Page
PRESIDENT WILSON ON AMERICA'S POLICY.
THE MONROE DOCTRINE
A distinguished group of Mexican the editure and journalists, touring United States under the supervision of the United States Government, was re- ceived by the President at the White House, recently, and was informally addressed by the President as follows:
Gentlemen,-I have never received a
THE HONGKONG DAILY PRESS. SATURDAY, AUGUST 10m, 1918 -
HIDDEN GERMAN FIRMS.
OFFICAL EXPOSURE OF TRICKS
BY GERMANS.
small percentage of the Indian Meham- medans; and no hope could be vainer than that the north-western and other military Moslems have any intention of associating themselves with a representa tive form of government which would compel them to co-opurata with the poli ticians of Hindustan or Southern India. It is caly too probable that a concession desired by the latter, and profoundly mistrusted by the former, would have the effect of creating a situation which would necessitate a large and permanent in- India.
group of men who were more welcome adopted British names and nationality. | Englishman understand the real meaning "crease of the British military forces in
than you are, because it has been one of my distresses during the period of my Presidency that the Mexican people did not more thoroughly understand the attitude of the United States towards exico. think I can assure you, and I hope you have had every evidence of the truth of my assurance, that that attitude is one of sincere friendship And not merely the sort of friendship which prompts one not to do his neighbour, any harm, but the sort of friendship which carnestly desires to do his neighbour, ser- vice. My own policy, the policy of my own administration towards Mexico, was
The committee notes that the German employed British staff, "avoided income tax by false invoices, and in case of necessity
INDIAN REFORMS.
IL-IRON DOORS OF CASTE.
About one thing no serious reformer of Tricks and stratagems by which the Indian political life has any doubt. The German penetrated England before the barriers of caste must be broken before war are revealed is a report by the Com. Constitutionalism can be introduced, not mittee which has been advising the Boardly with any hope of success, but with. af Trade on the winding up of German out the graves injustice to the vast businesses.
majority of our Indian fellow-subjects.
"It is dificult to make a demceratie of the word caste. It is to him a thing incredible that at the moment at which be reads these lines a wouthera Paraiyan, munity, pollutes a high-caste Hindu by however worthy a member of his com- approaching within of him. Until he realises the essential distance of 4ft. impossibility of imposing a conception of the equality of all men upon the hundreds of milions of India, who accept unmur muringly such class distinctions, he will not be in obstacles which Mr. Montagu bas set a position to estimate the himself to surmount. Nor in this matter of caste will Mr. Montaga have any help loudly for reform. The untouchable
"used ruthless competition." In one instance, Germans obtained control of British electrical patents 1 prevented the British company working the m from selling even 12 British Having restricted the cutput Colonies. to the home trade, the Germans (statea Mr. Ernest Moon, E.C.), who signs the report proceeded to utilise the factors of the British company for the purpose of andercutting & very important bus ness of a similar kind carried on by an
After all, can it be wondered at that Mostems regard democracy as an undesir. to all their traditions, and in its practice able thing In its essence it is contrary
been uniformly anfortunate." among Oriental peoples it has hitherto curious British inability to realise that With our the institutions which suit us more or less satisfactorily may be inapplicable to peoples of a totally different temper, civilisation, we have encouraged and even religion. tradition. and quality of helped athers to impose our ballot-box upon certain other great provinces of
for all the world to see-famine, disease,
at every point based upon this principle other British company, until, it was from those Indians who clamour most Islam. The results in Turkey stand out that the internal settlement of the affairs forced to sign an agreement, under which of Mexico was none of our business: that it had to resign its foreign business, classes in the peninsula are estimated to the Joss of vital territories, and an we had no right to interfere with "or to though it still held on to its business in number about 30,000,000, and in the eye abject submission to an alien race, which dictate to Mexico in any particular with the Colonies."
In another case a German combination regard to her own affairs. At the present time it distresses ine to learn that certain by underentting forced a British com- indances which I assume to be German pany manufacturing an article "exten- in their origin are trying to make asively used by the War Office and wrong impression throughout Mexico as Admiralty to join the combine. All to the purpose of the United States.
the shares were taken →ver for the Germans by. British trustees"; the proprietors were employed as managers. It was a German concern, but there was
the German interests."
CHAMPION OF SMALL NATIONS.
