6
G.
THE HONGKUNA DAILY
PRESS, THURSDAY, MAKOB
EVERYTHING FOR MOTORING IN CHINA)
ALEX ROSS C
MOTOR CAR AGENCIES.
BRITISH CARS:
Tho Three-Sentor, Britain's Landing Light Car. A wonderful Hill-Climber. Forty miles to the gallon. The FORD Universal Car. Masic in Canada. Fitted with Two or Five-Seater bodies.
The ARROL-JOHNSTON, as illustrated above. The famous Scotch Car. One of Britain's Best AMERICAN CARS:
The DORT Five Soster. A small Car with quality in every part. "Own n Dort-You will like it." The HUPMOBILE. The comfort Car built for Hill Climbing. Grey Body and White Wire Wheels. The CHALMERS. A delightful von-page Touring Car, with the Chalmers Famous Six-Cylinter
Mister.
NOTICE.
B.
ALEX. ROSS & CO.,
4. DES VOEUX ROAD CENTRAL,
LL PERSONS, with the exception of those of Chinese race desiring to leave the Colony should apply in person between the hours of 9 AM to 1 P., and P.M. to 4 P.M. daily, at the PASS OFFICE, POST OFFICE BUILDING
Applicants will be required to produce Passports or identification papers.
All persons, with certain exceptions, who remain in the Colony for more than 7 days are required to Register themselves under ot PERSONS the REGISTRATION ORDINANCE, 1916.
Forms of Registration, giving the parti calars required may be obtained at the G.P.O. and at all Police Stations.
The Penalty for non-compliance is a Boe not exceeding 950.
40
SEAMEN'S INSTITUTE.
A
21, PRAYA KAST, HONGKONG.
LL DEPARTMENTS of the above are now OPEN after extensive repairs. Roading and Writing Rooms, Billiard Room (two tables), Bestaurant, Concert Ball and Meeting Room.
Sleeping Accommodation-33 Cabins sod
70 Beds in Dormitories.
All men of the Mercantile Marine, H.M Navy and Army are welcome to use th Institute
MANAGERESS.
(110
Messrs. FRANK WATERHOUSE
& Co.'s
PACIFIC PORTS
Trade & Service Bureau.
Tel. 696.
prico
11, Ice House St.
(410
WATER
A COMPLETE AERATED
PLANT FOR SALE.
THE MACHINES are made by Messrs Baby & Hinchliffe, Ltd., Manchester
and guaranteed in perfect working order. This completo plant will turn
2,400
dozen Aerated water per day, purchasers to
take over about 6,000 dozen bottles at coat
Apply by letter-
AERATED WATER PLANT,"
Care of Hongkong Daily Press,
or.
Care of General Post Office,
Box No. 290.
[129
DAIRY FARM NEWS
Butchers' Meats
BEEF.
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Special price for wholesellers and retailers.
Please apply
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Manufacturers of the well known
64
Poppy Brand.**
Office: -31, OLD GILMAN STREET, Tel. No. 2800. Manufactory:- 18/23, ARGYLE STREET, Mongkok, Tol. No. K305. (480
Hongkong, March 3rd, 1918.
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37
TRADE MARKTY
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t
FOUCAULD
BRANDY
RUM
PAHIS WOR
LIQUORS
20TH, 1919.
BELGIAN JOURNALISTS.
FAREWELL DINNER
As chairman of the Overseas Cranmoitter
Lord Burnham, in proposing the toast of The Belgian Press," said that bis colleagues of the Belgian Press were about to return to their own long suffer
uf the institute of Journalists. Lording and heroic country. That mean the
Burbiam gave a dinner at the Savoy Hotel on January 11th, in London, in honor of members of the Belgian Press leaving England too resume their journa listic duties in their own country Dur- ing the German occupation of their land, Belginti journalists produced newspapers in England and Holland which did bruch to maintain the faith of their compat rints in the ultimat, triumph of the cause of freedom.
