THE PHILIPPINES.
[FROM OUR OWN CORRESPONDENT. |
Manila, P.I., 6th June.
Last weak was marked by an event of great significance. This was the news, received anofficially, of the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in the cuyo of Thomas E. Kopuer, a Manila lawyer. The euling, in brief teros, establishes the illegality of any appeal by the Government from requittal for the defanen in criminal caser so that, all suel cus24 airowly pouling may be dismissed on proper motion
AN IMPORTANT DECISION,
Kepner was acquittel some time ago by the lower court of the charge of misappropriating cerinin funds belonging to a client. The case was married to the Philippines Supreme Court by the Government, with the result that the lower „court's decision was reversed. The dofeneo then appealed to the United States Supreme Hurt on the grands that, under the provisions of the Philippine Act of July 1st, 1902, the defendunt was placed twice in jeopardy, which is also out of accord with the terms of the National Constitution. The Philippine Act, liowever, was intended to cover the provisions of the Constitution of the United Stales, but in the point at issue the Government bas always contended that a enso was never completel so lang as it was in appeal, and thus there was no socond jeopardy. The Supreme Court of the United States now holds that the jeopardy ends with the original decision, interpreting the Philippine Aet just as the Constitution would be interpreted.
FRONTIER NOTES.
{FROM A CORRESPONDENT.]
CROWN RENT.
13th June.
The difficulty in collecting Crow rent, which function devolvos upon the Police, has been very marked of late. Less than a quarter per cont. of the dues are recovered and the people seora to have come to the conclusion that they can treat the Government's demands for its just rights with impunity. Reference to higher authority generally brings forth the reply that the poor country people must not
te oppressed and that conciliatory and easy methods, must be amplayed in dealing with thew at the sacrifico of revenue. The Chinese
the difficulties of these to whom is entrusted are adepts at prevaricating, and the collection of these dnes, have their troubles doubled by the lack of thrines on the part of these in high place.
COTTON PLANTING.
There is no sign yet of any active step being taken towards the promotion of euttan begun there is considerable room for doubt planting in the New Territory. When it is whether it will meet with much better success than that which has attended the attempt to introduce Straits Settlements sugar-cans into the same country. Practical results have been attained that go to show that the southern cans is capable of producing 40 per cent more sugar than the Chinese plant, but the Chinese prefer their own native cano simply because it needs less attention and can be counted upon to grow on ground which is nufit for the cultivation of good pudy. Whether even the offer of prizes for le growing of cotton will act as an incen- tive to the New Territory people remains to be
proved.
THE RAILWAY SCHEME
Kapner's alleged offence was committed} prior to the passage by Congress of the Philippine Act, but it is a priuciple of common law, that any new law in favour of an accused criminal There is a growing belief, and it is well borne is retroactive, and when in favour of the Govern-out by recent statisties, that the New Territory ment it is ex post fuctu. On this same principle u as a whole is in the nature of a white elephant. axumber of important cases now before the Philippine Supreme Court, which were carried ap by the Government under an old Spanish law in forces at the time the offences were alleged to bave been committed, are similarly affected by the decision and must be dismissed on motion when they are reached in the docket. One case in particular is that of Dr. Gowoz, whose acquittal of the charges of conspiracy and treason, it will be remembered, was quite recent- ly appealed by the Government.
DR. GOMEZ,
Its apkop is a train upon the resources of Hongkong. The establishment of a railway running through the Territory to the Frontier would of course make an immense difference and would ensure the lasting prosperity of the region. Just as a sample of the difficulty of travel, we may take the journey from or to Sanchun to Hongkong. It oempies at least thro days if the passenger has bainos transact in one or other of the termini, and yet the cities are only some 35 miles distant. The same romark applies to Talpo or any of the outlying stations on the British side. The advent of the
railway would change all that,
BANCHUN.
THE HONGKONG DAILY PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15ru, 1904.
MILITARY AFFAIRS.
MAJOE: A. A, CHICHESTER, D.5.0. The appointment of Major A.. A. Chichester, D.8.0., Dorsetshiro Regiment, late D.A.Q.M.G. at Hongkong for three years, rice Major A. B. Hamilton, K.0.8.B., is gazetted.
MEMORIAL SERVICE TO-DAY,
A
Cathedral at 9 o'clock this morning.
A memorial service will be held at St. John's Memorial Brass is being unveiled today at Nottingham to the offers, non-commissioned officers, and men of the let Battalion Sherwood Foresters who lost their lives during the South African War.
