1910-04-30 — Page 5

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FOR THE HAIR

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WHY?

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And silky.

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74-2

SEVEN HAIR FACTS

. ONE Dandruff is a contagious disease caused by a microbe.

TWO

Dandruff is a forerunner of itching scalp, falling hair and baldness.

THREE Chronic baldness is incurable.

FOUR

The cause of dandruff cannot be washed out of the scalp with soap and water.

FIVE

The only way to cure dandruff and falling hair is to kill the germ that causes it..

SIX

Each day that dandruff is ne- glected adds to the permanent injury of the scalp, for dandruff does not cease voluntarily while the hair lasts.

SEVEN

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[282-M

EAST AND WEST,

THE ISLAND EMPIRES.

PROBLEM OF THE FACIFIC OCEAN.

THE HONGKONG DAILI PRESS, SATURDAY, APRIL 30TMμ, 1910.

wera: Sir John Brickwood, the Her: Marque S. population, particularly in view of hip hood and tasure of the whole nation to back a

Earl Stanhope was the guest on April 6th at house dianer of the Authors' Club, and took part in a debate on "The Island Empires of the East and West." Sir Eobert Hamilton Lang presided, the Rev. Josoph Hammond accupied the vice-chair, and among those present Rickarde

the Rev. F. G. Given-Wilson, Cap tain Haswell, Dr. W. H. Best, Dr. Charpentier, Dr. Bernard Hollander, Dr. J. Campbell McClure, Dr. Hubert J. Norman, Dr. Robert Jones, Mr. Rollo Appleyard, Mr. J. O. P. Bland, Mr. A. Bruce-Joy. Mr. Sydney Brad

Mr. O. Barge,

gate, Mr. G. T. Broadbrister Cook, Hr. F. Hermit Kingdom and fears of Russian eneroach. ambition of Japan, and we ought to face it

Mr. Mowbray Marras, Mr. W. J. Morgan. | Australia and in North America, Japan was at With it would go Australia, India, Hawaii, the

The Chairman, la asking the members and guests present to drink Lord Stanhope's health, said that they looked forward to an address which might be described as an intellectual trost. The members of that Chab did not live by bread alone. They looked to have wholesome nearish ment for the mind. To him (the Chairman) the charm of the house dinners was that, added to a good dinner, they also had the feast of reason and the flow of soul. They enjoyed pleasant and genial intercourse and interesting and instructive discussions. The subject that night was of grost interest; it would treat of England and of that interesting country the Empire of Japan. Forty-two years ago Japan was siruply a congeries of different clans of Samurai, 275 in number, in constant strife one with another, and if not among themselves, then with the Lord Paramount, the Mikado. The country was in a state of semi-barbarism od under an antiquated fondul system. It was in 1868 that a small band of reformers planned revolution, which resulted, by the disinterest ed patriotism of the majority of the Lords, in a frank recognition of the supreme authority of the Mikaco, in theabolition of fendalism which had divided the country into factions, and, by the substitution of Constitutional Government under the Mikado, in welding the nation into an undivided whole. Little more than a generation had passed and that congeries of discorded elements became an Empire, a naval and military Power which not long ago defeat ed the armua and the Fleets, of the Colossus of the North and one of the civilised Powers of the world. Of what had passed ono ccald read in bocks, hat only a few were privileged to see the present condition of Japan. Lord Stanhope had recently visited Japan, but not as a globe. trotter. He went out with letters of introdas tion to the best of authorities on the spot, and was able to study thoroughly with a discriminat ing mind the:

to be aired at by ww. Imperial Council or by a when 100,000,000, more than half the human third Parlameritata.. he shuddered at race would alost our Lidiitrini, methods at 3d. euggesting a third Parliament in these days or 6d. a day and destroy the white mau's standard laughter was not ripe for ash proof livingaleers commercially because posals, but wis thould imata closer understand the Asistio would have all the. Advantages ing of each other and be careful to do nothing af godgraply added to cheap labout with to block any movement in the direction of Im communication and transportation; and it was perind Federation: Japan could point to many unsound politically because it proposed to cham- plan the temporary commercial interests of the causes aimellar to those which had given us our world-wide possessions. The spirit of Empire, United States in Asiatic coil, already domad the love of the set, were less. She had need of to diminution and decay; because it pledged the room for her surplus and rapidly. fact

