COMMANDERS OF THE BRITISH TROOPS,
was
Field Marshal Sir John French accorded a great reception by the populace of Paris when he went there while the Expeditionary Force was being Linded. Cries of Vive L'Angleterre were frequent. His motor car was pelted with flowers as it passed through the streets..
THE COMMANDERS. Lieutenant-General Sir Douglas Haig is in command of the first corps of the Expeditionary Force, and Major-General William Pulteney the third corps.
Major-General Sir Archibald Murray is Sir John French's Chief of Staff.
roads.
HOLLAND ENSURING
NEUTRALITY.
A Rotterdam telegrain dated the 18th ul. said: The Dutch army is strongly holding the frontier, Numerous barbed wire entanglements have been erected, and barricades have been thrown across all Arrangements are ready for the flooding of the country if combatants erom the frontier in irresistible numbers. Many roads have been cut through and rendered impassable for troops and guns, and the houses within the line of fire of ented the forts have been prepared for dynamiting.
THE HONGKONG DAILY PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15TH, 1914.
no racial problems to be solved, and the two peoples were unanimously favourable to a definite policy of naval and military defence. But the peoples had yet to prove that they would carry through their respective programmes when the financial burdens involved were fully appreciated. The spontaneous offers of the two Govern. pients at the outbreak of the war, and the enthusiastic support of the electors have set at rest all doubts that were felt either here or in England. In the cause of the Empire those dominions have undertaken an expenditure out of all to anything proportion
previously attempted in their history, Their expon diture they have justly regarded as the least of their sacrifices. They have at the same time offered the services of men, on whom the development of young countries chiefly depends, the flower of their manhood, who, whatever their fortune, must be absent for many months
from their usual vocations.
Australians can only look with envy on the assistance which Canada has been able to offer to the Empire from day to day. We can envy her the advantage of her boundless resources, as well as of her proximity to the scene of action, which males transport a matter of no great difficulty. But we cannot admit that she has surpassed us in devotion to the cause, which is the cause of the whole Empire We have shown ourselves prepared to give our best, both by sea and land, and our responsible leaders have shown great aptitude and untiring zeal in their determination to apply the framework of scheme of defence to a sudden From day to day recruits have been pouring in in numbers far in excess of the quota originally accepted for this State. If all the volunteers had SHOTS FIRED IN THE "GATE OF TEARS."
been accepted, the force would already 31r. R. N. Lyne, Director of Agricul- have been in camp and under the fure, and Ceylon Commissioner to the discipline and training which are neca sary for success. But the universal Rubber Exhibition, arrived in Ceylon on August 29th by the P. & O. Moltun, eagerness has enabled the authorities to Interviewed by a Ceylon Observer reporter apply a high physical standard, and to Mr. Lyne had an exciting story to tell constitute their regiments only of men of the voyage of the Moottan, which, he who are fit for hard work, and have some said, was the first ship to leave after thexperience of the conditions of war,
HOW THE MOOLTAN RAN THE GAUNTLET.
declaration of war. As soon as war was declared the British Government reserved
our
emergency
all the berths on the Maolian for Govern- THE CHINESE NATIONAL LOAN rent officials and British officers. 400
OF THE THIRD YEAR OF THE REPUBLIC.
British officers were on board for Egypt and India and they included fifteen Cinerals, the Sirdar, the Governor of Aden, the Governor of the Straits Settle- ments, the Crown Prince of Greece, the Crown Prince of Roumania and numerous members of the Egyptian and Indian Seventy British officers Civil Service. were spread out like coolies on the deck there being no room for them in the cabins, they having to sleep on mattresses, The depoltar was escorted from Flymouth
UNDER WRITING REGULATIONS.
In reference to the advertisement appearing on page 4, the following under- writing regulations are of interest :—
Art. 1.-All underwriters, whether they he officials, Chinese or foreign citizens, banks or syndicates, shall he called agents. underwritten shall be one hundred thousand
COLLISION ON THE HIGH SEAS.
FULL TEXT OF JUDGMENT IN THE "JINSEN MARU"_"WINGSANG
CASE.
