1918-07-26 — Page 7

Daily Press 孖剌西報 All

OUR LONDON LETTER-

[FROM OUR OWN CORRESPONDEST-] GERMAN ATTACKS ON BRITISH RED CROSS HOSPITALS.

LONDON, June 3rd.

Public opinion is incensed against the German boast for the bombing of British Red Cross hospitals-miles behind the lines -in-France, resulting in the deaths of „” nurses and wounded and the maiming

hundreds of others. No crime has stirred the public so deeply since the sinking of the Lusitania,

Of course it is not more vile to bomb n hospital than to sink a hospital-ship Besides, the Hun bas bombed hospitals before to-day. But this latest outrage strikes the imagination because it was

THE HONGKONG DAILY PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY

EXCHANGE OF PRISONERS.

THE FRANCO-GERMAN AGREEMENT.

Monsieur de Panalou, French Minister. Plenipotentiary and Chief of the French Mission which has negotiated at Berne the exchange of prisoners with a German mission presided over by General Fried ricks, gives details of the pourparlers An agreement was frst come to for the exchange of men of 4 or of men of having three children. On this count the French gained an advantage, as they had many more old soldiers at the front than the Germans at the outbreak of the notably at Maxbeugt, where the Terri war, especially in garrison in the North,

torial garrison was taken prisoners Men of this grade are to be exchanged

26ra. 1918

THE LATE GORDON BENNETT went into the lines of the insur

JOURNALISTIC ENTERPRIȘE.

[BY T. P. O'CONNORM.P.

part of his life a dweller in foreign Mr. Gordon Bennett was for a great lands, almost a nomad, and he was of mixed European pacentage; and yet, in some respects, lip was essentially Ameri can in temperament and in carcer conditions of American life which could was only the strange, new, and dramatic have produced a personality so varied, so daring, so contradictory. His father was a grim Scotsman, his mother an Irisa man, and each parent represented faith The father had the rigid self-control, the fully the essential qualities of their race

hard-fstedness, the tireless industry of

REGISTER.

25TH JULY AM

Wind

genta in spite of the prohibition of CHINA DOAST METEOROLOGICAL the Spanish authorities; when he return ed with his precious information as to the size and the formidable character of the insurrection, he was arrested by the and for weeks expected every morning to Spaniards, thrown into a foul prison,

leased and sent to Madrid, and was able be ordered out to execution. He was re to return to his duties.

Station,

Weihniwel

அரக்குயற்றகு.

Hanzow

Changsha

Hogy-

Barczter at Ben Level.

SATINICA MO

Humidity.

Direction.

Force

Wrather

Similarly James Gordon Bennett gavo It to J. A. McGahan, one of the most

Russian expedition which ended in the Nemuro century, the commission to accompany the Vladivostock brilliant journalists of the nineteenth

that might end in death, either by the Coo fall of Khiva. Again it was a mission Hakodate wom bullet, the halter, or by starvation; but Kochi McGahan did not hesitate; he went to agaanka Russia, was refund permission to accom. Kagoshima pursuit the Russian expedition, through Bonin Inland natives and a few horses, followed in hot pany the expedition; then be hired a few

intervene between Russia and Central the boundless steppes and deserts that

admiration his daring deserved. It was Shanghal less perils and fatigues, caught up the

characteristic of Mr. Gordon Bennett's Gutzlaff peculiarities of temperament that soon after this achievement McGaban was dis- A Leak H too well known to require more than

The story of the, New York Herald i missed because he refused mother ex Caihok. 6.29.68.79 | 40 | NW few sentences, Gordon Bennett, arriving in America The father of James

daring, determined to found a newspaper, from Scotland, pennikas, but able and

He had little or no capital; he produced did nearly all the work of it himself, and the paper in something like a cellar; he

Swabow

on such a large scale; the raid continued without respect to numbers. Below that his nation, while the mother was exube Asia, and when he at last, after count-ang m for hours, and it was so deliberate in age exchange will take place inan per rant, wayward, and pleasure-foxing expedition he escaped punishment by the onception and methodically executed. man. In this respect France will benefit son had the gifts and the defects of both, Near Euples there is a whole town of to begin with, for in August, 1914, the A good many others that were all hospitals filled with our wounded, and taken to one German These men will, his own.

proportion was four or five Frenchmen the German airmen were sent there under of course, be first of all released. specifie orders in slaughter the defence has taken more prisoners than Germany On the other hand, since 1916 France has, and when the IG prisoners begin to be, exchanged there will be more Ger. mans sent back to Germany than French be exchanged when they have spent men restored to France, Prisoners will eighteen months in captivity, and this rule will prevail until the end of the war.

less.

