1915-10-22 — Page 7

Daily Press 孖剌西報 All

COUNTRY LIFE IN FRANCE. RETRENCHMENT ON THE LAND.

WOMEN'S SELF-DENIAL.

(FROM A PARIS CORRESPONDENT IN

THE TIMES.")

BRITISH AIRMEN IN GALLIPOLI.

NOONDAY NIGHTMARE OF THE TURK.

THE HONGKONG DAILY PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22ND, 1916,

We publish below an account by Mr. So many Frenchwomen who, in the or-

Arthur Ruhl, the American correspon dinary course of events; would be cater-dent, of a visit to the Turkish lines an taining house parties or doing a cure the southern end of the peninsula, where in Command of the local Turkish forces somewhere are now living quietly in their he was the guest of Shukri Boy, Colonel countre houses under quite peculiar cir-During the course of this visit Mr. oumstamocs. Their men, the younger ones. Ruhl shared with his Turkish hosts the seneation of being under the bombs of a anyway, are at the front, and it falls t

British aeroplanë. their lot to look after the estate

its silver down on them and on the black hills and water, still as some inland Lake.

The boneb, the bags, the ditch, all thei way round the camp, was ever anything more inglorious? Somewhere in the mid- The little steamer tied up at Akbash dle of it a hideous whiffling wail come for the night, and it was not until the down the sky: Trrourrou middle of the next morning that it was frrow and then a crash: The bomb had decided that she should cross and leave hit the water just off the end of the pier. her wounded at Lapsaki instead of going I kept on running. There was ther on up to Constantinople.

trrou another geyser of We lugged Trro our baggage off and hunted up our old water, and the bird had flown out. friend, the Hamburg-American captain, to see what might be done till some other Finally, we went aboard a sort of en larged tug which might be going up that Craft appeared.

afternoon or evening.

A MIDDAY VISITOR,

HOW ACTRESSES KEEP

THEIR GOOD LOOKS.

JAVA-CHINA JAPAN LIJN

REGULAR FORTNIGHTLY SERVICE BETWEEN JAVA, CHINA AND JAPAN.

STSAMER

FROM

EXPECTED ON OF ABOUT

Will Leave You

ΟΔΟΣ ΑΠΟΣ

TJIMANOEK"

BATAVIA

SHANGHAT'

27th Oct.

MAKASSAR

JAPAN

£8th Oct

SHANGBAI

18th Oct.

JAYA

31ab Oct.

* Wireless Telegraphy.

The Steamers are all fitted throughout with Electrio Light and have accommodation for

Many ladies envy their sisters of the TJIKINI It was about midday. The sun blazing theatrical profession, and wonder how down on the crowded flat; on boxes, it is that they retain the girlish freshness The talent vouchsafed to most French-

weich sucks, stevedores wrapped up in all the of complexion, the beaning eyes, and TJIKEMBANG .. women for good management stands thean

The Allies foothold here

mian ner which most in good stead at present, ant, except for

and out of the ships; on gaurga dige wonen lose soon after, nirringe, if not the shortness of labour and an exception wider than that at Ari Buru, Is the variegated rags of the East shuffling in the vivacity of ally wet August, the farm work has gone general landing operations of April zo

piling lumber, boiling water, rocking before.

The secret is simple. It is that on as usual. Wherever there are troops and 20 one fures was sent ashore in a

on horse, ox in the neighbourhood the officers send large collier, from which, after she was soup officers in brown uniforms and inen to help on the farms, and in more benched, the meu poured cross anchored brown lambswool caps; than one case I have known people who lighters to the share-the English and teams, and a vast herd of sheep, which actresses take plenty of exercise, are themselves in had just poured out of a transport and careful as to diet, and pay due attention all women need, at certain times, a'tonio have had the privilege of using the order French had established lies of officer friends for gardening, thus Sedd of Bahr itself and along the clifts spread over the plain, when from the to the commonsense laws of health. That

year

on either side. This position was stren-hill came two shots of warning.