Histoner was to circulate slanderous tales LANGKATS AND THE
through the community; or at any rate, DICTOPHONE CASE. under a liberal reading of this phrase, to circulate, injurious business tales. But, if any inference is proper and natural to be DEFENDANT DISCHARGED.
drawn as to the purpose of such a listener it is of another sort, the palpable motive Mr. M. F. Perkins delivered judg being one of pecuniary or personal ad- ment in the L.8. Consular Court in the vantage. The manifest nature of the case of Leon Crowell on a complaint of testimony of the complaining witnesses eavesdropping laid by Mr. J. Elmore, ofwas the possible loss of business inform the Langkat Company, which complaint Lion valuable to an outsider. Now it is was the subject of a preliminary hearing not elaar that such information may not have been heard and made use of by an on Thursday last.
Dr. F. E. Hinckley (District Attorney) actual listener without communication to a third person. But, granted that it was appeared for the prosecution with Mr. the purpose of the listener to com R. E. Gregson (representing the communicate such information, the whole occasioned by a collision which took place plainants), Accused was undefended.
purpose and profit of such a person would be nullified by anything like a general circulation or by any other course of action than an imparting of such informa tion to those willing to pay for its exclu: sive possession.
by Mr. Pottor. In the preliminary act of the Winy Sang it is not suggested that the Jinsen Maru was in default for failing to teop course and speed under Art. 21. This point is, however, made in the defendant's answer, and the contention now is that they. were bound by the preliminary act and cauid. not be allowed to amend it by their pleadings. Mr. Potter relied upon the principle that a preliminary net cannot ho amended at Jadgment was given yesterday in the the instance of the party filing it. Their Admiralty action of the Nippon Yusen is I think, however, no authority for the pleadings to matters set out in his preliminary Kaisha, as owners of the Jinsen Maru.proposition that a party is confined in his. The Indo-China Steam Navigation Co., as act, and the general principles of practice owners of the Wing Sany. The claim was are against it. Sir Robert Phillimore, in for the sum of $30,000 for damages The Meranda, L.R. 7P.D. at 186, expressly states that the parties in 00 action of damage are not bound in their pleadings in the Tathong Channel near Lamtong to repeat any errara or missions which may xist in their preliminary acts-it is open Island on February 17th. The plaintiffs to them, to state correctly any facts which also claimed costs of the action. There may have been omitted or erroneously was a counter-claim by the Indo-China stated in their preliminary nots.. In other words, the ease is essentially Steam Navigation Company, for damages the new matter in the pleading is not an allegation of feet properly so called. It is nothing more than en argumentative a matter of private interests and does not
presentment of the action of the other side. man who listens to The Chief Justice (Mr. H. H. J.
I have no difficulty in deciding this point differ, so far as its criminal aspects go, arising out of the same collision. from the case of barn the names of a merchant's customers, Gompertz), who heard the action, along in favour of the defendants
with. information to his own advantage. The business methods, oto, and uses such novelty of the apparatus ised, greatly (acting as Assessor), in delivering judg enhancing the opportunities of ite poa-ment, said : --- sessor, does not alter the principles in- volved; and, however repugnant. anch bonour, I am unable to find that conduct may be to any sense of personal criminal offence has been committed
It is, then, unnecessary to discuss the evidence with a view to ascertaining whether or not there is probable cause to beliere the accneed guilty of an offence. Accused was accordingly discharged.
Commander Beckwith,
B.N.
This collision took place between the after 12 noon on 17th February, 1914. There is a difference of two minutes in the time ing Seng and tho Jinsen Marie shortly
given by the two ships, and it is clear their clocks did not correspond. I have corrected the Jinsen by two minutes to bring them together.
