WHY GERMANY HAS FAILED.¦ REVIEW OF THE WAR BY
HILLAIRE BELLOC.
The war began on 31st July, 1914-a Friday. The first thing to grasp is this, that this dat connotes as completely as oireumatantial evidence will permit us to judge the determination on the part of the German Government to make the
war after the harvest of 1814-a doter mination extending over thire years That fundamental fact mast bo remora- bered; otherwise the whole meaning of the war, politica! aus! strategical, will be How can it be proved? The cause of the war was apparently an accident-the assassination of the heir to the Austrian throne-bat the premeditated character of the war can be proved by a system of converging lines of evidence. We can tell the time it takes a first-class Power to munition itself for an extraordinary effort the date of which it knows; that time is about three years. The determina tion to make war was conceived in the Hummer of 1011..
We know to what date was designed the finish of the widening of the Kiel We know that certain provision must be made only-in.the month prior to the outbreak of war. The crime of Bara
Canal.
jeva eccurred at the end of June. The war did not occur until the end of July. because the harvest had to be gathered Towards the end of July, when the har vost was gathered, the fateful note was linched.
in toto the French would be inferior in numbers by this strategy, they could de pend on local supriority.
The French dispositions, it is true. allowed for victory at the beginning, but this did not affect that fact that their tactics were as has just been outlined the tacties of the light weight opposed to the heavy-weight who must bear enor mona pain in order to reach the oppor- tunity for getting in an effective blow. The first part of the French plan was seen in the retreat from Mens, or what they call the battle of Charleroi, There eight
The count.r-offensivo was army corps were opposed to reventeen army corps, seen in the battle of the Marne, and it was Buccessful.
THE HONGKONG DAILY PRESS, TUESDAY, JUNE 8th, 1915,
The small Russian force was successful. was driven out of East. Prussia with the loss of one Russian army corps, the 20th. Then it marched on its main objective, the breaking of the line of the Nemen and Narew and the cutting of the line behind
Waraow.
INDIAN AFRICAN LINE.
Cargo carried on through Bäls of Lading, from HONGKONG to BEIRA DELAGOA BAY DURBAN (Natl), EAST LONDON, POET ELIZABETH and DAPE TOWN with transhipment at COLOMBO to 14 of the INDIAN. AFRICAN LINE.
FROM HONGKONG :
23rd Junė,
PROPOSED SAILINGS
Canmerking with "KAHIAWAR"
EXCELLENT 40COMMODATION you 187 and 2nd Class PassYVMGEKE,
AFRICAN
From ColoM'BO :
170. July,
LINE.
Regular Direct Bervies from JAPAN, CHINA and BTRAIIB to BEIBA, DELAGOA DAY, DULLAN, EAST LONDON, гURT ELIZABETH and CAFE TOWN, elling at MAURITIUS route, and fording the quickest Fraight.
PROPOSED SALLING.
she has not been affected is in regard to the propellent explosive, and that comes To those who know better from cotton. than I it is still worth while to give the The enemy now hos easy gunpowder. a million bales of cotton, one half obtained through neutral countries, one half by direct trade. In the course of the war he The battle of Pryaspyz took place on February 28th, 27th, and 29th, and thohe imported half as much again as he onomy failed in his attempt. In commonally imparts. The various neutral with many others, I believed that the at- countries are all supplying him with the Cotton is arriving tempt would be renewed. The battle exception of Italy. ended in a dribbling away of the enemy's directly at German ports and I am pre-ORIENTAL forces, He lost about 10 000 men in pripared to helieve that half the imports age We have used for the manufacturo of repellent ex- soners and perhaps 20 guns. now reached the second week of April; plosive.
The reason why in spite of the blockade this dof.at was sustained at the ead of
Transport from the ORIENT. to SOUTH AFRICA, Then ten men drove back th: February and nothing more has been done this cotton, which is gun-powder, is allow oxcept a desultory and inexplicable bom-tu to go free is that it is believed that the Prvention of its arrival would involvo sixteen; but they did not knock them out.
