31
What's Fred Been Doing To His Hair P
*
It was Getting Very Thin, He was Going Bald |
--THEN HE STARTED
HARLENE-HAIR-DRILL!
And what a difference it made. His hair soon began to grow again. The bald patches disappeared and he's looking younger than ever. His friends were amazed. Harlene-Hair- Drill simply performs wonders. You should try it to-day.
# Special
Notice To Ladies with
FAIR
HARLENE
HAIR GROWER AND TONIO
The greatest Hair Restorer for both sexes. Banishes baldness, falling hair, Heless hair, brittle hair, too-dry of too-greasy scalp, etc. Infuses new lie and vitality into each hair, follicle and review the weakened treasce. Quickly belags back youthful appearance.
HAIR CREMEX SHAMPOO
* HÄRLENE *Cam
exis Golden Hair Within a dainty Preperation
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Jund the thing for hair that has busines 'dull and beat 10 Tada,
No hair can be healthy uniam it is closïnand thoroughly to remova dust and depostą, etc. Shampoo with "CREMEX." Its generous creamy lather is delightfully refreshing and super-cleansing. It from the hair from every trace of Scurt and Dandruff and is moet beneficial to the scalp. FREE Burnishing Rinse included.
+
UZON BRILLIANTIÑE
"UZON" given just that final touch of distinction to the coiffure and is invaluable to thoms with overdry scalp. Keeps merely hair in place and preserves that well-groomed appeas anos fhawaghout the whole day. In Liquid or Solidifed form,
FROM CHEMISTS AND STORES.
EDWARDS 'HARLENE LTD, 28/26 Lamh's Candult St, Landon, England.
AS
CONTRUISE
NO ANIMAL FAT
Tam Buk
5 soon as you smear Zam-Buk herbal ointment on any sore, injured or diseased skin, pain disappears and healing starts, Zam-Buk expels harmful germs, draws poison out of the tissues and prevents festering. It heals quickly and safety and never leaves ugly scars. Use Zam-Buk for eczema, Dhobi's lich, ulcers, bad legs, abscesses, spots, pimples, and sores. Get a box of Zam-Buk to-day |
TE
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So much that is beautiful and romantic swaktu yan in Austria: Vicans, the world's music centre; Salzburg--the festival city; the Styrian woodlanda the beautiful Danube valky; tim fakes of Salzkam mengur and Carinthia; tha Tyrol and Voragiberg--- lands of picturesque pesants and snow capped mountains; sad the lovely landscapes of Lower and Upper Austria. Both for Summer Holidays (Golf, Tennis, Swimming, Climbing, etc.) and for Winter Sports, Austria inta become mame popolar thas evet. Come to Austria sit any time of the year---you may be ma of s kladly welcome.
Come to Beautiful Romantic. Austria
Considerable fare ridurtiuar nam-wallabla." Accommo
obtained from 615 a day. Trærd!' with Austrian Travellers' Conques for convenienet. Frits for special summer we winter programini of inclusive mrmgements to she, linding, sumisi · agmelts," or. AUSTRIAN STATE TRAVEL BUREAU, 159 ▼ Rizm Strees, Landon, $. Exeland.
HONG KONG DAILY PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1937.
MACLEANS OF ARDGOUR
Chieftainship And Arms
The hearing was continued in the Second Division of the Court of Session, Edinburgh, on January 8. of the appeal arising out of the dispute between Lieutenant-Com- mander Henry Hugh Maclean, R.N.R (retired), of Windhover, Bursledon, Hampshire, and his cousin Miss Catriona Louise Mac- lean of Ardgour, as to the head- ship of the Macleans of Ardgour.
The case originally came before the Lord Lyon King of Arms in the Lyon Court, and he held that he had jurisdiction to try the ques. tion at issue between the parties and allowed a proof. It is against this decision of the Lord Lyon that Commander Maclean has appealed to the Court of Session. One of his contentions is that the Lyon has no jurisdiction in the matter of a chieftainship, and another that the proceedings before the Lyon were null and vold because the petition was signed and the petitioner was represented by Mr. Thomas Innes of Learney, who is a Herald as well as an advocate.
I
QUESTION OF ARMS
When the hearing was resumed the Lord Justice-Clerk, addressing Mr. Hector McKechnie, counsel for the appellant, said:-"You are ask ing us to decide here and now without inquiry that a chieftain- ehip can have no bearing upon an application 'for arms?"
