1913-01-25 — Page 6

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Coughs and

Troubles

Lung

Angier's Emulsion has been prescribed by the medical profession sed used in the hospitals for the last twenty years and is now uni- versally recognised as the standard approved remedy for coughs, bronchitis, asthma, consumption and all forms of lung trouble. It is superior to other lung remedies because of its greater soothing and healing powers, in combination with exceptionat tonic and strengthen- ing qualities. Angier's Emulsion in soothing alike to threat, lungs, stomach and intestines, and it has a most invigorating influence upon the general health. It is pleasant to take, agrees perfectly with delicate stomachs, and improves appetite and digestion.

ANGIERS EMULSION

"The most valuable weapon in the fight against Consumption."

Pelham House, Pelham Square, Brighton. Dear Sirs,I have been suffering for several years from tuberculosis of the lungs and it is impossible for me to speak too highly of the extraordinary affect your pre- paration has had upon me daring this terrible condition. ' It has not only checked the wast- ing, decreased the cough, and lansoned, the irritation of the tubes, but has greatly increased my digestive powers, so that I have been able to assimilate a greater amount of nourishment. I sny distinctly (and the medical men who have been and are attend- ing mo hold the same opinion) that Augler's Emulsion is THE most valuable weapon in the fight against consumption. You may refer whomsoever you please 14 me.

(Signed) HILARY SHERBROOK

(Journalist),

ANGLER ONEMIGAL CỐ, Lên

80, Clerkenwell Road, London, End,

SWAN

Chemists.

FOUNT PEN,

DEFIES

HEAT

Its perfect fit and soientido construction

ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE preventing that annoying clogging and

FRED.

evaporation of the ink which attends the use of the old-fashioned dip pen or the cheap and nasty type of fountain pen. The Swan" has a perfect ink-feed, is fitted with gold nib iridium tipped, does not leak, and is easily filed and cleaned.

THE SWAN

SOLD BY ALL JEWELLERS, STATIONERS AND IMPORTERS

MABIE, TODD & Co.,

Manufacturers, LONDON,

ENJOY GOOD HEALTH AND

SPIRITS BY DRINKING

12

WOLFE'S

Aromatic Schiedam

SCHNAPPS

It is not only the most wholesome spirit obtainable as a stimulant for general use; it has a beneficial effect upon the liver, kidneys, and other organsas a pick-me-up, tonic or digestive. Wolfe's Schnapps is always opportuns, It is superior in every way to ordinary gin.

Agenta s

MacEwen, Frickel & Co.,

Hongkong, Canton, Macao, Swatow and

Amoy.

LIFE WITHOUT HEALTH 18 LIVING DEATH.

AND

VETARZONERVE FOOD

This remarkable compound, the latest discovery of modern times, is without equal in all cases of defective nerve and brain power, wisether Enduced by worry, overwork, dissipation, of other ukuences. Sleepiesmess palpitation, defective circulatiao, nervous dyspepsin, tie or low spirits, mental and bodily prostration, want of confidence, general debility, premature decay neuralgia, or deficiency of the vital forces, loss of vitality, harassing dreams, resilcamicas that can sette to anching, irritability of temper, female complaints, bysteris, backache, bearing down sensations, wasting discazes, consumption, night sweata, muddy, high-coloured water, fc., are all so many different phase of brain and nerve wreckage and exhaustion, the cause of by far the greater portion of the misery, i-health, and despondency by which we are confronted on every band, that can only be acccessfully combated by the use of this wonderful and highly scientific preparation. Bracing up the system generally, it give tone to the exhausted nerves, serests all weakenleg wasting discharges, restores the fkking tergies, and imparts new life and vigour to those who had no recently seemed played out, used sup mid vaipeless Bottles Price Rs."9"