that losing gate. He was sorry to ses the antag- North America and Australis had virtually onism aroused here by this proposal, because Great eles closed their doors to her emigrants. But the Britain and the United States needed to get principal cause of expansion had been the closer together rather than drift further apart. struggle for national existence. Korea was Anything which stirred up discord between the platol pointed at the heart of the Empire those two nations now was had Anglo-Saxon of the Rising Sun, Her war with Ching was politics. We wire all facing the same probleme due to the question of the control of the on the Pacific Ocean, and that was the Fox-Asiatic Mr. Robert Collfus, Mr. Blake Crofton, Mr. E. Wake Cook, Mr. J. 9.Dane, ments, and her struggle with Russis still more together. (Cheers) There was a tiras when a Mr. J. Mackenzie Fairfax, Mr. F. L. A. Gibbs, so Japan had acquired the protectorate of part of the Anglo-Saxon creed was that blood Mr. W. Oliver Hodges, Mr. Leonard Henslove, Korea, the possession of Formosa, a part of was thicker than water. The time had some Mr. Boland G. Hill, Mr. Charles Ince, Mr. Paul Saghalin, a lease of the Liao Ting Peninsula, to-day when we should have to carry together, ence and certain rights in Manchuris, Little wonder, if it was over carried at all, the white man's H. King, Mr. W. Tindal King, Mr. Lawrence Kellie, Mr. G. R. Kelly, Mr. M. J. Keans, Mr. therefore, that this sudden extension of territory bardan This English people should bonary leat B. Franichin Lisher, Mr. Heary Longmann, Mr. and of power, hacked as it was by the command the Anglo-Japanese Alliance handed over to Arthur Maquaris, Mr. George D. Meudell, Mr. of the Pacific, should be causing alarm in Japan the sapiensary of the Pacific Ocean. A. D. MeCormick, Mr. K. Vaughan

Mr. the parting of the ways. She had to deside in Philippines, and Alaska, and that gave the sup W. N. Medicott, Mr. F. W. Mitchell, Mr. the very near future whether she intended to romacy of the human race to the yellow man. Michael Morton, Mr. J. Mulvy Oussley, Mr. F. hold her colonies principally for her own good (Cheers.)

ENGLAND AFT&THETIC, J. Philps, Mr. Sutton Palmer, Mr. Harry J.-to adck then dry after our own colonial man

Mr. J. O. P. Bland, as one who had bean Shopard, Mr. George, H. Shepherd, Mr. Noel ner and that of most Continental Powers for H. P. Somerset, Mr. Seymour H. Stone, Mr. the benefit of Motherland-or whether she would exiled in the Far East, said that when England Pelham Tombe, Mr. F. B. Vroomas, Mr. Dudley govern principally with a view to their own bet-made the Alliance which had brought the Em- Wright, Mr. Gilbert L. West, and Mr. Algernon torment, and only indirectly for her own. In piros of East and West together the essentialiden Formoss she was faced with a problem very was that the two rations should work together Rose (hon, secretary).

for their common interests iu trade and for tho similar to that with which we had to grapple in Nigeria head hunters, desperate fanaticism, open door, which meant equal opportunities, and barbario customs of the utmost ferocity equal justice, and goodwill. The Alliance But was it not a little startling to find in the torminated in 1916 and its importance could not official reports the sentence: The aunihilation be exaggerated. We appeared now to bo of the Formosans proceda apace"! On the engaged in regilding the parish pump, which almost preciaded an intelligent appreciation of other hand Japan, had subsidised the sugar in- dustry at great oost to herself and with most what was going on, England made the Allianco benefcent results to her colony. The fact re- with the best of all possible objects, end for the mained that a white man could travel safely in time being it servod ite purpose, which was to save those large markets of the Far East for certain parts of the island when it would be rach of him to do so in company with a Japanese. In equal opportunity. All know how far that Kors, which must inevitably pass into her ab-purpose had been attained. Owing largely to solute control, Japan had built roads and rail the predominance of local questions in England ways,

