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utés amer & G

the wine forhany of the East

NAPIER JOHNSTONES'

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UNVARIED FOR OVER

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THE SAME TO-DAY AS IN

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BEWARE OF

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and from ALL WIRE MERCHANTS.

Warm Days

bring with their pleasures some discomforts. Then it is really refreshing to remove every trace of dust and perspiration by using

[56

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and any day à is a good soap to choose for ordinary toilet use. Pure and cleansing, pleasantly perfumed and antiseptic for 10% crystal carbolic is incorporated with it-- you will find it not only excellent for the skin, and complexion, but also a protection against contagion. Your local Chemist of Store sell it in three tablet basen.

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THE HONGKONG DAILY PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 3rd, 1911.

THE RUBBER INDUSTRY AND the maltliarious usos to which rubber is now

THE EXHIBITION.

A RECORD OF WONDERFUL PROGRESS.

applied. Mr. Wright, whe has had very large. experience on the spot, deals with the new plantations in Malays and Ceylon and their riolding capacity and he shows that great abanges are imminent in the balance of power in the rubber market: Brasil and Aftis, Surely it seldom falls to the lot of the writer from which such large proportions of rubber to discuss within the brief period of three years have been derived in times peut, will two mom interesting exhibitions than those de shortly have to yield the promiler place voted to the use and growth of rubber in all its to the plantation rubber, while Liverpool" will phases, at Olympia in 1903 and at Islington in re lang become a port of secondary importance 1911. The first International Rubber Exhibi- in the rubber trade se compared with London, tion was in many ways unique in character, and which may possibly have to deal with 3,000 tons served as an introduction to the pable of this of rubber monthly in the near futuro.

of one of the most remarkable veget A Correspondent with intimate knowledge Founity able

The Block the products

world. It is true that of the Stock Exchange gives his views on the a rabbor exhibition had already been held

prospects of the position

rabber companins, in Ceylon in 1906 under the auspices and takes a hopeful view of the situation. A of Sir Hoary A. Blake, the then Governor, with valuable article by Profesor Robert Wallace very important results, but it may well be describes certain of the diseases and pests of affirmed that the display over which he which rubber plantations are subject, and bis presided at Olympia three years ago ente as observations deserve the careful consideration a surprise to all but the very few interested of the profesional rubber plautor. It will be in rubber, either as merchants, planters, or seen that most of those foos to the rubber estate manufacturers, We entered to express our are the outcome of careless cleaning. Some inter- wonder, after a careful tour through the Exhi-sating and graphic socounts are giron of bition of 1906, how it was that mankind in the rubber collecting in Braad sad in the Amazon past had ever been able to oxist wilbost indis- district by an authority who bas spent many rabber, and the more we reflect upon

this ques

yesra in the country." and who is able to tion, and son all the varied and useful manu vconut from actual arerioncs the difficultice factures brought together on this second encountered by the Seringueiro and the troubles the more firmly do we feel convinced of the estate owner. On the subject of the now slon, that life without 'rubber' would indeed be method of obtaining gutin percha from the leaf blank," at Any rato in a civilized community. instead of the trunk of the Ison mora puits, some It seems a far cry from the rude elastic sota are given on the authority of Dr. Tromp de

plantations at Tjipetir, in Java. It is daimed that hy this plan of a TIBO of the Loaves a very mu

of gutta-percha con much larger be secured from ouch acre of plantation, and

יין

BRITAIN'S FOREIGN TRADE

FAIRLY SATISYACTORY.

Imports, June

Leorase on 1910 Exports, Jane

Increase on 1910 Re-exports, June...

Increnas on 1910

£51,105,889 3,623,923

£36,113,150

1,313,496

£8,753,388 359,745

Besing that there were two holidays in London and one in the country during Jone, and that the inbour situation in the shipping trade was unsettled, the Board of Trade rotaras for the month are not altogether unsatisfactory, remarks the Daily Telegraph. while the exports have inoroased 3.77 per cost, decrease in the imports is 6.45 per cent.,

There was a not failing off in raw materials in- ported of £3,233,640, although wool increased £207,676,

On balance manufactured articles increased £312,429 Iron and steel improved £134,909, other motals £365,970, and achinery £120.677: while food and drink diminished £680,280, the decline being chiefly in dutiable articles. Rubber fell off from 72,3530wt.. valued at £2,109,854, to 78,0630wt, valued at £1,215,725. Less wheat camo to hand from Argentin, Chili, Pritish East Indios, Australíu, and Canada, but Russia, the United States of America, and New Zealand sent us largor quantities. We received a smaller supply

"of wheatmeal and four, although more came for ward from Canada. Our roovipts of maize were

