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The Daily record and the Dresden daily : 18.11.1908
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 1908-11-18
- Sprache
- Englisch
- Vorlage
- SLUB Dresden
- Digitalisat
- SLUB Dresden
- Lizenz-/Rechtehinweis
- Public Domain Mark 1.0
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- urn:nbn:de:bsz:14-db-id416971482-190811189
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- http://digital.slub-dresden.de/id416971482-19081118
- OAI-Identifier
- oai:de:slub-dresden:db:id-416971482-19081118
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- ZeitungThe Daily record and the Dresden daily
- Jahr1908
- Monat1908-11
- Tag1908-11-18
- Monat1908-11
- Jahr1908
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"• KC^T^WW TV T-W* -'? «r/»*^f-» ( |<'., 5^ Vf -T,. - ^ ..; Office: Struve Str. 5,1. DresdenA. Telephone: 1755. and THE DRESDEN DAILY. Office: Struve Str. 5,1. DresdenA. Telephone: 1755. The First Daily Paper in English published in Germany. Aft 847. DRESDEN, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1908. The Daily Record is delivered by hand in Dresden, and 10 PFENNIGS. may be ordered at any Post Office throughout the German Empire. It is published daily legal holidays in Dresden. excepting Mondays and days following Monthly Subscriptton Rates:^-or Oresden. marh for the rest of Gerntany and Austria, marh ,*>. For other countries. Newly opened: ORIENTAL HOUSE Prager Srasse 37 under Europaeischer Hof An extensive partnership, Opera Bags, RICHARD WEHSENER Zinzendorf Strasse 16. ** DRESDEN CHINA. ** Met nips, wall-plates. tea cups, etc. Speciality: buttons. 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. H. G. B. Peters clearance sale of stock in hand from dissolved including Oriental Embroideries, Egyptian Veils, Embroidered Silk Goods, etc., is now proceeding. Established 1885. Furriers Exclusively. Desire to inform their patrons and visiting tourists that a verv extensive stock of fine Furs, fashioned in the latest Gar- ments fancy Neckpieces, Muffs, etc. are here to select from; Russian Sable, Mink Marten, Royal Ermine, Chinchilla, Seal, Squirrel, black Persian Broadtail, Lynx, Fox, Pony, Astrachan, etc., Bear, oKunk, ihibet, etc. Skins are imported from the b.est Fur centres (duty free) in the raw state and made up here, so that prices for the same qualities are more moderate here than in the foreign market. 5^Prager Strasse, Dresden, opposite Cook’s Tourist Bureau. ^ DRESDEN CHINA :: Own workmanship :: Lowest prices :: yi :: Retail Export :: Wholesale :: Estabi "flSa STEP HAN, 4, Reichs Strasse succ. to Helena Wolfsohn Nachf. Leopold Elb. FIFfTRIf F RFC S ummer and Winter Cures. LLLUlul lUHLd P ros pectus gratis and post-free. T.,. J. G. Brockmann A Reformed Natural Cure. Dresden-A. 3, Mosczinsky Str. 6. ft 1 - vo" Spreckelsen, SSE^M 1 TSffi: W In consequence of today (Busstag) being a General Holiday, our next issue will appear on Friday morning. THE STAR OF PROSPERITY. It will be recalled that previous to the election of Mr. Taft to the Presidency of the United States, numbers of prominent Americans gave it as their opinion that the election to office of the Republican candidate would result in a prompt return to that degree of prosperity which for long years has justi fied the title of “Eldorado'’ as applied to the Great Republic of the West. This opinion was put for ward in our own columns by a subscriber thoroughly experienced in the economic and political system of his country, and we are thus able to congratu late ourselves on the symptomatic evidences of re turning prosperity which continue to reach us from the other side of the Atlantic. In the words of a London contemporary’s New York correspondent, who gives chapter and verse for his assertion, “a wave of unexampled prosperity is sweeping over the country. More than a million men who were out of work a fortnight ago are now employed or are under engagement to commence as soon as the plans which are being made for the extension of projected enterprises can be completed. As an in dication of the general financial boom now being experienced on Wall-Street, which, after all, is an excellent barometer of the country at large, the following figures, showing the increased appreciation of the value of stocks listed on the New York Stock Market, merit special attention:— United States Steel.... $55,000,000 Union Pacific ....... 20,000,000 New York Central .... 20,000,000 Southern Pacific 20,000,000 Northern Pacific 14,500,000 Pennsylvania R.R 12,500,000 The total appreciation of stock values listed on the Stock Market since the election of Mr. Taft reaches the enormous figure of $2,000,000,000. But this is not all. Steamship companies engaged in passenger traffic to and from the United States report a steady decline in the number of people leaving America, and a corresponding increase in the passages booked to that country. Hardly more than a year ago an immense volume of human traf fic commenced to flow Europe-wards, fleeing from the wave of industrial depression that followed upon the downfall of several mighty financial concerns and of the smaller banking institutions that were involved in the general ruin. Ruin, indeed, stared many a humble citizen of the Great Republic in the face. The savings of years were swept away in a single day; the countless banks wherein thrifty toi lers had deposited their hard-earned nest-eggs were besieged day after day by crowds of desperate men and women, intent upon wresting some measure of their resources from the chaps which had descended upon the financial world with appalling suddenness. Heartrending scenes were of daily occurrence in every State where the depressing influence made itself felt, and dozens of people who saw their only safeguard from destitution disappearing before their very gaze gave up the struggle and found oblivion in suicidal grave. Nor was the effect of the great panic purely local or confined to the limits of the Union. Europe did not come scathless out