WOMAN'S
FEAR HER HAIR.
THE HONGKONG DAILY PENSS, SATURDAY, MARCH 151, 1918.
FOR
THOUSANDS OF READERS ALL OVER THE COUNTRY AFFRIGHTED AT EPI- DEMIC OF FADING AND FALLING HAIR.
Writo To-day for this Presentation Half-Growing Toilat Outāt and Save Your Hair Before Too Lato.
from all over the country come reports of an epidemic of fading and falling bait."
Women as yet at the chiefrit sufferete, but men and even cluleren are likewise
afccted.
Thousands of readres are finding
that their hair i
1osing its elasticity.
Becoming battle.
Spitting at the end,
-Losing a gun and lustre.
Becoming faded and grey,
-Falling vet Bendy a hand-
fels.
Further, the young growth of the hair (and young buit is for ever grow- ing to replace the old is being tied just a fra nips off the tender shoots of plants and nice.
Forinniely these disaster: Cind kams they literally are a he prevented
Women need for for air air
Schip, El Bhampso Powder which therooghly clean the seals frous Scurf and simulates Hingrowing powers of the hair-rests,
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-Total, Partial or Patohy Bald-
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Too Grensy Hair,
- Loss of Gloss, Lustre, Colour, -Faltar atr
-Irritation of the Scalp,
-Saurf Accumulations,
| Gracious 2 likals areng with my Air-Too Dry & Dritio Hair,
no langer, se Head men, ma redit cents out in sandrule is hard-Splitting at the Ends,
parents tra for this choice
out if son what was gay.
S-Thin, Poverty Stricken Hair,
A ready to tos prescrit etemic hundreds excite as shey Crack their hair letennd Eremex may be olaines
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Below there is printed a coupon.
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REVIEWS.
The Stranger in the House. By ANTHONY
DYLLINGTON.
Werner Lendon T. Laurie, Ltd. Written throughout in a minor key and with a remarkable economy of words, this tragic tale takes firm hold of the reader, and carries him, with fascinated interest, from the opening phrase to the last page, a willing prisoner of the author. It is cleverly runsteneted, with three or four strong characters, yet she who may be styled the central figure is merely suggested and ap pears in the flesh, so to speak, only in a few pages of the narrative. Two consins are in love with the same girl, the playmate of their youth. She prefers Sir William Quarrendene, and the story opens with the other, consin, Roger, in conversation with their old Irish nurse, a few hours after the The lovers have left marriage ceremony.
he motor car for their future home. An nécident demirs. The bride Bes at death's door, while Roger speeds with a celebrated surgeon and the old nurse to her aid. Her life is saved as if by
The Sotakar or Wise Sayings of Bhartrikari. Translated from the Sanskrit (with Notes, and an Introductory Preface on Inulinn Philosophy). By J M. KENNEDY. London: E Werner Lauris, Ltd.
Those of our readers who have read Mr. Kennedy's hook entitled "The Religions and Philosophies of the East" will welcome this volume, which, wo learn from the Publisher's Note, is the first of a new series of transla tions from the masterpieces of Oriental Philosophy and Literature. The volumes of the series will deal with Jadian works, but Jater on, wo are pleased to learn, translations will be published of Persian, Arabic, Hebrew, Chinese and Japanese works, and as the price of each volume a moderate a wide field
study will he opened up for those who have any desire to become acquainted with the philmophical and ethical systems of the Oriental rates. -
Bhartrihari, about whose "period" there is apparently great diversity of opinion, for some think he flourished in the eighth or fath.century A... while others assert that
it
INDIGESTION.
not the quantity of food we eat, but what we digest and assimilate that nourishes the body. When the stomach and organs of digestion and nutrition are diseases, and the food caten is unly imperfectly digested, there is so U merrition, and the bedy loses strength as a motorral consequence. Not only does she, system suffer from tack ot cunirishment, hut ilie derangement of the guns drunk Hvitlily card" further complications. Indigestion is gost prevalent source af Causes disordered liver, and prth Chemie Dyspepsia.
of constipation, whic
which in its turn
you become burilèned invariably arises
To improperly prepared food, husty cuting or indulgence, fatigue, and exhaustion during the la weather, breathing out air, vecessive brain work, isid mare frequently from cures and worry which exhaust of digestion the nervous force and weaken the organs Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills are safe, Bare, and reliable remedy for simulation of food at in is mild all stomachic complaints. They aid in the digestion and gentle manner regulate the ayer, restoring the weak and dyspeptic to health and strength. They give. you clean bowels, healthy stomach, a lively fiver, active kidneys, and blood that is rich and red.
They are perfect Blued. Purifier and a prukiva and permanent us for Alliancan, Fadigestion, Constipation. Badactics, Salow Costplexion, Liver vid lääney: Troubles,, Piles, Pioglos, Itotle und Bischer
DR MORSES
and der Femde bimestre miracle, but her whole he lived as early as the second century, wa nature is changed. From a gentle lady, sho
the son of King Candliavason of Malwar is transformed into something inhumau. Upon ascending to the Throne, he is ropated And the story deals with the agony of huo have led for seven years ne indolent and band, the agony and anxiety of Rogor, und this mystery of Viva. There is worked into the story a glimpse of a digenerate ariete crat and his imbecile son-a truly pathetic episode, all in the same minor key of the main story. Flow it all ends must be left to "The Stranger in the reader to find out. the House" is the new spirit which possesses
Tiva.
