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Mr Robert Hunto Cart R: Inners MFJ. Jeppesen My MM. Joseph Miss G. Kall Capt. & Mrs G. King
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[64
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» MARTIN'S
SAPIOLASTEEL
GRIMAULT'S
SYRUP
OF
HYPOPHOSPHITE OF LIME
FOR
STUBBORN COUGHS
BRONCHITIS
WEAK LUNGS
CATARRH
CONSUMPTION
Miss M. E. Dully Mr&Mrs L. J. Falconer Mr Wallace Karley Mr Wm. Farmer Dr G. A. L. Fitz
williams Mrs Ford
Capt & Min E. M.
French and Bon
Mr & Mrs Start
Füller
Mr J. Gibb
Mr V. Gouldboura Mr & Mrs J. Gould Mr & Mrs W.
Hannibal
Mr C. Lauritson. Mr G. A. LawreNOS Mr G. T. Lloyd Mrs. Longfield Mr G., Magill Dr. & Mrs O. Marriott Mr D. McMurray De G. M. McKean Mr W. S. MoKinley Mr J. Meraski Mr B. K: Mehta Mr.T. P. Mitchell
Mr & Mrs W.
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Mr A. Nasim Mrs Nim.
Mr & Mrs L. D.
Oliverra
Mr B. Olien Mr J. Ormiston Mr Jas. Ormiston
GENERALS WHO LEAD THE FRENCH FORCES,
A SKETCH OF GENERAL JOFFRE'S LIEUTENANTS.
(DY 'B. INSLEY-CASPED.},
were advanzug in four directions, the the opening of the war, the "sacred returned to bis command. He and Gen. army of the Crown Prince through the union under which La Patrie ma to Villaret, while inspecting some German Argonnes, that of the Grand Duke receive the fullget measure of unnelian trenches, werk struck by the same bullet Eugene of Wurttemburg between the service. Gen. Sarrai), in being willing on March 19th, and Maunoury lost the valley of the Alene and Chalone, the finally to go to the Dardanelles, has given sight of one eye. He is sixty-seven years Saxony army close to Rheims, and that signal proof of his own patriotism, since old, and, like Gen. Pau, is a veteran of of Gen. von Buelow West of Rheims he could have resigned from the army the Franco-Prussian war. The present. facing toward, Estornay, All four altogether when relieved at Verdun, and, war found him, like Cincinnatus and columns were headed in the direction of by joining his political adherents at the Hindenberg, retired to his farm. He at the French capital from which the Gov. Chamber of Deputies, he could certainly otios offered his services to the Govern ernment and thousands of the inhabit have overthrown the Government of ment, and at the battle of the Marne ants had fell to Bordeaux,
Viviani and Millerand, and possibly Maunoury commanded the centre of the placed himself an "Marshal of France, chiar army, assisted by Gen. Dubail, in rank superior to Joffre or Foch
Gen. d'Amade, who first took charge of the French troops joined to the British force under Gen. Sir Ian Hamilton on the Gallipoli Peninsula, is now with the Russian army and said to be serving under Czar Nicholas.
CASTELNAU'S THREE SONS KILLED.