The information read as follows: Personally appears the undersigned John Elmore and, on his oath, stating that he is a British subject and that he here appears in his capacity of manager of the business firm of George McBain, agents of the Langkat Company, with an office at 53, Szechuen Road, Shanghai, China, in which office he was at all times mentioned herein, that is to say within the customary business hours of the day, transacting business of said company, and complains of Loon Crowell, an American citizen, for eavesdropping, in that said Leon Crowell, at Shanghai, China, heretofore and on or about August 6th, 1914, and thence from time to time to, or to shout August 27th, 1914, by mears of placing and operating, and causing to be placed and operated, in said office of said complainant and between said office and a room by said Leon Crowell occupied in the building situste next north of, and near to the building in which said office was at all of said times located, one apparatus with wire connections, said apparatus being numbered 5,005 and being inscribed with
The China Navigation Company's the words This instrument is leased and
Forsyth) which is the property of the National Dicto graph Co., New York City, wilfully, Kueichen, (Captain wrongfully Listening to what was said and arrived here yesterday from Northern general cargo. The Wing Sang is a British bank of fog became visible on done in said office and so listening for. communication did eavesdrop, against the ports, public peace.
The decision of the Court was as follows:
The complaint laid is of eavesdropping, a common law offence; to be classified as a public or common nuisance,
A nuisance is anything that works hurt, damage, inconvenience. If to the public, it is a common nuisance; if the hurt is only to a private person or interest, the remedy is by civil proceed ings" (May, Crim. Law, 3d. Ed., 160). It is clear that a nuisance, may be both public and private; for, while incommod- special damage to private interest as to being the public, it may likewise cause auch
to give ground for civil action.
In this examination, it is necessary to
8.S.KUEICHOW" IN TWO TYPHOONS.
..
The collision took place to the S.E. of Lam Tong Island at the cast end of the Tat Hong channel, which leads to the harbour of Hongkong oa the Enst.
The Jinsen Maru is a Japanese steamship of 2,347 tons mett register owned by the Nippon Yusen Kaisha, and was manned by a crew of 55 hands. She was on a voyage from Japan to Hongkong laden with a
steamship of 2,339 tous gross, owned by the encountered WO typhoons
Indo-China Steam Navigation Company, between Shantung Promontory and Limited, and was mauued by a crew of 72 She was on a voyage from Hong- Heishan Island. When off the Probands.
general cargo. montory on the evening of the 8th, sheong to Swatow carrying passengers and a The plaintiffs' case is that the win at the ret the outside edge of the first typhoon, and it was not until midnight on the 9th. time was casterly and very slight, that the weather had. for some time past beón foggY, that she got across and clear of this one.
but varying from a dense to a light fog. At 1.00 a.m. on the 10th, the wind again The prescribed fog signals were regularly freshened from the cast, and as the sounded, and, the fog becoming more dense, barometer was falling rapidly, a course the engines of the Jinsen Mars, which had been moving slow ahead, were stopped, with was set for the North Saddles, but by a view to her anchor being let go in due 8.00 p.m. of the same day the spindrift course, and she proceeded slowly through out to clear Barren Island. At 10.45 after the engines of the Jinsen Machad became so thick that the ship was hauled the water heading about N.W. Shortly to Gibraltar by a British cruiser, and.
been stopped, she heard the fog signal of p.m. the ship was hove to, the barometer another steamship apparently bearing about from Malta another British cruiser went ahead right through the Red Sea. While passing through the Straits of Babel-be of five grades: 4 per cent. to those who determine, not whether any nuisance has having fallen to 28.98., the wind increasW, by N., and twice subsequently, at an Mandeb two shots were fired from the underwrite $100,000 or more; 4 per cent.been committed, but whether that forming to hurricane force, and an immense interval of a minute, another fag signal was to those who underwrite $250,000 or more; of nuisance has been committed which is sen was running. The centre of the hoard from about the same direction, but ninland, but whether at the Moolian or
6 per cent, to those who underwrite $500,000 indictable as an offence, namely, a com-
slightly more westerly. On each ocension not was not known. They were told that
or more; 6 per cent. to those who under-mon or public nuisance.
an answering blast was sounder. At about the German cruiser Kochigsburg was off
a minute after the third and last signal, and Socotra, and so they went 70 miles north write 8750,000 or more; 6 per cent. to those
who underwrite 81,000,000 or more.
