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The Daily record and the Dresden daily : 16.07.1909
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 1909-07-16
- 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-id416971482-190907165
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- http://digital.slub-dresden.de/id416971482-19090716
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- oai:de:slub-dresden:db:id-416971482-19090716
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- ZeitungThe Daily record and the Dresden daily
- Jahr1909
- Monat1909-07
- Tag1909-07-16
- Monat1909-07
- Jahr1909
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Office: DresdenA. Telephone 1755. Urcnrtr and THE DRESDEN DAILY. Office: DresdenA. Telephone: 1755. The First Daily Paper in English published in Germany. Afc 1,043. DRESDEN, FRIDAY, JULY 16, 1909. 10 PFENNIGS. The nail, Recant is detioere, hand to Dresden, an, mas he or,ere, at any Post Office throughout me German Empire, „ to published daily. eyceyting Mon,ays an, days fol,anting legal holidays in Dresden. * Monthly Subscription Ratos: Fo, Dresden, mark for the rest of Germany and Austria, mark 1.20. For other countries, marks 2.50. EXQUISITE PAINTING ON CHINA Speciality: Portraits on Ivory. Richard Wehsener, DRESDEN, Zinzendorf Strasse 16. 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. AMERICA AND JAPAN. (Daiiv Record Correspondent.) New York, July 5. There are times when the most peace-loving among rulers and statesmen are confronted by a series of circumstances apparently brought into be ing by malignant energy and threatening to develop into the hurricane of war wiIly-nil 1 v. In moments srHi .-is these the honeyed speech and suave plati tudes ot humanitarians fall on deaf ears; the dogs of war strain fiercely at the leash, and no man can tell when and whence may come the knife to set them fre for the carnage. A synthesis of events each in itself innocuous, but deadly poison in blend—quietly but persistentlv taking definite form and meaning, is even now causing the thunder clouds of war to hover ominously 011 the Pacific horizon, —no bigger than a man’s hand is that sinister cloud bank today, but its very presence connotes a highly charged atmosphere. While the Mikado’s represent atives are uttering unexceptionable sentiments of peace and goodwill at Tokyo, and while at Washing ton President Taft and his war-abhorring Cabinet have no policy other than a pacific one, the forces over which neither Government has control •e be ginning to operate. The last echo of Togo’s devastat ing guns had barely died away at Tsushima before men whose experience lends weight to their speech were prophesying freely of an American-Japanese conflict. The reasons they adduced have been ably set forth a score of times, and there is no occasion for a repetition here. Summed up in a nutshell the case is one of opposing interests, chiefly com mercial. Now in this era commercial rivalry is one of the bitterest and most potential causes of inter national friction. Self-aggrandisement and empty am bitions for glory are obsolete and discarded. Na tions today will not fight for visions, but for markets. Trade is the life-blood of our twentieth century universe, and a nation will take up arms for its trade where fifty years it battled for its “honour.” That is the backbone of contention be tween the United States and Japan, and it over shadows all the minor issues such as yellow immi gration, the increase of the latter country’s naval and military armaments, and so forth. The recrudescence of the friction prophesied by far-seeing publicists is to be found in the recall of Mr. Takashira, Japanese Ambassador at Wssh- ington. His recall is bluntly attributed to his in ability to patch-up the immigration trouble; and, in spite of his diplomatic assurances that he is simply going home for a vacation, there is little probability of his return. The reason that Japan wants to see this troublesome little business decided is because she recognises the growing irritation of American business interests at her stealthy absorption of the Manchurian market, irritation that may find a vent through any convenient crevice. The amount of pres sure which the business element is able to bring to bear at Washington may be guaged from today’s announcement of the pending despatch of the Pacific Fleet to the Philippines. This move indicates Uncle Sam’s determination to take his fists out of his pockets and have them ready if any punching is to be done. His eagle eye is fixed intently on the golden possibilities of the Chinese market which he not unjustly regards as peculiarly his own. Japan, on her part, believes possession to be nine points of the law. She, too, is not blind to the lucrative nature of the Chinese pasture, and she lost no time in putting up signs to warn intruders off the grass. But Japan’s mistake lies in the fact of her having bullied the sleepy old Colossus a little bit too much. America has played the game better pjjj| h _ advanced styles ^ Ww —now ready— AT POPULAR PRICES Retail and Wholesale. We cater to the wants of intelligent fur buyers, our enormous facilities give the best the market affords. H.G.B. Peters, furrier, 52 Prager Str. near the main R.R. Station. nrin b c« Port ~ Sherry Cobler- - * 7/7/0 * Cocktail etc. Whisky & Soda, (ontinental va&ww Cognac, as welt as Port, Sherry etc. in glasses! Champagne! 14, Waisenhaus Strasse corner Prager Strasse. a Trade Mark. Establ.1843 DRESDEN CHINA :: Own workmanship :: Lowest prices :. :: Retail Export Wholesale A. E. STEPHAN, 4, Reichs Strasse Pfund ’$ unskimmed milk. 1st quality only; Pasteurised and purified, there fore free fioin bacilli of any kind. Delivered free. Depots in all parls of the city. Pfund’s Dairy, Dresden, by gentle treatment, and has infinitely more favour in the Celestial Empire than any other foreign Power. Not one Chinaman in a hundred likes the Japanese, but nine in ten have a solid friendship for the United States. Thus the stake is the open door in China,—open, that is, to Americans, and to any others slick enough to slide in at the same time. Japan wants the open door too, but open only to the Japanese. Uncle Sam has his shoe inside, how ever, and his shoulder is quite ready to follow it if the self-appointed Japanese door-keeper turns rusty. Meanwhile the Fleet is going to Manila, and there is much heart-searching, at Tokyo.