WAR NEWS.

RELIABLE NEWS FOR CON-

SUMPTION IN MANILA.

The Cablenous American (Manila) is pluming itself on ita.cable servico, which it describes as "of the most complete and reliable character." It possesses the "exclusive rights of the Ostasiatischer Lloyd service in the Philippines.

Helow we quote a few samples of the complets und reliable character

of our Manila contemporary's cable service, from the issues of November 1st and 3rd:-

The Allie aro forced to retire to the Aisue.

2-Tho outbreak in South Africa is in- creasing in importance..

3-The British battleship Tenerable is sunt by a German anbmarino..

4.The Gochen and Brestou have sunk Ave Russian wanhips,

6.A report has been received" that the British hopital ship Rohilla, with hundreds of wounded soldiers on hoard, has been wrecked near Whitby, and 200 persona were drowned.

In the first two instances we know the statements to be the reverse of the fruth, and we can safely conclude that the other statements enumerated above are not a whit more reliable for had they been true wo would certainly have had the news published officially by the Governments comerned, and communi- cated to us through Routor's agency, as has boun the case nvariably when die asters or misfortunes have really occurred.

THE CAPTAIN OF THE EMDEN." The following is taken from the 3-6 Daily News:-

THE HONGKONG DAILY PRESS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10TH, 1914,

GERMANY'S WAR ON WOMEN.

Field-Marshal Sir Evolyn Wood, V.C. speaking at a recruiting rally in the Hackney Empire theatre, said that bo had been told by a Cabinet Minister that although the Germans had killed any Belgian soldiers they had killed three times that number of women and children. There was no cause for app hension that our soldiers would ever descend to that.

A BELGIAN MOTHER'S INDICTMENT.

OPEN LETTER TO THE GERMAN EMPRESS..

and

A remarkable letter, headed" An Open Letter to the German Empress " signed "A Belgian Mother appears in the Métropole (Antwerp). The following is a translation:

**MADAME,-I read is the newspapers that your son Joachim has returned to Berlin wounded, that you went out to meet hiri, and that you regarded with pride the Iron Cross pinned on his breast. I also, madame, have a son at the war. wounded, no yours was. But he has not He was been brought back to me. I have not been able to take him in. I have even spent three weeks praying to God for him, not knowing whether he lives. He has not fought, thank God, under the same colours as your con But, as wife and mother, I can understand the joy you must have felt it seeing your son again alive

*** I feel no bitterness against your soldiers

CROWN PRINCE'S BOOTY,

GERMAN SERIOUSNESS AND ENGLISH FRIVOLITY.

TELEGRAMS.

["DAILY PRESS

EXCLUSIVE SERVICE] CHINA'S NATIONAL LOAN.

PERING, November 8th. The National Loan has been over subscribed.

SHANGHAI RACES,

FIRST DAY.

A well-known Newcastle-on-Tyne trades man, M. Valentine Jacquemot, has The Germans have long complained that received from his niece, who lives close was are frivolous people, and now the to Fort Troyan, which has figured in the Cologne Gazette tells us that we are lack great battle along the Aisne, uning in understanding of the high serious- interesting story of happenings during ness of the war and in appreciation of its the period when the Gerutan troopa under moral importance. The proof of this is the district. She says Thoir Officers Even Sir John French talks of fair play, ordered us to keep open house and stable whereas the Germans refuse to measure the Crown Prines were in occupation of that we use sporting expressions about it.