The numerically inferior army having bardment of. Ossowices, which leads ap thrown back the numerically superior parently to nothing-the first use of heavy trouble with a neutral Blate whose friend- army, knew that ultimately numbers artillery which has led to nothing. The ship wo naturally desire to maintain. would begin to turn in ta:ir favour. attempt on Warsaw, it appears, has come But to have bought that cotton and pri to an end without a decisive victory for Teated it reaching Germany would only The Russians, who had at that moment
In it worth fewer than two millions in the field, the enemy. Its esult was negative, liko have cost us the cost of one or, at the would be slowly adding to their foreca the Marne; negative like Ypres, but still a most, two weeks of the war.
while, then, letting it go through? further aid would come in the shape of defent for the enemy.
We may be told that Germany has got In the month of March the whole cam- the voluntary recruits of Great Britain; lastly would come the necessary wastage paign began to enter on a fourth phase, all the cotton now she wants; therefore it In the doesn't matter. But that is a poor sort It is not true, Wo don't west the Allies have now obtained the of apology. of the enemy who had planned for a short which may not yet be predicted.
superiority in numbers. That sup rior know-how long the war may last, and in. war, and whose whole strategical and tac
ity could not long remain if the enemy permitting cotton to go through is the tical traditions compelled him to an enor mous wastage
were once froz on the eastern side, or if enemy you are doing what Bismarck and the onery
new von Moltke would have been doing had could bring up formations of value before the large new they allowed provisions to enter boleaguer. ped and the newly trained levies in contingents from Great Britain are equip.od Farís. Francs can proceed to the front,
Upon the whole at this moment the enemy could congratulate himself on hav- ing succeeded in that part of his plan He had not prevented which meant the holding up of the Rus
sians in the East.
the fall of Lemberg and the invasion of Galicia, but he had won one of the great battles of history at Tannenberg, defeat
intimax have in wise to have
hidden the significanes of this German victory frean Great Britain, but if we had been told the full facts it would have seen- ed in us something like Waterlon,
The enemy maant to make war whering five Russian army corps and destroyed, and the initiative in the west has the harvest of 1974 was cathered, and he had had that intention clearly befor hire we time in the midsummer 1811, and that is a conclusion to which history must undoubtedly agree. It meant that the meny was coming into an adventure which he regarded less as an adventure than us a certainly, not as a gamble but aan iny strment.
MENACE OF 8,000,000 MES.
THE FIGHT AT YPRES
"THE TIDE HAS TURNED." The tide in numbers has definitely turn pared to the thie by Tenson of their superiority in heavy gun-work, which in its turn is due to their superiority in the air. In trench warfare the initiative belongs to that side which is ready to at- tack when it chooses; the Allies have the initiative for another reason than their equipment, which is that the enemy is leaving only just enough men to hold his If we ask why the trenches in the west Allies airmen are superior I should ex plain it as being due to the adventurous The enemy is
character of the British.
You cannot make the explosive from
manufactured or from cotton that is dyed; only from the puro cotton balo. If there are reasons in spite of this for con- tinuing to give the enemy a commodity upon which his ability to continue the was depends, then I think those reasons ought to be published.-Hilaire Belloc in Week- ly Dispatch.
wood-pulp or from cotton that is already
WFATHER REPORT.
On the 7th at 11.15 am.-Presence-in-in- creased moderately throughout the arca; it is his hen in the Pacifle to the art of the Forire. and is relatively low over Clins and Tongking. Hongkong rainfall for the 24 hours ending at
East Prussia had been invaded. An old general was put at the head of the Germany, and without any superiority in numbers he broke the enemy in peces. It was an alliance governed from Be That general was von Hindenburg. Tan- in of from 193 to 180 millions, which innenberg was an enormous affair, more the first period of the war would have a than counter-balancing Lemberg. Har its disposal over eight millions of trained:
what was much harm for some time," munitions, challenging not the whole say, "The Russians won't be able to do us world but Bussia and France, and hoping going to happen in the West?