WITHOUT PURE BLOOD HEALTH IS IMPOSSIBLE

VETARZO MEDICINE

Never before was there anything like it, nor can Its marvellous properties ever be equalled in ail cases of poorness, impurity, or other imperfection of the blood from whatever cause ariing. No sooner is it imbibed into the system than it permeates and penetrates to the minstest capil taries, overcoming and expelling disease, wheresöever and in whatsoever farm met with; removing al blotches, pimples, scuff, scurvy, serofious and glandolar swellings, discolorations, roughnes and unrightly patches, &c. Its elects urn almost magical in the treatment of gout, rheumatism, eintico, hu bago, paina nud swellings of the joints, discharges. hiood poison, eczema, lejon, psoriasis had legs, bad breasts, abscesses, is, wounds, sore goitre or Derbyshire neck, a improves the general health, and quickly removes long-standing bronchitis, asthma, and hackin Training, spasmodie cough, too often the precursor of consumption. Bottles Price 28. 9.

THE HONGKONG DAILY PRESS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 25TH, 1918.

103

·106-2

Jond stamped addressed envelope for three booklet, or P.O. 2/9 for trial bottlo'or sicher remedy, to THE VETARZO REMEDIES CO., GOSPEL OAK, LONDON. Unprincipled Vendore may try to sell you something else for extra profiti-do not accept it, but insist on having 1063- VETARZO. The genuinë has the words "VETÁRZO REMEDIES" on Government Stamp. VETARZO REMEDIES ARE SOLD BY, BOOT'S. CASH Chemiava.

EXTRAORDINARY SCENE IN A

CHURCH

DANCES THAT WOULD MAKE THE DEVIL

BLUON."

Since the Rev. Mr. Ward Beecher, to illustrate the evils of slavery, took a black girl into his pulpit and offered her for sale by auction, there has been, says the Now York correspondent of the Daily Telegraph, no such clerical melodramn in America as was enacted in Minneo- polie, when two chorus girls danced rag- time donoes on the platform of the pulpit of the Rev. G. L. Morrill, illustrating hig

Praise

Him with the Dance on on

"Most amazing dances were put on the boards by the chorus girls, and the con gregation fairly gasped. No matter how brazon, the dance was performed the turkey trot, the crab crawl, the tortoise tango, the jelly wobble, the angle-worm wiggle, the grizzly, the sea-sick glide, the Boston dip, and various other forms of terpsichorean monstrosity, some of which are still popular here,

** LIKE A PLAQUE.

"Then began Mr. Morrill's sermon, which was a long fervont tirado against rag-time dances of to-day-dances, he said, that would make the devil blush, and which would hardly be tolerated in hell, Mr. Morrill asked for legislation to fight the torpsichorean evils, which, he said, originated in low resorts on the Barbary coast, and were now weeping like a plague over Christendom.

The animal world is libelled," he declared, Mr. Bear and Mrs. Turkey were never guilty of such antics, and doubtless look with surprise and shame at the dances which bear their name, Why, even when one goes down street one can almost tell the youths and maidens. who attend dances where these rag-times ato popular. Their walk is a mixture of slide and wiggle, and it is shameful. You may think that as long as these Barbary coast dances are done among good people they are right, but they have brought damnation to many, and the music that causes all these contortions is among the greatest existing evils'

As the chorus girls gyrated, now and then a coin was flipped towards the pulpit, while the big organ of the church posled forth rag-time music to accompany the dances.

THE FATHER OF GOOD ROADS...

Seventy-six years ago died n man whose peculiar fate it was to leave & name which has mingled with the dust and been trodden under foot in unique fashion -to its owner's honour and renown. Yet while every one talks of "macadam and "macadamizod' roads, not one person in a thousand has ever heard the full naine of John London Macadam, Scotch- man, born in 1756, the greatest road reformer of modern times.

