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The Daily record and the Dresden daily : 21.02.1909
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 1909-02-21
- 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-id416971482-190902211
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- http://digital.slub-dresden.de/id416971482-19090221
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- oai:de:slub-dresden:db:id-416971482-19090221
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- ZeitungThe Daily record and the Dresden daily
- Jahr1909
- Monat1909-02
- Tag1909-02-21
- Monat1909-02
- Jahr1909
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■:■*!&''-U^Wh\%Y'. ~'i •>'*' *■ " '.:v« “■* -•*« Office: Strnie Str. 5.1. DresdenA. Telephone 1755. § ^ ^ and THE DRESDEN DAILY. Bmrch Office: StraveStr.5,1. DresdenA. Telephone: 1755. The First Daily Paper in English published in Germany. ^ 924, I DRESDEN, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1909. I 10 PFENNIGS. Monthly Subscription Rate,: For Bremen, mark /-• frr tto r e « of derma*y anilastrta. mark ,.20. For other countries marks 2M. ^ DRESDEN CHINA :: Own workmanship :: Retail Export Lowest prices Wholesale Trade Mark. Establ.1843 A. E. STEPHAN, 4. Reichs Strasse succ. to Helena Wolfsohn Nachf. Leopold Elb. RICHARD WEHSEHER, Ziradorf Strasse is. * 4 DRESDEN CHINA. * * Mf# tin place-jlates, lea dips, etc. Portraits fran photes an ivmy and (bina. Speciality: buttons. * Lessons in painting. SPECIAL NOTICE! The Most Extraordinary Fur Sale of the season Now Taking Place At = 52 Prager Strasse. === Before Stock-Taking At Least Half Of The Present Value of Stock must Be Sacrificed Without The least Consideration Of Cost. r f, rao ^ The ™ Are Just What You Have Been Wanting—High Grade Furs—At Surprisingly Low Prices Ladies’ Fur Coats In All Sizes. Odd'Muffs, Odd Neckpieces- A1 l? Some Complete Sets, Some As Low As Half The Original Price! wK? Sa ! e n Contl i lues T ? n, y As Lon g As This Ad. Appears, Its Withdrawal Depending Upon The Reducing Of The Stock. We Urge All To Attend This Sale, Whether You Buy Or Not Peters The Furrier, 52 Prager Strasse, Opp. Cook’s Prager Strasse 35 MULLER & C. W. THIEL Linen Store Saxon Damask Under-clothing. DXa J’8 unskimmed milk. 1st quality rTlinn , onl y; Pasteurised and purified, there- ■ ■ fore free from bacilli of any kind ■ Delivered free. Depots in all parts of the city. Pfund’s Dairy, Dresden, THE HOUSE OF COMMONS. LORD CHARLES BERESFORD. On Thursday last, Mr. Bellairs asked the First Lord of the Admiralty whether, on the appoint ment of Lord Charles Beresford to the command of the Channel Fleet, the Admiralty intimated to him that he would only occupy the post for two years instead of the usual three years’ term. Mr. McKenna replied: Admiral Lord Charles Beres ford was appointed to his present command during pleasure, as is usual in the case of all appoint ments made by the Board of Admiralty. No men tion of any definite term was made, and it will be undesirable ,and indeed it is unprecedented, to discuss by means of question and answer the terms and conditions of the appointment of any particular officer. Mr. Bellairs: Subject to the fact that all appoint ments under the King are held during pleasure, will my right hon. friend say whether it is not custo mary for the chief commands to be given for a period of three years, and also whether Lord Tweed- mouth did not give any inducement to Lord Charles Beresford to accept the command of the Channel Fleet by holding out a period of a three years’ term of appointment, either verbally or in writing? Mr. McKenna :The answer to both questions is in the negative, qualifying the second answer with the words “so far as I am aware.” I do not know what private correspondence took place between Lord Tweedmouth and Lord Charles Beresford. Mr. Ashley asked whether it was a fact that a naval officer was liable to be moved without warn ing when no allegation was made against him? Mr. McKenna: I think, Mr. Speaker, this is only an example of the difficulty of discussing these ques tions by means of questions and answers. I hope the hon. member will not press the question. Mr. Bellairs: Has the right hon. gentleman re ceived any protest from Lord Charles Beresford with reference to this matter? Mr. McKenna : I do not know whether I am called upon to answer that question. I do not know whe ther anything has been received from Lord Charles Beresford, but I am pretty certain that it is not so. London, February 19. The resolution moved by the Opposition, proposing the addition to the Address in answer to the Speech from the Throne of a clause in favour of taritf re form, was rejected today, after a debate which lasted through two sittings, by 276 votes to 107. In the course of the discussion, Mr. Balfour said that for eign markets for British products and security for home industries were absolute necessities, and that financial reform was one of the chief means by which both those ends could be attained. Mr. Winston Churchill, the President of the Board of Trade, remarked on the indefiniteness of the rea sons adduced by Mr. Balfour, and pointed out that Great Britain not only did not obtain worse, but often secured better, conditions for her exports than were granted to Protectionist countries. It would, said Mr. Churchill, be a dangerous policy to con nect the idea of Imperial unity with the taxation of bread and meat. 