1915-12-04 — Page 7

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TRIAL TRIP IN

SUBMARINE.

FIFTY FEET UNDER WATER

THE TORFEDO BATTERY,

A highly interesting description is given in a recent issue of the Public Ledger, Philadelphia, of a tris voyage made in submarino at Quincy, Massachusetts. The writer first describes the preparations for z"statio dive," and naya ***

THE HONGKONG DAILY PRESS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 47B, IVIS,

THE INVASION OF EGYPT.

ORDERS FOUND ON A TURKISH OFFICER.

The following Army Orders, issued by Djemal Pasha to the Turkish Army under his command, which invaded Egypt at the end of January and beginning of Febru. ary last, were found on a stead Turkish officer after the fighting. Apart from their Every man to his station now. Stand historical importance these documents have by!" shouts the skipper. The 15 men of a deep psychological interest. They throw the crew are distributed through the sub-into relief the native confidence in victory marine, each man at his post. One at a with which Djemal started out on the ex- time now the valves are opened and the pedition in which defeat was certain. water rushes into the tanks. There are three ballast tanks, two trimming tanks, an auxiliary tank, and adjusting tank, and several other receptacles. The suboar ine is so built that water taken into one tank can be blown into another the length of the vessel simply by the manipulation of levers and pumps ander the thumb of the engineers. We are now engaged in the process of trimming."

The valvo

"All ready now, shouts the captain. And in another minute, "Take 300 lb. into the forward trimming tank." is opened and the rush of swirling water can be beard. The submarine commences to settle forward.

Pump 2001. into the trimming tank aft," shouts the skipper. The man aft repeats the order, The orders and ropeat ing of orders sound like the chanting of a litany. The captain keeps on filling and emptying tanks. Blow 200 out of the adjusting," mouns that much water is blown out of one of the tanks by the fore of compressed air. The process continues until the vessel is submerged on an even keel and finally floats in a sort of state of

suspended animation."

THROUGH THE PERISCOPE, Nothing but the sea stretches in every direction seva for the far-away coastline. Now we see our Boating prison settling in the water. She goes down gradually by the head. Foot by foot we drop closer to the water. As a matter of fact we are actually under the water and looking out over the surface through the periscope. Another minuto and the waves como up to meet us and we are gone! The peri #copes are under and we are down 25ft.

Below the conning tower they are mani- pulating the tanks. The process is some- thing like balancing a carpenter's level. The depth dial alone tells us how deep we have submerged. All hands are intent upon the slittle black indicator. All at once the hand bogins spinning rapidly and wo begin going down fast. The foot

The first order makes an appeal to the material instincts of the array. It is noto worthy that pensions for the families of the killed are graduated in proportion to the bravery shown by the slain. It is dated January 30th, 1915, three days be fore the Turks deliverest their attack on the Canal, and runs-

1.-Grants of money, te be given to the families of officers killed in the attack on the Canal, in addition to legal pensions. (L.T.280 in one payment apparently.)

2-Officers killed, who have shown extraordinary bravery, will be promoted in rank and the pensions of the higher rank will be paid to their families.

3.-Privates, Corporals and N.C.Os. killed in the attack on the Canal who have shown great bravery will be promoted to a higher rank. The pensions attached to the higher rank will be paid,

4-When the conquest of Egypt has been completed the family of every officer and soldier killed will have a house built for it by the Government in its town or village,

5.Claims in this connection must be authenticated by the A.C, Commander.

6.This order applies to all soldiers on the line of battle or behind it.

7.-1t also includes officers and men dis abled to work.

Commander of the 4th Army and Minia- ter of Marine-ARMED DIENAL.

THE ATTACK ON TOUSSOUM.

The second document, which is from the Army Corps order of January 30th of Djemal Pasha, dealt with the preparations for the attack on Toussoum which was at- tempted on February 2nd. It is as follows:

1.-To-night, in socordance with the a rangement of Kaim, Ali Fuad Boy, the following detachments will move towards Bir el Murra:-

WAR NEWS,

INSURING THE BULGARIAN

THRONE.

