SUPREME COURT..
Wednesday, April 30
IS SUMMARY JURISDICTION. BEFORE THE PUISSE JUDGE (Mr.
Г. Н. КЕМИ).
!
A QUESTION OF WAGES.
"THE FIGHTING SPIRIT OF JAPAN,"
THE OCCULT ASPECTS OF JAPANERE MILITARY ARTS.
THE HONGKONG DAILY PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 1ør, 1918.
The Fighting Spirt of Japan is the title of a recently published work of more than ordinary interest. The author is Mr. E, J. Harrison, a well-known journalist An action Vaa brought by Mak Kong, trading under the firm name of Sun Yuen in Japan, and the book, published by Messrs. T. Fisher Unwin of London, is Lung, of No. 116, Queen's Road West, as a contractor, against Chan Pui Yue, alias on oule locally at Kelly & Walsh's. Mr. Chan Loong & Sons, second floor, No. 17, Harrison is certainly justified in claim- The plaintiff claimed ing, as he does in the preface, that he has Ship Street. $650.50, being $515.50 as to money received brought together some material as yet new to the Western reading public; and by the defendant from the officer com manding the Royal Engineers for the use much of this material presenting glimpers of the plaintiff, and as to 813 for money of the occult aspects of Japanese military drawn by the defendant from the plain-arts, is intensely interesting. tiff's business.
Mr. Harrison arrived in Japan some Mr. M. Reader Harris (of Messrs. Wil-sixteen years ago, and being fond of kinson & Grist) appeared for the plain-wrestling, was naturally attracted to tiff, and Mr. Urew (of Mess. Hastings & Hastings) defended.
The defendant
Mr. Harris said that the claim arose out of a contract obtained from the mili tary authorities of the South China Com- mand by the defendant to carry out certain works at Mount Davi for $18,200, The defendant secured the contract in the first place in November, 1911, and subse quently he approached the plaintiff, and they came to an agreement that each should provide $10,000 capital with which to carry on the work took the contract in the name of Chan Long & Sons, a name which he had not used before. No agreement was signed, however, and on the 21st November the plaintiff, at the request of the defendant, paid his deposit of $500 to the Army Pay Department. Defendant was not able to raise his share of the capital, and a new agreement was arrived at, that the plain tiff should do the work, the defendant to receive $40 a month. The plaintiff car- ried out the whole of the work under the contract, engaging the sub-contractors and paying them. When the contract was completed, the deposit of 800 had to be returned, and as the contract was in the defendant's name, it could only be given to him. Plaintiff asked defendant to get the amount, and this he did, but the money had not been handed over to the plaintiff. With regard to the remainder of the claim, $135, this amount was over- drawn by the defendant as remuneration at 840 a month. The allegation of the defondant was that it was agreed that he
jude, or the art of a scientific develop ment and application of personal power He says:-
a dynamic or sentient impression I might oxhaust my energies upon the Trafalgar Square lious or the Egyptian sphynx. Finally. Mr. Konishige asked, “Are you satisfied? When I said I was, he made n pass with one hand, simply observed His strength will now disappear, and with no external aid whatsoever leaned back an kis haunches and dragged mo after him, still hanging on to his cars for all I was worth i
Sonic men,"
1
a
a
THE MORO TROUBLE IN THE PHILIPPINES.
INTERVIEW WITH THE SULTAN OF SULU,
Manila Cableners of Wednesday last published the following telegram from a special correspondent: --
Joto, April 22nd.
LOSSES OF INSURANCE COMPANIES.
The
There is a very general idea among the public that insurance business is very remunerative, but a brief résumé of the history of 1013 in a regent issue of the Post Magazine and Insurance Monitor seems to indicate that each year there is a very great loss of capital. Dissolutions, I have been closeted with the Sultan of etc., are recorded as follows:-British Union and National went into liquido Sulu for three hours with the doors antion, its transactions as life office being Similarly I was invited to push against windows shut, only the interpreter being quite small and of little interest, the com Mr. Kunishigo's brand chest with one or
present, and have conversed intimately both hands; no effort of inju could budge with him on the subject of present con- pany being chiefly remembered as a weak He expressed the opinion fire and general office that soon succumbed him, any more than they could have ditions here.
