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The Daily record and the Dresden daily : 20.02.1909
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 1909-02-20
- 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-id416971482-190902206
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- http://digital.slub-dresden.de/id416971482-19090220
- OAI-Identifier
- oai:de:slub-dresden:db:id-416971482-19090220
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- ZeitungThe Daily record and the Dresden daily
- Jahr1909
- Monat1909-02
- Tag1909-02-20
- Monat1909-02
- Jahr1909
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Office: SMlr.5,1. DresdenA. Telephone 1755. Bmnh <>r ~ ^ and THE Dresden daily. I Tt«: he First Daily Paper in Risjo.rr^^ " ~T|| I USH published in Germany 9 nnnopinx — ■ Office: SfimeStr.5,i I DresdenA. Telephone: 1755. JV« 923. DRESDEN, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9fi iono i — ~^ „^ ^ ^ _J10 PFENMOS. Monthh , c „ — tegal holidays in Dresdeh. ' ' IS P ubll ^ed daily, e xcepting Mondays and days following ■ y Subscription Rates: For Dresden. mnrh 1 . t . , . _ ————«4-*. ^ nuuuuys m Dresden. c^irpung me Monthly Subscription Rates: For Dresden mark~i ~7Z~Z ' — * ‘ ’ f rest of Germany and Austria mark 1 9ft f mark 120 ■ For other countries, marks 2.50. THE FUTURE OF TURKEY. In common with all juvenile institutions, the Tur kish Parliament shows a predilection to adopt ex- SvT-F 14 haS n0t yet attained the ^ exacted L E ^opean prototypes, nor can it be expected to reach this desirable stage in a single frn' . .J* 015 vvrung the concession of an inch rom stubborn Abdul Hamid, and forthwith took whorr 8 mile ' Thty are prepared toTow a.^ whom it may concern that, once having got the reins in their own hands, they intend to follow their own sweet will in spite of all opposition Europe looks on with some amusement, not unmixed with trepidation, at the Turkish kaleidoscope so sud the Ottoman p 0 *?" la f autumn - Six months ago the Ottoman Parliament did not exist'; since then there has been a General Election, a complete re " vision of the Cabinet, and Parliamentary procedure strenuous nature sufficient to satisfy an Irish Nationalist Few will be found to blame the de putes for keeping a sharp watch on the methods + + e ? rand Vizi «rate, which is popularly believed no o have lost its entire resilience under gentle Eamii re p h" 1 tk u Y ! ldiZ Ki0sk - The downfall of 5 amd p ^sha—who, despite his alleged breach of the Slest t W3S f by S eneral consent one of ablest statesmen of the Empire—doubtless re- UffioT a n 1Ct0ry for the u P start Committee of Union and Progress, but it is not unlikely to ulti mately prove a Pyrrhic victory. This committee is composed of militant Young Turks who concaved themselves outraged by the somewhat arbitrary dis missal of two Ministers by Kiamil Pasha Thev Grand^V a grudges a £ ainst the venerable rand Vizier, and now they are boasting that for aboufhk m ° n thCy Steadi,y worked to there Ignominiou s overthrow. Of their succesl there can be no question, but weapons such as they used are invariably liable to injure the hand of the wielder. Their ends, laudable though they apparently are, have been achieved by persistent unscrupulous intrigue and subterranean plotting worthy of the Yildiz Kiosk’s brightest days, fs forces wffirh tmg e f m P le to the reactionary ronSJ . a / e / Ver aIert on the flanks of the . r an opportunity to effect a coup d’etat.' Indeed, the Committtee by their artfoS »ncnt t er , ately hand f d ° V£r to Absolutist op! ShSh ?. card ’ and lt rema ins to be seen T^f n 1S r WI l! be , playe d for what jt worth, occurred at Klarni1 . Pasha could not well have ewr v. / re mauspicious juncture. What- to hi« IS ? ® ma Y have been—and even according mos t inexorable opponents they were little more than venial-over and over again hT had de monstrated his comprehensive grasp of the Empire’s assert n that**had ^ Wh ° » assert that had he not been at the helm during the negotmtions with the Dual Monarchy and Bub fhe r !f r WOU l even now haV€ heen flaming across which t nS n.w T C l in f a ‘.