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The Daily record and the Dresden daily : 19.12.1909
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 1909-12-19
- Sprache
- Englisch
- Vorlage
- SLUB Dresden
- Digitalisat
- SLUB Dresden
- Lizenz-/Rechtehinweis
- Public Domain Mark 1.0
- URN
- urn:nbn:de:bsz:14-db-id416971482-190912199
- PURL
- http://digital.slub-dresden.de/id416971482-19091219
- OAI-Identifier
- oai:de:slub-dresden:db:id-416971482-19091219
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Inhaltsverzeichnis
- ZeitungThe Daily record and the Dresden daily
- Jahr1909
- Monat1909-12
- Tag1909-12-19
- Monat1909-12
- Jahr1909
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«* '*4;. .. > ' j” - . fW'** nt. * Office: iMUL DresdenA. Telephone 1755. J and THE DRESDEN DAILY. Office: StiuveStr.5.1. DresdenA. Telephone:' 1755. The First Daily Paper in English published in Germany. .... — — .... ? . ___ w M 1,176. DRESDEN, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1909. 10 PFENNIGS. The Daily Record is delivered by hand in Dresden, and may be ordered at any Post Office throughout the German Empire. It is published daily, excepting Mondays and days following legal holidays in Dresden. Monthly Subscription Rates: Foi Dresden, mark J.—; for the rest of Germany and Austria, mark 1.20. For other countries, marks 2.50. ORIENTAL ROUSE Prop.: Leon Sevilla Prager Strasse 37, under Europaischer Hof An extensive quantity of fine hand-embroidered goods, just imported, delightful designs and combination of colours, including Table Cloths, Cushion' Covers, Centres, Opera Bags, Egyptian Veils, Belts, etc. The finest opportunity for Christmas Present seekers. MlmrlHrtnbc • Port " Sherry Cobler - / I/A CU LJf 11/no. CorktniL (ic \ihi skv & Soda, Cognac, as well as Port, Sherry etc. in glasses7 Champagne! 7 Cor.-house: Waisenhaus Str. 14. '~>D,VV(^QD (cfflptlfijf Entrance an Praver Strasse. ' fhntinetital Entrance on Prager Strasse. Hotel New York nr. the Central Stn. DRESDEN Prager Strasse 47. Steam-heat. = REALLY WELL HEATED HOUSE ===== Pension from 6 marks inclusive. Tel. 1948 E. W. Starke Tel. 1948 only Prager Strasse 6 only Prager Strasse 6 Table Linen, Handkerchiefs, Bed Linen, Hand-embroidered goods, Shirts to measure. High Class ■■■■ idq Prices == F U Reduced Retail and Wholesale. Wc 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. DRESDEN CHINA. =±===== Own workmanship! - ■ : Clearance sale of entire stock at ex raordinary reductions! Inspection invited by: Heufel & Co., Burgerwiese 12. Pfund iiiiskiiiim<‘<l milk. 1st <|u:«lin only; Pasteurised and purified, therefore free from bacilli of any kind. Delmcrcd free. Depots in all parts of the city. Pfund’s Dairy, Dresden, T c r. c : 3 a 3 1 & 3 8 3 2 . “Germania” Talon DRESDEN-A., PRAGER STRASSE 28 jVEasked Jail and theatrical Costume factory Scene Painting :: Stage Construction Elegant, tasteful costumes of every style Uniforms of all periods Sale Orders to Measure Hire Speciality : Tpltsi national Cosines Telephone: No. 10936 ^DRESDEN CHINA . 1 P\OjL Dodn^tmn X. 7 15% Reduction Vmoc o.i all prices till A.llIdo. E. STEPHAN, 4, Reichs Strasse Trade Mark. Succ. to Helena Wolfsohn Nachf. Leopold Elb. THE BLATCHFORD ARTICLES. Once upon a time there was a newspaper pro prietor who- telegraphed from Berlin to his paper a long dispatch upon the folly of a recent scare about imaginary German airships. He ended it with these words: Germans, who have so long been accustomed to regard Great Britain as a model of national, deportment, poise, and cool- headedness, are beginning to believe that England is becoming the home of mere nervous degenerates. Northcliffe. This, all this, was in the olden time long ago, as the poet has it. In fact, it was as long ago as the 31st May. this year; a very considerable lapse of time as it is measured in the mental world where the convic tions of the Yellow Press are formed. So now, almost as much' as seven months later, we find the most prominent place in the same paper given up day after day to what we are inclined to think the wildest, the silliest, the most ignorant, and the most unprin cipled attempt to beat up a panic about Germany that even our journalism has known; and not only to that, but to long dispatches from Germany showing how well the venom is working out there. With a curious appearance of pride, our contemporary prints extract after extract from German papers which, in commenting upon these articles, say what Lord North- cliffe was afraid—in May—they might come to be saying. That it is his journal which is forcing the belief upon them is apparently a matter of genuine self- congratulation. As for the articles themselves, they do not call for much description. They are' by Mr. Robert Blatchford; a fact which will be enough for every man who has followed politics in recent years, and more than enough for every man connected with any section of the Labour movement, which has re pudiated all connection with him. It is scarcely a com pliment to Mr. Blatchford to express our belief that he is sincere in his ravings about the German danger. He does, we think, really believe that the hash of half a dozen past panics which he is daily serving up is very important