— W. B. has barricaded its windows with cases full of sand. Two of the Company’s lines have been cut. The Nationalists are plundering the houses of the best known of the Shah’s adherents, but fraternising with the rest of the inhabitants. The same journal publishes another telegram from Teheran dated 6.45 p.m. as follows: “A party of 200 Solacharis, coming from Saltanabad, have made their way into the town and are attacking the Par liament building. The Shah’s volunteers are begin ning to plunder the houses of the Armenians, and the houses of several foreigners have also been clear ed of their contents. The foreign flags are no longer respected. At long intervals Creusot shells come from the northern side of the town, aimed at the Parliament building. The Nationalists are planning a decisive attack; tonight they will make an at tempt to blow up the Cossack barracks and Colonel Liakoff’s house. Reports say that 2,000 Bakhtiaris have arrived before the South gate of the town. THE UNREST IN PERSIA. Teheran, July 14, morning. Reuter reports that in the course of the fighting which began yesterday and continued all night, the Nationalists, in their attacks on the positions of the Shah’s Cossacks, succeeded in occupying a garden close to the house in which Colonel Liakoff, the Commander of the Cossacks, lives. Here they were exposed to a concentrated fire of Colonel Lia- koff's infantry and Artillery. Teheran, July 14. Reuter reports further that Sipahdar and Sardar as-Sad have sent a message to the British and Rus sian diplomatic representatives at Gulhak that, in spite of the fact that the Russian flag is flying over Colonel Liakoff’s house, the Nationalists are obliged to fire on the house because Cossacks are posted in it. The Shah’s troops are endeavouring to enter the town from the North. Teheran, July 14. The St. Petersburg Telegraph Agency reports that the Shah is fortifying himself in Saltanabad. Prince Naib es Saltaneh and Prince Izz ed Dauleh have taken refuge at the Russian Embassy. Saad-ed Dau leh is staying at Gulhak. Simahdar and Sardar as- Sad have informed the official -of the Russian Em bassy yvho was sent to Teheran to procure the safety of Russian subjects, that the abortive mediation of the British and Russian Ministers has induced them to appear in Teheran in order to obtain compliance with their demands; but that they will be prepared in any case to receive further instructions from the Embassies. Both leaders assured the official that no danger threatens the subjects of Russia or other foreigners, or the Russian officers of the Cossack brigade and their families, and that they, the two leaders, would take upon themselves the responsibili ty of any incidents that might happen. Teheran is generally quiet. Now and then shots are heard, or the explosion of a bomb. The streets are placarded with notices declaring the peaceable objects of the revolutionaries, who have no inten tion of taking aggressive steps against the Cossacks fortified in their barracks, unless compelled to do so by the Cossacks. Cologne,] uly 14. A telegram published by the Kolnische Zeitung, dated 4 o’clock p.m., runs: “The Cossacks and vo lunteers who are fighting for the Shah have oc cupied more blocks of streets and are gaining ground towards the West and South, chiefly by their ar tillery. The Telegraph Office of the Indo-European Cable Company, around which fighting is going on, Teheran, July 15. Reuter reports that there was no oessation of the fighting during the evening. The Persian Cossacks kept up an incessant artillery fire. Some of their shells struck the houses of Europeans in a street near the British Embassy, probably because some other houses in that street were occupied by Na tionalists who fired from the roofs. The Shah’s troops bombarded the Parliament building from out side the town. The British and Russian Ministers have again urged the Shah to come to an under standing with the Nationalists, but the Shah' has refused. It is reported that, towards sunset a Secretary of the Russian Embassy went to the Parliament building and, in the name of Colonel Liakoff an'd his Persian Cossacks, made overtures to Sipahdar and Sar as-Sad in which guarantees were demanded in case of their surrendering. The revolutionary leaders are said to have replied that, as soon as the Cos sacks laid down their arms, they would be free to go home or to remain neutral in their barracks. The Cossacks would be permitted to take service under the Constitutional Government. Safety would be guaranteed to all. Teheran, July 15. Reuter reports: The Cossacks have not fired a shot during the last two hours, and it is rumoured that Colonel Liakoff has given orders that firing is to cease. The rifle fire between the Shah’s troops and the Bakhtiari, and the artillery fire of the Na tionalists, have all but ceased. The Shah’s troops attacked the north-east gate of the town yesterday evening, but were driven back by the Nationalists with great loss. THE BRITISH NAVY. London, July 14. Admiral Lord Charles Beresford, speaking at a dinner of the Chambers of Commerce today, em phatically asserted the necessity of providing more shipbuilding facilities as soon as possible, since Germany was now able to turn out yearly ten large battleships with full armament against England’s seven. THE ARGENTINE REPUBLIC AND BOLIVIA. Buenos Ayres, July 14. The Minister of Foreign Affairs has received a telegram from the Argentine Minister in La Paz that he will not leave La Paz, as the Bolivian Go vernment has promised to give satisfaction. This news has been received here with great favour.
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