1904-05-21 — Page 2

Daily Press 孖剌西報 All

INTIMATION

LIMITED

THE LEADING MANUFACTURERS

AERATED

Port Arthur and sank in half in hour's This time, drowning nearly 450 men. magnificent warship is nearly the finest in the Japanese fleet and represents one-sixth of the battleship squadron. A month ago

A. S. WATSON & CO., the world was startled at the loss of the Russian flagship Petropavlovek, one of Russia's strongest naval items. The Hafeuse's fate was only loss appalling be- cause lewe sudden than that of the Petra- pastoork; but the Halsuse was a veseel of 4,000 tons mora displacement. Further, as if this disaster were not grievous enough, on the same day, in a fog off Shantung promontory, the newly-purchased Japanese cruiser Kasuga ran into another cruiser and WATERS Bank her, drowning 200 men. Japan's new cruiser has done her country indeed an ill IN THE FAR EAST.

service early in her career. The Forhino was fairly large, but not very new, and hor losa is, of course, in no way comparable to AERATED WATERS of our manufacture that of the Hatsuse. Still she was an effective part of Japan's fleet. It may well made under countant European expert supervi-he imagined that grief pervados Japon at the loss of three good ships and between sion are seld throughout the Far East and are

650 and 700 mon in the course of two days. invariably preferred on sccount of their After nearly three mouths and a half of naval war in which the Japanese injuries were infinitesimal in comparison with the damage inflicted on the foe and the greatness of the task accomplished, two days have turned exultation into sorrow, and accidents hare

excelleuse."

THE MACHINERY in use embodies every improvement known up to date.

ABSOLUTE PURITY in guaranteed. THE BEST MATERIALS only are used.

THE HONGKONG DAILY PRESS, SATURDAY, MAY 21st, 1904

H.M.S. Strine is to undergo a dockinz.

L'Echo de Chine says that Colonel Marchand, Laving refused the command of the French troops at Tientsin, has had his resignation. secopted.

:.

On the 30th. alt, the ceremony took place at Simla of the assumption of office by Lorit Ampthill, who will act as Viceroy of India during Lord Curzon's absence on leave.

The despatch of the huge painting of the Dowager-Empress of China from Peking to the 8. Louis Exhibition is regarded by the natives as an crea that Her Majesty will not outlive

this year.

A Pensacola telegram of the 16th ult. states that the crew of the battleship Tests, working a 12in. gnu, achieved a world's record for fast and accurate marksmanship, scoring 80 out of a possible 100.

By special request, the Zantigs, who recently appeared in the Theatre Royal, will give an exhibition of their hypnotism and mentalism at the Peak Hotel to-night at 9 o'clock. The ontor-

tainment will be open to the public.

A Darjeeling despatch of the 4th May

daily in the Sikkiin valleys. The road is already

aye:Thunderstorms are occurring almost broached between Rangpo and Funglich. The road between the base and Ruugpo is breached annually, but largo supplies of atores cra gerumiit - lated at Gangtok in cuse of emergency.

TELEGRAMS.

DAILY PRESS" SERVICE.

THE WAR

[FROM OUR OWN CORRESPONDENTS.}

TWO GREAT JAPANESE

LOSSES.

BATTLESHIP AND CRUISER GONE

Kone, 20th May, 10.20 a.m. The Japanese battleship Hatsuse on the 15th inst. struck a Russian mine off Port Arthur and sank in thirty minutes. About 300 men were saved by the Japanese fleet.

The Japanese cruiser Yoshino was sunk in collision with the cruiser Kasuga off the promontory of tung on the 15th inst. also.

90 of her crew were saved.

WAR NOTES.

GREAT JAPANESE NAVAL DISANTE. OFFICIAL DESPATCH.

Yesterday morning Mr. M. Nona, Japanese Consul at Hongkong, sent us a copy of the following official telegram received by him from

Tokyo:-

Toxxo, 19th May, 11.5 p.m.. "Admiral Togo reports that, while the third squadron was returning from Port Arthur in the deep fog, the Yoshino was struck by the Kasuga off Shantung promontory on the 15th

instant and sunk: ainety of the orew were

saved.