Mr. McKechnie.—Yes.
The Lord Justice-Clerk-There may be a great deal of force in your request that we should decide that how. My difficulty, however, is that the view of Lyon is that chieftainship is relevant to the question of arms; but I do not know what Lyon's reasons are for this view. He has given none, and in a specialist matter of this kind I think we are 'entitled to get from Lyon the grounds on which he says the chieftaincy is relevant to the question of arms. What I am sug- gesting is that this is a case for re- mitting back.
}
BAGPIPES ON. THE NILE
"Over The Sea To Skye"
31
Hitherto the nomadic Bedouins of Egypt have escaped conscrip- tion. Just as they have, avolded taxes and all the other burdens of citizenship, writes a London cor- respondent.
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But there is a possibility, I understand, that they will be in- cluded as a separate camel corps in the new Egyptian Army, on the formation of which the British Military Mission, appointed under the Anglo-Egyptian Treaty, is to advise. The mission arrived in Cairo to-day.
ROYAL NAVY
Cadets' Training
"Cruise
H.Ms. 'Frobisher, seagoing train- ing cruiser for cadets, in the com- mand of which Captain E. J. Spooner, D.S.O., has relieved. Cap-. tain, P. K. Kekewich, left Chatham on January, 15, on her Spring cruise.
IL
་་
As in former years, the Frobisher she will visit Barbados from Jan- will proceed to the West Indies, uary 29 to February 1, Grenada February 9 to 15, Barbados again from February 2 to 9. Tobago from from February 15 to 24, Antigua February 28 to March 9. on February 25, and Tortola from She ta due back at Chatham on April 1. A military development already begun in Egypt, and que rich ti COMMANDERS' NEW POSTS possibilities, is the training of an Egyptian bagpipe band. A col-DB.C.. from the command of the Commander S. N. Blackburn. league of mine recently attended destroyer Electra, is joining the a special performance by a unit in Naval Intelligence Division for Upper Egypt. They played "Over duty in succession to Commander the Bea to Skye" with a wealth of T. M. Smith, who later in
the dramatic detail that needed only the kilt to complete it. The big (operations and intelligence) to month will become staff oficer drummer enlivened his accompan the Commander-in-Chief at Ports- ment by running round and round his drum and smacking, it soundly as he passed at top speed.
ter to clear up several matters at the same time.
*
mouth.
Commander K. L. Harkness, from the Training and Staff Dutles Division, Joins the battleship Royal Oak for duty as staff (operations) and squadron gunnery officer
officer with Rear-Admiral C. G. Continuing, his Lordship sald Ramsey. CB, in the Second Battis that there might be great force in Squadron, Commander D. Gilmour the view that Lyon had no jurisdic-has held this post for the normal tion in a matter of chieftaincy, two years. but before their Lordships 'could hold that at this stage they must find out what the view of Lyon
was on that.
suggestion, the
Commander E. 5. Brand, who during 1936 attended the course at the R.A.F. Staff College, Andover, takes command of the Saltburn. signal and navigation schools" sloop at Fortsmouth, in succession to Commander O. I Gordon
MV.O., who has been appointed to HMS. Victory for a course.
On Mr. McKechnie indicating that he was prepared to agree to his Lordship's Lord-Justice Clerks intimated that they would not write an inter locutor until next week, and 1 there were any matters which
Commander A. M. Williams, after counsel, on either side considered
two years in HMS. Iron Duke, proper matters for remit perhaps joins the Bt. Angelo as commander they would let the Court know. of the depot at Malta, in succes- Mr. Gordon Thomson, for Mission to Commander P. F.P. Wood. Maclean, also signifying his assent He inst served in the Mediter- to the proposed course, said that ranean in the battleship Warspite ne thought the whole difficulty in in 1929-31, until his promotion, the case had arisen from the fact and afterwards commanded the that the parties were not in agree-
destroyer Whitshed in China, ment as to what was meant by the words "chief" and **chieftain." The Lord Justice-Clerk-If we That could be solved by asking feel difficulty, as we do, about de-Lyon what he understood the words ciding this case without knowing to exactly wast was in the mind of Lyon, can you really oppose the sending back? It is going to be re- mitted back on another point, any way, because we are not going to hear Mr. Innes until we have de- cided the question of his status, That being the position, it is bet- to counsel
Mr. McKechnie.-I submit not.
