THE HONGKONG GOVERNMENT GAZETTE, FEBRUARY 24, 1911.
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should the Board of Direction desire to undertake the work, and that the remains removed from such graves shall be re-interred or disposed of in such manner as the Registrar General in consultation with the Head of the Sanitary Department and the Board of Direction of the Tung Wah Hospital shall think fit, and that all reasonable expenses in connection with such removal, re-interment and disposal shall be defrayed out of the public revenue of the Colony.
Given under my hand this 20th day of February, in the year of Our Lord 1911.
Government House,
Hongkong.
No. 43.
F. D. LUGARD,
Governor.
Order under Section 91b of the Public Health and Buildings Ordinance, 1903, (as amended by Ordinance No. 11 of 1909),
WHEREAS I, Sir FREDERICK JOHN DEALTRY LUGARD, Knight Commander of the Most Distinguished Order of Saint Michael and Saint George, Companion of the Most Honourable Order of the Bath Companion of the Distinguished Service Order, Governor and Commander- in-Chief of the Colony of Hongkong and its Dependencies and Vice-Admiral of the same, deem it expedient for the execution of a public work (namely, the proper laying ont of a certain area of Chai Wan Cemetery in terraces for future interments) to remove the graves on Crown Land within the area in Chai Wan Cemetery coloured blue on the plan referred to in Government Notification No. 256 of the 19th August, 1910, AND WHEREAS notice of my intention to make the following order has been duly notifi d for a period of six months in accordance with the provisions of Section 91b of the Public Health and Buildings Ordinance, 1903, (as amended by Ordinance No. 11 of 1909), Now I, by this order under my hand by virtue of the power in that behalf vested in me by the aforesaid Section 91b of the said Ordinance, do hereby order and direct that the graves within the area in Chai Wan Cemetery coloured blue on the plan above referred to shall be removed to the satisfaction of the Director of Public Works either by the Public Works Department or by the Tung Wah Ho-pital, should the Board of Direction desire to undertake the work, and that the remains removed from such graves shall be re-interred or disposed of in such manner as the Registrar General in consultation with the Head of the Sanitary Deparment and the Board of Direc- tion of the Tang Wah Hospital shall think fit, and that all reasonable expenses in connec- tion with such removal, re-interment and disposal shall be defrayed out of the public revenuc of the Colony.
Given under my hand this 20th day of February, in the year of Our Lord 1911.
Government House, Hongkong.
F. D. LUGARD, Governor.
COLONIAL SECRETARY'S DEPARTMENT.
No. 44. The attention of all persons who consume white rice and also of all large employers of coolie labour is directed to the fact that it is generally believed that the disease Beri-beri, which causes several hundred deaths in Hongkong each year, is produced by the consumption of white ries, as the staple article of diet, without a sufficiency of other foods.
It is important therefore that a sufficient quantity of fresh mat or of fresh fish should be eaten with the rice, but if this cannot be afforded beans should be eaten, in the propor- tion of not less than one quarter of a catty of beans to every catty of rice. The beans shouid be boiled with a small quantity of fresh pork or fresh fish to make a soup.
C. CLEMENTI,
Caloniul Secretary
24th February, 1911.
OFFICE OF REGISTRAR OF TRADE MARKS.
No. 45. It is hereby notified that the Baker Sewing Machines Trust, Limited, of 17 Hanover Square, London, England, have by assignment become proprietors of a Letters Patent registered on the 13th September, 1910, under the number 3 of 1910, by Mr. FRE- DERICK BAKER, of 42 Lee Road, Blackheath, in the County of Kent, England, and Mr. LESSER JACOBS, of 17 Hanover Square, in the County of London, England.