.**TERROR OF THE DANUBE."
BRITISH NAVAL OFFICERS INGENUITY.
KARGE AS, FRONCLAD!
The fact that British troops are lighting with the Serbians was disclosed in n specch at Liverpool recently by Mr. Crawford Prive, an Eye-witness" with the Serbian Army.
AMR. N."
"A few weeks later, when the British Government had given its consent, Mr. X. arrived at Nish. He was a secret perhaps the greatest secret that has ever walked through Serbia.
HOLDING OUT.
THE HONGKONG DAILY PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 20rn, 1918.
the French; Germany is even able to export 2 cool to neutral countries. It is claimed that the product of iron and steel has been
LIMITS OF ECONOMIC, ENDURANCE. doubled. The stock of other ores may be
L-ON THE ENEMY SIPE!
[BY A COURERONDENT IN THE TIMES."}
The day has come when we are permitted to face the facts and to discuss openly when sacrifices are demanded of us before we reach No longor the goal which must be reached.
short, but we have no reasons to suspect any
VISITORS AT HOTELS.
Horaxosa Horar
vital delicioney. The oil and petrol qua & Mrs F. X. d Mx O, C Kuight
has probably been sovel by the
and it may be that the thrust there victories, was prompted by this need. Deficiency in that which does not concern war will be easily endured by a people who have their minds set upon ultimate victory by the exhaustion of their foes and can see clearly what defeat means for them.
WHEN THE END WILL COVE
In the
emada e Castro tisad Almads & Castro aster d Almach o
Castro Mr G. E. Mr J. H. Baring
Anderson
Mr H. Murray Bain Mr R. E. Boli tos
Mrs E. B. Belillos Mr D. C. Bandel Mr G. Bosman Mr&Mrs F. M Brooks Mr & Mis R. D. Bann
and obild
Mr Campbell A. Cherk
Mr J J. Connell Mr D. Copeland Mrs Choy Leang Shi Mr& Mis F. E. Davis
FF, J. Davis Miss ML. E. Dafy
& Mr S. Erlinger Mr O. Feenwissen Dr Fitzwillistos Capt. & Mr E. M.
French and child
During six weeks of siege warfare one of is every thing subserved to the fear of heart. The indications all point to two, and only the things which was impressed upon Mr.ening the enemy, and no longer are we told two, real limits to our enemy's endurne Price was the enormous destruction which to believe that all is being done for the best viz. his supply of fighting men and his re- was being inflicted upon Serbian troops by and that victory is the certain outcome. We tention of home eredit and of motionni war eight Austrian monitors on the river Many have looked deeper, and we know that there moral in the first, though the wastage is of them used to ply up and down the river is nothing which encourages the eneiny more enormous, the end is yet far distant hurling pumpoms into the advanced trenches them to see as blind to facts or building our second, we may expect the losses to increase on the river side, and throwing great shells calculations upon false assumptions; and we the desire of his peoples for peace; but this on Serbian positions further inland. They know, too, that the people of this country war does not end with that, it ends only harassed the Serbians very considerably, but can bear to face the truth. We do not at when his resistance is completely broken in spite of all efforts to put an end to their present care whether this great change is down. It must be the success of the siege activities they simply steamed up and down due to the new cloments in our administra works by the exhaustion of the enemy's tight: ouring forers, or by the collapse of his home the river flaunting the sens of their security tins, to the outspoken courage of
Minister of Manitions, or to other causes; credit, which brings the end when the end in our very faces
int a new and better confidence is in us, for does come. It cannot be given to us to know we feel that we are taking the steps which the hopes and probabilities of the military operations. We see the first year ending with lead on to victory,
We can discuss the question of economic the account on the wrong side, so far is the endurance, and the conditions under which position of the enemy's lines indicate the Time will be fighting on our side, with firm balance of gains and loss. We are looking MrI, T. Fulaway conviction that by so dong we are not heart forward with unabated confidence to the time Mr J. Gibb ening the enemy, but, on the contrary, when a change will come, but we have hecuz & M J. Gould destroying the foundations of his hopes. To toll it it will be nine months before our Mr. V. Geuldbourn do this we should first take stock of the new Armies and our inouitable Allies in Mr C. L. Good ich factors which limit the enemy's powers of the last (for we believe the Black Sen route Mr & Mrs B. C. Haile endurance and of the period of supreme ellort will then be open) will be equipped to fight Cept T. P. Hail for which we, as a nation, should prepare our minds. We should then take stock on on fully equal terms in the matter of the Me & Mrs W.
