TAN HONGKONG DAILY PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 14TH, 1915.

BAD LIVERS.

Not only is the Liver the largest but one of the most important organs in the human body, and when deranged it becomes the source of endless suffering. When the Liver is clogged by the inactivity of the kidneys and bowels, it becomes torpid, and fails to filter the bile from the blood, thus producing biliousness and a general impairment of the digestive system. The tongue is coated, the head aches, digestion is imperfed; there is aching of the limbs and back, feelings of fulness, weight and soreness over the stomach and liver; the eye becomes yellow and jaundiced and the complexion muddy, the urine is

• There is scarity and highly coloured, and the bowels irregular, constipation and looseness alternating.

are made little use treating the liver separately, as it can never be set right until the kidneys and bowels active in removing the waste from the body. It is for this very reason that Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills have always proved so wonderfully successful in curing the most chronic Liver complaint, biliousness liver, and bowels. They reach the liver as no other and complicated ailments of the kidneys, remedy does.

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HAZARDS BEHIND THE LINE.

HOW WILDING DIED IN A DUG-OUT.

RESOURCES OF INDIA.

A very eminent Indian," contributes to the Times of India the following power. ful and moving appeal to all to seize the occasion in order to improve the industries. of India;-

Men out here will tell you they would far rather be in the treaches than in billets behind the line. The trenches are safer, they say. Their preference is easily

It has been truly said that there is no understood, says the special correspondent of the Daily Mail, Day and night the mixed ovil in the world.

There is no doubt that this horrid wär Germans are shelling up and down our has ruined thousands of families and line sometimes methodically searching throw them into misery, but at the same length of road with Jack Johnsons and time it has opened bur oyes to the import- shrapnel on the chance of British troops or supply trains passing along it at the ant fact, fact, viz-what-reliance can be placed upon the resources of this country. time, or again rumping them over! at som spot where they believe one of our batteries to be, or seeking to batter down some point of vantige, a belfry or a watuntries in the West, some of which for a tower, where they imagine our artillery ug time have not displayed a friendly

disposition towards the British Empi observation officers are posted.

and one of which, at any rate, is our in- exorable enemy to-day-

*

During the first battle of Ypres a big German shell fell into the Chateau of Hooge, where the First Division had it headquarters, Luncheon had just finished in the mess, and the staff officers were pass- ing into the courtyard. Two officers mot in the doorway. After you," said the Grst, standing aside. "No, you go on," said the other, and the first officer, as the Sheik fell into the courtyard, stepped ont to his death. The ether was untouched.

I saw a farmhouse in which three men had been sleeping side by side on straw when a shell came in through the roof. It burst faband square in the place, instant- ly kibing the two men lying outside. The man in the middle escaped unhurt.

|

It is undeniable that in many respects we have to depend upon supplies from

Therefore, to the extent of our depond- once upon other countries, we are not a self-supporting country. But at any rate now the time has thus come when, as far as our own requirements are concerned, something must be done to make India. self-reliant.

Not July are we dependent for certain article of manufacture, but what we our- selves could produce we are not able t do now, Centuries ago many things were made in this country, though only by the hand or according to the old recipes trans- mitted from father ao son, But ever since machinery came, aided by scientific pr resses, hand labour failed to compete will the West, and naturally this country has ceased to manufacture most of the articles it was once famous for; this is not alt even the processes we knew have now been nearly forgotten.

Beside a lonely, rubbish-strewn - palli) which not so very long ago had been a country road. I saw yesterday the grave of Anthony Wilding, the lawn tennis champion, who met his death by the chance of a stray shell. He was riding a motor- eyete along this road when-German shell hurst just in front of him. It is. I think,ever stopped we would find ourselves in a a sound role in these cases to go straight very sad plight indeed. on, for the Germans generally drop que er two shells about the same place.

· A dug-out was close by, and Captain Wilding took cover in it to wait till the belling ceased. In the dug out were an officer and some men of the Suffolk Regi- arent. The very next shell fell into the dug- out and killed the inmates Wilding lies buried close to the road, with the Suffolk officer and his men, A plain wonden cross, with his name and the date of his death inscribed in indelible pencil, marks his resting place.

There are given points along our line that the Germans are never tired of shell ing When I passed Wilding's grave was on my way to a little hamlet in the southern part of our ling, which, though all but destroyed and quite deserted both by military and civilians, the Germans still bombard wish great persistency,

While I was in the churchyard looking at the ruin of the church, which has been practically razed to the ground, a succes eion of big German shell came whistling over and burst with the most tremendous raplosions. The village is now in ruins. Not a house remains that has not got a shell-hote

As I came down yesterday on to the great straight thoroughfare which intersects both the British and the German trenches, and which has been the witness of some et the most desperate fighting in this war, the Germans were sending heavy howitzer shells over in braces, the noise of the pass age of each alel through the air, which I could distinguish clearly, being follow ed by a double explosion. Near the road I fell in with a victim of this cost y expenditure of ammunition a humble private lying motionless on a stretcher: The stretcher-bearers bore him swiftly to the field dressing station situated in a farmhouse, and so used are the men at the frong to the hazards of their work that his passage excited neither attention nor regrets.

