1915-11-30 — Page 7

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THE WONDERFUL NEW PLANT FOOD.

GERMANY BIDS FOR WHAT ENGLAND DISDAINS. Professor Bottomloy's last lecture at the Royal Society, on Humogen, the wonderful plant food he has discovered,. was illustrated by a number of specimens which have been grown 14 Kow and at King's College, where many of his ex- periments have been carried out,

For instance, a couple of months ago a box was filled with moss, planted with four potatoes, and placed on the roof of the college in the Strand. Once every week the moss was watered with extract from the bacterized, peat. After eight wecks the box was as full as it could be of fine new potatoes.

The professor said that the process con- sisted in the treatment of ordinary raw peat by means of bacteria, and within four or six days the peat bad turned into a black substance containing fifty times as much valuable plant food material as ordinary manure. The mans- facture was very simple, and at present being carried out by a man and a boy.

On ordinary agricultural land pest has given an increase in potatoes of 123 per cent. compared with those grown with no inanure, and 75 per cent. and 41 per cent. compared with those grown in artificial manure and farmyard

anure respectively.

INVISIBLE BATTLE.

THE HONGKONG DAILY PRESS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 33 H. 1915.

BRITISH CHARGE THROUGH "A" CLOUD OF SMOKE AND GAS.

BY PERCIVAL PHILLIPS.]

GENENIAL HEADQUARTERS,

£

BRITISH ARMY IN THE FIELD, Oct. 16. ** Yesterday afternoon, after a dom- bardment, we attacked the enemy's trenches under cover of cloud of smoke and gas..

(Sir John French's despatch, October 14.) It was an extraordinary spectacle.: For twenty-five minutes a phalanx of British ging had been pouring shell on two shattered mining villages, a pit head,

3,000,000 SHELLS IN CHAMPAGNE.

HOW THE GREAT FRENCH

VICTORY WAS WON.

Mr. W. P. Simms, the United Press cor respondent, who has just visited the French front in Middle Champagne, writes:-

My first impression was that Judgment Day had come, and that I had been left behind to roam the disrupted orth: Hell's fury seemed to have been forestalled and outdone. For three days I was permitted to wander over, the ground recently wen

by the French.

a quarry, and the mass of German trenches, which scarred the open country

I had previously talked with many between guns of every size and calibre, officers and men concerning the efficacy of from slim field-pieces to ponderous the French shell fire, but even thus pro- howitzers, packed together with increpared, nad combined with what I had dible ingenuity, rending the heavens hitherto soon for myself, I was completely with an indescribable uproar.

surprised by what I found here over tens of square miles. Practically no vegetation was left, and even rabbits and rats had not excaped.

3,000,000 SHELLS.

Suddenly a column of dense, pearl white smoke lifted its head over the hidden British Infantry, It looked af first like a low burst of shrapnel, having the same effect of a ball of cotton-wool poised a few feet above the plain. Then it rose sluggishly but steadily, the wind Almost three million shells had been caught it, and the ball of cotton wool hurled into the area in three days, excavat- was broadened and flattened until iting by their explosion pits from five to assumed the aspect of a gigantic funnel, seventy-five feet deep and from 130 to 180 tilted towards the enemy.

feet wide. The result of the concentrated fire was that the whole countryside was covered with a white powder. One gon- eral told me that some of the German troops had been so thoroughly demoralised that droves of prisoners were sent to the French rear without any other escort than a solitary guide. Many of them were

In: one experiment with onions treat ment with the peat was followed by an increase of 41 per cent., and the plants

More smoke rolled up from the same had smaller tops, thinner nocks and spot, and still more smoke, It was as harder bulbs than those grown in ordi-though someone had taken the lid off a nary manure. Equally successful results chimney. The fleece-like cloud seemed to have been achieved with turnips, radi seethe as it cleared the parapet, and was shes, paranips, peas, and other vegetables, whipped across the empty fields by the and the effect of hamogen on flowers, afternoon breeze. I could so it writing Loth with regard to the foliage and in thick folds over the "no man's land blossom, is very remarkable.

between the trenches, crawling nearer and nearer to the Hohenzollern Redoubt. blotting out, the country-side in a broad white smear.

SNUBBED BY GOVERNMENT.

One of the chief surprises in connection with the use of the new plant, food is the facy that it intensifies variegation the foliage of a plant, Specimens of coleus, grown at Kew Gardens, one in the usual potting compost, and the other with humogen treatment, exemplify this peculiarity, while the latter plant is double the size of the other.