KNOLL 60. ?

STORY OF A GREAT FIGHT.

BY CAPTAIN C, R. W. BEAN, AUSTRALIAN PRESS REPRESENTATIVE]

Underwritore recently accepted a rate of £5 5 per cent. for a policy providing for the payment of a total loss claim It was just 10 days after the first big should King Ferdinand still be on the Bulgarina Throne on June 30, 1018. The battle which followed the Suva Bay low rate indicates that in the underlanding. The new British force landed und the wheels of the great battle which writers' opinion the risk insured against at Nulla Bay on the night of August 6th, followed bad run slowly to a standstil is small.

by August 10th and 11th. Ben cannot fight for ever, and after about five days and nights of it both the Turks and our own men were pretty well exhausted. We settled down, and dug ourselves in. The Turks spread their trenches as well as they could around us, and there was comparative quiet for a week

5,000,000 ENEMY CASUALTIES.

The Vicure Rotterdamasche Courant Publishes a review of enemy lusses. It between Octobor 11th and 20th, the total appears, according to this estimate, that casualties mounted to 57,424 dead, wounded, and missing

On August 21st, at 9 o'clock of the afternoon, the British guns began to tear The total Prussien losses up to the the bowels out of the pain in front of present are set down at 2,021,078. There them and the low hills which rise out of are, moreover, 228 Bavarian, 200 Saxon; it w 286 Wurtemburg, and 53 Navy lists, as The first sign that the Australians and well as some lists of officers and non-Now Zealanders were on the move was a wild outburst of firing at about 20 commissioned officers with the Turkish Army

Sminutes pass 3 from the cactny somewhere

totad

The Indians on the The newspapers estimate the

upon a spur fosses of the Central Powers at five mil- extreme left were to wheel round across lions.

the plain and join with the British. The New Zealand Mounted Rifles what was left of them after the wild night battle of August 6th-with the Maoris and Con- naught Rangers, were to charge the knoll and the redoubt. And the Fourth Australian Brigade, also very attenuated by the hard fighting of the week before, was to cross the valley and attack the scaward side of the knell,

DEATH PREFERABLE, TO CAPTIVITY.

Private W Lonsdale, ex-tramcar.con- ductor of Leeds, makes it clear in letters to his wife tant he is feeling the full rigour of German discipline. He writes from the fortress prison of Spandau:

The captain came to see me yester day, and gave me a copy of Ti-Bits and a copy of the Social Gazette (Salvation Army paper). The only time I have for reading is on Sunday. During the wock it is all work and sleep, and not a large amount of the latter. Pleased to hear that is still alive and well. You can tell him that I don't fancy being a pri- soner of war

Death is far preferable to what I have already gone through. If my time were to come over again I should never be a prisoner of wor. I would be with my comrades ou the pit-hills in Flanders."

In another letter, Bays the Daily Chronicle, be tells his wife not to warry about him, as he is in good health, and British heart, the same as I am doing, and adds: So cheer up, keep up a good old all will come well in the end Remember.

Those who had crossed the gully hung on there just below one of the enemy's trenches and within sight of 14 And by nightfail the result was that the New Zealanders held part of the outer trench of a circular redoubt. The Australians were on the same spur, 150 yards away and in front of the Turkish trench run- ning up the spur. The 15th Australian Battalion had been put in on the plain to link up a space between the Indians and the force advancing from Suvia.

The 18th and 19th Battalions had only landed the day before-fairly bucking their packs off, was how one who had been toiling here since the first day put it to me.

Australians may be legitimately proud of the fact that there was an almost instantaneous demand for their Everybody seemed to want services, some of the new Australians. The had captured on knoll 60 might have been a difficult trench to keep unless one of fraction of the outer trench which wo

Staff of 6th Regiment, 75th Regiment. Once British alwaya British. That is a good the numerous tranches behind it were marks fly by the indicator and stop with | Field Artillery Comp. 2 Heavy Battery motto, and it takes a lot to break the heart talon-the plan of them at that time

a jerk at 42, The keel of the vessel is 12ft. below the indicator hand, and that means that wo are down aft

Not until after the trip was all over did wo know that is the unsophisticated as senger-that the submarine had suddenly tilted "off balance" and slid down to the bottom of the harbour entrance.

