makro ntuvƐ ni evideènon viqat a'd' Inisz?'' need and a to ygos ezolono I kro,sunoy somli tasl øft 101. yedi də iriu al rubetazorem Jniot .abam radi od doksiw adonemtuda myrig und muß Lucurell Fadd mct?

3.14 10 trooss as evi -atorit tooqqa birow ¿I

Labistrobru etinitab a Div defol, Jertkaya dię 11 -3 al edueno-00 od 5% Iaciavali od A Launga, a tod Lankað trodduos bra Lazdneo ni godt larmeħi Jonliga rę laquao a rol abruri to trade D1 000,000,12 babeɔr sil one tikino, veru!?

...

Lanoidlobe no abeem ad von tud vrelogio a donc for od song,' adi yonom alı .[£a - 000,000,2# gnide DJ Telloi 8 707 dae for: asub ed Jud nkatiya deară noti dad navi vi tcom gwo 12.a Ikamu tavo behaarf að fen mot du amir! Kéiw adɛzóró-oo ¡h mé I vlung""

rto 3. da te inquana to naiq zocor, a dadd bas dore-tali „boðafurio)

aid mavdou sonsonboo puchamo 8 ni muodi

kopar dabit a

u ni movi ̧ seus it ina

I

aded

SOOTİ. MİM b-protni w loda2 JA

Nu ere : AF S1 (modul deniz o rgispaO

to di bevallu ma klaar

17780

telegram from Shanghai, dated the 9th August, states that General Fan Chung-siu (#), to whose activities reference was made in paragraph 3 of my

461

secret despatch of the 12th August has captured Hsu-chou-fu in Honan province and thus cut the line of the Peking- Hankow railway. This, of course, if true, will seriously embarrass Marshal Wu in a campaign for the defence of Hupeh, Human and Kiang-si. On the other hand, it is re- ported that the troops of General Tang Chi-yao have reached the frontier between the Yunnan and Kuang-hsi provinces: but from a despatch of His Majesty's Consul General at Yunnanfu I learn that on the 5th August the Commissioner for Foreign Affairs of Yunnan, informed Mr. G. A. Combe that Marshal Tu, hard pressed between the Kuo-min-chun in the north and the expedition of the Cantonese in the South, had telegraphed to General T'ang for support, but that owing to lack of funds General T'ang was unable to help. It seems quite probable that, owing to lack of funds all round, the campaigns now in progress may nowhere be fought to a finish and that a position of stale mate may ensue. If so, trade conditions in China, especially in south China, may be ex- pected to become much worse than at present.

(101

mi betoferros yllin

dibenclum ex di ti,

ome

5.

t...

kha ni u gəl (2) „Ammİ ve pažød ził to trave an 1:00 Jas movoð ¡noigno?! sdt reikt d çi. ¡imte ovn. Inza Frau ed of piger ovið yen a beauso genproli arið vald Ilmvedo}{ ̧rũ his word moauora tiż Liot

-

Ver 1.10 ni mua: Ilvis eomanit Jon II} froments vol

pull sunb a'yabrodiny to suç alad a'radumi! A

yo barudçao nood aal s.sq m.':i-na? Jadi atroqstezalis¶ al antiof Juris kan nå!-cet godt taner To aqooni ek evoer Jon seob treve vitt Jud temperavo rt bergafiac

Information reaching Colonel F. Hayley Bell from military sources is to the effect that General Cheung Kai-shek will proceed from Heng-chou to Chang-sha with the First Revolutionary Army under his command; that definite

plans for attacking Tuchang and Hankow have been made and that there will be a new development of the situation at the front after General Cheung reaches Ch'ang-sha; also

that troops from Kuei-chou and Ssu-ch'uan provinces have

entered Hunan to co-operate with the Northern Punitive Expedition. It is further reported that General Cheung

Kai-shek

#30 BOLA

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