The Hun is methodical even in bis worst erimes; he generally does devilry with an object. It is believed that the object of attacking Red Cross hospitals, where our men were being nursed back to life out of the Valley of the Shadow, was designed to terrorise us into a resolve not to bomb Rhineland towns. BAJDS INTO GERMANY.

With regard to Allied air raids into Germany, the civil population in towns and cities across the Rhine are now hav- ing to take the same medicing that they gave us here, and also the French, for Aftree-and-a-half years both with Zeppe lins and Gothes. We took it all without a whimper, but the Germans are squealing loudly, being what they are. The Ger man Press is calling upon the German Government to arrange with the Allies

to har air-raids outside the war-zone. But we are not likely to relinquish this most tent weapon now because the origina tors of aerial murder and massacre ar finding out what it is like. In fact, they are only at the begining of their troubles in this respect.

A good illustration

of Cerniau

taken in November.

that the total number of men affected is It was stated recently by Lord Newton

#30,000,

اتے

dition, the refused being caused simply

know that McGaha was ever associated by McGahan's anxiety to write his Taishu šiem) famous book on his expedition. I do not ainan .......

and making known to the world the Bal magnificent opportunity in describing with the Herald again, but he found

as Atrocities, and his story was the

the face of the Balkans and the map political and military, which have chang beginning of the various enterprises,

of Europe.

SIR STANLEYT Outside and beyond all these great

until August, 1919, lut by consent will The present agreement is signed as be renewable without notice until the cluse of hostilities. That is to say, as he started with the determination to make soon as a prisoner has accomplished his it known-suneliow, anyhow. And it soon eighteen months of captivity he will be became known, even to the extent of bring- entitled to release. The exchange of pricing at times violent assaults on the daring figures whoo Gordm Bennett brought to soners will be effected in strict order: of sonierity, if one may employ that editor. It is one of the legends of Ameri- the service of the World and to the know- word. A latitude of two months has been can journalistic history that Bennett once edge of history and the making of history agreed apots by the French and Gernians, brought out an issue of his young japer and the figure of Hesry M. Stanley that is, prisoners, for example, taken in with the headline James Gordon Ben Banley was summoned to the presence of Januars may be exchanged with prisoners ett horsewhipped again. It may be a Gordon Bennett; he was asked to go and legend, but it typifies the man. He had ind Livingstone, who had been last for proprietor, and neither menaces, nor sented at once; the whole interview last made his resolve to be a great newspaper years to the eye of Europe; Stanley con- punishment, nor obstacles could be allowed ad only a few minutes; and Stanley soon to stand in his way.ld sarted on the expedition which was not In a comparatively short time theofly to make him fanious, but again to journal beening a success, leaped to the change the current of history, and to very front of the newspapers of the coun- of the great African Continent. This first begin the recivilisation and the recarving try and opened an entirely new era in expedition was The American soldier's opinion of the journalism not only in the United States; which gave Stanley the opportunity to followed by another, enemy is presented concisely in the first but throughout the world, it was espe- explore the muknow parts of Central issue of a four-page newspaper published cially fruitful in extending the area of fries, and led to a march by the side of by members of Company C, 165th Jn.newsiaper subjects and of newspaper which, in its daring, its dangers, and its fantry (the old coth Regiment of New enterprise, Nothing that touched hu achievements, the story of the Greek York). It is one of the pioneer publi-manity was considered by its daring pro legions in Xenopho pales into insigni- cations of the American forces in France prietor to be outside the scope of news face. That expedition, it will be re- and is called See What Happens

paper treatment, Mr. Gordon Bennett view that was due to the initiative of was not the originator of the inter-membered, was devised by the journal in an Irishman named McCulloch, who was

Which I now write.

the editor of a St. Louis journal, but the Herald certainly brought this new method of journalism into vogue, and was the boldest and most frequent employer of it.

AMERICAN

SOLDIERS.