‘ he flimsy foundations o„ that tee a I U ^ IS . h r6e '™ is based - All agree vohLu posed Vizier did much to restrain the crif f ^ ements of his country during a time of fli m"sLffo^w HiS reWa « d haS ^ contemptuous alih!! U , followin & on a ‘no confidence” vote, for und^r the WaS ° + fficia,Iy reported t0 have resigned, under the circumstances “thrown overboard” would tn K m0re a PP r °priate. The new Cabinet is said fident °K f I * Ptimists ’ of men who are con- of State intn Cir , lty to guide the Ottoman ship nian must h^r^ f u Every European states- close ^ fo l such a result, but he cannot Cabfnei Cy€S the fact that the revision of the PowerfulT €ng ir red ( r ° m start to finish by the body has tasted”!^ a " d Pro & ress - That the^enftasted power, and found it passing sweet; that ^IP. o.n to repeat the operation is a danger tolerates it™* f ° r JUSt 80 long as the countrj CommitL management of its affairs by this of the people " the eIected representatives SPECIAL NOTICE! The Most Extraordinary Fur Sale of the season Now Taking Place At n f ~ 52 Prager Strasse. - must Be Sactfted n fe^riLT a s?r he Val “ e ^ DRESDEN CHINA /C7\ :: Own workmanship :: Lowest prices :: UII •• Retail :: Export Wholesale :: A. E. STEPHAN, 4, Reichs Strasse succ. to Helena Wolfsohn Nachf. Leopold Elb Trade Mark. Establ.1843 Otto Mayer, PHOTOGRAPHER x QQ ni 38 Prager Strasse 38 _ Tel. 446. By appotntaent to T. M. the King of Saxony and the Emperor of Austria. 't Superb artistic work. Moderate terms. SK, IIR * Plrtnils Ain. p ciality. buttons. * Lessons in painting. THE PANAMA CANAL. diverging opinions. GOVERNMENT MEASURES AT PRAGUE. ■ t&sz'z. the Nuttonlf rl l X as made on th e premises of and that severai Roosevtdt S sent f tn r 1 *™' Which [Jr «Ment t^uoseveit sent to Congress regarding the Panama Canal, it , s interesting to note the great dTr te e rence to th fhrcT erS n 0pini0nS espediall y with re- . , Gatun Dam. Mr. Roosevelt has al- the lde Tu hiS mind as to who Is right in of the ’ a unequivocally accepted the opinion of the engineers who accompanied the President by M.VuaXi w £r - '" 8 enou ?h, especially since in Congress there for M Bunau " has claimed ■ ° un au that he knows more about the i«th crtU f ms Pa by am t a hi^ n tT 7 °‘ h r Par s TL « . Ee . nt ^ man have been “Wed from now JrTJ » to the Herald, and he has t “ r of thf ln. me 5 1C fi aS . Strong an opponent as H - . . , P °f fbe American engineers. designed to K ‘ S ‘.n** a he great Qatun Dam . aesigned to hold up the dreaded Chagres river thin r g a? far d taek iVe a " d He said the sam e g as far back as a couple of years ago of the Boca Dam, and the construction of this has since tions of a, the ne ri lt n admitted that the founda tions of the Gatun Dam must rest upon nothin* more substantial than blue clay, and that in the £g shS oT, r h k "T , haS b££n somewhat alarm! ing smtting of the clay strata. • Col. Goethals and the other engineers of the Isth mus claimi to have a plan which will overcome the clay trouble and make the Gatun Dam capable of te° ,n a n eVeryth,ng that IS squired of it, and they have to all appearance satisfied Mr. Taft and the ad visers whom he took with him on his recent visit of inspection to the Isthmus. The President-elect