Afer the coasts of The King and The King of the Belgians had been honoured, Mi, Herbert Samine), presid- ent of the Anglo-Belgian Union, proposed "Belgaum. He thanked Lord Burnham for giving their the opportunity of ex- pressing once more the profound sym pathy felt by the people of this country for their Belgu Friends. (Cheers.) When Germany threw down her challenge it was a challenge to the human soul. It was a les whether mankind was willing to make sacrifices for great ideals, whe ther the peoply of the world would risk all for the sake of the principles of liberty and of international justice. It was Belgian who first took up that chai.
and
the cause of It was lenge (cheers) Belgium more than any other thing that detertained Great Britain in the couran of policy it adopted. Speaking as one who was a member of the British Cabinet ut that time, he could say that it was the invasion of Belgium that, more than anything else, ensured harmonious and unanimous nation in entering that great conflict. (theers.) As President of the Local Government Board at that time he had the privilege of assisting the res fugees who came from Belgiam, and who numbered 250,000. It had been the fate tion of the Belgian Press in England during all these years to maintain the ural of the Belgian people, to pre- serve the spirit of patriotism amongst them, and, so far as might be, to main- tain their cheerfuluess
It was in
restoration of what Gladstone once de- scribed as public right in Europe, of which Belgium was at once the evidence and the guarantee. Greaga had been Bite common losses and surrows of the 4421 no country had berti vietimised as much as Belgium. (Hea, hear.) The vocabulary of crime and suffering had beng torn to tatter to find new feries 10 describe the fate of those countries which had been to use the military phrase, with in the zone of military operations," but no words fitted the case of Belgium |
well as they of brutal and barbarous victimisation. Nu other nowSpader Press, no other set of able editurs and journalists had boca su vietinised. They had stood their long and torturing trial with unstained honour and unfailing fortitude. The German Government tried | every gas within their power 10 H8 and to seduce them, and, with the oxoep- tion of a handful of wretched creatures who were now being gibbeted in Belgium, they shook their Bists in the face of the oppressor (Chears.) Mr. Brand Whit
lock, in his vivid story of German rule in Belgium, had told us how the Bar of Belgium vindicated its bonour and its tranition, and they know the Press did no less and no mare Belgian Pressmen, in their ravished homes or in exile in Great Britain and in France, had had little to live upon but the bread and the dreamt water of afliction, but they never of bowing the knee to Baal. Those who stayed in Belgium had had their pens wrenched from their hands, or had only boen able to use them in secret work age against the tyranny of the invader, and unfailing efforts to maintain the spirit of the nation. Those who came to Great Britain had produced and published editions of their best papers in a way most creditable to their ability and, pat- riotism, and of infinite solace to their follow-country roun. They
bad all felt the tragedy of the heart; Belgium had felt the tragedy of the soul. The worst at last was over, because the Germans were no longer in Belgium to mock and re juice at the result of their infamy; but the suffering was not you over,
and
could not be over. Belgium had been robbed of the means of livelihood in nearly every industry. Ho was told that in such a staple manufacture as that of cotton only the obsolete machinery had been left lays, standing, and all the rest was sent away
in
the
Now at last the people of Belgium were returning to their own country. They were returning to face very arduous and dihealt economic conditions, but they saw at Inst near at hand the full res toration of Belgium-an even greater Belgium than before the war, a Belgium ennobled and sanctified by her sucrifices, a Belgium, let them hope, unified more even than she had been in bygone days, a Belgium which they hoped would, by to German mills, from which, he hoped, the Fence Conference, be endowed with it might still be brought back, andoubted. an even more complete independence thanly the worse for wear. It was the same existed before the war, and a Belging with printing. It was not only the ma resting, like all other countries, on the chinery that had been aither stolen or sanction of international law, guarantee destroyed; the man-power had been did and upheld by all the great nations of abled by the disuse of skill and the de
Nationa aks. League the world.
one bility of enforced idleness. In spite of that hopes of all mankind would centre all, he believed that the inherited enter- for the avoidance of another conflict. I prise and industriousness of might be long before Belgion relations Belgian
were people
such that were restored on a footing of friendship they would triumph Over thede with Germany it could hardly be excruel hardships in their economic life, pected that the events of the last few just as they did by their valour of eare would soon be forgotten, or, in endurance in the field of battle. (Cheers!) deed, could ever be forgiven; but let them in the forums, in the market-place, in the hope that Belgium would be able, as the temple, the shibboleth of the day was outcome of the settlemen of the Peace reconstruction, but here, although we had Conference, to live on terms not merely our time of trial and trouble before ut. of goodwill but of friendship with all we used it only in changing metaphot. her other neighbours. (Cheers.) Parti.