The second phase of the war in the West and expecting that this country, the only
He had other Great Power involved, would keep
was for the enemy to break out, out and watch events. Even if this cour lost his early decision. The sixteen had try did come in victory seed certain,
been pinned by the ten and the ten by because when the war broke out two
now and become eleven and the sixteen things were so much in favour of the chemy that, humanly speaking, he could had been reduced to about fifteen. Still the enemy enjoyed a great superiority and hardly fail to win. A disinterested ob- erver, say, an Asiatic monk, would have his business was not to remain pinned.
The attempt to break out formed the been bound to conft, looking at the situation at the end of July, that the tier-econd chapter of the war, the enemy be manie Powers must achieve what they were setting out to achieve to hold up Russin, crush France, and establish their hegemony in the European Continent.
soldiers with full equipment and fulting virtually succeeded in the ability, jumpy, and the general impression is that 10 am, to-day, 0.( 0 inokea,
ing occupied simultaneously in the east in holding back the Russian food The attempt lasted from the early days of October to the later days of November. The Germanic Powers were not out to So huge were the forces engaged that one change the map of Europa, They were hesitates almost to predicate their sits for fear of the figures being considered fan- out to obtain economic control in the Bat- kans, the Egean, and in the Turkish tastic. The attempt was made on the Empire, to combat the Slay menace in the northern front between Ypres and the sea, Caat, destroy in the French people the or, to be more exact, between Armentieres iden of revenge, and chastise them for and the sea, and it followed the fall of The first half was the fight entertaining it, and place themselves in Antwerp, a position ultimately to challenge the between Dixmude and the sea on & front hitherto unchallenged hegemony of Great of twelve miles; the second half was Britain and they were out to achieve the salient of Ypres, which will their main ends in the first six months of remain among the proudest and nudest achievements in the archives of the British people
The war-i-
calculable The plut failed, though the
Now, as regards the numbers that Tactors making for victory were all on their side. The first part of their plan Berce struggle on the enemy's pert to was to detach sufficient forces to hold up break out, I had occasion to speak to a Russia in the East, There was no ques-general officer who had seen the greater part of these actions with his own eyes and tion of conquering Russia; it was too vast an empire with enormous reserves of had had every opportunity for estimating What do men, who ultimately would have adequate the loss of the enemy, see the evidence, and resources in material. Their object was corroborate his estimate. to persuade Russia that each fresh wave you regard the losses of the enemy on the
I answered "About 120,000 of its effort would be broken while the salient of Ypres in three weeks?" he ask German alliance got its decision in the ed me.
Your are quite safe in doubling that
Personally West,
figure." was his reply. should say 300,000."
THE WESTERN AVALANCHE.
In lic East à million men were sot "apart-to-meet the first mobilised effort of Russia and to hold it up while the avalanche in the West, fully equipped in every detail, swept through the West, numerical This avalanche bad the superiority of sixteen to ten, and, apart from the confidence begotten of numbers. there was the optimism born of the conviction that France was on the down grade,
More important was the theory with which the enemy went to war. He main tained against the universal criticism of this country, which had just gone through
experience
the
of
Heaven knows what effort Germany ads to break out. Certainly it was made with all the armed wight at her dispread The second chapter, like and it failed. the first, ended in failure for the enemy.
the
then.
cam-
a method of advance on the ground that
HOLDING THE LINE.
We
gallantly le has performed his task. This
his reconnaissance is less efficient than ours, with the result that our heavy artil lery work is more accurate. Taking the great and the little effort together I be lieve it truc to say that ten attacks by the Allies have been successful to one by the enemy.
As to the east, we note that the at
tempt to pin the Russian forces behind the Vistula has apparently failed, and there has developed another new feature of the utmost importance the battle on the Carpathian front. For months and months what has been going on in the Carpathians has been subsidiary to the at tempt to capture Warsaw, but Since th March the Carpathians front has beconie perhaps th: d.cisive, certainly a very im- portant factor in the progress of the war. If the Carpathians, which guard the interest in the war will turn there, for the granary of Hungary, are forced, all the political consequences will be incalculable. Also it will afford an opportunity for the employment of the clouds of Russian the decision of this great battle now sway- hersemen. We cannot say until we know ing on the summits of these heights what my happen. The Russians held several passes, but they have not yet got the sum init of the Uszok, and further east they are sell ten or twelve miles away from the Bakovina, which remains in the enemy's hands..