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. THE NEW PATENT ACT. London, February 19. A society composed of representative English manufacturers has been formed here with the ob ject of ensuring a strict application of the Patent laws. NEW PERUVIAN LOAN. New York, February 19. According to a report received from Lima, the 60/0 loan of 3,000,000 dollars proposed by the Go vernment has been approved by the Senate. PRESERVATION OF NATURAL RESOURCES. A NOVEL CONFERENCE. Washington, February 19. President Roosevelt announces that invitations will be issued without delay to 45 States to send delegates to a world-conference that will assemble at The Hague next September, to consider what measures should be taken to preserve the natural resources of those States. PARLIAMENT WILL NOT BE'DISSOLVED. London, February 19. In a speech delivered in Bishop Auckland today, ;5\^ Cretar y of 5tate for War > Mr - Haldane, said x nat the Government would not dissolve Parliament so long as they were sure of a large majority in the Lower House. STEEL MARKET IN AMERICA. THE PRICE OF STEEL LOWER. New York, February 19. The reports from Pittsburg that steel will hence forward be dealt in free of agreements of any kind, and that considerable reductions in the price are to be made by the United States Steel Corporation without regard to the prices fixed by the indepen- dent i i\ns, seem to t>e confirmed by the announce- ment on the part of the Carnegie Steel‘Corpora tion of a reduction of four dollars a ton in the price of steel bat's, and of a similar reduction in building steel by the Chicago companies. Pittsburg, February 19, The steel markets are demoralised by the fall in steel tubes, which are marked from ten to twelve dollars lower than yesterday evening. Steel bars are four dollars cheaper. THE U.S. STEEL CORPORATION. New York, February 19. The President of the United States Steel Corpo ration gives notice that the Corporation has de cided to sell at altered prices whenever the circum stances render such action necessary in order to secure a fair share of the steel trade. New York, February 20. In his notice as to the policy to be pursued by the United States Steel Corporation in effecting sales, the President alludes to the panic of 1907. If great reductions of price occur all at once, says the no tice, that means failure for many engaged in the business. Enquiries had therefore been made from leading men in the steel industry as to their views, and the result was the resolve to take steps to en sure some degree of steadiness in the prices. Many of the smaller firms had nevertheless lowered their prices, and so occasioned a considerable loss of new business. Hence the decision of the Corpora tion to alter their prices according to circumstances. THE NEAR EAST. BULGARIAN RULER’S RANK. Vienna, February 19. Prince Ferdinand of Bulgaria is still here, and will probably start in the course of the day for St. Petersburg, in order to be present at the fune ral of the Grand Duke Vladimir. A later telegram announces the Prince’s depar ture for St. Petersburg on Friday afternoon. Frankfort o. M., February 19. The Frankfurter Zeitung publishes a report from Paris as follows: “After long negotiations, Prince Ferdinand of Bulgaria has obtained the sanction of the Russian Court, in consideration of the actual cir cumstances, to his being personally treated as Czar of Bulgaria during his sojourn at St. Petersburg. It is said that Russia asked the assent of Turkey to this arrangement. The assurance is given in Rus sian circles that this Court proceeding does not prejudice the question of the recogrtition of the independence of Bulgaria.” Vienna, February 19. The Fremdenblatt, in an article on the recogni tion of Bulgaria as a kingdom, writes:—“So far as the attitude of Austria-Hungary to this question is concerned, the Vienna Cabinet suggested to some of the Powers last October that the independence of Bulgaria should be recognised, and the Minister for Foreign Affairs expressed himself in that sense to the delegations. It may be assumed that, so soon' as an agreement between Turkey and Bulgaria on pending questions is reached, Austria-Hungary will not hesitate to act in accordance with the views which she then declared in recognising the indepen dence of Bulgaria and the Kingship of her ruler.” London, February 19. Reuter learns that the report from Sofia of the recognition of the independence of Bulgaria is un founded, and that nothing indicates a sudden altera tion in the attitude of one Power. No information has been received in official quar ters to confirm the disquieting rumours as to the situation in Austria-Hungary and Servia. Those ru mours have caused astonishment in diplomatic circles, and no credence is given to them. TURKEY WORRIED. _ Sophia, February 19. The Turkish Minister, Refik Bey, enquired today at the Ministry for Foreign Affairs as to the truth of reports published in the Bulgarian newspapers of the impending mobilisation of one or more Bul garian divisions, and complained at the same time of the unfriendly tone in which the new Turkish Cabinet was spoken of in the semi-official journals The representative of the Minister for Foreign Af fairs, who is absent, gave Refik Bey pacifying as surances, and declared that the mobilisation reports were unfounded. HONOUR TO COUNT ZEPPELIN. rr, Stuttgart, February 19. The Staatsanzeiger says that the King has raised Uberleutnant Alexander von Brandenstein, of the 19th regiment of Wiirttemberg Ulans, to the dignity of a Count, on the occasion of his marriage with Coun tess Helene Zeppelin; with the addition of the name Zeppelin to that of von Brandenstein, to be borne by the first-born heirs male in a direct line.
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