GERMAN

psychology is supplied this week when, in response to the request of the Ard bishop of Cologne, communicated through the Pope to our own itd the French Governmente, we refrained front bombing Cologne un de Feast of Corpus Christi The streets, it was said, would be full of Catholtes,, and so would the churches The German towns were spared on that.Soldiers" is described the difference he

In an article entitled Hand-Made day, but it did not prevent the German tween the American and the German long-range guu from shelling Paris al soldier, as follows: day long, a church being hit, and girls killed while in the act of making young their first Communion. Moreover, the enemy sent his Gothis to bomb the city. It is no wonder that, the authorities here are severely criticised for parleying with the enemies of mankind and pandering

to sentiment

A CONTRAST..

Those of us who have seen him, in netion do not underestimate the power of the German soldier. He is a perfect fighting machine, the greatest machine- made product that Prussian militarien after forty years of effort has shown elvilization. But Fritz will be benten. "

The latter is

ESTHER AND SON

A

-CABLE ENTERPRISE.

Another of the vast and daring enter- prinos into which this hold, wealthy, and Totless man entered was in an entirely different Ene. Bennett, was enraged by some collisions, with the existing cable Oh Gordon Bennett ivod as simple companies; and to carage Bennett was a The difference between the American and possibly as frugal as he was when dangerous thing. Be resolved to create a cable sprvice of his own, and to maku and German soldier is the difference lee care, the penniless Highlander, to the It is being asked why the Pope hus beca

a cable company, as everybody knows, is solicitous to intervene on behalf of the

tween hand-made and machine-made lace land of promise. His son meantime had

a perfect product its been gradually brought into the business, of the most expensive, gigantic, and German Catholics on Corpus Christi Day stitches are in much eloer accord and in

and never gave himself up to any prolough to obtain the co-operation of perilous of enterprise. He was fortunate but has never a word to say against the much better alignment than are those of fussion or trade but that of his father John Mackay the grim Dublin man, killing of French Catholics at their devo the hand-made kind, and yet it is not

And thought their gifts were essentially tions. This is the time of year when valuable Tests have proved this the First Companion of French girls takes

different, the son was fully the equal of with the iron face and the resolute mouth place, and for weeks the Churches have one. Not as perfect as is his machine- rany things froin which the more cau-

The American soldier is a hand-made his father as a journalist; indeed, he did of a barn leader of men, who had risen through the discovery of the Bonanza mine in Nevada from a working miner to a been crowded with them and their mothers made rival: lie is nevertheless more valutions father would have shrunk. He had and friends. And, all the time the Gerable braiser for 1908 and is encouraged the daring and the imagination to concubination both in capital and in the milti-millionaire. It was a powerful an long-range gun has continued to shell Paris. Yet there has been no word in the use of what the German soldier is

characters of the two men, for they were. coal in their energy and in their daring and the defcets in the temperament of Banett were more than counter-balanced the iron will and the steadier purpose his partner. The cable undertaking is to-day one of the great companies of the world.

cive, and the dauntless resolution to carry out great projects; and he had an as to this from the Pontiff. His Holines forhidden to use-bis awo brains. ** zaust, however, perceive the difference

American privates an fast thinkers, activity that was feverish even to the end. thu nititude of the German and the Allied

It has been said often br American Army On the other side, he was a man incessant pations towards his faith

officers that some of their privates, wholy in sursnit of excitement. He kept did not know what it was to handle a yachts, and then motor-tars; he played WHAT OF THE GEUMAN FLEET?

rifle, could command men after a few at all open-air games, with characteristic Two years have gone by since the Baltic months of training. An everybody knows, feverishness, and by preference at ganics of Jutland-wns fought on the Glorious each American soldier has the opportunity that had in them an element of risk: polo,

Outside his own country his sucecas in. First of Inne," and, although there is of getting an officer's commission, but for instance. Indeed, it was Gordon a good deal about that fight which is still such is ubt the case in Germany. The Bennett who was the pioneer of that newspaper enterprise was pot equally un- far from clear, one fact emerges beyond German soldier must go into the army devotion to sport which is characteristic checked. He started a New York Herald question--the battle was decisive. Since when he becomes of age and seldom does to-day of so many of his countrymen, and in London, but it had to cease after a the British and German navies met, and he advance himself. the Germans finally fled back to port

which was little known to the generation struggle of some years. But the New under cover of a sea mist with our men

of the sedentary workers at the desk and York Herald which be founded in Paris in elose pursuit, they have never once

in the factory into which he was born.has turned out to be a great success. It ventured out again with their High Sens

and athletes have won since is due in Every triumph that American sportsmen Fleet. There has not been even a tip

some degree to the original impulse given and run incident such as we had at Sear

to thego pursuita by Gordon Bennett. He borough and Yarmouth in the early days

was the pioneer. of the war, ANA

there are a certain number who do not appear to understand. The Board of Trade appeals to these, and recommends them through the Board's Journal to retain the services of all good agents In the meantime the naval warfare has abroad whether by the payment of a changed. The enemy has confined himself retaining fee, or in some other way."!!