Now, gentlemen, for the time being at apy ente, and I hope it will not be a short
We, the influence of the United States in inet, no ontward and visible sign of achieved by the teachings of the Brahms that she is to play henceforward in the
of
Germany obtained control of important The committee nates the extent to which It has discovered metal industries, Germans engaged in a variety of business from the great chemical and electrical to the treatment of offals vombination
fee the production of sausage skins."
THE NATURALISED GREMYN.
The committee have a strong suspicion
in that
baany instances British nationality has been adopted purely as an armour of defence... It Ger mar trade penetration is to be fully dealt with, some if the cases in which it is carried by recently naturklised Cermany would seem to require conside
Under the Act the committee ion. had no power to deal with the naturalise
German.
un
i
The report of the committee on some quints seus to require further explana. tion. Winding-up orders have been made in 50 out of 901 cases considered, and the report does not sta how many have ben actually wound up.
is sun-w bat pervasive in the affairs of the world, and believe it is pervasive because the nations of the world which are less powerful than some of the greatest nations coming to believe that our sincere desire is to do disinterested service. We are the champions of those nations which have not had military standing which would enable them to compete with the. strongest nations in the world, and I look
Noting that funny businesses are owned forward with pride to the time, which I hop will nie, when we can give subby naturalised Germans. Mr Moon says: stantial evidence not only that we do not want anything out of this war, but that we would not accept anything out of it that it is absolutely a case of disinter. 'ested artión. And if you will watch the atsitude of our people you will see that hing stirs then so deeply as assurances this war, so far as we are concerned. is for idealistic objects. One of the difficulties that I experienced during the first the years of the war-years when thi Enited States "was not in the wa was in getting the Foreign Offices European nations to belies that the nited States a seaking nothing for herself, that her neutrality was not sel- fish, and that if she came in she would not come in to get anything substantial of the war. Any material object, any or trade, or anything else of that terrings
son of the Foreign Offices there Mert men who personally knew me, and thes tefiel, I hope that 1 was sincere in assuring them that our purposes were disinterested, but they thought that these assurances came from an academic gentle; | tan removed frotu ordinary sources of information, and speaking the idealistic purposes of the cloister. They did not
The ramifications of German trade believe that I was speaking the real heart of the American people, and 1 kus allenetration have been enormous," a
Sir Watson Rutherford. M.P., to a Press along that
believe every- was Now, body who cutres into contact with the representative. To counteract the Ger American people knows that I am speak of trade, each trade of Great Britain, he man cunspiracy for world domination ing their purposes.
The other night, in New York, at the said, should be organised and the Allies opening of the campaign for funds for should stand together in trade matters our Red Cross, I made an address, I had as they are doing in war, not intended to refer to Russia, but I was speaking without notes, and in the course of what I said my own thought was led Russia and I said that we meant to nd Russia, just as firmly as we would stant by Franed or England, or any other of the Allies. The audience to which 1. wis speaking was not an audience from which I would have expected an enthu- siastic response to that.
MILE.
It has also refrained from winding du small businesses gyned by enemy aliens when a farnurable report was made by the policy, which possible explains some of the winzing examples of enemy aliens at liberty and doing business which have been given from time to time in the Daly Mai,
ALLIED ACTION NERDED............
GERMAN "HONOUR."
never
equal to those of any other custe or sect domains for her own advantage. In of democracy their rights are, of course, intends only to exploit the Ottoman in India. But no, National Congress has Persia, the overthrow of the old régime made any attempt to put forward the has brought about a chaos which has no political rights of these classes. The parallel in the world. Central govern grip of caste is too strong upon India ment-in fact, all government xept the till. A warning may be aceded by many medieval methods of brigand tribes-has of those who are told that the barriers ceased to exist, and she awaits in between class and class have been weaken-humiliation the issue of a war in which ed in late years. Nothing that has been she has no part or lot to learn the rela Samaj or of Christianity itself is to be family of nations. of Sikhism in the sixteenth century-an house with unburned clay, and, though compared with the great anti-caste effort tried the same experiment of building a Even in Egypt we
effort which has largely spent its force in this direction. The reverse is actually action of the General Assembly
we were able to retrieve the blunder; the the case, for the tendency among all Egypt in the matter of the Suez Canal is of Indians is by all possible means to find a way into a caste above, and therefore stricter than his own. There is a angges tion of caste even among Moslems. The Roman Catholic missions have given up the struggle and have openly allowed the caste system to remain in force among their converts. It is often asked why Protestant missions are less successful than their rival. The answer is the not wholly discreditable one that, with one or two exceptions, they have refused to tolerate a system which is as opposed to Christian principles as to the progress of civilisation.
a record of our unwisdom. Is it, then. a matter of wonder that the vigorous and masculine Moslems in India should refuse to take any part in the agitation carried on for the extension of constitutional government to themselves and their de spied Hindu neighbours!