THE SHERWOOD FORESTERS' WEDATH.
Among British military badges there are to They are borne by some of the cavalry
found a great number and variety of wreaths. giments, the E., the A.S.C., KAM.C., and by quite half the territorial regiments. Thore are at least ten different sorts worn on the various appointments, in addition to that known wreaths are worn by the Derbyshire and Not- as the Union wreath, borze cu the calears. Oak tinghamshire Regt. (the Sherwood Foresters) as su allusion to their name, and by the Essex, Dorsetshire and Suffolk Regta. These infter probably have been assumed with the Castle of from those granted with the sphinx and tiger. Gibraltar to distinguish the nature of the wreath
A SOLDIER'S CURLS.
In the case of a soldier of the 2nd Buffs, who for striking a superior ‹ffer when remonstrated was tried recently by court-martial at Dover,
with about wearing his hair in coris outside his cap, a sentenes of two months' imprisonment and dismissal from the army has been passed. The soldier was vouring his bair contrary to regulations.
THE INDIAN ARMY.
general question of preparedness of the army in Lord Kitchener, in Lis Memorandum on the India for war, says as car army is an admitted- ty small one for the purpose for which it is maintain ed, there is all the more need for a' higher standard of Excellence with us than
obtains else whero. It must be the constant en
BRITISH TRADE IN CHINA.
INTERNATIONAT. RIVALRY. Mr. Acting Consul General Playfair's Report on the trade of Hankow for the your 1903-an unusually prompt and informative document- 'contains some interesting remarks on the rivalry
KODAKS! KODAKS!! KODAKS!!!
AND
PHOTO GOODS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION.
We have au Establishment Soldly devoted to
to which British trade is now subject in the Far or Amaterus, where we turn ent work of the best description and with great promptuees.
DEVELOPING AND PRINTING
East. We quote the falling surg
LONG, HING & CO.,
Hongkong, 10th March, 1904
17A, QUEEN'S ROAD CENTRAL
(Fow Doors East of Hongkong Hotel
[38
"British trade in Chino, that is to say, trade, conducted not only in British goods, but by British hands, has undergone a transformation. The chunge has boon gradual, and has extendul"} over many years. The majority of those enga opposition to those of other contrips. At the ed in it lave found it dificult to adapt them-mest they son price list to the local Consular selves to the new mothols which they will have representative withra request that he will handl to follow if they wish to maintain their it on to some local agent; but they overlook the group and not see their livelihood slip away fact that the Chinese Government profors to
from them.
who are
converse.
to sell, and to secure orders therefor,"
THE GREAT NORTHERN TELEGRAPH CO.
"THE RISES OF WAR"
At the general meeting, held at Copenhagen on April 30, Coniniodora E. Sueuson, D.R.N., rendering an account of the working of the company during 1903, said —
TRAVE
66
TELEPHONE No. 135.
MARK
YEBISU"
THE FAMOUS BEER OF JAPAN.
JHIS IS A
PURE
PLEASING
POPULAR PALATABLE
PRODUCTION
$16.00 PER CASE or 8 DOZEN PINTS.