helasman. I could not pass him, and I sprang to the window and jumped out. The ship was listing, and I feared that every mormont sho would turn over. On the bridge I saw a officer weltering in blood-it was our Admiral Makaroff. He lay face downwards. I sprang to Lim, grasped him by the shoulder and attempted to ralss liin. The ship seemed to be falling somewhere. From all sides flow fragments. heard the deafening screech and the frightful ilin. The smoke rosa in dense clouds and the Aamea soomed to loop towards the bridge, where

was standing beside the Admiral. I jumped on the rail and was washed off, but succeded in grabbing something. I was drawn down. I remoraber the falling masts, and then nothing more. On our ship was an old man with a

our, man. He had a book in his hand, and beautiful white board, who bad been good to seemed to be writing, perhaps sketching." [Ho "On the same day, when the Hatruse' was

was Verestchagin, the painter.] ten miles south-east of Laotishan with other

The Associated Press's Port Arthur corres- vessels, she was struck by the enemy's mechani-pondent, who witnessed the disaster from Golden cal mines and sunk; just then the Russian flotilla, Hill, describes it thus:-- consisting of sixten torpedo-beat destroyers approached, but was repulsed by our cruisers which saved 300 of the Hatarise's crow, including Rear-Admiral Nashiba and Captain Nakas."

Inter.

TOKYO. 20th May, 5 par on the 15th inst, oir fleet, consisting of four Rear-Admiral Masamichi Togo reports that Shan-ruisers, there gunboats, and the torpeto Botilla, About

after mccessfully repelling the

enemy's

destroyers which emerged from Port Arthur at

the time of the Helene dimster and rescuing the drowning crew, proceeded to Pichili Galf [The Hatsuse was Japan's third largest and reconnoitered along the Kaichow Pro- battleship, being à 15,000-ton boat, of 16,300 montory. On the 16th inet, we discovereda part i.hp. She was nanched at Elswick in 1899.of the enemy ashore, and fired upon them, and Her armour ranged from 2in., deck, to 14in. they flet. On the 17th inst. we penstrated the Kaichow Gulf and bombarded the enemy's edifices, the railway, bridges, and military

dealt a wound which actual fighting could fuble Sent and Lovely Woman is writing a series heavy gun position. Her armament was four

not deal. The sympathy of Britons, and of many others as well, must go out to Japan in this hour. The triple catastrophe may not affect the course of the war, but it is nevertheless of cruel intensity. Japan con- THE PRICES are only half those charged tinues to command the sea, but in less

in England.

Mr. T. W. Cresland, author of The Unspeak

of articles on Unlovely Man in which le advances the theory that Adam was a Seot. Scotsmon, we imagine, will be most relieved that there is no attempt to prove that Mr. Crosland is a Scot, whatever Adam msy have been.

12-in., fourteen 6-in., twenty 12-pr., eight 3-pr., and four 2-pr. guns. She carried four sub-trains. maring torpedo-tubes. Her speed was 19.11 kaota and her complement 741 men, so that over 400 were drowned,

The Yoshino was a 4,190-top cruiser, of 15,000 i.b.p. She was also built at Elswick, and launched in 1892. Her deck and gun-position armour was 4in. Her guns were four 6-in.,

Toxro, 20th May, 5.20 p.m. "A portion of our army commenced landing at Takushan on the 17th inst.

THE FIGHT AT KINCHOW. Mr. M. Nome, the Japanese Cemil, has courteously forwarded to us the following copy of a telegram received by him yesterday

The

My glance returned to our squadron. Petropavlensk was abast without headway, when anddenly I saw her tremble. She seemed to rise out of the water, a tremendous explosion ront the air; then a second, and then a third. Fragments flew in all directions, and wreckage and mon were mixed up in a terrible mass. I was hardly able to realise the horror of it, when

The Petropavlovsk had disappeared. The float- the ship began to Hist. In a moment the sea seemed to open and the water rushed over her. ing woodwork and the few men struggling in

the water were all that was left to recall the splendid fighting machine which a few hours

plaid out of the labour

(Sigued) MAJOR-GENERAL PFLUG,

Quartermaster-General.