One of the most picturesque figures. among the French Generals is Merchand, who took his expedition in 1888 along the Upper Nils to Fashoda, where he was met by Gen. Kitchener, then the com mander of the British army in the Soudan, who commanded him to turn back. One of Marchand's chief lieuten- ants in the Fashoda expedition was Bara
The French army officers known to Americans of the present generation up
** HAMMERING AT THE CENTRE. " to August of last year were those of the Parisian salons and the Bois de Bologne, A portion of the army of the Crown immaculate, ooreeted, elegant dandies, Prince under Gen. von Kluck turned attending dinners and receptions in the azide & little toward Meaux and Coulom American quarter én garcon, blase and miers, the better to envelop the Freach ansmis from dissipation; riding on the left wing, when the armies under Foch, cinder path of the Bois in a cavalcade Borrail, de Langle and d'Esperey sprang of handsome horsemen in scarlet breeches forward, attacking the Germans all and navy blue conta, or in showy costume along their front. The English forges of sky-blue cloth and gold braid-belong-south of the Marne threw themselves The Marquis de Castelnau is a Clerionltior, who is now one of France's great ing to that Paris, gay, irresponsible, upon von Kluck's right and Gen. Mau-and a Royalist who has fought for repab-Generals. Early last September when revelling in license, the marriage libre nory's soldiers threatened the German lican France with the same stoicism Lord Kitchener as British Secretary of in preference to the marriage legale, the rear. When von Kluck made an about which the men of bis caste displayed War was visiting the French army in Paris of self-advertisement, of the mon- Face to meet the blows of his opponents upon the guillotine during the Reign of the Champagne district with Gen. Jofre, Batrosity in art, of the fantastic in cos the English army got its chance to attack Terror. Born on Christmas Eve sixty-he encountered Gen. Baratier. The tume, the Paris of superficialitics and the German left, and Maunoury's men years ago in the Department of Frenchman, astride his horse, and the passing charm-the Paris which the attacked von Kluck's soldiers in front, Aveyron, in Central France, and enter- Britisher, on foot, withdrew a little from. French have long been saying was in- But it was. Gen. Foch who got in the ing military school in his youth, he soon the other men in the party and gravely vented that the foreigner should know wedge between the forces of the Crown began a distinguished and busy career, saluted one another, their friends the nothing of France,
Prince, cut the Crown Prince off alto but found time to undertake personally spectators of a historical meeting of two gether from the Saxons and checked the the education of his four sons. At the ancient enemies.-The World.
outbreak of the war all offered their of von Buelow. [[ Driving forward against the German services to France, and before August killed, quoted in despatches and named centre, Gen, Foch telegraphed to the was ended one of them, Xavier, had been
My right wing is Generalissimo:
in the order of the day for gallantry. The news of the death of the second, being crushed.
Gerald, in Alsace was brought to the father when in council of war. Gentle
Mr & Mrs E, V. D.
Parr
Mr&Aire L. T. Fitcher
Mr W. S. Paley Mr & Mrs E. M.
Baymond
Mr & Mrs A Haworth
Mr E. B.Ray Mr C. Reed Mr & Mrs F. Saunders
Mr W. B. Schroder Mr & Mrs J. R. Shaw Mr. Shouker
Mr J. A. E. da Silva Mr F. W. Simunous
Mr W. H. Smith
A.
Mr V. Sorby
Cupt T. P. Hall Mr A. Hanson Mr C. Hawkes
Hon. MrE, A Hewett
0.2.2,
Mr W. Heyliom Mr W. J. Hodge Mr L. G. Holgate Mr J. S. C. Hunt
Mi D. G. Stevena
B.
In a day almost the nation Was
The startled American world re-
war.
at alized with consternation and solicitade that the sister republic had been caught unprepared and was yielding against the swift, merciless blows of the German army advancing straight to the gates of Paris-when the real France, the France
army
I am. however, ham
two
KING EDWARD'S INSIGHT,
A TRUE FORECAST OF THE PRESENT SITUATION.
mering away at the centre." The Ger of La Patrie, sprang into vision, tragic mans, unable to hold their own at the eyo but calm, with the stern-faced, centre. began there the retreat which unemotional, resourceful army officers soon took in their own right and leftmen, let us continuo," was the only com ment he made. The third, Hugues, died who knew how, at the eleventh hour, to wings. Von Kluck escaped the trap set of n wound received in a recent battle.
