1915-11-17 — Page 6

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PURES BLOOD ROBON, DAD ZEGE, SKIN_EXUPTORS, S

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THERAPION

AKD

SLARKED WORD 'THERAVIÓN” IS ON

TEAN ZOLL GENOŻNE JACKETS

INNIET ON

ATHBLAPION..

WEATHER REPORT.

THE HONGKONG DAILY PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 17TH, 1915.

On the 16th at' 12.06 am.—Prease bas in creased sligtly one S Chite, Formoen and Appam; it has decrented elsewhere, especially over Japan.

The anti-cyclone remains stationary and has woskened, A depression is situated to the eonth of the Bonis.

- Moderato to fresh sastaly winds will provail over the n rth part of the Chí.n Seù,

Hongkong rainfall for the 24 hours ending at 10 am, to-day, 0.01 incher.

The forsomt for the 24 hours ending av nướ to-day in an follow

DistBioT

Formosa Channel.

Розпод (East winds, mo. Bougkong & Neighbourh, oderate to fresh

cloudy

N,E. winds,

fresh. South coast of China between The ́samé as

No. 1. Hongkong and Laroska. Į South coast of Chins betweenƒThe same€ M

No, L Hongkong and Hamen..

CHINA COAST

Station.

METEOROLOGICAL

REGISTER.

18TH NOVEMBER A.1,

Hour.

Fre Level. Barometer

Iemperature.

Humidity.

Vladvustooking for

Nemuro

Linkodate HIM

Tokio ............14IR-

Kocha

Wind

Direction

Wher

*.3034

50.36

30.50'

DAI BILAN

30. a

NEW WEW

Nagasaki

1 335)

Kagoshiza

30 27

Ophirms aweso

30.20

30 10

ANE

Labs'j nonin Is. ..... Chefoo Weibalwe in

ARSENA

30.03

29 73

HanBOWROTNO

Ichang hinking Changaba

phanghai) Gutalai Suary

Amoy

Owato

Peak...

Taihoku...

80.12 5693 | NW | 4

20.1703100) EBA 130.1500

30.07 70 97

NNE

a 30.76990 NE

929.97 757

6. 30.02 72

299972

29 08

N

208)

すす #

Taichu...........

Tainan *****

Koshun

Leboadores

Canton ......... 6 .50 10)

Hoogkong

Gap Rook

Alacso

Wuchow

Holbow gen Pakhol

Phutan.********! Tourene. Cape St. James "Apatzi | Dagupan or Maails ...-- Legaspi som. Tailoban NAS

Surigao ..... Labien

300274

-

29.9% 12

д

30 08

1985

129.26 74 29.6179 89.70 37 96 39.20, 77 90

29.78' 76 91 RADIO-TELEG RAMS.

29.81'75 | 84

N

U b 10

ENE 3 o N 3 b

+ Tjisondari... 6 a 29,95 19

Hurano Maru 3003-

Lat. 11.39 N. Long. 116.20 E.

† Lat. 4.8 N Gong. 119.14 E.

C. W. Jeepsies, Director,

1 BABOMBERS, reduced to 32 degrees Fahrenhei on the level of the wes to Inoben, tenthe sad kundrodička.

↑ Takendaturn, in the shade, in degress

Fahrenbeis,

8 HUMINCTY, in peromiage of maturation, the oumidity of air saturated with moisture baleg 10,

• DIAMOTION OF Wixo, to two pointa, S-FORCH OF WIRD, nocording to Banufort Boula.

₺ STATH OF Wxarxan, b blue sky, ́u detached sionă, d delasting rain, f "fog, a gloomy, h hall, a | lightning, o ovozdais, p pssung showers, a aqust,

z rain, kanow, i thunder, v visibility, wdów (wat).

7 Bam in Inches, i testhu and hundredths,

HONGKONG TIDE TABLE.

From 17th to 23rd November.

HIGH WATER

Month

B'kong.