WIRELESS TELEGRAPHY AND WAR,

- The Times special correspondent, who has sent that journal various messages by wireless telegraphy from the fines steamer, sends from Weihai a protest against the throat of the Russian Government to treat as spies corre spondents using wireless telegraphy at sea. Ho

ALYA

The definition of a spy in international law is one who disguises his true identity and in- sinuates himself within hostile territory for the Another large assignment of Spanish-Filipino coinage has been shipped to the United States

Torro, May 20th, 12.40 p.m. purpose of communicating with the envy. for recoinage into Conant currency. The ship-sight 4.7, and twenty-three 3-prs., and she had near Kinchow on the 18th instant consisted of and had communicated with the Japanese, I "The enemy which participated in the fight. If I had insinuated myself into Russian waters ment consisted of 1,810,000 pesos, in denomina. tions of pesotas, media pesos, and pesos. After five torpedo-tubes. Her speed was 23 knots and the 5th, the 14th, and 16th Sharpshooter Infan- might come within this category. But I am try Regiments with eight quickfirers. They guilty of neither of these insinuations, I left on the field thirty dead officers and men. are acknowledged by the leading English "scratch pack "though it may be, to chal-recoinage it will be returned to the Philippines. lost over 200. The cruiser Kasuga, of course, According to the prisoners' statements, the possess a system of wireless telegraphy which,

WATERS MANUFACTURED by US

preponderating strength, and the events of the 14th and 15th instant may decide Russia to attempt to carry into execution the threat of sending out hor Baltic fleet,

lenge Japan's weakened naval power. The quakers to be equal to those of their own awful import of submarine mines bas truly production.

been well illustrated in this war,

Ou land the Japanese are fortunate in A. S. WATSON & CO. being able to point to very distinct saccesses

LIMITED.

THE HONGKONG DISPENSARY.

ESTABLISHED A.D. 1841.

NOTICE TO CORRESPONDENTS

ONLvComminications relating to the news columns should be addressed to Tan Epiron.

Lorrespondents must forward their names and at dresses with communicatione addrested to the Editor, net for publication, but as evidence of good faith

All letters for publication should be written on ene side of the

er only. paper

Ne anonymously signed communications that have already appeared in other papers will be inserted.

Orders for extra copies of DAILY PRESE should be

to counterbalance, in some degree, their navul disasters. Newehwang is in their hands without a struggle (involving the destruction by Russia of the bardly valuable gun-vessel Sivutch), and the Liaotung peninsula is theirs from Tashibekiao right down to Kinchow. More significant still is the Russian story that the retreat on Harbiu is threatened. The astonishing report reached us just too late for publication in Thursday's issue of this paper that a Japa- nese force had reached a point thirty miles north-east of Moukden, coming from what direction we do not yet know; it might

At the present time there is in circulation in the Philippine marts of trade almost every kind of

money in existence. The local currencies arè Connat, Mexican, and Spanish-Filipino coins The last mentioned will be recoined into Conant, and it is believed that" Mez." will be driven out.

According to the Kobe Chronicle, the proposed reforms in the Corean Governmont are to be commeaved at the Court of the Emporer, where; a despatch says, the influence of superstition is remarkable. In the past fortune-tellers and interfering, to the disadvantage of the country, sorcerers have flourished at the Corean Court, not only with domestic but with political affairs.

her complement 300 men, ao that she must have

is one of the two bought by Japan from Chile just before the war.--ED. D.P.]

NEWCHWANG IN JAPAN'S '

HANDS.

LONDON, 19th May, 12 p.m. A Russian official despatch nounces that Newchwang has captured by the Japanese. The

been

enemy's casualties were above 300.**

NEWS VIA BHANGHAI,

The correspondent of the N-O. hely Neier telegraphs from Paking, 14th MayThe Russian troops near Kaopangtse, the junction of the Haimintun railway, are withdrawing to the east of the Liao. A great part of the Russian troops at Newchatan station have bean broken up and most of the camp furniture

sold."

evon if the messages were not veiled by a cipher, neither the Japanese nor Russian- instruments can record. The messages go to a neutral cable office and thence to London, no one having access to them. I have never yet · sailed in Russian waters; all my messages have been sont from the high seas or from neutrul waters. I would point out that all the fighting

an-Agent in China, sends the following telegrams neutral cables after a few hours steaming. Major-General. Dessine Russian Military I have witnessed could have been placed with

to some of the Shanghai papers —

No Power ever dreamed of interfering with Monkdon, 12th May. General Mitselmasko raports that he found neutral cable offices, and the wireless system is two Japanese dotachments of considerable only a means of accelerating the despatch of strength; one in the neighbourhood of the lower the mesanges. I trust that the Governments

gun-vessel Swoich was destroyed by part of the Tayung-ho and the other at a disinterested will insist that the Russians shall

the Russians previously.

The Minister of the Imperial Household has now issued an order which banishes from the

The Russians admit that all com- precincts of the Court all fortune-tellers and forcerers. This will not necessarily uprootmunication with Port Arthur is now superstition, but it is a beginning.

tance of one day's march east of Suying. He

CRICKET.

did net discover anything of the enemy between confine their throats to Russian waters. Fonghwangcheng and Saimachi. The Japa nose army continues to advance very slowly.

