ATTACK IN THE BALKANSI
ENEMY'S MOST VULNERABLE
POINT.
THE UTMOST ENERGY WANTED,
Mr. R. A. Scott James writes in the
Evening Standuri :-
SIR E. SHACKLETON'S STORY.
780-MILE JOURNEY TO GET HELP. TERRIBLE EXPERIENCE IN THE
·ICE PACK.
The following account of Sir Ernest Shackleton's adventures is extracted from a telegram sent by the explorer to the Editor of the Daily Chronicle :
ance
·WILA
THE HONGKONG DAILY PRESS, TUESDAY JULY 4ra 1916.
THE AIR WAR ON THE
WESTERN FRONT AEROPLANE LOSSES IN MAY.
The fine weather which prevailed prac tically throughout the whole of May favoured sir reconnaissance work on the Western front, and it may be held very
A TRADE WAR.
MR HUGHES ON CONTROL OF IMPORTA
-THE VALUE OF ORGANISATION.
Mr. W. M. Hughes, Prime Minister of
a noun for the many hits alta, visited Birmingham on May Which took place during the month beth and received the honorary degree of the airmen of the Allies and those Doctor of Laws from Birmingham Uni attached to the German armies (says The versity and the freedom of the city
Economic Policy for War and Peace," WAR OF ECONOMIC DOMINATION. Mr. Hughes, whose subject was An paid a tribute to the memory of Mr. Joseph Chamberlain, who, he said, first sounded in these islands the clarion call seeds of the concept of Empire that was uf Empire. To hinr they owed the first to-day spreading like a great wave world- wide in extent, lapping the most remote shares of the Empire buk
THE OMNIBUS.
Although the skisence of many" motor busses at the front has led, in some stauces, in and around Lundon, to the old horse bus being restored to the road, still it has come back, where it has, a sorry travesty of itself. There is a "ha'pny bus still plying between Somerset House and Waterloo, over Waterloo bridge, a genuine survival, and in some enoto corners of London the horse bus is still to be found. But none the less its and the "hansom it has given up the days are over. Along with the growler racenom it
"Attack the enemy where he is weak. ets," and the Serbian Prime Minister, ber, 1014, the Endurance entered the pucker),
Haying left South Georgia in Decem the other day. Attack where his resistice in 56deg. 40. 8, 18deg, W., and
The following table, compiled from the tive audience at the Town Hall. Mr. ing power is lowest. Attack from the forced her way for 1,000 miles through British, French, and German Headquartons should be well represented.
There was a very large and representa- Balkans Military experts, like all other icebergs, On January 10th, 1015, Coats
daily official reports issued by the Hughes had asked that Labour urganiza- experta difer when confronted with Land was sighted, and then the Endarters, shows that the Allied airmen brand, decisive issue. One school of opinion urges us to ignore the mobility miles of coast, which was named Caird host of the German Bring service. discovered a new land, with 200 uiue to retain their ascendancy over conferred on by sea-power, and exhorts Const. But abnormal circumstances now ur
During
April they accounted for 49 as to concentrate all our military forces intervened, and, contrary to all experi-machines,
In May, 58 on the Western front. Others, like the ene
German in February, temperature
machines were brought to earth Of military advisera of M. Pasitch, forming below zero," Summer conditions were these 41 are claimed by French and 18 by their opinion from actual experience of
non-existent, The Endurance was beset
British nirmen. It cannot be, and is not Near Eastern warfare-anropinion in the ice and never got free, and it was stroyed. A large number fell into or asserted that all the machines, were de ported by many, experts in the West--impossible to land, though general scien- behind the enemy's lines, and all that is urge that we should attack the enemy not tific work was carried on. The Endurance clained in the majority of these case where he in strongest, as he is in France, south of 77deg. S. (35deg, W.). In June drifted southward, reaching a farthest.