Hos. Mr E. A. Hewett, our own side, and see if there is any knit machinery of destruction. It has been With the facts before us it would be also consider how the matter stands in these to expect reverses chemy mind, and judge if there is any just worse than folly for us as a nation to base Me W. J. Hodge tication for his confident hope of holding his our ideas upon any assumptions which do Me C. B. Jan own till his foes are exhausted. We can not includent least two further years of experte Mr. Joseph afford to Inte discovery that any assumption port. And ordinary prudence appears or E, Josph or principle upon which we are working is demand that our estimates should take ne Mr M. 1. Janes fundamentally wrong; we must consider count of the possibility of a still longer Mr Kodani the deeply, and make sure that the enemy struggle and of more calls for financial assis- is not in advance of us in grasping any tance to enable our Allies to maintain their efforts, for we should regard ourselves as the essential fnet.
reserves on the financial as well as on the industrial side.
Hanulbal
for our men. Theys the French havi to against which we should guard. We shouk/strongly hinted to us that in the interval we | Mr A Heine
Twenty-four hours after his arrival in Nish he was ruber in the uniform of a Serbian colonel of engineers, us was also his secretary and the petty officer who accom janied him. They went to ilelgrade
One fatal morning there was an order to ovacuate Belgrade, and it was a bitter pill managed to get away most of their tackle, leave their gans. That little British is sion entered Belgrade on December 15 with the Serbian Army. Very shortly after wards a large quantity of material arrived and another detachment of British troops.
"A few days afterwards the Serbians unde an attuck on one of the islands in the river opposite Belgrade. The Serbian infantry attacked one end of the island, and during the middle of a dark night the Austrians at the other end saw a huge, heavily armed boat, bristling with cannon, hearing quickly down upon them.
ATTACK ON AN ISLAND.
They could not imagine the origin of this river Dreadnought. It fired cannon and shell, with the result that the Austrian forces
vacuated the island.
"This Dreadnought had been crefully donstructed by the British petty officer, and consisted of a barge, on the how of which he had neatly fixed a number of tin plates, and behind these he had mounted two machine guns-hence the Austria as fright.
"There are a lot more of these now, and they have been doing a lot of these tricks. An old river bont, little more than a ferry boat, has been fitted up, and is called the Terror of the Danube
THE ENEMY'S LIMITS OF ENDURANCE, Our enemy at the outset disclosed a strange lack of capacity for appreciating the problems of human nature, an utter failure to grasp the part which honour, sentiment, and any of the purer tires play in the guidance of national action, and an entire disregard for international morality. Thus his calculations as to what would be the course taken by other nations and communities were entirely false, and he has seen the bribes which he thought would be potent scouted by one after another; and thus, too, he has built up for himself a heritage, the symbol of which for generations to come will be the new meaning attaching to the epithet German," when applied to honour to truth, to humanity, and to all that civilization implies Too really we jumped to the conclusion that his other calculations were equally faulty, and that he had over estimated his come endurance and his power of self-support. Slowly we have come to realize that, in things material, he does not miscalculate, as he does in things mental aid moral. We have built much on the hope of the bank ruptcy of his exchequer, or the exhaustion of The oficialis supplies of food or raw material, inter vening to end the struggle. If this is not sound, let us know it tid stupe our course accordingly.
With the Terror of the Danube Lieuten ant Kerr has accountul for one of the Aue tram river monitors, for which he had re- ceived high and well-merited decoration.'
D.S.O. FOR MR. X.
A D.S.O. for Lieutenant Commander Kerr was announced on June 30. Account of his deed roads:--
Lieutenant-Commander Kerr was in com- and of a picket hat which reconnaitred the position of the Austrian monitors on. the Danube on the nights of April 21 and 23, 1915, and torpedoed one of them under heavy fire, the enterprise being boldly and skilfully conducted.
DRACONIAN LAWS.
A series of interesting rescripts by tienerul von Roehl, commanding the headquarters of the 9th Army Corps at Hamburg and Altona, is worth notice,
The general issues a summary warning to all whom it may concern that anyone discovered giving alcohol in any form 10 soldiers about to start on active service, or who treats soldiers on the march or at railway stations to alcoholic drinks will be punished with imprisonment for one year, unless the existing laws provide for a severer penalty.