while the Jinsen still had forward way, of the Island. They had also been coming
a steamship which proved to be the fing with lights out all the way. The Maglian
Sang appeared about 24 points on her port did not call at Marseilles, but put in at
bow apparently distant some two ship'a Plymouth and Malta, at the former place
lengths away, pproaching through the fog, to secure the latest intelligence before
and heading in the direction of, or a little The engines of the leaving England. The Captein did not know from port to port whether he would
abaft of, her foretanet. Jinsen Maru were at once put full speed be able to get any further, and it waS
catern and three short blasts blown, but the indeed a most anxious time for the
Wing Sang came on apparently at full speed Captain and officers.
thead under a starboard helm, two short blasts being blown on her whistle and she struck the stem on the port side of the Jinsen Har, with her starboard side shaft the foremast, and did her considerable damage.
There
WAS
Art. 2. The minimum amount
dollars ($100,000).
Art. 3. Commission to underwriters skall
Art. 4The underwriter shall pay to the Bureau of National Loans or the establish- ments named by the Bureau the whole of thus amount which he has underwritten within A period of two months, which periul is to begin on September 1st, 1914, and end on
October 31st, 1914.
Art. 5.-The underwriter shall pay at the time of underwriting one-tenth of the amount he has underwritten as guaranty money. Should he fail to make any payment within the above stipulated period of two months, the whole of his guaranty money shall be confiscated. If he underwrites one million dollars and pays only five hundred thousand dollars, then the guaranty money for the five hundred thousand dollars unpaid shall be confiscated. Other cases are to be dealt with in like proportion. mission due to the underwriter shall be given in accordance with Art. 3.
The com
...
An analysis of eavesdropping as a public nuisance discloses two general classifications:--
second typhoon passed over the ship at midnight, when there was an appreciable lull in the wind's force. With the passing of the centre, the wind came again with terrific force, from the north-west this (1) The nuisance to the public arises time, and it was at times thought that the from the surreptitious acquisition by anship inust be engulfed and her decks unauthorized person of information which swept clear by the tremendously heavy the public welfare demands shall be kept seas running, many of which were funnel secret; not only from the community in top high. However, the vessel rose to the general, but from any person or group waves in a satisfactory manner, escaping of persons in the community. Here the with little more than the heavy lash of the emphasis is primarily upon the public driving spindrift. At 1.00 p.m. on the nature of the information without regard 11th, Barren Island was sighted, and the to the further communication thereof by ship put on her course. By 8.00 p.m. the the eavesdropper. One of the cases cited weather had considerably moderated, and by the District Attorney is illustrative: by the time that Heishan Isiknd was that of the State Pennington (40 passed, the typhoon was over. Tenn. 3 Head, 209, 75 Amer. Dec.).
"A person who secretly steals near the room occupied by the Grand Jury, while they are engaged in the performance of their duties, in order that he may hear what they are saying and doing, is guilty of eavesdropping, and is liable to be Art. 6.Scrips shall be given to the under-indicted therefor." writer when the guaranty money is paid. Such a person might be the very one The Bureau of National Loons shall exercise whose prospective indictment was under its discretion and determine how many scrips discussion. are to be given to an underwriter:
The Kueichow had a good deal of deck cargo, not a package of which was damaged. This speaks well for her good sea qualities, as well as for the fine seamanship shown by the Captain and his officers.
EUROPEAN UNEMPLOYED. IN.
PENANG.
The complaint made against the Wing Song is that she did not observe the provisions of Arts, 16, 19, 22, and 29 of the Regulations.
Here
Coming now to the evidence, I will begin This ship passed Collinson, outward bound from Hang- with that for the Wing Sany. kong, at 11.55 .m. At 12.5 she passed Na Tang Pai, and the Master heard to part--
The log how the whistle of a steamer. shows that his whistle was in fact heard he said in cross-examination on the port
He could not say where on the port bow. it came from, the echo enme from Lan The there would throw back the sound. Tung. It was explained that the high land witness said he could see no fog at that tinie, only a distant haze to the east of Wagkan, which was
The witness replied to the whistle, as an act f At 12.10 Precaution, as it might have been From a ship coming round Lam Taug. the Ting Sang passed Lam Tong point, am the course, which had been. S. 23. E. was altered to E. She had then speed of about 8 kucts, or a little more. At the same time the starboard bow from to one mile away,
(C'antinned or Page 5.) -
about 4 miles distant.