In the forthcoming "Memories," by In 1900, after Gen. do Castelnau badford Redesdale, which will be published Javert the threatening disaster of capitu fer him, but the Germans could ofter
lation to the enemy, who have known that only rest on the defensive,
A month and a half afterward, when received the Cross of Officer of the Legion shortly by Messrs. Hutchinson & Co., the how to keep him at bay for over a year
of Honour and had been promoted to the, and to gain little by little upon him;
the British were attempting to reinforce General Staff, he came in close touch author, in writing of the late King the Belgians at Ypres, it was the Tenth with Gen. Joffre and the two began the Edward and his relations with foreign through offensive movements of master- ful strategy and extraordinary daring, Army of Gen. Foch which came with intimacy somewhat strange between the the men whose ideals of personal abne-reinforcements at the moment when they man of plebeian birth and the one from Powers, gives an instance of his penetrat
The King and the old When the war beganing insight, gation under military discipline can only could save the situation. Across the the patriciang. be equalled by the Spartans, whose Yser the invading Germans were thrown, Joffre placed him in command of one of Emperor of Austria wero on very friendly bravery, tenacity and self-effacement will and there they have since remained.
the most important armies in Lorraine, terms ; —— be an inspiration to patriotism as long
and it was through Gen. de Castelnau
"The betrayal of 1908," says Lord; as the world endures.
that Nancy was at that time saved from Redesdale, when Baron Aerenthal sa- capture by the German forces, Emperor nexed Bosnia and Herzegovina, making William: himself directed. the fierce the Treaty of Berlin into
# serap of assaults upon Nancy, and the Germans paper, was a violent shock to King Ed-
another.
ward. It was on October 8th that the King received the news at Balmoral, and no ene who was there can forget how terribly he was upset. Never did I see him so moved.
Mr W. G. Symmons Mr H. H. Taylor Capt H. Trowbridge MK. E, Taebben Me J. Will HG G. G. Word Dr & Mrs Lindmy
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ohildren
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1.
Mrs E. £. Tourtallot Mr. & Mrs J. a Underwood
W. Mr D. H. Wacholl
M & M Wakefield Mr & Mira J. W. Whit
PEAK HOTEL.
SHADOW OF THE MAN ON HORSEBACK.”
BIL JOHN FRENCH'S TRIBUTE.
Field Marshal French, in his report to Lord Kitchener on the Battle of the Marne, refers to the victory as his own,
throughout these opera although
strained his tions Gen. Foch has resources to the utmost to afford me all The British the support he could." commander also gives expression to the warm gratitude due to Gen, Duball, commanding the Eighth French Army my left, and to Gen, de Corpą on Maud'huy, commanding the Tenth Army Corps, on my right. France has, how- ever, written the history of the Battle of in different language, the Marne although even now Gen. Foch is care fully kept in the background and his name seldom appears in the censored Press.
The Government, fearful of a Man on Horseback," a popular military hero who would become dictator like Napo leongi. or Napoleon III, keeps the people in ignorance as much as possible of the namos of ite valiant defenders. The title of Marshal of France," as the rank of the supreme commander of the army, has been revived. But it has been bestowed upon no one, and the last man to bear the rank still remains Leboeuf. who proudly boasted that his army was ready to the last gaiter button" when the war in 1870 broke out. The Generals of to-day work in silence and devotion for the liberation of France from the invader, the very art of war making it impossible for theut to pose in theatrical
Like Lord Roberts in England Foch roles. Far from the scenes of the notusl fighting, in the rooms of their head had been preaching the necessity of pre- quarters they keep informed of the man-paration for war, bummering it into the euvres of the memy through the reports heads of his students at the Ecole de of their aviators, and issue the orders Guerre, where Clemenceau, the atheist of Radical, when Prime Minister, appoint- by telephone, which send the tens thousands of soldiers into battle. The ed him as Director without Foch having spectacular dash of the General at the made the application, Clemenceau knew head of his troops, the dramatic moment what he was about, for Foch's books on of surprise and enthusiastic rallying strategy were known to military men all under the magnetic eye and around the over the world, and the great ammuni- beloved form of a Bonaparte, is no part tion factories at Creusot had been put of modern warfare, and military genius into readiness for the nation's defence is the cold, detached, unimaginative through Foch's suggestions. His Prin- science which works by machinery and ciples of War is a text book written knows little of personality.
years ago, but forecasting the nature of present-day warfare and explaining its technique with the simplicity of style possible only to a master-mind grasping the whole subject with thorough under standing and able to elucidate it to a child from a dozen different points of view. France's past greatness in war and her weakness through defeat are not like history to Foch; they are inter woven with his daily life, and while his big, raw-boned figure and large featured face seem fashioned for the rough life of the battlefield, he is still the scholar as well as the soldier and a man of deep, intense emotions.
