Suche löschen...
The Daily record and the Dresden daily : 30.03.1909
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 1909-03-30
- Sprache
- Englisch
- Vorlage
- SLUB Dresden
- Digitalisat
- SLUB Dresden
- Lizenz-/Rechtehinweis
- Public Domain Mark 1.0
- URN
- urn:nbn:de:bsz:14-db-id416971482-190903305
- PURL
- http://digital.slub-dresden.de/id416971482-19090330
- OAI-Identifier
- oai:de:slub-dresden:db:id-416971482-19090330
- Sammlungen
- Zeitungen
- Historische Zeitungen
- Strukturtyp
- Ausgabe
- Parlamentsperiode
- -
- Wahlperiode
- -
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- ZeitungThe Daily record and the Dresden daily
- Jahr1909
- Monat1909-03
- Tag1909-03-30
- Monat1909-03
- Jahr1909
- Links
-
Downloads
- Einzelseite als Bild herunterladen (JPG)
-
Volltext Seite (XML)
4 THE DAILY RECORD, TUESDAY, MARCH 30, 1909. No. 954. ED DRESDEN Pension Cronheim, Villa: Eisenstuck , Strasse 47, corner of Mflnchner Strasse. Modern style. Garden. Excellent cuisine. Best references. Moderate terms. German conversation. Briihl&Guttentag . Err Artistic needle work — Embroideries, Prager Str. 20. Hugo |j| Borack Purveyor to the Court. English Spoken. 4, See Strasse 4, corner of Zahns Gasse. : Woollen underwear. Flannel shirts. Ladies’ Jerseys. Knitted Waists. English and German knitted Goods. Fast-colour black Hosiery for Ladies, Gentlemen, and children. Shawls, Shetland veils, Wool and Silk, Skirts, Caps, Felt Shoes and Slippers. ===== Novelties of the season. ============ • Flnu/orc fnr HfltC v3ses ' dresses, ostrich feathers, heron 1 IIIWClu llli Iluli, feathers, stoles, palms, fruits, flower-papers, etc tr<> in H. Hesse, Seheffel Strasse 10-12. Pension Mrs. C. Todd Strehlener Strasse 3, I. Well furnished Rooms. English cooking. Best references. ^=== Reasonable Terms. U III American Dentist. Modern Dentistry in all its Branches. Straightening crooked teeth a Specialty Dresden, Prager Strasse 10,1. u Tel. 8514. Office hours 9-1 a.m. & 3-5 p. m * * LW * * cocoa and CHOCOLATE: marquis, Suchard, Kohler, bindt-Spriingli, Peter. Bonbons and Biscuits, first quality. Carge stock of Bonfronnierts. Prager Str. 5 J. OLIVIER Prager Sir. 5 By appointment to the Rojjal Court. Pension Kosmos fliglo-flnerican family Jjomc. DRESDEN-A. Schnorr Str. 14,1. SII. close to Hauptbhf. Elegantly furnished rooms OORCeSTER HORSE SCHOOL Do you want a suit or overcoat made like at home? If so, call at oCudwiff jfengehold’s See Strasse 21, first floor, corner Ring Strasse. PENSION BEHNCKE u " , ““ Strasse 11,1. Comfortable home. Excellent cooking. Moderate prices. DRESDEN, i9» Gutzkow Strasse, preparatory for Schools and Universities. Instruction in Classics, Mathematics, English, German, French, etc. in class or privately. — : Boarders received. ==.. ■ 1 : I. KlDfl. IL OlM. J. B. WtC 11 Mtlfe Pension ran Oerben old established house Reichs Strasse 26, I., II., III. Best situation. Highly recommended, comf. sunny rooms, best cuisine. SCHOOL FOR GIRLS. Classes in English, Arithmetic, Mathematics, (jerman, french, and £atin. A small number of resident pupils taken. German and French resident governesses. Private instruction if desired. Miss Virgin, Schnorr Str. 80 (Villa). PclLlPllLPAfifjip||#yp OypA Payments on all Letters of Credit. ® ” WfluwCll^U VL UUi Exchange of Circular-Notes. W* Dresden, Prager Strasse 12, Exchange of Circular-Notes. Cheques and foreign money at most favourable rates. Postal Orders. English and American newspapers. O ff loe hours &—1, 3—6, Saturdays 9—3. NEW BOOKS RECEIVED. * This book is written on the well-known author’s usual lines. It relates the history of a beautiful, penniless girl, the daughter of a General—Indian, cela va sans dire—who has left nothing behind him except debts and Katherine, who, being of the usual Croker type, has absolutely refused to sell her