The gangs scattered like water-bugs dicing to build up the nerves, and to round. In other cases where troops have thened during the weeks of fightinghen one to thrown into the water. assist, nature in her work every actress ensuring vegetables for all the not been forthcoming, women landowners which followed until they appeared to have asked for batches of German pribe pretty firmly fixed on the end of the They ran for the hill, dropped into recognises, and that is the reason why soners to work on their farms, and under peninsula, with a front ruming, clean trenches; to the beach and threw then Dr. Williams Pink Pills are so popular the guardianship of French soldiers they across it in a general north-west line selves flat on the sand; into the water-among them. work very well, glad, in many instances, overal kilometres in from the point. all, as they ran, looking their Miss Durathy Ward, for example, who

the Apollo Theatre, London, and is no to be all peaceful labour safe from the The valley wo had just left was about shoulders to where, far overhead; whirred first won fame in The Daitymaids," at seyen miles from Sedd el Baar, and the steadily nearer that tiny, terribly hawk, sholls and shrapnel.

were walking plateari nacross which we led, on the right, up to a ridge from which une could look down on the whole battlefield, or, to the left, straight down into the battle itself..

It is notable that wherever the prae- fical Frenchwoman has to manage her land, hers if she always has the nepes sary, essential things baked after ab the expense of anything ornamental. and where she is obliged to economize strictly she allows no false pride to interfere with her retrenchnum We read of these uld aristocrats who will go on living in the hrane of their forefathers when no- thing is left them but the walls, moulds Furniture, and neglected gardens; but, in reality, the French mind inclines to a much more modern point of view, and when the family fortunes decline they realize on their remaining possessions at retire into smaller and more comfortable quarters. Even when they do live on in their country houses they manage in such a practical way that they do not suffer discomfort, although they have luxury, for the French aristocrat or provincial of the upper middle class is capable of the most amazing self-denial in the litte chings of overyday life.

AN EVERY DAY SCENE.

QU

A hidden battery roared, and pop-regarded as one of the best “principal a little puff of cotton floated in the sky boys in pantomine on the English stage, Another says: "I recognise how valuable. Dr. under the approaching flyer. and another-all the nervous little bat-Williams Pink Pills have been in help teries in the hills round about were ing me to be well and keep well. What rescue The birdman is good for the singer is good for the| coming to our

without audience, that is why I willingly give safely above them, drew flinching. We had looked up at aero public praise to Dr. Williams' Pink Pils. planes many times before and watched it is fully due to them."

All leading medicine dealers through. the pretty chase of the shrapne), and we leaned out from under the awning to

Look, I said, out the world sell Dr. Willians Pink keep the thing in view,

And Fills, for $1.50, 5 bottles for 88, post fee. "she's coming right over us."

from the Dr, Williams Medicine Co., 98, } then, all at once, there was a crash, a

[1093-9 concussion that hit the ear like a blow, Szechury Road, Shanghai.

We could see the end of the peninsula, where the coast curves round from Eski Hisarlik toward Sedd el Baby, and two of the enemy's cruisers steaming slowly back and forth under the cliffs, firing, were hidden under the shore, now they prezamably, as they steamed. Now they con in view, and opposite Eski His

geyser of smoke and dust nad stones sarlik swung round and steamed weat again. In front of us, just over the edge out on the flat in front of us. Through the smoke I saw a horse with its pack of the plateau, which there began to slope downward, were the trenches of the undone and flopping under its belly, Turks left wing, now under bombard-trotting round with the wild niclessness ment. The ridge just hid the shells as of horses in the bull ring after they have they struck, but we could see the smoke been gored. Men were running, and, in from each, now a tall black column, like

a tangle of wagons, half a dozen oxen, of the West, now

on the ground, were giving a few spas- mudic kicks. the "Jack Johnsons a yellowish cloud that hung long after- ward like fug-and with it the continuous Saveral yers ejeruttle of infantry fire.

were creeping about far up against the blue, looking for just such hidden bat us. and out front and to the right teries as that which kept barking behind came the low Br-7-um of heavy guns.

Fighting like this had been going on for weeks; the chips having the advantage of night. their big guns by day, the Turks recover- ing theniselves, apparently, They were on their own ground-a sug cession of ridges, one behind the other- and they could not only always see, but generally looked down on, an enemy, who could not generally see them. And the enemy's men, supplies; perhaps even his water for this is a dry country at all times, but after June there are about no rains must come from his ships.