The Board of Agriculture had said they would not take it up, and Mr. Acland bad said that no result had yet been obtained which demonstrated its atility for agricultural purposes on a field scule.

In July of last year," said Professor Bottomley,” “a German professor same into my laboratory with the copy of an address 1 had delivered on the subject, and asked to have the process explained to him, I did so. He was brother scientist, and it was before the war. He expressed his delight, and then naked quite harmlessly that he might see the bacteria. I opened the incubator for him. He then asked for a sample, but 1. said No, because the work was not completed.

"Next day he came back and told the truth. He said he wanted it for the German Board of Agriculture, and that it would be worth my while to let him have it. They didn't got it. But con- trast it with what we get from our Board of Agriculture 1

HOW GERMAN GOODS GËT -THROUGH.

ENEMY'S CLUMSY ATTEMPT TO

*DISGUISE THEIR ORIGIN,

.....

WORSE THAN LONDON FOG.

Blow strong jets of smoke from a pipe along the surface of a table and vou will have some idea of the advance of this sinister and impenetrable ally against the German entrenched infantry between Loos and La Bassée that afternoon.

It was heavier, more bewildering, than any London log. No Gorman periscope could pierce the solid wall that arose so suddenly, nor could the puzzled troops determine the moment when they would be attacked. Shaken as they were by the intensity of the bombardment, this new and unexpected enemy had exactly the effect intended, and they were easily flung from their trenches when our own troops suddenly appeared through the fog, bay onces in hand, and were at them with a horns cbylous result of an attend

result of an attack under cover of smoke clouds is to make it im possible for spectators behind the lines to follow a battle. Whenever the valves were opened and new, screens of vapour loosed, the bayonets and bombs worked beyond a veil which enveloped the front of attack. Only the tips of two pit-head chimneys and some naked tree trunks- all that romain of a wood-were visible above the wall of smocke, od

cheers

almost insane.

WHO KILLED THE ARCHDUKE?

Thore has been a suspicion from the first that Germany and Austria had a hand in gaoviding the timely protext for the war upon which they were resolved in the sub- mer of last year. The acts of the murder of Franz Ferdinand xd his wife are re viewed afresh in the dinipurga Review by Mr. H. W. Steed, and their study re- veels a number of features that are dimeult to oxptain upon any but sinister hypo- thesis. The absence of precaution which attended the Archduke's visit to Bosnin was remarkably inconsistent with Austrian habits. There was not only an absence of all special protection, but actually a with- drawal of the usual safeguards.

was to abstain from giving the Archduke

WAR NEWS.

GERMANY'S LAST RESERVES.

In accordance with the new military law all men previously rejected at Mulhouse have been newly examined, with the result that 2,000 have been taken by the military authorities for training, or 2 por ceat, of the population.

This figure, if applied to the entire Ger. man Empire, would give the army a million and a quarter wen.

PRIEST MURDERED. FOR

WEATHER REPORT.

On the 19th at 11.01 am. The anti-cyclone has strengthened and is moving slowly eastward

adorably. It is now central to the worth of The northern depression has deupened son- Hokkaido.

Pressure bas increased very slightly in Southern districts.

Fresh monsoon is indicated along the coast and over" the China Sev.

|

Hongkong tameall for the 2a cours ending at 1.10 a.m. to-day, 0,00 1 18tre,

The forecast for the 24 hours ending wi noop to-day is as follows

DISTRICT.

VORECAST

{N. strong;

SHELTERING SOLDIERS.

According to the Echo Belye, u M. oulon, the cure of Staden (Finders), received a summans from German teldiers Bougkong & Nughbourhood N. Wind, while in his cellar with some inhabitants,

asserted, were hidden there. to deliver up French soldiers, who, they Before the priest coù d'answer, the Ger ather persons.

mud, killing the priest, and three

FURTHER REPRESSIVE

MEASURES,

Forino ChanDSİ

1

North-onst gale.

VUŠCI UŽ URIOs verwocky kay mamie Car

No. A kam kongkong anu Lainoisin, L South coast of Chins between. North winds,

kong kung nais kumatimia.

freah.

Baron von Bissing hag announced that CHINA

A message from Brusies states that- all soldiers belonging to the Allies now in Belgium must report themselves to to ha interned in Germany. Those who the German authorities within 24 hours.

as well as all persons suspected of ha zing do not report themselves are to be abot, harboured them.

GERMAN THREAT TO THE PEOPLE OF MITAL

Statum.

