HONG KONG DAILY PRESS
FOOT ITCH
Athlete's Foot
According to the Govern
ment Health Bulletin No
E-28, at least 50% of the
adult population of the United States are being attacked by the. disease known as Athlete's Foot,
Usually the discuss starts between the toes. Little watery blisters form, and the skin cracks and peels. After a while, the itching becomes intense, and you feel as though you would like to acratch off all the skin.
N BEWARE OF IT SPREADING
"
Often the disease travols all over the bottom of the foot. The les of your feet become red and swollen. The skin also cracks and poels, and the itching becomes worse and worse.
Get rid of this disense quickly as possible, because it is very contagious and it may go to your hands or even to the under arm or crotch of the lega.
Most people who have Athlete's Foot have tried all kinds of remedies to cure it without success. Ordinary germicides, unti- septics, alve or ointments seldom do any good.
HERE'S HOW TO TREAT IT
The germs that causes the disease is known as Tines Trichophy- ton. It baries itself deep in the tissues of the skin and is very hard to kill. A test maile shows it takes 15 minutes of boiling to kill the germs you can see why ordinary romedies are unsuccessful. H. F. was developed solely for the purpose of treating Athlete's Foot it is a liquid that penetrates and dries quickly, You just paint the affected parts.. It peels off the tissue of the skin where the germ breeds.
ITCHING STOPS IMMEDIATELY
As soon as you apply H. F. you will find that the itching is immediately relieved. You should paint the infected parts with .F. night and morning until your feet are well. Usually this takes from three to ten day, although in severe cases it may take longer or in mild cases less time.
H. F. will leave the skin soft and smooth. You will marvel at the quick way it brings you relief: especially if you are one of those who have tried for years to get rid of Athlete's Foot without"
success.
ነ
Before using B.F.
ACTUAL
PHOTOS
H. F.
FOOT
REMEDY
Made this
Difference
After using H.F.
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"H.K. POLICE
1
RESERVE
Orders by The Hon. Mr. T. H. King. Commissioner of Police).
CHINESE COMPANY Training Course Part II. The undermentioned members of the Chinese Company will attend Chi- nese Company Headquarters for Part II of Training Course OR Tuesday, July 26 at 17.15 hours:- Constables R7 Fong Iu Ping, R13 Tang Shiu Hung, R16 Yan Kwong Yin, R18 Lai Ching Fan, RM4 Lo Man Pok, R33 Lam Shiu '90. R35 Leung Wing Tseung, R53 Lin Ka Hang, R95 Ho Thong Chol. R97 Wong Chun Pang. R99 Kwok Kin Kwong, and R100 Kwok Chan.
Inspection Parade. All ranks of the Chinese Company will parade at Central Police Station on
Thursday. July 28 at 17.30 hours
GENERAL
AUTHORITY ON CHINESE
POTTERY
Mr. R. L. Hobson Of The
British Museum
After forty years"service at the British Museum, Mr. R. L. Hob-. son, the orientalist, who is regarded as the greatest living authority on Chinese pottery. will retire this month. He is the museum's Keeper of Oriental Antiquities and Ethnography, a department: which has changed and grown more than any other in the museum since. the beginning of this century.
Mr. Hobson, when he spoke about, gan to appear (he did not mention his forty years' work, obviously re-his own books on Chinese pottery, gretted his imminent retirement, probably the best-known of all), but.. he said, his ill-health made it and soon there were competent inevitable. He is 66 years old. He collectors of early Chinese art. said that when he entered the
The museum. be said. benefited
museum he had been in the British from this, since many of these cul- for a general Inspection of and Mediaeval Antiquities Depart- equipment etc.. by the Com
ment, which at that time included lectors left their treasures to it: the list of the donors of Chinese Dress White all antiquities save the Greek, White Cover. Roman. Egyptian. and
art was a long one-Harvey Had- Assyrian.
den, Bloxain, Harris, and "par Truncheon. Later a Department of Ceramics
ticularly Eamorfopoulos were some i note- and Ethnograph WIA separated
рапу Commander. Uniform, Cap with
Belt with Brace,
"Pocket Policeman"
and
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book to be carried. The Equip-from this, and in 1921 he became of them. Hence the Antiquities ment Officer will make a point of its keeper. His present Oriental Department had swollen to a huge being present.
size. Department was yet another sub- division, made only three years Mr. Hobson. however, added that aro.
