HONGKONG
TELEGRAPH. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1,
1935.
COMMON COLD CURE
Scientist's
THE
SIKHS FOR AFRICA
Five-Minute
Treatment
READY TO SUBMIT
TO ANY TEST
After years of struggle and patient research, a British scientist claima to have dis- covered a certain cure for the common cold, long recognised" as one of the worst menaces to the health of mankind.
By means of rays emanating from a rare metal the amazing powers of which he has proved to his own satisfaction and to that of his fellow-workers, Mr. W. G. Moore, a Manxman, has cured within a few accumls the most obstinate head, throat and nose colds,
"When one realises that the common cold costs this country. ulone millions of pounds in money every year--because of the Insa tal trade by illness of workers--to say! nothing of the mortality figures, une can measure the worth significance of my discovery," he
.said.
Instantaneous
and
"Just about five years ago," he went on, "I discovered that the rare metal, titanium, alloy- ed with tungsten, gave greater penetrations and bactericidal action-and that these rays, allied with autonomic therapy, were almost miraculous in the way in which they cured the common cold.
"My ray is derived from electric are, produced by currents passing through the tianlum. I treat patients through the nasal organs, and the cure is practically instantaneous,
"I am ready to submit my treat- ment to any test-in public if need band 1 guarantee that I can cure any cold within the space of] five minutes."
Mr. Moore is a former associale
of the late Dr. Hall Edwards the "X-Ray Martyr."
Indian Sikhs, biggest family in the world, aerdrding to Gordon Sin- clair, who has done a bit of wan dering in India, have been sent to Africa to defend British property in event of war. Hard-riding, loyal and excellent fighters, the Sikhs never slave nor cut their hair, nor drink nor make. There are ten million of them in India-they are India's policemen--and they all have the same family name, Blugh. Chief Sikh is Maharajah of Patinin, one of the world's greatest poten- tates, and personal side-de-camp of King George. The picture shows a Sikh major. It was taken by Gordon Sinclair on his last trip to India.
Cattle King Who Began With A One-Eyed Horse
Melbourne, Sept. 15.
CIR SIDNEY KIDMAN, Australia's "cattle king," has
died; aged seventy-eight.
When he was thirteen he left
home to seck fortune. He owned
a one-eyed horse, a saddle,
a
For some years past he has been bridle, a rug, and five shillings in working nt the hustitute of Autonomic Therapy. A, St. James-cash. He died owning pastoral land nearly twice the size of sq., London.
"My colleague Mr. Andre Harp-Britain. man and I have proved," he said.
Kidman's family were originally
"that autonomic therapy and the farmers in East Anglia, and there is titanium ray can not only cure a record of a land transfer to a Kid- colds, but can banish some diseases man in the days of Queen Elizabeth. hitherto pronounced incurable."
He Spent A Night In Pyramids
EERIE WATCH `IN LONELY GRAVE
His parents emigrated to Aus-i tralla and settled near Adelaide where Sidney was born.
The boy began to roam the coun- tryside. Early in life he missed two fortunes in Broken Hill mines and became a postman-contractor. He bought a one-fourteenth share in the original Broken Hill Com- pany, which he sold inter for £150.
That share is estimated to- day to be worth £6,000,000.
Risked His Life
The first white man ever to The boy got his first start as a spend a night in the Great cattle owner when a great drought Pyramid has returned to Lon-sent many penniless stockraisers to don.
the coasts.
He is Mr. Paul Brunton, the Much abandoned stock survived author and investigator of the drought, and Kidman bought a Eastern psychie mysteries. Ile ranch in the affected country, is back home after eight months' research into archaeological and psychic matters connected with ancient and modern Egypt.
WAS
By special permission of the Egyptian Government, he allowed the eerie experience of spending a night alone in the King's Chamber af the Great Pyramid.
"It certainly was an eerie ex.
He took his life in his hands when he went to round up strays in a country inhabited by hostile natives, but he won through..
He collected 3,000 horses and 500 cattle.
Soon he was the most powerful cattle man in Australia.
He never drank. He was known
perience, and for several days to be the "gamest loser" in Aus- afterwards I was far from well," {trulia,
Mr. Brunton said,
Sat in Darkness
In 1908 he went to London; needed men. He asked London
“I sat in total darkness through-omnibus drivers if they would come out the night, concentrating and to Australia. Many of them did.
All prospered.
making my mind completely re- Sir Sidney was knighted in 1921 ceptive to the psychic vibrations.
"After about six hours I had a most extraordinary experi- ence. I saw in a vision two ancient High Priests in the ceremonial robes of their religion, who showed me Д hitherto undiscovered and
for war services.
FOUR
COUNTRIES SHARE PROFITS ·
secret passago insido the SEALER RETURNS WITH
Pyramids but the entrance
to it I was unable to discover.
"I was told that the Chamber
into which this passngo led con-
$1,800,000 PELT CARGO
Seattle, Sept. 24. The Navy supply ship Sirius,
tained prohistoric records, des-bringing a $1,800,000 cargo' of cribing the unknown history of an sealskins back from the Pribilof earlier mankind, an Atlantcân race. Islands of the Bering Sea, also I was able to confirm by personal brought with It five live seals for experience, my theory that in this Balboa Park Zoo, San Diego, this room the High Priests put their year.
pupils into hypnotle trances The seals were youngsters, cap- wherein their'spirits were releas-tured at the bleak lalands where ed from their bodies and they were the great herds congregato every shown that the soul definitely yêur for the breeding sonson, They survives death."
travelled in crates supplied with Ice
Mr.. Brunton's long and delnil-dally to maintain low temperatures. ed researches into the origins oft Commander J. G. Cunningham the Pyramids and Sphinx have was relieved to be free of hla cargo convinced him that these monu- when he renched Seattle. The scal ments were originally, put up by pelts, taken under supervision of the Atlanteans-that is, by an the U.S. Government, were shipped -emigrant colony from the now to St. Louis for processing and sale. sunken Continent of Atlantis. Receipts will bo divided among the He believes that the aver-governments of the United States, whelming of Atlantis caused the Gront Britain and Japan, the Sahara soa-bed to emerge as dry American share much the largest. ́iland.