The metamorphosis is not in deal direct with the manufacturers, and that the the British trader himself, but in those with local finns have no facilities for bringing their when the traite is conducted-siz, the Chinese goods to the direct notice of the authorities. and unless the British merchant recognises fucts The only effectual method is to send accredited and can accommodate himself to the novel cou-agents with full particulars to the officials in ditious, he will find himself supplanted by those charge of factories in order to expound the United Kingdom has taken a large and laudable native merchants in order to point out the
more plinut and adaptable. The advantages of British-made machinery, or to HAVE YOU TRIED share in promoting the education of the Chinese. saperierity of the article, which they are trying We have preached to thom and exhorted them and entreated them to adopt larger views, and to assimilate the wisdom and superior methods of the West. We have impressed on thom that they are really ignorant people, and that they themselves on European lives. Tacitly and cannot possibly move forward maless they model
meekly they have recognised this. Silently they have avowed their own shortcomings. So
the transformation been effected that in many unostentatiously, and in that so skilfully, has
Thanks to the cponing of the Kielita route ways they have turned the tables on us, and we for general traffic on February 23rd this year have been blind to the fact. Their education we are in a position to obviate the inconvenience has been so complete and their adaptability so enused by the closing of our two cables between positions wlush wo formerly occupied unques- war, and to transmit the traffic between Europe thorough that they have shouldered as out of Vladivostock and Nagasaki on account of the tioned. The volume of. British trade is not and the Far East as though nothing had hap- hore spoken of; that continues to increase poned. The Russian Government does not yearly, and no doubt will go on doing exercise any kind of censorship on traffic pas- no as long as We have something to sell sing via this new route. The combined effect which the native of China wishes to buy or the of tariff reductions and of the loss of the
exceedingly, but, in the conerets, its profits are an immediate decrease of our receipts, averag
British trado, in the abstract, still American traffle through the opening of the flourishes, and may indeed be said to Gourish Thilippine cable, which naturally has taken the noa, more direct, and less expensive route, was no longer distributed in the same direction, noring in the beginning €10,000 a month. If the do they benefit the same persons. This trade of total diminution of the trafo revenne, an com- pared with the preceding year, has nevertheless Chins is like the Egyptian Nile. In the old been limited to about £12,000, it is only due to days, in making its way to the sea it overflowed our increased receipts during the first half of the and enriched with fertilising alluvium the re-
year, and to the considerable Government and Press trae called forth by the complications gions through which it passed. We have, with in the Far East towards the end of the year. the best of motives, canalised it, so that it enters Now that war between Russia and Japan has the sea in even greater volume, but it no longer broken out, it would, however, be a mistake to enriches all and sundry who tarry on its banks
rely too much upon a continuance of this
they wore accustomed. The stream has been so They await in vain the lavish overdow to which the danger to which our cables and telegraph increase of the traffic, whilst, on the other hand,
nursed and conserved that, unless they are wise upon the chances of war. Fassing throngl lines are exposed is only too evident. The enough to make use of the hundred and one Mongolia, it is, fortunately, as yet very far security of the new Kiachta route will depend
irrigation channels into which its waters have from the theatre of war, but may be exposed to been diverted, they find it last that its benefits East connect Japan with China and Corea, De uro no longer for the first comer as they used to of them (between Tsushima and Fuss) has other dangers. Threa of our cables in the Far
be, and that its profits are much harder to come always been worked by the Japanese Adminis by. There was a time when the British mer.tration, whilst the other two (tween Nagasati case. The new Eastern ally has an army of has many, and some are of his own making. His exposed to the risks of war, twelve divisions, three or four of which, accord-European competitors are yearly becoming more
All these cables are unfortunately
ing to circumstances, form a Field Army, existing units of the Regular Forces to three The new scheme is a temporary allotmout of Field armies and three Cavalry Brigades, somewhat on similar lines to the Japanese Forces. In peace the Ist Field Army will be stati ened at Aldershot, und will consist of the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd Divisions, together with the 1st Cavalry Brigade.
deatour of overgene in the army in India 80 to train thomsel vos and those under them in time of peace that when the strain of war came all Notwithstanding many instructions regard- ranks might know what to do and how to do it.
ing tho military training of
troops issued, the results bitherto obtsixed which bad from time to time
India in gud to this important subjes had been somewhat disappointing,
BRITAIN EMULATING JAPAN.
been
in
Speaking of the principle of jeopardy, I am reminded that Dr. Gonca has a fair prospect thest one of the three charges remaining against
I hear from a source deserving every credence hi will be thrown out of court. I refer to the that the representative people of Sanchun sity count of bandolerismu, in which essentially the and valley have again petitioned the Hongkong Council to in quire into the proposals contained The committee appointed by the Army same evidence as that used in the treason case Government to take over these places and incor-in the Report of Lord Esher's Committee have will Im offered in support. In such an event porate them in the Now Territory under British recommended a divisional organisation for War The accused will be on trint a second time for the rule. Until this is dous Samchan will certainly in lien of the brigade administration suggested same offence, as although under a diferent babes a standing menace to the peace of the by the committee, and this alteration is to be the same nets will he offered in proof. As well countryside. It is the resort of all the had. carried out somewhat on the lines of the Japau- as this, trial of the charge of misappropriation characters of the province, who find it a ese Army. It is curious, says an exchange, thet of funds. premises to result favourably for him.
convenient base from which to make raids upon we should go to a military your geter like Japan The funds alleged to have been misappropriated the British Territory villages aut also to make to reorganise our army, bai sucb is actually the chant had very few rivals in the field. Now ba and Shanghai) are in our hands audi are still aro thons of the Union Obres, which has already descents upon itself for thisving purposes been decided to have boop an illegal organisa- This is said to be the third occasion on which tinu. Tange the organisation in question is not similar petitions have been made. The Govern likely to have any status before the Court.
ment are foolish not to take advantage of the However, if the Supreme Court decides unfav-general feeling and arrange for the transfer ourably in Gomez's appeal case (ie., the "illegal of the city to the British flag. organisation" count) then his chances will not
be so bright As it is, like Barkis, he has hopes, and would have but one offence left to answor For.