HS FINANCIAL PROBLEMS,
THE "FALABA" CRIME.
LORD MERSEY ON GERMAN GUILT.
ជា”។
A
Mr P. K. V. Å. Llaar Mr C. auritsen Mr& Mrs A. Lewis
Mr G. T. Lloyd
MS. Longfield
Mr B. Markham
Dr & Mrs O. Marriot?
Mr H. J. Mardling
Mr L. D. MoNoail
Mr D. McMurray Mr J. Murecki
Mr. B. K, Mebin Mrs E. A. Millar Miss Milar
air S. M. Meoriton Mr W. B. Neighbour
Mr J. Ormiston Mr A. . P.teher Mra M. Pitcaiker Mr D. Poli Mr R. D. Riell Mr E, H, Lay Mism F. Reny Mrs C. Keed Capt P H. Rolfe Mr G. S berg M&A Sallege and
infsat
Mr Hamilton Sawyer Dr RE.hitley Mra A. G. smith
Me W. H. Smith
Mr J. 1. Smith Mr B. E. Solmen ar V Sarby Mr B. Stewort Mr H v. Swiffe di Mr I. E. Thompson Mr E. Voeg l Mr W. B. Waera MF. W White Ma J. Wilso Men H. F. Wood -Bar tx, tx, Wod
King Edward HOTEL
Mrs B Almond Mis tenis & child Mr A. Black Mr W. Budke Mr & Mrs T. S. Cheng Mr U. de Cleary Mnr. La Cooke Miss J. F, Cooko Masters G. M. J. P..
Cooke
Dutton
Lord Mersey gave judgment at the West
Mr A. Course Mr F. F. Duckworth
G. A. minster Palacz Hotel on July 8th cu the foundering on March 28th of the British Mr & Mrs steamer Faith, of Liverpool, which was Mr W. T. Elion terpedoed and sunk 50 miles off the Pem-Capt. Fotheringham
Me C. Fritz MJ. Fyfe brokeshire coast by a German submarine, Mra A. Fuy with the loss of 194 lives,
Mr & Mis. Use me Tof. Gregory Mr ki Ghiers Mr&Mr Hammes and Mr S. Hishimu to
The Court found that the act was done, not merely with the intention of destroying the ship, but also with the intention af sacrificing life; further, the opportunity given to the men and women on board getting to the boats and saying their lives was gressly insufficient, "There w evidence before me," said Lord Mersey, "of laughing and jeering on board the submarine while the men and women on the Falabu were struggling for their lives in the water, but I prefer to keep silent on this matter in the hope that the witorss was mistaken."
A nation which is besieged is for the time being frood from all the complications of in- ternational finance, and our enemies are so far in the condition of a community besieged and dependent upon self-support that their prob
When the captain and chief officer lems in regard to rates of exchange, and to liquidating the balance of debt to neutral decided that it was impossible to escap countries created by excess of import over after the signal "Stop, or I fre" had been export, are reduced to very small proportions given by the submarine, the engines were War has set up almost elemental and prin stopped. Then came the signal from the tive conditions for Germany and Austria-
The submarine, "Abandon ship immediately," Hungary on the international side. blockade limits the possibilities of drawing and a message through a megaphone to supplies from abroad, save from the compara- take to the boats, as the ship was going tively small neutral sources which lie within to be sunk in five minutes. Within five the great siege ring, but it has its compensa- minutes, and when the submarine was tiona in extending to an almost unlimited within about 100 yards of the Fainiu, de extent our enemy's power of financial endur-fired a torpedo which struck the vessel in ance on the national side.
Within the ring the question is simply one of home credit and the confidence and trust of the besieged populations. While he retains Another notice warns soldiers returning this confidence and trust our enemy has at his from the front against making communica- disposal is full resources in inen, in food- tions to their relatives and friends regard stutis, and in material for war; and he has ing the positions occupied by the German only to face the primitive problems of how troops. Should the enemy by any accident long these supplies will endure, for credit can obtain this information it might have serious extend the power of his exchequera, and the Consequences. Equally reprehensible is the possibility of paper payment, to an unlimited habit, frequently observed, of writing to men extent. Now we must look at this question at the front complaining of the deamness of of home credit from the enemy's standpoint food in Germany. These letters are often and not from our own, and we must have no lost or otherwise fall into the hands of the delusions in regard to the matter. The enemy, and by their complaining tone en- Germanic peoples are firmly convinced that the future is theirs--to them the portents of courage him in his belief that scarcity and hunger prevail, and thereby cause enormous fate are good-thoy see the first year ending injury to the German cause.