for them to act as their servants, and to the whole world from the point of view of give them our all.... The Crown the sportsman and the non-sportsman." Prince was in Vaux, and took your They have given Europe other culture carriage to drive around in. He also has values" than records" in tennis and taken fancy to your trap and the rowing, whereas we have no other ideals English harness. They have smashed all than those of sport, and the language of the furnituro in the houses and carried sport is for us the expression of all situa everything away. They bombarded Fort tions in life. Now, we do not doubt the Treyon for five days. Shells were con- seriousness of the Germans, our complaint Autumn Race Meeting at Shanghai. The Yesterday was the first day of the tinually passing over the houses, and we against them is that they are serious in did not got rest. My uncle, an elderly the wrong place. We said of our soldiers following were the results: man, was ordered by their officers, with the other day that war is to them always revolvers in hand, to go on the battlefield something of u nuisance, and therefore Mr. E Kadoorie's Durbor Chief to pick up their wounded under deadly something of a joke. But to the Germans French artillery fire. It was & miracle war is neither. They have been trained Mr. Thomas' Piccadilly ... (Lindsay) that he escaped death. Afterwards he was to believe that the fate of the universer. Oswald's Anld. Reckie ordered to drive to Motz all they had depends upon their victory; and, since rest he received a kick or a knock from they can only sustain their belief by nicans stolen. If he felt tired and asked for a it is very difficult for them to believe that,

(JK. Brand) the butt of a gun. After three days and of an immense and incessant seriousness.

Distance: n. Tine, la 13-5ɛces. three nights without food he asked to be "Deutschland über Alles" they sing, and Mr. Henry Morriss' Castlefield allowed to water his horse, and was given if it were not always a hymn to them they

CRITERION STAKES.

permission. Leaving a German soldier to could not think it always true. horse and dashed through their lines, there is something about England that wo Mr. Ellis Radooris's Fijian Chief look after the other, he mounted his own can make jokes about Englend, becauso

But, wo Mr. R. Macgregor's Yo Magician escaping unhurt, though hundreds of shots beliove in. were tre were fired after him.'

"Send out the boys of the girls' brigado, Distance: 1m, Tue, 2m. 92-5cces.

They will keep old England free; "Send out my mother, my sister, and

my brother, my

GERMAN CROWN PRINCE AS LOOTER.

CHIVALRY,?!

for having wounded my son on the battlefiek. It is the fortune of war, birt I rofleet that it is in my poor Belgium that your son mand. It is here, with an armed horde kas fought and, without doubt, held com-so EMINENT A REPRESENTATIVE OF TEUTONIC Thore is the soldier's natural reaction Coveted to rapine, to murder, to the utter A German correspondent writes loost length of the most bestial horrors, that contradict the report to which we alluded he has earned his Iron Cross

German offcialism has denied. the loot yesterday, under the usual reservation Therefore, madame, did you feel so proud but the Baroness de Baye has repeated, ing exploits ascribed to the Crown Prince, attached to all snc stories, that Captain-seeing him as you are said to have felt with details, the account of how her cha Carl von Mueller, of the Emden, has an

Did no after-hought trouble you? English mother and wife and was partly unless you were unaware of the orgy of the of Divine Right, who, she says, stood with And, teau was robbed by this interesting scion educated at Harrow. we expected something like this, including Prince Joachim has fought and commanded, preased into packing his plunder. When We may say that sets of hell in our country, among which a revolver over those whom he had im- has evident warmth with which our boro no stain, that it was in hour of a

tidl you assure yourself, that that Iron Cross the reckoning is made after the war, the correspondent writes. He asks for a soldier's doods and could similar prominent space" to that given responsibility in the crimes of which my individual depredations of so eminent

French Government will not forget, we cover up noimaging, to include the account for these to the original report. He shall have country has been the victim at the hands of representative of Teutonic chivalry. Over

your people?

titled to exact the personal punishment and above the settlement with their public enemy, France and Belgium will be en of those who by wanton cruelty to non combatants and by outrages on private property have placed themselves beyond the protection of the laws of war.

TOR

single German officer, and your son more Dots it appear to you as likely that a than any other, can escape before God and before history the responsibility for a joint work which has been consummated for several weeks, methodically and without mercy, in all parts of my country at once?,

This Crass, then, ought it not to inspire you with a little terror beside the pride which the newspapers credit you with

MALOO PIATE, «

(Moller) 1

3

(Stowart) 1

(Dalgleish) 2

(Moller) 3

Mr. Elms' Moane (Hill) 1 MALDEN STAKES.