The sun was shining level down the road as we returned to camp, and soldiers were still tramping pracefully up to the front with their kettles of food."

THE FIRST ALAEM.

Men streaked up from the engine-room and across the wharf-after all, the wharf would be the thing he'd try for and 1 just as there came another crash, but found myself out on the flat with them this time over by the Barbaroese across the bay. Black smoke was pouring from the Turkish cruiser as she got under way, Tessly after, the flyer swung to the south- ward and out of sight.. ad, with the shrapnel puffs chasing hope.

THE TWO AIRMEN Officers were galloping about yelling had struck a man was saving furiously away at the throats of the oxen (there orders; over in the dust where the bomb were seven of them, and there would be any rate); there was a dead horse, two- plenty of beef in camp that night, as badly wounded men, and 100ft. away a man lying on his face, hatless, just as he had been blown there; dead, or good as dead.

OLD-FASHIONED HOSPITALITY. Over all they do there is a bare gance which suggest birth and breed ing, and a certain narrowness of outlook which makes the stranger within the gates always a stranger. The thread- bare hospitality which naturally and simply offers the half of its poor all to alty passing stranger in equivalent cases in England, and still more in Scotland and leeland, is not known in France, for ceremony is attached to the simplest form of entertaining in French country houses of this kind, and when poverty is the ruling power it is not exposed to the common guze. Tais does not mean that there is no doling out i chority

the contrary. the landed proprietor in France dispenses many benefits among his tenguts and the pour of his village In many cases he is the waire of the place and the arbiter of all sputes, He addresses the village maidens in the

It appeared that two airmen had come second person singular, and they reply

from opposite directions and most of the in the third; he sits among the village jocose friendliness elders in a spirit

crowd had seen but the one, while the which never approaches familarity. No

I awoke shortly after daylight, think other dropped the bomb. It had struck man knows better that the old type of French nobleman how to do this, and ning I heard an aeroplane strumming in just outside the busiest part of the camp, woman knows better than the old the distance, and was drowsily wonder-aimed very likely at the stores piled fashioned type of French aristocrat how

crash echoed up the valley. We both six feet wide and three or four feet deep, hurried out it was sunup, a delicious but it had blown everything in the neigh prasant.

morning, and far up against the south-bourhood cut from it, as the captain had ern sky the little speck was sailing back said. Holes you could put your fist in toward the west. There was a flash of were torn in the Banks of the oxen, and the tires of some of the wagons, sixty the just under the flyer-it was

silver biplane and moment later or seventy feet away, had been another crash further away. Neither through like wax. did any damage.

2.8

FORTHCOMING EVENTS.

TO-MORROW

10 am-Italian Convent Bazuar.

Wednesday, 27th Oct.:-

Noon-Hengkong and South China Steam Fisheries Co., Ltd., Meeting of Share. holders.

12.15 p.m.-Hongkong and South China Steam Fisheries Co., Ltd., Extraordinary General Meeting.

Friday, 29th Oct

• limited number of Saloon Fassengers, All steamers carry a duly qualified surgeon. Cargo takes at through rates to all ports in Netherlands India and Australia,"

For Particulars of Freight and Passage, apply to the

York Buildings, let Floor.

Hongkong, 13th October, 1915

JAVA-CHINA-JAPAN LIJN. Telephone No. 1574.

THOS. COOK & SON.

TOURIST, STEAMSHIP AND FORWARDING AGENTS.

BANKERS, &c.

Head Office for the Far East — 16, DES VEUX BOAD, HONGKONG. SHANGHAI, 2-3, FuochoW ROAD, YOKORAMA, 52, Water STREAT MANILA-MANILA HOTEL.

TICKETS SUPPLIED to EUROPE by the principal STEAMSHIP LINES

TRANS-SIBERIAN RAILWAY.

TUURS arranged to ALL PARTS of the WORLD. BAGGAGE collected, forwarded and insured at lowest rates. LETTERS of CREDIT and CIRCULAR NOTES ISSUED and CASHED, FOREIGN MONIES Exchanged,

(૪

Cook's "FAR EASTERN TRAVELLER'S GAZETTE," containing Sailings and Fares from the Far East to all parts of the World, will be forwarded free on application.