r p tal%o th? A h0me in ° hi °- has i“ st ^ an appeal to the American people to trust the men who are actually building the Canal, and not be fooled by ‘bunkum speeches” in Congress Maritime the advocates of a sea level canal hive decided to continue their campaign vigorously and m o S C °r ction tIley are ma king effective use of M. Bunau-VariHa, who has been booked to make a series of speeches, and to have an interview Tn th canal question with President Roosevelt. HOUSE OF COMMONS. ADMISSION OF STRANGERS. wlXlriti ^ W ' Redm ° nd asked * b£ Speaker bad an >' suggestion to make to the House with reference to the finding of the Select Committee last Session on the question of th?ad mission of strangers to the House? having ^, a , k ? replied tbat the Committee leries should It “ne^ uSlfT m ^ penalties upon those who created disorder had°beM for S h ’ HOt think lt wou,d ^ competent Commlttee° f!,d ^ f by the *“”' 2 u things must r ™iain as ney were until the House sees fit to pass the Bill M W r ‘p a n ° tiC ! had »•“ gi «" (hearf hear) to^ct o! 'th! « ?° eS th£ Prirae Minister intend pointed test th 4sten? gS ° f ‘ h£ C ° mmittee h£ ap - Mr Asquith: Yes, the Attorney-General is about to mtriKluce a Bill on the subject. ab ° Ut in tli Was '" troduced by the Attorney-General the course of Wednesday’s sitting. At today’s sitting of tta^ Mr'TL' Ra ca , s m : r tt t r , 0 f r^ lf r- as H ked the U ms attention had been directed to suggestions bti fl „ nd rf C,a ' , kind that bad been ZEStSE of an Anglo r° P ,n German >’ as 10 ‘be possibility agreement respecting naval her Ihiul V cond ‘ tK>n that England should build King’s vls/t tn "r *' ,at l ba «‘ofore; and if the that ? Germany had given rise to hope that some such arrangement might be made A ^ u ' th replied: The non-official suggestions ~l by ‘ h£ bon ° urable member have not my ears. So far as I am informed has r rtifi°r.r„ e s nt ^y^thUr :r s wh :' ch it gramme of German; is fixed^in accordance"™ h P her' owni requiremehts, and cannot be influenced in the shghtest degree by anything we do. The German fh a f ernmen ». ? also op pinion that it is hatural necessary S for th^“d f tbe S,€ps which ' ™ «»«Wer Th^rtfrv e defence of our own,i«f^rektd> J trntf'\"° agr “ raent waa concluded at S t dear fhr Wr ; ‘ hat , the Ki "«’s visit has^S garded as » K°U ■ nava expenditure cannot blrfr'' garded as embodying any cause of friction between the two countries (Cheers). Petween v nJ^ By iS? : A / € to understand fhat no competition between the two Powers in resLrt strength o? 1 fc bU1 i dil ? P ro & ram mes, and that ^he what the othei! dws ? ° ^ n °‘ depead «" Mr. Asquith ; I do not wish that that should he (Laughter)! ° r a " ythmf? £lse that 1 bave not said in replv^ol fnrthe° f * h£ Admlralty ’ Mr - McKenna, n reply to a further enquiry, said that the Question on w,th mP hTu nt i ° f dirigiWc baboons iii con unc Wltb tbe fl «‘ was under consideration. LORD CHARLES BERESFORD. th^Admiralty:— S ^ ‘° aSk the First Lord <« Beresfo?d r to 0 thi he appoi " tment of Lord Charles “d as tee offl command of the Channel Fleet, ana as the officer designated in the i memorandum of February 26 1 on7 + S the combined Fleets Thome ^ate “ the aT n,a . n . d intimated to him that he ZZu , Ad ' niraliy years’ P term V< a IT? suspending him M th^n^oVlwo'ye^ 0 ” ^ TITLES OF NEW|PEERS. that h Mr*°John SincW °L Tu f sday ni S ht announced been created . ^juclair, Secretary for Scotland, has thl title nfp Ba " 0n of the United Kingdom by nf rlilt aron Pentland of Lyth, in the countv side^or/he"Probed^T" ' a ” P - of e D»by° f B * r0 " QoreI ‘ of Bf“>P*onf in the'm’un^
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