anerfannt roerben mu3, baft fid) gerabe ber itben in einer IPeife entrotrielt bat, roie fein anberer Sanbegtbetl. 33or allem t) iite man fid) or ber iijerbtnbung mit ben I'lrbettgnacfjtDeifebureauf, ben fo genannten (Smplorjment Sin fnrdjtbareg Scbbeben roirb Don ber Smfet 3amaifa gemelbet.

s2tu Si. fjomag, dnifd) 2Mt-Snbien etfdtjrt man fearuber fol genbeg: ie in ber )ollanbud)t auf ber itingfton qegenitber Itegenben eite 3amat fu'g beridjtete bjute, baft am iUiotr-tag SKadjmittafl 3 lU)c :0 sJjhnuten etn duUsrft tjeftigeg Srbbeben auf 3nmaiEa tjerrfdjte, baf? er-beerungen nuf bee 3fel, namer.b lid) aber in iiingfton, anrtdete. SI lie auf ber 3n rouvben ertjort unb ba aiut) bte ftabel Off tee in Oer pollanbud)t ft art befdjdDtgt rourbe, fo bietbt aud) biefe oorldufij oljne genaue iiber ben Umfang beg Unglucfg, Sg ift jebodj fidjer, bal3 bte taut Jrttttgfton gat'3 erftort rourbe unb bafj unberte Don Se roobnern tbc 2eben babet einbiife ten. djroadjere Srbftofse madjen fid) audj beute nod) bemerEbrr unb Dermetjceu bted)recEeu berattgen blicflidjen duatton. sBer bet bem geftiigen Srbbeben fetn 2eben retteu oermoijte, ift aug ber tabt entflorjeu uii3 Eainpirt tm Jreien aufjerbalb ber tabt.

ofort nad) bem Srbbeben brad) in Sitngfton 5euer aug unb Dollenbete bager nid)iiuiggtoerE, bag bag Srbbeben begonnen t)at. te meifteneroot)--ner ergriffn bte (ud)t, Dl)tte ir genb etiaag Don itjren abfeligEet5 ten (v-i retten, unb biefe 2eute t)a ben jefct roeberpeim nodi Slleibung ober 9tat)runggmittel unb man be furdjtet, bafe etjr balb eiu grofjer 9Cotl)ftanb Dtntreten roirb. mtfififrtjcr 2Hitai jhim ftebentea tycdruar Dcrtagt. SSerltn, 14. $an.

3n UeBerctnfttm mung mtt bem fdjon friirjer mitgettjeil-ten 23efcr)luB f)at ber preufetftfje fianb tag bis 3um ftebenten ebruar erien gemad)t. tefer ajtttt empfafjl fid) ton felbft, ba btele 2JJttgIieber be3 preufeifdjen 2tbgeorbnetenaufe3 aud) Sanbibakn iir ben 9ietd)tag ftnb unb em namt)after rocentfafc ber iibrtgen birefien Stntetl an ber Sampagne nimmt. te etatberatfumg Ijatte be Ijatb bet leeren S3anfen ftottfintxn miiffen, unb fo erfebxen bte aetttrjetlige 23ertagung aU ber paffenbfte 5Iuroeg. 9Jad)bem ber Stat tm 2t6gotbneten t)aufe berabfdjtebet fetn roirb, biitfte fofort an bte S3eratt)ung ber oln borlage gegangen tnerben, njeldje bm taate grofeere 2ad)tmtttel in fetnem Eampfe mit ber allpolntf d)n $ropa ganba sur SSerfiigung fteHen foil. S3 ift inbfj gu conftattren, ber pol ntfde (Sdjulftreif, roeIcr)er eine Qtit lang bte emiitljer in bebcnfltd)em 9Jlae erljifcte, Iangfam abflaut, ba bte egenmtttel, toeldje bte JRegterung in 2lmenbung gebradjt f)at unb nodj trtngt, aHmiiltd) ifjte SBtrlung au New York city alone.

There are perhaps as many more in the three hundred and sixty-thousand dark rooms ot this xJaoyion in tne back stories ef tenements, in the cellars, cabins, and shanties that no inspector has ever scented out. In one square mile of these tenements, six hun dred thousand people are crowded, perhaps the most densely packed mound of human ants upon this planet. The Rev. Doctor Behrends found, in a block of Hester Street, a room twelve by eight and five and a half feet high, in which nine persons slept and cooked and worked. In another room, located in a basement, where living, working, and sleeping two men with their wives, a girl of fourteen, a boy of seventeen, two single men, two women, and four boy just entering their "teens." Packed to gether in that cellar room were fourteen human beings.

