1915-09-21 — Page 6

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Crablar Falmer &&

The king, Merchany of the Last

NAPIER JOHNSTONE'S

“SQUARE BOTTLE”

WHISKY. UNVARIED FOR OVER 150 YEARS.

THE SAME TO-DAY AS IN 1745.

BEWARF OF

IMITATIONS

SOLE AGENTS IN HONGKONG

LANE CRAWFORD & CO.

and from ALL WINH MERCHANTS,

RINGWORM SPREAD

ALL OVER HEAD

Places Quite Bare. Bad Disfigure- ment. Ceaseless itching and Burn- ing. Could Not Sleep. Cuticura Soap and Ointment Healed.

14, Glover B Prosion, Lance, Eng The ringworm began about a year ago with atrail place at the back of my head. I noticed the bair was leaving it. It

gradually

got word and spread all over the back and sides of my bead Jeving the places quite bars and also a small pises at the front. It was a very bad dis

fgement and I suffered

a great deal with cease-

* Lose Itching and buralag. could not sleep.

"I applied different ointments also two kinds of bale restorers but all

to no purpose.

1

I was tired of trying things for the com- plaint when I happened to read an adver tement about Cuticura Soap and Olat- ment and docided to give them trial. From the dret I noticed what a clean ap pearance the affected places had after using the Cuticum Boap and Ointment t

and the pain was bauch easier. After a few wooks, find washing with Cutler Soap and then applying the Cuticura Olatment I received a cure and my hair began to grow sasta." (signed) Byd Dark, Jan. 23, 1914, Samples Free by Post

In purity, delkory and fragrance Call- curs. Soap and Otatment wilsfy the most. discriminating. A single set la often suf- Ociont. Seld throughout the world. Sample of each with 32-p. Skin Book free from nearest depot. Address: F. Newbery & Sons, 27. Charterhouse Sa., London, ur Potter D. &C. Corp., Boston, U. S. A.

Isay

KEATINGS LOZENGES

cure the worst Cough

[68-12

THE HONGKONG DAILY PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21ør, 1916.

WEATHER REPORT. A RED CROSS WORK AT THE up with us. "Mosquito curtains about instead of being sent back to the

On the 20th at 10.45 am-Premre has in- arekked' slightly over the Philippines, and decreased slightly to moderately elsewhere. Tho' anti-oyolens has again" weakened and depressione dover the Eastern Ses and the south part of the China Sea

41

Light to Moderate S.E. winds may be expected over the north part of the China Bea, Hongkong ralutall for the 24 hours ending at 10 am, to-day, 0.00 Inches.

DARDANELLES.

INTERESTING LETTER BY SIR COURTAULD THOMSON.

front. Wh

especially useful-not so much an a prio tection against mosquitos ab against fi which are very trying to the baily wounded.

till they find a nameless gravo or are too So back and back they will gó much maimed to be of further us I felt glad that I had to come small tent shared their danger in trying to estab lish our Red Cross Stores on the battle- field, but any little sacrifice one may make is feeble compared with their con- and lives.

GERMAN INTRIGUES IN AMERICA.

Tho

NEW YORK, August lõtlı.. World this morning devotes three page to an exposure of the methods

A reader has kindly sent us the follow-trenches they had taken in the morning. I tribution which consists of their limbs by which Germany has been secretly work

ing extremely interesting and moving letter written from Alexandria by flir. Courtauld

Thomson, who has been assisting in the Red Cross work at the

The forecast for the 24 koura ending at noce Dardanellas;-- to-day in se follows

FORMCAST

DISTELOT.

(E&S.E. winds, Hongkong & Neighbourhood Ught to moder fair to Laloudy. (Light southerly ***Lor variable wind South coast of China between J'The name as Hongkong and Larocks, 1 No. 1.

Formoss Channel

Bouth coast of China between ƒ'The sime n

Hongkong and Hairan....

CHINA COAST

Blation.

No. 1.

METEOROLOGICAL

REGISTER.

20TH SEPTEMBER A.M.

Vladrostook Nemuro Hakodate ...... Tokio.******* Kochi

Wind

Hour.

emperature. ** Fee Level.

¿ arometer

Bumidity.

Direction

Weather.

Force

7 A. 6.30.18

# 30.09

Nagasaki Kagoshima... 17 29.90

Oshima

SE www

BRE

NNW

30 L8

*

29.55!