The ambitious hudged Mount Fuji, whereas with his that the best solation of the problem to financial troubles. little finger placed lightly against my body would be to win the hearts of the Moros, Glasgow Assurance Corporation (fire, he upset my equilibrium in a second, and who, ho said, were like chickens that, if accident, marine and general) got at last I had no power to resist."
you threw rice to them, would come to top-heavy with speculative and unprofit able commitments, and was compelled to Mr. Harrison regards these and other you,
Another Are, accident and He claimed that the bottom of the whole liquidate. experiences as inexplicable on the basis of generally accepted physiological, anatomi- trouble was the tyranny of one of the general company, the United London and He said also that the ing out of the acquisition of business from cal and psychological laws, but we see government interpreters and the robberies Scottish, partly through difficulties aris- very little indication in the book, that he committed.
student interpreter Arolas was the cause of the other offices, was ordered to be wound up. #be auther has been of occult science. We are inclined Moroa under Amil going to Bagsak, and owing to the unexpected demend of writer According to the Sultan, Arolas would de- the Board of Trade for a £20,000 deposit, to endorse the views of of a review of the book in one of the mand cattle, carabao and horses when he the Counties and General (fire, accident
its connection to the Yorkshire. Japan papers, when he says all these aceded them and if they were not forth and general) had to cease working and go things. cun be explained on hypnotic coming would threaten to make charges in voluatury liquidation, handing over Farmers' Mutual (fire, livestock and en- observes the against them to Governor Gordon and principles.
are born with what is loosely have his victims thrown into prison. reviewer, In connection with the study and
Among other things the Sultan said: plovers' liahilita) resolved to wind up practice of judo, my attention was drawn called magnetic influence, and while that Governor Gordon has implicit confidence voluntarily, while compulsory liquida to the part that a certain kind of influence can be developed undoubtedly by in Arolas. Scores of people are now tions were ordered of the London and occultism plays in the armoury of really training, whether it can be ocated in one languishing in jail without trial as a Westminster (fire) and the Eclipse (fire efficient masters.. The rolegation of the
in whom it is not inherent is an open result of Arola's action, their imprison- and general), two concerns, whose disap- sent of courage to the lower abdomen question. For instance, it would be an ment being imposed under the arbitrary pearance was hardly a matter for regret. Aralas com- Among less important events, we, the (shita-hara in Japanese), and the conten- interesting subject of investigation to orders of the governor. tion that the concentration of strength in- that partion of the body is, as it were, the inquire how many, if any, of Mr.manded Amil to arrest all those who reliquidations of the British General Invest Kunishige's pupils have been able to fused his (Arola's) deinanda, but Amilment, which had some insurance powers, alpha and ornega of fighting capacity, at
Japanese for protection against the outlaws." once inpressed me profoundly as plausible attain his powers." Mr. Harrison refused and took his followers up Bagsak
admite that even mong
Amil had recommended the dismissal of and original theories worthy of investiga specialists in the military urts,
are ablo Arolas, but not that of Schuck. tion. By actual experiment I found that the number of those who these claims were more than idle and to make any practical use of esoteric empty theorizing, und that the habit of knowledge is exceedingly limited. That deep abdominal breathing, if used as things were very different during the directed by the Japanese teachers of mili- feudal ere, when the samurais skill in tary arts, and side by side with the fence or wrestling, for example, might at
the latter, would practical study of
any moment furnish his only safeguard generally lead to a marked defensive and against death, I personally am fully offensivo power."
persuaded," Mr. Harrison writes. "What I know at first hand of the feats that are possible in an era of so-called enlighten- ment (Meiji) among the chosen few, men whom I prefer to regard as the real aristocracy of the nation, predisposes me to lend credence to stories of prowess which to the average foreigner, or even to myself when I first arrived in Japan, might appear simply mythical and fanciful."
This was the origin of Mr. Harrison's enquiry. He acquired the Japanese collo quial; entered the jujitsu schools, and by close attention rose to the rank of shoden, or the first step in the highest section of experts, the only other foreigner besides Mr. Harrison enjoying that distinction being his friend, Mr. D. T. Weed, of Keio The University, an all-round athlete. author is thus qualified to write with authority on the subject..
To Mr. Kanu, founder of the Kodo kwon (the principal judo school in the Empire) Mr. Harrison attributes credit for the modern development of the blended esoteric and exoteric power of this strange science, which had been known and practised sporadically in the country in the past, but had been allowed to fall into desuetude, Mr. Kano, we fare told," insists upon the ethical as well as the purely physical aspect of his system, and, in theory at least, a good moral character is as essential to the pro- The hearing was adjourned until Tues- motion of the student of judo as practical efficiency. Juls is now the system clay.
all officially recognised, practised at Government Universities and schools, and at nearly all the bigger private educa
Its importance as tional establishments. a national asset, therefore, grnating its intrinsic value, ought not to be under rated.
should receive $70 a month.