WHAT PRŻEMYSL MEANT.
The forest for the 24 hours ending si noor to-tiny, in na follows fun
DISTRICK.
Hongkong & Neighbourhood-
FORECAST
[South winds, mo- derats, flas gena kly.
{The Be
No. 1.
Formosa Channel South coast of China bat woonj The same
No 1 Hongkong and Lamčoks, į
Hongkong and Bainan.. 1 Beath count of Chins between The zame
CHINA
8 stavk
COAST
Visdros100) 99*] Nemuro
Nagasak
Je ak
The great change came with the fall of Bakanto
Tokio.......-- Przemysl, whose importance rested not n the prisoners captured and the army ast Koobl free, but in the fact that it placed in the Russian hands the railways behind the Reposhima.. Oshima edip Nabil sommers has rushed to the aid of her ally on the tabije. Carpathians. Wo know that Germany top of the first four army corps another Benin Is. ***** thres, and is preparing to send a further Cheloo
three, but that will be the end of her re: Weihaiwel... sources on that front. On the other hand, Bankow we know that the equipment of the Ras-chang in recruits is proceeding at a rate which pag makes the growth of the Russian Army, a Changaka om factor seriously to be considered by Ger-E
Guls
uluss
No. 1.
METEOROLOGICAL
REGISTER
7TH JUNE, A.M.
Wind
*100Я
Karometer
-1 Fee Leval.
amma Juta 1.
Kumidity.
Virration
Wat
Fores
76 — 629.99) €9.93
208
29.82
Was
1
20 82-
29,
» 2991
2.95 29 ya
.
21
From Hongkong: "SALAMIS" 25(3 June
FIRST CLASE ACCOMMODATION FOR PAWNGERS
FETED WITH WIRELESS TELEGRAPHY, For Hates of Freight and Passage, apply_to
THE BANK LINE, LIMITED,
MANAGING Adams ·
"ELLERMAN" LINE.
JAPAN, CHINA AND STRAITS
TO
MARSEILLES. LONDON AND LIVERPOOL.
For
Steamer LONDON & LIVERPOOL: "NETHERBY HALL" MARSEILLES & LONDON ... "CITY OF RANGOON ”
Subject to change without notice. For raits of freight and further information apply to
Hongkong, 29th May, 1915.
Sails.
On 24th Jane. On 26th July
THE BANK LINE,
GENERAL AGENTA.
LTD
303
IT STANDS TO REASON
that the best proof of the excellence of any medical preparation is. Its cont tinued popularity. Brecham's Pills have been before the pubikk for uporards of hall a century, and it is acknowledged that they are, now, in greater demand than ever. Their enormous sales are still on the Increase. No medicine could achieve such a remarkable success unless it bad proved itself to be of very seal worth and practical valce.
Beecham's Pills
have hastilted public confidence. In thousands of homes, to-day, experience has proved the beneficent results obtained from the use of these pills in caSES of biliousness, sluggish Uver, Impaired digestion and a disordered condition of the bowels. It is a safe and prudent thing should you feel "out-of-sorts" to rely upon the gurative properties of this excellent preparation. You will speedily find that Beecham's Pilis
WILL DO YOU GOOD.
Sold everywhere in boxes, price 918 (36 pilis) 1/1jd (56 pliis) &c 2/9 (168 piils).
VISITORS AT HOTEL:
Mr E,
Homerose Horat.
Alder
Mr G. E. Anderson Mr E. W. Ashurst Me J. H. Baring Mr & Mrs S. Barkor
and infact MrE, H. Beck Mrs. R. Balilies Mr C. D. J. Bell Mr G. O. Blocker Mr G. C Bonmen Mr & Mrs B. Brodsky
Mr J. H. Bulaser
Mr Leigh E. Butler
Capt L. Chas 1
Mr Chapmana
Mr B. Cheelbazı
Mr F. Klein Mr F. KrosDA Mr S. B. Laubert. "Mr U. Layosta”-·
Mr G. T. Lloyd Mr Songfield, Dr & Mrs O. Marriott Mrs E Grobam
Marshall
Mrs R. Maon Mr J. Macki Mr B. K. Mebta Mr & Mr G. E
Me, or
Mr G. & Middleton
Me M. Madison
Mr P. Markham
Mr & Mr J. L. Mr.J. H. N. Mody
Chidsey
Mrs Clark
Mrs Coinsliasen and
obild Mr&Mrs F. E Dark Mr & Mrs Dertesno
and family
29.84 66 29.8
12981 64.19.87
Fy
59915 76 86 BW
2917-75-
b
29 67 75 29.87 79 108677
2 b
Mr W. I hrhardt
8835 zł
2985, 1969
9.86
90.