INTIMATIONS
TERRIBLE ITCHING
AND BURNING
With Eczema on Face and Body for Eight Years. Got No Rest At Night. Used Cuticura Soap and Ointment. Free From Eruption.
46. Dymock St., Fulham, London, 8. W. Eng. "After auffering for nearly eight years with eczema on my face and body, rinning eruption of sorts on my cars and hand, getting no rest at night for the terrible tching and burning i have usod Cutímire Soap and Ointment and am now quite free from the trouble. The trouble began on my furohead and spres into my hoad. Ono eyebrow was quite raw at times. could Het very little sleep with the burstag and Itching foeling and used to try to fluta cool spot on the pillow for ease. My pour fare was a sad sight and there hava boga times that I have boon ashamed go out. "I" can safóly say that I used" "Some dozens of advertised curos, and treatmoata. which gave me no tallet. Then I sont for a sample of Cuticura Soup and Ointment., I used the Hoap and then spread the Ointment len and bound my face up and on some luen the very first that I had roller. I kept da and Cuticura Boap and Olpiment worked
a miracle. Now I fool quito different, my face being free from the eruption and dis- Agurement. Thanks to Cutleurs Soap and Ointment my face and neck are fresh an clear." (signed) Mrs. A. Tumor, Jan. 21, '14.
Samples Free by Post
In purity, delicacy and fragranco Cuti- cura Boap and Ointment satisfy the most discriminating. A single sot is often suf ficient. Sold throughout the world. Bampla
A GERMAN SPY" IN SINGAPORE. considerable excitement atmong the boarding officers who visited the Bourbon on her arrival from Saigon last week, an excitement which ended in the loud laughter of all concerned. The
The case for the Wing Sang is that she was officials were informed in a mysterious whisper that there was a German "spy
proceeding south of Lam Tong Island on an easterly course. The weather was fine and on board, who had been busy at Hong
calm the atmosphere was clear in her kong and captured red-handed with plans
neighbourhood and in all directions except). of the forts on him. He had escaped,
towards the east and south, where there was however, but was recognised by the The boarding
a fog bank; and a light wind was blowing captain of the Bourbon.
from about east-south-east. At 12.10 the officers were duly impressed and, headed by the mato, proceeded towards the smoke
The case before us is not analagous to
prolonged blast from a vessel enveloped and Toom, where the "spy was solacing
Art. 7-As the purchases of the bonds are the above in that the nature of the com Major H. Barry de Hamel, Chiefing Hang heard on her starboard side a writes to the invisible in the fog. It was clear for some himself with the bear of his country.
likely to be ade on different dates, it would plaining parties is not the same; the one Police Officer, Penang, "Bring that man out," roared the mate.
So it has is representative of the public interest, Penang Press, as follow:-Owing to the and after a slight pause, a huge pair of be difficult to calculate interest. boots emerged, followed by a stout figure been decided that the interest for the And it is immaterial that the range of presence of a great number of Europen. distance in that direction, and the other to be any present danger of collision, but ju a uniform of sorts. He was being remaining months of the year 1914 shall be the private interest is extensive, pro- unemployed in Penang at the present vessel was apparently too far away for there carried by two sailors. The boarding deducted at the time when the purchaser vided that it is not co-extensive and time, who appear to live by their wits, officers were about to do their duty when pays for his bonds. (For example, if the bet identical with the public welfare, becomes the Chief Police Officer would be glad if the ing. ang sounded a prolonged blast in any person who may be pestered by or reply, and slowed down, navigating with they saw across the front of the spy's prire of a hand bo ninety-four dollars and merged therein as to lose its private asked for money by any such Europeans cantion, and continued to sound a prolonged
The if the interest due to the purchaser for the charecter.
would at once communicate with him helmet the legend Shoot it!"
was a dummy, whose construction remaining months of the year be two dollars,
detaining such persons till the arrival of minutes. Hearing the whistle of the other had enlivened the idle hours of some of
the police. It is mistaken charity to vessel getting nearer and apparently more the garcons of Saigon, where the life-size
forward on the starboard side, the other figure had been paraded on several
enquiry into all cases reported to them vessel being still hidden in the fog, the Wing Sang's engines were stopped. The fog occaisions-Straits Times.
and assist deserving cases.
bank approached the Wing Sang's bow by the MACGREGOR&Co.