The New Gulliver and other Stories. By BARRY PAIN. London: T. Werker Lauric, Ltd.
licentious existence. One day he found that his favourite wife had deceived him, where upon his life suddenly changed, and he nght relief in devotion and meditation. The three Sakatas--the Nita Sataka, the Vairagya Sataka, and the Sringga Sataka ̈ aro a collection of aphorisms bearing, more or less, upon human life and the haven of the soul. In the translations as they are
to presented
that ns, it is evident Bhartrihari experienced all the emotions to which the human soul is subject, that be it would be presumptuous and superfluous passed through the fires of tribulation and to commend Barry Pain to the English the sorrows of a man of vivid imagination, and out of his own experiences he seeks to speaking-race. He is one of the most furi-point the way to overlasting peace for these liar of our modern writers as well as one of troubled souls which seek a haven of rest the most industrious. The New Gulliver, from the trials and difficulties of human Mr. Lemuel Gulliver, junior, is shipwrecked, existente. There is, as Jir. Kennedy points and swims ashore to the Island of Thule,
out, some reserablance between the Sringa where he finds a new race of people. Mr.
Stoke and the Song of Solomon it will Paiu draws a highly imaginative picture be found highly-favoured pabulum for some and makes it interesting; but, somehow,
re ders; but, on the whole, there is much we feel that he is not so happy in this as he
in Bhartrihari's philosophy to stir the has been in other efforts. In a Landon imagination ul those of us who wore nurtured Garden" is altogether delightful fooling: on Biblical teaching and whose daily con and Zero," the story of the wonderful
diet, whether we are willing to admit it or presience of a bull-dog, is one of the bast
not, is guided as much by the Mosaic law things he has done. Pathos mingles with
and the Christian doctrines as by the worldly "The humour in "When I was King"
wisdom arising out of our own experience. Choice is tragic and yet seems natural;
It is only by studying such works that we while The Satyr" and "The Piano-
are likely to understand, even imperfectly, Tuner are both pleasant little tales. There
the underlying influences of the Asiatic is plenty of variety in this collection—
races among whom we live and move and something to suit every mood.
have our daily existenco
The British Review. (February Number). Edited by RICHARD JOHNSON Walker, London: Williams & Norgate.
1
The promise of the January number is more than fulfilled in this, the second, amu- ber of The British Review." It is only fitting that a monthly which incorporates the old Oxford and Cambridge Review should have a strong academic flavour; but it is none, the Jass readable on that account. International and domestic politics, an episode in the Baikan war, the fiscal question, poetry, spiritualiam, romance, theatrical criticism, the Editor's Obiter Dicta, and reviews and correspondence compose. strong dish. for most appetites, but not too heavy for the man who wishes to keep himself abreast of modern thought and modern movement in the Old World. Mr. Francis McCullagh, who is well-known in the Far East, gives a graphie account of how be became A Prisoner of the Bulgars. Incidentally, we learn how it is that the Bulgarian advance in Thrace has beer so successful and how it is that the Turks have failed so lamentably
There is in the present campaign. piquancy in Mr. Hilaire Belloc's article on Fiscal Reform That gentleman entered Parliament as Idheral while still a writer in one of the leading London Conservative dailies; but, like Mr. Harold Cox and a few others, he was unable to see eye to eye with any of the party leaders; so finding no place in Parliament for the man of independent views he did not seek re-election. He is one of the best travelled, best informed and most versatile of present-day writers,.and it is not astonishing, therefore, that he makes his article on Fiscal Reform interest. ing. He regards a change in the fiscal system of Great Britain as inevitable, and proceeds to marshal his arguments with clearness. He scientific precision and maintains that four conditions combined to prepare public opinion for a change, and his first contribution deals with "The desire for a British Stato-to include what the somewhat rhetorical term of the Heralds calls the 'Britains-Over-Sess." There are three articles on the Irish Question. The first, by A Child of Uister," seeks to justify resistance to Hame Rale; the second, by Father Joseph Keating, discusses The Ethics of Resistance"; and the third, by Richard Fitz Walter, is "A Plea for a Parley." Maurice Howlott contributes The Soul at the Window," a characteristic piece of writing, and G. Egremont, in. "Majorie," describes in glowing terms a bush-fire episode in Australia. Some Light on the Mystery of Evil" is the spiritualistic. item; but we doubt whether it will help to illuminate the minds of those who are grop- ing after the elucidation of the greatest of all mysteries. We have not mentioned all the articles. They are all readable, and not least interesting are the Editorial contribu tions.. We look forward to the remainder of Mr. Belloc's articles on the fiscal question, for this is one of the political questions of the day which ought to be considered dis. passionately and thoughtfully, without party bias, if the best interests of the British Empire are to be maintained.
By GERTRUDE ROBINE. London: T Werner Laurie, Etd.
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