THE MAGISTRĄCY... Twenty-seven men appeared before Mr. Hazeland charged with smoking in an opium divan. Inspector Dymond said a big business, was carried on at the place, which had been raided several times before. The keeper was fued $250 or three months and the others were fined $3 each,
We refer the reader to the book for the history and technical details of this strange art (details which will be read with interest by all classes) and content overselves with whetting his appetite by giving one or two extracts showing the remarkable results of its practice, as Inspector Gerrard, in proceeding before personally witnessed by Mr. Harrison, Mr. Hazeland against a man for being One of these is the extraordinary power it gives to restore life, after life has a fogue and a vagabond, said the man was found up a tree outside the police apparently departed. This section of the art is called weppo (the system of station at Yaumati, his object being ap-resuscitation), and by its application parently to take observations of the houses students of judo who have been deliberately in the vicinity, the windows of which he strangled are restored without suffering could see into. Defendant pleaded that ill-effects. Both Mr. Harrison and Mr. he went up the tree to view a festival Weed have undergone this experience and undisturbed as ho had previously been their sensations are described in the book. Krappo is said to be executed by means moved by the police, but the Inspector of á weird shout called kini, which has stated that the festival finished at eleven been known to arrest hæmorrhages, cure o'clock and the man was found at two diseases, demoralize a hostile antagonist, o'clock. He was sentenced to one month's and even cause birds to fall from their hard labour and was recommended for perch on trees. This is is said to be 'the potential power that governs the course of human life, and to be the source banishment.
of the energy inherent in the haman race, the energy of all energies, in short." Its control seems to be the object of judo, which is supposed to attain it by, psychologically, concentrating one's whole mental energy upon a single end, and, physically, by applying the art of deep and prolonged breathing. Mr. Harrison relates sore astonishing instances of the exercise, of this gift. He tells us that diaphanous and anemic doctors who have been amazed and bewildered wit nesses of Mr. Kunishigo's ability to resuscitate where all the resources of the materin medica had utterly failed, have
Two Chinese apprenties were brought before Mr. Hazeland yesterday charged with the theft of a gold medallion from a house at West Point. It was stated that the boys, who lived in the same house as the complainant, took advantage of her absence to purloin the medallion from where it hung on an image. The woman reported her loss to the police, and the theft was brought home to the boys, who One ad accused each other of the theft.
mitted stealing it and giving it to the other to pawn. The pawnbroker who advanced 67 on the medallion was cau- tioned by his Worship for accepting such articles from boys, but the pawnbroker said that the boy told him his mother sent him. They were ordered to receive eight strokes each with the birch.
THE TENNIS TOURNAMENT.
The following are the results of yester
ilay's matches:---
In the semi-final of the Championship Singles, A. N. Joseland and J. B. Pen- man continued their interrupted match, and the former won both games played by 8-4 and 8-2-
Capt. Crawford and Capt. James beat C. E. H. Beavis and R. D. Stewart in the semi-final of the Doubles Handicap, 80; 6-3.
C. C. Clarke beat J. MacPherson in the final of the Class B Singles, 4-6; 6-3; 0-2; ti-1,
THE KINETOPHONE. “
Last night another large audience attended a further demonstration by the Kinetophone at the Theatre. The pro gracame was slightly varied, and contain- d three new films, and the audience was most enthusiastic in praise of the inven tion.
implored him to explain how it is done.
Mr. Harrison's book runs to some 350 pages. Its character is somewhat diversi- fed, as besides the extremely interesting chapters in which the author describes the occult practices in connection with military arts, we have chapters on the art of Nino or Physiognomy, on the Cult of Cold Steel, on the Sock and Buskin, the Japanese Thespian nad on the Japanese eternal feminine. In all, these chapters Mr. Harrison contributes much interesting information that is probably new to most foreigners who think they know Japan. This is pre-eminently the case as regards the military arts and the super-normal powers which he describes as being associated with them, and wo cordially commend the book to the nation of our readers as being one of extras ordinary interest: It is well written and several illustrations add to the interest of the book.
NEW JAPANESE BATTLE-CRUISER.
