LIVING THE WAR.

MR. RUDYARD KIPLING ON THE

FRENCH PEOPLE.

WHAT ENGLAND MUST KNOW.

Some extracts from a private letter written by Mr. Rudyard Kipling on his xperimes at the French front are published in the Daily Telegraph. We quote the following passages:-

LONDON AND PARIS.

A CONTRAST.

down

THE HONGKONG DAILY PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1ɛr, 1915.

slow.

NOTES BY A NEUTRAL,

GERMAN QUICKNESS.

women had mutilated the German wound- ed. That was published far and wide long before the accusations against Ger- many were made by the Allies. I have been present at the curious spectacle of a German faintly admitting that excesses may have been committed by the Army. while a German-Swiss flatly contradicted,

In

Mr. John N. Raphael writes as follows HOW SHE DISCREDITS THE ALIES in the London Daily Express:

The Frenchman let himself

The leisurely movements of the indihin.

Many Germans are quito touchy on Tho, blinds

the score of the word barbarian." wearily into an armchair.

The house was quiet.vidual German in peace time, the cur were drawn.

that were sent out (under some precon- This is the first time for a fortnight, bersono nature of many of his business many of the millions of inspired letters old friend," he said, "that I have felt arrangements, the long toilsome day, normat," I laughed. "You mean, I relieved by many indigestible meals and

some music make an amazing contrastived system) to all the neutral coun- to England great stress was laid on to the astounding quickness of the Ger- trics and even at one time, I believe, Franco is not merely fighting this war, suppose," I asked, because we two are

man Govermant. This war has proved

"English lies about the German Army. she is living it, and living it with quietly alone here and have shut London sety and high heart that, when you out?" He nodded. "Yes, use, your that the collective German Government In the first week in August last year, a got to close quarters, doesn't for a second the talk of London. It confusee me, your is as quick as the individual German is

widely-distributed instruction was given It makes me fedt 1 hide the cold deadly earnestness and London, voyez vou8.

as I have felt when I have been smoking The chief German weapons of war are to all persons who had, or who had ever tenacity of her purpose.

I have been in their towns, eto, and too much." And one of those inimitable! I can testify that they bear themselves French gestures which cannot be put into beyond question big cannons, harbed had any social or business connection tiring propaganda. The German Govern countries, urging them to write private letters to their friends setting forth the men and woisen equally resolute without print completed and explained the wire, countless machine guns, and un-with anyone in the Allied or neutral

factors ready in We had to the thought which was in bis mind.

German case. It had been a custom for parade or self-pity.

London and the current talk of Londonment had all there other day in a town which the Bosches

As a neutral, I wish to emphasize the half a century for a great many people shell daily because it is full of women really are a shock and a confusion to the August last.

immense advantage they have gained over of my nationality to go to Germany for music and other branches of education. and children and has a fine old church mind of the run who comes from France, The cellars of the house wame a hospital even if, as in my own case, that man

How much the Allies by the campaign of informing Much to their surprise, they began to But not one word round that cheery knows London fairly well.

teachers the very names of whom they table upstairs, where not une shade of more confusing, therefore, to a foreigner coxing, and bullying they began imine daily etiquette was missing, suggested, I will try to explain what I mean, I got diately on the declaration of war. As one receive letters from old fellow-pupils and or even hinted at, the perpetual strain

Every now and British, I cannot sufficiently emphasize They were down to Fled-street. under which they live.

Bations, one by one, falling away from German thoroughness in propaganda. A French and so long as work was to be then a policeman stopped the traffic and the urgent need for preventing the little merely instance this as an example of

And they do work!

we had to wait. clone they worked.

You will wonder in what way this the Allies' cause. I une or two cases, relative of mine received such a letter You as I have indicated before, I believe it rebutting the charges of barbarism and As far as I can see there is not a single action of any individual from one should surprise an old Londoner. end of Francs to the other which is not will wonder legs when I tell you that impossible to make any change now, but sent a reply that was anything but flat- poloured and guided and soaked through street traffic in Paris is quite negligible. there are other countries where British,tering to fiermany, only to receive an There has not been a block of traffic in French, and Russian prestige must be answer, written more in sorrow than in by their strong determination.

a Paris street since the first days of maintained at all costs and can be main-anger, reiterating the accusations pre-

FORESIGHT AND THOROUGHNESS. We shall come to this ourselves in time, but at the present moment we haven't August, 1914, except during those few days tained by the use of brain, energy, and viously made against the Allies.

in which then carly September last year when the printing ink.