OVERSEAS AGENTS AND BRITISH FIRMS.

342

Bogbun

Gap Rock Pescadores Conten Hongkong Manso

Pokha Hothow, Wachow

Phulen. Teursne

Dagupan Capest James Aparri Manila Logan...................

acloban oil Sarigeo Labuan Guam..........

296077 2901 70 2987 63 29.69 82 67 NW 29.69.78 05 ZAE 29.61 75

1F

281 77 29.50 81 250 78

61.29.58 70

29.55 76

» 20.49'

11 2006 78

ENA

728.30 77 £8 #NW

$29.00 8

29.72 6.20.01 77 88

29 63 77 96

31

29.db 79 94

MR

WBW 4

29.077002 Wow

20.7117 02: 29.71 77 92

4.80 8429.76 £196

N

a

1.

T. E. CLAXTON, Directour. 1. BAROMETER, enduosd to 88 digress Fukran. hait, on the level of the sea in luchas, tenTL) and hundredths.

2. TEMPERATOR, in the aśndə, in degrsei fahrenheit.

8. BEMIDITY, ia percentage of saturation, thu zamidity of air maturated with moisture bein}"

100

4. DIRECTION OF WIED, to two polote

6. Fomon on Wing, according to Banafort Bea 6. STATE or Watson, b bine skƒ, o detach uč bad, d drisiling ram, 2 Tug, g gìtɔny, h hail, 1 lightning, o overst, & parding scoreza, o sque, Kala, 6, 300w, t'thander, vihility, LET

7. Batz in inches, t tenths and hundreds.

BONGKONG" METEOROLOGICAL

LEGISTER Hengking Observatory, July 25th,

Previous On Tate On Date

Dayat T

at 2p.m. ...' S pm)

29.57

·99.89 80

88 69

Barometer .. Postpakintaro

29 68

76

01

97

Wind Dirertion,;

(766kker

SE

SW

0

0,80

Highest open-air Temperature on 24th 81 Lowest opens Temparature a 25th...76

HONGKONG TIDE TABLE.

From 26th July to 1st August, 1816.

Hoon WATER

Monta

Haight

B'kong

Mean

Time

b.

ft. in.

28 m 10:33

7 6

17 45

4 6

7 2

LOW WATER.

Hking

Tins.

h m 1 to

313 24

5 200 В 2:3

I

5

29

0 241 01865 6451 1 6 £9m 19 6.3m 6:44

2 120 86.7 721 22

22.18 8 61.2 8 268 57m 10.096 4 236 43 85463 1m4 16111462 1 9 16 4.0 19626 3:5

Aug

..

WEATHER REPORT.

Jaly 25th, at 11:46.-No returns from Japan and Vladivostock. Prosare bas de oreased slightly over Formous and the east coast of Chine, and increased slightly else whero. The depression over the Gulf of Tangking continue to fill up; a depression. or typhoon is indicated over the MoisesO Shima Islanda.

Hongkong rainfall for the 24-bours ending at 10 s.. to-day, 0.03 inob, Total sinos January 1st, 46.42 inches, against an average of 18:26 inches.

The forecast for the 24 hours unding at noon ta-day is as foll

DISTRICT

Junglory to Gap Börk

Formors Channel

FORECAST.

(S.W. or variable winds molur. tate; fair.

The me AN

No. 1.

Bath Cost of Chias between ¦ The mame a

Hongkong and Lazooka - No. 1, grath Cost of China between / The same as

Hongkong and Hainan... --

Να Ει

HONGKONG'S STORM SIGNALS

A NEW CODE:

New local and non-local stort signals codes were introduced at Hongkong on July 1st, 1917, in place of the old Local. Code and the China Coast Code

The principal change in the Local Codo is that the new signals will show the direction from which the gule is expected, whereas the old signals showed the posi- tion of the typhoon. The latter will be indicated, as béretofore, by the non-local signals. The new Local Code is given below:

DAY SIGNALS,

Signal Symbol

Meaning

1.-Red Cone--A typhoon exists which mony possibly cause a gale at Hongkong with in 24 hours.