COAST METEOROLOGICAL

REGISTER

29TH NOVEMBER A.M.

Vladvostocks

Tokio kochi

When the Emperor himself went to Sorgjeve four years earlier, the police ar his Heir-Presumptive, the police service that the millitery authorities would see to was actually suspended on the grounds everything. What the latter actually did even a military exort, and even after the first bomb had been thrown in the earlier Part of the day the omission was not re- paired. The Archduke's motor-car was, strangely enough, slowed down as it af preached the point where the second as as was posted. It might be possibe to ascribe this chrin of events to a combination of ac Leident and incompetence but for one very remarkable circumstance. No one in a re- sponsible position was punished afterwards for the extraordinary negligence which had expeed the life of sa importent à per sonnge as an easy target to his slayer have instigated a crime so well calculated That the Serbian Government should to bring down upon it the reproach of the whole civilised world was a ways a concep of Mitau that if Riga is not captured and

The Germans have informed the people. tien invested with the highest improbabi- they are obliged to retire, they will razo lity. The most elementary foresight must all the towns and villages on the line of Under the French artillery fire the Ger- have withheld any Power in such a posither retreat, The German reinforcements Neuro man trenches had become graves for the tron from so wantonly compromising its own sent to the Rign region include the Land- living, while the graves of the former vis future. But the inner circle who directedsturm mon called out in September, who tims had been exposed to the air. This Austro-German policy had, as Mr. Steed have had only four or five weeks' training. Nagasaki man-made earthquake is an illustration ofhows, more than one interest to serve in what would be necessary if an advance the Archduke's removal, He was suffering at Czartorysk said that the Austrians could

A German officer who was taken prisoner Kagoshima were made without it.

from a dangerous malady linble to cuimin only fight if they were six against ono. wire the whole of the surrounding forests, session to the Throne with awkward equal they fled before the least attack.

The Germans had woven with barbed to in montal instability and to invest his If the opposing forces were anything like under cover of which a maze of tronches problems, He was known to be out of syn eight feet deep zig-zagged, the whole fine pathy with the system of German and Max-

THE KAISER AND ENGLAND, being supported by multitude of yar domination, and to have hope of mak machine-guns and numerous 4-in. steel turing the Serb nationalities a more active in-

1 WILL NEVER FORGET."! rets. The latter were provided with re-

Auence within the Empite. German policy volving tops, and all save the top was and its Austrian agents saw little to be

According to the Hamburg papers, the embedded in the ground. Each turret had hoped for from the Archduke, while on the Alnische Folkszeitung has published an a 50mm quick-firing gun, which was served other had his assassination would give an article from Berlin about the causes of by three men.

ideal clock of moral indignation for the at the wae, with the title The Hypocrite which contains the following ants were locked in the turrets. Personally,circumstances of the crime might neither of

The French troops say, that these attend-tack upon Serbia which had been proposed Grey,"

to Italy so long before. The motive or the passage Linapected one turret, the doors of which them separately afford sufficient ground science of the English Government this Nothing can ever wash out of the cop- had been fastened with chains on the out for the suspicion that the murder was war with all its horrors. It may be thit side. The French captors declared that arranged in the high places of Teutonic Grey and many Englishmen with him three unwounded but unconscious Gier statesmanship. But their combination hope that the world may forget the bloal mans were found inside. This is what the gives this view of the matter a credibility guilt of the English Government, and Canton French had to go up against

to which none of the alternative theories that even the German people may forget Hongkong Gap Book the guilt of England. The German Kai- car, attain. Pall Mall Gazette-

ser not long ago wrote the words "I will Maca

Wakow in m

never forget on the margin of a dipomlic report which spoke about Holhow.............. forgetting the deeds of England. ANI Phuliem will never forget must to-day be thought and said with the German Kalor by every German.

TWO MONTHS PREPARATIONSJED The General Commanding the Fourth, Army told me that it took two months to prepare his part of the attack.” He con-| structed, for a distance of about 500 kila- metres, new trenchen, some of which were wide enough for two horses to

pass along Many new railroads and dirt roada had been constructed:

There were intervals when the vapour lifted, and I had a survey of all the level fighting ground betwech Loos and Haignes, Once, or twice I saw solitary

Personally, I rode along one of these figures darting across the open spaces between the white lines of trench paraxe trong roads which was thirteen pets. They were undoubtedly berabers kilometres long and had been planned in hurrying back to captured positions with such a way that troops and convoys could fresh supplies. There was a single pass along day and night without being flecting glimpse a mere flash of a mass seen, owing to the cut of the improvised of men that appeared to spring up out hedges. When all was ready the artillery of the empty plain and sink back again, was let loose, and the battle for which it in a new place. That is all anyone can had taken two months to prepare was prao hope to see of an infantry obarge in this tically över in one day,

war.

