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The Daily record and the Dresden daily : 27.09.1908
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 1908-09-27
- 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-id416971482-190809275
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- http://digital.slub-dresden.de/id416971482-19080927
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- oai:de:slub-dresden:db:id-416971482-19080927
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- ZeitungThe Daily record and the Dresden daily
- Jahr1908
- Monat1908-09
- Tag1908-09-27
- Monat1908-09
- Jahr1908
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Office: Straw Sir. 5,1. Dresden A. Telephone: 1755. and THE DRESDEN DAILY. Office: Struve Str.5,1. Dresden A. Telephone: 1755. The First Daily Paper in English published in Germany. Jfo 804. DRESDEN, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1908. 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: For the whole of Germany and Austria, mark 1.—. For other countries, marks 2.50. Leather Goods and Travelling Articles in great variety, from the cheapest to the most elegant style, from ROBERT KUNZE, Altmarkt-Rathaus and 30, Prager Str. 30. openecl: ORIENTAL HOUSE 37, Prager Strasse 37 Will begin an extensive clearance sale of stock in hand *- ..f nde /l .. , from dissolved partnership, including Oriental Embroideries, Europaischer Hof Egyptian Veils, Opera Bags, Embroidered Silk Goods, etc. Prager Strasse 35 MULLER & C.W. THIEL Linen Store Saxon Damask Under-clothing. RICHARD WEHSENER Zlnzendorf Strasse 16. nnn Dresden China, nnn Coffee cups, wall plates, tea cups, &g. Speciality: buttons. “ PELZ - MODE-W AREN” STORE. Dresden, Prager Strasse 52. Ladies intending to purchase Purs should not omit to see what can be obtained at 52, Prager Str., opp. Cook’s Tourist Office. Among the great variety of what are termed “Fine Furs,” of guaranteed quality and at reasonable prices, are: Persian Lamb, Broadtail, Sable, Marten, Mink, Ermine, Chinchilla, Sealskin, Squirrel, Black Lynx, Pony, Fox, &c., made into Jackets, Coats, Neckpieces, Collarettes, Muffs, &c., in the latest styles. The proprietors, H. G. B. Peters, your countrymen, are furriers of many years’ experience, and in every case ready to conscientiously advise in any matter pertaining to Furs. An agreeable feature of this Store is that visitors feel per fectly at home within its precincts, and shopping is there fore rendered pleasant and easy. A visit to this establishment cannot fail to prove bene ficial. “Peters Furs” are world-renowned. Painting on Porcelain I Paul Fritzsche, Lessons also given in own studio. | Uhland Strasse 27. Adolf Beck Ladies’ Hairdresser. Salons modern comforts, — for ladies only. Special hair treatment by electricity. Massage. Christian Strasse 32 T tw m Telephone 10,049. GENERAL NEWS. NEWS FROM ENGLAND. INFERNAL MACHINE AS WEDDING GIFT. London, September 25. The Aberdeen police are investigating a mysteri ous affair which occurred in the City last week. A young woman about to be married received, in the form of a wedding present, what proved to be a perfectly equipped infernal machine. Owing to some flaw in the mechanism the machine did not go off, and the police declare that a terrible ca lamity was averted. Two men have been detained in Glasgow in connection with the mystery. CONTINUED RIOTING IN MANCHESTER. Manchester, September 25. Two thousand unemployed assembled before the Town Hall in this city while a civil reception was being held in the building. The mob was driven back by the police, blows being freely exchanged, and in the melee several people were hurt, includ ing more than one policeman. Foiled in their at tack on the municipal buildings, the men next marched to the Greenwich Workhouse, where they demanded food and shelter. Again the police inter fered, finally dispersing the crowd in all directions. GERMAN WARSHIPS OFF DOVER. One evening last week a German naval flotilla, consisting of eight torpedo-boats and a gunboat, passed Dover, bound westward. The flotilla steamed close inshore past the mouth of Dover Harbour, and when off the Admiralty Pier carried out some evolutions in changing formation. The spectacle excited a great deal of interest among the people who watched it from the shore. NEWS FROM AMERICA. THE CASE OF HARRY THAW. The tiresome question whether Harry Thaw’s sanity is or is not to be decided by a trial by jury was again deferred last week, in spite of his counsel’s attempt to have it decided before Justice Mills, of the Supreme Court, sitting at White Plains, N. Y. It was expected that the Judge, who has declared his dislike of protracted delays, would give a de cision one way or the other yesterday. He pointed out that the question of granting a trial by jury to the alleged lunatic was not one of constitutional right, but was left to the discretion of the Court to decide. Thaw’s counsel are unrelaxing in their efforts to secure his freedom, and have gone from one Judge to another since his committal to Mat- teawan, winning their point here, losing it there. Their chief victory was in obtaining Thaw’s trans fer temporarily from Matteawan—pending a settle ment of his right to a trial by jury—to Duchess county gaol at Poughkeepsie, where the