The public are warned to be most careful with the war (as far as in one is our in wing fublic telephones in cafés, carried well beyond their borders; they see no reason to doubt the capacity of their restaurants, and other places of resort armies to hold the enemy back; and they see
notice already ap, no cause to fear any maritime action In the boxes pears advising caution, but the general will do them further damage, but, on the thinks that sufficient regard is not paid to the notice. Another danger point is the contrary, much hope of inflicting naval losses without incurring corresponding risk; and, public telephone at railway stations, where last, but not least, they believe that time there are always persons listening and pry is on their side. ing, and only too ready to inflict injury on Germany.
Perhaps the most curious of all General von Roll's rescripts is that referring to cornflowers. The notice is as follows: "The plucking and sale of cornflowers, so far as it can be shown that the flowers do not come from gardens, is forbidders, as it has been proved by experience that they cannot be gathered without treading down corn. Any one acting against this rescript will be pun- ished with imprisoned for a teria not exceed ing one year.'
д
BARON'S CASTLE LOOTED.
GERMAN SOLDIERS CARRY AWAY TWO
THOUSAND BOTTLES OF WINE.
We must remember that confidence will die hard when the only alternative is to face national bank- ruptcy and the extinction of all national hopes; but we may reasonably expect the collapse to be sudden and great when it does
come.
HIS FOOD PROBLEM.
the starboard side. The Fulaba at once took a list to starboard, and, in eigh minutes, she sank.
Without submarine in
child.ea
Me H Hayman
Mr A. Hoohing Mr &
Alarm
Jackson
Mr J. Joseph
Mr W. D. Len
tt M
Capt. & Mrs Lennox Mr LeBuos
Mr & Mrs. Montgom
ery
Mr H. Murphy
Mr B. Naki
Mia
Newman
Mr W. C. Pusnuore
Mr H. Pearman
Mr C IL Soper
an adanay
Maymond
Mr & mr. Rich zrdeer
Mr 8 Sylves EÍ
Mr H, Tano
Mr H.- bornton Mrs E. L. Tourtello
・Mr & Mrs J Mr S. Tad
Underwood Xr J. Young
PRAK HOTEL.
Mrs Anderson Mr R 8t, Au ery
Mrs Arnoit Rev. & Mrs B con Mr. & Mrs ceatb MW R. Bell Mrs Bondler Mm W. M. Campbe!
and children Mr H. A. Cartwright
Mr F. W. Cary Mr & Mr. Carmichael Mr&Mrs C. D Casulli Mr G. Clare
Mr & Mrs A. Constand Col. Darling B.E.
tir
Denman Faller Miss Dorow
b
Rev. & Mrs Kelly, es d
obildren
Mrs Kirto
Dr & Mrs Learell
Mrs Marriott
Misa MacChapin
Mr & Mrs Moss and
child
Mrr Mr
Mitable otula
E
Maj. &
Nicho'son
And child Mr & Mrs Nighting le Mre Clivecrans
Mr T. L. Perkins -- Mre Pratt
Major Pynt, R.E. Mr & Mrs A. A. Falton Mrs Rynolds the Mia Fulton rights Miss Grima
Capt & Mrs Hammond
discussing whether
ber within WAS
the Court har Gabbey Falabi sinking the
that in
she Mr F. A. Hazeland any event was bound 20 afford the men and women Mr&Mr B. A. Hale ussumed on board reasonable opportunity of Mises Howard getting to the boats and saving their lives. Major Faistine This was not done, and in fact Lord Mersey was driven to the conclusion that the captain of the submarine desired and designed, not merely to sink the ship, but, in doing so, also to sacrifice the lives of the passengers, At the time the torpedo was fired the crew and passengers of the Folaba had not left the ship in the boats, and these on board the submarine were
well able to see the position of affairs. The only other craft in sight at the time of the attack was a steam drifter the Eileen Ening, which was at some distance.