-United Press.
AUSTRALIA BANS MAE WEST NOVEL
Melbourne, Sept. 20.
Mae West's novel, "Dia- mond Lil," otherwise known as "She Done Him Wrong." has been banned by the Cus- toms Department here.
The novel is alleged to "contain indecent and ob- scene passages."
Miss Mae West's other novel, "The Constant Sin- ner," continues to be allowed to enter the State freely and be sold at all bookstalls.— Reuter,
"Diamond Lil" is the story of an "underworld queen' who goes to New York from Chicago. All she brings with her is a past. In New York she becomes associated with American gangsters,
Adds Zest to
ARTIFICIAL RADIUM
THE HARDEST EARNED MONEY
V.C. GIVES AWAY HIS £10 BOUNTY
Factories Will Be Open Soon
-Professor Claims
San Francisco, Sept. 1.
radium,
ARTIFICIAL
until now only the dream of scientists, will| shortly be manufactured on a commercial basis from table salt, phosphorus, and other cheap, abundant sub-
stances.
The world's leading atom- smasher, Professor Ernest Law- rence, announced this discovery -which will revolutionise the war on cancer-at a meeting of the American Chemical Society in San Francisco to-day.
Safe Injections
Artificial radium will not only I much cheaper than natural radium, which at present costs about £11,000 per gramme, but it will also be two or three times more powerful.
It is expected that factorica
'will in a few months be turn- ing out the artificial radium. At present physicians dare not inject radium into the tissues of human beings since radium is not only poisonous but has the power to rallate for years, accumulating trouble resulting in death
Salt radium, however, is spon- taneously destroyed in a few
hours, and, can therefore be in-
jeeted into cancerous tissues. In A Day's Work Just what artificial radium will In the balance-sheet of the east as a marketed product has not Royal Chelsen Hospital there yet been determined, but it will appears a brief entry, which unquestionably be small
rends:-
"From the Bradley V.C. Fund. -£10."
com-
pared with the cost of natural radium.
Professor Lawrenge, who makes the product by atomic bombard- ment of table salt by high-voltage Behind this cryptic announce electricity, is now able to produce Iment there Hes the story of a hero cheaply in a ten-hour working of the synthetic who voluntarily surrenders the £10 day enough bounty which the State pays to substance to equal in potency him annually for his deed of radium which would cost several.
thousand pounds.
valour.
Twenty-four-years-old F. A.
Bradley, serving in the South If
African war as a driver In the Royal Field Artillery, was one of a
If Roger
little garrison surrounded at Itals, Casement
in Zululand, by 1,600 Boera,
Man after mon was shot down in attempting to cross the fatal 150 yards, swept by gunfire, Driver Bradley succeeded, car ried ammunition up the hill, saved the day,
At the end-of-the-war-Lord- Kitchener pinned the V.C. on hia chest,
To-day Driver Bradley is Ik veteran of nearly sixty, but each year when he receives his bounty, The lardest-earned money in the Army-he sends it to the hospital.
Wine Festival
Pageantry and dance featured the Redwood Empire's, grape harvest fats, the St. Helena Vintagà Festival, last month. And ́ ́Joanna Hays, danseuse, depicted the spirit of wine in one-of-
the solo numbers.
Had Lied
OFFER BY CROWN TO SPARE HIS LIFE
Roger--Casement,executed for high treason daring the war, was betrayed into British hands by the Germans.
Even after his capture be might have saved his life but for the fact that he refused to tell a lie.
These facts, made known for the first time, are contained in Roger Casement's own private papers, now in the possession of his family.
When Casement was taken prisoner after he had landed on ihe Irish.coast from a German submarine, powerful influences got to work to save him from the death penalty in view of his previous services to the Empire. After long negotiation, it is re- vealed a member of the Govern- ment of that day intimated that if Casement advanced the plea of insanity the Crown would 'accept it and he would be ordered to be detained during His Majesty's pleasure, with the certainty of being released after the war.
This offer was conveyed to Casement in Pentonville prison, but he refused to permit this defence to be put forward, saying he preferred death to a lying plea.
Tricked By Germans Almost the lust thing Casement wrote in his diary was his profound conviction tint bo had been tricked by the Germans.
The Germans wanted him to form an Irish Brigade, recruited among prisoners of war, but they had no intention of transporting this brigade to Ireland to fight for Irlah Independence.
Casement "I am convinced," wrote. "that the intention was to send this brigade on the Western Front. When I realised that, I decided to have nothing more to do with the enterprise.
"It was then that the Ger- mans decided to repatriato me 'to Ireland. I am convinced that it was they who advised the British authorities of my landing plans in order to ensure that I should fall intó British harids. It was their iden of punishing me for my failure to fall in with their plans.”
It was left to his family to determine whether any or all of his papers should be published. They have decided against publica- tion...
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