Mr. Lamerton's Mamaluke....(Rowe) a Mr. John Peel's Firthhead.. (Johnston) 3 Distance: mi. Time, n. 34 4-3secs... FAH-WAL STAKES. Mr. Henry Morriss Cornfeld

The B. P. Kongsi's The Gay Bird

(Stewart) 1 Mr. Evelyn's Sir Pellets (Vidu) 2

(J. K. Brand), 3 Distance: tm. Time, 2m. 2125secs. ROYAL NAVY CUR

GERMAN PROFESSORS'

MANIFESTO.

The German professors and authors having stated the case for Germany in speeches, articles, and open letters; havo now compiled a general manifesto for the benefit of the Worl of Culture," with the words:"It is not true that Each paragraph of this document begins ", printed in large typo. The first

paragraph, dealing with the responsibility for the war, contains the following passage:→→→

Often enough has Wilbolm II. in the 20 years of his roigu shown himself to be the protector of world-penco; often enough have our enemies admitted this. Yes, this same Emperor whom they now dare to call an Attiin has for decades boon scoffed of by them for his uncompromising love of peace. Only when an overwhelming force, which had long been lurking on the frontine, fell upon our nation from threa sides did he rise up like a man,

The second paragraph consists of the violated the neutrality of Belgium. The well-worn lio that England and Franço fourth begins--

It is not true that the life and property. cf a single Belgina citizen has been touched by our solliers except when the bitterest necessity for self-defence rendered it unavoidable.

The paragraph dealing with Louvain begius:~.

It is not true that cur troops raged like brutes in Louvain, With heavy hearts they were obliged to take roprials against a furious population by Bombarding a portion of the town.

The last section runs:-

INTIMATIONS

*** But for goodness sake don't send me," against a dangerous solemnity, which to a German would sem either blasphemy or the shameless betrayal of cowardice.

It is not true that the fight against our

cowards, so they are shocked at the But the Germans know how that the

so-called militarism is not, as our enemies men who sing these th nga® ere not

hypocritically aver a fight against our

fight. It is, perhaps, & difference of profane light-heartedness with which they

culturo. Without German militarism

whether our manners in war are better Mr. E. S. Iline's Kimberly.......(Hill) 1 world of German learning and literature. German culture would long ago have been manners, yet

swept off the face of the earth. the question remains.

The document has 82 signatures, includ ing almost all the best-known names in the or worse than theirs. We have not yet. J. I. Ezra's Ultimatum.....(Owner) 2 the chance, like them, of displaying our Mr. Hongkew's Winston....(Dalgliesh) 3 humours in a hostile country, but, when they can compare our conduct in Germany

Distance: m Time, Im. 30 -5secs.

frivolity is less disagreeable to non-com- they will seo perhaps that our English Messrs. Toeg and Speelman's Sungari with their own in Belgium and France,

SHANOSTAI ST, LEGER,

batants than their German seriousness For it is just because they take war so soriously and see nothing beyond it that the world is shocked with them, Añ English commander might, in his vulgar sporting jargon, say that it was not cricket to make war

on women and Because to the German war is too sacred children, but he would not make it. a thing to be compared with cricket, or war on anyone who comes in his way, Mr. Mohawk's Futurist...(G. Morriss) 1 always preserving his tento of the high Mr. E. Kadoorie's Fijlan Chief anything else except religion, he will make-

seriousness of war and its moral import-

(Moller) 9

(Burkill) 3. Distance: im Time, n. 43 2-ásecs. WHANGPOO STAKES.