KICARTE THE VIPER."
The subject of bandolerismo hrings me back to Ricarto. The Government is still framing charges against its prisoner. Incidentally, those already prepared have had to be reconstructed
A. NUISANCE.
The other day the passengers on board one of the Samehun River launches wore horrified to find out on their arrival at the point where they change into the flat-bottomed river boats that they had had for a mate on the way up a corso. It was only when the custodians of the body attempted to remote it from the launch to the out that its presence was made patmut to the
LOED WOLSELEY AND CONSCRIPTION,
intact.
SHIPPING NOTES..
STEAMER MOVEMENTS
inst., and may be expected here on the 29th inst. The Indo-China steamer Suiseng left Cal- cutta for this port via the Straits on the 12th
WEATHER AT SEA.
The Tremont from Moji ceports "no." wind and smooth sea..
The Benmehr from Foochow reports light
MISCELLANEOUS, The Scottish Monarch arrived from Barry yesterday with 6,076 tons of coul. Her lust stopping place was Port Natal.
The Parifan also arrived from Barry yester
on account of the prisoner's admissions gising passengers. for en voyage it had been had attention to un article in a military journal, and, during the current year, also in percentage,day. She has 6,000 tons of Welsh coal aboard.
his case a different arpet. The Government is confronted by no foothold to acense treason, instanch as Ricarte, unlike Gomez, never took the oath of allegiance to the United States and was in selive opposition to its rule at the time that country acquired the Philippines, and hus been over since, A subject of the United States be amionbtedly is, and clearly a rebel- lions one, but he is not citizen; and under the peculiar circumstances can searedly be charged with treason or traitorens eenduet. Thus the only grounds for prosecution can be bandsterismo, or armel and organised defanen of the lawinl government, aud conspiracy to ́raise a rebellion, and then will probably be the offences ultimately charged.
A CONVICTION CONFIRMED. The same telegram that conveyed the news of the Kepner decision, which, by the way, was sent by the Attorney-General of the Philippines representing the case at Washington, contained word of the finding in two other appeal cases Before the Supreme Court. These were the cases of Dorr and O'Brien, the newspaper inen tried for sedition. The Judges, with only one in dissent. found against the accused and con- firmed their sentences, which means the payment of a heary fine suda terni in prisonSunless the pardoning authority intervenes, as nauy believe
he will.
Mauila, 30th June.
RICARTE SENTENCED.
Artemio Ricarta, the "Viper," was yesterday charged on remand with carrying firearms without a permit from the authorities.
Defendant was convicted and sentenced to one year and one day imprisonmont and $1,000 fine. or to the subsidiary imprisonment for insolvency and to the payment of the costs of the trial.
MACNIVEN & CAMERON'S "J" PENS. arby special de vicinamfacture the sunsetbeat and mort quill-like fails to be obtained any where
Blick J. Gilt J. big J.
covered up with matting, so that it was not strikingly visible. The women who was taking the body up was inconsel at the refusal of the boat people to take it ashore, and she indignantly produced a permit from the Registrar-General of Hongkong authorising the removal of a dead body. It was eventually dumped on the Chine se side of the river awaiting conveyance to come- tery. But should not a dead body be covered up decently? The dead curcase of a sheep eveu must be covered when carried alour the streets of Hongkong.
LICHEES.
The crop of lichtes is remarkably good and great quantities of the fruit are bolug des- patchel every day to the Hongkong market.
NAVAL NOTES.
U. . #HIPS LEAVING HONGKON
The U. S. flagship Wisconsin, the cruiser Oregon, and the U. S. destroyer Bletills now in port, had steam up yesterday, so it is to be prosumed that they will leave Hongkong to-day,
BATTLESHIPS IN MODERN WARFARE. Captain Muhuu, in un articls in the New the survival of the motoru battleship in a val York Sun, disensses at length the question of warfare, which ho answers in the affirmative,
THE GERMAN MAYY..