GERMANY'S PRANTIC EFFORTS

unchanged.

GERMAN DESCRIPTION OF LOOS BATTLE.

NOT SOLDIERS, BUT DEVILS."

The battle near Loos is thus described in the Berliner Tageblatt by its special war correspondent, Herr Kellermann

As a result of the terrific bombardment our admirably constructed trenches were shot into cavitica, our wizo entanglements flow in shreds into the air and disappears ed. Everything before, and behind the trenches-scrub, trees, grass-disappear ed, leaving the earth furrowed and naked. Then whiteish fog-banks began to creep slowly nearer.

The subsequent fighting really, amounted to a settling data prets still occur, Following the attack which gained us tacks. Counter-attacks are still Thus it happened that our men at årst the main breach of the Hohenzollern Rebut the original result remains materially doubt and another trench north-west of the quarries, the enemy indulged in a frantic spurt of shelling against all cap tured positions. We had got into one stretch of fires lino poaitions south and west of Hulluch, on a front of about two-

WARK WHITEHALL.

Fancy goods, laca hosiery, gloves and other things of German manufacture still sneak into Great Britain. The manu facturers agents in neutral countries even mix such goods with their own manufactures in order to deceive the British buyer. Sometimes the attempt to cover the troos of German origin is antisily carried out, as in the case of gloves, some of which still showed the Made in Saxony mark, while others Holland-imposed on that "Made in

The swollen Dutch trade returns indi-thirds of a mile, but the German bom gate that large purchases are made by bardment necessitated a retirement from Germany in Holland, and since Germany had found a foothold in the redoubt and this trench, although we stuck where wo has no gold to spare it is to be presumed. on one side of the quarries. that Dutch goods

are paid for by Get-

This redoubt, which has, with Fosse man goods.

The British Consul's certificate at the 8, been the focal point of much of the recent fighting, is a kind of miniature place of export that the goods are made fort, heavily supplied with machine-gune, in the neutral country is not a complete entered from the quarries. The enemy or legal guarantee that the goods are of attach great importance to holding it, neutral origin. It is no more than and after we captured it the first time

sort of 29

check instituted by the Board of Trade. Any information in regard orders were issued by the German com to suspicious goods is invited by the mander to retake it, no matter what the Under - Secretary of State, Home Office, Whitehall, 8:W. H

A gentleman who believes the autho rities uro doing their utmost in the mat- ter instanced to the Daily Graphic the particulars of certain imports from Italy.

LAIPORTER'S DUTY. "That man's importations,” he said, "for at least three months, were checked each time, and it was only after he was found guiltless in three lots of goods that they were satisfied his business was hund fide. That is an instance showing that if they have suspicion they will examine goods, hold them up, and ask for further particulars. The suspected

cost.

For the first time in many months these miners and cottagers, who can be found eating, sleeping, and even indulg ing in simple recreations surrounded by artillery, and constantly in danger of death from shell fire, showed some in- terest in a battle that was being fought over their neighbours' fields. I except, of course, the children, to whom all bat this now look alike, and who continued to play childish games in front of Bri- tish batteries at the height of the bom bardment-Daily Graphic,

The French claim that their present ad- vance has been gained with staall losses considering the conditions they had to overcome, but even had their losses been enormous the Champagne victory would have been cheap. Not only has the country been electrified, but the troops are surer the mightiest blow Germany has to offer. than ever that they will be fully equal to

GERMAN ACTIVITY IN ARGENTINA,

ENEMY TRADING WITH GREAT BRITAIN.

THE BRITON'S BITTER CRY!

The Neueste Nachrichten, of Leipzig, in another of its revelations of the heart of the Englishman," writes:---

The Joy of Belgade has restored to the blind man his sight, The Englishman loves realities; he feels and measures the distance between words and deeds.

future,

Vario

Hour,

Barometer

at Fen: Lavel.

Temperature.

Humidity.

