NOW

IN PREPARATION.

THE DIRECTORY AND CHRONICLE

1916.

FOR CHINA, JAPAN, COREA, INDO. CHINA, SIAM, STRAITS SETTLE MENTS, MALAY STATES, NETHERLANDS INDIA, PHILIP. FINES, BORNEO, ETC.

FIFTY FOURTH ANNUAL ISSUE.

Tho Compilern invite the European residents in the Far East who appreciate the advantage of having at their disposal A thoroughly complete and trustworthy work of reference to cooperate with them by returning promptly the forms sent out for revision, and by furnishing, also, the names of any European firms which have rocently been established in their midst or any that have ceased to exist.

Those advertisere, also, who have not yet sent in their revised announcements for the 1018 issue of the volume are asked to do so, if possible, not later than the end of this month.

In this way the usefulness of the "Directory and Chronicle" will be increased and its early is me facilitated

The Directories and Descriptions are of:

CRIZA.

Canton. Chinking. Whampos.

Peking. (textain.

Soochow.

Poitaibo. Nanking. Kowloon.

Chinwangtao. Wubu.

Kowkiong. Jamzbul.

Lappa.

Taku.

Astung.

Hankow Kongmoon.

Manchurian Tochow.

Nanning

Wusbowiu.

Trade C'tres. Shansi. Newchwang. Ichang. Kwangchauwan. Dsiren.

Chungking. Pakbol.-

Port Arthur. Hangchow. Hoihow.

Chefoo.

Ningpp. Langchow

Wenckow. Mongtre.

Tengrush.

Weihniwet,

Tsinaafu...

Santu.

Bokow.

Muzdon.

Foochow Bromso.

Shanghai.

Amoy.

STAŁOW..

Tokyo.

Yokohama,

Brogo.

Kobe.

JAPAN AND FORKOLA.

Deaks. Koalung.

Tsinanfo. Mofi.- Nagasaki. Takow. Hakodate Anping.

Shimonoseki, Tamaui.

Seoul,

EASTERN SIBERIA,

Vladivostock.

Nicolojerak

CHOEN.

Chemulpo.

Kunsan.

Wonian. Mokpo.

Fusso. Chinnampo.

Pinging. Sungchin.

HONGKONG AND I26 Darendakotas, Macao.

Hanoi.

Haiphong

FRENCH INDO-CHINA.

Andam. Hué.

Tonkin Provinces. Quinhon.

- PHILIPPINES,

Tourade. Saigon. Cambodge,

Manila.

Iloilo.

Oeba.

Boanna.

Sarawak. Brunei,

Labuan.

Persk.

British North - Borneo,'

BANGKOK

Malay StatiÉ.

Belangor. Pabang

Kedah Trenggaan. Perlia.

Negri Sembilan, Jobore. Kelantan.

Bingapore, Penang, Malanes, Prov. Wellesley,

Batavia.

Buitenborg.

Bemales SertLEMENTS,

NETHERLAND, India.

Samarang. Padang. Sourabaya. Macassar.

East Coast of Sumatra,

NAVAL SQUADRONG,

Украчеве. Siamese.

United States, Italian.

British. French.

OFFICERS OP Coast and KIVER STRAMEEJ,

The Book is printed from New Type specially reserved for the purpose, and aniformity in every arrangement greatly Iscilitates referonos.

-Besides the usual Alphabetical List of Firms the Directory gives the CLASSIFIED LISTS of TRADES and PROFESSIONS the larger Commercial Centres.

The

ALPHABETICAL LIST of RESIDENTS of the last half-century in the Far Eas sontains the names of over

30,000 FOREIGNERS,

arranged, with the Initials as well as the Surnames, in strictly Alphabetical Order, so that any name can be found instantly.

THE MAPS AND PLANS

of the principal ports in the Far East have been cograved by one of the most eminent Firms in Great Britain and are annually worrected and brought up to date.