It does not need the evidence of im-

The modern German Ambassador, Min- wholly realised the way French, as I have said, are living this French-Government went to Bordeaux

We English must be made to and Parisians piled themselves and their mense accumdations of munitions to

convenient opportunity is who buys and influences newspapers. He secures German advertisements for understand this for our own sakes as well luggage into cabs and made for the rail-prove that Germany prepared for mer ister or consul is a propaganda. He it Но As for theirs; and the examples that the way stations when the enemy was just word seized a French are setting i can't-be-rubbel in outside the gates. You can take a cab which coincided with her custom of

now at the Bastille and drive to the Bois making-war after the harvest. There are publications that cannot be bought ez Lou often or too hard:

de Houlogne, and you can drive a good other guides to her provision. She had or He assists needy journalists. THE BRITISH WAY If it in hard for us to understand the deal faster, too, than you drove before entrenched herself in the Press of every sees to the distribution of cinematograph the war, and the traffic will never be neutral country, and, according to state-las extolling the German Army and French it has been harder for the sufficient to impede your progress, even ments made in Germany, she had greatly Navy. He anticipates the very feeble

T don't

through the busier parts of Paris. There influenced a portion of the British Press. propaganda of the Allies by contradict French to understa

You can I believe investigation of the affairs of ing it before it is widely circulated. An For example. You remenars no really, busy parts.

work of the American writers who have blame 'em! ber. S. talking about that hellish business the Place Vendome from the Place de the Hamburg-Amerika Steamship Com American journalist told me that all the

pany and hospitality to British news Couldn't het to

paper editors would yield fruitful. if been living with the German armies, or making the kind of Cook's tours that are of unra last Aprili

distasteful, results. say any more than that it was "damned Opéra at 3 p.m. every day.

arranged for others of them, is carefully And he is like all the rest

NEED OF COUNTER-PROPAGANDA.

collated and watched. No favours are unhealthy,"

Of course, there are people on the of us.

All this has been done, and is still Well, what on earth are the French to boulevards as there are people in Regent

criticize. Hotel-keepers in neutral coun malor of this sort of thing which they street and Oxford-street. You will hear have known now for the past year! And about the same proportion of French and going on, and, if Great Britain and horain granted to those who venture to to the irlena of most neutrals as is the You will hear tions among neutrals, she and her part- The whole sordid business is as foreign we are just as inarticulate as we were at Belgian accente as you hear in the West Allies do not wish to find further defecries are used for propaganda purposes.

Yet there isn't much End of London now,

But the mors must promptly realize the necessity

use of poisonous gaa, but it must be the beginning.

Our hostes almost as much English, too. difference really between us.

Acquaintances with whom I convera But they all. at the tea party said, with a delightful poops you will see here and watch in the for a counter propaganda. With two ex-

In here in London are angry when I tell smile, that, on the whole bombardment Paris rent behave in curiously quiet conceptions, all the little neutral States of met.

It might trast to the people in the streets of Lon-Europe loathe Germany. does not add a zest to life."

sister speaking don. London the people who pass feat her and in increasing degree.

You hear, many of these countries the average them that we at home know nothing about have been 8.'s own And it's the same with their men

But behind the laugh you in he streets are basy.

But in opinion, about Germany that it is not the British Fleet: But we hear nothing along the line.

Most of it is questions. and the outrageous understatement of of course, a great deal of talk about the citizen is so afraid of expressing hit the British Army and very little about moves Paris you hear no other talk at all than until you have won his confidence that of your Army or Navy and are deluged he will tell you shut he thinks. Mixed with German news. How can we know things there is the spirit that mountains.

I had a letter from a Paris friend just up with this fear is a certain kind of about you? The more educated among vinced us. A handful know the Bryes I want progress The readiness and endurance, and now. He edits a weekly illustrated paper sneaking admiration for Germany's war us have seen the White Paper, which con

with an enormous circulation.

Early in the war Great Britain was Report, but the mass of the people, while you to pardon me, old friend," he writes, again the light heart, among their men, ano marvellous. They don't stop to for publishing none of the fine photo greatly feared in Europe. There was a they detest, the Germans, are growing

They are agreed argue about things. that the only good Bosch is a dead Bosch, graphs of your play Peter Ibbetson, hazy motion in some neutral countries more and more afraid of thent. What the English demolish that of Germany. A certain in Bulgaria, Rumania, and the rest of

the neutral countries. and they joyously and zealously do their though I see that they are appearing with that the British Fleet would immediately is happening in my country is happening

deserved prominence in

We print none but war pictures rash speech of one of your Cabinet Minis Press. hore, as you know. We have not even ters about digging out the German published photographs of the war matinée Fleet carried conviction. These neutrals at the Opera Comique which wo organised have not realized, and do not realize,

This letter reflects, exactly, the con- in nothing but the war itself." trast between Paris and London after twelve months of war. It explains, too, the feeling of my French friend who was so glad to spend an evening with me in London and to forget for that evening that anything existed but the war. I am writing this in no spirit of criticism. I am trying merely to show you the contrast CHIEF DAGADU OF KFANDU, between the attitude towards the war and life in war time, in London and in Paris.

into a taxicab in Portland-place to drive whose nation is nine-tenths strongly Phad forgotten-on the subject of the war..