Direction

PIERFUME

29 49 sma

LOKA

akodate

29.56

WSW

NNW

30-11

W

10. 20

NNW

NW

Othin .........

shima Bonin Z

30 B

N

30 19

N

NW

29.91

NW

5

20.50) 39

**

i J

30.61 38

геноц

below too! Weihsive)....° Hankowi, lahang... Kiukiang, sanı Changahs Shanghai Gutalatt Sharp Feak ... Amoy BORUT Stow pirant Taiboku202 Taichu vzne Tainan Konhun.is Pescadore

Pakhoi

非常

-свечно 040

Cape St. James Touran........ Apart Dagupan... Marila Legarpt......... Taoloban

bilo........ Surigao... Labuan

* 30.17

الحريات نه لا

D

30.24 63 70 期

NNE

N

NE

NNK

3.:00' 70} —.

30.0004

DOV 215169

#

201408142 INB

30.14 57 56

30 17

149.76 125.00 75

(29:78) 78

-9.50 76 98 $29.78 70 94

29.7577 94

29.75 1796

278.7891

Wextbes

C. W. JEFFRIus,' Director,

1 Bazomeras, reduced to 33 degrees Fahrenbuf on the loyal of the, son is inahes, tonths and anndredths

the

Wahrenbek

5 TEMPEHAT, in the sladic, in digreen

5 Hurry, in parentage of estoration,

Brion or Wasp, to two points

hamidaty of an exturbed with monetare balus siia.

·S WOMɑN OF WIND, Mostrully su tanatori ZORLA

in, amow, a shaadior, warbility, wdow (rek L STATE OF WRATHER, b blue sky, detached loud, ddrizzling rain, f fog, a gloomy, b bau, a lightning, o svarsset; y prazing showane, a aquà},

7. Baam in inshaa, ↑ tantha and bendrədib.

·He sees the spirit of his people embodied in Grey and Churchill, and the spirit of the German people in its Emperor and in The landscape consists of flat meadows Hindenburg; he measures the pitiful and fields, and in these months at crawling of English intrigue with the iron hangs over it morning and evening deads of Mackenson, and he perceivre that thought the approaching whitish bank the shameful defeats of the present wij yet of vapour was mist, but very soon they be followed by more terrible ones in the know what was the matter. It was a gas stuck, and the order was issued, ut immediate future is threatening. They had Now only they begin to admit what the on the gas masks.

The bank of fog felt themselves so secure on their island, passed over our trenches, then camo tow bank of smoke creeping towards us, they had ridiculed the idea of German black-grey; then, again, another bank of landing, and even of a Zeppelin raid, but gas, some 10 minutes behind the first. on the day when the German gune thun- Altogether three or four double waves of dered at Belgrade, these arose from the whiteish gas and smoke gas swept over depth of the English people's heart the our trenches. There was nothing else to bitter cry, Away with Grey! Away with hagoon,

Some men coughed and fell || Churchil. !?! down. The others stood at the ready as Paradoxical though it may sound, it is long as possible. The English artillery the German land army that will paralyse at the same time fired gas shells on our England's naval tyranny. This object we trenches.

are all striving for, and it must be attain- Behind the fourth gas and smoke clouded, no matter at ahat or at whose sacrifice. there suddenly emerged Englishmen in And attained it shall be, not, however, by thick lines and storming columns. They way of Calais, but along the old highway Bar rose suddenly from the earth, wearing of the Crusaders, by way of Bagdad and Temperature an smoke maske over their faces, and look the desert of Sinai. Over that path the Humally ing not like soldiers but like devil. The wire was no longer there to hold them German crusade must pass before the | Wind Direction ...

world's salvation can be effected,

HONGKONG

METEOROLOGICAL

REGISTER.

Hongkong Observatory, November 29th.

sion Force

Weather w

Previous On Date On Date

Day

st 3 pm 6 m

4p.

30.12

30.20

30.29

70

·:59

39

.67 4610 38

NNE KNE

3

Highest open air Temperature on 28 h 70 Lowest opna als Temperature on 28ta

HONGKONG TIDE TABLE.

From 30th November to 7th December.

HIGH WÄREN

The following extracts from a letter received from & Buenos Aires correspon. back dent of a London firm afford an interestShortly after 7 o'clock no more news

reached the divisional fighting headquar- WHEN EVERY NOISE GETS Bala ing sidelight on the activities of theters to the rear. The telegraph and tre- Germans in Argentina:-

phone wires were shot to pieces, and ens

** ON YOUR NERVES.". munications had to be restored by dir "One must admire the German organ

When you have so far lost control of and terrible hours. The adjoining your nerves that you fly to pieces ization; we see it here in every possible patch riders and motors. These were bad