,and was maintaining them at a considerable was had lost sight of the main object of the annual cost. But land had been taken from the alliance. The Japanese, like the English, were Koreans without payment, and the less said about Hable to error. They had faults, and we had. the method the insurgents were being dealt with But the Japanese bad not got party politice, (Fear, It was difficult bear.) The Japanese House of Poers could throw in all too many cases the better. to extract reliable evidence from Koreans out a Bill of the House of Commons and yet living in the country, and as there were restrlendbars itself to the people. (Laughter.) It did tions upon them leaving it but little was known sa recently and there was no question of ro of what was going on in that country. In Man- forming the House. The Japanese had not got churia Japan notainally held but the railway, Suffragettes," but they had got Protection. the talegraphs and the posts stationed along it (Cheers) The Japanese believed in the open Actually she was gradually noquiring a position door on paper, but they did not believe in being very similar to that wo so long held in Egypt. the door-mat-laughter) and speaking as an Would Japan utilise her position as we had done outsider it seemed to him that the policy of for tie boueft of that vast province, or would Great Britain in the Far East had been sub- she exploit it for her own private ends? China ordinated so much to old age pensions and other was anxions to build new railways to open up things that Great Britain in the Far East had this fortile territory-Japan feared this might become the door-mal. We should soon reach affect the takings on her South Manchurian 1915, when the Panama Canal would be open and Railway. The danger lay in the spirit the question of the rondwal or non-renewal of of commercialism which, with Western the Anglo-Japanese Alliance would bocorto a de- methods, had invaded Japan. Which was inito question we always shelved definito ques- to Provall that or the grand principles tions-andit soomed to him that it was the business still followed by many of of every intelligent Englishman, and particu of her leading men? Sir F. Piggott, in his in- larly of authors, to consider whether it was not teresting article in the Nineteenth Century, possible to have an alliance with a well-meaning said that if he (Lord Stanhope) studied the Oriental race under conditions which would Digest of our Law Reports he would find but obviate the supremacy of the Pacific. If that of the two countries. He would be considerably partnera proper results would be brought about. surprised if he found by thet study that mom. At present we allowed things to drift in the bers of both Houses of Parliament, even includ of something happening to relieve us of ing noble Dukes, had been seriously involved scandala snch as that of the Dai Nippon Sugar develop abaracter, but in our case it seemed to Refinery Company in Japan last year. (Hear, have developed fank. Dominions which were at bear. He was not quite sure that Japan had yet least intelligent would not follow a Mother realised that if she was to win the confidence of Country which did not know its own mind: It was, therefore, necessary to work to bring about Earl Stanhope, who was well received, said the subject races she must visit with oven that he was hardly worthy of such an honour as greater severity the shortcomings of her own a better understanding with Japan, but not by settlers, than those of the peoples over whom allowing everything Japanese to carry weight that of addressing the Authors' Club. The she held sway. Friends of Japan were auxions while we ourselves subordinated all foreign. Secretary was adamant. He (Lord Stanhope) that she should not eat her cake and have it too, questions to the immediata necessities of the received a most courteous, but most peremp that she should be considered in all respecte a moment. He believed that the Japanese Alliance tory, letter containing an unswer-paid wire-nation equally civilised with our own, They would be a good thing. For years he had been (laughter)-demanding an immediate reply as must not forget that there must be fundamental in the service of Japan, and during the war was Не was struck by to whether he would consent to be present there differences in the points of view of an Eastern in its Secret Service. that night. Every sort of consideration and and a Western race, that while there was the way in which the Japanese took it kindness was promised, and therefore he

the East there was also a reverso sile to anything found himself dragged from the backwoods-ery much to admire in the Empire of for granted always that England would accept (laughter) which the average Feer was

the medal, with which, if we were to ratain suppcead habitually to reside, and found him-

DAR own bight ideals, we could have no self standing before the dazzling brilliance of

part nor lot. Both Empires had great problems such an assembly. The subject of the Inland awaiting solution, ours that of consolidation, Empires was a vast one.

The Empire over Japan's that of whether her possessions were to which the Union Jack held away and the Japanese he managed on British or Continental lines. Empire had their headquarters each in a group Let them hope that an all-wiss Providence of islands. This fact produced immunity from might so direct their respective Empires, that invasion, and the brooding of a hardy, seafaring they might arrive at results not only beneficial race filled with a love of that very unstable to the peoples immediately concerned, but to element, the sea, and a love fer adventure. It the nations of the world at large. also made apparent to ench nation the fact that

A WARNING TO BRITISH POLITICA the command of the sea was essential to the

Mr. F. B. Vrooman said that he was not -deferee of the homeland. So soon as we had.

secured, for least a period, the safety of our representing the Author's Club in what he had to say, but G ter Britain on the Pacific own shoron by the defeat of the Spanish Arma

He honged to the Anglo-Saxon da, the love of adventure inbred in us had to find Ocean. frosh scope, and so we found our Drakes and frontier. He had lived along the whole from Honolulu to Skagway. He Raleighs exploring distant sess and bringing line home news of strange lands to fire their country lived, there, on the very edgo. not to say men to yet further enterprises. At this time the ragged odge, of the Japanese question and by stretching a figurs somewhat he sight also a yet further incentive was provided by the fact that England was becoming a many that he belonged to a bunch of buffer facturing cod. In the Eighteenth

and to acquire additional British between the Island Empire of the West outlets for her

and the Island Empire at the East. Spanking Cen

HOW TO BE BEAUTIFUL-Keep your com tury me were with our great rival, France for the Greater British ruce on the Pacific One of the two had to go nader, and to ralin. Ocean, he wished to atter a straight warning plexion, Mrs. Ellen's Creme Charinante, Lait quish not only her colonial possessions as ther that present politics and their tendencies were

likely to lose for ds the raustery of the Charmmat and Special Skin Tonio and Poudro were then considered, but her oversen trade, one and hand it over to an Oriental race, Charmant will enable you to do it. Thus we get another causa conducing to the