2-Black cone-Gale expected from the

North N.W. to N.E.). 3. Black cone

inverted--Gale expected from the

South (S.E, to S.W.). 4. Black drum.--Gale expected from the

East (NE. to S.E.). 5-Black ball-Gale expected from the

West (N.W. to S.W.).

Ereasc

6. Double cone-Gale expected to in-

7-Black cross.--Wind of typhoon fores

expected

(any direc tion). Sigual No. 7 will be accompanied by three explosive bombs, fired at intervals of 18 seconds. the Water Police Station and repeated at the Harbour Office

The signals will be lowered when it ig considered that all danger is over.

The Day Signals will be displayed at the masthead of the storm signal mast, the flagstaff on the premises of the Hong kong and Kowloon Wharf and Godown Company at Kowloon, the flagstaff on the premises of the Standard Oil Company at Laichikok, and the flagstaff near the Field Officer's Quarters at Lyemuz.

NIGHT SIGNALS. (Lamps).

1.-White white-white. White-green-green..

3-Green-white white. 4-Green-green white 3--White-white-green. 4-Green-green green. 7--Red-green-red.

The Night Signala will be displayed, at sunset, on the tower of the Railway Station; on HIS- Tomar, and on the Harbour Office flagstaff. They will have the same signification as the day signals Signal No. 7 will be accompanied by explosive bombe as above, in the event of the information conveyed by this signāl being first published at night,

SUPPLEMENTARY WARNING.

When local signals are displayed in the Harbour a Cone will be exhibited at the following stations-Cup Rock, Waglan, Stanley, Aberdeen, Sau Ki Wan Sai Kung Sha Tau Kok and, Tai Po, to notify the fact to native craft and passing ocean vessels.

Further details can always be given to oman vessels, on demand, by signal from lighthouses.

illuminating glimpse into the inner tem- is a curious journal, especially as an perement of the strange personality r which was behind it. It deals little, if Satar. 27 11 29. ats, with political questions; but, on the For many years he visited his native other hand, it is a complete record of the ga country bu seldom, and sometimes hevements of the globe-trotter und the tosubmarine piracy, without achieving the THE IMPERIAL CONFERENCE

made a journey back and heross the plauze seeker and the wealthy all over Mon decision he expected, and otherwise the whole of his surface ships might as well

It is believed that the forthcoming. In-Atlantic as though he were paying only the world; every motor trip is recorded:

a week-end visit; forty-eight hours a dance from Cairo to Lucerne and Tuas 30 m 2 0 55 9920 be Lon-existent. Some day after the war perial Conference will be the most notable fired for his enjoyment of his native city to London the theatre figures largely; is ended we shall know in full what wo

v. The repre in the history of the country. ove to the Royal Navy; and perhaps, also sentatives from overseas will sit in the and his native country. Like so many no marriage among the well-to-do Wed,

though this is by no means certain War Cabinet on the same footing as the other wealthy Americans, be made Paris pes notice. It is also especially

It represents, Thurs we shall learn what the German losses Prime Minister and his British colleagues his headquarters, and there he usually strong in sporting newe were at Jutland in the greatest sea-fight resident here. The subjects to be discuss dwelt a good part of every year. But he in other words, thep activities of the of the war.

ed are, I understand, Preferential trade was essentially a nomad, and there was moving world in which Gordon Bennett within the Empire; Federal Home Rule no rendezvous of the wealthy and the was alone interested it was only in for Ireland, Rigorous treatment of enemy fashionable where he was not to be found America, in his New York paper, that he showed interest in the world of politica. I am oficially informed that the Board trade after the war; Control and preser- at some portion of the year.