A is that the machines were seen to fall in but. where he is most vulnerable, as he is the menace of fee-pressure on the ship lend to the conclusion that they would day saw its ebb and flow. Some of them At present the war obsessed our minds, in the South-East. Now, if we were will began, and preparations were made to
circumstances which would reasonably We thought rally, of nothing else. Ewry ing to go on waging this war indefinitely abandon the vessel. These preparations almost any persistent military plan were completed just in time
be wrecked on faudinger is a little while ago believed it was a mere would enable us to win. But we cannot
German Main
Headquarters takes passing upisude in the life of the nation, be content with the costly victory of nt flocs during a blizzard, the ice split under
On August 1st, while examining the the number claimed was 24-four British who stood secure; there was not a man credit for $1 enemy machines. In April, but there was not now a man or woman trition and siege warfare. The whole my feet, and 1 had just rushed the dogs up of-British, seven (these are admitted nflected by the war. When the war was
and 20 French. The May figure is made country demands the utmost energy and
on board when with a grinding crash they our General leadquarters to have
or woman in Britain whose life was not enterprise, in war; it demands that the pressure took us The Endurance have been lost), French, 34. Two of the French (cheers) or rest for over under the Allied Governments should freate oppor- bodily out of the ice and was fun machines included in the total of 41 were stigma of decadonec, for we could not tunities for effective offensive action; for before the gale against masses of up said to have fallen in flames near defeated unless we were a party to the
we must march as conquerors
beating the enemy, not merily for wear-driven in. The vessel stood the strain, Froideterre Hill, north of Verdun, but defeat. Nothing less, than the complete friends along the road, and to see and ing him down. There cau be no doubt
and by middag the pressure censed. The this statement in the German commverju erthrow of our enemy, would suffice. A that before the war is over the Germansship heeled over half out of the water, will have to be beaten by the French and
and with her rudder split."
was unofficially contradicted from Paris.. the British on the Western front, and by
In the middle of October the Endurmachines, compares with it in the pre-spell our economic ruin; for the war, The total losses for May, namely, 100 stalemate would be a defent. It would ta Russians in the East.
was ceding month:-
after allt the back of it was a war by Germany for the economie domination of the earth
LESSON OF VERDEN.
ས་
see was drifting across
what reputed to be Now South Green'and, but soundings showed 1,800 fatheins of valer. On October 10th, in the space of right on to the ice, and on October 27th British 10 seconds heavy pressure forced the ship. the and cate. shin, the water overmastered the pumps Germans
Locbergs pierced the French the main deck breaking upwards. hands took to the ice the position was
·All extremely serious. The party were on drifting ice and the nearest land was Paulet Island, 340 miles distant. Sir Ernest tried at first to cross the ice with the small boats and dog, teains, but new cracks and high-pressure ridges prevented progress, and the party, then stayed by the wreek of the Endurance, depending on the northerly drift and the summer heak-up. They named their floating through the ice and main deck of the honte Ocean Camp, P Endurance grappled out a hundred cases and by cutting of food. On November 20th the Budar.
Driven down for Aerial Shot forced to Fights Down land. Total.
7 34.
2
*48
17 4
CRUCIFIED SERBIAN.
AUSTRIA OBTAINED EVI LENCE IN "TREASON TRIAL
HOW
over
WEATHER REPORT.
Japan or N.E. Chirs
On the 3rd at 10.59. No returns from
Pressure has decreased slightly at Shanghal and Haiphong. It is nearly station RF ose bare The depression is the China Stahan filled up A depression appears to to forming over
Tongking
10 am, to-day 000 h. Total since Int January, 65.16 in.nes against an average of Hongkong rainfall for 24 hours ending st
40:48 inches
The foxmuust for the 24 hegymanding at Noon to-day is as follows:--:
DISTRICT
FORECANT. E. wirde, moder- Hongkong & Neighbourhoodate to light, fine
(to cloudy. (The camo B
No. 1.
Formosa Channel
South Coast of China between The same as
kingkong and Lancake, į South count of Chins between E. winds, moder
No. 1.
Hongkong sad Hainaneste to fresh. HONGKONG METEOROLOGICAL
KEGISTER.
Honghong Observatory, July 2nd.
Temperature Barometer og Homidity... Wind Direction....
Rain Weather Ty
Previous On Dale On Date
DAY
at
st
at 3 pm 6 11.
2p.m.