* ball.” of the Indians in Haiti, at the Haas, the ableSoperintendent of the Government dephlet incrassed abipments being made &

gmaa

time of the first landing of Columbus, to the gaily pointed toy in our English nurseries, but within this compass wo have the whole range of the history of indiarahber brought vividly before us. Mary notable inventions had to

that the

Bassia, Reumanis, the United States of America, and Canada,

be perfected before the orudo rubber of the the trenem is less liable to cause iniary to declined £186,456. Iron and steel improved

sayage became transformed into the val canized anbstance used for our modern

For the half-year the imports huve decreased 08 por cent, while the exporte have increased 9.52 per cent

Imports, Six months, Beerense on 1910 Exports, Six months Increase on 1910 Re-Exports, Six months

Decrease on 1910

£334,124,058 282.393 £223,668.997 19,082,574 £54,887,444 424,887

25,145,056, in decroise of 22,647,059, imports during to and those for the six months were £31,705,641, or a decrease of £8,130,566, The exports for the mooth increased £474,316, to £3,020,769; while those for the six months decreased £4,727,580, to £23.944,761.

With regard .to the exports, manfactured articles increased £1.777.211, cotton contri- bating £649,717, chiefly piece goods, while wool

than the formor process of tapping.

£302,842 other metals, £149,054, machinery, Guagale rubber, obtained from a small bush or shrub covering vast areas in Northern Mari£305,373; and new ships, £42,870. Among raw materials the chief item was a reduction things, and these evolutions are fully eluolor and Loss, fog, vs the subject cl special of £591,918 in coal, namely, from 6,138,810 lous, dated at the present Exhibition, It may

article in which a full-account is given of the valued at £1,637,771, to 5,442,775 tour. valued confidently by claimed that the entire andas. growth of the Guayule plant and the mode in at £3,045,853. trial development of the use of indiarabber which the rabber is secreted, which differs has become possible through the inventions of essentially from that of ucarly ill other known Goodyear in the United States in 1839 and of descriptions of that substance. Special con- Hadonok in this country in 1844. The discov.sideration is devoted to the mechanical testing Peries of these two men were apparently quite of rubber, to the use of rabber as a material independent, but they enabled rubber, treated for street paving, and to many other matters in with sulphur, to be employed for a wide range relation to this subject which are now attract- 02

usofal

purposes, and practically laid the ing public attenti n. A full description bas foundation for the whole modɑrn system of also been prepared of the Exhibition and of the

this materical.

collections brought together by the different eins find, oreover, that within the brief rubber producing cornistes, with notes on the period of a decade mighty changes have been conferences in which the expert authorities affected in the sarees of our rubber supplies deputed by the various Governmenta kayə taken and in the methods of preparing the raw sub-part, stance for use, cultivated rubber threateni g A remarkable festure is the extent to which to take the place of the wild forest tree former the support of the Governments of rubber by employed. Only a fów months before the producing countries bas been accorded to this opening of the previous exbibition in London Exhibition, and the large expenditures which the rabber trade experienced one of the most has been undertaken by the Governments in severe crisis over known in its history, and the order that the conditions surrounding cultiva Falue of the best rubber from the Amazonion and preparation of the product shall be district was reduced by approximately 50 por cont. This was aid to be caned by financial depression in the United States of America, which country was always a large buyer of the raw material. Then came about the formation of Domorous plantation companies in the Straits Settlements, Ceylon, Santhern India, and throughout the Middle East, followed by the truly wonderful rubber boom, during five times the value at the period of the former crisis. It cannot be sail that the increased ment in favour of planting the feves, Experts edy.oxhanation of the вуше bud long predicted the South Amerionn and African sources of f supply, and almost at the same time rumours were rife concerning the profitable nature of the yield from rubber plantations. Companies followed one another in quick oncession, in whose pros- pectuses hopes were held out of wonderful gains to be derived in the net distant future by the judicious rubber planter.

ROMANCE OF RUBBER.

INTERESTING PRESENTATIONS.

worthily presented. There is also presented the advantage of seeing the exhibita of Brazil and One of the romances of modern botanica British Malaya, of Ceylon and India, sad the science was commemorated at the International Dutch Colonies and other countries side by Bulher Lanquet, over which Sir Henry Blake, side, and this has facilitated the work of those a Governor of Ceylon and also of Hongkong, who desire to make comparisons of the manner presided, at the Connaught Rooms, London, in which the industry is conducted in various parts of the world. In a special article dealing recently. Rubber in the East is not, as many people imagine, the product of indigenous trees. with the Exhibition an account is given of the In the early

by the Indian Govern industry in the old growing districts, and in those

had bolted. supareargoes territories, many of thes within the Briment, chartered the trading steamer Amazonas, * P*ce of rubber was responsible for the more Empire, where rubber has only recently been captain and an empty ship, ana