The CHRONICLE covers the notable events Logether with the Texts of all the mor important Troaties conciled with the countries of Eastern Asis, the various Customs Tariffs, Trade Regulations, Chan- bers of Commerce, Scales of Commissions Consular and Court Fees, Hongkong Stamp Duties, Postal Grade, Signal Codes, Chinese Festivals, Tables of Money, Weights and

cables Famer &&

Um Merchany of the Cast.

THE HONGKONG DAILY PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12m, 1918.

HAPIER JOHNSTONE'S

*

SQUARE BOTTLE"

WHISKY.

UNVARIED FOR OVER

150 YEARS.

THE SAME TO-DAY AS IN 1745.

BEWARE OF IMITATIONS!

SOLE AGENTS IN HONGKONG

LANE CRAWFORD

CO.

and from ALL Wins MurorantN.

UNABLE TO WORK

ECZEMA SO BAD

Pimples All Over Body. Burning and Itching. Could Not Sleep or Rest. Used Cuticura Soap and Oint- ment. Well As Ever.

135, Phot.. Ashton-n-Lyne, Lancs," Hog-"I uffered from a bad casa of eczo- ma. It commenced Itching underneath the akin and then broke out with pimples all over my body. They grew larger and then

broke out a mass of sores. I was unable to work for about eight weeks, suffering great pain. It caused burn- Ing and itching and I could no sleep at night or rest

anywhere for about six months.

of

"I tried treatment but all failed to da mno any good. I saw the advertisment of 10 and Ointment and I used Cuticura Soap and them the months and tie sores all camo boy in scales and then they began to heal and the sain left mo altogether. { fool as well now as over did in mur

In my life." (Signed) Frod Schoßold, Aug, 20, 1013,

Hotela your good looks, keep your skin dandruff, clear, scalp clean and free from

live and glossy, handle soft and white, sound and shapely. . Cuilcurą, Soap. with an octional vso of Cuthurn Ointment. will promote and malatain these covoted conditions in most enser when all else falls. Besides, in purity and delicate emollient properties they rect with the approval of the most decritating.

bair

Samples Free by Post Although Cuticura Soap and Ointment. are solti throughout the worti, a sample of each with 32-p, Skin Book will bo sent from upon requmat. Address post-card: F, New- bury & Sons, 27, Charterhouse Sq., London.

Isay

KEATINGS *LOZENGES

cure the worst Cough

MARTIN'S

APIOL & STEEL PILLS

[68-6

A Franola Ramonly for all frengulariilée. Thousand at Lee always keep a par Mare to the house, solini on the drai Few of any

Abicaly down any be administered. Those wise MAN AZAM SABOOmend them, haben Ihstrange. BRONI CHIA, AŬ Civentate and flores sell LESENA Kiszonghoud the World, or post, tres de BULETIN, Obernial, Wonthaington, Bag.

* MARTIN'S PAPIOL & STEEL

GRIMAULT'S

SYRUP

OF

HYPOPHOSPHITE OF LIME

FOR

STUBBORN COUGHS

BRONCHITIS

WEAK LUNGS

CATARRH

Measures and other Commercial Information CONSUMPTION

The CHRONICLE and DIRECTORY. though aradensed in every possible manner. sontains every year 13070 pages.

974

VISITORS AT HOTELS.

HONGKONG HOTEL.

Mr. A. Adler Mr Goo, E. Anderson Mr & Mrs F. Z. 4

Alomadas Castro ~Missd Almada e Castro Master d Almada é

Castro

MrJ H. Backhouse Mr&Mrs F. J. Barkey Mr J. H. Baring Me H. Murray Bain Be R. E. Belition Mrs E, R. Belitica Mr O. D. J. Bell Mr J J. Blandin Mr J. P. Browne Mr G. BonEAD

Mr W. B.Bowerman Mr E. V. Browa Mr & Mrs HD Benn

and child

Mr & Mre W

Barns

A.

Mr W. H. Burtt Mr C. Champlin Mr & Mrs G. Chapana

Mr F. C. ComFINAN

Mr H. Cheetham

Mra Colnelinton

Mr I. J. Cokely

Mr T. Colletz

Mr & Mrs W.. F.