ECLIPSE STAKES

Mr. W. S. Jackson'e Suffolk (Vida): 2 Mr. Oswald's Bartonhill...(Johnstone) 3 (Heard) 1

Distance: 1m. Time, 3m 52 2-5secs, Mr. H. Mooriss Wakefield...(Stewart) 1 Mr. Ting's Staysail (Johnstone) Mr. E. Kadoorie's Gipsy Chief

(Moller) 3 Distance: 1m. Time, 2m. 50 2-5secs.

LAUTUMN CUP.

Being an old acquaintance of Mueller, allow me to say that his mother is a née von Bennigsen, of a very old and pure Teutonic family, that his wife cannot be an English lady because he is so far confirmed bachelor-there is therefore stil chance, however-and that he never saw beautiful Figland in his life.

Not yet,

Some of these criminals have already been brought to justice. On Monday a nyhow.. Well, he is a very gallaur fellow all the

French council of war dealt with four Sam And if he never seen England If delicacy, sweetness, and sacred pity whom two were sentenced to death, one German pillagers caught near Senlis, of yet, we sincerely hope that when he falls remain the moral adornment of our sex in to penal servitude for life, and the other in with a British cruiser, he will forego his all the regions where Christian civilisation to ten years imprisonment; avowed intention of sinking his ship has left its stamp, every woman's heart onglit alleged in their defence that anything rather than be captured. They would be doubly horrified that human hangs they left would have been taken by their It was appreciate Eim, in England.

could perpetrate the desolation and barbarism with which a country like mins superior officers, and also that they had has been filled, and that the emblem of the General von Steinger, to shout the inhabiance. So the Inquisitor preserved always Mr. G. E. Thompson's Paladin

precise orders, particularly from a Christ can find itself in such a position as tants in the conquered towns, and to burna sense of the high seriousness of the lying as a reward on the breasts of those who remain responsible for it beloge conscience and before humanity. The publishes the following1dd not envy you your pride, madenie, An officer of Austrian Hussars captured face to face with your son fresh come from in Galicia gives the following account of the ravaged regions of Vist and Dinaat, of how he was carried off by a Cossack Aerschot, of Louvain, or Tormontle, wounded, Our cavalry advanced to the battle with which is nothing, but decorated with the rou ardour, bus the Cossacks fell on us like & Cross, which is an ironie sacrilege and a whirlwind. Bardly were we in touch than profanation worthy of supreme punishment. a Cossack dealt me three simultaneous, blows with his lau, sabre, and fist the midst of our tears, which we shall dry

"No, I envy you nothing. How he did it I don't know, but he did and of our ruins, which we shall restore, one not even give time to fall..

day, I bless God that those of us who have soldier sons can clasp them in our arms in the certain knowledge that they are subliers and not nesassins."

THE COSEACE WAY.

AUSTRIAN OFFICER'S AMAZING STORY.

"He seized me by the collar, lifted me on to his horse, and carried me off. His courrades acted similarly, and a good number of our Hussars were thus taken prisoners."-Reuter.

THE BLACK COW.

INFORMATION FOR THE ENEMY.

A particularly ingenious example of the methods employed by derman spies at the front for communicating information to their troops is given in the Telegramme of the. Pas-de-Calais, The German Intelligence Department has taken a leaf from the book of the gipsies and wander- ing beggars, who often have a code of sigas which they write on walls and fences.

And even in

BRITISH AND GERMAN TRADE

A COMPARISON.

The following official telegram from the Foreign Office has been handed to Reuter's Agency at Peking

LONDON, November 1st. shipping is laid up idle in ports. So German reports state that British little is this the case that new lines are being established tapping the trade routes hitherto occupied by the Germans.