The Generals of France represent the unity of the people, who at the beginning of the war forgot differences in social caste, in politics and religion.
Gen. Joffre in known and is always in the public eye.
His career need not be retold. But it is worth while to look for a moment at his lieutenants now rising into fame.
GEN. FOCH LOOMIS LARGE,
Gen Foch is regarded by many who know the actual history of the French campaigns as the nation's greatest mili- tary figure. A year and a half ago his
Mr & Mrs W. Arm Mra V. Martin and rank was that of commandant of an
strong
Mr Boote
Mrs Bowdler
Mr & Mrs Carmichael
974Me F. W. Cary
Mrk Mrs C. D.Casalli It & Mrs Cooney Col. Darling B.E. Mr Danman Fuller Mr. T. J. E. Johns Mr Lee JonAR Major. Morgan
chlidre
Mr E. Patersɔn Mr T. L. Perkins
Me U. skott Mr &
Smita
Mr & Mrs A. Findiay
Smith
Mr. G. E. Stewart Mai-Gen. Ventris Mr&Mrs David Woo
· Gland Boxal
My J. C. Anker. Mr C. R. Arnott Met Bird
Mr C. H. Booth Mr.A. K. Grew. Mr.&. Danrich Mr F. 8, van Uyk M. K. S. Line Mr L. E George Mr. F. nu Mr B. Jazzes
MrJde Klerk 'M» W. Lawrie
Bir J. Mantaire
Miss Mass bang. My James dŁOZŁOW Mr M. G. Moyes
made
after one attack
Castelnau has ever since been called the "Saviour of Nacicy." He is now engaged in a campaign for more shells, and the French Press, in clamouring for more cannon and ammunition, take Gen. 1 Castelnau's declaration as
that d
their text,
Short and
"He had paid the Emperor of Aus tria a visit at Ischl less than two months before. The morting had been friendly and affectionate, ending with a hearty Baron "auf baldiges Wiedersehen.” Aernthal had been with the Emperor, Sir Charles Hardinge with King Edward. The two Sovereigns and the two states. men had discussed the Eastern Question especially the Balkan difficulties with the utmost apparent intimacy and the King lett Ishel in the full assurance that there was no cloud on the horizon. Now, without a word of warning, all was ekonged.
War must be waged not by the shock of men but by the shock of ammunition. THIS WAR MADE GEN, DE MAUD'HUT. Gen. De Mand'huy has recently been appointed the commander of the army of the Vosges, where he succeeded Gen. Pau, the one-armed hero of the Franco-Prus- sian War, sent to Russia, Roumania and Italy on a special mission last spring, and again in Russia as an oficer enrolled, like Gen, d'Amade, under the standard of the Czar. De Maud'huy belongs, with Castelnaut, to the aristoc racy and the Clericals.
The King was indignant, for nobody stocky, with a long-handied pipe in his mouth and a rough, knotted walking knew better than he did the danger of the stick hanging over his arm, De Maud'huy tampering with the provisions of looks like a Teuton, and it is probable Treaty of Berlin, and he saw that to that he has a good deal of Germanic make any change in the Turkish pro blood in his veins, as ho was born, fifty vinees was to light a fuse which, sooner seven years ago, at Metz, in Lorraine, or later, was bound to fire a powder- now one of France's lost provinces, magazine. Personally the King felt that but a German province for centuries he had been treacherously derived. His before.
forecast of the danger, which be com. muntested at the time to mo, showed him to be possessed of the prevision which marks the statesman. Every word that he uttered that day has come true."
De
It is
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WEIGHT,
GOOD ADVICE FOR THIN FOLKS..