In Belgium, where a wide margin of her oularly they would hope that the happy frontier was ons long scene of devasta relations between Britain and Belgium tion and often of desolation, the word might enduro after the war was over, reconstruction was grin reality As first president of the Anglo-Belgian an uwful fact. Just as it was the Union, under the patronage of the two common duty of the Allies to defend the Sovereigns, he hoped that the union independence of Belgium, so it was their would help to keep up contact between the common duty to leave nothing undotte peoples of the two countries.
The union to restore Belgium to the status of in- proposed to encourage lectures un sub-dustrial freedom and commercial capa
cets of common interest by Englishmen city We had seen what good workers in Belgium and by Belgians in the the Belgians had proved themselves hore United Kingdom. It was hoped also to
in every branch of industry that they
have an interchange of students between had entered, and what valuable help
universities of the two countries, producing
and also to disseminate information of masses of munitions which had in a mate interest through the agency of the news rial sense won the war. We could de papers of but countries. At this mo
mopend upon Belgium to regain her old ment the union was specially concerned pride of place, given only a fair and to promote a memorial to the sailors of equal chance. She had even now a rank.
SUFFERED FROM
ITCHING ECZEMA
All Over Back and Chest. Also Head. Unbearable. Cuticura Healed in a Month.
I was "1 suilered from eczema. covered all over my back and ches: with pimples the size of a pin hend, and my head also had a mass of pim- plea slightly larger. The pumples were hard and dry, and always itched, and) I scratched until I made them bleed I could hardly get any sleep.
"It got unbeatabit and I sent for free sample of Cuticura Soap and Qint- rent. It did good an I bought more, and used them for a month when I Wan bealed." (Signed) Wm. Tonge, S, Gordon St, Stairfoot, Yorke., Eng.
Cuticura Soap to cleanse, purify and! bearily, Cuicura Optment to soften, soothe and heal, are ideal for every. day toilet purposes.
Soap to cleanse. Ointment to heal. Brash F. Nawbery & Sons, Ltd. 27. Cher heus 3a, London. Sold everywhere.
X
[31 18
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Dale Ties and ther „STEEL AND WIRE
PRODUCES
[208
"ARETHUSA"
Training Ship.
Patrons: THEIR MAJESTIES THE KING AND QUEEN,
C'mon and Treasurer: C. K. MALDEN, Kan., M....
Chairman of Rhin Commiter HOWSON F. DEVITC. Eing
Jalni Herretn
H. BAINIOW Wale wet Hanat 07. GOFALAND.
TO BRITONS EVERYWHERE --
Of the Eight Old • Arethusa “ Boys in a H.M.8.Vinden ive" at Zeebruggu, onako Mod the V.C. the others the D.S.M.
Altogether over 2,400 Old Boys are in the Royal Navy, sung were in the Jutiand battin the Falkland Islands bailie and other ungagu
ente in the Hast and in the North Sou
fla of the gemost importante the the qlen 1-1 work of the "Afathrina" Trainskog sudis shus vidt her weih majale. $500 Toys are to the Mieteršiji - Marine, and wfurther 4.000 are sprand treat the Bregoli Armeni varlad nos vivos. Theo furty shoulit muke u shp bard to rentes. If the Society so which this resep belongs, and ita Elght Country and den Hem are to be maintained withnat a shors tee of tande. is own only be scrumpisland be so the f Howoriptions and Donations and be Stort for w
t War Korgener Fanik, en enable it to west the ku, anand cont of food and materials,
+
The Commiten plest earnestly for a rekordu! response and all gifte wil IMI promptly and grate uly acknowledged it sent to ing Klisiscóbure API. W.G.A.
MARTIN'S
APIOL & STEEL TSPILLS
[360
& Pronak Remedy for all (regularitas,
Teraguandey_af_du lytin e amy DONE THAT
Al Chaterais mod Stovai
wal Phone &
and Dam thangnew the Ward on gan kere din MARTIN, Chenn, Buatkastakes. faë.