of

and pitago their houses. Steinger is alive at the conclusion

It General von

Luquisition and its moral importance. He nover said that it was not fair bull-fight pones his will be on a list withing to torture 6. suspect into confession, Certain officers whoon names have earned sure that he would have burnt him for a similar notoriety are already reported blasphemy. But let us confess that we which the Allies will show special cons.ru and if anyone else had said it, we may be to be in their hands. who is said to have been the destroyer of that we think and talk too much of sport, Major Manteuffel, re, as a nation, sometimes too frivolous, Louvain, is alleged to have been taken and that our vocabulary is infected with the ex-Chanceller and the reputed author least they harm no one but ourselves. The prisoner the other day, and now we hear sporting terms. There are faults, no that Commander von Bülow, a relative of doubt, displeasing to the Germans, but at of the atrocities at Aarschot, is included common complaint against the Germans in the latest batch of captures. If this at the present moment is that their is so, there is probably nothing to pre- defects, or, as they would say, their vent the bearing of the charges against virtues, are harmful to other people. them being expedited pour encourager fesTo the English," they, any, "war is a outres-Pall Mall Gazette:

ARMY OF 4,388,000.

GERMANS NOW AT FULL WAH STRENGTH.

BERNE, October 3rd. In military circles bere it is estimated that Germany has now actually under and an equal number of reserves, making arms 27 army corps of her regular troops a total of 54 army corps.

Of these, 24 army corps are at present in East Prussia, and 11 between Thorn in France, six in Belgium and Alsace, 13 and Cracow

1,500,000 Landsturm and volunteers There are, in addition, assumed to be serving in the interior, while 600,000 fresh recruits are reported to be in training sufficiently advanced for them to be ready for service in November-Central News, The total is estimated at 4,288,000 fight

Mr. Evelyn's Sir Mordred... (Vida) 1 Mr. Ezra's Jupiter Mr. Lamerton's Mameluke... ..(Howe) 2:

(Ezra) 3 Distance: 15m. Time, 3m. 28 3-5secs.

the

South

NEARLY DRIVEN HAD WITH ECZEMA

Broke Out Over Eyebrows. Covered Whole of Face. Rarely Got Any Sleep During Night, Cuticura Soap and Ointment Healed Face.

هست.

67. Nunaory Lane, York, Eng-"'Ecro- ma broko out just over my eyebrows-and gradualis covered the whole of my face

In the form of small scabs, which were constantly mat- tering, then gradually dried and period off. I was under treatment for sOYES Becks during which tim confined to the hours and racely got any stoop during the night on account of the Irritation. For several days

Way

I was neatly driven mad with the kzatqtion and then happening to hear from a fical

Outeurs Soap and Ointment I dedde

BOERS AND GERMANS.

GENERAL SMUTS' STINGING REBUKE,

Defents Minister, replying to ex-General Beyers, when he resigned the post of General Smuts, the South African

Commandant Gewral of very dramatic, very intense, and very African Defence Forces, said:- profitable sport." It is not a sport. to

Your bitter attack on Great Britain them, we must admit, and they have taken is not only entirely baseless, but is the very good care that it shall not be one to more unjustifiable coming as it does in the the Belgians. The Belgians see something midst of a great war from the Com- little Satanic in the German sense of mandant-General of one of the British they would rather hear the frivolous acts during the South African War cannot the seriousness of war, and we suspect that Dominions. Your reference to barbarou laughter and sporting jokes of the English justify the instead of a friend. The Times. soldier, even if he came as an enemy Belgium and can only be calculated to sow

criminal devastation of Samples Free by Fost hatred and division among the people of South Africa Ca

GENERAL FRENCH.

with

You forget to mention that since the South African War the British people. The following is taken from an inter-gavo South Africa her entire freedom view with a Catholic Chaplain :- ho had to fight during the day, always ideals along our own lines, and which, for "General French, no matter how hard possible for us to realize our national under a Constitution which makes it

tried to spend a little time in the field instance, allows you to write hospital at night with the wounded He impunity a letter for which you would would stroll in sometimes accompanied by without doubt be liable in the German an orderly, but many times, alone. would ask the wounded how they were as we ourselves are concerned our coast is He Empire to the extreme penalty. So far through their legs would slap them ou and our borders are invaded by the enemy, the back and say: You'll get him next