Coney

Mr & Mr F. E. Davis Mr E. P. Day

Mr&m J. M. Don.

nizon

Mr W. A. Dowley Mr RP. Downie Mr Th. Dred ickson Miss M. E. Dafty Capt W. Erhardt Mr & Mrs E. C. Ely Mr C. R. Fisbar Dr kitzwilliams Lient Comdr. & Mm

V. N. Lascoiné Mr H. Groar Mr J. Gould Mr V. Gouldbourn Mr G. Li, Ghoodrich Mr & Mrs W. Hannibal

A.

Chpt T. P. Hall Hon. Mr E. A. Hewett

QMO.

Mr W. J. Hodge ̈ Mir L. G. Holgats Mr T. W. Hollyday Mr & Mrs Howell' Mrs H. G. Huickly: Miss Huat

Mr J. S. C. Hunt Capt & Mrs R. anness Mr F. B. Ingersoll

Mr R. B. Jepson Mr A. H. F. Jennings MrS, M. Joseph "Mr M. Josph

- Mr & Mrs F. G:Jones

Miss C. Kennedy Mr A. J. Kouninge Mr C. auriteon - “Mr A. M. Lawrence Mr Th. Layberris Mr G. T. Lloyd Mr S. Longfield Mr& Mrs. H. Leyson Miss E. E. Mahony Mr&Mrs W. Mannlag Mr Mansfield Dr & Mrs O. Marriott Mr G. Mavor Mr S. M. Mayor Mr D. McMurray Dr G. M. McKean Mr J. Marocki Mr B. K. Mehta Capt H. E. Morton Mr Wm. Moore Mr & Mrs H.

Morgan

A STRANGE SPY STORY.

FBENCH WIFE MOURNS A GERMAN

AS HUSBAND,

The following is related by a Paris correspondent és a true story of one of the Cherman methods of spying,

Captain Belmont and been dangerously

NAVAL COALITION AGAINST ENGLAND.

"NEUTRAL" STATESMAN'S · NEW. DISCLOSURE.

The Morning Post publishes the follow ing:-

We have received the following cable gram from M. Take Joneson, the well known Romaning statesman ..". In-

JUDGES ON THE HUNS,

THE "NO NATIONALITY." PLEA REJECTED.

The King's Bench Divisional Court (Justices Bailhacho and Low) delivered considered judgments dismissing the cage of Mr. Alfred Liobmann, managing direc

wounded in an action in the Champagne view of the extraordinary perversions of tor of the London and Provincial Electric

ke truth contained in the speech to the Theatres, Ltd.

He had claimed to be released from in- Reichstag of Dr. von Bethnatur-Hellweg, the Germain Chancellor, I authorise the ternment as an alien enemy and prisoner publication of the following facts in of war on the ground that he was a man addition to those I have already made of "no nationality" because he had ob

tained from the Gorman Government a known:

In November, 1911, Herr von Kider-certificate of discharge from German Waechter, the then Eccretary of State nationality and had not been naturalised. Ear Foreign Affairs, told me at Barlin in this country. that it had been his desire to arrive at an arrangement with Great Britain with regard to the limitation of naval armaments, but that he was opposed in this matter by Admiral von Tirpitz, whose attitude had the approval of the German Emperor, and that for this reason the policy of armaments A outrance must continue.

country, and was carried to a hospital a a little neighouring town, where he short ly died without regaining consciousness. On soarching his pockets when he was admitted the authorities had found a Intter aldressed to his wife, with the mote ::

Please forward in case of dangerous wounding." The lotter was sent and Mme, Belmont was able to reach the hos pital from Paris before her husband was placed in his coffin. The nursing sister who had tended the captain received her and tried to break the news as gently s possible, but at the first words the widow understood and fell fainting into her arms? The sister, who knew that the dend

was fearfully, mutilated, Jan's face

managed to persuade the wife not to insist on seeing her husband's features again, so as to keep in her memory the face as she had last seen it?**