But on the next trial the static divy was successfully negotiated, and we fosted 30ft, down balanced like an aerobat on two

logs of a chair. At this juncture we tried asafety first device which has been adopted on all submarines. The captain set & trip contrivance at 35ft. This meant that when wo had submerged to a depth of oft the mechanism would trip and send the vessel up to the surface in a jiffy Again the tanks and valves are adjusted and we settle downwards. At 33 we are As the still sinking at 34 still going.. indicator band starts going the other way. a sudden clutching somewhere in the vitals of the submarine, a jolt all over, and the indicator, and starts going the other way.

In less than 30 seconds, going at elevator speed, we are lifted out of the depths us had though some supernatural power reached down suddenly and torn us from the bed of the ocean. This "tripper" can

bo set at any depth, and unless the submar ine has been disabled, is as mre sa the sun. After the statio dive we some up again and, very frankly, there is some sense of relief to the uninitiated. What would have

happened if our boat had stayed down on

the bottom? If no rescuers had come to our aid each man would have been shunted up into the ponning tower in turn, the air pressure turned on, the hatchway opened, and the man "blown out." If he had n good heart he might have reached the sur-

The Engineer Battalion and the bridge squads and the Supply Column Detach of a true Britisher,” ment will on arrival in the vicinity of Bir el Murra immediately fortify this place with a front facing Toussoum,

2.The A.C. Headquarters with the Cavalry squadron under its orders will move to-morrow morning at 4 o'clock ta Bir el Murra

5-Communication and company bag gags will be colected by the régiment and left at the camp in the care of an officer until further orders. The cases, boxes, and stretchers of the Banitary Corps are 4.-The Imam must explain to the sol to be conveyed by the soldiers of that Before leaving camp soldiers will diera that, when they have crossed the corps. Canal, they will not be in an enemy coun-have their water finaks filled try but in a country belonging to our dear fellow-countrymen. We are not making war against our co-religionists, the Egyp- tians; we are fighting the English, the him. enemies of the clear religion of Islam. No attacks are, therefore, to be made on Mos- lems or others, except the English, French, and Russians, and even the wives and chil dren of those latter are on no account to be touched.

5.--Officers must on no account have.

their notebooks, containing special notes which they have made, on their persons during the attack.

6-Abdulla-oghlu-Andal-Kadir of Der ras. Sergeant in the 2nd Company, 1st Battalion, 76th Regiment, is awarded the bftikhar medal for his bravery during

yesterday's reconnaissance.

- BRIDGING "PARTY'S INSTRUCTIONS.

Djoma's order No. 21 makes interesting reading in the light of the fact that the Turks were allowed to bring their bridg ing material to the banks of the Canal and actually to begin building the bridge be foro the British attacked them. The fact also that the Turks rifles were not loaded must have lost them many men. They fled,

61 the detachments which cross the

hoy are to Canal meet the enemy in the vicinity of the Canal they are to attack and disperso

7-On the day of attack provisions will not be sent to the soldiers. Accordingly I allow them one day's rations.

could only be guessed vaguely, Accord- ingly just after daylight next morning the 18th Battalion, the first of the new Australian Battalions to go really into action, was put in through the Indians to take the trenches ahead of it at right- angles to the pars already captured by the New Zealanders.

The battalion swept through an open- ing in the Indian line and then deployed. It charged through the scrub up the hil, and found in front of it a trench which was really part of the wide cuter circis a party under Major Lane followed of the redoubt. It seized the trench, and along this trench to the north and down the northern slope of the hill until the Tarks on the hits in the plain realised what was happening. The trench lay open to the Turks as does a furrow when you look down into it from the slope of 8All officers and men will attach a white band to the upper part of their arm

arm the opposite side, and they poured into as a distinguishing mark

is such a hail of machine-gun fire au shrapnel that the men were driven out of the part that was over the northern slope. During the day the Turks bed up both sides of the trench and bombed it from half-made trenches of their own, whose direction they knew, while it was unknown to us. The new battalion had no experience of bombs except by sanch and was driven back along the trench until it joined other trench the others had taken, and there it stayed. We had still only part of the rise of the circle,

the five days following. and that was the situation on knoll 60 on the evening of August 22nd and for