CHIEF OFFICN:—LUDGATE CIRCUS, LONDON, EC. Hoogkong, 3rd July,1914,

VISITORS AT HOTELS.

HOXOKONG HOTEL

Mr Geo. E. Anderson

r & Mrs F. I. d

Alemda e Castro

·

Mi›ad Almada e Castro

5.15 p..-Hongkong Club Extmordinary Meeter d Almada o

Castro General Meeting. Baturday, 30th Oct.

Neon--Hongkeng Jockey Club, Half-Yearly

Meeting. 2p.m. Ministering Children's Lengue Bazar. Wednesday, 3rd Nov, 1-

2.15 p.m.-Meeting of the Licensing Beard

in the Conneil Chamber.

*O* GKONG

MITEO 'OLOGICAL REGISTER

Hongkong Otservatozy, October 21sk

to deal with the old type of French wg whether or not it was fanor, when a there. It had made a hole only five or | Barometer zomerenc

For, the modern spirit of democracy however, they have a natural spirit of antagonism, and since the war began "hey have taken care to end and the advantages of the old régime vrlour of the old French blood from which have sprung some of France's finust soldiers. Their loyalty to their Church is also emphasized, and the fine qualities of the soldier priests, as well as the staying powers of the village cures under severe tests of personal courage, have helped them in their support of Catholic France.

Where the landed proprietors are well off and the situation of the great house allows of it hospitals and convalescent homes have been arranged, and almost ita has château everywhere tive

d'Uzès, ouvroir; the Duchesse Duchesse de Rohas, the Comtesse da

11

Temperature Humidity......

Pravion On Dat Os Date

ཏྲྰཾ「3geÄཕཨྰཿ.i

MrJ. H. Back hunte Mr J. H. Baring Mr H. Murray Enio Mr K. E. Beli ios E R. Balition

Mr G. D. J. Bell

Mr& Mrs. I erube'm

and child

Mr G. Honman

Mr. W E, kaw.zman Mr B Brod by

My 3 P. Bow. S

Mr & MR.

and obsia

Mr G. G. Carey

Mad. Ce ile

Mr H: Chetham

Mr C. Clampkin

Collet

Mr F. Chsby sto Dr W. H. Dade

江江版

Mr & Mrs F. E Davis Mr F. 8. Dougless Mr & MR. K.

L'ouglass

Mr J. M. Do nieon Miss M. E. Duffy

J. E. Edward

Mr H. Maricko

DAY •nt

(at 2 p.m2) 6.-8.00

19.92 2994

82

71

15

Wind Direction

Force Weather

Ent

EN 6

4

*

ed

tain

14

cut

Highen spes air Temperatae.on Oba Lowest open wir Tomapezkiers on 20 à

€2

77

Dr G. H. L

william's

Fitz

HONGKONG TIDE TABLE.

Ferm 22nd to 28th October.

We

EIGE War

With a curious sense that the bottoni A few minutes later we were looking haul somehow fallen out of things-even at the remains of the bomb and propeller- the blue above was treacherous-and that like winge, whose whirling, as it falls, one of those things which only happen opens a valve that causes it to explode to other people not only could, but was on striking its mark. Until it had fallen going to, happen to us right here and a certain number of motres, mere striking now, we watched the men go back to

even went for a swim, the ground would not explode it-work and the afternoon wear on. device to protect the airman in case of accident to his machine or if he is forced to make a quick landing.

with

THE RUDE DOME THROWER.

Barn, the Marquise de Ganay are among by the tethered horses, our aerial visitor I watched that little speck buzzing those who have done good work in this way, and less well-known women can be named by the score who have given wisely and generously to the great task of nursing the French soldiers and supply ing them with necessaries and comforts when they are in the trenches.

Where there are young people in the family the life of the house itself is not allowed to fall into monotony, for the claims of the children in France are al- Thus ways recognized as paramount the family life go on much the same within the strid privacy of the home. The little girls, go on with their music and dancing, the little boys with their studies and sporte, the maida keep the linen chests in the same perfect order. and the English" Miss" doos all the odd jobs. Only the superfluous things of life, have been put down, and when the time comes to take them up again there will be no confusion.

3

Winek

Month

Day

Height

H'Long.

Mean Time

b, m. ft.in.