Field-Marshal Viscount Wolseley, replying to a correspondent who drew his lordship's
had always bed an advocate of compulsory advocating conscription England, said he
military service on a plan that w Ad suit the convenience of our population generally.”
HONGKONG AN EXAMPLE FOR
THE PHILIPPINES.
ecstasies
over tho
numerous und more formidable. They came in at the feet of Canaliel,' but have by this time dattering imitation of himself, and at first 'aut learned all there was to letra, and have in many ways bettered his instruction. His bestrosource, is now to sit at the foot of his quondam pupils, and learn. like them, pick up the crumbs that fall from the table. Except in shipping and banking. commerce, with a big 'C,' bag passed out of his hands, and nothing seems lett. him but trade with a small 't Though British shipping has yearly increased in tonnage
business as merel autseither in imports or exports the number of British firms of repute doing
is falling off, and those still here find it daily harder to compete with their foreign rivale. When first British merchants themselves ILE Hankow they confined themselves to the tea taude, of which Hankow was then the centro, and treated with contempt entirely in the hands of French and German the so-called 'muck und truck, leaving it
they still retain. The Hankow tea trade, having fems who got hold of the connections which boon wounded to the death as far as the United
established
Jean Villamor, Governor of Abra Province, St. Louis Exposition, writes to El Renaci into one of the honorary special commissioners to the on the subject of Chiness immigration. Senor Villamor goes into magnificent roads, public improvements, and Kingdom was concerned, by the pushing firms of India and Cylon, and having consernently private enterprise winch he bearved at Hong-fullen almost cutirely into Russian hands. koug, and says that all the things were made possible by "Chinese cheap labour."
New York yesterday with 107,000 cares of oil The Norwegiau steamer Af arrived from for Chefoo. Her consignees are the Standard
Oil Co.
NEW LIGHT FOR HONGKONG.
On the 1st prox. a light will be exhibited from the Western point of Mawan Island. It will consist of two white lights, vertically, six exhibited from a white must with a white hut feet apart. visible in clear weather one mile, at the foot. Upper light 515 foot above high
water.
from New York with a cargo of case oil for the Standard Oil Co., after a 133 days passage. In the Sunds Straits she spoke the Arthur Sewall bound for Shanghai. Strong N.Ely winds were experienced off Cap Rock.
ARRIVAL OF A BAILING SHIP. The 4-mastod barque Kentmere has arrived
THE FRENCH MERCHANT MARINE. British merchants found it increasingly difcalt
On the 10th ult, the captains, sa gineers, and officers of to do any business, the utere so as the Chinese passed a resolution to the effect that they would the merchant marine at Bordeaux The Chinese babourer," he says, "is absolutely necessary here, not only on account of his merchants begun to purchase their imports at join the strike begun by thair Marseilles and
Shanghai and Hongkong, instead of through Havre colleagues unless thoir deals cheapnes but also industry. It is impossible the agency of the local firms. The British, after seeing what Chinese Ishour has dous i sines their Concession adjuins the native city, growing determination to fores upon those acceded to by the 13th. This decision would Hongkong, to rompin blind without making hold the most advantageous position on the concerned a solution of the off core differences seem to indicate, the Timce correspondent suil, a one's self ridiculous." that it will be disastrous for the Filipinos fall working order, the centre of trade may be belong in a senso favourable to themselves. To He goes on to say river, yet as soon as the Pei-Han Railway is in with the trade union to which their crews
tion into
captains cast the responsibility for the continua
delay. This attitude tends to give a prima tion of the strike not upon the shipowners, bat pra the Government, which, they say, could, if it chose, put an end to the conflict without Jecie probability to the allegation of the crows
nnderstanding between the officers and the that the present strike, which is rather of the afore of a professional loot-out than a refusal of employer to work, is the consequence of an shipowners.
the islands of Chinese labour,
if they persist in refusing to allow immigrexpected to gravitate towards the French Judge from their mauifestous, the merchant)
this shour available for all other nations, through which a brunch line of the railway is especially as the Panama Canal will make Concession, immediately bolund which is the railway station. and to the German Concession, The Filipino commissioners, he says, were nearly all violently opposed to ('bincse to be carried down to the water's edge. The estimates in the Reichstag on the 11th inst. have changed their minds, after seeing Hongkong, Chinese Government contracts for machinery In the course of the discussion on the Navy immigration when they left Manila, hut theyGermans and, to a certain extent, the Belgians Herr von Kardorf (Imperial party) urged the and now favour it under certain restrictions.