Mr W. B. Neighbour Mr A. Niksim

Mrs Niss.m

Mr J. Ormiston

Mr T. N. Parsley

Mr A. J. Patober

Mr & Mrs

Raymond

Mr., A, Kudy. Miss F. Hany Mrs C. Reed Capt Bolmaon. MF W. H. Kobiason Mad. Salle

M

Mr Wm. Scelt Mr & Mrs J. R` Shaw Mr Shocker Mrs Savons Me¥, M. § nith Mr W. H. Smith Mr D R. Stephen Mins T. R. Stephen Mr V. Sorby Mr Tim Tang Day Mr C. Trimm Mr U. B Waites Mr W. B. Walters Me W. B. Webster Mr E. L. Wemple Mrs C. M. Walken M&MU A. Williams Mr.J. Wilkie Mr H, Wiseman Mrs S. B. Wellskill Birth Wood, Dr & Mrs Lladasy

Woo.is

KING EDWARD HOTEL

Mre B Almond

Capt. & Mr Birnie

and children

Mr W. Buder

Mr & Mrs T. S. Cheng

Mrs F. L. Cooke Miss J. F. Cooke

Mr W. D. Lee Miss Lennox Mr Leanor

Mr E, C. Norris Mr T. B. Norrie Mr D. A. Macleod + Mr H. Murphy

Masters G. M. & J. F. Mr & Mm Newman

Cooke

Mr A. Course

Mr B. G. Deane

Mr F. F. Duckworth

air W. T. Elson

Mrs C. Foo

Me 0, Frits

Mrs Goe

J. A. Gillespie Mr T. 1. Gregory Mr B. Grieva Mi T. Gaan Mr & Mrs Hammes and

children

Mr & Mrs W.

Jackson

Mr J. Joseph.. Mr D. Laibden Miss Lambden

Mr G. Morra

Mr C. E. Parker Mrs W. O. Passmore Dx & Mra Paterson Mire Robson

Mr E. M. S'eigh Mrs D. G. Smith Mr C. H. Soper Mrs R. A. Ramsay Mr C. E. Richa.com Mr H. F. Stoneham Mrs S. Sylvaner Mr H. Thornton Mrs E. L. Tourtellot Mr & Mr J. B.

Underwood

Mr & Mrs J. B.

Witchell

Mr Wong

FEAK HOTEL.

Mr W. Armstrong

Mr Au'd

Mrs Bowdler Mr & Mrs Carmichael Mr F. W. Cary Mr&Mrs C. D.Camilli Lt & Mrs Cooney Mr & Mrs A. Consland Col. Darling BE. Mr Denman Fuller Mr & Mrs Dabis

Mr. & Mr B. A. Hale Capt& Mrs Hammond

and child

Mr & Mrs W. T.

Hansen

Mr B. W. Hind Mer T. J. E. Johns Mr Lee Jones

M Lambelet

Major Morgan

Mrs Y Mar tin and

obild rea Mr & Mrs Moss and

obild

Mrs MaoGowan and

children

Mrs Oinecra Mr T. L. Perkins Mr C. Skott

Smith

Mrs Graat

Mr & Mrs A. Findlay

Braith

Capt & Mrs Stew.rt MFG. E. Stewart Mr B. Steckmort Mr W. E. Tiada I Mr G. Tindall Mr J. A. Traha Maj. Gen. Ventris

Grand Horne,

Mr E. M. Abbott. Mr G. Angelo

Mr J. U... Anker Mr C. B. Arnott Mr O. H. Booth | Mr E. af. Britt,

Ma e. Bachasan or A. B. Grow Mr C. Cradan Mr A. Dunrich

4. F. 8. van Dyk Mr C. Jade Girsan Mr A. C. Haig

de K. 8. Hassel Mr, G. Humn ar B. James

Mr & Mrs Jobastes

and chidren Mr.J. de Klerk Mr J. Manteiro

Miss G. May

Mr 2. Philipp Mr O. W. Reynolds

Mr E. Hyen

Mr J. Smith

MrJ. K. S. Stanton

Mr G. E. Stockwell »