What delicacy or decency of life is pos sible in such dehumanizing homes? It is in such mockeries of home that drudgery wears its spiked crown It is in such poverties that men drift beastward, women sink to haghood, and children wax old before they have tasted youth. (To bo continued te edjniE unferer gett hat inge bie Dor furgem nod) alg einfad) unmoglidi bmge ftellt rourben unb eg last fid) taum augbenfen, roa afleg nod) pemadjt roerben tutrD. SBtirDe beg menidjlidjen bag ant, 2erDoIIfomtnnung tedjniidjer Sin ge geridjtet ift, angeroanbt roerben, urn unfere gefellichaftlichen (Sin rtdjtungen unb ba leben ber 'Dienfcfjen untereinanber uerrjollfommnen, esc mace beffer auf unferer Gtrbe. Stann nod) em 3meitel an ber amerifantictjen rofperitat be ftetjen? te Softer beg htlabel phta sJDitlIiondcg 3. iSrtnton Gtoye, (Sore, Jjat ben (Srafen tonaiim aiano tjtlipo bt s-BraoSaDorgnanSergnu DonsJioin getjeiratbet.

silieber etn ametita--nif ctjet $caf, ber in feiner fyaui tj it, bet fetnen Sumpereten buret) amertfanijetje Sfrbeit unterrjalten roerben muf3. robuenten, roeldje fict) ben 2uju leiften tonnen, fo Dtele rafen, urften unb ieroge augufjalten, miifjen in ber Stjat aufterorbentltrij gut geftellt fetn. SDie nittjtgnutitgften, t)erglofe ften, hohlEopfigften eidjopfe auf ber IDelt nennt etn Sdjreiber in ber 9toitb American Seoiero" bie liofjeren amertfantfrijen efell5 fctjafticbamen. fann ttjnen and) nidjt eine eintge gute abge minnen. SSir aud) nittt.

3Ktt PauEenfctjlag rotrb Derfiin bet, bie ifenbar)n--efell)crjafteu, Slorjten Sompanrjg, tafjl unb (Sifentnbuftrien ijdtten em fetteg Sabi: birder fidj. otje iDibenben unb rogente, (Sjtra eromne! odj nper fatft fie etn? frdgt be 92id)t bie (Sifenbabn-5Irbetter, nicbt bie S3ergleute, niri)t bie an ben edjmelgofen. te feten efunbtjeit unb 2eben em, bamit bie rare unb l)octjbefoIbete Snbuftrte ureaufraten mit bem 3ieid)tbum beg 2anbeg prafjlen fonnen, ben fie in ber afdje baben. ag 3Kot9 to ber tjeutigen OeEonomie tjeifet: (Sjproprtrung ber -SSielen burdj SEbentge; bie fojtale bagegen Derlangt Uebernarjme beg emeinbegutg Don ber efammt tjeit unb jebem (Smgelenen ba, roogu tfjn fetne 2etftungen berea tigen. A true greatness lies iD the oorisciousrie.ss of an honest uurpo.se in life, founded on a just, estimate of himself and everything else, frequent self-examination, and a steady obedience to the rule which he knows to be right, without troubling himself about what others may think or say, or whether they do or not do that which he thinks and says and does.

George Long. 'The: sons it; sen tern: at are today 575,000 per-he United States under i death to be executed known moment in the a 1.1 00 i i number eyery week Imsfly work is eomple-lutidligent and earnest ef-Id produce tho reprieve of of these innocent vic-t was in this striking sen- Dr. Josirth pre-he American Institute Service, set forth the of human life in the occupations and other-t country greater than in the world. next te: and thr i ijpti! An for! 'A; a i i 1 3 i I i tim s. i tenoe li sident of Si fearful ind ustria wis in ti in any of Th- I iladelphia "Telegraph" iir financial system is th ch nia ief source of danger tbreate- industrial activity and "-'mess.