He came of a good Ayrshire family in mcderate cigcumstances, and when 14 years old was sent to the office of an uncle, Who was n merchant in New York. Young Macadam remained there for a number of years and during the Revolu tion did a thriving business as an agent for the sale of prizes. The outcome of the war left him nearly penniles. He returned to Great Britain, where for many years he held various small but honourable county offices. As a trustee of roads in Ayrshire he turned over in his mind various schemes for bettering the road system of the United Kingdom, and afterward, when he was appointed surveyor of Bristol roads, he carried out many of his plans at his own expense.

The main feature of his road-making: process was to form a bed of fragments of hard stone, none of which should be too large to pass through an iron ring two an a half inches in diameter. This stone stratum was to be from six to twelve, inches thick, covered with a finer surface material, and left to be worn into com- pactness and smoothness by the action of the wheels and hoofs that passed over it.

Macadam was 80 when he got his scheme fairly started, but he pushed it with such energy that before he died the whole country had adopted his system. Parlia ment voted him

of £9,000 a grant and reimbursed him for some £5,000 more which, he had spent out of his own pocket in experiments. He refused a knight- hood. He died on November 26th, 1836, in his eighty-first year.

Stone crushers and steam rollers have supplanted his more primitive methods. Yet the nineteenth century and the pre- 'sent as well owe to Macadam thom solid principles of country-road building which hardly more than 100 years ago began to offer relief from the incredible joltings and bemirings that made travel by road a horror in the good old days."

MANUFACTURING PAPER FROM

BAMBOO.

Scottish engineers have perfected plants for the manufacture of paper, on a large scale; from bamboo. On a site near Kagi (Japan) a factory has been installed with every requisite to deal in the first place with 300 tons of pulp per month, but with room for any development. In this case the pulp will be treated in Formos, and shipped in rolls or sheets to the paper. mills at Kobe just in the same way as the wood pulp of Norway, Sweden, Russia, and Finland is shipped to the United Kingdom to feed the British paper mills. It is hoped that in the Far East bamboo pulp will enable Eastern mills to compete with the British and America imported paper of the finer qualities. The process of manufacture from bamboo is a more expensive ons than that from wood. It is thought that experiments may cheapen the process, and the supply of the cane is practically inexhaustible. Moreover, the bamboo is a plant that can readily be cultivated. If any particular species is considered the best for paper-making purposes. It can. easily be grown in any quantity, Asia, Africa, America, and Oceania all have forests of it. For paper-making, the caue is cut into small pieces, of one or two inches, then boiled with sulphate of lime, bleached by electricity, washed, machine rolled and pressed into tissue form, and dried by steam.

CONSTIPATION.

The Cause of much Suffering.

When the Bowels are clogged the waste matter decays and ferments and enters the blood, and is carried to all parts of the body, producing Headaches, Biliousness, Sleeplessness, Heartburn, Loss of Appetite, Indigestion, Neuralgia, Rheumatism and various other ailments disturbing the Heart and Nervous System, and if continued is liable to cause inflamation of the Bowels, Liver and Kidneys. Nature often requires a little assistance, and if this assistance is given at the first indication much distress and suffering may be averted. Mothers, especially, should guard the health of their children, and inculcate regular habita from infancy. As a family remedy for Costivenesa, Dr. MORSE'S INDIAN ROOT PILLS have a wide reputation. They are mild in their action, causing neither weakness nor sickness and do not grips, and may be used by old and young, weak and strong.

They are a perfect blood purifier and a positive and permanent Cure for Biliousness, Indigestion, Constipation, Headaches, Sallow Complexion, Liver and Kidney Troubles, Piles, Pimples, Boils and Blotches, and for Female Ailments.

DR. MORSE'S' INDIAN ROOT PILLS are an efficient, reliable, and safc

all.

remedy, placed on the market at a price within the reach of The Pals being sugar-coated, arc to take, and pleasant to retain their full medicinal properties. They are packed in amber coloured bottles-not in cheap wooden or pasteboard boxes and are thes always fresh and clean, impervious to moisture. unaffected by climatic con- ditions, and do not deteriorate by keep- ing as all liquid medicines do.