BW

29.89

PAR

29.93

Naha men

Lahi'jpg

Bonin Is...

29,97

Chalco

Waibalwel...

29.90

Kinking

Hanker

Lobang

Changsha ... Shanghai Gratalan

Sharp Peak...} Amoy

49.82

29,80

9.29.80

Bwator... 6 29,89 Taikots 5.29.85

Taichu

Tainan TI Koshan

29.85 75

NE

" 29.84 79 29,86 73 29.84 79 Canton 6.29.67 78

cm

Pescadores

Hongkong...

29.86

F

Gap Book

29.87

Mimono

sva

2924

WBoho

9:

Holker

E

Pakho Phulies

#

629 86 79 94 88W

29.89 77

b

"

29.78' 75

b

|29.82*

Tourang!

Cape St. James Apatzi

Dagujas ..... Manila Legaspin Taslotan Hoo Surigao...... Labuma HE

29.78 79

29.81 77 96 ES

.. 29:80 79 96

o

29.80 77 96-

29.79 79 89

29.79 586 NEW 29.73 6091 BW

210

C. W. JEFFRIES, Diesta

1 BAROMÁTJA, reduced to 32 degrees Fahrezle. on the level of the non in inakes, tend aundredths.

3 TERATUR in the shade, in degre Fahrenheit.

8 HUKIATT, in parentage of cataration,

midity of air saturated with mblature being jour

• DIAMETION OF WIND, to two points.

FORK OF WIND, socording to Beaufort Bonis. L STATE OF Wanas, b blue sky, a detaut, d blond, ddrizzling coin, 1 Log, gloomy, bar, lightning, o ovora, passing showorn, sql, r (430, SOW, & thenges, ↑ visibility, Warm WAL Bark in inches, t tanthe and haudredthe.

METEOROLOGICAL

074

HONGKONG

REGISTER.

Hongkong Observatory, September 20th,

MARTIN'S

APIOL &STEEL

*tanch Remedy for all feregulactitea

The stands of Ladin

1 of 197

that on the f

of the mystech a Stanly down any badristered. Clic mehracomtrand them, b

on sale. All Chemists and Fill tham throughout the world, or pont true &=. MARTIN, Chem'at, qushs9162, 856

* MARTIN'S

PIOL SSTEEL MELOOPILLS

Wind Direction..

GRIMAULT'S

SYRUP

OF

HYPOPHOSPHITE OF LIME

FOR

STUBBORN COUGHS

BRONCHITIS

at-

Previous On Dat On Dal

Day at 2 p.m.

E.X 2 pm.. 29.92 29.92 29.83

70 92

Barometer Temperature Humidity h 74

#

Forte Weather ++ Kain

East 3

3

68 East

3.

C

Highest open air Temperature on 19th... to Lowest open air Temperature on ih 8)

HONGKONG TIDE TABLE.

Fram 21st to 27th September.

HIGH WATER

Week

Days of

Mouth

B'kong.

Height

22 8. 1973

LOW WATSB.

Height.

9 0 a 5 6

2-3 a 1 $ 23m 9 7 7 1 m 2 35 2 7

9 20 & 5 9

H'kong.

Mean

Mean

Time

b. m.

ft, in.

l'es

21m 7 26

7 3m

Time

h., 0 56

It in

3. B

8:33

5 3

2 12 A 16

bl

1

42

3 2

hars

WEAK LUNGS

fri.

24 m 9 53 67m

3 17.

3 12 a 2 2 2 3

9 39 6 4 2

3 39 2.8

istar.

2510 37:6 3

3 58 21

CATARRH

9,57 2 6 6

4 482

8

$24th

10 16 6

4 2/3 2

27

U 25 25 22

10 20 6 8 4 46

CONSUMPTION,

26 11 2057 m 439 2 1

bore in

out ne consultant

at it

יד

"

I have now been twice to the Darda nelles, and each time we have established and I hope next time wo shall do better the Red Cross on a firmer footing there,

ill

here in all this heat is marvellous.

The way the Red Cross ladies work

TURKISH METHODS OF WARFARE.

AMERICAN AMBASSADOR'S

ENERGETIC ACTION.