A second train reached Port Arthur on the 11th May. broken off.

The rumber of the enemy who handed at Fitero, near the promontory of Konechuy and

This afternoon a match will be played [The Sivoutch is a small and antiquated gun in the bay of Kinchow, is not yet fully ascertain

between members of the Dallas Musical Comedy vassal which has been wintering at Newchwang.ed, but it goes that it is not very strong.

Continious engagements are daily taking Co., assisted by others, and a team calling itself vessel, carrying one 9-in.. one 6-in., and eleven armies. The losses on both sides are insignif-the Happy Valley on the ground of the Civil place between advance detachmente of both

tha Nendescripts. The game will be played at smaller guns. Her spood was 12.5 knots-En. cant. The Japanese troops are advancing from Pitsewo, and from the other places at which they had landed, to Kinchow. The advanes de tachments showed themselves on the night of the 10th inst. on the heights near Sanshilipu.

13th May..

ent hefore 11 am. on day of publication. After that be from Fenghwangeleng in the South, of a volunteer cavalry regiment, in which the Built at Stockholm in 1884, she was a 950-ton

how the supply is limited. Only supplied for Cash.

or possibly from the East.. No confirmation

A Vladivostock paper having contained a critical article on the subject of the composition

writer ridiculed the movement, the commander prisoned him for seven days. At the same time the commander described the conduct of the offender as most unpatriotic

Telegraphic Addresi: PRESS. Codes: A.B.C. 5th from Japanese sources has been published. of the fortress arrested the editor and in-.

Lieber's

P.O, Hon, 33. Telephons No. 12

BIRTH.

On the 20th May, at 2. Gomes Vilina, Kowloon. the wife of L. P. GLISSMANN, of a daughter.

as was only to be expected, seeing how well hidden have been the land tactics of Japan, General Kuropatkin was stated to calculate [1303 that the Japanese would take six weeks to On the 4th May, at the British Consulate-reach Harbin, supposing them to live General, before Mr. E. M. Hobart Humpden, Acting 225,000 men in Manchuria. But now it Conaal-General, and afterwards at Christ Church, Yokohama, by the Rev. W. P. G. Field, MA is actually suggested that the Russian

MARRIAGES,

HOLAGE WILFERD, eldest son of FREDERICK C. BUCKLAND,

Sevenoaks, Kont, England, to Cara retreat

from Moulden to Harbin

D.P.

*All our force," RUSSIAN RETREAT REPORTED he continued, "must be directed to the attain.

CUT OFF. ment of our end-the delivery of our country from the dangers that threaten it. Such articles are unpleasant, Thoy prove that the editor has forgotten the serious duties that devolve upon representatives of the Press,"

Captain M. Kaburaki, the new Japanese

RINT ELIZABETH, eldest daughter of Wares may be intercopted. A curious common- FINCH PAGE, of Dzushi, Japan.

$1302

tary, truly, on General PeLue's criticism. Naval Attaché, who arrived in London from telegraphed from Moukden to S. Peters-Japan in the middle of April, denied that the burg, that "Japan's advance to Linoyang Japanese Nary includes submarine vessels. Although two new battle-ships wore at present is characterised by indecision"! We might

On the 7th May, at Yokohama, WILLIAM, son of Jean D'ARTY, of Redbourn, Herts, to Earru REBECCA, third daughter of HeY WALLS BOER, of S. Albans, Horta, England.

The Daily Press.

HONGKONG OFFICE: 14, DESVœux ROAD Cl. LONDON OFFICE: 131, FLEET STREET, E.C.

LONDON, 19th May, 12 p.m.

It is reported that the Russian retreat on Harbin has been prevented by the interposition of a Japanese force.

Service C.C., kindly lent for the occasion by the committee, and play will commouco at 2 o'clock. As several prominent cricketers have promised to turn out, there should be a good game.

THE DALLAS COMPANY.