20 87
30.80
39.67
ab
79
86
75
BI
88
East
Fast
0
C
Highest open-siz Temperature on 285 Lowont open-air Temperature on 2nd
HONGKONG TIDE TABLE.
From 4th to 10th July, 1918,
HIGH WATER
The motor bus is not really its linen! difference between the motorman and the successor, any more than the tram was ever its real connection. There is all the bus driver that there is between the en- gine driver and the sea captain. On the horse bus, the driver was the thing and duster, and after him the herves. The the great thing, and after him the con driver and the conductor were not at ciale. No one over thought of addressing
and spoke to him rather as a travelling thom as officials any more than he would think of addressing a captain or the first mate as officials. In the case of the driver companion of superior experience, to whom respect was, the best way of soning London was from naturally due. When Gladstone said that. for this reason,
truth. But the top of the bus owed its the top of a bus, he enunciated a simple
driver, in front; he of the bell-shaped top hat, of the cherry fick of the whip, of the eye alert; he who seemed to have so many preeminenes in this respect mainly to the
greet them at such extravagant distances; past belief; he whose convoreation with be whose topographical knowledge was you as you sat respectfully alert to his very word on the favoured sat beside But will the first fruitful results of a great offensive, even a combined offensive,
For the last 20 years her advance read à trois, you and the horses and the novor or immediately behind him, was always Le felt on these fonts? For eighteen
like a romance. Britons had lived in a ending stream of pussing friends! Juonths the Germans have been making
paradise of fools, believing that all was. Then there was the conductor. Never their Western line, into a fortress, defend
well, but nothing was more certain than surely was a man more highly gifted with od by line after line of strong defensive
this that bad peace stayed with us for command of language. Hear him as be positions. The battle of Verdun, magni-
another 10 years we were utterly undone, reaches an important stopping place, se Scently as it revealed the fighting power
It was well that the war came when it his observant eye for fares, note how he f.the French, proved also the enormous
did. Now that it had come we had been disposes of all questions put to him in advantages which the defensive possesses
dragged into the area and had been the shortest possible time, hear the won in a prepared region. It showed that on
challenged in a battle to the death. Woderful recital of the places he hopes to advance in the West can only be accom
must fight it in the spirit of men resolved reach, watch the ready, assistance he plished at prodigious cost. Similar con
either to die or conquer. (Cheers.) After renders to all and sundry as they clamber ditions prevail on the Russian front, with
justice, as revealed in the recent Ban-could say that victory was safel A crushing indictment of Austrian 20 months war was there anyone who on to the footboard. Then the horses, this difference, that in view of the far
jaluko trial at Sarajevo, when to Aus greater length of the line, the enemy front
trian Serbs were condemned to death and tish people realized that the present was their calling; two of them, three of them, He believed the great mass of the Bri- for the most part, willing and wise at Government subsidized horses they were is more thinly held, and reinforcement is slower. But in Russia as in France, the
88 tu terms of hard labour on charges of battle to the end, and that every weapon sometimes four of them leaders and Tue. ey have the advantage of elaborately
Laussane, and transmitted by the Wire regarded the struggle as a war for this To find the beginnings of things in the Wed. treason, is published by Professor R. A.
st the disposal must be brought into use. wheelers pulling with a will, prepared defeness, with a network of rail- ways behind them connecting each front
economic domination of the earth. Should history of the omnibus, recourse must be with the central military depots. Very
ADVENTURES ON ICE FLOSS.