Mean

Time

Height

LOW WATEL

Erkong.

Mean Tizne

Hoight.

WITH THE GRAND FLEET closed into much shertor sange. Since decks in those eitleg of stool, one foliowo was to that eventuality; super-drilled then, we had bad the new method of ed the guide, receiving so much informu all the others through the years, till ench marksmanship. Tsushima ceased to below and so many impression, that one one know his part as well as one knows BY FREDERICK PALMER.

a criterion. The Doggor Bank multiplied was confused as to details between the how to turn the key of his drawer in hi hit of their own gung at battle practice, the range by five. A hundred years since two veterans, the Lion, which was hit 15 desk. Used to the shock of the discharges England, all the while the most power-times, and the Tiger, which was fully-armed nation at sea, had been in eight. Wherever you wont every square many of the crew did not even kno a naval war of the first magnitude; and ineb of space and every bit of equipment that their ship was hit, so preoccupied was each with his own duty, which was to the Lion and the Tiger had cumio de Beed to serve some purpose. teat. The Germans said that they had sunk the Tiger; but the Tiger afloat pur- red a contented denial.

[REPRINTED FROM THE TIMES.''] Mr. Frederick Folmer, the American war correspondent, was a member of party of distinguished foreign journalists who visited the Grand Fleet in August and September last at the invitation of the British Government. The visit, of which Mr. Palmer gives his impressionis, was the first and only one which has been paid by any journalists to the Fleet

since the outbreak of war.

I.

SHIPS THAT HAVE FOUGHT, Bat was that really it? That spread of greyisu blue-green dots set on a huge grey18 blue-green platter One could not discern where ships began and water and sky, which held them suspended, left. Invisible dect it had been called, At first glauca it seemed to be composed of batlling phantom, absorbing the roue of its background. Admiralty scoreey must be the result of a naval dislike of publicity,

SIR DAVID BEATTY. One could not fail to identify among

the group of officers of the quarter-deck Vice-Admira Sir David Beatty, for his victory had impressed his features on the public's eye. Had his portrait not ap peared in the Press, one would have been inclined to say that a first lieutenant had put on a vice-admiral's coat by mistake, He was about the age of the first ieu tenant of our own battleships,

A vice-ndmiral at forty-four! A w who is a rear admiral with us at fifty five very precocious. And all the men around him were young.

The British Navy did not wait for war to teach again the lesson of youth for action!" They saved time by putting youth in charge at once.

A beautiful bit, Indeed, was that into to go on with it until an order or a shell's Every mind whi small hooded aperture where an ob-havoc stopped him, server looked out from a turrets Ho was closed except to the thing which had been killed and another man took his plnes.so established by dril in bis nature that Fresh armour and no sign of where the be did it instinctively.

Thon below, into a A few minutes later one was looking. shot had strack. compartment between the side of the down from the upper bridge on the top ship and the armoured barbette which of this turret and the black-lined plank- protects the delicate machinery for feeding of the deck eighty-five feet below ing shell, and powder from the maizazine with the sweep of the firm lines of the side, converging toward the buy on the deep below the water to the guns.

Hwas killed here. Impact of the back-ground of the water. Suddenly the shell passing through the outer plates ship seemed to have grown large, impres

structure had a rock-like burst it inside; and of course, the frag sive her

Her beauty was In her un- menty struck harmlessly against the bar-solidity,

adorned strength. One was absorbing the betle

Bang in the dugout!" one exclaimed, majesty of a city from a cathedral tower from army habit.

after having been in its thorougfare, and Precisely.

done next on the detail of its throbbing industry, No harm

Beyond the Lion's bow were more ships. door"

Trench traverses nud funk-pit shel- and port and starboard and aft were The compass range ters" for localizing the effects of shell still more ships. bursts are the terrestrial expression of filled the eye with the stately precision marine construction. No one shell hap- of the many squadrons and divisions of pened to get many men either on the leviathans. One could see all the Flert.