boats
and child
Hr W. T. Flanzen Mr. W. Hind Mrs Rogg and children Mr Jenkins Howard T. J. B. Johns Mr Le Jo
ori
Mr & Mrs E. Ralphs
C. P. Ross
Mr
Mr Auclair
Mr
Mr C. Skott
Mew Grant &
Mien Middleton Smith Mr & Mrs & Finday
Smith
Capt & Mrs Stewart Mrs E. W. Tisdall
Mr J. A. Trshe Mr& hire Van den Pol Maj. Gen. Ventris Mrs Wicox
Mr G. Tisdall
Grand Hote
Serious complaints had been made by some of the witnesses as to the condition Mr & Mrs Allen of the boats and their launching. The Mr. C. Anker evidence of skilled and apparently careful Me J. Bain
as having been Mr A. von Dyke men satisfied him that the witnesses who Mr A. Burew described the
rotten" were mistaken, and that in Mr H. Hunk truth the heats were sound and in good Mr B. James order. The fact that some of them were Mr E, Jones. found to be unseaworthy when launched Mr W. Johanson In regard to food, we know that the enemy was wholly due to the damage suffered Mr W. H. Lacusy
1 Mr L. Lobo is about to reap the harvest of many rich hectares beyond his own confines, and that after the launching began, and not to any Mr G. von Leur he is unquestionably capable of using it with previous defect scant regard for the claims of the native populations; we know that ho means to use his prisoners of war in the gathering of his har rests, and we have reason to believe that his people have responded to the call to use every square yard of soil for the production of the food-staffs most needed, and that organiza tion and economy bave done much to avert
"I cannot find," said Lord Mersey, "that the damage to the boats was due to the Had there been neglect of officers and crew in connection with the launching, more time for the work it might have been better carried out, but in my opinion all on board did their very best. It is im possible for me to fix any man on board
any risk of shortage, With these conditions the ship with a failure of duty or with in- he should have little difficulty in making up competenes The responsibility for the an original deficiency of 25 per cent, and in consequences of this catastrophe must rest solving the food problem for any length of exclusively with the officers and crew of
the German submarine."! time.
Much indignation is felt at Maastricht at the most recent theft committed by the
WIS SUPPLIES OF EAW MATERIAL German soldiery in Belgium.
In raw materials there will be some de- they have just looted the castly of Baren Michels van Kassenich, situated four yards ficiencies no doubt, but much can be done to
from the Dutch-Belgian frontier,
It seems
They
wake them good, where the State has full
are at its command for the provision of
The men on board the five fishing boats aster, and which picked up the survivors, behaved with great courage and kindness, which arrived on the scene after the dis-
also stole 2,000 bottles of wine, regardless control of all the native products and visible and deserved the highest commendation. of the fact that the Baron's cellar is situ. supply, and when the resources of science After the firing of the torpedo the Bus
The wine was
Those on board her marlo substitutes. It has been reported to the marine remained in the vicinity until the ated in Dutch territory. brought first into the Baron's garden. which Reichstag that all the problems created by Falaba sank. is on Belgian soil, and then taken towards the blockade have been solved The great no effort to render assistance in Baving life. the German frontier in four military question of coal has been settled by They probably could not have done so with:
possession of the Belgian supply and part of out endangering the submarine. motor-wire,
Mr P. J. Lobo
Mr B. LownGA Mr W. H. Lookey
Mr P G. Moen Mr. Nizon Mr G. Udner Mr V. A. Farre Mr R. Pels
Mr C. PuttesAN
Mr C. W. Reynolds
Mr D. Robertson Mr F. Ryas Mr R. E. Ru'e Mr J, Suth Mr H. r. Thorig Mr C. D. odd
Mr V. D. V.lde MIS. . Wright
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SHIPPING IN PORT.
STEAMERS.
ANNI, Norwegian str., 1,017, A. Arntz, 16th Augast-Bangkok 9th August, Rion-Thoresen & Co.
CHINGCHOW, British str., 1,195, Jas Doyle, 18th August-Port Parseval 3rd August, Cement Stone.-Shewan, Tomes & Co.
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595
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ORDER AT ONCE.
THE
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1,850 PAGES PRIOR $10.
The alterations this year are unusually has vy owing to changes incidental to the War.
Hongkong, 16th March, 1915
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