One man, Spiro Baldo, now awaiting We. lie asked, fie supine and let the Gor had to Paris and to the 18th of March; Thurs different is their position in the Balkan Ocean Camp, the ice appearing Arm evidence which consisted solely of a let- On December 23rd, 1915, the party left execution, was condemned to death on
man Juggeranut roll over us should 1689 On that day journeys began to be we take advantage of the present great made in Paris by a vehicle which started Fri, Ponzosals. Here alone is it possible for enough to travel over. They hauled with ter written to him in 1903 by a young Aus Portunity. For it was a great oppor at fixed times from fixed points, and ear- the British to engage Germans without them three boats, the James Caird, Und trian Serb residing in Bosnia, attacking tity, as well as a great trial. He urged. ried passengers. These passengers were Batur. boing at a positive disadvantage in the ley Docker and Stanconibe-Wills (named the German headmaster of the school at that we must equip ourselves to meet charged at a fixed rate of five sous for matter of coramunications. It will be said after donors to the expedition) Jar which he (the writer of the letter) was after-the-war problems, and so roh Ger ecob journey, but by no means everybody that the sea route is rauch longer, and vary and February passed without any pupil. The letter was seized in 1910 when many of that glittering bauble that urged and anybody were accepted for transport. that the available merchant shipping is hope of escape; five of the seven dog teatas he returned to Austria from Serbis, and her on. If we let Germany see that at the The vehicles were, in fact, ouly pour In hath large arinies in the Near East, and In March winter began, and the tents at the recent trial, RARE limited. The reply is that we already had been shot owing to shortage of food kept by the police until it was produced end of the war she could achieve at the plus grande commodité et liberté des par. that the sea-route, though longer, is for were worn bar. The ice on which they
best hat, a barren victory we should pricksonnos de mérite," and such persona as tore adequate shan the tortuous single were now drifted rapidly northward, and collect information for the defence had organize the forces of England, and the tied Later on, in the reign of Charles Two advocates who went to Belgrade to the bubble of her confidence. We must soldiers, pages and lackeys were not car- line teruss Serbia. And before the enemy disappeart of Terling Palet Island all their papers seized on the frontier, basis of organization was control of the X came the real omnibus--for all
TIRED LOOKING WOMEN. can use this single line they have to
On April 7th the party and the Public Prosecutor decided they traverso vast spaces of their own Austro-sighted Clarence Island, the most easterly wore equally guilty of treason
Some women always wear a worn, tired Hungarias territory, de qua
It was not, however, until the year 1820 look. It is the outward sign of nervous- l the initial stages of an advance from camp was pitched split to pieces under the seized by gendarmes and told they minst with regard to Tariff Reform, Mr. which ran from the Yorkshire Stingy ütnches and sleeplessness
On April 8th, der foe on which Two witnesses declared that they were
I want to make my position quite clar Paris to London and put on a service characteristic symptoms of worry, head- that Mr. Shillibeer brought the idea from tess, neurasthenia perhaps, with its Sidonika we have the advantage in every influence of the swell. As the ice opened say that one of the accused had worker Hughes continued, I do not say for one Puddington to the Bank. The busses our and prolonged nervous strain, lack respect. The enemy depends upon that gle line which reus along the valley of
What I say is that Tarift Reform is a faro, anything but a popular one, was may be responsible for the trouble. Those is to be achieved morely by Tariff Reform. twenty-two inside passengers, and the of outdoor exercise any or all of these moment that the salvation of the country wore drawn by three horses, carried
Overwork, grief, undue excitement, lale the Varda. We have the use of our and
means to organization. With Tariff, Ro- shilling for each journey These were f this line, which runs almost du north
form you can organize the whole fabric followed by a smaller vehicle carrying of more strength try the great tonic, Dr. from Balonika, and, in addition, two other railways, one going north-west from
industry throughout the whole nation.welve inside passengers. Then came the
who inherit weak nerves are also victins.
Whatever the cause, if you feel the need Salonika to Monastir, another north-east
treatment must be directed toward build- ing up your binod their nourishment from the blood the
bloodlessness, shown by most neurasthenic of the greatest henofit in many cases of Dr. Williams' pink proper regulation of the diet have proved pilis act directly on the blood, and with.
urasthenia. A tendency to anemia, or patients, is also
ance kank, tak
of the South Shetlands,
we launched the boats,
our.
The tide rip.
driving the ice, almost Enished our ex pedition. Rasing through masses of pack we made northward, and pulled the boats, up on a flue for the night.
We
less Press.
a
home market.
PUUTARIFT BEVORM AND ORGANIZATION.
San
Mon
H'kong Mesu Time
4.49 3. 10:41 Gm 116
6 m 141.
11 69
2:10.
Height
Low Wates.