on or the Tiger. But the effect of the This seemed to be the scenic climax

we were to learn later burst was felt in the passages, for the it was not, as air-pressure is bound to be pronunced when we should see the Fleet go to sea. in enclosed spaces which allow of little Then we were to behold the mountaing di room for the expansion of the gases,

Then up more ladders out of the electric light into the daylight, hugging a wall of armour whose thickness was revealed in the cus made for the small Now you were in one of the brain-centres doorway which you were hidden to enter. of the ship, where the action is directed Through slits in that massive shelter of Night and day they must be on watch.

the hardest steel one had a narrow view. No easy-chairs; their ship is their home.

Above them on

were the white wall They must have the vitality that endures silhouetted diagrams of the different a strain. One error in battle by say one of them might wreck the British Empire.ypes of Gerinan ships, which one found in all observing stations. They were the It is difficult to write about any man-

most popular form of mural decoration of war and not be teclinical; for every-in the British Nury. thing about her scems technical and me

Underneath the slits WBS a literal Homogeneity!" Another favourite chanical except the fact that she floats.

rooms. Here it was applied in the large. Her officers and crew are engaged in panoply of the brass fittings of speaking word, I remember, from our own ward- tubey and levers and push-buttons, which work which is legerdemain to the civilian would have puzzled even the City Ex-No experimental ships there, no freak Was it like what you thought change girl. To look at them revealed variations of type, but each successive would he after all your training for anothing more than what the eye saw; type as a unit of action. Homogeneous, naval action ? one asked.

Still as if they were rooted, these leviathans!

Their simple uniforms, the directness, How could such IB shy.

these peaceful-looking array send out broad-alertness, and definiteness of sides of 12 and 13.5 and 15-inen shells officers, who had been with a fleet ready What a paradise for a German sub-for a year to go into battle on a minute's marine! Each snip seemed an inviting notice, were in keeping with their sur target. Only there were wany gates and

roundings of decks cleared for action doors to the paradise, closed to all things and the absence of anything which did not suggest that hitting a target was the that travel on and under the water with-

business of their life, Submarinca out proper identification. that had tried to pick one of the locks. were like the fish who found going good into the trap. A submarine had about the same chance of reaching that ao- chorage as a German in the uniform of the Death's Head Hussars, with a bomb under his urm, of reaching the vaults of the Bank of England.

And was this all of the greatest naval force ever gathered under a single com mand, these two or three lines of ships? Bua as the destroyer drew nearer the question changed How many more

as there no end to the greyish blue. green monsters, in order as precise as the dreea of a Cantornia, orchard, that ap- peared out of the greyish blue-green back ground First to claim attention was the Queen Elizabeth, with her 10 13in. guns on a platform which could travel at nearly the speed of the average rail

road train

I had heard that you look your ad; mirals from the schoolroom," said one of the Frenchmen, "but I begin to believe that it is the nursery."

"Yes, quite pretty much as we rea-nothing more than the face of a watch reveals of the character of its works. soned it out," was, the reply, Inderd, this was the most remarkable thing. ItThere was no telling how they ran in duplicate below the water-line or under was battle practice--with the other follow the protection of armour to the guns and shooting at you!

the engines.

The contrast of sea and land warfare appealed the more vividly to one fresh The fire-control officers; who were aloft, from the front in France. What infinite all agreed about one unexpected sensation, labour for an army to get one big gun which had not occurred to any expert into position! How heralded the snail-scientifically predicting what action like travels of the big German howitzer 1 would be like. They are the only ones Here was ship after ship, whose guns who may really see the battle in the seemed innumerable. One found it hard füll sense. to realize the resisting power of their armour, painted to look as liquid as the armour," said one of these officers, the sea, and the stability of their construc-fragments were visible as they flew about tion, which was able to bear the strain We had a desire, in the midst of our of firing the great shells that travelled preoccupation with our work, to reach 10 miles to their target.

out and catch them. Singulár mental phenomenon, wasn't it?"