The conclusion that weerns 'rersonable' is that hasty legislation is of all things to be avoided, and that a very much greater volume of assent to any new scheme than has yet been secured should be obtained from those to whom it is to be applied. Care for those who are unable to care for themselves, and a vigilant prevision The Brahmans do not intend that their, of the indirect dangers" which may be authority, spiritual or temporal, shall be the result of deranging the political reduced by the introduction of democratic atmosphere of India, must characterise institutions, They demand authority for every elduse of the new proposals. The themselves alene. It is interesting to domination of the caste system makes any refer here to the statement recently made real delegation of autonomy impossible, by a Maratha candidate for a municinal and the invincible hostility existing lesion at Nasik. The Brahmans between Hindus and Mohammedans issued instructions to their caste, fellows renders it imperative that the ultimate to the effect that if a Brahmin voter rights of government in all matters Im favoured a Maratha with his vote on any perial and local shall remain without account be would be considered an aut diminution in the bands of the British- cast." In this short threat is aut-ahelled perhaps more imperative after the exten-, the worst obstacle to any real grant of sion of local government than it is to-day. an effective autonomy to-Endian castes. It may again be said that in any matter. Catil freedom of political thought has concerned with the internal welfare of been secured in a large measure among the
of India. the advice and all classes, the grant of representative counsel of the native chiefs, whether forins of gavernment can only tighten the through the medium of a Council of steel network of Brahmanie influence in Princes or by some less official channel, India. Obedience. fear, and terror are should be sought and most carefully con the lower castes towards the Brahmaans.couraged to extend the sease of respon the lifelong characteristics of relations of sidered. In return they should be en The punishment they inflict for disobedi. sible citizenship among their subjecta hy ence is terrible; it recalls the life of a such graduakateps as may be suited to leper in Europe in the Dark Ages, and the mere threat of excommunication is sufficient to cause submission. It is not to be contended that the infuence of the Brahman is wholly bad, especially when it is supervised by the British authori- ties: but it is as certain as anything can be that so long as it exists the introduc. tion of democratie institutions must necessarily be empty of all representative
character,
MR. LANSING'S REVELATION.
Declaring that Prussianism and endur- It was rathering, peace an
be brought into too well dressed. It was not an audience, in other words, innde up of the class of harmony. Mr. Lansing, in an address at ple who would have the most intimate Union College, cited instances from the Feeling for the sufferings of the ordinary archives of the State Department. He man in Russia; but that audience jump-disclosed the fact that six weeks after ed to its feet in enthusiasm. Nothing Germany, in the use case, had given that I said on that occasion aroused any. the United States her solemn promise to thing like the enthusiasm which that cease ruthless submarine slaughter, Count single sentence aroused.
Bernstorff, appreciating the worthlessness Now that is a sample, gentlemen, We of the promise, asked the Berlin Foreign cannot make anything out of Russia. We Office to advise him in ample time before" untouchables" only. The many peo cannot make anything out of Landing iy the campaign of submarine murder was Russia at this time-the remotest of Euro-renewed, in order that he might notify pean nations as far as we are concerned, German merchant ships in American har the one with which we have had the least
bours to destroy their machinery, because connections in trade and advantage, and
be anticipated that the renewal of that yet the people of the United States rose method of warfare would in all probabi- to that suggestion as to bo ciher that I made in that address. That is the heartily bring the United States into the war,
of America, and we are ready to show you by any act of friendship that you mranke possible our real feelings
tówards Mexico!.
NO AGGRESSIVE AIMS.
any
What a commentary," remarked Mr. Lansing," on Count Bernstorf's estimate of the sense of honour and good faith of
his Government.”