B'kong
Mean
Time
0m 5 44
2:44 m
434m 6:30
0 g 0 g 0 0 0
{0.42 m2 54 8 17 2
48 m 32:
710142
8 m 3 42
9m 324
13.40 4. 10 4 12
61
5 37 3.8
10 18
927 a
0
a 2
10 85
Height
would pay dearly for it. One gave woy, for Serbia, against Austria, or they the other refused and drained along "I was maltreated and dragged along the floe split under the tent.
the railway line,' said the latter. "The "A heavy swell set in at midnight, and was crucified on a tree. I thought that You can create authorities who can speak grent revolution, the accommodation for Williams pink pills, As your ueryes get- and close to the Bulgarian frontier to pulled one man out of the water before down from the torture 1 was conducted or partiet ons birthing thautside passengers. They sat back to hack my last hour had come. After I was taken Wayde Kavalin and Dedeagntch The ass closed together. The whole to the village under escort, and in the your ramifications binding the whole down the middle of the roof on the 750,000 Sorbians recently refitted at ne, only 109ft, long while the gondarme Konkuvitse Kept tollity, call it, if you like, a department of
party waited for daylight on a flective strength of Bulgaria. The Turks escaped into the open sen, and decided to soners Then I told him various things do not say Tarif Reform will save the speak in little of the express bus for in urfa, will be sufficient to neutralise the On the night of the 12th the partying me to bear evidente against the pri-industry, to look after industrial Britain round the knife board" would fill many
evon ng I was plied with heavy wior,dustry together and create an author knife board," as some wag dubbed it.
The wealth of history which centres fully occupied elsewhere. We should make for Elephant Island, which was just to save myself from further torture,
and the Empire gonoraily, (Cheers volumes. No one will really attempt to Have the advantage of attacking in a vir-sighted on the 14th and
in fighting zone where the enemy are by
means well prepared, and where pre-little progress.
A strong wind heading us, we made but now I declare that I know nothing Tariff Reform or soque control over in Notting Hill to the Bank in the 705 and pilla.corrected by there toute
nation at the present juncture, but I say stance, which ran from the Clarendon paration would take much time and many
The gale increased, and against any of the accused? the James Caird took the Stancumbe men, Either the Germans and Austrians Wills in tow. Hudson and Blackbore.
ports will certainty coable you to do that the 80s; of the famous cross bench be. which must bn dous-VALVE DO would detach from their other fronte were severely frost-hitten. forers equal, or nearly equal, tu our own high cross-sea and a furious gals ragel, the very crisis, enabling us to clearg to be a great struggle at the end of the bus; of the straight laddor to the
All night a
by continous baling. The wind shifted
There was (Mr. Hughes continued) go clear of the front wheel without stopping hind the driver of the art of jumping off (this would in itself justify the expedi- driving snow, and there was a low tem- the land tion, as it would give a corresponding ad
the war, not only between Germany and footboard; of the seat lust could be re- perature at midnight. The Dudley Dock-
On the 10th, the gale restarting, unrselves, but between other nations and served, and of the rugs that could be pro vantago for the Allied offensives in Franceer disappeared. and Russia), G, that is more probable, Or landing, on the 15th, it was found the island to the whaling station on the ance of the nation equipping itself and bored. Again, who would hurry over the decided thy beach the hour and try to cross ourselves, and he emphasized the import vided, if the conductor were duly remen they would attempt to hold the position had been without water or hot food for the past. At dusk, we managed to beaching ready to reap the harvest for whichistory of the two famous brothers as
that several members of the party (which cast
boat in a small cove. there is plenty of manoeuvring ground two days) were on the verge of physical weak to haul her up, so we hang on to Now was the hour wien we should declare of their career had each driven a coach, We were too men were dying every day. (Cheers) as two pens who in the early stages place it was found that the beach would the head of King Haakon Bay and mental collapse. At the landing her all night. On the 15th we reached our policy after the war and begin but who in those days each drovo a bus be untenable in high gales, but the party
preparations fo cut a hole in the ice slope above the reach of the waves. Owing to the seriousness of the situation Sir E. Shackleton decided distant, to obtain help, leaving the mail to try to reach South Georgia, 750 miles party on Elephant Inland in charge of Frank Wild, whose judgment, ability, and experience were, says Sir Ernest, a valu- able asset to the expedition: The wea there was appallingly bad, with constant blizzards.