the foundations of the present
INDIAN COMPANY Training Course-Part I. The undermentioned members of the Mr. Hobson supposed that it was Chinese collection-which is prob- Indian Company will attend In about 1902 that he began to spe- ably the finest in the world—had dian "Company Headquarters for cialise in Chinese pottery-ceramics been laid by Sir A. W. Franks, who Part II of Training Course on generally had been his subject had been keeper of the British and Tuesday, July 28 at 17.30 hours from the start. The reason, he Mediaeval Department and had under LSR. 214 Channan Singh: sald; why there had been all the given to the museum his dne Chi- Constables R230 B. Singh, R232 subsequent sub-dividing in the nese porcelain collection, which he K. Mohamed, R235 A. A. Pipe, R236 museum's Antiquities Department gathered between 1850 and 1890. H. G. Mohamed, R285 A. Singh, Pas mainly that these 40 years R243 A. Ghani, R247 B. Rám. R249 had seen a huge increase in the
A FAMOUS STATUE $ Singh, R252 F. Mohamed. R28 British and, indeed, European in-
By far the biggest acquisition by H. Singh, R293 G. Singh, R294 Aterest in Chinese art.
the Antiquities Department was Rehman, R244 G. Sarwar, R237-K. Until then Chinese art had that of the Eumorfopoulos Collec-1 Bachao, R295 F. Khan. R208 F.mainly meant eighteenth-century tion in 1938. This, Mr. Hobson Alam, R296 S. Omar and R300 B. chinoiserie; Britain was ignorant said, cost £100,000 and was worth Singh.
of anything better than that.
£250,000. This had doubled the
Training Course-Part I. All re-
-Mufti.
1
Chinesc art.
crults of the Indian Company will TREASURES FROM THE TOMBS value of the museum's collection of attend No. 2 Police Station on But as Inner China began to be Thursday, July 28 at 17.30 hours developed all sorts of earlier trea-most excited him was that of the The acquisition, though, which for Part 1 of Training Course un-sures were brought to light. He Tang Lohan statue. He remem- der P.S.R. 274 Mendi Khan. Dreas mentioned particularly the effect hers how some fifteen years ago he of new raliways; in making cut-had gone down to a London ware- FLYING SQUAD
tings, for them, tombs containing house to see this treasure when it Instructional Patrol. An instrue-Tang and Han pottery were ex-reached England. Subsequently he tional patrol for members of the posed.
managed by great efforts to buy Flying Squad will be carried out on At first, he said, the collection it for the museum for £5,000: Friday, July 29, 1938. "All members of these wonderful specimens was This statue was one of eighteen will parade at Central Police' due to thoroughly illegal excava- found in a cave somewhere in Station at 17.15 hours. Dress tions by the Chinese-the spolls-North China. White Uniform. and Cap with tion of tombs was strictly against Mr. Hobson said
the law. He remembered, he said, twice visited Cover.
bad how French experts "shook their time being when he went to collect China the second EMERGENCY UNIT RESERVE An Instructor's "course on Airheads" about the first Tang horses specimens for the
that reached them: they simply House Chinese Exhibition of three. Burlington Raid Precaution Work will be given on Tuesday. July 25 and could not belleve in their au-
years ago. This exhibition, he Friday, July 29 at 17.30 hours at
thenticity.
considered, marked the peak point the EUR, Club by S.I. (R) R.P. After that he said, interest was so far of European interest in Chi- Dunlop. All members who intend aroused; books on the subject be- nese art. to take this
course must attend all lectures.
C. CHAMPKIN,
Hong Kong. July 25.
D. S. P. (R)
LOCAL DIRECTORY LONDON JEWISH
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(MID-SUMMER) LOCAL DIRECTORY.
LEADER DIES,
AGED 80
Dr. Claude Joseph Goldsmid Mon- teflore, the 80-year-old authori ly on Judaism and Jewish litera- ture, died at his home at Portman- square, W., recently.
4
A noted scholar, he occupied a pre-eminent place in Anglo-Jewry. He was president of the Liberal Jewish Synagogue.
It was under his leaderhip that Liberal Judaism was established In this country. He had identified himself with communal affairs. educational and philanthropic movements.
اداره
For 25 years he was president of the Anglo-Jewish Association.
In 1910 a number of Jews who found themselves out of sympathy with the Orthodox interpretation of Judaism, headed by Dr. Golda- mid Monteflore, formed a group with the object of "combining the permanent spiritual values in the Jewish tradition with modern thought."
CRITIC OF POLITICAL ZIONISM Dr. Goldsmid Montefiore was an unswerving critte of " pofitical Zlonism. His attitude is best ex- pressed in his own words at a meeting of the League of British Jews, two of whose objects were "to uphold the status of British subjects professing the Jewish re- ligion. and to resist the allega tion that Jews'constitute a separate political nationality."
Speaking at a meeting of the League in 1928 he said that a Jew who was not a Jew by religion was a monstrosity, an impossibility.
"We hold two great principles," he said, "that the Jews should be linked together by religion, and not by anything that might be alkened to nationality, and that in the modern State their moderate and distinctive religion need be no bar to the fullest participation in the social, cultural and political life of the nations whose fellow- citizens they were.”
that he
TUESDAY, JULY 26, 1938.-PAGE 3-
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