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GAOL FOR KISSING.

SEQUEL TO A FLIRTATION. MUSICAL CEITFC'S TREATMENT AN EXPERIENCE IN ITALY. "Don't kiss!" might become the slogan for travellers in Italy, if the experiences of Dr. Erwin Felber, a leading Vienna musical critic, are to be taken as typical. Dr. Felber, whose adventures will probably form the subject of diplomatic intervention on the part of the Austrian Government, states: "On September 11 I accompanied a woman friend, a noted Berlin singer, in the steamer from Venice to Fusta. We were the only passengers on the firstclass deck, which was in total darkness. "We flirted innocently, and as I kissed my friend the searchlight was turned full on us. The captain of the boat admonished us with much profane language from the bridge, and on landing in Venice I was handed over to the pnlice. "Two carabinicri took hold of mo, emptied my pockets and threw me into a dark ceil, where I spent a sleepless night, sharing my plank bed with a drunken man. On the following morning I was led handcuffed through the streets to the police court. On the way we met Professor Adolf Weissmann, the Berlin musical critic, who protested against my treatment and threatened to complain tc.Signor Mussolini. "The oirlv result was that I was taken back to the cell and left there for nearly twenty-four hours without food or even water. Then I was handcuffed again and dragged to the Giudecca prison, where my finger prints were taken, and I was thrown into a room where were fifteen or twenty dangerous criminals. "At last my case was tried, I was handcuffed again, and on my protesting the handcuffs were screwed on so tightly that my skin was broken. In addition I was chained by the leg to three criminals and thus led before the court. "There was no lawyer to defend me, and no interpreter; and the captain of the steamer was the only witness. The magistrate and,the public prosecutor shoolc with laughter during the proceedings. "Judgment was delivered, and I was told that I had been pardoned and that in an hour's time I would be a free man. Nevertheless, still chained, I was led back to my cell and was kept there for five more days. _ At the end of this period the intervention of the Austrian Legation and a Venice lawyer secured my liberty."

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19260109.2.149.25

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Herald, Volume LXIII, Issue 19221, 9 January 1926, Page 2 (Supplement)

Word Count
395

GAOL FOR KISSING. New Zealand Herald, Volume LXIII, Issue 19221, 9 January 1926, Page 2 (Supplement)

GAOL FOR KISSING. New Zealand Herald, Volume LXIII, Issue 19221, 9 January 1926, Page 2 (Supplement)