6.29.74 21 91
24.75
m.
29.86 7/ 85
1984 7 96 -29 HS 7/194
XNE a
29.22 1584
0 b
» 19.82 17
.. 2980 6x 81
N
4,0
W
10
Pt
125.90 85-i
29.79
c980 75 to wsw 1 a
It is possible that the Russians have Sharp feck ser The warmest day in front of Ypres was
now between the Baltic and the Bukorina Apoy
Stalow me If they
Toibok the 31st October; the 11th November was
Taichu So that after eight the most gallant day. Then the Prussian larger numbers than the enemy. Guard launched its great effort, By the do not already employ this superiority
Thine m The third chapter of the months of war we can just congratulat: Koshe**** 15th November- the enemy's effort had they shortly will. dribbled away, war opened on the last day of Nevmber, ourselves on being on the turn in the mat Punderts The enemy said to himself," So far Iter of numbers and with this feeling weCanton 2003 7795 have held up the Russians, but they come a couple the knowledge that the man-Hongkong ** critical
We have missed our rapid blow in hood resoures of the enemy are less by Gap Rock South African War; against
had the west: il we don't look out these masses three millions, and that as regards his Macao
infantry officers of thirty-three who went Wachow who of beliefs
the Russians,
Boibow ......... in the east will be too much for us. must pinion them.". Before the Russians into the war twenty-six have gone. gune through the Manchurian
There is the financial aspect of the wai. Pathol paign against the French military
Tourabe.... school, that his particular type of discip.ould become overwhelmingly superior
On of the enemy we mean his power to ob line could get men to advanes in closed in numbers von Hindenburg was given the When we speak of the financial position Phulies
Fictitious pur-Aparr!..... formation, excusing the costliness of such task of pinioning them in the east.
and munitions of war,
Dagupan the west the enemy contented himself with tain by purchase nominal or actual food Caps St. James it would give him what he wanted-a maintaining the existing line and very chases he can carry on in his own confines
Tacloban quick d'cision.
Our reply was "You won't be able to ine. 430 miles in length, extending from if he does not descend to the psychological Mania......
So far as domestic supply is con-
Uuilokkee The Prussian discip- the Swiss mountains to the North Sea, has subtlety of Danton-taking whatever he Legapl.
The Gerwants.
cerned a war for life oor death concerns
Surig get me to do it." line will do it" was their answer; and saffered no material change. they ware right. Again, French military man-Austrian Army determined to do no opinion maintained that permanent lert-more than hold that western line while what you have got in the country and not How was the German loan raised? Very fications could withstand the fire of the pinioning the Russians in the east, and the method by which you obtain it.
They came to a man who had modern heavy howitzer, but that opinion their plan as against Russia was to cut
"I hold simply.
They said, had not allowed for the giant howitzer. the railway behind Warsaw.
and valued his property. The enemy said: Your fortifications Warsaw," the enemy said to himself, "I horas and other possessions vital to war
can break the Russian offensive,"
You are worth £1,000. Here are notey will fall in the attack." They were right
All December and January the light for
for the amount. Send the money back as Leige, Nemur, Antwerp, and Nau-
Hammer blows as in
to us and we will give you 4 per cent, bouge proved. Verdun might have fallen Warsaw went on.
and you will find us the 4 per cent. some too had not the French, Earning their the west were delivered against the Bzura.