Comparative prices published by the Berlin Statistical Office show the increased A favourite sign of the German spies Berlin during the period July to Septem- cost of different classes of provisions ar who aro no doubt innocent-looking ber, 1914. In particular there has been peasants apparently arousing themselves an increase in the price of cereals, flour, with bits of chalk, is a black cow. This pulses, potatoes, oggs and butter. animal, erudely sketched in black erayon on walls and gates and lenocs, was fre cate gives statistics showing that the The Rhenish Westphalian Coal Syndi quently noticed by the French as they passed and was so badly drawn that it output of coal during the thonth of ing men, A German army corps is 42,603 getting on, and in the case of chaps shot threatened, our mail boata are arrested,

September was 3,500,000 tons as compared

men.

aroused no suspicion. The only remark with 6,500,000 tons during September last

it called forth was that it was much out

of proportion. Sometimes it was small, sometimes large,

year.

PEXIKO, November 2nd.

To rampant, now INTERNED SAILORS AT NANKING. couchant, and often tho horns were ridiculously tong in comparison with the rest of the animal. It was not a case of bad drawing. The only things that'

The Government has instructed General mattored were the size and the direction Feng Kuo-chang, to intern the crews of in which it faced. The French officers the British gunboats-Teal-and-Widgeon in have now discovered the secret of this the same way as the crew of the destroyer system of signals, which are apparently 90 at Nanking and to accord impartial the exclusive possension of General von

treatment

both belligerents. Kluck's army.

Ostasiatischer Lloyd.

TIME'S REVENGES.-

DESCENDANTS OF VELLINGTON AND NET FIGHTING SIDE BY SIDE.

A little cow signified that the road was only weakly defended; a moderate-sized cow meant that the Alled troops were in the neighbourhood; a large cow was a warning that there were earthworks or trenches near by. The direction in which the cow's head pointed indicated where. M. Arthur Meyes (the Gaulois says) the danger was. If it pointed into the was hunching at Larne's when a young air, that meant that the Germans had English officer in khaki came up to shake better reconnoitre: the ground by aero hands with M. Meyer'a companion plane before advancing. The black cow trick is henceforth useless, but the enemy will doubtless invent other apparently innocent signals.

THE GERMAN

COMMANDER-IN-

"Do you know who that is said the latter.It is Lord G. Wellesley, a great-grandson of the Duke of Wellington, the conqueror of Waterloo. He is going

"ARETHUSA" HONOURED.

FORTIC INSCRIPTION ON THE CRUISER.

The Admiralty have ordered the fellow ing verses to be engraved upon a brass plate and fixed in a conspicuous place in B. MS. Arthu

Come, all ye jolly sailors bold Whose hearts are east in honour's mould, While English glory I unfold, Huzza for the Arethusa Her men are staunch, To their fav'rite launch, And when the foo shall meet our fire. Sooner than strike we'll all expire-

On board of the Arethusa.

Ant, now we've driven the foe ashore Never to fight with Britons more,

Let each fill his glass. To his fav rite lass;

A health to our captain and officers true,

On board of the Arethusa. And all that belong to the jovial crew

to Bue to fetch an aeroplane, for he is a action off Heligoland are to have the All the ships which took part in the flying officer, and from there he will fly words, Heligoland, August 28th, 1914," CHIEF

to the British General Headquarters,

And do you know whom he will meet painted in gold lettering in some con- New York information from German there rejoined M. Meyer. He will

venient place. sources states that the dissatisfaction with find himself shaking hands with a General von Moltke has accumulated to brilliant young officer of the corps of A Civil and Military cablegram quotes such a degree that, while he has not bein interpreters called Charles Ney, Duke of The Timex military correspondent that the formally ousted from his position as Chief Elchingen. of Staff, he has been deprived of much