Mr H. F. Thorig

Mr Veen W. B. Van

Mrs E. J. We

Mr B. Wright

THE NEW FRENCH REMEDY, N°1 Not No

#price / leading

THERAPIONE CORS

BLOOD POISON, HÉDERY, BLADDER, URIMARY DISEASES, DISCHARGES, WEAKLISS, FALES GERDSTAMP ADDRESS EXYKLOVE J * FREE SOOMET TO DE SE CLERO MED.CO. HAVERSTOCK AÐ. HAMPSTEAD, LONDON, ENG. PARIS DEFOT: IL, REE CASTIGLIONE, TAMBURER WEW YORK DEFOTI 10. ZELEMAN OT. IFOR YOU. T&T NEW DRAGKE (LASTELESS) 70EMOT. HASY TO THE

SAVE AND LASTING CURE. SEE THAT TRADE MARKED WORD "THEFAFLOK". 29 ON BEAT.GOVT.NZANIA ZIBER TRALL, GLENJEKE TACKLES

THERAPION

Mue. Belmont returned to Paris and shut herself up with her grief, declining the offer of her mother to go and stay with her. Three worths passed, and then one morning the past brought a letter, dated on the envelope from a hospital, with the address in the writing of her husband. As if turned to stone she held the letter in her hands, gazing at it with fixed eyes and not daring to open it, and scarcely breath- ing in the mad conflict of feelings that overwhelmed her. Finally she drew out a letter, and as she rendit line by lined she fancied her reason was leaving her. There were only a few words, in a trem- bling hand, to say that her husband had been wounded in Champagne and sent to`n hospital on the Normandy const. He had hung on the edge of death for months, and it was only now that he was saved and had the strength to send her these fow Hives:

The dates he gave of his wound and admission to the hospital corresponded with those given by the nursing eister, and the wife was left in a haze of doubt. and mystery until she went to Normandy, and then the truth came out. There the captain told her that he had booni left for dead on the field, and when he came to himself after many hours he found him-

AUSTRIA'S AIM.

......

It was stated that the judgment would. afect the position of a great number of interned aliens who also claimed to be of

no nationality."

Mr. Justice Bailhache (in whose judg- ment Mr. Justice Low concurred) said he decided Liebmann was on ation enemy. He was also legally a prisoner of war, and therefore his application must fail. When the internment of an alien enemy was con- In September, 1912, Count Berchtold sidered by the executive Government. the Austro-Hungarian Minister for charged with the protection, of the realur Foreign Affairs, explained to me at desirable in the interests of the safety of Vienna that Austrian wavel plans were the realm, tho action of the Government i

To my ob- directed against England.

so doing was not open to be reviewed by jection that Creat Britain would never the Courts of Law by habeas corpus. allow herself to be outstripped in the race for armaments, Count Berchtold replied that the moment would come when England, not having resorbed to national service would find herself short of bluejackets, and that then Gormany and Austria-Hungary would

take the lead.

ISTRIQUE IN THE BALKANS.

|

"There are a large number of German subjects in this coufry," said his lordship in one passage of his judgment. This war is not being carried on by naval and military forces alono. Reports, rumours, and intrigues play a large part; and methods of communication with the enemy

include wireless telegraphy, signalling by lights, and employment of carrier pigeons. Spying has become the hallmark of Ger

Kultur. In these circumstances man

German civilian in this country might be a danger in promotag unrest, suspicion, doubts of victory, and communicating in- telligence and assisting in the movements of submarines and Zeppelins far greater danger indeed than the German soldier or sailor."

gene

With regard to the Serbo-Bulgarian rupture of 1913 I was in a position as a member of the Roumanian Govern ment (Minister of the Interior) to know what strenuous efforts Russia made to avoid a rupture I also know that this quainted was due to Austrian intri- gues, and I remember how the day after the rupture, or within a very fow days after, Prince Fürstenberg, the Austro-Hungarian Minister at Buchar est, said to me, rubbing his hands with glee: We have done a good stroke of UNIVERSITIES AND THE WAR. business."