115

THE ONLY GOOD HORCH.

all

}

wor.

war talk,

"

ON THE BOULEVARDS.

17

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JAVA

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listened, with his kind smile, as the peti- tion was translated to him, the Sepoy is content, for the King has

"He is a listener," says the Sepoy as the Royal party passes on." All we want in India is a listener. You saw," said ho to the others, who wondered at his forwardness, you saw that he listened, and that is enough."

CHINA

Bration.

Nampro

*

COAST

METEOROLOGICAL

REGISTER.

30TH SEPTEMBER A‚N.

the lines-how would you like to graze ourselves. The public hore is interested that sea warfare to-day is likely to be regards as of about the same importance | Hakodate » in}

best to make it go.

But when all is said and done, it is the man and the women who are the and the book with detail, wonders. of the life behind the lines and up to cow under big-shell fire-and the patience and the fervour and terrifio Industry of all the land. But you must soc it to believe it; and when you have soen it you must testify, as I hope to, that nothing that England on do is enough to keep abreast of such an Ally,

as long as in the days of Nelson and Villeneuve. The whole world, indeed, is not yet awakes to the fact that modern changes have not reduced the duration of war.

Koohi 55 Nagasaki angushimaam Oshima

s

Bania is

foo

Wand

Hour.

Barometer

I mmperature,

Humidity.

Direction.

6.30.3

30.29

- 30.20-

-$0.05

* 30.03

3000

2008

Piro

30.20

3015

It is quite easy to learn the respective values placed by Germany upon the stock 7... various neutrals. The United States sho as Norway. "The United States is an inert, unarmed massa long way off,"

ship-for Germany," She apologizes to argues the German, and Norwegian hos-

Within a few weeks of the war, Ger- Sweden for ships destroyed, and her tility only accentuates Sweden's friend- man-inspired newspapers and individual rapid apology to Denmark this week has Germans began preaching the doctrine of surely opened people's eyes to the in- the "battled-up British Fleet." The ex-portanos she attaches to Danish friend ploits of the Emden and Goeben wore ship.

boomed" by German agents in my particular country. All this was accom panied by very fine naval cinematograph Alms-obviously taken before the war be Watch the people whom you meet in gan-and articles by German naval au- Think of the thorities. Since then there has been an the London highways. people on the boulevards in Paris (thore incessant campaign of advertisement of remarkable thing was really known about the sinking are so few in any other Paris strect), and German naval prowess. Long before any The people in Regent-stroet, in of the Lusitania, neutrals were informed this contram becomes more

a owning schome of Great Britain to still. Oxford-strect, in Bond-street, anywhere that her having passengers on board was her refractory workpeople declined to in London, are looking at the shop win-

"Business unusual, dows, are shopping. They have all kinds enable her to import those shells which Thus it is that in most neutral to of things to do.

whole Lusitania perhaps, but the briskness of business, rake. and as it strikes the man from abroad, countries to-day the business very much as usual.

"IT WAS MY WILLING TO GIVE.

MORE."

Gold Coast up

CURIOUS CONTRAST.

PRANJENOS

|AT ETTEMADS018 32222882gcselet

19128 1, 189281ğı 12 HHMERE

Photog

NAK

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30 259 106 Na

£0.9

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04.29.9 74 86 NE

5.29.95 75 96 aw

29.92 72

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29.99

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KNI

29.89

Weibsiwel We noutrals, are almost entirely with Hanko........ you. We ask you to tell us continually labang*******

new form Changsha what you are doing. German propaganda Kinking ........... is persistent. It assumes a sional speeches of your Ministers have with every phase of the war. The occa Shangha

Amuy

Taiboku.... dune some good, but they cannot combat share Fear news agencies and the continual stream Batow 6 29.97 75 8!

It would be invidious to make a list Taisha the daily hes of the Wolff and other of cinematograph pictures. of the neutral States and deal with their Tainan

Pascadores...| unwise to do so, but this I can reafirm, particular points of view. It might be Kochun... they are all afraid of Germany, all Canton

Ger- except Sweden dislike Germany, and all Hongkong... Gimp Rock asseļ many, by her propaganda, however, Macao

Wuchow divides public opinion. She begins by dividing the opinion and finally captures the Governments. She is an unceasing worker.The Times.