of the general debacle, though thanks to the foresight of Madonna and Child Oil painting, epoch 1560 to 1580. An elderly English lady living at 12, II. rechts, ruersten btrasse, wishes to dispose of this valuable picture and a number of rare articles, prlvatelv. at very reduced prices. They may be seen on Tuesdays and Fridays, be tween 4 and 5.30, or by appointment at other times. A photograph of the picture and a list of the articles are to be seen at the office of the DAILY RECORD. , BlSli Class Educational Home tor young ladies wishing to complete their studies. Thorough tuition in German. Pleasant family life. Home comforts. Excellent Ref. a, ’ Hoerichs, (Jhland Strasse 41,1. Also German lessons, private and in classes, for day pupils. Pension Donath. Moderate terms. Excellent cook. Best references. Dinners or suppers for non-residents of the •£ • « . iui uuu-icamcms ui ific house, if previously ordered. Luettichau Strasse 13,1, and II. those who control the money markets of London, Paris, and Berlin, the shock did not find investors on this side of the ocean so unprepared, and the . re £* , resu ^ was therefore less disastrous than it might have been. Nevertheless, thousands of poverty- s ^ i( * en refugees from the States inundated their old homes, and in Italy, particularly, the ranks of the unemployed and destitute were greatly augment ed by this phenomenon. In America itself the people seemed paralysed by the spontaneity of the catas trophe ; one bank after another put up its shutters when the last dollar had been paiid over the counter Those larger institutions which withstood the first onslaught were unable to lend their minor brethren a helping hand, as they were themselves in the direst need of every cent remaining in the vaults. Then it was that a powerful group of financial lords, headed by Mr. J. Pierpont Morgan, came to the rescue in the nick of time, lavishly pouring long- hoarded gold into depleted treasuries, damming the stream of insolvency and arresting the wave of dis aster which threatened to shake the very foundations of the national edifice. It was an inspiring spectacle. The puny forces of mankind desperately battling against a huge natural revulsion brought into being by years of sinful extravagance, the result of an P eriod of lordly opulence. And at last the tide was turned; upon the ruins of shattered banking and other financial institutions fresh enter prises were rapidly erected, this time with firmer foundations. Gradually the national mind became permeated with the idea that a drastic lesson had been administered, and that from the evil which had seemed without one extenuating circumstance a great good might result. We believe the lesson has been taken to heart, and that the rejuvenated and vigor ous prosperity which is now exerting its beneficial influence on the United States will not be abused as formerly, but rather that it will be fostered and appreciated by all classes in America, who are anti cipating the blessing of four years of uninterrupted sound administration, assured by the appointment . a Chief Magistrate whose name is synonymous with unimpeachable integrity. GENERAL NEWS. NEWS FROM ENGLAND. ARRIVAL OF THE KING AND QUEEN OF SWEDEN. Portsmouth, November 16. The Royal yacht “Victoria and Albert” with the King and Queen of Sweden on board arrived here at noon today and was berthed alongside the jetty. The Prince of Wales at once went on board to wel come their Majesties. . Windsor, November 16. Their Majesties the King and Queen of Sweden arrived here this evening and drove to the Castle. HOUSE OF COMMONS. London, November 16. Mr. Byles, Liberal member for Salford, put a ques tion with reference to Mr. Asquith’s recent state ment of the Government interpretation of the two- Power standard, and suggested that, while main taining the relative strength of the Navy accord ing to that standard, Great Britain might think of proposing to the other Powers a mutual and pro portional diminution of the expenses of protection at sea. The Prime Minister replied that the other Powers were well informed of the views to which the Bri tish Government has more than once given expres sion as to the superfluous and competitive expendi ture for shipbuilding which lays such heavv burdens on the taxpayers. In the further course of the sitting Mr. Lonsdale, Conservative member for Armagh, asked the Prime Minister if he did not consider it necessary to be gin at once the building of first-class warships with a view to the maintenance of the standard of which he had spoken, and whether, besides the ships that had been already voted, other ships would be laid down before the close of the present financial year. a a •*’ ^ S( 1 U ^ answered, that in the opinion of the Admiralty no necessity existed for the course sug gested, and that the Government did not purpose altering the programme already sanctioned. NEWS FROM AMERICA. THE SHOOTING OF MR. HENEY. New York, November 16. I resident Roosevelt has sent a message to Mrs. F. J. Heney, wife of the San Francisco District At torney, who was shot in court, in which he says:— ‘Like every good American, I hold your husband in peculiar regard for the absolutely fearless way in which he has attacked and exposed corruption without any regard to the political or social pro minence of the offenders or to the dangerous char acter of the work. Your husband has taken his life m his hands in doing this great task, and is entitled to the gratitude and esteem, and above all to the heartiest support of all good citizens. The infamous character of the man who has assaulted him should 2r A ot , on ly to the horror and detestation felt for the deed, but the determination of decent citizens to stamp out the power of all men of his kind.” Mr. Heney, the District Attorney of San Francisco, wtw has taken a prominent part against the “graf- • rs . res P on sible for the corruption of the city ad ministration and who was shot in court on Friday (Continued on page 2.)
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