YEAR'S SEA WAR,

self stripped of his uniform and cap, and THE LOSS INFLICTED ON GERMAN

SHIPPING:

a man dressed in his clothes was standing looking at him. Snatching his revolver, that had fallen by his side, the captain fired point blank in the face of the man The total gross tonnage (approximate who had robbed him, and remembered, noy) of ships of all nationalities captured, more. It was whilst still unconscious that detained, sunk, or damaged from the out- the ambulance mon had found him, as break of hostilities in August, 1914, until well as the other man, and had sont theme end of August, 1915, amounted to nearly 4,000,000 tons and numbered close to different hospitals.

o 3,000 vessels.

The natural comment on this strangei but veracions story would be that all was well that ended well, but, temporarily, the consequences are serious. Captain Belmont having been officially returned dead he no longer any civil state of existence. He has been wiped out of the book of living Frenchmen and can longer give or receive or sight or buy or sell. He is excluded from society, and though he is alive and woll his wife is a widow, and if a child were born it would be a posthumous one. It will probably take months and cast no small sum for him to regain his place in the sun.

WARNING TO STOCK EXCHANGES,

UNBRIDLED EXPLOITATION OF WAR CONDITIONS,

no

The detanks of German vessels which have been swept off the seas in all parts of the world are as under :——

Ships. T'a'ge.

21

by

Detained in United Kingdom

and Oversco British port...146 Captured in German Colonial

ports

and Bunk Captured British Captured by British.......... 75 Detained in Egyptian ports... 18 Detained in Belgian ports. 89 Detained in French and Rus

aian portacion Detained in Italian ports Captured and sunk by Allies. 4

Captured by Allies

The vice-chancellors of the four north- ern universities, Manchester, Liverpool, Leeds, and Sheffield, havo sent a letter to the Committee on Public Rotrenchment to deprecate the withdrawal of public subsidy from the universities on the ground that education and research indispensable to the present and future strength of the country are being carried on within their walls,

The letter has been drawn up because of the fear that haste to seenro nations!

economy might land to the claims of educa tion being neglected. The value of the universities' work to the Army in the training, of officer, doctors, Engineers etc., is also pointed out.

Already the income of these institutions 315,181 is cut down by the number of students who have enlisted. If the Government grants 43,367 are reduced it is feared that the local au- thorities will reduce their support. There- 29,424 fore ineroased rather than diminished 186,765 grants are asked for.

86,038 138,920

95

112,945

36

159,876

3,800

37,986

WEALTH AND SMALL FAMILIES.

Those who can best afford to bring up

Busk or damaged by sub-

marines mines, or explosions ! *6,975 children have the smallest families, states

Dr. Parkes, the acting medical officer of Total....... ...523 1,113,258 | health for Kensington.

The British trawlers sunk by sub- In North Kensington, which is poor and marines to the end of July numbered 105, has many slums, the birth-rate last year of a tonnage of 15,087, in addition to was 20.0 per 1,000, but in South Kensing

31 vissels of the same class (with a tonton, which is rich, the birth-rate was only

age of 4,299) sunk by minds or explos

sions.

In contrast to the general chorus of jubilation which has taken the place of sober discussion of Germany's finances, bering 43, with al total tonnage of 58,299. HOW THIN PEOPLE CAN PUT

writer (Lẹo Jolles) in Der Tag strikes a

The record of neutrad vessels sunk by German submarines is a long one, num-

They comprised

Norwegian Danish Swedish

Dutch Portuguese Greek

22

note of warning as to the recrudesconos of speculative dealings on the Stock Exchanges. He points, of course, with pride to the fact that the life of the Berline Bourse, is as active and noisy as over, while

visible depression and glum silence rate No fewer than 700 write were issued on the Bourses of Londoms and Paris;" by the Prize Court up to August 25th but he urges that, the development of with reference to the seizure of vessels or speculative dealings gives rise to concern. cargoes in purely prize cases

The net amount standing to the credit There are reasons for apprehension, lest

WHERE ARE THE YOUNG MEN ?