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AUTO-MANUAL RACHALS BRINSMEAD WERNER KRAUSS WERNER CHALLEN

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[54

GRAFLEX CAMERAS,

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DEVELOPING AND PRINTING

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LONG HING & CO.,

PHOTO GOODS STORE,

whist prices of the raw material reached present position and the prospects of the rubber { Wickham, commission Heary Alexander As SUPPLIED TO THE HOUSE OF

Some of the sastances of the company promoter were indeed magnificent, but it soon transpired that profits of 200 and even 300 per cent, were being realized by those who had been carly in the field in the rabber planting move

ment. Then the public "fell over one another" in their eagerness to invest in the new Golconds, with the remit that states, good, bad, and indifferent, were sold for rabber plantations, many of them at greatly inflated prices. Rubber codorus quickly became fashionable, and there were few among the izvesting public who failed to secure whares in some company or other sometimes with disastrous rasmita.

AK.

Sir Haury Blake truly states in his intro: duction to the catalogue of the present Exhibi. tion, many millions of pounds have beer inverted in rubber since 1908, and it is not difficult to believe that the shareholders in the new companies will be disposed to learn all that they can about the product upon which they hare staked so much wealth, and about the machinery used ip its mangfacture.

In the various collections brought together in the Agricultural Hall it becomes possible to study the behaviour of the latex from the moment

it flows from the incision in the tree. stem down to the time when, in the form of sheets, cakes, or blocks, it leaves the plantation for shipment to the manufacturer in some far-off landl; then to trace its conversion into vulcanized rubber for use in a thousand different ferent ways to see the finished artiole as it issues from the mould on the bydraulic preas; and,

Rot

explored the grawn. In addition, arrangements lusse been done Brazilian forests, collected reeds of

owle for daily demonstrations of various the Hevea Brasiliensis.

them on board, phosos of the work, in order that those who are and, baving ran the gauntlet at the port of der unable to visit rubber-g

r-growing countries, or parture succeeded in landing them in London. are unacquainted with the details of manufae These seeds bo handad over to the authorities at ture, may follow the sequence of the work from

Kow. They were planted, and some 1,900 germi- the carliest stages until the finished product is mated. Of the seedlings, thirty-eight cases ware ready for the market. The decision to take sent to Ceylon, and from them the Straits Settle- advantage of the presence in Londen of a large mexts and the whole of the Middle East were zumber of those interested in rubber to hold a supplied with the plants, whose yield of rubber, International Conference was a wise one it is confidently expected, will in a few years' This conference has been attended by planters, time squad that of the whole of the rest of the merchants, and manufacturers, and the oppor- world.

Mr. Norman Grieve on behalf of the tunity they have afforded for the diseastion of

rabber industries of the Middle East, the questions relating to the treatment of the raw rubber and for the various methods its pre-Rabber Growers Association of London, paration for the market cannot fail to produce and the Pinuters Associations of Ceylon important results. It is only by means of meetings of this character, where all those who and Malaya, asked the chairman to pré- are interested in the rubber industry may have an opportunty for a free interchange of ideas, that real and permanent progress can be effected.

It is hoped that by those means the value and importance of the display at the Agricultural Hall may be emphasized, and that the main facts relating to the rubber industry may be brought more prominently to the netics of the public-T e Times,

THE BOXER INDEMNITY.

SENSATIONAL CHARGE-IN AMERICA,

A Washington, DC., dispatch, dated June 18th, rays:-No time is going to be lost by the House Investigating Committee in getting at the bottom of the transaction whereby the State Department during Mr. Roosevelt's admini. stration paid more than 2368,000 out of the Boxer Indemnity fund to Mr. John W. Fester for Mrs Georgiana Amidon, bis slient, The Herald's exclusive account of Mr. Foster s own testimony bearing on the case in the Surrogate's Court of taensation here to-day.

LORDS AND HOUSE OF COMMONS

THORNE'S

OLD VAT

#No. 44

This rat was started by the late Robert Thorn of Greenock and has been sold as No. 4 since 1831

17, QUEEN's BOAD CENTRALA

VISITORS AT HOTELS.

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Mrs E. M. A. Apcer Mrs ft. Hingham Mr NV, Blanch Miss Bue Kingham Miss A. M. Clark Mr B.E. Cark Mr G S. Colman Mr NK. Davidson Mr V.C Drow

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sent to Sir W. Thiwlton Dyer, representing SCOTCH WHISKY. Mr&Mr Joseph Gould Mias F. Reny Kor Gardens, a silver silver, as a token of their appreciation of the part taken by the Royal gardens in the work of introducing the rabber plant.