General Stossel reports that, on the 11th May, as soon as he received on the 7th May the report that Palantien was occupied by the Japanese, be sent out several patrols of cavalry to recon- noitre in the direction of Pulantien, Pitrend, and Kerr Boy, which ware followed by detach ments of mounted infantry. On the 10th May he sent siz battalions of infantry and one but Fock towards Sansbilipu. As they advanced to- tory of artillery under the command of General ward the north they compelled the enemy's cavalry and a small detachment of infantry visit of the Company. Mr. Percival Knight, which were near the railway to retire in an

as Lord Cheyne, was, as on the previous oc- eastern direction. During this engagement casion, very humorous, and Mr. Frank

Inst oight, at the Theatre Royal, bofere a good house, was staged Three Little Maids, a popular here on the occasion of the previous piece whick will be remembered as being very

almost expect to hear soon that Gener being bailt in Great Britain, he said, the S.S. "BUGATYRE" WRECKED. with the enemy we had two men killed and 14 Cochrane, as M. de l'Orme, sang several songs in

confirmation of the aows. Already some- what conflicting rumours are abroad.

PFLUG has been superseded, following Admiral STARCK, Viceroy ALEZIEFF, and General SasseLirca into the disgrace HONGKONG, 21ST MAY, 1904 which has punished want of foresight on the Russian side in this war. Japan's Loving of sensation and modern news "indecision," at any rate, seems to have been a very effective maneuvre if it has paper-readers in all parts of the world are supposed to be such cannot complain that resulted as well as Russian reports seem to during the past forty-eight hours they have make out. But that the Japanese should not been abundantly supplied with excite already be in a position to threaten the ment. The war in the North has moved retreat, from Moukden to Harbin seems with tremendous rapidity and has lelt in-almost incredible. It will be well to await effaceable marke. The horrors of warfare have been demonstrated in their most vivid light. The news which reiched the Colony- yesterday, and which we reproduce in our own correspondent's and the Japanese offi- cial telegrams in to-day's issue, comos with a shock of startling intensity. Early in the work we learnt that the Japanese cruiser Miyako, while engaged in destroying Rus. sian wines in the neighbourhood of Dalny, touched one of them and sank, happily with very few casualties. It was not until yesterday that it was known here that, on the very day following that first serious disaster in the war to Japan's Navy, two far more cruel blows followed, one of them

course,

the

of irreparable extent. The latter is, of sinking of the great battleship Hatsuse, flagship of Bear Admiral NASHIBA, which came in contact with a Russion mechanical mine ten miles away from the Laotishan promontory below

Japanese Congress would decide at the end of this year whether contracts for further battle- ships would be given out. Three or four craisers, of four thousand tons each, were at present being turned out in the Naval yards is at Yokusaka and Kure, while a number of desvostock. The crow is saved, trovers and torpede craft were also building.

LONDON, 20th May, 11.5 a.m. It is reported that the s.s. Bogatyre wrecked at the entrance to Vladi-

Severol of the latter had been launched and

completed since the outbreak of the war. With

the British-built boats and those turned out in the Japanese dockyards, Japan at present possessed a fleet of a hundred destroyers and torpedo-boats.

In the German Reichstag on the 22nd ult. the debate upon the estimates for the Gorman East Asiatic Brigade was opened by Herr He Puyer, member of the Radical Left. declared that the political situation in East Asia The French Mail of the 18th April was necessitated a reserved attitude in the part of delivered in London on the 19th inst.

To-morrow is Whit Sunday,

Five more fatal Chinese plague cases were reported up to noon yesterday, three in the New Territory, while one body was found on the

hillside at. Yaumsti.

While playing in a billiard match with Charles Dawson (the champion) at Liverpool H. W. Stevenson (ex-champion) broke the record for the lughest push-barred break with 788; the previous record was Dawson's 722.

REUTER'S SERVICE,

THE WAR-JAPANESE LANDING IN LIAOTUNG.

LONDON, 18th May. A S. Petersburg telegram says that General Karopatkin reports that on the 18th instant a Lumber of transports landed troops at two points 25 miles south of Kaiping. The troops afterwards marched in the direction of Kaiping.

ANOTHER RUSSIAN GENERAL SUPERSEDED.

LONDON, 18th May. General Sussulitch, the Russian Commander on the Yalu, has been relieved of the command of the 2nd Siberian Division and is replaced by General Keller,

TWO FIRES LAST NIGHT.

wounded.

According to information received since from good style. The bonoura were fairly equally privata sources the Puluation station has been divided among the Indies of the Company, reoccupied by the Japanese and the railway Miss Violet Frampton and Miss Ernestine communication is now wholly interrupted.