When the shells burst against the

a man

"We got one in here, too. It was a

paid the host. good one

Junk, of course," was low be ex- pressed the result. Here, too, man who was killed, just as the first stepped forward to take the place of the lieutenant takes fe place of a captain infantry who falls. With the whole telephone apparatus blown off the wall, as it were, how did be communicate?

There The host pointed toward an opening at his feet. If that failed there was still another way. In the final At eight or nine thousand yards one alternative, each turret could go on bring So the Germans must have by itself. knew that the modern battleship, could done on the Bucher and on the Greise tear a target to pieces, But eighteen.

na and the Acharnhorst in their last thousand-was accuracy possible at that ghastly moments of bloody chaos, distance 1

Did one in five Germin shells hit at that range?" I asked.

No!"

If this is carried away and then that is, why, then, we have as one had heard officers say on board our own often

Here ships. But that was hypothesis.

the march.

seaman,

who

One glanced back at the deck and around the bridge with a sort of relief. The infinite was making one dizzy. One wanted to be in touch with the Buite practical, hardened again. But it is the writer, not the affected in this way. To the seaman here was a battle cruiser with her sister battle. cruisers astern, and there around her were Dreadnoughts of different types and pre-Dreadnoughts and cruisers and all manner of other emft which could fight each in its way, each representing so much speed and so much metal which could be thrown a certain distance,

The

yes remorselessly homogeneous. British do not simply build some ships: they build a Navy, And, of course, the experts are not satisfied with it; if they were, the British Navy would be in a bad way. But a layman was; he was over- whelmed.

MAKERS OF HISTORY,

SIR JOHN FRENCH AND HIS MEN.

An interesting and picturesque account

French is contained in a letter which of an inspection at the front by Sir John Alderman J. Ranson, of Battersea, Jas received from his son, Lance Corporal J. W. Ranson, who is serving with the Bri. tish Expeditionary Force in France.

Describing the ceremony, the writer says **

It was raining when we marched intu the square, trodden into mud by the passage of then and horses, but, as the hour came when the Field Marsha yaa expected, the rain ceased, and a strag ging beam of sunshit broke through

Then came Sir John

I have heard many

SEA-POWER AND LAND-POWER.

Sea-power, indeed! And world-power ton, there in the hollow of a nation's haud, to throw in whatever, direction she pleased. It an American had a lump his throat at the thought of what it nicant, what might it not mean to aIL Englishman? Probably the Englishman would say, "I think that the fleet is all

Or in ton No! In twenty Still was demonstration, which made a glimpse the heavy clouds, right, don't you?"

no, though less decisively. One got, a

of the Lion and the Tiger so interesting. French. He stood on the fourth side of On the Continent conviction, then, that the day of holding The Lion had had a narrow escape from the square, with his staff around him- Land-power, too! vast armies wrestled for sume square your fire until you were close in enough going down after being hit in the feed a little insignificant-looking many, in a miles of earth. France has, say, three for a large percentage of hits wae past tak, but once in dry docks, all her brown cap unadorned by badges of rank million soldiers; Germany, five; Aus- Accuracy was still vital and decisive, but damaged parts had been renowed. Par in the shape of band, and a mackintosh, to while behind him stood some of the best tria, four-and England had perhaps, not absolute accuracy. At eighteen thou-ticularly, it

required imagination hundred thousand men, perhaps more sand yards all the factors which send realize that this tower had ever been brains of Britain. on board this feet, which defended the thousand or fifteen hundred or two thou-

The ranks stiffened to attention, and visually, more convincing was a struck; English land and lands far over seas sand pounds of steel that long distance plate eiserhere which had been left un he began to speak. without bring a shot. A battalion of in- cannot be so gauged that each one will painted, showing a spatter of dents from fantry is more than sufficient in numbers strike in exactly the same line when ten shell-fragments. to man a Dreadnought How precious, issue from the gun-muzzles in a broad- then, the skill of that crew! Man-power side. But if one out of twenty is on at is as concentrated as gun-power with a eighteen thousand yards, it may mean navy. Ride 300 miles in an automobile a turret out of action. Again, four or along an army front, with glimpses of five might hit, or none. So, no risk of units of soldiers and you have seen hittle waiting may be taken, in face of the of a modern army.