He entered the war as a Brigadier General, but in the second month he had distinguished himself with the Eightieth Infantry Brigade of the Sixth Army Corps and received upon the battlefield of the Marne the Cross of the Commander of the Legion of Honour. He was sucESS- ful in the wide flanking movement which threatened the rear of von Kluck's army. In the following month; at Ypres, be was placed in command of the army which extended from Arras, the left wing of Gen. de Castelnau, south of Lille, Maud buy's troops had been hastily brought together; they consisted of odds GEN. SERRAIL & STORM DENTRE,
and ends from other regiments and many men beyond or below the best military army corps, one of twenty. He is now
Serrail is the chief rival of these two age, but his army made as good a show-Friday, 3rd Dea the man who is primarily responsible for the execution of all the plans men as far as the French nation is con- ing under Gen. Foch at Ypres as that of the Generalissimo, and who is concerned. A few weeks ago, when the of Castelnau. In the summer campaign Mr & Mrs J. Plommer sidered by the allies of France to be Chamber of Deputies in Faris was ring north of Arras, around the famous Laby
otte Grant deserving of an equal share of commen- ing with the speeches of Socialists and rinth; the worst impediment the French dation and appreciation for the unex Radicals, demanding the resignation of had to encounter in their advance upon pected strength and vitality of France'a Millerand, Gen. Serrail, & Radical with Lens, and the best fortified position of In December of last powerful following among the Bocial- the Germans on the entire western flank, people's army.' year King George of England visited theists, was suddenly relieved of his com-Gen. De Maud'buy's regiment captured headquarters near Bordeaux to bestow and in the Argonne
Clemenceau's this position, which had nearly worn out AN Homme Enchaine, and La other regiments for two monthe the Grand Cross of the Order of the newspaper. Bath upon Gea, Joffre and Gen. Foch, Guerre Sociale, edited by Gustave estimated that 1,000 shells burst every the highest distinction the English King Herve, were both suppressed by the minute within a few square miles of ter- reward for censor when they attempted to defend ritory until an opening was made when can give to any General as purely military services; and the an. Gen. Berrail. The foreign correspond-
De Mand'huy's men rushed out of their nouncement of this honour was the first eats were the only ones allowed to lay trenches and threw themselves into the intimation the French people or the the facts before their public, and when
outer treaches of the Labyrinth.
The trouble with most thin folks who world at large received concerning the Serrail accepted the post as commander
He is one of the most unconventional wish to gain weight is that they insist on position which Ferdinand Foch had won of the forces at the Dardanelles the
men in the army, and the attitude of drugging their stomach or stuffing it with for himself since August, 1914. Catholics and Royalists, who are be friendly comradeship which he shows eroams or following some foolish physical Born sixty one years ago in the south, lieved to support Gen. Forch as the sue toward all of his soldiers, even the hum greasy foods; rubbing on nseless flesh a few months after Joffre, his home cessor of Joffre, breathed a sigh of relief. blest, arises from the simplicity and separated from Gen. Joffre's birthplace The Dardanelles command had already sincerity of his nature. He has just culture stunt, while the real cause of thirpem gose untouched. You cannot get by only a few miles, he and the Generabeen held by two men, Gen. d'Amade written to the workmen of Creusot to tell
fat until your digestive tract assimilates- lissimo have been associates in army and Gen. Gourand, and it is likely to them that he, individually, appreciates the food you ca affairs since their youth, but never in-be the grave for the reputation of any the hard work they are doing, day and
Thanks to a remarkable new scientiflo tirantes. When Joffre assumed the su- British or French commander unless a night, to send cannon and ammunition
discovery, it is now possible to combine preme command he sought to intrust his miracle happens and the Quadruple to the army, plans to his two most confidential Entente succeeds where it has so far
Gen. Dubail, a cavalry General, is now into simple form the very elements needed friends, Ger. Pau and Gen. the Marquis made a hopeless failure.
