THE HONGKONG ~ TELEGRAPH. SATURDAY DECEMBER
1936.
IT WAS A MUDDLE-HEADED WAR, SAYS L.G.
Britain's Best Brains Were In The Slime Their Leaders Avoided
A
POLITICAL
OPPONENT. "
From Madrid comes this grim picture, of the exccution, of a young political prisoner suspected of espionage. While all eyes were fixed on the unhappy youth, the pletu re was taken secretly and smuggled out of Spain..
Seniority, Society,
Deportment Were
Promotion Factors
“CHANCE is the supreme judge in war, and not Right. There are other judges on the Bench, but Chance presides."
TOO FAT TO BEND
Took Off 44 lbs. With Kruschen
Forty-four pounds is a lot of weight to take of, but this man bad all that to spare,. He willes-
"Six months ago I was getting so fat that I was hardly able to get one' with my job-in fact, it was painful to bend down. I started taking Kruschen Saltsa teaspoonful in half a pint of hot water every morn..... Ing. After a month I was amazed to find that I had lost 19 me, of fat.. I kept on with the treatment, and now, after a full six months, I am very pleased to tell you that I have
am 35
fost the grand total of 44 Dr. years of ngo 5 ft. 6 in..
and weighed 14 st. is, I am now
exactly 11 st. 2 Ths. I am a traveller, This is one of the conclusions at a safe distance from the alime and, of course, come in contact with a number of people, and they marvel reached by Mr. Lloyd George in
which they had chosen as the at the change in my figure.”—C. 8. terrain where their plans were to the sixth and final volume of his
operate."
Kruschen contains those six mineral- "War Memoirs," published by There were honourable exceptions, safts, proportionately balanced, found: Ivor Nicholson and Watson, 218. but the solicitude with which most in the waters of those famous Euro- It is true. ho writes, that the generals in high places avoided per-pean Spas used by generations of fat to reduce weight. These world war ended in a victory for Gonal jeopardy is "one of the de- people
Salts combat the cause of fat be Right. But it was not won on the batable novelties of modern warfare.
The allegation that the Cabinet assisting the Internal organs to merita of the case: "The blunder could have achieved an honourable throw off each day those waste pro- of Germany saved TLY from the peace in 1917 is rejected. But, he ducts and poisons which, if allowed finds no reason why the dramatic victo accumulate, will be converted by
consequences of
of our own."
All Governments found difficulty
Dy
in discovering capable commanders. tories in Palestine in 1918 could not the body's chemistry inte fatty tissue No one reached the highest ranks in Allenby's predecessors. The general- have been obtained years before by the British Army except those who ship in the first attack on Gaza comes
were there
here or thereabouts when the war began
"Seniorlly and
·lely were the Boclety dominant factors in Army promo- tion.
Deportment counted a good deal. Brains came bad fourth." The
In for this stricture:---
րում
"The attack of Bobell Chetwode on Gaza had been the most perfect sample exhibited on either side in any theaire during this
Great War of that combina- of muddleheadedness, mis- fanic analog and Dicer
converts an assured victory into a humiliating defeat." This is how he sums up Hatg: 'His training was on lines irrelevant
The greatness of the abilities of Sir John Monash, commander of the Australian forces, was not brought to the attention of the Cabinet in any despatches, says Mr. Lloyd George. Professional soldiers could hardly be expected advertise the fact that the greatest strategist into the Great War. He was a con- the Army was a civilian when the scientious worker, who was incapable of planning campaigns of 2,000,000 war began..
men on a 100-mile battle front, and who chose his advisers badly.
"To Mud, By Order' Such highly gified men as the British Army possessed were:-
"conalaned to mud by order of men superior in rank but inferior
'Pessimist'
"The importance of other theatres of war did not enter into his reckon- ing, and three weeks before the
in capacity, who themselves kept Armistice he gave the Cabinet n
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pessimistic view of the military altua-
of the Allles," tion
Mr. Lloyd George declares he is "convinced, after a careful perusal of all the documents available on all sides, that the Kaiser, never had
war.
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In giving all pes of "The negotiations," he says, "were botched by everybody engaged to waves-Irating artistic mil directing them. War ought to have fures th Been and could have been averted."
WINTER-BORN CHILDREN
WEAKEST
Handicap Reflected
in Death Rate
A child born in summer has more chance of living than one born in winter.
According to figures published by the Registrar-General, in his official commentary on the vital statistics of 1934, there Is a considerable-dis advantage in survival at the end of the second year for children born in winter compared with those born in other seasons.
Although each group of children has by the end of two years from birth been twice exposed to a com- of each plete round of the seasons, out
1,000 children born in four winters an average of 80 died within two. years. Out of cach 1,000 born in summer only 75 died. For spring- born children the proportion was 17, and for autumn-born 82.
During the first year of life the handicap of the winter-born infant, in comparison with the summer-born, was equivalent to 14 per cent. excess in mortality, and during the second year of life to a 42 per cent.
excess.
WORLD RATES
The Registrar-General, making a comparison between the death rates
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The Norwegian death rates of
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of 1934 at 40,467,000 people, of whom 19,412,000 were males and 21,055,000 females.
The total is 117,000, or 0.29 per cent, greater than the estimate for the previous year and 615,000, or 1.3 per cent, greater than the population at the census in 1931.
The Increase of 615,000 is made up- of excess of births over deaths about 365,000, and the balance by migration, 150,000.
The average ages of the estimated population
are 32.4 years for males and 34.2 for females. These are. greatly increased; in 1931 they were 31.8 and 33.5 respectively, and in 1021, 29.0 and 31.2.
The number of marriages increased by 24,000 in 1994 compared with 1933, und apart from the years 1015, 1910, and
1920,
when special conditions prevalled, the greatest proportion
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**Incidentally
ty, the marriago
Inles of the City of London and the Metro politan. boroughs of Holborn and Westminster. were more. f'aan: twice the average figure. It is added that. the hotel population in these.1 areas is unusually greatereg
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