They are engaged in the division also reported a gas attack and over the last little noise or excitement direction greatest advertising campaign that has that their first line had been stormed

it is high time to give your nerves a rest,, ever been carried out in this country the English.

and to build up your blood. You are They have a circle of papers, they own The smell of the gas made itself keenly keeping up on your nerves alone, Your the Union, La Garela de España, Ger noticeable. The fog was so thick even pale, sallow complexion shows that your menia, El Nacional, etc. They control among the staffs to the rear that ene blood is thin and watery. Your whole PESSIMIST PRESS CRITICISED. I don't know how many hesides, and they could not see 100 metres in front of one system is weak and run down. The came with a certificate of origin.

supply even the big dailies with their Rumours flew about, reports circulated drawn look, the sunken eyes, the deepen- think," continued this gentleman,

Professor A. F. Pollard, Professor of doctored cables. They have men outside like wildfire. Then at last news became ing lines about the mouth and forehead, "it is time a word was addressed to the

Goods are History at University College, speaking every newspaper office, who, when some importers and wholesalers.

more definite, The British between the the boss in weight, are pain, sigas imported by an agent or the actual im. on the progress of the war, said that ten thing new is shown, at once discuss the Inst gas wares had succeeded in storming that the nerves and body are being poor- porter. A large number of things are times more spaces in the newspapers was matter with the crowd, and show the Ger-

it happened.--Reuter

will power are all that is standing then resold to the wholesaler, from whom occupied with things that went wrong than man up as the injured party, in every first trenches of our division. Thus ly nourished. Your nervous energy and between you and a complete nervous they came down to the retailer and the with the things that went right instance The result is to-day that if consumer. The retailer and the consumer

breakdown amate "These wild imaginings," he said, "these you discuss the matter with the average

CHEAP ADVERTISING.

Don't put off taking Dr. Williams may not know, but wholesalers as a gene absurd fears that if Germany succeeds in Argentine you will find that he is pro- ral rule have expert buyers who now establishing connection with Constan- the educated man is not, but then the German and anti-British Of course,

Pink Pills any longer, You may be goods and can easily recognise when they tinople there is going to be any risk to standard of education here is generallying Mr. Thomas Russel, president of the people know their endurance. Dr. Wil

Speaking on "Beginnings in Advertis nearer a collapse than you think. Few Tws. are Gortman, and, of course, the importer Indis of any sort whatsoever, can only very low, as there is such a huge proper Incorporated Society of Advertisement liams' Pink Pills build up, purify and Wa knowe.

arise in the minds of people who never look on of the Galician element from the Consultants, said many beginners hesitated put your blood in shape to properly "Either of these two ought to report

at & map. The Germans at no point have north-west of Spain.

to ane newspaper advertising because of nourish your exhausted. overstrained Ther goods, and say from whom he bought penetrated more than 175. miles from their Ubveza. With that knowledge it would be

own frontier, and it is 3,000 from their united for mutual protection, and as the employing circulars instead. But the ex or harmful drugs. They give strength r

Again, the German merchants here have the expense, and thought to save money by nervous system. They contain po opiates sul abroad not to accept good, from the The Professor went on to say that he did an import freely from Great Britain pense of anything must be measured by its not stimulation Go to the nearest medi a simple matter of instracting the Con- present frontier to India." guilty mentral firm again, It is em- not believe Germany had so many men in thanks to our lawyer government efficiency, and a newspaper circulating in dealer today and get a bottle of Dr. Batar. phatically the duty of the first importer the Balkans as she wished us to believe Again, the North Americana, who are among the proper class could carry its mes- the authorities. In not doing so he runs done with view of bringing Bulgaria in the preference to Germen houses with at a very small fraction of what it would if he has any doubts whatever to inform The great German-Austrian offensive was trying hard to get into this market, give go into the families of the bay ng public grave risk. This is the only way to to do the fighting and of keeping Greece Facilities of payment that others don't cost to convey the same message by means

ond Bamanía out of it,

of a circular. clean the stable.

to the Home Office, with samples of the

they are now in a stronger position,

Bet."

William

Pink Pils for $1.50 or six

to the Dr. Williama Medicine Co., 96. Brechten Road, Shanghai The price bottles for 88. Or send for them direct Ban,

include pastage.

** [1095-4

to T

Height

63m 959

·5 8 m 10:49.

942

LOW WATKE.

Hang

H'bong.

Maan

Menu

Time

Time

b.

ft.in.

30.im 1.25

Des

1m 257

10a 5 5

2 m

32.

3

53 5 4 m 046

32

J1.56 178

81

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