220

Low WATER.

Holght. ↑

21

3 6311 2 3 17

Mrs Sturt Fo ler Lieat.-Comdr. & Mas

V. N. Gascoine Mr J. Gibb

Mr V. Gouldboarn Mr & Mr W.

Hannibal

Capt T. P. Hall MD. K. Har.wick

A.

Mr J. M. Havor Hon. Mr.E. A. Hameit

O.M.G

Mr W. J. Hodge MrL G. Bolgate

Mr & Mrs BB Howell

Er R. B. Jepson

H'kong.

Mesu

Time

h m

it in

Capt Hoperoi

3 a 2 32

25

8 30

2 29

3 1

Mr J. S C. Hunt

・北

23 m 9 41

8 60 7 2 24.10 34 5 6 911 7 4 25m 11 21 5 2

60

m 3 13

Mr Robert Hante

2 54 a 3 3

Capt R. Inzes

9 33 7 6

26

0134

3 1616

9 56 x 7.6

f.d

27

1 1 4 5 m 6

a 4 0 20

10 82a 7 5 9 54 a 4-2

10 54 7 4 Dor low

2 2 water

KING. BOWARD Hotel.

36 4 34 1 7 8373 8.

Mr & Mre Kubn Miss Lambdes air W. D). Les

Mr E. C. Norris Mr Lentor

Mr P. a. Maal od

In the fresh, still morning, with the

At every unexpected noise one looked camp, just waking up and the curious upward, and when about 5 o'clock the Turkish carry-combs olinking away over crowd scattered again, I will confess that added only a pleasant excitement to this hearer, ou a line that would bring him: straight overhead, with an interes con- life in the open, and we went on our dressing with great satisfaction,

Thero atar little dreaming how soon we were to look siderably lees casual than any i had we were, confined in our little amphi- differently.

theatre; there was that diabolical bird at one of those little flying specks quits bestowed on these birds before,

peering down at us, and in another INCOMPLAINING FATALISTU. We breakfasted with the colonel in his minute, somewhere in that space, would oa.

that earth-shaking explosion-a arbour on bread and ripe olives and tea, come end walked with him round the camp, mingling of crash and who! Thore through a hospital, and into an old farm-was no escaping it, no dodging it, no house yard, where the gunsmiths were thing to get under but empty air..

I had decided that the beach, about going over stacks of captured guns and damaged rifles of the wounded, while hundred yards away from the wharves, har 28 No infer high-m8 55 the bees left behind in some clumsy old was the safest place and hurried there box-hives buzzed away as of yore Wiser but the speck overhead, as if anticipat than men, the colond bserved. There ing me, seemed to be aiming for the were English Enfields French rifles precise spot. It is difficult under such of the early nineties, and a mitrailleuse circumstances to si: tight, reasoning

new calmly that after all the chances of the Mrs R Aimond to which the Turks had fitted

were rifles with bomb's not landing exactly there are a J. 8. Barnes wooden base. There

bored good many to one you demand at least Mr W. Badge smashed barrels. with stooks through by bullets (clean-cut holes that the ostrichlike satisfaction of having r & Mr. T. S. Cheng must have gone on through the men who something overhead. So I scurried over rat. La Cooke A farge number of beautiful estates held them live men like ourselves) to the left to get out from under what is J. F. Cooke and small properties have been utterly quick choking instants of terror, the seemed his line of flight, when what Masters G. M. & J. F.

was really rubbing it in a hit. To fly Mr J. H. Cook destroyed in the north, and many pain- ghosts of which we were poking and should he do but begin to turn! This ful stories are told by those to whom they peering into thero in the

across as he had that morning was one Mr A. Course once belonged. I heard one woman sy eine!