Mr. Lansing added that the war must be won completely. The task," he said, "must not be left half-done. We must not transmit to posterity a legacy of blood and misery,"
*
This is a matter which affects as nearly. We bave maintained our rule in India by the unflinching and equal justice we have dealt out to all men alike. Not lightly have we earned the title of Pro- tector of the Poor, and this task of pro- tection is one that we have no right to shrink from It is not a question of the ples of India look to our eren scales as the sole guarantee of their liberty and prosperity, and one is glad to hear that not interference in any way with the absolute authority of the Iadian Execu- tive in this, the most important of all internal acts of administration, is con- templated by Mr. Montagu's new pro posals. But justice is not merely a matter of the policeman and the judge. Some means must be found fur ascertaining the political wishes of the 300.000.000 whose views the agitators do not attempt to chtain, and by whose suffrages they have ho wish to be controlled. They know. well enough that an Oriental is by every instinct a man of tradition.
Dumes
each individual case. The question of elementary education should be dealt with strongly, especially kong the Mohan- medan cinanen. Finally, wide powers of revision should be provided for a full re- consideration of any part of the new scheme after it has been in operation for
period of years, and experience has shown us the weak points and, they will be many of even the best-intentioned plans that can now be devised in the in-
terest of the many nations and religions of the Continent of India.-Daily Tele graph.
MONEY WASTED ON FOOD
Everyone knows that without food we cannot live! But food is of many kinds, and "One man's food is another man's poison." Yet how ignorant most of us are concerning the elementary facts of food and nutrition. We eat what we like, what uppeals to our palate, instead of selecting our food intelligently and with proper regard to the various needs of our bodies.
By so doing we not only waste money, but lessen our physical and mental efficiency, even if we do not bring upon ourselves the pains and penalties which are the unhappy lot of the victime of indigestion, biliousness, and kindred dis- orders of the stomach, liver and howels.
Some time ago, as you probably all know, I proposed a sort of Fan-American
Remember, it is not what you eat, but agreement. I had perceived that one of
what you digeit, that nourishes your body the difficulties of our past relationships
and keeps you strong and healthy. with Latin-Amerien was this: the famous
To consult these submerged millions is Unless food is converted by the diges Monroe Doctrine was adopted without
our clear duty," difficult as it may be tire processes into a condition in which of I pointed out to some gentlemen who because of the ignorance and inertia to it can be absorbed into the mysteri consent your consent, without the Centrul American or South American were less inclined to enter into this agree. States.
If I may express it in terms ment than others that that was in effect which reference has already been made muscles, bones, nerves and brain-are that we so often use in this country, we giving bonds on the part of the United Among these multitudes are included the slowly but surely starved. Food in such. We are going to be your big States that we would enter into an fighting peoples, who would intervene a case is indeed sometimes positively brother whether you want us to be or arrangement by which you would be pro- with the sword should the introduction harmful. It kinders instead of helps
Now, that is the kind of any ill-considered measure of self- weakens instead of strengthens. How? not."
We did not ask whether it was tected from as agreeable to you that we should be your of agreement that will have to be the government bring about an intolerable Because it ferments in the stomach or big brother. We said, we are going
of the future life of the internal situation. The fostering of race intestines. Impurities are given off which world,
The whole family of hatred by a repetition of such outbreaks | find their way into the blood and affect Now, that was all very well so far. gentlernen.
said,
to
.F
as protecting you from aggression from nations will have to guarantee to each as those in Bihar must inevitably and disastrously the whole body... the other side of the water was concerned. nation that no nation shall viola.e is not without reason-arouse the old and If you would get full value from the but there was nothing in it that protected political independence or its territorial common complaint from them, You say food you eat, you must see to it that your
That is the basis-the only you from aggression from us, and I have integrity. repeatedly on the part of representatives conceivable basis for the future peace of you are the Government-why do you not digestive organs are always equal to the Kovern 1 The old ambitions of the work you give them to do. Now and then, of States of Central and South America the world, and I must admit that I was Mohammedan: races to whom their age from one cause or another, they may lose that our self-appointed protection might ambitious to have the Btates of the two be for our own benefit and our own in continents of America show the way to long empire of ladis is anything but tone. At such times you will find it terest, and not for the interest of our the rest of the world as to how to make mere reminiscence, smoulder still. We better to save a shilling or two on food neighbours. So I said, "Very well, let the basis of peace. Peace can come only hold India because we hold the balance and spend it on Mother's Siegel's Byrup
as there is us make an arrangement by which we will by trust. So long as
We, manat see to it that by ao indirect continuing to eat more than your weaken-
give bonds. Let us have & common guar. there is going to be misunderpicion fairly between Hindu and Mohammedant than to pile up misery for yourself by
antee that all of us will sign a declara- so long as there is misunderstanding there method, such as that which the concession ed organs can digest. tion of political-independence and ter is going to be trouble. If you can once of power to one side that is not desired This renowned remedy clears the system riforial integrity. Let us agree that if get a situation of trust, then you by the other would occasion, we disturb of the injurious products of digestion, have a situation of permanent peace that balance to the undoing of the great and by toning up and stimulating the or Therefore, everyone of us, it seems to work we have carried out, and are still stomach, liver and bowels enables you to
carrying out, in India.