with insufficient men; and in that case
for the ontflanking movements of our forces,
ADRIFT IN A HURRICANE,
"On May 19th I started across the island.. As Vincent and Maenish were unfit to march, I took Crean and Worsley with me. Sions and a cooking stove, but no other quite unknown, I took three days' prov
As the interior of the island was
equipment. Thirty-six hours continuous marching covered 30 miles over glaciers, across mountain ridges and snowfolds from 2,000ft. to 4,000ft. above sea level We made good progress, assisted by the moonlight. We reached Stromness whal ing station in the afternoon of May 20th. This is the first time that the island of Boath Georgia has been crossed, managers of the Norwegian whaling Sir Ernest received every help from the stations in South Georgia, They equip ped a whaler, which started for the wall formidable for the little 80 ton unprotect on April 6th, but found the ice too ed whaler, though it would be easily Also, in view of the shortage of coal, we negotiable for a large protected vessel. reluctantly decided to turn north for assistance to the Falklands. This deci sion caused, great disappointment to our
enerous Norwegian friends." EN
that Tabour must take that place in the passed each other many times a day, Mr. Hughes ploaded, in conclusion, from Ledbury-road to Victoria; how they Councile of the nation that its number always in Park lanc, and how avery time
ment by the people of England. You are "knife board" to the cross seats, quite of Government; there must be zuvern- entitled it to. We must broaden the basis they gravely saluted each other, driver. fashion, with whip and glove? But there. asking the great muas of the people to change their policy (he added); take them
is no end to such recollection From
into your confidence. Let them share your botansels Labour can have, and it is the guarantee That is the best guarantes
to which she is entitled. (Chnors)
The Lord Mayor asked Hughes to,
it in the glorious years of its greatest a modern innovation, was an easy step, and with this, the bus, as Londoners kaew prosperity those immediately preceding
its supersession--had retched its fullest. expression.
It should be mentioned that these pills are as valuable for the ailing girl in her
teens as for the wife and tatron. pink pills for pale people; they are also Your own dealer sells Dr. Williams' obtainable, ons bottle for $1.50, six bottles Co., 06 Szechuen Road, Shanghai Write for $8/ from Dr. Williams Medicine for the helpful free book, “ Plain Talks to Women to the same address.
_____FORTHCOMING EVENTS. Saturday, 8th July
345 p.m.-Third Gymkhaus Meeting at the
Race Course, Happy Valley. Monday, 10th July *****
3pm Anotion of Crown Lead at Pabllo
Works Dept P
3.30 pm Byal Hugkoop Golf Club Extraordinary General Meeting at the Saturday, 15th Jp y
Clus Home Happy Valley.
Ltd Final Winding-up Meeting at the Company's Office
Noon The Derawongse Steamship Co.,
18.15pm The "Phranstig" Steamshin Co.,
Hughes visited a rumber of works wher Earlier in the day at Sheffield Mr.
915 New Hendoian Opera & Comedy It is not yet pinoty years since Mr. Baf en date du
the Theatro Royal To Ni,ht's the freedom of the pity Mr. Hurbs to Marylebone-road from the Yorkshire war material is buing mad, and received Skillibeer, with a crack of the whip and Wednesday 19th July,
a shake of the reins, set off, down the accept as a souvenir of his visit a cabinet pieces, and a piero of Sheffield plate of Sheffald cutlery, containing over 400 manufactured over 100 years ago. To Mrs. and to baby Helen Hughes a case contain Hughes he presented a set of fruit baskets, ing a bowl, cup, and spoon. Mr. Hughes, in his reply, said:
Stingo on his first trip to the Benk," memory has come and gone. set in that time the bus of happy
20
WHAT TICTONY WOULD Consider the effect, not merely military, but also political and gconomic, of an Allied advance in the Balkans. A com- paratively short line from Salonika to the Danube cats the enemy territories into halves. Oust the Germans and their allies from Serbin, and they can no longer serid munitions to Bulgaria and Turkey, or receive food supplies in return. But this is not all. A victorious Allied force On April 24th I set out with volun in the Balkans would make certain the tecra-namely, Worseley, Crean, Marnish intervention of Greece and Rumania on Macarthy, and Vincent. ur side, and Austria-Hungary would through the stream ice, and san north We passed find herself invaded from the Adriatic to
with a fair wind during the first night. the Russian frontier by an overwhelming Snowstorms and gales swept over us foi force of Serbians, Rumanians, and Greeks, the next fortnight, and only three times along with the arstics of Great Britain did wo get sight of the sun for observa and France. Here, too, the Allies would tion.