Kuntiendien is clear of the enemy: the Walter possibly, being the best, although a Japanese columns, composed of about one divi- decided want of finish in their vocal efforts was sion, are advancing storly along the hills in the apparent. One of the features of the evening direction of Siouyen. We have further infor mation that the enemy is concentrating consi- was the violin solo by Miss Blanche Garbette, derable forces to the north of Takuelan,

who was deservedly encored. To-night A Chi- near Honeymoon is billed for production.

The Japanese columns started on the 11th May from Fonghwangcheng to Lingyang. In an engagement of our cavalry with the enemy'. outpost near the village of Belutehik, Lieut. Ven Val of the 2nil Chita Cossacks was wounded and two Cossacks killed.

Everything is quiet in the Primorski district. Captain Balshakoff reports from Corea that the Coreans themselves are destroying the tele- graphs between Kenotieng and Senju.

Some Japanese ships are hiding from our squadron on the Coreur coust in the bay of Pallada.

THE LOSS OF THE "PETBOPAVLOVEK." Now that the same terrible fato Las over- taken the great Japanese battleship Hateuse, one can but recall the loss of the Russion flag- ship Petropavlovsk a month and two days pre- viuusly in the smos tragio Zay. The following description of that cats srophe was given by a signalman actually on the vessel when it blow

up.

He said :-

bimself and his party. Nevertheless he par- ticularly desired the Government to remember that the brigade was merely a temporary force which was, by no means to be regarded as A forming the nucleus of a colonial army. Conservative Deputy, on the other hand, ex- prossed the belief that the brigade had still

We were returning to the harbour, the Petropavlovs lealing. Some of our cruisers important duties to fult. In fact a meraber

which had remained in the harbour went ont of the Budget Committee had described it as

and steamed towards the enemy, firing sixteen "the backbone of China." The Secretary of

shots at him with their bow guns. Then they Stute for Foreign Affairs, Baron ΤΟΥ

retired The enemy numbered fourteen heavy Richthofen, repudiated the suggestion of a Fire broke out at No. 18 Queen's Road ships, nearly all amoral, while ours were nine. The Novos Vremye paklished last month sletter Socialist speaker that the brigade was a purely West, a lantern maker's shop, at 6.50 ya. Bayar. I stood in the wheelhouse on board the Against their armoured cruisers wo had only the from a correspondent on his way to the front.in decorative institution. He declared that with yesterday. The Brigade, undor Messrs. E. R.battleship looking at the signal book. The the course of which he says that General Karupat-out its presence the residence of foreigners in Halifax and H. G. Baker managed to keep the Admiral's last signal had been for the torpedo- kin has a bodyguard of 15 Knights of S. George China would have been entirely out of the flames to the one house, which was gutted.

hosts to enter the harbour. The Petropactovsk alowed speed and almost stood still. Suddenly with a banner of the Order. The knights will

question. If the German troops had beou At 10 p.m. firo broke out at the basement of she shook violently. I heard a fearful explosion, accompany him throughout the war, and the reduced bust year, the Government would have No. 109 Queen's Road Central, a medicine immediately followed by another and thon unfurled banner will indicate the position of been accused of being wanting in political shop. The Brigade nipped the conflagration under the bridge. I rushed to the door of the another. They seemed to me to be directly. the Commander-in-Chief-rather a conspicuous mark, surely!

foresight.

wheelhouse, where I met an officer, probably a

before much damago was done.

By lind permission of Lt. Col. Tramonger and afficere, the Band of the 93rd Barina Infantry will play at the Hongkong Hotel from 8 : 9.30 p.m. to-night:

March........." Santa Fé" Overture ...Tancredi Selection ... The Orchid Cak: Walk.....“ „Jolly Negroes" Selection......Patience

Walte Dance.

Rovensg"

Slavonic"

God Save the king.

MENU

·Hors d'Œuvres Caviare and Olive Croutons..

BOUP.

Birds Nest.

FIFE.

Scalloped.

ENTREES.

Murrell .Eossini

Ivan Caryll

Berger ..Sullivan

.Follet Dvorak

Mutton Cutlets a In Westanorland Lobster a l'Americaine Chicken and Maceroni Pudding. CVDRY

JOISTA.

Roast Sirlain of Boof and Horseradishı Rozst Turkey and Asparagus Sance Beiled York Ham and Champagne Sauco Cold Spiced Beef and Mixed salad, БУБЕГ.

Baked Chestnut Custard Pudding.. Diplomata Ice Cream sad Chocolate Cake Apple Turt Tipsy Cake.

Fruit

Coffee

DESAERY.

*

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