9-On the night of the attack the pass word will be the "Sacred Standard" (Surjak-Sherif) The password Sacred Standard" is given in order that friendly detachments may be able to recognite one another in the dark.on

10.-One pontoon and two rafts will be given to each full company designated for the attack. Rafts will also be given to the two weak companies, according to the num ber of rafte available. Eighteen soldiers must be designated to carry or convey each raft These soldiers are to be changed every half hour. Tomorrow, at 5 pm the squads of bridgemakers are to present themselves at the supply column.

The rifles will be carried by the other soldiers.

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On the evening of August 27th the New Zealand Mounted Rifles and the Fourth Australian Brigade, both of them for the 9th LH, worked along the trench to meet fourth time within three weeks, plunged

face and then have had to swim for life.leaving their bridging material in our led to each raft and pontoont into a force fight. They had set out to them, and the redoubt was ours, The in

orer tried being shot of known, has honds. Order 21 reader el Murra

ever a submarine

torpedo tube. He survived.

·THE SWISH OF THE TORPEDO.

take the remainder of the redoubt enclosed terior was almost full of lead Turks, and

bodies. Sme spe within the inner circle of which the New the alopes around it were thick with their Zealanders held so far part of the circum ference, The bombardment ceased at 5, and on the moment of it our men dashed over

the parapes against the Turkish trenches.

There is only one part to tell-the part of the 4th Australian Brigade on the right. The bombardment which wrecked some of the trenches in the redoubt never reached the trench on the spur. The assaulting

Bir el February 1st, 1915 1-During to-day's and to-morrow's ad The firing of torpedoes is an interesting vance upon the Canal, absolute silence process. Four tubes are loaded and four must be preserved by both officers and men. compartment. We are going to fire foar more torpedoes carried inside the forward There must be no coughing, and commands everywhere the Turks were severely defeat Mounted Rifles in the first, Otago and party went out in three tines of 100 each, and load four while running at full speed. The obief gunner's mate and his crew seal the breeches end make all ready for firing The actual firing is done by the com- mander in the conning tower. Through and with the aid of mathematical range spaces marked off on the periscope glass furlers he has them aimed at the required angle.

Little red lights glow to tell him when the tubes are ready for firing. At the exact moment desired he pulls a lever. Down below there is a swishing sound as the torpedo is discharged, followed by the swirl of the water as it fills the empty tor- pedo chamber. Looking through the port scope you see the torpedo jump to the aur face a few yards ahead of the bow and veer straight ahead at a speed faster than the submarine, leaving behind it the tell-tale wake which transatlantic voyagers have noted the last few months. In less than two minutes the four torpedoes are dis charged. In this case they are "blanks" so far as explosives are concerned, but each is propelled by its own mechanism after it has been discharged from the sub marines

S

A few engineer soldiers are to be assign-. The Army Corps Commander-DJEMAL Army Corps Order No. 23 bears no date, but as Order No. 21 was issued on Febre ary 1st this date may also be assigned to No. 23. It outlines the operations to be undertaken. These were subsequently at- There were three lines in the central at- tempted in the manner indicated, and tack, the Auckland and Canterbury

Wellington in the second, and the Eigh of whom one hundred was lent from the teenth Australian Battalion in the third 17th Australian Battalion. They came

straight into a terrible fire. Captain Con on their left were the Connaughts and onnelly, of the 14th Battalion, who led the their right the Fourth Brigade. As they ret line, fell wounded in three places. dashed out the Mounted Rifles were met by a fierce fire from the nearest tronches in Every officer was either killed or wound- the men, except a small party, which man- affected by the bombardment in any case aged to get into a Turkish trench slong- out of them. Possibly it had been leasted, and so were practically the whole of