"Here moving down danger of a chance shot at long range. the lanes that separated these grey It was a chance shot which struck the fighters, one could compass the whole! Linn's feed tank and disabled her and

Four gold fetters, spelling the word Lion awakened the imagination to the reality of the Blücher turning her bottom skyward before she sank off the Doggers Bank under the fire of the guns of the Lion and of the Tiger, astern of het to the Princess Royal, and the eu

kept the cat squadron from doing to the other German cruisers what they had done to the Blacher.

"We thought that we ought to have something to prove that we had been in battle," said the host. I think I've shown all the hits. There were not many."

METHODS OF GUNFIRE.

speeches, some by orators whose fame is

more than national, but I bave never heard a speaker quite like Sir John. Ha speaks very slowly, in a voice that carries well, and I suppose no one ever spoke in quite such a way, to quite such an audience, before,

You may have thought, when you have fought so gallantly, day after day, Having seen the results of German in the trenches, that you were doing su I don't want any man to think that, gun-fire we were next to see the methods good, of British gun-fire; something of the guns and the men who did things to the Ger- So he began, and one could see the And the noise of it to you aduft of the turret armour from the barbette shoulders as he spoke, while over the mans. One stooped under the overhang stiffening of back and a squaring of spotting the shots?" I suggested.I and climbed up through an opening already quiet ranks there fell a deeper must have been a lonely place in such a

To make charges when one is which allowed no spare room for the hush. tornado,

You could tell ?"

latest aproved type; but it had been in the ship. It was like other guns of the action, and one kept thinking of this fact which gave it a sort of majestic prestige. One wished that it might look a little different from the others, as the right

of a veteran.

"The battle in which you have been engaged, and which you have fo You have enabled the British and French Then it was that one realised Armies to make a successful attack else where. that these men had made history. Just a few more phrases, and the speaker THE GUN-LAYER'S PART. finished, and someone called for Threa The plugman's is the most showy part; cheers for the Field-Marshal."

"Yo gods! how the square rang! I others playing equally important parts doubt not that in this quiet French are in the cavern below the turret; and village some back-mators of history have most important of all is that of the man,

Zealand; to the latest fashion is battle- "Yes. Besides the crashing blasts generously built, and out of the. dim excited anyone can do that; but trenak light appeared the glint of the massive warfare that reeds all the qualities of a cruiser squadrons which are known as from, our own guns we had the screams the "cat squadron. This work brought of the shells that went over and

steel breech-block and gun, set in its soldier.'" the

It seemed that the speaker was anxi- heavy recoil mountings with roots of steel them into their own; proved how the cataracts of water from those short supports sunk into the very structure of us to do Full justice, and more than British, who built the first Dreadnought, sprinkling the ship with spray. have kept a little ahead of their rivals this was what one expected. Everything

justice, to his hearers. in construction. With almost the gun was what, one expected, except that desire power of Dreadnoughts, better than three to catch the fragments. Naturally, one to two against the best battleships, with was too busy to think much of anything the speed of cruisers and capable of over except the enemy's ships-to learn where whelming cruisers, or of pursuing any your shells were striking." b. m. Itin b. m. ft. in, battleship, or getting out of range, they Red. 17m 5:58.

60 m 0 5 4 0

can run or strike, as they please. 047

Ascend that gangway so amazingly Ther. 18 7 4

clean, as were the decks above and below 7 10

and everything about the Ion or the 19m 8 4 Frt.