digest, and draw nourishment from, what
ry one of us, the United States included, violates the political" independence territorial integrity of any of the others all the others will jump on her.'
(Continued at foot of next Column.)
me, owes it as a patriotic duty to his
own country to plant seeds of trust and
of confidence instead of seeds of suspicion and variety of interest.
No mistake can have more serious re- you eat. You will then no longer havs
sults than the illusion that the Moslem to deplore money wanted on food
· League represents anything but a very
TEK TIÊ'S METHOD OF
GROWING BEAUTIFUL HAIR TO-DAY FREE.
GIGANTIC HAIR-HEALTH OFFER.
Banish Hair Poverty by accepting this Four - Fold Gift.
Every reader of this newspaper is invited to enjoy, a delightfully pleasant, complete coarse of Hair Health, and Beauty Culture FREE
Absolutely every hing necessary to conduct your hote hair-health , couns willbe sint you without cost or obligation, med if you will post the form below to-day you on com- Maece a toilet practice that will for over banish the impoverished, weak, dali, stinggling, lifeless ap- prasace of your hair.
Bac sets apportnařty pončom sro indebted 10. tàs propuristons-of “ Nachna Hair-Drill," whmen great eõenia to tepnk the public bow to care for their personal agyaminaon" bayA
FREETER
EDWARDS
ICREMEX
U SHAM.CC K.POWDER
|
Na maler how this, dail, or generally bow long it has been giving you cause for impoverished your bair may be, no matter
iety. "Hariane Hair-Drill" will over- come your hair troubles.
The most famous beautiful Actresses, the most famona Cinema 'xtara, the landaza
Delf" the ideal method of growing hair. of fakion, all proclaim "Harlene Hair-
No matter whether you are troubled with
1. Thinning Hair 6, Spättion Hair
2. Scart
1. Bendrait
4. Belianes
& Dyer-Brozziness
7. Over-Brynos“
B. Baldurs
*Barlens Hair-Drill" is for you. · Bajay your week's test free.
There are thousands of people to-day sugarina Propi Hair trouším, sko, dy scerpting, the
amaha Howe Rauty Gal offered here, could unquestionably not only onerere the troubise. but griotły mianos. Ume appearance of their katar.
on Harime Hor-Drill Quite or taxday ofarad to the public, anal if you take pride in your appearance you wil
domapi, o of them Gift Peral,
mei with such an enormous response in avery part of the world.
MILLIONS PRACTISE “HARLENE
BAIK DRILL".
"Millions of men and women who take pride in a youthful, smart, well-groomed appearance practise Hair-Drill, just as you are freely invited to do to-day.
The complete Four-Fold Outfit that awaits your acceptance is des tailed in the centre of this an- nouncement, and, as will be seen, includes everything necessary to grow so abundance of bealthy,, beautiful hair. Firstly, a supply of *Harlene," the wonderful tonic Food that compels the weakest hair shafts to new strength and vitality, and contains Do Dial" inic Hair poverty cannot exist when Harlene" is applied. In addition, YOU PRESĪVS Z supply of the delight- fal Cremex Shampoo Powder, the ideal hair-cleansing preparation which prepares the head for "Hair. Drill," and lastly, the full secret
· “Harioca Han-Drill" manual
After a Free Trial you will be able to obenin upples of "Harlene" and Cramex : Shampo Powders from all Basmara and · Drug Stores throughout India.
Any or all of the preparations will be sant by post on receipt of price direct from: Edwards' Harlene, Ltd., 20/26 Lamb's Con="; duit Street. Candon, W.G. 1. England, to whom remittances should be nude by Post i Office Money Order, and should' include ! postaga..
“HARLENE":
GIFT COUPON.
· Edi in- and post 10 EDWARDS' HARLERE, LTD.