REMISSION ON TWO POINTS
connote. That would clear away a great many of the difficul- ties.
The Lord Justice-Clerk indicated that their Lordships would adjust the questions to be put to Lyon, and that these questions before submission to Lyon would be shown
Gas Masks For All
On Tuesday & huge Government | der the chin and on the cheeks in factory is to be opened at Black- front of the ears. The action of burn, writes a Home correspondent, inhaling pulls open the rubber The ceremony will be performed valve and air passes in through the by Mr. Geoffrey Lloyd, Parliamen- | Alter. On exhaling, the valve tary Under-Secretary Home Omce, closes and the used air from the and in the factory the thirty mil lungs escapes around the edges. Ilons of gas masks being prepared
NEW TYPE by the Home Office for the protec- tion of the civil population will be assembled, packed and distributed to storage centres all over the Kingdom.
The gas mask for civilan use is new and a great deal of work has had to be done both in the de- sign and in the organisation for production and distribution. As The component parts of the
regards design, much of the · ex- masks are being made by many perimenting was carried out at the arms, and this has brought wel-Chemical Research Department's come work to many districts still auffering from depression.
laboratories on Salisbury Plain. As- regards production, a great organi- sation has been built up from nothing by the Home Office. go far as visits to works, and talks with Home Office, inspectors can show, the work is being done ex- tremely well, and is being kept frée from red tape. -
"These gas masks should be re- garded in the same way as life belts," said Mr. J. W. L. Oliver, the Home Office official in charge of 'supply. "They may never be want ed: We hope they never will. But will give confidence, and if they do „the knowledge that they are ready have to be issued they will encour- age people to stay quietly in their own homes, where they will come į They can be true gases which mix
to least harm.**
A ELEVEN OUNCES
Malevolent gases that can be used in war are of many kinds, but they fall into two main classes.
with the air, or they may be in the nature of minute particles, dust The Home Office pattern gas so to speak, which is suspended in mask has little in common with the air. For this reason the filter. the familiar Service type. It is not has to be in two parts. Intended for those who have to One part of the filter consista of work during an air raid, and can a pad of occulent material; which; therefore be made quite light-a. is a dust alter. This occupies ex- matter of about eleven ounces. It ❘ netly half an inch in the tin box. 14 not uncomfortable to wear, and The rest of the space, except for breathing with it on is easy. that occupied by metal 'nets,
The mask consists of a rubber springs, and other parts designed vizor with an eye plece made of a to keep the full filter in position" Is slip of cellulose acetate, a material, taken up by a mass of granulated resembling celluloid, but pot in-carbon or charcoal. This carbon is Mammable. To the rubber mask 18 | “activated" by a special process, Atted a "anout," which contains and is the gas niter, the filtering material. It is a tin
box about three and a half inches
in diameter and three inches long. When we read of the mob The outer end is perforated and the hysteria and the fan mail evoked inner end is fitted with a non-re-by film stars dance-band leaders, crooners, and dirt track racers we turn rubber valve de
can hardly escape the belief that a
In position on the wearer's head very large proportion of the public the rubber portion covers the eyes, now consists of borderline cases. nose, and mouth, fitting lightly un-"Dr. Harvey Grace."
"Really! Sanatogen will make you Strong & Vigorous again” "YOU have made too great demands of yourself, but Sanatogen will soon put that right. It contains the very secret of strength* and health. Take it regularly for a few weeks, then you will soon feel healthy and happy again."
Remember that every physician the whole world over knows the remarkable results obtained by Sanatogen, and Sanatogen is regularly prescribed by them.
The fameus medical paper, 'The Lancet, * writes: *There is abundant evidence of the value of Sanatogen as a restorative and food, and more particularly in cases of general debility."
Every chemist sells Sanatogen. Go to-day and get a package. Then you will soon feel stronger than ever before.
SANATOGEN
The True Tone Food
At all Chemists'
DIRECTORY & CHRONICLE
OF THE FAR EAST
CHINA JAPAN MALAYA, PHILIPPINE ISLANDS. INDO-CHINA. NETHERLANDS INDIA, ETC.
(Published by The Hong Kong, Daily Press, Ltd.) First Edition 1862, revised and enlarged annually
1937
EDITION
(NOW IN PRESS)
*
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