Tiger, and you were on board one of the 7 53 7 0

few major ships which had been under- Batur, 20m 8 57

Leavy fire. Her officers and men knew: 7 58 7. 4 1 41 3 5 what modera naval war was like; her. -21m 9 47 Im 3 91 8

guns knew the difference between 19

wall of cloth of a towed target and an 22 m 10 36

223

Jan,

Mon.

Scientific

6 2 09A 2 7 5 7 m 1 4 3 4

6 6 1 0 42 al 3 5

2 8

153

1 12

Am

2:30

7 6 2 83 7 8 m 3 471.6

7 8 2323 8 4 6m 4 2014 3 0

enemy's wall of armour,

the.

In the Battle of Tsushima Straits the Russian and Japanese ships had fought at three and four thousand yards and

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Yes. Just as well and better than at target practice; for the target was larger and solid. It was enthralling, this; watching the flight of our shells toward their target."

+

order t

THE SCARS OF BATTLE.

In common

who keeps the gun on the target, whose sometimes rippled, bat these women and Where were the sears from the wounds? true right eye may send twenty-five thou children who leaned out of their windows sand tons of battleship to perdition. No have seen something that they may well One looked for them on both the Lion one eye of any enlisted man can be as tell to those who come after, so long as and the Tiger. That armour patch on the sloping top of a turret might have important as the gun-layer's. His the the old market-place lies drowsing in sun. eye and the nerve trained as finely as the They have seen the thin band of heroes; been escaped attention if it had not

He does nothing they have seen something of the spirit plugman' muscles.

of England; but more than that, they pointed out. A shell struck there and a else, thinks of nothing else.

have seen in their day a little unassum fair blow, too. And what happened with painters and poets, gun-layers are side? Was the turret gear put out of born with a gift, and that gift is trained ing man, whose army is greater, whose and trained and trained. It seeing simple task is barder, but whose success is surer To one who has lived in a wardroom to keep right on, but it is not. Try than ever was. the case with that other store of questions were on the tongue twenty men in the most rudimentary test end. The turret is the basket which holds and you will fed that it is not; then idealised. precious eggs. A turret out of action means two guns out of action; a broken think of the nerve it takes to keep right oe in battle, with your ship shaken by kauckle for the pugilist

hits. Constructors have racked their brains the enemy's over the subject of turrets in the old his job? Six years. And the gun-layer i How long had the plugman been en contest between gun-power and protec tion. Too much gun-power, too little Beven. Twelve years is the term of enlist ment in the British Navy. Not too fast, armour! Too much armour, too little gun but thoroughly, is the British way. The power! Finally, results depend on how

master

little

has

mar "?

France whom

HONGKONG

METEOROLOGICAL

EEGISTER.

Hongkong Observatory, November 18th.

Previous Oz Daś (On Dats

Day

at 2.p.m. 6. 2.00

2pm

30.03

30.07

30.04

74

70

72

23

72

East

East

ENE

0

COL

good is your armour, how sound your idea is to make a plugman or a gun-layer

the same kind of expert as a machinery

which rotates the turret, That shell did not go through bodily, artisan. in any other walk of life, by Barometer

Temperature only a fragment, which killed one man long service and selection,

None of all these men serving the two Humidity.

Wind Direction ... and wounded another. The turret would still rotate; the other gun kept in action guns from the depths to the turret saw and the one under the shell-baret was anything of the battle, except the gun- soon back in action. Very satisfactory to layer. It was easier for them than for

him to be letter-perfect in the test, as Ein fine naval constructors.

Up and down the all but perpendicular he had to guard against the exhilaration steel: Eadders with their narrow steps, of having an enemy's ship instead of a■- and through the winding passages below cloth target under his eye. Super-drilled

Fords

Weather-akart

Lowest even a 124 Blckest open sif Taiparáture on 15th ., 76

on 15th

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