MARTIN'S
ALASTEEL HEMPILLS
[29
the Vindictive and the British Fleetling sense of the injustice done her in BALF A CENTURY REPUTATION.
generally, which took part in the historie 1839 by the Great Powers, which ought DR, LE CLERC'S VEYS
of
A
PILLU FOR THE
(160
attack at Zeebrugge. At the suggestion now to be reconsidered, and, as for LA
the Deputy for Bruges, and under the possible, redressed. The Press would be Invaluable for diseases of there Important orgazas, auspices of a committee of Englishmen as much as ever in the forefront of the Gravel. Feins
Bottle. lending and inspiriear, hear.) Loxos, Entel- KI
the Back, Gout, Rheumatis, &c and Belgians, it was proposed to enise
all ranks Price 38., tending Chorists, or post free. DB. LE fund sufficient for all time of the men of the armies of industry.
CLABO DIED Co., HAVERSTOOR ROAR NW., who fought in that remarkable action. We had, in Great Britain, in our local CAPTIONE; New York, 90, BETHMAN STREET, Depote Paris, 12, Ruz (Chcers.)
M. Cummerts, in reply, said he had Committee It controlled the town police. Sydney and Brisbane; NEW ZEALAND DRUG Co
government, a body called the "Watch Toroute, LYMANS, Ln, Autralia, ELLIOT Bace.,. listened with great pleasure to the In the future, if the world was not to. L, Auckland, Christchurch, Dunedin, Welling speech of Mr. Berbert Samuel, but what relapes into primeval anarchy, the nowaton: India, B, K. PAUL, & Co., Aulentia. aver the possibilities of the future might paper Press had to constitute itself the be, for the present Belgiane were more
"Watch Committee of civilisation, concerned with feelings of friendabiy otherwise the moral force of the world with the British, French, and all the would be lost in the babel of tongues other Allies. They were keen to consoli and the inevitable clash of national date the bonds that bound Belgium to her rivalries on an even extended scale. There splendid Allica (Cheers.) That de fore, let our allinneo be combined, our manded all their effort at the present best friends made good, our best means moment, and they had no mood for any stretched out." The Penoo Conference thing else. He had u splendid example could
the newspaper of that friendship on the occasion of the dot last for over:
will always be with us, and entry of the King into Brussels, when his would, he was sure, play its part bettor Majesty rode at the head of his troops or mure honourably than the Belgian Contingents of the Allies followed. First Press, the representatives of which he enue Americana, and the people aid, hailed there that night as friends sail
These are the men who have fed us.
colleagues, to whose future he wished Then came the French, and people said. all that was good hope and good rẻ- "These are the men who have fought for
wo and have housed our refugees.
Lator
Dort
ende
FOR
NERVOUS] [EXHAUSTION
поле
LOSS!
MEMORY
DEBILITY
(Cheerenn-Savino, in reply.
M. E.
came a band of 100 pipers. The effect was old he wished most sincerely to thank and people said, "Those mon tlie Overseas Committee of the Institute
did aot
tremo only relieve n2%, house our re- of Journalists for the sympathy they had fugees, and fight for us; but they sanie manifested. The hospitality that they into the wach. In Belgium to-day there residence in England would never be war lor That impressed lind been shown to them during their
kim
згрдо да
was a knowledge of the siroumstances in which Great Britain entered into the
war. (Cheers.) But while Grout Britain Lomonneir independence
lind
rendered
.
534
free the NERVES,
t
and M. J. Claes (La Métropold) u orga immense service to Bel-nisa replied. “
HAPOTEAUTS LIT LCLYCHRATE OF AINE steegees ask men med servi
gium, he thought Belgium had rendered Chevalier Maskens (ire Becretary of Home service to Great Britain in helping the Belgian Legation), in the absence of tho
English
people to realise the real the Belldan Minister, expressed to Eorite clear women sad mirossa kiimani in taming spirit of the chemy and the danger de Burnhage in the name of his compatriote England Ads her Empire owing to who well prosent, their due import German setión.. (Hoar, hear,}
thanks. (Chaëra.)
APVOCAT, ne'mart, Alu ja Arine.