self for twenty thousand pounds per annum. Con sequently, in the first chapter we find our heroine half-starving in an obscure London boarding-house, but knowing Miss Croker of old we do not despair, something will happen to prevent the dear .girl from being reduced to the one indigestible straw, which by spoiling her complexion might interfere with; her “sudden blazes of beauty.” Katherine errjerges from her retreat to become the maid of the frivolous, re putedly rich, parsimonious Lady Warbeck, who, at the age of' seventy-three, still skips about a la jeune fills. In Switzerland Katherine meets her fate: a mysterious man, whose name she does not even learn. The denouement is such that one’s expecta tions are kept on the alert until the very last chapter. As a pleasant, harmless story of every-dav life the story can be recommended. This two volume-work deals with the evils and miseries which a despotic and heartless king can bring on his subjects. It is an interesting study of despotism carried to its farthest lengths: taxes and oppression constitute the present history of Helianthus, and these are not made more bearable by the memory of a glorious past. The chief in terest of the story centres round Elim, the second son of the king, an idealist with a profound con tempt for the trammels and pomp of royalty, and a sincere sympathy for the burdens of the poor whose misery he is unable to lighten in the slightest de gree. In addition to these traits, which are regarded as mad vagaries by the rest of the royal family, he visits Platon Illyris, the man who should be king of Helianthus. There he meets the grand daughter of the old hero and loves her. He is imprisoned for accompanying the body of Illyris to the grave, but is recalled on the death of his brother. We leave him the unwilling heir to a throne which his father has determined he shall never as cend. The characters in this, the last and unfinished work of a romantic author, are unreal to the verge of reality, and we lay the book aside, with regret, at the twenty-ninth chapter. THE INVASION OF ENGLAND. WAR MINISTER’S REMARKABLE SPEECH. * Katherine the Arrogant, by B. M: Croker. 1 Vol.) Tauchnitz • .. .. ~ - j Editiont * Helianthus, by "Ouida." 2 Vol's. (From The Daily Record correspondent.) London, March 28. The following were the principal points in Mr. Haldane’s remarkable speech at Northampton on Fri day night. “For three years past,” he said, “I have been going up and down the country preaching from the text that if you wish to make war unlikely you must prepare yourself against being taken unawares. I hate war, and I wish to avert its horrors, but when the nations are piling up armaments it is not safe for us to shut our eyes to the risks. We must prepare while there is time to prepare. The fault of our country is that we do not look ahead. We are very practical, very energetic, but we do not make far-reaching plans or look to the possibili ties of the future. We insure against risks in busi ness and we ought to do it in our national life. There has been too little of that, and I desire to impress on the country that we must look ahead if we are to be sure. “The people of this country should meditate on the fact that we are not merely the centre of a great Empire, but that we have to police, with what I may call a long-range professional army, our do minions across the seas. We want not only a great Army, but a great Navy with the command of the sea. Because we are an island we should be fools if we neglected the defence which the sea makes possible to us. During the last few days there has been awakened deep interest in the state of the Navy. I will only say one word about that. The Government is determined to preserve the command of the sea. The command of the sea must be pre served from the point of view of the Army as well as the Navy itself. No man can say we are never likely to be invaded, and the more we are prepared the less likely is it to occur.” CHURCH SERVICES: DRESDEN. All Saints' (English) Church, Wiener Strasse Tuesday, March 30th. 10.0 a.m. Matins. Wednesday, March 3lst. 8.15 a. m. Holy Communion. 