DR-MORSE'S

INDIAN ROOT

FOR THE LIVER PILLS

For Sale by Watkins. Ltd., Wholesale and Retail Agents, and Chemists and Stores generally, at 60 cents per bottle, or will be forwarded on receipt of price by The W. H. COMSTOCK CO., Ltd.. (Sole Proprietors) 21 Farringdon Avenue, London, England.

They do not Weaken. They do not Sicken. They do not Gripe.

BY APPOINTMENT,

LEA & PERRINS'

Gives piquancy and flavour

to Meat, Fish, Curries, Poultry,

Salad and Cheese.

SAUCE

SAINT-RAPHAEL

Tonic, RestORATIVE, DIGESTIVE WINE

Very palatable.

Known throughout the world and prescribed in all cases of children Anamia, Debility and Convalescance, to vouno women and the aged. Invaluable in hot climates.

DOSE: One wine-glace after the two principal, menis. Each bottle of genuine VIN SAINT-RAPHAËL bears, in addition

to the registered trade-mark:

16 The WARRANTY. STAMP of the UNION DES FABRICANT).

(3) A ME FAL SEAL advertising OLEXEAS.

CLETEAS is a MELISSA and MINT cordiut

which surpasses all others by its purety and faultless preparation. To be taken on a lump of sugar. COMPAGNIE du VIH RAINT-RAPHAEL. Valence (Drome-France). AGENTS :—CALDBECK, MACGREGOR & Có, Ho%ckone.

I say

KEATINGS

LOZENGES cure the worst Cough.

Beetham's

Makes the Sk!). As

BOFT 48 VELVES, and keeps 11 SOFT, BMOOTH and WHITE all the your round Reasoves and prevents Roughness.

Reducis, Iriation. Tin, etci- COOLING AND REFRESHG DURING THE SUMMER HEAT

M. BEETHAM &ISÓN, FCHELTENHAM (W ENGLAND EA

The Original & Genuine WORCESTERSHIRE

92.3

DARLINGTON'S HANDBOOK.

"Sir Henry Ponsonby is com

manded by the Queen to thank

Mr. Darlington for a copy of his

Handbook."

"Nothing better could be wished for."

British Weekly.

"Far enperior to ordinary guides.-

Daily Chronicle.

Visitors to London should n

DARLINGTON'S

"A brilliant book."-The Times. LONDON Pastionlarly good."Academy

AND

BY E. C. COOH and Enlarged Edition E. T. Cook, MA.

50; ENVIRONS.

24 Maps and Plans 60 Illustratione,

NORTH WALES. 60 Hinstrations,

DEVON AND CORNWALL

10 Maps 68.

20 Ilustrations. 12 Maps: 68. Visitors to Brighton, Eastbourne Hastings Bournemouth, Wye Valley, Severn Valley Bath, Weston-super-maro, Malvern, Hereford Worcester, Gloucester, Llandrinod Wells Llangollen, Aberystwyth, Towyn, Barmouth Dolgelly, Harlech, Criccieth. Pwlhelli, Llandudno Rhyl, Batwey-coed, I la of Wight and Chedral Islands should end for DARLINGTON'S HANDBOOKS 18. ash.

18. THE HOTELS OF THE WORLD.

A Handbook to the leading Hotels throughout the World..

LLANGOLLEN DARLINGTON & Co., LONDON: SIMPKIN & Co.

暴新外中沿零

RUNG NGO1 SAN PO (Chinese Daily Press),

PUBLISHED DAILY.

In the oldest and still immeasurably the best Advertising medium among the Native Community. Established for over FIFTY YEARS Circulates largely throughout Southern China Indo-China, ole.

Terme for Advertising (Translation) free can bó obtained at the Office, 10a, Des Voeur Road Central, Hongkong 131, Fleet Street, Londen or from the different; Agents:

Documents translated from or into Classian or Colloquial Chinos

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