fighting on favourable ground. The Slave of the Southern Empire are heart Jettison cars and other equipment to "On the sixth day we were forced to and soul with the Allies, and the discon-relieve the topweight owing to the boat tent of the Hungarians is known to be being heavily ired up. All our equip increasing. Here is the real vulnerable ment and sleeping gear were soaked point of the Central Powers the point through. On the eighth day, while hove
The people of Sheffold have a right to which they can least easily defend, where to in a gale, we lost our sea anchor, the
rojnice at what has been done, but they their strength would must quickly cul- On the 14th day we sighted the eliffe The party on the beach on Elephant gard it merely as a spur to urge then on unless we defeated her utterly the result
rops being cut by the ice, lapso. It is not suggested by any coa and the west coast of South Georgia dur Island, when I left there on April 24th.
will do wrong if they regard what they Mr. Hughes expressed the belief that petent critic that we should ceass to press
have done as sufficient, They should reGermany could not conquer, but said that the war in the West or to develop our ing a clearance in the snowstorm, and we were well They had five weeks' most powerful offensive there, and to deal stood in for the Innd, but, observing seas ions and full rations, exclusive of the national organization which the Eng- should in the days to come live in fear and to further, exertions. There is a potency would in fact be defeat for us, because we in that quarter our most deadly and final spouting on uncharted reefs, we hauled possibilities of obtaining seals.lish people have not realized, but which trembling and in feverish preparation for Blows But in the meantime vo can burry off for the night. On May 9th the wind The work of the expedition to date they must realize or perish. It will not the day of final battle. "Shall we then," on the conclusion by energetic action in again increased to a hurricane, and enor ncludes the discovery of 20 miles of new be sufficient that one city shall see the he asked have those Allies. We have-to- that region where the enemy is unquestions seas were cunning on a dead-leeast line and a complete hydrographical error of its ways; the whole Empire ought day? Do we deserve them? Has not our ably weakest, and where he is least sure
shore of his allies, his communications, and his when between squalls we found we werp continuous magnetic and meteorologether its tremendous resources, ba pre to the very pit of destructions. And shell We saw "nothing till the afternoonvey of the Weddell Sca, the elimina to be at this juncture so disposed as to policy in this country been to take no of New Bouth Greenland from the move Be one and, having gathered to thought for to-morrow, but to go headlong supplice. It would be the beginning of drifting on to the cliffs. One chance retal observation, important biological nared to hurl them in this direction or à miracle happen again? This is the hour, the end. It would give us the initiative.mained. We set a reefed sail. It would break the spell of stalemate It boat stood the strain, and was kept afloat with 1915, and a photographic record up fally and nationally there is a power in opportunities and see the war through to Thr roords, cinema records up to October that is occasion may demand. Economic and we must, now take advantage of the would hasten the end of the war.
(Continued on next Enlumn.) to date.”
(Continued on west Columns."}} the bitter end.
DISCOVERIES AND NEW RECORDE Sir Ernest Shackleton adds:
provi
organization which multiplies the aggre gate power of the individual a hundred fold Thero is the difference between an army and a mob in an organized nation and a disorganized one.
Ltd. Final Winding up Meeting at the Company's Offee.
春格中 外新级
GIỮNG NGÔI SAN TO
(Chinese Dally · Press),
DAILY
the aides and still humánarably las han 405 Advertising medium mesong, the
Native Commandky.
for over Porr Trass
wuf Southern China
the Ollon: 10% Des Contral Hongkong. 131. Plant Béry
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