In that respeel he could intervene often a type. He began life in the days when Perhaps he was the last of an epoch and of Trade regrets to learn that some Brivation of Empire resoures for the peoples.

with effect. But his journal was never the multi-millionaire was yet a rare relations with their agents abroad. The colonies captured from the eneiry. The Ho bad the strength of a great leader a real party organ, its course was as figure. His father had conquered before Beaufort Scale, or 40-45 m.p.b. mean tish manufacturers have broken off their of the Empire; and Retention of German reason assigned for this step is that. Dominion Governments are particularly of men, and he was not diverted from any dificult to forecast as the meteoric move him the position of his journal; and the Owing to war conditions, it is impossible strong on the last named point, probably purpose by the vastness of the expense mente of its nomad proprietor. But it journal when he took it on bad still so to deliver goods for export. These diff because they know more than we do in or by the risks of those he employed to should be said that Mr. Gordon Bennets much ground gained that it was difficult culties are considerable, but all the same this country about the German and his carry them out. And thus he brought was always on the side of clean govora-ever to catch up with him. Even his the Board urgos here manufacturers to methods abroad.

into being an entirely new kind of mont.

Yong absence from home did not exi- bear in mind the position of their agenta BIRTHDAY HONOURS.

journalist from the deskman of previous

usly interfere with the prosperity of his who End themselves unable to obtain sup- plies from this country.

The list of Birthday Honours published pochs. Thus, there was a great inser good agent is as valuable an asset to name of the recipient the reason why the great Power beyond the seas to an lost ninmufacturer, as any unit in his manu-distinction, was conferred This is entirely self-contained, country, with all facturing organisation, and that the salutary new departure resulting from Hunterion of his services may assist the recent discussions in the House of the conquests from the days of Christ waterially in Keaping together the good Lords, in the course of which it was opher Columbus, gone to others will of the manufacturer's connection, proved that titles were add by the politi Spanish authorities denied the existenes executed." There is a further point that a bar of soap. Only a few politicians missioned Mr. James O'Kelly, who died motor-car, or wherever else he bad set-his many differences, used to gay of Gordon Signal No. 1 is intended as a warning

NEW JOURNALISM.

IN PRIVATE LIPE!

The view of the Department is that a to-day is the first which gives after the rection in Cuba-the forerunners of that of his fevered life, and in spite of able to keep down all competition; he without a gale occurring at Hongkong,

vast transformation of Spain Crome a

The object of the code is to give at least 24 hours warning of a gale (Force 8 by velocity by Dines Anemometer) and also direction and fore of the wind. Owing, warnings of expected changes in the however, to the uncertain movcidents of typhoons and to insuficient telegraphic observations, it will occasionally happen He remained amid all the distractions great pane But, of course, he was not that signals to may be displayed remoteness from his country and his ept the price of his paper high, and or ern Gap Rock, but the reverse is no paper, always an active and often an in the left the opportunity for the competi and Journalist. He used the cable late Afr J and cheaper journals. The rain wo that he carried on his journalist, with setzer, another great oral in New York even from his flat fournalist, and will something of the same

Bennett that he had certainly accomplish. an agent who finds his occupation geno figure in the present list, and they are the other day, a member of the present wondering feet for the moment. He exed one great journalistic, triumph, and to Stand By and watch for the ne as regards ono particular firm will trans- men who have done good service for the House of Commons to establisle the preted his servants to come to him across when Pulitzer was asked what he replied sighal for his services and connection to someone has made good as Food Controller a man of great daring and enterprise, and anapot for ungween the trouble he the New York World. That was Mr. mate velocity of the storm centre will be State-Lord Rhondda, for example, who existence of the rebellion. Mr. O'Kelly Oceans and continents at his cabled sum with a mealing wild Boat, he replied

In the new non Local Code the approxi No doubt the majority of manufactur- and becomes a Viscount. One of the most one who had followed the French Dag the disproportion between the trouble he Pulitzer's own paper and the biggestion, shown in addition to its direction be ers have considered these points, which interesting names is that of a journalist, in many countries took up the commis gave them and the trivial task or neces of course, was that if it had not been for motion, and the position of the centre are fairly obvious to a business man; but 31r John Merry Le Sage, editor of the sion, though he knew, and probably r.sity which he presented at the end of the Gordon Bennett's leaving the ground will be given in degrees of latitude and

else

(Continued at foot of next Column.)

Daily Telegraph, and the doyen of Fleet Bennett knew, that the enterprise fourney, Street H.B.

light involve death Mr. O'Kelly (Continued at foot of next Column.)

likely to happen, except in the case of typhoons forrning in the viche case of traveling rapidly towards Hongko and of a located typhoon increasingkong, or of progression abnormally

open, the World could not have come into existenceDaily Telegraph,

longitude. The time at which the war

ing was issued will also be given,

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