We said goodbye to the colonel, for thing, but to pen one up in a nice little J. H. Darizon the other day that every family souvenir

family our passes took us but to the valley, and pocket in the bills, and then on a radius Mr R. G, Deane haxi gose; family papers,

relics thousand

of he had stretched a point in sending us of three or four thousand yards circle Mr F. F. Dunkworth

round over one's head-anything yet W. T. Elson portraits,

have

down the They

plateau the evening before. past. prosperons

Mr F. E. Fraser another. I heard

The boat we went by was the devised by the human nightmare was dra C. Foo And gine!

little paddle steamer we had come crude and immature to this.

dr C. Fritz one mansion,

Fas it overhead? No, behind, but it whose parental those old houses which began small and down on, crowded with wounded now, grew large with the growing prosperity mud-stained, blood-stained, just as they was travelling at 50 or 60 miles on hour, had come from the trenches across the and the bomb would carry forward-just of succeeding generations, had been on- tirely destroyed with the great factories water, with no space to lie but the bare enough probably to bring it over; and deck. The stifling hold was packed with if over, still the bomb would be several which had built up the family wealth.

them; they curled up about the engine seconds in falling-it might be right on To know that such days can

Award or forward? Here was a place, in come again is depressing, and only less room grating for it was cold that top of us now! Should we ran back- of between some grain bags. But the grain sad than the tales we hear of the poor night-yet there was no complaint. villagers whose every means of subsis tired sigh now and then, a moan tence has gone with the destruction of weariness, and the soldier wrapped bis bags were open toward the wharf, and their little house and bit of land. Life army overcoat a little closer about him, the wharf was what he was aiming st. Mr T. R. Janes is flying on a very broken wing for such curled up like a dog on a doormat, and and a plank blown through you- No, J. Joseph

left the rest to fate. A big round, yellow the trench was the thing, but Quick, | Mi D. Lubder as these, and war is a very real problem.

moon climbed up out of Asia and poured he is overhead.

PROPERTIES DESTROYED.

of

вечег

50

BLITY Warm

Cooko

Mr. V. Meyer Mr.J. Masning

Mr H. Murphy Mr & Mrs Newman- Mrs W. C. Passmore Mrs R A. Ramusay Mr C. E Richadies Mra Robson my L. R. Sawyer. Mr E. M. S eighTM Mrs D G. Smith Mr C H. Soper Mr H. F. Stoneham Mrs Gee

Mrs Sylves er rT. M. Gregory

Mr H. O Taylor Mr E Grieve Me T. Gann

Mrs E. L. Tourtellot children r&Mrs Hammes and Mr H. Thornton

Mr & Mr J. b MrJ. H. Holma

Underwood M&H

Jackson

My K. C. Loo

Wa.

Mr D. H. Wech il Mr & Mrs J. Witchell

Mr Wong Mr A. Youngton

IRAK

Hr W. Armstrong Mrs Bowdler

Mr & Mr. Carmichael Ar F. W. Cary Mr&Mrs C. D.Casulli

Lt & Mm Looney Mr & Mrs A. Consland Col. Darling FRE Mr Denman Foller Mr & Mis Dobis Mr & Mrs B. A. Hats Capt & Are somond

and child Mr & Mrs W. T.

Hansen Mr B. W. Hind Mrs T. J. E. Johns Mr Lee Jone M Lembelet

Mr E. M. Jesoph Mrs A. Johnston Mr E. F. Janson Mr G.J, King

Mr A. M.Kirby

Mr W. n injung

Mr C. auritaen

Mr C. C L

Mr G. 1'. Lloyd

MS Longfield

Mr & Mis J. L. Mar-

Birg

· 596

VESSELS ON THE BERTH

THE PENINSULAR AND ORIENTAL STEAM NAVIGATION COMPANY.

STEAM FOR STRAITS, CEYLON

EGYPT, AUSTRALIA,... · ADEN,

MEDITERRANEAN PORTS

AND LONDON.

THROUGH BILLS OF LADING ISSUED FOR BATAVIA, AMERICAN, CONTIMENTAL, AND SOUTH AFRICA PORTS.

Mr & Mrs W. Manning THE MEDİP Dr & Mr O. Marriot Mr. G. M Tor

Mr S. M. Hayes Mr D. Mo Murray,

Dr G. M MoKesn

Mr J. Miermoki Mr B. K. Mahta

Mr H. Moldea

Mr H, I. Morgan Capt H. E. Morton Mr Wm. moore Mr & Mre I, Monsley Mr & Mrs W.

Neighbour

H.

E M.

