|
Тема |
Re: Google - News archive search [re: errata] |
|
Автор |
tonza (член) |
|
Публикувано | 20.02.07 14:28 |
|
|
Супер!
FREE Article Preview
Buy Complete Document Buy Page Print
KING FERDINAND'S POLICY MAY COST HIM HIS HEAD, BULGARIAN RULER IS TOLD IN STORMY INTERVIEW AT SOFIA
Leaders of Bulgarian Parties Frankly Advise Ruler Against Antagonizing Russia -- Warned Against Repetition of Policy of 1913 -- Blame for Disaster to the Nation Placed on King.
The Washington Post (1877-1954) - Washington, D.C.
Author: Special Cable to The Washington Post.
Date: Oct 5, 1915
Start Page: 1
Document Types: front_page
Text Word Count: 886
London, Oct. 4. -- What purports to be an account of the recent meeting of King Ferdinand of Bulgaria and the leaders of the five parties opposed to Premier Radoslavoff is published in the Corriere Delia Sera at Milan and has been forwarded to the Chronicle.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Tsar v. Cat
Monday, Sep. 24, 1928 Article ToolsPrintEmailReprints Tsar Boris of Bulgaria perhaps did not hear, at Sofia, last week, that his father, the abdicated Tsar Ferdinand, was seen in Vienna to chase a black cat with oaths out of his hotel bedroom. Other guests testified that Ferdinand, barefoot, clad in nightshirt, pursued cat down corridor.
Knowing observers were not surprised.
Ferdinand is a royal mystic, supposed by superstitious Bulgarian peasants to possess occult powers. Presumably the Mystic Tsar had quarreled with his Black Cat, or someone's else cat.
Beloved Princess Eudoxia of Bulgaria, sister and chatelaine of Bachelor Tsar Boris, was last week, the house guest at Balmoral, Scotland, of Their Britannic Majesties. Queen Mary was reported to have baited His Majesty's hook, last week, with a worm, in the presence of witnesses. "She can do it much better than I can," was a remark attributed to George V by a correspondent of the U. S. Luke Lea newspaper chain.
|
| |
|
|
|