NEW YORK, August 17th. The United Press publishes the follow-

respondent in Constantinople, Mr. Honry Wood :----

The following is the story of the manner Ambassador, intervened in favour of 2,000 in which Mr. Morgenthau, the American English and French civilians whom Enver Pashe had decided to expose to the bombardment of the Allied Floet at Gallipoli.

throughout the United States. ing to shape opinion and stir up discord:

and the subsidising of newspapers, charges include the fomenting of strikes The

The whole exposure is based on corre pondence between prominent represon tatives of the German Govornament with its agents in this country which has com into the possession of the Forld. In ita introduction the World says:

We day begin the publication of series of articles raising for the first time the curtain that has hitherto con- curled the activities and purposes of the official German propaganda in the United States. Correspondence in car possession reveals unmistakably that loading offcials of the Gorman Goveno ment had a hand in the promotion of yeatures not alone against its enemies with whom it is warring, but in soms: instances against the laws of the United States as well.

The most surprising fact in this connection is that no less a personage than Herr von Bethmann- Hollweg actually participated from Berlin in somie seerol undertakings of his Government in the counter”,

In the evening about 6 I went again to the observation post and found a violent Turkish counter-attack going on and our men trying and I am glad to say we were successfu

hold on to the The fight went on till 8 clook. but in the opening we dined under a breakfasted and lunched in awning.

dugou Everyone very cheerful, as i Just back from the front. I left in of the death or wounds of various suppose they must be to keep going as alf, for all the evening news kept coming hospital ship-empty, of officers, most of who must have been of course with Surgeon General Babtie, who the party quite recently. A general and has been appointed the head of all the his second in einmand were both killed median work for the Mediterranean that day. After dinner Aylmer and I Expeditionary Force, and Mayo Robson, a walked in the moonlight and passed famous surgeon (retired), who has come convoys going up to trenches with abama- lent and a good supply of nurse, and we All the time shells were dropping about The ship was exoel-nition or wounded being brought in. had put a great many Red Cross stores but not with the same violence as in the aboard. The medical staff and nurses were busy all the time gotting things daytime and the rifle fire was still hard ready and it seemed dreadful to think

Eventually after a long day I that these 600 or 700 empty cols would went to bed under the awning which was all be filed and more than flled in a

used for dining under. I was quite fow daye with the wounded and dying. the camp ander oc and lying off the ing article received from its special cor open and as I lay there I could see all We got to Learnos and found another bench were three hospital ships which hospital ship was going up to the had hurried up like vultures on hearing Peninsula before ours, so we moved into of the fight and were waiting for her and started for the front about aid their cargo, might.

Mayo Robson and I shared alike as they were lit up at night with a They looked quite fairy- cabins.

We arrived off the Peninsula band of green lights along the whole shis about 1 am., and as we approached the and in the middle one illuminated Red shore Mayo Robson called my to get up Cross. (The Turks are good about not and look out of the porthole as there was shooting at the Red Cross, but of course a heavy engagement going on.

1 put they canot always help it, and as a my head out and found by this time we were about 1,200 yards from the shore Cross flag over our store which I had matter of fact next morning the Red and a regular battle was taking place. We heard afterwards it was a Turkish just started was blown away.) attack and our counter-attack-It really night the shell-fire-continued agadi morning, when on the previous evening Albert, Chief Financial Agent of the Ger

During was a remarkable sight.

We could see share near where I was

from the Asiatie, side and we had our the troops and the men running into their tion that everyone in that camp sleeps in I may men- dugouts and the noise of the big gans

terrifie

The

a dugout, but there was not one to spare rifle fre absolutely continuous and sounded like was an aeroplane hurrying oft from out- Another incident in the night thousands of policemen's rattles. watching this fight for some time I side my tent to try and drop bombs on became aware of something hitting the

some special position. side of the ship all round cur portholes wounded had come in and after being By next morning a large number of and then found they were rifle bullets, and & few axonents later one of our crew was

treated were taken out in barges either shot through the leg. The Turks were I went off in one of these barges with its to the hospital ships or to mine sweepers. not bring deliberately at our hospital ship, but we were getting th bonent of melancholy load and thea on with them the goueral engagement. Within

in a sweeper to Lemnos couple of hours a launch put off towing were moved on to a big ship bound for some barges and brought them alongside Alexandria and again I went on with In these barges were lying the wounded them. I am sorry to say four of them from the engagement, and it seemed hours journey,

died in the sweeper during its 3 or 4 rapid and terrible sequel to what we had for Alexandria, we had about 500 wounded When we got started just scen. I sat word back by sho lanch that I wanted to get round to aboard some desperately bad. another part of the Peninsula, and when things came aboard absolutely as they o'clock," Mr. Morgenthau replied, "I Government, the correspondence shows, "But unless you have received me by of munitions to the Allies the German While protesting against the shipments it came off again I was told that it would came from the trenches except for the will come out and enter the Council of take me off to a trawler lying close by.