"Oh, no," you will say, "not as usual / tragedy has been minimized and befogged. are secretly anxious to help you.

TURKEY'S INTERVENTION.

AMONG INDIANS

SEPOYS' PERSONAL PETITIONS

#

20

98,

Holbow........ Pakhoi

Tourene....... Cape St. Jam Aparri Dagupan Maniia 191 Legaspi Tacloban

29.86 77

29.81 75 29.84 7694 29.82 7089 29.83 77 92 WNW 29.81 77 39 NW

Westber

|IT DE

.....

The Secretary of State for the Colonies has received through the Acting Governor of the Gold Coast further con ributions from the Western and Eastern Provinces of that Colony to the National Relief Fund to the amount of £1,629 15s. 7d., bringing the total contribution from the people of the $25,518 68. 74.

In addition to this a sum of £100 % 3d was collected by Dagadu, Chief of

Most people with whom I have dis Kpandu, in Togoland. This chief hal, in 1886, applied to be taken under at all! A girl will open the door for British protection, and had been given a you in a London shop or a London British flag, but his territory came office! (You will say this in italics. In cussed these matters during my present within the German sphere of influence Paris such things have become a mere visit here do not realize the importance was matter of course) There are girls in the of placing before the neutral the Allies It has been said, that when the Togoland boundary

But case of Turkey. delimited. He, however, retained his lifts, there are messenger girls, there are cause and sacrifices. Let me take the fing until 18 months ago, when, on girls in the clubs instead of waiters.

the Goeber and the Breslau eluded cap- account of his British sympathies, he there are male waiters in London clubs Turkey's support was lost to Great Bri- EMPEROR

At this season of a was exiled to Duala, and the fag was still, and young waiters at that, and the tain owing to soms negligence by which

When shops are but empty. discovered and taken from him Duata was occupied by the Allied Forces normal year in Paris it would take you tare or destruction in the Mediterranean, and half an hour to buy anything in one of That I do not for one moment believe. rolansed,

They are Turkey was lost to the Allies' cause owing Chiof Dagadu

When the King and Queen visited the returned to Kpandu in January, where the big department stores.

That propaganda was, to my knowledge,

wounded ludians at Brighton the other he was received with great enthusiasm. curiously empty now. Nobody has money tu German pressure and propaganda

manipulator-formerly in Londen day, the time-honoured Indian custom ci The foreign visitor to London is conducted by an extremely astute news- Since then he has been of much assistance to buy anything but necessities.

paper

the personal petition to the Emperor was TheBaron von Kühlmann. The arrival of to the occupation Government.

observed. In forwarding his contribution, which amazed at the number of interests in

London beside the communiqués:

There is so the Gochen and Breslau, no doubt, as

The time was short, says the Indeman, was entirely spontaneous and came as a

newspapers astonish him."

in describing the incident, but the King's surprise to the political officer in Togo-swap them. The Paris evening papers sisted, but for weeks disgraceful lies were land, Chief Dagadu wrote as follows:

I, the Head Chief Dagadn of Kpandu, are rarely more than single sheets, and disseminated through Turkey about the hare given here £50, fifty pounds, and my there is little in them which does not Allies, accompanied by hribes and Village-youngmen have also assisted me bar directly on the struggle by which threats. The Turks, who had hitherto experience in India moved him to listen that the British Fleet was interned, thating, took this opportunity of approaching Said the first: "My brother and I were with cash Col 10s., fifty-one pounds and these years will be remembered in the been admirers of the English, were told patiently to two Sepys who, greatly dar-

One history of the world.

I do not intend to raise the question London was in a state of terror from the Presence. ten shillings (to total £101. 10s.).

both wounded, and came to England. their contrast in a controversial spirit.

mad. But I was not dead, and the Sahib. took me to see him. He became sane, and we both wept. But there are practically no big theatres

They told him I was dead, and he went in anow, thanduk, visibility, o, 9 squal,

open in Paris except the State theatres, and they play to half-empty seate

Was

hundred and one pounds and tell of the Paris and the London theatres and Zeppelins, and even more fantastic lies

the

May

being a fund given to help the Government towards the Imperial war between England, France, Russia, and Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Tarkey. I was my willing to give more than what have done above, but on account of Germans, and owing to their had treatment giving, most of my Village younguen have removed from this land and entered into another Colony for their daily bread; and also my land is very poor to say. God the Almighty bless the great Britain to master the victory. I congratulate the local and the Imperial Government, and the R. 8. District Political Officer, Mi Rattray, who is treating us here very well And Mr. and gentle; may be live long. J. T. Furley (the Sazior Political Officer of. Lome), who is a best and good gentlemen, carrying his duty very pleasant in order, by May my eye-witness, may he lire long. God bless the English Government and pro- long their power to be second to none,-God Save the King! Yours obediently... HEAD CHIP DECADE OF KASDU, XXX mk.