prison authorities objected to the luxuries and apparent freedom which he enjoyed and preferred his room to his company. Owing to the protests of the sheriff of Duchess county, Thaw a few days ago was lodged in West chester county gaol, White Plains. There, says the Times correspondent, his prison life is in strong contrast to that which he enjoyed at Poughkeepsie. He is strictly subject to the prison regulations, is denied all luxuries, and has no letters delivered to him because he has declined to sign the customary waiver allowing the sheriff to open and read his correspondence. He is reported to be industriously occupying his enforced leisure in the composition of a book which will tell the story of his shooting of Mr. White and all that has since befallen him. NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE. New York, September 26. Mr. A. O. Brown and Mr. Lewis G. Young have been expelled from the New York Stock Exchange on account of alleged proceedings on the occasion of the sensational day’s trading in Wall-street on 22nd ult. BILL-POSTING ON A LINER. A contemporary’s New York correspondent says:— At first sight there would seem to be nothing par ticularly amusing in a man falling overboard from the deck of a great liner and being rescued amid a scene of much excitement, but roars of laughter quickly followed on an incident of this kind which occurred at the Cunard pier yesterday just before the “Mauretania” sailed for England. A couple of enterprising bill-posters took it into their heads that a large theatrical playbill, with which they had been beautifying various parts of the city, would look especially effective on the giant Cunarder’s bow, and having, by the exercise of fine strategy, secured a position on the port side from which they could carry their scheme into effect, the knights of the paste-pot and brush were soon hard at work. It was just at this moment that splashing and shouting announced to those on the liner that a man had fallen from one of the lower decks into the weater. His rescue was the work of only a few minutes, and he was little the worse for the ducking, but the rescuers espied the indignity to which the “Mauretania’s” nose was being sub jected, and an exchange of pertinent remarks at tracted general attention to the matter. Seamen and officials, greatly wroth, putting in an ap pearance, the bill-posters left in a hurry, and the crowd aboard and ashore screamed with laughter as they dodged their pursuers and eventually escaped. IRISH CONVENTION AT BOSTON. Boston, September 25. The United Irish League Convention closed last evening with a resolution expressing approval of the work of the representatives of the League in the House of Commons, and pledging 50,000 dollars (£10,000) “for perpetuating the work of Irish free dom.” Over 80,000 dollars (£16,000) has been raised for this purpose. Mr. John Redmond, M.P., Mr. Devlin, M.P., and Mr. Fitzgibbon spoke. SERIOUS RAILROAD DISASTER. St. Paul (Minn.), September 25. A passenger train came into collision with a freight train at Young’s Point today while running at high speed, and several coaches were smashed to atoms. Nineteen passengers were killed instantly, many others receiving injuries. All those killed were in the smoking-car, which received the full force of the impact and was utterly demolished. The ruined coaches caught fire immediately after the collision. Both trains belonged to the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT. UNFOUNDED RUMOURS. London, September 26. The Central News is authorised by the American Embassy to contradict certain disquieting rumours which have been circulated in London concerning President Roosevelt. The rumours became pre valent early yesterday morning, and inquiries have shown that they are absolutely without founda tion. The rumours in question suggested that an at tempt had been made on the President’s life. JAPAN AND MANCHURIA. OFFICIAL VIEW OF THE OPEN-DOOR POLICY. London, September 26. Mr. Y. Yamaza, who was for eight years Director of the Political Bureau of the Japanese Foreign Office, and has just arrived in London in order to assume charge of the Embassy, has discussed at some length with a representative of Reuter*s Agency various matters of Anglo-Japanese policy. Replying to the criticism which has been passed in America and elsewhere regarding Japan’s failure to maintain the open door in Manchuria, Mr. Yamaza remarked:—“There seems to be a good deal of misunderstanding among foreigners on this subject. I am anxious to know in what particular point Japan has departed from her declared policy of the open door in the Far East. I know of none, and I can only reaffirm that it is now, as ever, the firm intention of the Japanese Government to maintain the principle of equal opportunity and the open door in Manchuria, as well as in other parts of China. Even in Corea no preference is given to our people, and all comers have equal opportunity. I am, therefore, at a loss to under stand where we can be accused of arbitrary action.” THE LATE 8EN0R SARASATE’S WEALTH. Paris, September 26. It is reported that the estate of the late Senor Sarasate, the renowned violin virtuoso, amounts to three million francs. (Continued on page 2.)
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