preliminary dressing. You cannot Ministers myself, where I shall insist on engaged in secretly building and extend. owns & company which is now actually 1 got on. to the trawler, loay imagine what a Bad looking party they talking to you." ing Baltie and Robson

behind

were-wounded, ill, filthy and in the last An appointment was therefore granteding large munitions plant in this cotin We storteri uff. No

stage of exhaustion. Many of them had for 3 o clock, and after a long argument and other explosives. Soone

try for manufacture of shrapnel casings were we under way than the Turks had their clothes out off and were absol Enver Pashe was pereunded to agree to started shelling us.

When I say "utely naked. Except for the look of it, send culy 25 French and 25 English to I was the only passenger, so I took it however, there was no great hardship in Gallipoli as a demonstration," the War as a special compliment. The shells fell this, as it was very hot. Fortunately Minister arguing that any further retrac- all round us and I really don't know had put a large amount of Red Cross tion would weaken discipline. It was why they did not get us. There was a

stores on board and they came in most also agreed to send only the youngest sunken trawler between us and the shore everything in their power, but they only

usefully The medical officers did on, and Bedri Bey, the Constantinople pour encourager les autres. However,

Chief of Police, was at once sent for in after a bit we got out of range and I had a limited number of orderlies to order that he might be acquainted with Innded at the point I was making for, help them, so I got hold of 4 or 5 Padres the new limitations of the decision. will say this for the Turks, they never

who wore on board, and 3 or 4 officers he at once protested. I don't want to shelled the hospital ship and it

who were slightly wounded and we placed sand a lot of boys down there. was anty when I got in the trawler that they ourselves under the orders of the Medical to send down notables,

I want started shelling

You've tricked Home," he declared, turning to the Ambas-

wi

and

was for me.

After

but every detail had been secretly pre The decision had not only been taken, pared for its carrying out on Monday

secured from him a promise that wonten Mr. Morgenthau learned of it. He a once telephoned to Enver Pasha and and children should be spared. A second be delayed till the following Thursday, request, that the execution of the order was only secured after the Ambassador had assured Enver that it would be the to carry it out without first advising the greatest mistake Turkey had over made Powers interested.

France and England by way of Washing- Mr. Morgenthau at ones telegraphed to ton, and, no reply having arrived by There they Wednesday morning, he again telephoned to the War Minister, insisting on being received in personal audience.

The poor

"I have not a single moment left vacant until 4 o'clock, at which time I must attend a council of the Ministers," was the reply.

·Dut

At the

THE CHIEF ACTORS.

selected to perform duties are Count The Juets set forth in the correspond- ence show that among the chief actors Bernstorf, Captain von Papen; Doctor

institutions in Berlin, Frankfort, and. Man Government in this country, and well-known financiers New York. The magnitude of some of and financial

of large suns the transactions suggests the expenditura. One estimate, based ou accurate knowledge, fixes the figure at two million dollars weekly..

The World further says:-

One very important feature of the German programme was a most clabor ato scheme to control and influence the Press of the United States, to establish newspapers and news service, finance professional lecturers, and pub. lish books for the sole purpose of fomenting internal discord among the American people for the advantage of the German Empire.

TO SUPPLY THE ALLIES!

It is further asserted that this German company it now negotiating to supply with its products but without liability for the British and Russian Governmenta the failure to deliver" clause in con- tracts or with any real purpose to deliver its products. Details of this transaction, win the name and location of the plant, will be published in a subsequent article.

Reuter.