Mr A. Nisam

Mrs Nise m Mr J. Ormiston My Jas. O miston Yra, J. wher Mr & Mrs

Kaymend Mr Him. May Mine F. Res Mrs C. Rends Mr & Mrs R Salle Mr & Mrs R Shew Mr & Mra C. A. Shop-

Pay Mrs Whoker

Mr T. W. Siminous

Mr A. Elegh

Mr Y. Sorby

Mr O. HI. Spit Im My C. P. Sattheay Mr II. H. Taylor Mr J. H. Toorne Mr C, B. Wai's Mr C. E. Watkinson Mr W. H. Wenyon Mr J. Wilkie

Mr G. G. Wood Dr & Mr. Lindsay

Mad Cecil Wright

HOTEL.

Major Morgan Mr & Mrs Moss and

oblid

Mrs MacGowan and

childien

Mrs OinecraLB. Mr 1. L. Perkins Mr & Mrs J. Plumme Me U. akott Mr & Mrs Grant

Amilt

Mr & Mrs A, Finding

Smith Cajt& Mrs Stow.rt MF & E. Stew.rt M. 8. Stockm.st Mrs W. E. Tisvall Mr. Tisd Mr Ji A. Traba Mra V. Martin and Maj. Gen. Voutris

childre

RAND HOTEL

Mr E. M. Abbəti Mr G. Angelo Mr J, U. Anker My C. R. Arut Mr C. H. Booth EBr.tt Mr A. B. La Mr A. Dunrich Mr. P. S. Tan Dyk`· Mr C. J. de Gran Mr K 8. Hassel Me F. G. Huma EMB. James -

Mr. & Mrs Joinston

and chil`rin -My J. de Klers -

Mr W. Lawrie

- Mr J. Manteiro

Mim), May My P. Philipp MYU W. Buynolds

Mr E. Brau My J. Smith Mr J. K. 8. Stanton My & his J. B. - tobo Mr G. L. Stock mult Mr H. F. Thorig

Mr Vren W. B, Tan Ma E J. Wola Mr & Mr C, E,

Whiting

Mr S. 4. Wright

"MALTA,” ̈Capkair G. C. Talbot, EN.E., carrying His Majesty's Meila, will te despatched from

OP this port on

about the 32.d Oot be, 1945, taking Passengers and Moils for the above Porta, in connection with the Co's 5.5. "KHTBER, from Colombe, passengers accommodation in which vessel is secured before departure from Hongkong,

Silk and Valuables and Tee and Cargo for Italy France and London (under arrange Iment) will be transhipped at Colombo into the Mail Steamer proceeding via Bombay to Marseilles and London. Other Cargo for Bombay London, eto, will be conveyed. vik, and frenshipped to the s. "PERSIA, due in London about the 4 à Dec., 1913.

Parcels will be received at the Oes

The antil 4 r. the day before sailing. contents and value of all pokages are required.

For further particulars, aprit to

E. A. HEWETT.

Superintendent. -

[1 Hongkong, 8 h October, 1915,

HONGKONG NEW. YORK.

REGULAR SAILINGS TIA PORTS and SUEZ and PANAMA CANALS.

(WITH LIBERTY TO CALL AT THE MALABAR Coiar.)

For NEW YORK VIA PANAMA CANAL, 3.8. "SAINT BEDE,"

02. or about 26th October, It is innded to desp tch the above s.esmer r gerve the

is Panama Canal, but Ow_ery right of procved ng vis any other route nod all Liberties as pr Billot-L-ding,...

(0

For Freight and farther Information, apply

DODWELL & Co., Erp.. Agents.

Angkong, 13th October, 115:

THE BANK LINE, LTD.

FOR SAN FRANCISCO.

HE Steamakip

"INVERIC," Captain A. Wallace. 4,789 tons, will despatched sa above on WEDNESDAY 17th November,

For Freight and farther particulars, apply to

THE BANK LINE, LTD.,

Managing Agents, Hongkong, 22nd September, 1915. [1009

%

GLEN LINE (McGREGOR, GOW

& Co.), LIMITED.

FOR GENOA ONLY.

THE Steamship

THE

"GLENGYLE."

Captain H. Webster, will be despatched, for the above port on or about the 30th Nov, 1915

For freight, passage and further information, *pply to

SHEWAN, TOMES & Co.,

Agente

Hongkong 4th October, 1915

[105]

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