Alarming
Results Hair Neglect.
THE HONGKONG DAILY PRESS, SATURDAY, APRIL 28ra, 1913.
of THE TEACHING OF GOLF.
ROOTS CHOKED WITH SCURF, BALDNESS ENCOURAGED, AND BEAUTY AND STRENGTH OF THE HAIR
ABSOLUTELY DESTROYED.
ACCEPT THE HELP OF SEVEN DAYS' FREE "HAIR-DRILL.”
The results of busir neglect are met abrmin-10 soys Mr. Edwants, the leading Couri Fuifel Specialist of the day. Rad Loventar o Harlene Hair-Drill regarding which he makes an extramlinary free ater.
Neglect of Hair Cuime me lately the abse fete loss of the hair's beauty and reagh.
More than any pair of your body your hair re quires capstan ore and arrestin
Firs, is a most delicate and sensitive structure.
This is shown by the fact that 'me's frequenly Guanes all the patient's hair to fall our
Secondly, it is rated by the most exposent partref
your body as feels the full
Stack of the desinerive
Terms which 66 the auṛM- phere.
THE DANGER.
The resate of unglacing to "Off" your hair daily is that peposits of scarf and greasy matter accumulate on your scalp.
Here they set up a dis cased condition of hair growing structures all squeeze the lair outs, so death.
Applied to scanty, thin hair, within a few weeks the lady or gentleman oì child who uses It is surprised wark the result.
** Harlene Hair-Drill" svinover scurf and prevents it re- forating, and stimulates the reals to healthy growing action.
It stops hair-fall, prezenta splittingŝat asds.
completely cures all forms of balduını, greyman, and hair-poverty, Yit it wuly takes two, lantas à day to practice.
To prove the value of Harlens Hair-Dell" to you, Mr. Lümmuda will send you a completa cunfit for practising
It-Free!
The Free Tral Onts to codes --
1. A trial boule of the world- famous Tonic Dressing for poor Hair-Edwards" Harlene."
A packet of the exquisite **Creides"-Shampoo Powder for cleansing the scalp, dis- saking scarf deposits.
3. A copy of the "Harlene Hair Manual, contain ing full directions for practising. 2 minutes daily Mair Drill Hare and Cranex may be sent direct, oh receipt P.O. busty under.
The alarming yersity of nixiecting to "dit your pied from all diemists, or
haic ari skozya alors,
The sympton is when your bale begins to split-af the end, which may happen withoot your being waar di
Then it becomes either day ared bristle, or greasy, dull and dead-bosing.
The third stage in the disorder generally is that your hair begins to lose its colour and rapidly name grey. The fourth age is aho Gulling one of your hair in Targe quantities every ine you li- coral it.
Father you ne probably tormented by an almost inisterable ching of the walp, due to the presence of irritating, greasy matter and decaying debris, in the hair follicles, while steadily your tir in getting worse; Kontier, dinner, and more unattende-looking every day.
These are the results of hair-neglect.
To este for sair hair properly and scientifically is to
easy, and its resulta are so gratifying,
Everybody Is heard of Hanlone Heiz-DL" Over a millan men and wonca practise il svery day trom Karyalay downwards
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The golf professional, says Mr. Filson Young in the Saturday Revicu, is a curious person. He is usually a member of the artisan class who has began life As a caddie, and who, probably to the grief of his parents, refused to fomake the links for any more disciplined and regular occupation; who nevertheless has survived physically and morally the loaf. ing years of caddieship, who has worked in a desultory way at club making, or rather also assembling, who has shown a definite aptitude for the game and gained an entrance into the envied ranks of the "plus" men, and who has ultimately got permanent employment as professional at à golf club. I am not speaking now, of: course, of the brilliant "few who have achieved at some time or other the open championship, but of the ordinary, work- ing professionals who are, unknown to anything but a local fame. It is these mon who are responsible for the so-called teaching of nine golfers out of ten; and a more haphazard, inefficient business it would be hard to find. To the innocent beginner there is something magical in the word "professional"; it is held to imply a knowledge of all the mysteries of the most mysterious game in the world; and because the professional can himacli play the game, it is taken for granted that he can also teach it. I have before mo six books on golf, all written by pro "femionals; and each book, in the part dovoted to un attempt to expound the proper methods of learning the game, contains the adico "put yourself in the hands of your professional'
Of every ten people who begin to play the game of golf I suppose that five pick it up for themselves, and arrive, by natural aptitude and practice, at a form which represents pretty well their full capability in the matter. Of the other live, perhaps one will seriously took untill he finds a really efficient teacher, and so in time achieve a good style and a decent game; the other four confdingly "pla themselves in the hands of their pro- fessional," and either give up the game in disgust as a consequence or else spend the rest of their gulfing life as confirmed slicers, topped, founderers, and more or less contented foozlers. I know it is a serious thing to say a word in criticism of a body of men who are held in almost. superstitions esteem; who are, moreover, for the most part, very decent, agreeable fellows. But I do seriously say that the average professional, considered teacher of golf-which is one of the things which he professes-is a complete though probably anconscious fraud,
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A heavily socketed stroke, accompanied by a faint crack sends the ball about thirty yards to the extreme left. The professional picks up the driver and examines its heel. I am afraid you have done for it," he says:-" "You came right down on it." The fracture of the driver is beyond a doubt. "I can put a new head on it," says the professional, "but of course it would be the same club, I tell you what I will-do; you had better have another driver, and I will fix this one up for you so that you can play with it, and keep it as a second one. Now I think we had better try some brassey shots." The same process is gone through again, all except the breaking of the club. Perhaps by this time the learner is chow-