Farther light is thrown on the methods adopted by a second Router telegram quoting the following message received by the New York Times from Providenog (Rhode Island) :-

morning that the Government at Wash- The Providence Journal asserts this ington has obtained overwhelming evi denge that officials of the Gormusu Embassy and many individuals have been concerned in wilful and persistenti violations of our neutrality laws, and will result in sensational disclosures. that action is about to be taken which

has been placed in possession of a bag The journal says that the Government of documents which was found on a secret service agent of the German Government, Among them was found positive proof of German offcial activities against the peace of the United States. journal claims to be sensational facts the Among what the following are the most interesting.

Officer in Command as orderlies. On landing I mach my way to Hear! asked us first to get the men out of their sador. quarters on the Peninsula, and Aylmer clothes, wash them and put them in the gave me a hearty welcome and told me heale pyjamas and shirts I had brought

with me was busy completing the arrangements work it was, and it was a touching sight You have no idea what hard for a big fight next day. The Churchill we met in the Meding is one of his

to these wounded officers and Padres A.D.Ce.. and he was most kind and gave

washing the feet of the poor Tommies. me his bed. Aylmer explained the The result was quite a success and they arrangements for the advance and said I really looked very much better when they mould use his observation post, so newashing we helped with the dressing of got into the cool pyjamas. After the morning I took up my position there. It is on the top of a fairly sharp incline.

wounds and feeding. The courage and and from it I could see the whole of the endurance they show is simply marvel- ground to be fought for and fought over.

lous. I won't horrify you with a descrip It was the sort of view you get fran. tion of some of the injuries. I will only Linton, only on a much smaller scale and

say that men lying in the lower hold of a you could see every tree, trench and the steamer straight from the trenches are smallest detail. At 9 a. two or three

very different to the sort of wounded one battleships appeared and took up their ses bring driven out in motors in positions to the west, each accompanied by

London. I will only tell you of one destroyers which raced round and round

pour boy who was shot through both eyes them the whole time to protect them from and of course was bound up and saw submarines. At 9.30 the general bora-calmness was too wonderful. I noticed he nothing. His patienes and his gentle bardment began from the ships from our land guns and from the French.

never asked for unything, not even water, The noise was continuous and terrific and though of course they all suffer from absolutely plastered the trenches it was

intense thirst, so I made a point of trying proposed to take. Shell after sheli to look after him a bit. When we got burst until the ground looked like huge to Alexandria I told him we wone galling groups of volcances. At 11 am. the alongside and I saw his hand moving -gun-more or less stopped and suddenly about trying to find something. I asked wo say our men jump out of their him what he wanted. He said simply trenches and dash across the open to the taken it he held it

"I want your hand." When he hati first line of Turkish trenches.

minute and then As they crossed the open the Turkish shells fell have been very kind to me.

went on, "Please tell ine your name, you on then and one saw little clusters of our poor fellows wiped out and another really a minute or two before I could It was hatch would run up and take their place

answer. The funerals at sea are very and so on till they got into the Turkish ving. A remote part of the ship aft, trenches and drove than ours with the group of wounded with bandaged bayonet. It was an awful sight, and !!

heads, arms in slings, or on crutches we had been in safety ourselves I should gathered round the poor hero under the have felt it was too cold-blooded to be Union Jack a short service concluding standing there as an olooker, but as it with the Lord's Prayer in which we join каз ве were in pretty considerable and all is over. danger ourselves, as the Turks were stell ing a battery from the Asiatic side and we were in the direct line of fre Thirty or forty shells passed over our heads and many of thean exploded within a few yards of na

The fight went on till sorry for our poor lads, as they must have par and every moment was full of the felt their return was rather a flat affair. nigst intense interest and excitement. However, we eventually started getting VON MOLTKE ON GERMAN The General whose division was specially them off the ship and a sad procession it engaged was standing next to me and was-the an-willed walking cases" reports were coming in all the time, but ing first, that is to say, they mostly one could sor

The Lokaleurrijer publishes the report of so perfectly what was staggered along with sticks or crutches going on that the reports did not ad or carrying or helping each other, then

a long interview,granted to Mr. Emerson. much to what we know already. At the followed the stretcher vases.

an American correspondent, by Field- firing practically stopped and we nd

I walked Marshal von Moltke. In regard to the a few yards with some I knew best on the expenditure of ammunition the Fields-Reuter made the most important advance that way to the ambulances to say good-bye, Marshat said that before the war no one had been made for nearly a month, and, and they unclenched their teeth as they we had taken more Turkish ground and were being jolted along to give me a fure-

had any conception whatever of the enor trenches than had been hoped for. The well smile.

mous demands for new munitions which And so we parted after would arise from this colossal fight and whole thing had been a macet complite having been together from practically that Germany found herself in the same battle and I doubt if anyone ever saw the firing line until they disappeared into sea and land engagement in grader the hot town, some to die, some to the

predicament as her enemies.. detail.