side the New Zealanders.. it was crowded with Turks, and these the

And so fell knoll 60. New Zealanders shot down. They then swept on to the further side of the circle, and thence to their right. Within 10 minates they had every trench in the right. hand portion of the circle, and the Con- naughts had swept through to their left, with the 18th Battalion behind them. In the trenches and over the surface between them the Turkish dead were lying thick There was no doubt that this bombardment had done its work

are not to be given in a loud voice. For-ed. The order reade

1-All the detachments of the enemy tifying (entrenching) tools and water flasks are to be tied in such a way that have been pushed back to the western bank they will make no sound during the march of the Canal A part of the eastern bank There is to be no cigarette smoking. of the Canal between Ismailia and the On the eastern bank of the Canal no Large Bitter Lake is occupied by a few bank of the Canal riffs are to be loaded ships are in Timsah Lake and the Large rifles are to be loaded. On the western sentries of the enemy. The enemy's war on the commands of the offcora. Before Bitter Lake beginning the advance, the company com- manders will personally inspect the rifes and make themselves absolutely certain that they are not loaded. Later, the squad officers will again examine the rifles to see that they are not loaded. The embarks tion on to, and the disembarkation from, the rafts and pontoons is to be carried out noiselessly and speedily. Soldiers must be told off to man the rafts and pontoons. Dis embarkation on to the opposite bank is to be accomplished without noise.

2-By the grace of Allah we shall at tack the enemy on the night of February 2nd and 3rd and seize the Canal. Simul taneously with us the column will attack Suez and one company Kantara. The 68th Regiment will attack El Ferdan (1) and Ismailis, The left column will at tack Suez, and ore company from the 10th Division wil attack Skinfeg (Shallufs) The Champions of Islam (Hajanio) from Tripoli, in Africa, from the left wing will advance on Serapeum and the south of But the whole circle had not yet been The ammunition in the war baggage Serapeum. To act as a reserve during the gained. The Connaughts on the left were will be distributed to the soldiers in the attack the 10th Division will take up driven back out of the same trenches which forenoon, and it is to be carried by them position in advance of its present camp. the 18th and been forced to give up tho in their bread sacks and pockets. Empty 3. As soon as it is dark the heavy artil week before. The Turks still retained a ammunition boxes and cases are to be lery battery, with the 1st Battalion of the wedge running right into some of the in- handed over to the soldiers' supply column 75th Infantry Regiment, will take up its nermost trenches of the circle, although we It is to he explained to the soldiers that position in the vicinity of Bir Fushad three quarters of the circumference. the ammunition is sufficient for require and Bir Morra: a battalion from the 10th That night at 11 o'clock the 9th Australian ments, and, further, that they are to take Division will be assigned to the heavy Light Horse was put in to make the circle ammunition from any s diers who may be battery to assist it during the morch. Its complete. They, like their predecessors, killed. Haversacks and overcoats are to task is to destroy the enemy's warships in found themselves attacked from both sides be left at the camp.

Laske Timsah. If it gets the opportunity of the trench by Turks whose position they it is to sink a ship at the entrance of the could not see. They, too, were driven back Canal. After executing this task it will along it, and the Turks, retained their immediately move south and subject the wedge.

The following night, when the run of the trenches was now pretty wall certain, the 10th LH. charged from nur trenches in the interior of the circle, and seized the remaining part of the circumference. The

The torpedo tubes are filled with water, which rushed in when the blow caps were opened. The water is pumped into one of the auxiliary tanks, the breeches flung open and in a few minutes more the re- maining four torpedoes ars swung along travelling rail platforms and jammed into the empty tubes. In less than 10 minutes Rations will be carried by the sol-enemy's warships in the Large Bitter Lake

diers in their bread sacks and pockets. to its fire,

it is possible to fire eight torpedoes. And if our aim has been good eight of the

enemy's ships are in Davy Jones focker.

3-Two soldiers (from the weak and ill) from each company are to be left with the baggage.

Ration sicks will be collected by the bat 4The infantry regiments are to be talion and will be handed over to-morrow ready to march as, 6 o'clock this evening, forenoon to the supply column.

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