and Rawka, which protect Warsaw on how. But when it comes to paying for lesson, creeted temporary outworks to
west and at a distance of only three days things abroad, such as cotton, petrol, in- march from the city. At the beginning dia-rubber nickel, copper, which mostly W. wil hamper of February the first attempt to take War
must be bought abroad, those purchases you commercially and financially; and saw had failed. Then the enemy argued. they wer right again, though only to a "If I cannot take Warsaw in front I will have to be paid either by export of things In tactical psychological try to get round it from the north, pound-anfactured in the country or in gold. certain extent
An enormous assault was launch what neutral nations think of Germany's and strategical reasoning the enemy's caling in feint and partly in a real at and you can tell from the rate of exchange
tempt. culations proved sound, except in the big on Warsaw from the 2nd to the 6th capacity ultimately to pay.
What supplies has Germany got? gest business of all-they despised as in- applicable to modern conditions of war February, when it died away. the particular form of defene to which
She is pinched in her the French wore wedded. This d'fene corps, and ultimately as large as 14 to 15 food she has just enough to last her until
small fraction of their my corps-was got ready in East Pruthe next harvest, placed upon
vix in descend unexpectedly in the north supply of horses and petrol; in copper she fore the duty of holding great masses of the enemy while the remainder awaited and cut the railways from behind the city is hampered, but as yet she has not har At Srst that enormous mastned to rob the electric light installations of Warsaw.
of the cities she has conquered. favourable moment of launching a counter-offensive. In other words, while of men, ontaining many new formations,
present the big howitzers from coming within range of the fortress.
The enemy said:
Meanwhile an army at first 10 army
COTTON AND GUNPOWDER.
Of
Miss M. E. Dufy Mire M.G. Eeste n Mr H. G: Ehrenfels
Mr E. Evensen...................
Dr Flawilliams Capt & Mrs E. M. French and child Mr TJ. Davidson Mr J. P. Evans Mr Denman Fulier Mr J. Gibt Dr Mis Glaister Mr.V. Goulbourn Mr & Mrs J. Gould Mr C. L. Goodrich
0 Mr H L. Grißthe
Capt F. P. Hall Mr & Mr W.
Hannibal
Mr A. Basson
Mr JH N. Moty Capt G. Morse MFWR Neighboar Mr & Men T. Nickle.
FOR
Mr J, Ormiston Mr H. H. Fegg Mr A. J. Patchure Mr W. II. Plant Mr J. Quin_
Randall Mr J. A.1 Mr E.B.By Litol & Mrs Rayner
H.A.M.C.
Afia F Bany MC. H. Richardson
Mr J. P, Rowell Mr R. Sale Mr G. M. Shaw Mm A. G. Smith Mr W. H. Smith
Mr V. Sor y Mr. Stook mest Dr & Mrs F. P. S one Mr H. E. Swaffold
A. H&M J. W. Taylor Madame Toalsusa Mr AL. Tiar Mr K. E. Tuebben &
family
Mr N. E. Hawden Mr C. B. Halewood Bop, Mr E. A. Hewett,
U.N.G.
Mr W. J. Hodge C. W. JEFFRIES, Direstor
1 Banomien, reduced to 33 degreas Fahrenha”. on the loyal of the sea in inches tenthead. hundredtka.
8 TEMPERATUar, in the Fabrenheit.
shade,
in degress
9 HUMIDITY, in parentage of saturation, the bumidhy of ate karated with moisture being 10.
+ Dination or Wind, to two peixia.
6 Foam or Wime, socording to Beaufort Bonia. LETITS OF WEATHER, b blue sky, o detach,
oled, ddrissling rain, fog, g glooms, à hail, a lightning, overast, p passing Lowery, 4 qual mib, new, & thunder, visibility, wdaw (wa)
7 Bam in frukos, t tenths and hundredths.
ON SALE.
OUND VOLUMES of the HONGKONG
Mr A. H. Hollings
worth Mr E. Hunchine Dr
Houston My leving Mr E. M Jotoph Mr B M. Joseph Mr E. Jos ph Mr M. T. Jones
-
Dr & Mr H. de Valia Mr J. G. Y and Mr & Mrs B. Webb Mr & Mrs A. Well
and family Mr & Mrs H. L H.