THE TRIALS OF THE "KONGO.
The Japanese battle-cruiser Kongo was to leave the Vickers Works at Barrow, where she has been built, on her ateam, gun, and torpedo trials on April 19, going first to Belfast to be put into the Alexan- dra Graving Dook, to prepare for running her steam tests in the Irish gea. The extensive programme of steam trials will begin early in May, and those, as well as the gunnery tests, are being looked forward to with considerable interest, because the vessel is the most powerful battle-cruiser so far completed. The main armament, includes eight 14in. guns and 18 Gin, guns. The trials of the guns at the Vickers Eskmeals Range gave moat satisfactory results.
The steam tests include progressive russ of four hours duration at various speeds, a 30 hours' trial, and an eight hours full- power trial, during all of which tests runs will be made over the measured mile at Skelmorlic on the Clyde. The Kongo, which was designed by the Vickors Com- panya design adopted by the Japanese for three other vessels building in Japan has a length of 704ft. abeam of 92ft,- and at 27ft 6in, draught the displace ment will be 27,500 tons. As the vessel is effectively armoured and has a large number of small guns and submerged torpedo tubes, she represents a happy combination of fighting qualities.
The officers and crew, numbering 677 in all, are due to arrive in this country on April 9, and will proceed to Barrow on To all such entreaties, Mr. Kunishige has April 17 to take part in the trials and to replied that, with the best will in the man the vessel for her voyage to Japan, under the command of Captain N. world, he could not impart the necessary information to any purpose until the Nakano. student had undergone a hard preliminary training in jujitan, in the absence of which the most adamantine abdominal muscles ovoked by deep breathing would be of little avail." ile donics that he possesses any extraordinary powers. Here is one of Mr. Harrison's personal
experiences
OPIUM IN HANKOW.
The Sultan also said that Amil was sure from private advices he had received, that he would be hanged if he came in, so ho demanded Captain Pyle as a hostage until his return from the interview.
Captain Pyle expressed his willingness to stay, said the Sultan, but Lieutenant Whitney anid he had no such orders and hence declined to consider the proposition. Asked what he considered a remedy for the situation, the Sultan said that the Mores were afraid of General Pershing, and had come to distrust all Americans but General Hugh L. Scott, General Leonard Wood and Dr. Salesby, the pharmacist of Zamboanga.
we
ness Benefit, and the Erin Assurance and the Public Benefit Investment and Sick Investment, part of whose business went to the National and Co-operativo. As a tho preliminary to its business going to British Law Fite, the Northern Counties Glass resolved on voluntary liquidation, Season Ticket Registry, the Brixham the Mutual Steamship, the Key and Plate Glass, the St. Helen's and District Mutual Plate Glass, and the City Rever- Several companies that had sionary effacing themselves in a similar manner. become dormant, boon abandoned finally wound up, were dissolved by the Registrar of Joint Stock Companies and struck off the register.
JAPAN AND CHINA.
ENORMOUS INCREASE IN JAPAN'S EXPORT TO CHINA.
or
He said that the Moros of Mindanno had always been well treated by the British in North Borneo as well as by tho Germans and by the Spaniards, but that: Japan's trade with China this year has the Americans had broken promises with up to the present been of a most promis He thought that if Dr. Saleeby ing nature. The exports for the first ten them.
of Y. 2,115,837, when compared with the. were made the governor of the Moro prov days of April showed an increase in valite If we could not have Dr. Saleeby, as corresponding term of the previous year, ince all would be well.
and the total increase in the export trade our governor-general," he went on,
As things are now con- from January 1st to April 10th of this year is estimated to reach Y. 22,030,943, would like to have General Scott or General Weed. ditions are worse than they were ten years less and have been shorn of all power in ago. Though Sultan of Sulu I am help return for a pension of P8,000 a year. I asked him why Amil went up Bagsak Everything is now at sen.
Because come down, and he replied:
in after promising on March to He Suit lake, contrary to promises.' the 52nd More Scouts had been sent to said he would either have to kill the last one of them or the governor would have to extend them his confidence and good will.