It says: re i remend 'isl overtax- prou Hi 'W't in a blished of the s-it. The by our tary fnci irnpera! i i (iesign about o. rv ice we no is te- and esta-le-tenth part force upon ific. and it is to ai'just our inone-iltits to th. immense and demands of these over whelmingly prosperous times that a failure may be precipitated.

shows how greed for money humanity as child slavery. There is something wrong with a prosperity winch is so immense that it finally comes to feed iinon the lives of little children, iuen who make money by working infants are making too much money. There are, at a low estimate, 590,000 children under Hat work in cotton mil's, glass factories, sweatshops, mines and like industries. Those whom such toil dees not kill are being ruined for citizenship. We are turning out.

at a low estimate, 200,000 adult London Hooligans every year, and these become in turn the parents of hundreds of thousands of other degenerates. And so this civic pestilence riots and spreads. Senator Beveridge. "The prohibitory law inKansas," says the Hiawatha Democrat, "is a farce, a fraud and a disgrace." The Democrat is published in what is usually dry town" and from the tenor of the following article its position on the prohibition question is not at all ambigu tifd) feien. a VlrrangementuSo mtte, gu bem aud) fvofin U).

ber rafibent ber nbtartj 2ruft gebort, fagte, bte OJeriicbtc iittx einen eoentuellen Sluffdjub feien unbegriinbet unb baa Somite Iaffc fid) bunb in einen Slrbeiten nidjt toren. (Scviebetttt Od)vmier. Sriuuert an bie fiettiale XQat bci M-auptntnMH3 vtn SSerlin, 14. anuar. 51 it 3 efd)0 ltjtij tm SJegierttngabegtrf Oppelu roirb baS folgenbe auner ftiirf bcridjtet, bas Iebbaft an bie ge niale 2f)at be famofen )aupN manits Don Stopenid" erinnert: ber 'ilJofjnnng be3 in bent KiDtd)cn allgemein befannten iif entierS ito.uol Ief erfd)icn ant ainftag Wadiniitlag etn y.Uanu in ber Uniform einca CJerid.t:b ber eiu papier ior 3ci.de unb eritiirte, baft er ben V(ufj trag babe, eine oorgtM ba Per Rentier unb feinc attin bet ber ttiegen bcniin.urt lotTben fden.

as ooHfianbig fdiulblofe Sbepaar 10a fo erfdrorfen, baft ben yjiunb nidjt 311 bffnen loagte, al5 ber oerrneintlidie S8eamte bie djub laben gu burebfucben begann. Viad) bem ber iUJenfi) aiki oorfjanbene SBaargclD, unpefabr (500 lUt art unb Sutoelen im Seribe ton 1000 'JJlarf etngeftedt fjatte, ftcllte er bem berrn mtt oieler Umuattblidjfett eine Ouittung ait5 unb lub benielben mtt feiner Tyrait auf 11 fjr vJiad)mittag3 uacli bem Vlmtcoerhtt oor. 511-3 Mo Zici'ct unb fetne L-e ff ere ftiilfte ftdj girtcrnb tcrt eittfleflten, fid) auf bie angebiidi gegen fie gu oevth'ibigen, fanben fie gu tfjrent au, baft fie baS Opfer eineo raffinirteu gcioorbcn loaren. voljttiitiugofl auf Vieferunfl fun clef trifrtjer Mraft nu3 Snunba. Cttaam, 14.

anuar. ie cana Slegterung bat befdIoffen, iir ben Srpcrt ocn elcftrifdjer Mraft et nen fo 3ofl gu baft er fccinafje ali rcfjibitiogoll roerben fann. 31. S3. ift beauftragt morben, eine 58orIage auS guarbeiten, bie ea Airmen in Toronto terbictet, Mraft one be fonbere Cigeng nad) auiuart gu lie fern.

lugenbltdlid) giett eingelne canabifdje' cfeflfdaften in Toronto, bie alle an ben liagara fallen er geugte Mraft nad) Buffalo Itefern. urdj ben robibitiogoll follen biefe efellfcfjaften nidjt atiein gegmungin roerben, bet ber Cteferung bon elef trtfdjer Mraft canabtfebe ftirmen ju nadjft gu beriidftd)tigen, fonbern e3 foil aud) oerbiitet roerben, bie taga rafoUe burd) Sntgiefmng bon 3U biel SBafferlraft 311 fdjdbigen. gradtbampfer fcftgeforc- Sb.atr)am, 14. San. er madjttge iradC)tbcimpfer Ononbagart bon ber SIpbe2inie tourbe Ijeute 3JJorgen um 1 Ubr 30 DJJinuten bet Orleans cberljalb ber 2ebcnret tungsftatton auf bte Miifie gelrteben.

a borliiufig feinc efal)r ben ift, fo 'lreigcrten fid) Offigtere unb aWannfdjaften, bag Sdjiff 3U berlaffen. er ampfer be rite ft mtt etner auC SQJaaren unb egenftanben oerfdjiebencr SIrt befierjenben Cabung SSofton geflern 5iadimtttag unb ift nad) unb 3fldfonbiIIe 6e fitmmt..

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About Neue Kansas Staats-Zeitung Archive

Pages Available:
4,732
Years Available:
1895-1908