in command of the army of Naney. His by the digestive organs to help them con- de Castelnau. In September of last
strong face, full of intellectual ability vert food into rich, fat-laden blood. This year, when the Germans faunted their
and austerity when in ropose, is, never-master-stroke of modern chemistry is conquest of Belgium and that part of After the fearful fighting near Sedan theless, & welcome sight to his soldiers, called Sargol and has been termed the Northern France which is the richest in at the opening of the war, in which for they greet him with a smile which greatest of flesh-builders. Sargol aims natural resources and contains one-sixth the Crown Prince severely defeated the brings a transformation to his counten-through its regenerative, reconstructive of the whole population, Gen. Foch was French under Gen. Buffey, Gen. Serrail ance. Like Serrall, he looks much more powers to coax the stomach and intestines one of six subordinates to the Comman was ordered to take cummand, and he,
the aristocrat than either Castelnau or to literally soak up the fattening elementa. der-in-Chief. With Pau Dalstein, therefore, was in the position to join in De Mand'huy Gen. Franchet d'Esperey, of your food and pass them into the blood, and the offensive on the Marne. For almost one of the chief commanders of the Gen- where they are carried to every starved, Franchet d'Esperey, Castelnau Maunoury, the six were each at the head year afterward he operated in the cralissimo early in the war Gen. De broken-down cell and tissue of your body. of forces awaiting the movements ordered region of the fortress of Verdag, repel Langle de Cray, a man whom Joffre You can readily picture the result when by telegraph or telephone which were for fling furious onslaughts by the Crown keeps in clean touch with his headquar this amazing transformation, has taken the purposes of dividing the German Prince, whose one aim in the war is to
ters; Gen, de Thuy, belonging to the place and you notice how your cheeks fill army and turning back the seemingly capture Verdan. In July Gen. Serrail's army of Lorraine, and Gen. d'Urbal, out, hollows about your resk, shoulders men were caught in an attack by the commanding in Belgium, are all of them. irresistible tide surging towards Paris.
The battle of the Marne, fought be Germans with asphyxiating gases, when from the aristocracy. Gen. Humber, 10 to 20 pounds of solid, healthy Hosh. and bust disappear and you take on from tween the 6th and 13th of September, the French, having only a small number who has been appointed to succeed Gen. Sargol is absolutely harmless, inexpensive, is unique in history in re-establishing in of protecting monet & For several hou. Serrail in the Argonne, is almost an efficients only harm such a short space of time the almost sand. In August this reverse was more unknown quantity. He was only a major vanished prestige of an army through than retrieved by the brilliant defence at the outbreak of the war, and is the the execution of movements which were of the French against another attempt of youngest General commanding an army as harmonious as the methodical inter the Crown Prince, but Gen, Serrail's in the field. change of the mechanism of a watch, removal from the command in Verdun and at the same time full of the freedom came at this time. Clemenceau and TWO GENERALS KIT BY ONE BULLET. of initiative The Germans had, after Herve have both threatened, unless Berrail After several months of inactivity on weeks of effort, succeeded in getting is recalled to France, to break the trucenocount of his wounds, Gen Mannoury, around the left flank of the French and entered into by all political parties at one of the herces of the Marne has
Mr P. Philipp
Mr C. W. beynolda Mr E. Ryan Mr-EI. S.nelair
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Mr H. k. Thorig
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Mr J. Wasky
MS. H. Wright
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HUNG NGOI SAN. PO (Chine Daily Press),
DAILY
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Established for over Firer Trans
Jiroulates largely throughout Bouthern China
Torna fór Advertising Translation fres) can be oblidued at the OE on, 10, Des Vous Bone Central, Hongkong, 131, West Street, Londa s gy from the dicerent Agezis
Documenta tranalated from er into Clavideo ro Colloquial Chinese,
SENT TO THE DARDANELLES.
A... WATSON & Co., LTD., VICTORIA DISPENSARY, THE PHARMACY, SE QUEEN'S DISPENSARY, THE EDWARD DISPENSARY
and other leading Chemists of Hongkong have it.
[1709-8
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