11.0 a.m. Matins, Litany and Address. Thursday, April 1st. 8.0 a.m. Holy Communion. Friday, April 2nd. 10.15 a.m. Holy Communion. 11.0 a.m. Matins and Litany. Chaplain: The Rev. C A. Moore, M.A., B.C.L. The American Church of St. John, Reichs Platz 5, at the head of Reichs Strasse. Tuesday, March 30th. Service 4.0 p.m. Thursday, April 1st. Service 4.0 p.m. Friday, April 2nd. 3.0 p.m. An illustrated address on Christian work in the Hawaian Islands by Mrs. F. W. Glade, in the New York Hotel. The Rev. J. F. Butterworth, M.A., Rector. Church of Scotland (Presbyterian), Bernhard Strasse 2, at the corner of Bismarck and Winckelmann Strasse. Divine Service Sunday morning at 11, and evening at 6 o’clock Communion service is held every third Sunday in January, March, June and October. The Rev T H Wright, Resident Minister MOVEMENTS OF LINERS. NORDDEUTSCHER LLOYD S. S Co. Dresden office. Fr. Bremermann, Prager Strasse 49. YESTERDAY’S REPORTS “Friedrich der Grosse,” from Australia for Bremen, arrived Genoa March 28th. “Kleist,” from Japan for Hamburg, arrived Singapore March 28th. “Goeben,” from Bremen for Japan, arrived Shanghai March 29th. “Hannover,” from Bremen for Baltimore, passed Dover March 28th. “Main,” from Bremen for New York, passed Dover March 28th. “Breslau,” from Baltimore for Bremen, passed Lizard March 28th. “Roon,” from New York for Bremen, arrived Bremerhaven March 29th. HAMBURG-AMERICA LINE. “Sambia,” from New Orleans, passed Lizard March 26th. “Allemannia,” from Mexico, passed Dover March 25th. “Corcovado,” from Middle Brazil, left Teneriffe March 25th. “Graecia,” from West India, passed Lizard March 26th. “Konig Wilhelm II.,” left Buenos Aires March 25th. “Mecklenburg,” for West Indies, arrived Antwerp March 25th. “Sparta,” from Buenos Aires for Hamburg, left Buenos Aires March 25th. “Ypiranga,” arrived Rio de Janeiro March 25th. “Rugia,” from East Asia, arrived Suez March 26th. “Senegambia,” for East Asia, passed Dungeness March 25th. “Kamerun,” from West Africa, arrived Lome March 25th. ‘ Meteor,” left Ajaccio March 25th. “Moltke,” left Kalamaki March 25th. “Parihia,” from Bombay, passed St. Catherine’s Point March 25th. “Siegmund,” arrived Rio Grande do Sul March 25th. BRITISH AND AMERICAN REPRESENTATIVES. THE BRITISH LEGATION: Wiener Strasse 38.—Minister Resident: Mansfeld de Cardonnel Findlay, Esq., C.B., C.M.G. THE BRITISH CONSULATE: Altmarkt 16.—British Consul: H. Palmie, Esq. THE AMERICAN CONSULATE GENERAL: Ammon Strasse 2,p American Consul-General: T. St. John Gaffney, ESq. WEATHER FORECAST FOR TODAY of the Royal Saxon Meteorological Institute, Fresh westerly winds, cloudy, showers at times, warmer. Of M Dres JVS The Daily EXQ OR Otto Sup T There crisis to be advisi to the : proval 1 which is trite ap vice joii Russia, read as 0) affecti sequer nexati (2) ly terj and as (3) The i quite log of opini> very nat but wher has beco of furtlw of the B tion whii ed by tl we thinl since, ri, cipated . tion. Th it took tion” as saying: but neitl With thi and the the dipk did not threatem Comm< man Reic perial Cl lenge, bt Austria-F outspokei Europe, suspected imposes i circle th Daily Gr lish peop he reoeiv Edward’s German vailing oi that norr the assur Reichstag RUS Proprietor*, Printer*, and Publisher*: Record Vertag G. m, b. Jf. in Dresden.—Responsible. Editor: Willie ttaumfeldsr. M. Isvo for Foreis Engalitsch
- Aktuelle Seite (TXT)
- METS Datei (XML)
- IIIF Manifest (JSON)
- Doppelseitenansicht
- Vorschaubilder
Nächste Seite
10 Seiten weiter
Letzte Seite