soom to have socured for themselves all the construction of submarine boats and especially The Chinese labourer," he says, "afraid of of every description, the local arsenal, ironworks, the increase of flo ravy. he declared, was becoming a danger to Germany his work. He is not an agitator, nor is ho factures.-The Japanese are to provide rifled for The British Navy, losing bis employment, keeps his word regarding and niat being fitted out with their mann Germans should take lesson from the Ra590-
pretentions. He is especially fitted for heavy and the Chinese troops, us rifles of Japanese make matter how harshly treated. He has not the same that have hitherto boon supplied by German axhausting work. He never complains no are both cheaper and more effectiro than those House of personal gaits that the Filipino firms. The blame for the lack of success of labourer has, and does not pause to consider the British firms in these, as in other branches of
Japanese war, and the Empire should follow the example of Great Britain, who during the Boer war had taken upon herself the burden of extra taxation and other liabilities, regardless
WEATHER REPORT.
The Hongkong Observatory yesterday issued
risen in SW. Japan and in the Philippines. In the following report:-
On the 14th at 11.30a.m. The arometer. haa Chins also there is a slight increase of pressura, Gradinis are moderate on the China Coast
and strong E. winds will be met with in the Channel. Pressure is still low in the China Sea northern part of the Chins Sea,
Forecast-Fresh E. winds, fine.
of every consideration but the end in view character of his work as long as it brings him trade, though commonly ascribed to the supine and fresh SE. winds will prevail in the Formos
the Navy, said that the problem of sulmurine Admin von Tirpitz, Secretary of State for
boats was as yet by no means solved. S WAVERLEY WORKS, EDINBURNU, (402–41 great revolution in the naval question.
marines could not therefore at present caus
In Gd. and 1. boxes, ut all Stationers,
money.
Many Filipino labourers will not attitude of British Consular officials towards stand this sort of thing. The personal dignity of the offorts of British merchants, would seem to the Filipino labourer could be safegarded by be in reality with the firs themselves, who restricting the number of Chiness admitted." make no serious effort to push their goods in
N. B. There are no reports from Indo-China or from places westward of Hongkong.
SOLE AGENTS
H. PRICE & CO.
12, QUEEN'S ROAD CENTRAL.
SORE HANDS
Itching, Burning Palms, Painful Finger Ends,
With Brittle, Shapeless, Discolored flails,
As Well as Roughness and Redness.
One Night Treatment with Cuti- cura, the Great Skin Care.
Soak the bands on retiringin a strong, hot, creamy lather of Cadcura Soap. Dry and anolut freely with Cuticura Olotment, the great skin cure and purest of emollients, Wear, during the night, old, loose kid gloves, or bandage lightly In old, soft cotton or linen. For red, ugh and chapped hazda, dry, Dssured, Itching, feverish palms, with brittle, shapeless natte and painful änger ends, this treatment is simply wonderful, fre- quently curing in a single application. Complete local and constitutional treatment for every humour of the skin, scalp and blood, with loss of hatz. Bathe with hot water and Catcura Soap, to cleanse the surface of crusts and scales, and soften the thickened cuticle. Dry, without hard rabbing, end apply Cuticura Ointment freely, to allay Itching, Irritation and Inflammation, and anothe and heal, and lastly, take she Cuticura Resolvent, to cool and cleanse the blood. This treatment affords instant relief, permita rest and sleep in the severest forms
of Eczema and other itching. burning and scaly lauro
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Cadrars Resolvent, quid and in the form of Cliocolate Coales Ple Caucun fame.1 and Cuicum Boo sold throughout the world. Bapolas Lazdon, 27 Chartery home Sq. Fari, 5 tus de la Paixz Australlet. Towns Co., Sydney: Houten, EST Columbus Ave. Foner Druza
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"How to Care Every Humoar."
[4]
(81-10
DE. NEWELL WILSON. DR. WILLIAM DANEL
DENTISTS.
Latest American Methods.
Reasonable Fees...
No charge for examinations.
Office hours 9 a.. to I r., and 2 to 5 PM.
J
31 QUEEN'S ROAD CENTRAL (First Floor Watkin's Building). Hongkong, 18th February, 1904,
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