3+
VALUE OF A BOY'S LEG. CLADE AGAINST A JAPANESE TRAMWAY. On December 14th, last year, Kitano Kenji, fteen years old, had his leg cut off
a tram at. Hiroshima.
way Company for Y.24,008 darnages. Kitano Kensuke, an Army apothecary, is now suing the Hiroshimu Electric Tram- This sum is made up as follows: Medical treatment Tniversity fees at T.30 per mensem
His father,
fer five years (Kenji being now disqualified for a free course at the Military College) graduation, at Y.15 per monsen Jinrikisha for nine years until
rate till the age of 65 Jinrikisha thereafter at the same. Estimated loss of income for thirty, one years, through having only one leg, at Y.10 per incasem Attendant for two years at Y.12 per
mensom...
years till the age of 55, at Y.50 per legger Artificial leg renewed every three Consolation for loss of leg
1: 300
1,800
1,020 5,580
INTIMATIONS
BABY CONSTANTLY CRIED WITH ECZEMA
Would Scratch Until Face Bled, Had
to Watch Him Nightand Day. UsesTM. Cuticura Soap and Ointment, Face Clears, Scars Come Off, Sleeps Peacefully, and Is Cured..
"When my baby was five weeks old I noticed something on his face like a dry
scurf which soon spread mil over his head. The doctor said it was dry ectoma and Kave me BODO Galte. Ee told me to bathe it freely with olivo all. This I did But it gradually got worse. We got no rust night or day, it was so itchy He would scratch his foré until- it bied. At last-I took him to an infirmary. Thoy sald is was & vary bad cuso of dry eczema and gave me a Jar of salve, told me to put it on linen and gut on la face and head. I eng- tinued this, for some weeks but all to no good. He got so bad someone had to watch him-night and day and he had hands tied so he would not make his face bleed. He was constantly crying with the pain.
"I tried many other ointment but they were oll no use. My friendly advised me to try Cuticure Sonn and Ointment. The I did and before I had lacul the first bör of Batteurs Ointinent his face cleared, the scars came off his head and left to merks whatever, He was able to sleep peacefully which he lud. not lone for months. Daby is now nearly two years old, and there has never been the least signs of its return since he was cured some elevon months ago. It was all gone before I had finished the second box. When · ever I bear of anyone suffering with eczema I always recommend Culleurs Bean and Ointment I am very grateful, indeed for them." (Signos) Mra, A. Wilson, 12. Perso BL, Hartlepool, Durham, Eng., Dec. 10, 1910. A sample of cach with 32-p, book free from ncarest depot Newbery & Sons, 27, Char- terhouse Sq., London, R. Towns & Co., Syd- 10, N. 8. W.: Lennon, Lia, Cape Town; Yallor, Maclean & Co., Calcutta and Bombay: Potter D. & U. Corp., solo props., Boston,U.B.Aug.
pared with the corresponding term of the an advance by 202 per cent. when com- export from January 1st to April 10th isZEISS preceding year. The total amount of the estimated to reach Y 11,783,260.
The
12
12
96-18-0
PRISM
AT HOME PRICES:
period totals P. 2,200,000, which shows an increase in the importo during the same BINOCULARS for the first ten days of April is increased increase of 2 per cent., while the import by Y. 80,000, when compared with the corresponding period of last year. The 16 Power total value of imports from China between January 1st and April 10th is estimated to amount to Y. 10,890,516. The reason for the remarkable increase in the export trade is attributable to the fact that, after the revolution, the stand. ard of living in Central China has greatly advanced, and the demand for cotton cloth favours the Japanese products instead of the rough woven material from
India.
THE MURDER OF MR. SUNG. A PRISONER WITH EPIDUREAN. TASTES. Highly interesting reports have appear- ed in the Chinese papers regarding lung Kwe-shing's prison life. Evidently, re- marks the lana Press, he has read of the English suffragettes, for he has threatened to resort to a hunger strike if he should be put into irons in the day time.
This was ordered by Colonel Chon when he discovered that fung was attempting to write something with a pencil on a piece of paper. A threat to commit suicide 3,720 by poisoning or hunger strike has resulted in the rescinding of the order during 288 Iung's good behavior.
