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The Daily record and the Dresden daily : 13.09.1908
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 1908-09-13
- Sprache
- Englisch
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- SLUB Dresden
- Digitalisat
- SLUB Dresden
- Lizenz-/Rechtehinweis
- Public Domain Mark 1.0
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- urn:nbn:de:bsz:14-db-id416971482-190809138
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- http://digital.slub-dresden.de/id416971482-19080913
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- oai:de:slub-dresden:db:id-416971482-19080913
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- ZeitungThe Daily record and the Dresden daily
- Jahr1908
- Monat1908-09
- Tag1908-09-13
- Monat1908-09
- Jahr1908
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.Office: Struve Str. 5,1. Dresden A. Telephone: 1755. and THE DRESDEN DAILY. Office: Struve Sir. 5,1. Dresden A. Telephone: 1755. The First Daily Paper in English published in Germany. DRESDEN, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1908. 10 PFENNIGS. The Daily Record to delivered by band in Dresden, and may be ordered at any Post Office throughout the German Umpire It to published daily, excepting Mondays and days following legal holidays in Dresden. Monthly Subscription Rates: For the whole of Germany and Austria, mark 1.—. For other countries, marks 2.50. Leather Goods and Travelling Articles in great variety, from the cheapest to the most elegant style, from ROBERT KUNZE, Altmarkt- Rathaus and 30, Prager Str. 30. nRiFNTii uniici? 31 • 37 17th instant a new store, to be known as the 111 Wamm I li I / m mam I I V? Iih Europaischer Hof for the sale of Oriental Embroideries, Egyptian Veils, Opera Bags, Embroidered Silk Goods, etc. It is my Arm intention to satisfy customers in every possible wav and I therefore trust to be favoured with a due share of patronage. LSOn oevilla. (former partner of the Kairo-Haus). Otto Mayer, PHOTOGRAPHER 38 Prager Strasse 38 Tel! 446. By appointment to T. M. the King of Saxony and the Emperor of Austria. Superb artistic work, moderate terms. Prager Strasse 35 MULLER & C. W. THIEL Linen Store Saxon Damask Under-clothing. THE ECCHAKISTIC PROCESSION IN LONDON. According to a despatch from London of yester day’s date, the various Protestant bodies in Eng land have presented a petition to the Home Secre tary on the subject of the procession to be held today through the streets of London on the occa sion of the Eucharistic Congress. In this proces sion various high dignitaries of the Roman Catholic Church are to take part, including no less a per sonage than Cardinal Yannutelli, who is the first Papal Legate to visit English shores since the early years of Elizabeth’s reign. A feature of the pro cession will be the bearing of the Host, which is to be carried in public. This action will be illegal, according to the Emancipation Act of 1829; but it is not expected that the point will be pressed, as in the opinion of many this law can only be re garded as a dead letter. Nevertheless, there are unmistakable symptoms of violent opposition on the part of the more militant Protestant party, and it* will be somewhat surprising if today’s ceremonial is not marked by a more or less violent demonstration of popular disapproval. Such an event, viewed from any reasonable point of view, would be highly deplorable, and we do not think that the Roman Church authorities would injure their cause if they recognised the extreme delicacy of the situation and refrained from any action likely to wound public sensibilities. The mere act of a street procession in which are displayed the sacred symbols of the Roman creed may not improbably inflame passions which are best left undisturbed. Religious fanaticism has fortuna tely lost much of its potency under the enlighten ing influence of education and the growth of a broad-minded toleration: it has lost its power to make or mar the fortunes of a State, but it still has energy enough to embitter the hearts of the kindliest of men. There is an ominous tone in the petition to which we have referred above. The Home Secretary is warned that he will be held responsible for any breach of the peace that may occur as a result of the procession; but it is difficult to see what action that official can take without injuring the sus ceptibilities of a not inconsiderable section of the British public. It would, of course, be possible for him to actually forbid the event, and he would un doubtedly have no little justification for this measure, which would at least embody the openly expressed desires of both the Low Church party and the Free Church Council. At the eleventh hour, however, there is no intelligence of such a step having been taken, and we can therefore only express the hope that Christian tolerance may prevail over theological ran cour, and that today’s ceremonial will not be charac terised by an unseemly outbreak which would revive a feud popularly supposed to have died of inanition! “PELZ-MODE-WAREN” STORE. Dresden, Prager Strasse 52. Ladies intending to purchase Purs should not omit to see what can be obtained at 52, Prager Str., opp. Cook’s Tourist Office. Among the great variety of what are termed “Fine Furs,” of guaranteed quality and at reasonable prices, are: Persian