[467 acquirement of our Empire life and death He had not been surprised ut the general Specialities for the Skin are the study of a struggle for national existence struggle antagonien of Europe and Great Britain toward lifetime. A. 8. Watson & Co. Ltd., Side Agonte. often fought out in the far ends of the carth. the recent proposals of Secretary Knox for

master. Hobject he had travelled so far to little to choose between the commercial morality question were approached by the two nations" 08

thus give information from the spot, information carefully sifted and intelligently controlled The views of such traveller ware of exceptional valce, and he (the Chairman) would stand no longer between the members and Lord Stanbope, whose health ho asked them to drink. (Cheers.)

CONSIDERATIONS ON EMPIRE.

US

the mentralisation of a railroad in Man- charia, but he had beer surprised at the grounds on which the almcet universal strictures had been based. A writer in a recent magasine had compared the proposal with

Napoleon fung at the gibe that we

That were a nation of shopkeepers.

appeared to him the embittered romark of a disappointed man, disappointed at failing to achieve a great Celonial Empire. (Hear, hear) It was often said that trade followed the Flag, but it was even thrusting a ramrod into the clockwork. Perhaps a more trae to say that the king had followed bettor figur would have been thrusting a ther trade. (Cheers) Thus, in addition to the lovemometer under the tongue, for Mr. Knox had of adventure, the love of the sen, the struggle certainly found the temperaturg plave pormal for rustional existenco, they found rarning (Laughter.) Mr. Dillon in the last Contempor strongly as an undercurrent the necessity for a ary suggested that the "gramsliose suhome" for manufacturing country, a trading centre, of the neutralisation of Manchuria was a "dead- finding

outlets for trade. But this undercurrently blow aimed at Japan," intimating that the brought us near to a dangerons shore. Taught, blood and treasure spent by Japan and Russia

were a mufficient and final dissolvent for however, by the bitter experience of the War

in

of American Indopeudence the Colonies censed obligations towards an open dour entered into to be looked upon merely as possessions-lands in the Treaty of Portsmouth. He intimated to be exploited and sucked dry for the benefit of further that this proposal contained the seeds realine of world revolution, but nowhere suggested the Mother Country. It was that a fuller freedom ist now be given, and the quality or chometer of one of the seeds" England began to reach ent n wider concep. Indeed, he had missed the whole point. tion of Empire, Colonies managing their own Any searching oriticism of the Knox proposal airs and gradually developing into great self- must rest Yot on the ground that Japan had PRINTING☎rning Colonies. This brought out a fact of rights in Chinese territory which the white vast Import, the readiness of the self-governing rason had not, but on the round of the utter Nothing creates such a good impression in Dominions to come to the aid of the Mother futility of the scheme of Wall Street for com-

business as the use of First Class Printing.

Country in case of nood. 3f the Colonies were mercial aggrandisement on the Asiatic Con- not to be considered possessions of England the tinent. From the Atherican standpoint first of only alternative me that they must be a part all it was's blunder, and should therefore be of England, each art governing itself free of considered a blunder for Anglo-Sasoud plomacy control from the remainder, but sack taking a It was a shortsighted scheme industrially, com- share and a full share, in the ruling of those mercially, and politically-industrially because other parts of the British Empire, opt Crown it raised the whole question of the industrial. Colonies, and Dependencies. Whether this was awakening of Asis, and would harten the day

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responsibility. Responsibility Was said to

We had surrendered the supre- msey of the Pacific to the Japanese Fleet: The Japanese had got a very definite idea of what they wanted, and so long as we, their allies, ensomraged them with our capital and moral support they would naturally take advantage of their position. The moment we wished frankly and freely to consult with them as to our mutual interests he thought the Japanese would see that it would be for their own welfare, the pasice of the world, and the general welfare of humanity to follow out the open door policy, and until that day came he thought the Japan exe would be justified in carrying ont their present policy. (Cheers)

Mr. Paul H. King said that he was a grent believer in the four hundred millions of China, in their industry, intelligence, and patriotism, and be thonght that in the impossibility of enslaving them would be found the solution of many of the problems of which they had hoard. (Cheers.)

The health of the Chairman was drunk on the proposition of the Rev. Joseph Hammond.

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