Jung also laments daily that his indul- gence in oplum smoking should be pro- 700 hibited. He declares this is the saddest 10,000 blow of all. He demands delicious Taken altogether, remarks the Japan Chinese dishes for every meal and it is
attention of legal eircles in Hiroshima. Chronicle, it is quite an interesting reported that he even insists upon a A Peking dispatch states that: The estimate, and is said to be occupying the foreign dinner. An Employers Liability Act or a National The Insurance Scheme worked on these lines intention of President Yuan Shih-kui to would be exceedingly interesting. Tramway Company will doubtless seek create a special court through Wang to conduct the trial of the Sung Chian abatement on the grounds that the insur Chung-hui former minister of justice, ance tables would show the expectation of life to be less than 55 years, or the evidence en case, is being opposed by all older of schoolmasters might be called as oficials of the ministry of justice. claimant passing his examinations. On testimony against the chances of the the other hand, the claimant could easily. add to his bill of charges. For instance, a man with one log is worth less in the marriage market, and he could never be
judo expert or & baseball star, Again, suppose while in his service, kis kuramaya (rickebaman) got injured. If Liability Act in Japan, would Kenji or by that time there were an Employers' the Tramway Company be responsible A single case raises so many problems that
SINGAPORE JOINT STOCK COMPANIES.
(new model),
£10.10.0
£10.10.0
£9.5.0
£6.10.0
6.
(large field).
£7.10.0
£6.0.0
(small model):
£5.18.0
To be Obtained from
£5.8.0
Chs. J. Gaupp
& Co.,
ALEXANDRA
OUR
STUDY
OF
The report on the working of the legistry of Joint Block Companies in Singapore for 1918 states that thirty-one THE new companies were registered during the year with a total nominal capital of
Eight companies in have a nominal capital of one million 815,987,500, of which no fewer than four dollars and over.
saged their capital, and eighteen com pantes vére, voluntarily wound up. The Bill setting forth a regular tariff effess collected amounted to $7.839.20. At damages to the person..
The sale of opium in Hankow city is The time fixed for selling out all opium now confined to eight Government shops, Mr. Kunishigo invited me to squat stocked in Hankow at present is six and face him. This I did as well as I montba. After this term the shops have could. He then instructed me to seize to be closed. There was a great rush to it would be best for the Diet to adopt a both his cars and to pull thom as hard as these shops to begin with by the black I liked. Without more ado I obeyed. I citizens" (as the opium smokers are now Recently the rush has ceased. am not exactly a weakling, but my most called), desporate efforts had no more effect upon On a careful inquiry the Central China Mr. Kunishige's facial expression or upon Post learns that the employees of these AN AMALGAMATION OF PUBLISH- his cara, so far as any of us could see, shops, who are officials have already than if they had never been. A Spartan found a way to squeeze. A great deal might perhaps contrive to conceal the of opium has been secretly sold by them agony he was enduring beneath a mask of rich Chines as well as to the keepers of opium dens in the Concessions. The indifference, but no Spartan known to
officials in this way make a net profit of several thousand dollars a month.
history ever possessed cara which could have survived intact the tugging to which I subjected the corresponding organs of Mr. Kunishige. What is more, through all this pulling the teacher never altered his position on the cushion. At the And:
A Chinese child about one month old
of a minute's exercise of this description was found abandoned in-a Kowloon
I began to fool that it much the same thoroughfare and handed over to the care asaner and with equal prospect of making of the Italian Convent.
ING HOUSES.
the close of the year 1919 thors were $23 working companies on the register. It is a source of nuch atisfaction, obave Mr. Gottlieb, to be able to report that the requirements of the Companies Ordinance are being more strictly observed by com- panics. There have been some omissions, Mr. Stanley Paul, of 31, Essex Street,und the following penalties were imposed Strand, announces that he has acquired and pad-Eleven companies for con Ltd., who are well-known, particularly ranco company for contravention of the business of Messrs. Greening & Corntion of section 76 (2) $400, one in- as publishers of fiction. The firm o section 72 825, total 425. In Penang, Greening & Co. will be continued, und Mr. Acton reports that ten new companies its own name, and as there are some were registered during the year with a titles on its list. Mr. Stanley Paul who nominal capital of $1,483,000, as comparei will conduct both businesses from his with seven compan es rerristered in 1811, arrangement control the management of were prosecutions against three companies for contravention of the provisions of the offices in Essex Street, willy this with a nominal capital of 8910,000. There upwards of 1,200 current books
Companies Ordinance.
BUILDINGS.
CHATES ROAD,
EYE
and its anatomy and our los experienos in correcting defective vision enable us to tell. beyond doubt if your eyes will be benefited by wearing glasses. ----
Our method of testing is soleatilo ud sccurate. If de af ned clases we gwwill tell you so. If you do nocd gastr wo can supply and it them at extremely moderate prices.
MAKE CERTAIN WE WILL TELL YOU.
O, ARK & C
BLOGS,
CHATER RO SONGKONG
· 48