In the afternoon I went d was operating table and those who survived I betray no secret," he said, "in stat will go, I suppose, to some convalescenting that our armies in the first stages of the home here for a while. Then when in war were frequently dangerously short of spite of this horrible climate they have munitions." Germany's emergence from

AN AFFECTING FAREWELL Next morning the Ambassador attended French and 26 English who had been personally to the going aboard of the 24 finally selected. For all that they know the original orders to expose them to the fire of the Fleet were to be carried out to the letter and the farewell to their pier was one of the most affecting scenes friemis, and relatives at the Golden Horn over enzoted at Constantinople. last moment one of the English ministers, who still remained at Constantinople, volunteered to go along in order that he might offer spiritual consolation should they eventually face death, and a young Englishman was released in his place. Mr. Morgenthau insisted that the party should be accompanied by Mr. Hoffman Phillip, First Scoretary of the American Embassy. imprisoned in

On their arrival at Gallipoli they were two empty houses and informed that the

THE PASSPORT · FRAUDĖ, expected any monent to resume its bom elsewhere and the frauds in connection

Allied Fleet was

The passport frauds in New York and bardment The city had then been under fire for several days, and was almost com

with the Stegler case have been traced pletely deserted. No provision had been Captain Boyed; a list of names of Ger- directly to the personal activitics of made for their subsistence. During the days which followed 50 men suffered cou

man reservist officers in this country who" wore to be roburned to Europe ou forged siderable hardships, but at last orders passports is in the hands of the Govern- came from Constantinople for all 50 toient; this list has been traced directly be returned and released.

to German Government officials, and is The complement to this narrative is headed with the name of Captain Horn, tween Sir Edward Grey and the Ameri-bridge on the Canadian border. supplied in correspondence exchanged be- who attempted to blow up the Vanceboro can Ambassador in London, published on May 14th.

It is stated that Horn signed a con- party of 50 had left Constantinople for of a superior officer connected with the This shows that after the fession that what he did was by order Gallipoli Sir Edward Grey informed the German Government in this country, Turkisli Government that if British and The journal's long story concludes:- French non-combatants were transported to the zone of the military operations,

The immense amount of evidence in the possession of the Government Enver Pasha, His Highness Said Halim Pasha, and the Ottoman authorities

regarding these efforts, the

attempts to would be held personally responsible for

bribe Irbour leaders, to compel the Government to act in the fraudulent their lives. This warning had an instantaneous effect, and the prisoner:

plot prepared against British Vessels outside New York Harbour, to I was were at once released.

create a conspiracy among banking institutions in the control of Germans or German Americans, to poison horses and mules at New Orleans, to involve the United States with Mexico, to stir up strike and sedition by forming alleged prace associations have all com hined to create conditions under which the United States Government can remain silent no longer.

to the huts which serve as a hospital (which is under constant though no intentional shell fire) and say the wounded from the morning's fight bring brought in. There were not many as yet as they generally have to wait till night to bring them in. I am glad to say the huts were made more comfortable by various Red Cross stores we had brought

At Alexandria the arrival of a ship with wounded is unfortunately more than an every day occurance, 30 that our coming alongside did not create the faint- est interest in anyone ashore.

gu-

MUNITIONS.

War

grapher confided that he was worked to As one faced the camera the photo- death and could not get a holiday.

"I supposed all the men going to the front get photoed" said his victim.

"Oh, that only means postcards," said the photographer contemptuously. "What

nets from the men who've just got com- missions.

It's nothing nowadays to get

got a bit of colour back in their checke this dangerous position, her success in meet-we depend or are the big orders for cab- you will hear some busybody say that ing all present and future demands, he at they happened to be at Mrs. Jones home tributed to the extraordinary capacity for the other day and they saw several quite work and adaptability of the old and the robust-looking young fellows, and "Isn't now munitions factories as well as to the it a scandal that they should be sitting patriotic spirit of German workmen.

an urder for two or three dozen cabinets. Some of them send one to byery girl they know."-

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