indeed. He has nothing to say that has not been said already by the prophets of the Great War. His facts are known: his fictions are stale. Mr. Blatchford is quite ignorant about Germany. He does not know, for instance, that even the strongly anti-British coteries in Germany have moderated their tone of late, while there has been a complete absence of that mood of irritated suspicion in Germany which has, as a matter of fact, on se veral occasions in the past produced a situation of real peril. He does, not know that the Pan-German ex tremists are bewailing the impossibility of inflam ing public opinion anew, or influencing the Govern ment in any way, or that the Government has gone out of its way to smib them heavily of late. If he knew these facts, we think that even he would have held his hand from doing the one thing which might possibly help the anti-British element in Germany to get itis head up agaim All Mr. Blatchford knows is that German armaments are “directed against Eng land” ; which is as true as that British armaments are directed against Germany—no more and no less. There has beeii danger; there may be again; we know it, everybody knows it, and now, it seems, even Mr. Blatchford knows it; and the discovery has quite turned his brain. The piling up of armaments, which is inevitable once the miserable folly of militarism is established, appears to him as evidence of a resolve to fight—but only on Germany’s side. He is doing what he can to destroy the beginnings of a saner and more hopeful state of relations between the two Powers.—Daily News. to the Brussels residence palace. The funeral has been fixed for Wednesday next. On Thursday the Heir Apparent, Prince Albert of Belgium, to whom the assembled Ministers tendered their condolences yesterday afternoon, will take the oath of allegiance to the Constitution. NEW YORK, Saturday.—Captain Loose emphati cally repudiates the letter of Mr. Osborne, Secretary of the American Arctic Club, in which the latter states that Loose has retracted all his allegations against Dr. Cook in the matter of preparing the Polar report. On the contrary, Captain Loose asse verates that he has refused all the money bribes offered him to retract his charges originally published in the New York Times. NEWS OF THE WORLD. BRUSSELS, Saturday.—The will of the-late King Leopold commences with the following words: “I die in the Catholic faith, in which I have lived. I ask pardon for the errors I have committed. I be queath the fortune which*I received from my father (15 million francs) to my children. I desire a simple funeral service, and to be attended to my last rest ing place only by the attendants of the palace.” The news that King Leopold contracted a religious mar riage with the Baroness Vaughan has caused consider able discussion in political circles. It is asserted that the marriage took place, with the sanction of the Pope, at San Remo in 1905, and that it may be re garded as valid in Belgium. The position thus created will not improbably cause difficulties now that his Majesty is dead. BRUSSELS, Saturday.—From all parts of the coun try come reports of the people’s grief at the death of King Leopold. In the course of this evening the body will be conveyed from the castle of Laeken VIENNA, Saturday.—Towards 7.30.o’clock last eve ning in the Chamber of Deputies, insulting, cries against the Czechs were heard from the first gallery, together with threats against Deputy Chaloupka, who was speaking at the time. These insults were vigor ously applauded by occupants of the second gallery. At the same moment some one in the gallery squirted the contents of a mineral water syphon on the Czechish Agrarian benches,- .Deputy Brdlk getting thoroughly drenched. Vice-President Zazvorak at' once ordered the removal of the practical joker and- the clearaii' j of the galleries. Numbers of Social- Democratic Deputies noisily protested against this- order, which was carried out, however. Quiet beihg once more restored, the sitting was resumed ahd M. Chaloupka continued his speech. (From our correspondent.) NEW YORK.—Gold fever has once more broken out in Alaska and will certainly spread throughout the Union. The greatest excitement is reported to prevail at Tacoma, Wash ington, where fifteen despatches by wireless and cable have been received from Nome, Alaska, giving details of the new gold strike. Mr. James Murphy, an ex- United States Commissioner of Alaska, recently ar rived at Nome from Iditarod. He declares that the gold vein formerly discovered on Ophir Creek was only the branch of a rhuch richer vein extending' along Ophir and Otter Creeks. The principal vein he asserts is 600 feet broad and six to 20 feet deep. Apparently authentic evidence goes to prove that,a. territory of 250 square miles in North-Central AlaskaL contains rich gold deposits. Mr.' Murphy has/thjf , putation of being an absolutely trustworthy^ ^aiy.jLj <! * Relchs Strasse 2 Telephone 2456 <3. 4. 4. IMerger Platz 1 Telephone 3364 By appointment to the Saxon Court. Paul IHarkscb DRESDEN DYER AND, CHEMICAL CLEANER , Telephone 24^6 • itvj 4» 4* ♦ First olats establishment. Telephone *3878 •k •k Branches in all parts of the town.
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