Mr. Alexander Bothune, president of the Rubber Growers Association, handed to Mr. Wickham the gold medal of the association, a cheque for 1,000 guineas, and an annuity, in recognition of what he did, which had resulted in the foundation of a vast industry.

Sir W. Thiselton Dyer, in reply, characterised the occasion as almost unique fo official history. Mr. Wickham, acknowledging the presenta tion to himself, paid a very warm tribute to Sir James Hooker, the great naturalist, now in his 95th year, whe was director of Kew Gardens from 1865 to 1885.

Among those present at the banquet were Sir J. Anderson, Permanent Under-Secretary for. the

Colonies, whe proposed "Buccess to the Rubber Industry," the Brazilian Minister, the Consuls-General of Germany, Brazil, Russia, the Netherlands, France, and Belgium, Bir W. Taylor, Mr. G. Machin, chairman, London Chamber of Commerca, Sir Channesy Cart wright, Sir A. Birch, Sir W. H. Treacher, Mr. Pegler, Dr. Busse, Imperial. Colonial Office, Berlin, and the Commissioners for the Colonies and South American States.

stly, to study the methods used in testing it New York caused, min, of Missouri, chair- Leadon Shand, Mr. Turing Mackenzie, Mr. F.

audin ao rtaining its value for industrial pur

Mr. Courtney W. poses. The machinery employed in the dif

man of the House Investigating Committee, ferent stages of the manufacture possess many said:"I bave read the Herald article features of interest, and it will be a source of

thoroughly and purpose to lose no time in got some surprise to tad how widely the growth ting to the bottom of the affair. This is of rabber has become dispersed in many different apparently just the kind of practice the com- guarters of the world and to study the tops re- mittes is trying to uncover and provest." fating to this subject, It will be pou-

The fact that Mr. Foster collected more than sible from these maps to

olitain some $184,000 as a fee for himself and Mr. Robert general idea of the distribution of the different Lansing, his son-in-law, was regarded as quite as varieties of trees from which rubber is obtained ustonishing as his own story of how bo availed and to see where each species prependerates. himself of the services of Mr. Conger, after get

In order to aid the general reader to obtain ting him appointed as Minister to China, how good information on the present state of the he utilised the services of the Chinese Minister rubbor industry,

a series of articles by some of here, Sir Liang Cheng Tang, to help him in the leading experts has been brought together. pushing the claim against his own government Thus Dr. Philip Behidrowitz deals with the and bow influences"

the were brought on chemistry of rubber, both raw and vulcanized, Roosevelt administration at just the time when and he indicates the lines on which it has been they would be most effective, attempted to produce rubber synthetically by means of isoprene. He also discusses the varions uses of waste rubber and the method in which it is prepared for re-msoufacture. In connection with the attempt to prepare rub ber by chemical means, which has always been held in terrorem over the heads of the rubber planters, it is interesting to note that in the present display some specimens, are shown of isoprene derived from starch, sugar, and evry sawdust. The very volatile liquid thus obtained is then condensed by boiling under pressure for three days when a certain proportion of gelatin- "This matter has received consideration frona ous material said to be pare caoutchouc separates several of

of your predecessers, to whose despatches out, and it is claimed that by the addition of and records you are referred."

These to the substance thus prepared it enzymes

despatches and records contained re. becomes possible to manufacture the synthetic ports

ON SALE.

A TABLE OF THE

RATES OF EXCHANGE

AT HONGKONG

FOX

DEMAND DRAFTS ON BOMBAY

Mr. Foster's reference to having won Judge' Penfield, once solicitor of the State Department, On the Day Proceding the Departure of the over to sanctioning the presentation of the claim against the Chinese Government to-day called English Mails from the Year of the Closing forth a vigorous denial by Mr. Walter S. Pen- of the Indian Mints to the Froo Coinage of field, a prominent attorney and son of the late

Silver- Judge Ponfeld.

Investigation shows that the letter of Secre. tary Hay to Mr. Conger was perfunctory in tone, authorising him to informally call the matter to the attention of the Wai-Wu-Pa, and at the same time stating

rabber there on view which will, it is said, Minist the claim by Mr. Denby, once

to Ching, and the erstwhile Secretary vulcanize well and

all POBBESED the properties of of State, Mr. Bayard. the substance prepared from the later of plants.

Mr. Conger, under date of November 3, 1902,

In an article or The Rubber Industry," wrote a personal and conddontial letter to Mr. contributed by Mr. Herbert Wright, the ques. Foster, stating that he had to stretch his in- tion of fature supplies of the raw material is structions & good deal” to bring the matter to a fully investigated, and some account is given of ) successful isene.

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