Lamb, Broadtail, Sable, Marten, Mink, Ermine, Chinchilla, Sealskin, Squirrel, Black Lynx, Pony, Fox, &c., made into Jackets, Coats, Neckpieces, Collarettes, Muffs, &c., in the latest styles. The proprietors, H. G. B. Peters, your countrymen, are furriers of many years’ experience, and in every case ready to conscientiously advise in any matter pertaining to Furs. An agreeable feature of this Store is that visitors feel per fectly at home within its precincts, and shopping is there fore rendered pleasant and easy. A visit to this establishment cannot fail to prove bene ficial. “Peters Furs” are world-renowned. Adolf Beck Ladies’ Hairdresser. Salons with 21,1 m odern’comforts, for ladies only. Special hair treatment by electricity. Massage. T t P o4 9 ° me Christian Strasse 32 T t£ ne Painting on Porcelain Lessons also given in own studio. Paul Fritzsche, Uhland Strasse 27. GENERAL NEWS. NEWS FROM ENGLAND. MR. CHURCHILL’S BRIDE. (From our own correspondent.) London, September 11. The bride of Mr. Winston Churchill is to be Directoire, not only on her wedding day tomorrow, but for some time after, to judge by the accounts of the trousseau. Buttons, says one of the fashion papers, are to define the characteristic lines on her going-away gown of grey cloth, and embroidery is to perform a similar duty on a gown of white voile. It is pleasant to note that the trousseau is being made in Britain, as behoves the bride of a Cabinet Minister in a Radical Parliament. It is not so very many years since the bride of a Home Secretary went to Paris for her trousseau, paid for with money earned in trade in Glasgow’. Naughty! Very naughty. There is a Scottish saying that “a bonnie bride is easy dressed,” and tomorrow’s bride is bonnie enough to be a case in point. There have been some very lovely brides this year, including the Gay Gordon girls and the Gaiety girls, who have undertaken matrimony with scions of the peerage. One of these courageous young women wore a very extraordinary wedding costume: item, a pale blue gown; item, a black hat with crimson roses; item, a green scarf. Curious amalgam. The bride must have been bonnie, indeed, to have looked well in it, as no doubt she did. VARIETY ARTISTE’S HUGE SALARY. (From our own correspondent.) Mr. Tom McNaughton, manager for Miss Alice Lloyd, states that she is leaving for New York on Saturday to appear at the New York Theatre, Broadway, at a salary of £500 a week, “the largest ever paid an English music-hall artist in musical comedy.” The contract is for 42 weeks a year for two years, a record contract for either England or America. Miss Lloyd is to appear in a musical comedy, specially written for her, entitled “The Bonnie Belle of Scotland.” AERONAUTS RESCUED AT SEA. Rotterdam, September 11. A pilot steamer belonging to this port has rescued two English balloonists whose balloon was on the point of falling into the sea. NEWS FROM AMERICA. . AMBASSADOR’S SON AS A NEWSPAPER REPORTER. One of the most interesting recruits to modern journalism is young Mr. Ogden Mills Reid, the son of Mr. Whitelaw Reid, United States Ambassador in London. Mr. Ogden Reid, says a New York report, has just started work as a political reporter on the New York Tribune, which is owned by his father. There is little doubt, of course, that the young man will inherit the ownership of the great newspaper from his father, and he has expressed his determi nation to work his way up on the staff, in order that he may gain a thorough acquaintance with every department of newspaper work. In the course of a few words with another news paper representative yesterday, Mr. Ogden Reid declared he had entered on his new life with a firm conviction that he could “make a good thing of it.” He was prepared to devote his whole energies for the present to the task of making him self a really competent reporter. He regarded newspaper work, he said, as his object in life. FATAL “L” RAILWAY ACCIDENT. New York, September 11. A train on the Brooklyn elevated railway which had been stopped in consequence of a fire on the line was run into by another train coming up from behind. The last carriage of the stationary train was completely smashed, one of the passengers in it being killed and twenty others more or less severely injured. ORVILLE WRIGHT BEATS HIS OWN RECORD. Fort Myers, September 12. Mr. Orville Wright took another flight yesterday afternoon, which lasted 70 minutes 25 seconds. The speed he attained on this occasion and on Wednes day was 39 V 2 English miles an horn*. THE ATTACK ON MAJOR DREYFUS. ACQUITTAL OF THE ASSAILANT. Paris, September 11. After a trial lasting two days M. Gregory, who on the occasion of the translation of Zola’s ashes to the Pantheon fired two revolver shots at Major Dreyfus, wounding him in the left arm, was ac quitted today. The Court held that the attempt was more in the nature of a symbolical demonstra tion than a deliberate outrage. Numerous witnesses testified to the high character of the accused, who is a well-known writer in the Paris press on’mili tary questions. THE TOLSTOY CELEBRATIONS. . St. Petersburg, September 11. An interesting tribute has reached Count Tolstoy from the United States of America, Mr. Edison, the famous inventor and scientist, having written asking the Count to allow a record of his voice to be taken for the gramophone. The Count has agreed, (Continued on page 2.)
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