White
Mr F. W. Wh'te
Miss Matelits Mrs B. F. Wood Mr G. G. Wou
GRAND
HOTEL
Mr & Mrs Allen Mr & Mrs Arnizes and
child
Mr G. Bird Mr & Mrs A. B. Grow Mr A. Dunrich Mr A. von Dyke MA, W.D. Gibbs
WEEKLY PRAS, JULY 1 DECEMBER, MFB James
14. Witt Indas. Price $7.50.
Un Bale at the "Hoxosong EALLY FEESS
38
Omeo.
Where
Bangkong. 22nd January, 1915.
B C. Johnsez Mr W. H. Lacusy Mr A. Landen Mr B. Leo a
Mr G von Lear Mr C. Lippin Mr W. H. Lickey Mr P. G. Mo'en Mr B. Puls Mr C Pulteaan Mr C. W. Reynolds Mr F. . Booze -Cap J. So mas MFT. fudd Mr V. D. Vilde Mr 8. H. Wright
King Edward Hotel, Mrs R.Atend Mr & Mr W, H.
Bettivon
| Mr C. W. Brown
Mr W. Budge Mrs Deals & child Mr A. A. Clantons Mrs. L. Cooke Misa J. E. Cocke Masters G. M. & J. F..
Cookó
Mr A. Course Mr F. F. Duskworth ... Mr & Mr Q. A.
Datton
Mr W. Y. Elon Mrs A. Fy Mr C, Frits Mr.A. A. Fyle
| Mr P. K. Hazlitt Mr S. Hashimoto Mr E. C. Hendery Mr A. Hoshing Mr & Mrs J. Huntar Mr & Mrs W.
Jackson
Mr J. Joesph Mr F. H. Kales Mrs Lambert
183.2
Mr & Mrs V. Lauret-
Mr W. D. Lee Mr. H. Loo Mr J. Luanez Ming Lennor Major D. Mardonall Mr H. Murphy ·
Nakai
Passmore
Mr A. L. Peoning Mr H. Radford Mrs R A. Rammy Mr& Mrr Niobaedsov. Mr & Mu H. E.
Rigge
Mr C. H. Sep Mr R Slows t Mr W. .D. Sullivan Men 8. Spiver er Mr H. Tanio Mr F. Taylor
Mrx1hrelfell Mrs E. L. Tourtello Mrs. Tande Afr & M
Underwood Capt Waxt
PRAK FOTEL
|-Wr¬& Kr W...Arm--- Hr E, K-doorie.
Eizong
Mr H. 1. Bastor
MTK Bowdler
Mr P. R. Butler
Ur H. Bryan
Mr H. A. Cartwright Mr & Mrs Carmichaal Mr F. W. Cary Mr& Mrs C. D Casnili Mr Courland
Col. Darling R.E. Mr A. 8. Davies Mr Elle Mr & Mrs J. H. C.
Goodben
Mr F. A. Haseland Mr & Mrs B. A. Hate
Mr A. Hardman Major Faithine Lt. Col. Gordon Hall,
B.A.M.C
Me 3. A. Hind Mix & Mrs C. Hum-
phre. 1 Mr & Mrs W. G.
Humphreys
Mrs T. J. E. Johna
Mr Leo Jones
Eng Lieut. & Mes
J. Lambert
Miss Lambert-
Mr A. Li ton
Ar P. W. McClintaok Mr & Mrs Moss and
chi'd Mr & Mrs E. V Mitchelmore and obild Mr P. L. Perkins Mr H. N. Pountney Mr P ingle Major Fyr, RE Mr & Mrs E. Ralphs. Mr A. Sinclair Miss Shinder Mr O. Skott Mrs Sq s M&
Mrs Grane
Mr & MMA Findlay
Smith
MuE, W. Tikall
Mr0, Tisd 1 Me J. A. Fraba Mr&Mrs Vanden Pol
ON SALE.
TONGKONG HANSAED EKPORTU
Π
the of LEGISLATIVE Susion 1914.
the
MEETINGS
COUNCIL for the
REVISED BY THE H® B288.
IR'UE
DAILY Prise Orrita, Hongkong, 26th February, 1015
85.