[4
spy
15
J
-COLONIAL EXPEDITIONARY
TORCES.
In a leading article the Sydney Morn- ing Herald of August 20th sayз:-
In no way have the opinious.published
German
established by
writers of authority been more directly refuted than by the attitude of the self-governing dominions at the frat hint of war. was asserted by more than one accepted teacher of the people that if over. Great Britain wore found to be in danger the
It
(2) The common
form of caves then the purchaser need only pay ainety-two dropping, however, as a public nuisance dollars.) The method of reckoning this is not comprised within the above classi-assist such people, as the police will make portion of the interest shall be as follows:fication; but consiste in the fact of eaves
(a.)If the purchaser pays for the bonds dropping coupled with the subsequent on or before the 5th of the month (olar dissemination of matters scandalous and calendar), bo is entitled to the interest for disquieting to the community; or, at the whole of that month. For instance, least, coupled with a purpose so to dis if he pays on or before September 5th, he seminate. The following definitions cover shall receive four months' interest.
this form of eavesdropping:
(b.) If the purchaser pays for the bands after the 5th and on or before the 20th of the month, he shall receive interest for
the half of that month.
discuss termos.. If the prospective under writer is at a place far away from Peking, the Bureau of National Loans will tele graphically entrust a person to discuss termus
(a.) Eavesdropping, by looking and listening at a window for the purpose of framing, slanderou Lovett, Pa. 1531, 8 tales, is an indictable
offence
INDUSTRIAL FEUDALISM,
TAXING TITLED FOREIGNERS.
blast at intervals of not more than two
a
of each with 32-p. Bin Book free from nearest depot. Addeos. F. Newbery & Sons, 27, Charterhouse 8q., Londen, or Potter D. & G. Corp., Boston, U. B. A..
CALDBECK,
(ESTABLISHED 1864).
SOLE AGENTS FOR
[96-14
wind, and soon afterwards the other vessel, which proved to be the Jinnen Meru, saddenly came into sight: approximately 3 lengths away and bearing about 3 points on the Wing Bang's starboard bow, emerging from the fog bank which appeared to tax of 25 per cont, be levied on all persons considerable speed on a course crossing the
In support of the Bill proposing that a
be very dense, and travelling at marrying titled foreigners, Mr. Bowdie, (5.) Eavesdropping is the common representative of Ohio, published a list of Wing Sang's course ahead of the Wing Sang. nuisance of hanging about the dwelling thirty American women who had married The Wing Sang's course was still east, and as the Jinser Maru came into sight, she house of another, hearing tattle, and re-into the nobility, all of whom derive their her speed was from 3-4 knots an hour. Just penting to the disquiet of the neighbour incomes from property in the United sanded 3 short blasts, indicating that her hood" (Bishop's New Crim. Law, vol. 1,
States, and whose names are almost as engines were going full speed astern. Par. 112).
Thereupon the Wing Sang put her hel well-known in London as in New York.
Mr. Bowdio mentions that most of the hard astarboard, and sounded two short American States have surresion taxos blasts, and her engines were put full speed FALCON LAGER which even the poor must pay before ahead in order to assist her holm, and also inheriting even the smallest estates, but to minimise the effect of the collision. But he continues: Here we have hundreds of the Jiasen Maru, coming rapidly on with an millions of dollars removed ermanently apparent slackening in her speed, struck from America by a lot of stiftless lords with the port side of her stem the Wing and dukes, who enjoy it whi e they live, Sang's starboard side, just forward of and then hand it on to their progeny, amidships, and inflicted serious injury pa who have nothing hut atempt for the Wing Sang. democratic institutions, and hey get this from American soil without one penny tax,"
(c.) Eavesdroppers, or such as listen under of a house, to hearken after dis- course, and thereupon to frame slander- ous and mischievous tales, are a common nuisance." (4 BI. Com., 168.)