SERIOUS OUTLOOK FOR GOLF CLUBS.

SHRINKAGE OF REVENUK

This horrid war has amply proved that if the import of materials and stuffs is

A few instances may be cited to show how. far we are dependent upon the countries of the West:

(1) We can't make any machinery in this country which they do so well and such scale in the West-

(9) We can't make dyes, most varietie of cloth, and a thousand other things which are in daily use its

Jaimer &

the Wine Merchany of the last

NAPIER

We are very fortunate to be under a molt gracious Sovereign and his Government," which is entirely sympathetic. It is su prising, therefore, that the mechanical arts and other device for meeting the need of this country have not yet attained Of course ho adequate development; Government can ever do what the people. themselves must do. The Government car only adopt administrative measures and introduce conditions which favour the growth of industries, Trade and commerce This the Government have, to a certam extent, done, are doing and will no daubt continue to do. It is for private enter- prise to do the rest and thus make this great country entirely self-supporting There is no doubt that the interests of al parts of the Empire are thoroughly, ideh. tical. This identity of interest would ap- pear to dietats the policy of protecting the trade of the Indian Empire against a foreign competition and not of the ons par against the other. Therefore any measures involving the latter form of pr tection sie worthy of the serious considera- tion of the generous Supreme Government.

It is regrettable, indeed, and also very painful to see what sacrifices our brethren of England have to make in prosecuting this war, and that we in this country can. do so little to come to their rescue in any effective sense. If only to-day we had the requisite class of concerns and factories in this country with local labour trained i carry them on, we would have been proud to help our brethren and relieve them of the strain and anxiety they are suffering.

Is it not a shame that we can't get many of the medicines, woollen stuffs, machines of inmunerable kinds and myriad other things, as for most of these we depend upen the odieus Germans, if not entirely at kast to a great extent? Men and money are here but not the training..and the organisation that can turn them to the mat important of accounts.

It seems a pity that even our big and well-organised Chambers of Commerce have so overlooked this point for want of foresight and a deeper interest in Pe country

It is hoped that the writer will be for given this proumptuous effort to bring a most rited and important point to the notics of the Government, the commercial the numerous community and also

He prays to Chambers of Coramerce. God that the day may soon come when India will be fully prepared to compete

business with the foreign countries iy every respet. It is hardly necessary to say that by foreign countries the writer means countries outside the British En

pre-

In conclusion, the writer would express

It is obvious that the longer the wax lasts the greater will its effects become manifest in the ordinary interests of life. In the case of a few golf clubs these effects have already revealed themselves to the extent of total extinction, and the prospect of anything like & serious pro- longation of the conflict opens up very difficult problems for the other clubs, says the Globe. When the war started a great many golfers, actuated chiefly by nan cial considerations, curtailed their play, and consequently thier expenditure, on the game very considerably, and some, on account of rather fanciful patriotic rea sons, abandoned the pastime altogether Later, after the panic had subsided some what and the genial weather came, they relaxed their rigid rules of economy and

his sense of pride at the honourable part.! returned to their favourite coursce.

For the moment one can almost detect this country has played in the war in co a return to the frame of mind which pre-operating with its brethren of the Went veiled soon after, the outbreak of war, and in supporting them in every way pos and the result has been a really ericus sible. May all this lead to the best of shrinkage of revenue to the clubs One feelings and the happiest of relations club near London which formerly prided itself on its annual high returns from visitors green fees is losing heavily, but in the majority of cases the defcit is largely in the catering and refreshment departments As most clubs, too, have waived the subscriptions of their membera

A Warsaw telegram says that, accord who are serving with the colours, the result is that the income showing to the testimony of prisoners, wur signs very soon of being unable to marings against the war in Germany are come up to the requirements. Ecopomies becoming louder and louder in spie uf will, therefore, have to be practised and the iron régimes as there is a project afoot, in one pise, of A prisoner told the following story, elling for volunteers from among the He said that the Empress Augusta, was members to undertake some of the ground recently visiting one of the hospitals in work and so ease the club of Fume peus.who had lost both arms and legs by Posen, and stopped at the bed of an officer in the maintenance of a staff. The who prospect of green cutting or rolling may amputation and whose body was covered The Empress, not be quite so attractive as a round at with shrapnel wounds. the game itself, but if players are faced tried to comfort this bunam wreck and with the alternative of finding their club promised that she would try to secure the in serious, oancial trouble they will fiffihoort of any special wish he might probably not hesitate long before getting have a their coats off and stirring to work...

GERMAN OFFICER AND THE KAISER.

The officer turned his bloodshot eyes upon her and bissed out the answer :→→→ "My wish is that the Emperor William and all his children may experience a fate Prince Jochum, on of the Kaiserke mince The Empress was so upset, wintors is the this incident that she flitto a deep sons has joined a corps of

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