SOME ARE STILL AT THE SEASIDE.

ON FLESH.

A NEW DISCOVERY.

Thin men and women-that big, hearty, filling dinner you ate last night. What became of all the fat-producing nourish- ment it contained You haven't gained in weight one ounce. That food passed from your body like unburned coal through an open grate. The material was there, but your food doesn't work and stick, and the plain trath is you hardly get enough nourishment from your meals to pay for the cost of cooking. This is true of thin folks the world over.

Your mutritive organs, your functions of assimilation, are sadly out of gear and need reconstruction.

a dissipation of the available cash surplus of the Prize Fund at the present moment and a shortage may result at a most in- 12 2,843,804. Nowadays here is no die opportune moment. Later on he says:tribution of prize money among the

captors. The unbridled exploitation of war conditions (by speculators) is a most un- welcome symptom. The more the circles. spread round the Stock Exchange the more la the purely commercial attitude of the people at large to the war emphasis-

Cut out the foolish foods and funny ed. The danger liea not in the sale and

sawdust diets. Omit the fresh cream rub- purchase of stocks and shares on the

008. Cut out everything but the meals Exchange, but in the alluring of the

you are eating now and eat with every public Free dealing has its advantages;

In two one of those two Sargol tablets. indeed, the authorities recognised them.

Five to eight The writer of an article in The Times wooks note the difference. First of all the development of business on The New Holidays dwelt upon the good solid pounds of healthy, stay was a proof of confidence. Other coun-comparative absence of young meat there" fat should be the net result. tries were taught that German capital Brighton. Where are the young men Sargol charges your weak, stagnant blood did not hide itself in alarm.

It he asked. They may not be at Brighton, with millions of fresh new red blood cor- preserved the means of livelihood of many says a correspondent, but they are to be puscles-gives the blood the carrying ... Many debts were liquidated by found at some of the Cornish seaside power to deliver every ounes of fat- the rise in prices. ... The lively resorts in numbers well-nigh approaching making material in your food to every Sargol, too, mixes movement in some securities was an advan- the proportion to older folk to be seen part of your body, tage both to buyers and sellors "_____ in pre-war times. Bome are well fitted with your food and prepares it for the.

The writer goes on to institute a com-

om for despatch riders, seeing the skill with blood in casily assimilated form. Thin parison between conditions in London and which they drive their motor-bicyal people gain all the way from 10 to 25 Paris and those in Berlin-much to the through the narrow streets of some of pounds a month while taking Sargol, and these towns and villages. Others, too, the new flesh staps put. Sargo! tablets He concludes: advantage of Berlin,

there are and far too many who are a scientific combination of six of the Only we must beware of excess. would be no advantage, and would create promenade, prominently sporting, best flesh-producing elements known to war badge." Here in Cornwall, where chemistry. They come 40 tablets to a pack- a bad impression abroad, to suppress all

this latest recruiting returns are none too ago, are pleasant, harmless and inexpen dealings on the Stack Excharge. But possibly the Government might and that good, the effect of the stalwart well-sive, and are obtainable from

dressed holiday-maker is having an it had no other remedy,.. All available unwholesome effect. If the apparently money must in the first instance be made well-off holiday-making bachelor of to serve the needs of the Empire. That military age turns a deaf ear and eye is the unalterable Isw."

to the recruiter, his example is not a Special stross is laid on the danger from good one for his less fortunate hard- loans made for industrial and speculative working countrymen who are not car purposes by private banks which absorbing in some cases, as much in a

week kong. a good deal of money.

as the holiday-maker spends in a day.

It

A. S. WATHON & Co., LTD.,

VICTORIA DISPENSARY, THE PHARMACY,

QUEEN'S DISPENSARY, THE EDWARD DISPENSARY, and all other first-class Chemists of Hong.

(700-2

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