German forces in the west may total ono These descendants of those two great and a half millions. He is quite pre- in a commission of the Kaiser's most will find themselves, almost exactly a by the Germans, but regards that executive authority, which is now reated warriors who met on the field of Waterloo pared to see resumption of the offensive trusted soldiers.

century later, fighting side by side,' possibility without anxiety,

to give them a trial. I obtalnest a supply of Cuticura Soap and Ointment. After wash- Ing with the Soap I put a little of the Olas ment on my face. This tresienst

gradually' alayed the irritation so I continuod (h£#. for pris weaks and after that time my face was cured." (Bignet) Lawson, Jan, 10,14,

Cutleurs Soap and Qfatmoat have

thave proved most valuable for the treatment of pimples, blackheads, redness and roughnices of tho fare and hands, dandruff. Itching, irritated ocals with dry, dn and falls hair, as well as for all purposes of the toilet, bath, and Basery from infancy 10.060 gra

-Although Cuticura, Soap and Cuticura Omitment are sold by druggiate and dealers throughout the world, a lorral sample of cach with 33-p. Skin Book will be sens free. upon request, Address post-card: P. Noir- bery & Sons, 27, Charterhouse Sq., Londa,

CALDBECK,

[16-24

time. How soon will you be out and "As regards your insinuation concern- back with us with you ending the ban of £7,000,000, which the MACGREGOR&C..

"And sometimes the General would British Government was kind enough to stay too long, and realise that he could grant us, and for which the public of the not get back to headquarters that night. Union, as evidenced recently in Parlia Then he would wrap & blanket round him ment, are most grateful, it is of such a and earl up on a vacant cot or on the despicable nature that there is no necessity floor alongside a wounded Tommy and to make any comment thereon. It only go to sleep, I tell you, every British shows to what extent your mind has been soldier is strong for Sir John French-a obscured by political bias. real man as well as a soldier."

VOLUNTEER OFFICERS

PROMOTED.

The Government Gazette announces the following appointments by H. B. the Governor :--

2nd Lieutenants. A E. Wright and G. Norrington to be Lieutenants in the Hongkong Volunteer Corps, and Mr. J. D. Danby to be a temporary Liestenaut, with effect from the 2nd November, 1914.

(ESTABLISHED 1864.

SOLE AGENTS FOR

You speak about duty and honour: my conviction is that the people of South Africa will in these dark days, when the. Government as well as tho people of South Africa are put to the supreme test, have a clearer conception of duty and honour than is to be deduced from your speaking section in particular I cannot letter and action. For the Dutch BL conceive anything humiliating than a policy of hip loyalty fatal and in fair weather and of a policy of neutrality and pro-German sentiment in days of storm and stress,

more

I am convinced that the people will the mandate of Parliament, and in this support the Government in carrying out fulfil their duty to South Africa and to the Empire and maintain their dearly manner, which is the caly legitimate one,

on honour unblemished for the future

WHISKIES

GOLD LABEL.

WHITE LABEL.

Prepared by the Oldest Firm of Distillers in the World.

TRAFFIC IN THE THAMES. The following notice has been issued by All tradic into and out of the River the Admiralty: Thames must pass through the Edinburgh Channels or through the Black Deep South of the Enock John and Knob Light buoys and through the Gaze Deep until under way in the above mentioned Chan- by Cook's representative, who went to the further notice. No vessels are to remain Dels inside the sunk Head Lich buoy or frontier to meet them, were brought to Nearly 250 English people, accompanied

Sand and East Shingles Buoys between tire at Karisbad, who had arranged for within a line joining the South Long Berno from Karishad. Cont's represent

hibit any lights between the hours of 7 eight of the firm's Austris employes, who the hours of 7 p.m. and 6a.m. Vesels at the running of the train, was not allowed anchor within those limite must not ex-

to leave at the last moment, and about Market. p.m. and 6 am. All other Channels are are English, are in prison. closed to navigation.

Matured

before

being

perfect condition

placed

on the

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