The emphasis is here placed, not upon the damage to an individual but upon the damage to the community, through the circulation of slanderous and mischievous tales and through the unrestrained acti vity in the community of an individual committing such practices and likely to commit them against individual of the community. The busybody, detected in gory with the common scold. eavesdropping, is placed in the same cate
If the purchaser pays after the Pa. Law J. 226). 20th of the month, his interest shall begin from the 1st of the next month. For instanco, if he pays after September 20th, 1914, be shall receive interest for three of the remaining months of the year. minions would one by one take the
Art. 8.-Prospective underwriters may opportunity of declaring their indepen- dence. To anyone who know the different write or telegraph to the Bureau of National types into which the British race had Loans, Hsi Tang Tea Hutang, Peking, were 80 stating his proposals. On receiving the developed, these assertions obviously baseless as to inspire a doubt replies to their letters or telegrams, they may whether the teachers were sincere or call at the Bureau of National Loans to whether they were themselves deceived. That it may be questioned whether the most sanguine Imperialist could have anticipated that the spirit of loyalty throughout the Empire could have taken the immediate, the sincere, and the practical form in which it has been expressed during the past three weeks.
"Under ancient fendalis," mys the So far from racial discords taking the
indignant Mr. Bowdie, "the overlord a form of secession or rebellion, they have
Does the present case show this kind of been completely healed In South Africa,
least lived in the centre of hi estates, and Art. 10. The underwriters may invite as in Ireland, the menace of Germany has done what no civil danger could do, persers to sub-underwrite the amount he public Buisance? Complaint was not
reveal, the circulation of slanderous tales be an assemblage of inde irial feuda and has drawn an appeal for uning from has taken at the Bureau of Nations! Lonn made of, and the examination did not knew his tenants. America vill shortly the most stubborn opponent of all things will only al with the underwriters, who or even of husiness secrets, or of any kind estates, whose owners live 3,000 miles British. In Canada the two races that shall be re onsible for their own actions,
of information whatesoever. The evidence away. This thing constitutes a distinc: within the same boundaries have for a Art. 11 The underwriters may publisis sufficient to show that a listening peril to the republic, and within four century and a half maintained separate advertisements or engage persons to canvas took place; or, at least, most careful years this peril will be recno sed by bot ideals and separate characteristics have subscriptio for them, but whatever the action preparation thereto and in con- political parties. Wealthy fathers whe at last begun to share the same bopes and must not be antagonistic to the rules annection therewith. To find a public nurs-still preserve their self-respect for Ameri To support the same enterprise. Ingulations issued by the Bureau of Nation ange, however, it must be inferred from can institutions should set that their Australia and New Zealand there were Loans.
this evidence that the pose of the wills are arranged to stop this evil.”.
with him.
Art. 9. The Bureau of National Loans may enquire into the qualifications of any prospective underwriter and decide whether the Barean will entertain his application
or not.
BEER
FOTTLED BI.
& Co., AMSTERDAM.
Those, on board the Wing Sang blame the Jinsen Alaru for going et an excessive spoed with regard to the circumstances, and with MESSES. VAN VOLLENHOVEN neglecting to stop and anchor, or to reverse her engines, so as to take her way off, when she heard the Wing Sang's whistle. Again, was going astern she neglected to reverse with sufficient promptners. Further, the manœuvre of reversing was an improper when the Jinsen Maru signalled that she
DBC The Jinsen Maru is alleged to have neglected to comply with Arts, 16, 31, 23, 27 I have stated shortly the effect of the and 20 of the Regulations. case for each side as shown on the pleadings. Hofore dealing with the evidence it is necessary to clear away an objection taken
The ONLY GENUINE CHEAP
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