FORTHCOMING EVENTS,

TOMORROW pr.-Promenade Concert by Hongkong Police Reserve Band at Botanic-1 Gardens,

Monday, 4th Oct-

-such as the statement that King George It is idle to pretend that such propaganda is beneath notice. This pro was begging for peace from the Emperor William. paganda tells-especially when it is backed up by liberal financial bribes and promises of other peoples' territory. To me, it is sometimes really remarkable that the little neutral countries have held out against such bullying, cajolery, bribery and lying.

There is an old saying that, if you give alie & start, you can never catch is up The quickness of the German Govern-

TO THE KING.

Hoilo *****] Surigao.... Labuan...-line

940 75 92 W 29,83 78 85 W

C. W. JEFFRIES, Dirsekr.

I BAROMETER, zadused to 92 degrees Fabronie! in the level of the aes in inches, tantas mad hadredths.

doganes alde, fa

2 Tamrazsturs, in the fahrenheit.

3 BUMIDITY, in percentage of saturation, th samidity of air saturated with moisture being jub

& DiamoTION OF Win, to two pezuta.

FORCE OF Win, sosording to Bonafort Boals.

L STAIR OF Warnan, b blue sky, a dataabid gloed, d drissling rain, I fog, a gloomy, b bail, i

5 v w daw wet 1 Bar be innkos, & tenths and hundredths, HONGKONG ASTEOROLOGICAL

"But next day he went mad again, and said it was a dream and an illusion. And he has gone back to India, while I well, I gave six shillings to an Indian writing man to buy me something in the bazaar, ed, these writing men-he took my six and the writing man-they are all accurs shillinge, and will not give them back."

REGISTER.

Hongkong Observay, September 20 h

THE KING'S PROMISE, "This," said the King. "is a serious Barometer .......

Temperstarre It is a promise, and the petitioner falis Humidity...... matter, and shall be looked into."

Force back content. for he knows that the Eng- Wind Direction...

ish keep promises.

3 p.m.-Anction of Crown Land aborn Mayment, the corrupt German news service Road and at Ship St eet, at Public Works and the Wolff Agency-with its countless ramifications throughout Europe should Dept. 6.30 P.M.-Hongkong St. Andrew's Society be checked in such countries as still main- Annual General Me ting in the City Halltain their neutrality. At one time the speedy circulation of the Bryce Report Wednesday, 6th Oct

it should have been sent might have pro- in the language of the country to which duced effect. It is too late now. For the Germans forestalled yon by instantly, of his family. This, too, shall receive con- circulating the statement that Belgian sideration. Whatever may be the decision,

10.30 ..-French Convent Annual Ratar

in the New Convent at Causeway Bay. Saturday 9th Oct,

12.30 p.Dauty Farm Co., Ltd., Meeting

of Shareholders,

Previous On Date On Dati at Day

K

st. 2 p.m.6 5.m

19.50 29.65

29.94

83

79 20

€3

74

74

Est East East

5

4

od

Bigbent open nir Temperstars on 205.13

The second petitioner had lost two Weather brothers at the front, and it behoves him Rain ... **** to return to his village to settle the affairs

*

Levant öll sky Températuraen 29.5 76

1595

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Mr & Mrs F. X. d

Atemada e Castro Mirad Almada Castro Master d Almada s

Castro

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Mis Koi8 n

Mr J. E. Runcie

Mr E. m. S'eigh Mr C. H. Soper Mrs R. A. Ramsay Mr Haymond Mr HF. Stoneham Mrs B. Sylvester Mr H. hornton Mrs E, L. Tourtellot

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Mr G. Angelo MrJ. U. Ankar Ma C. R. Arnoit Mr C. FL Booth. Mas 8. Bachsoan Mr A, B. Lum Mr. C. Cruden Mr A. Danrich MrP. S. van Dyk Mr G.J. de Graan HEAC Brig. MT.G.

Mr B. James Mr J. de Klerk Mr J. Mantelro Miss G. May

Mr P. Philipp Mr C. W. Heynolds

Mr E. Rysh Mr J. Smith Mr.J. K. B. Stanton Me H. F. Thorig

Me Ven V. B Vn MrB. L Wright

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