20.29 Lan's Conduit Stenet, London, 1.0.1, Kas. Dear Sirs, Flexse send me your Fros" "Harlene Fore-guld Hu r-growing Outât as deacsivu Koute. Ioncione 4 aanaa in stamps for postage in any part of the world' (Foreign stampa accepted.)
NOTE TO READER. Were van hill name mid nadzmen sarly en a plain pises of paper, plar tala dongan ko się najvaliza directed.
LIFE WITHOUT HEALTH
Hongkong Daily Prem
IS LIVING 'DEATH,
VETARZO:
BRAIN AND NERVE FOOD
This remarkable compound, the Ixfect discovery of modern times, is wichour equal la kit exper st defective serve and brain power, whether induced by worry, overwork, dissipatim, w stan influences. Sleepiesances, palpitation, defective circulation, nervous dyspepala, tia' se nesimizin, low spirtis, mental and body prostration, west of confidence, general debility, premature decay ar deficiency of the vital forces, kas of vitality, baraming dreams, restlessnes last caE PUIŠI SO nothing, iritabilty of temper, fecule complaints, byeleria, backache, bearing down mensstiene, wasting diseases, counmption, night sweata, muddy, high-coloured, water, ăn.. are all IN BLAST different phases of bexin and nerve wreckage and exhazstion, the cosa of by far, the greater Dortion of the misery, lil-health, and despondency by which we une confronted in every hand, tras can only be successfully combated by the use of tile wonderful and highly scientifle pesperatÍNE. Bracing up the system generally, it gives tose to the existed serves, geresta aŭ wankening wasting discharges, restores the fading energes, and tamparta new life xað vigour te thong whe and sa recently seemed pityed out, swed up and valueitan. Bacties Erica 36, 082-
· WITHOUT PURE BLOOD HEALTH IS IMPOSSIBLE,
BLOOD
VETARZO MEDICINE
Never before was thers anything Hirit, por cast its marvellous properties ever be equaledt in alf execs of poornem, impurity, or other imperfection of the blood from whatever casse arising, No sooner is it imbibed into the system, thus it permenten and pezetrates Sa the minutest capil krit, quarcoming and expelllng dacase, wheresoever and in wisstoever forna met with; removing all bitches, pimples, senf, semary, seruditons and glandular swellings, discolorations, roughnes and unsightly patches, &c. Its efacts are Almost magics in the treatment of gout, TheGold, wulstica, lumbago, patus and swellings of the joints, dischargey blood poison, ecstma, lepené ‚ had legs, but breasts, abscesses, alerts, wounds, sor, goltre or Derbyshire work, the Princ wealth, and gudely remover kong-standing bronchitis, athak, and keckis, Meaning; spremedle aregh, ion of text the precurate of comunexpilaan. Bottima Frick the Naz
Gland stamped södraissé envelope for free booklet, or P.C. 2/2 for trial bottle or wrŞİNAD remedy, is THE VETARZO REMEDIES COM GOSPEL CAR, LONDON. Unprincipled Yes may try to all you something else for extra peat-do not accept it, but Inslet on herege VETARZDYSTHe passeline has the words “VETÁRZO REMEDIES" on Government Stang. METARZO REMEDIES awz ́Sold av BOOTS.. PASH CHEMIRTI.
Cuticura Stops. Itching At Once
Treatment:
Cleanse With
Cuticura Soap,
Dry and Beal
With
Cuticura Ointment
For eczemas, rashes, itchings, irri- tations, pimples, dandruff, sore bands and baby bumors,, Cuti- sura Soap and Ointment are. supremely effective as well as ideal for toilet purposes.
Samples Bach Free by Post.!
Address F. Newbery & Sops. 27, Chaze terhous Sa, London, Buld everywhere.
36-19
JJ&S
JOHN JAMESON'S : WHISKEY unequalled for flavour and purity. Guaranteed to be
PURE POT STILL WHISKEY
...
Famous for over 100 years. John damason & Sọn, Ltd., Dub Distillers la B.K. The King:”
BEEEHAWPS.
arola
YOUR SKIN AND COMPLEXION
sem že kept in Patient Coopalition all the your pund by, a' regalie un gỗ- Beetham's Laraia. Ja placasglia
Sosthma and
Of all high-clan Chandyle and Stat
Manufactured by M. BEETHAM
CHELTENHAM, ENGLAND.