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Let us consider what happens to the gulfer who places himself in the hands of his professional." You may see him about on the links in these early Spring days, accompanied by this same pro fessional and a caddie carrying a very new and expensive bag heavily stocked with clubs. For the first thing a pro fessional does is to fit you out with a bag of clubs." A part of his living, of course, is derived from these sales, and if he did his business honestly he would be much the best person to act as a begin- ner's adviser and provider. But ho understands the business of selling no better than the business of teaching. Instead of selling his victim one club at a time, and teaching him the use of that club and making him able to play with it, and so producing such confidence that the learner feels that it is these clubs, and these alone, with which he can play, he loads him at once with a full assort ment of mysterious implements. "Let me see," he says, estimating the enthu Biasin and purse of the victim with a hungry eye, you will want a driver, and a brasary to match it." His selects one of these; but the victim, preferring the polish and finish of another one, indicates a faint preference for that. "Yes, that's a good club, too," says the professional, and allows him to make his own ignored choice. Then you will want a clook"-- the poor wretch will not want it, and probably will soon earnestly desire to be without it and an iron, and a mashio, and & putter." The one club that a beginner probably wants to possess is a niblick, for he is attracted and reasured by its large surface. This is also chosen for him, and he feels that he is complete. "There's a beautiful club," says the pro- fessional, handing him a driving mashie;
you can get a very long, straight balling some dawning ability to hit the ball; with that. As the learner wishes to get but he never knows what he hit at The long straight bulls he buys it. Then professional never tells him that, although you want a jigger for running up," says it is the only thing worth koowing and the professional, and on this course a learning at golf. There may be any one bally is very useful; in fact you must have of a hundred roasons why he fails to hit it on this course, You won't want any the ball, but if he does it fairly it is more clubs." With a pair of gloves, a because he is doing something right; it tin of some adhesive substance, and is that something which it is so important box of half-crown balls (they fy much he should know. The pupil's grip, his farther than the shilling ones") the stance, position of his body and shoulders, victim sallics forth to the first tee, feel the action of his left arm and wrist are ing that the battle is more than half won, all wrong; and as he makes stroke after He raakes several attempts to hit the stroke the teacher draws attention now ball with his driver; the professional to one, now to another of these defects; gives him a few simple directions, and he never addresses himself to one at a tells him to take it easy, and not try to time in order to get it right. And just as neither way. Poor teacher, how can he hit the ball too hard. The first time that the pupil is getting dimly to understand teach who never learned 1 He picked his he misses it he ia told that he took his eye some of the first principles of handling golf up as a little boy, in the bright. off it; the second, that he raised his head; one club, he is put on to another that sunshine of some seaside links, trudging the third, that he moved his body; the requires quite different treatment, so his through the bonts with the other fourth, that be carce down on it, the fifth, mistakes begin all over again. At the gamuffins, with the noise of the sea in that he took his eye off it; the sixth, that end of the lesson he retires with a
his ears and the wind in his fave; he he fell over on to it; the seventh, that he aching body and a collection of hacked
never thought how the thing was done, took his eye off it; the eighth, that he went and gashed balls, and with an under- he just did it. And now that he is back too quick, and the ninth, that bo standing that if he would learn to play making a living out of his ability to do took his eye off it. How the professional golf, he must repeat this process con- it, he is called upon out of his own. could be sure of this, seeing that at the tinually with the professional, nad knowledge and experience en to converso moment the stroke was made, he was stick at it,"
Ho does stick at it, until with some stiff, middle-aged, sedantary interestedly watching an approach shot he is weary. The professional, feeling, gentleman that he also will be able to do by a scratch player, it is difficult to that there are no more sales to be effected, know; but the victim takes his word for grows weary also, and departs to some it. The professional then himself takes new victim. By this time the learner is the club, and saying. “You want to do convinced that it is his clubs that are it more like this," drives with lightning wrong, and goes secretly by himself to a rapidity a very satisfactory and agreeable shop and boys new ones. He is ashamed ball straight away for some two hundred to be seen by the professional playing and twenty yards. He likes it so much with them, so he avoids him; and this is that he does another, and another; the one of the many reasons why the pro- sensation of driving new half-eron balls fessional is a bad business man.
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it. No wonder that such teaching is a failure. You might as well ask some peasant from a eyard on the banks of the Rhone to teach French in an English academy of young ladies. The golf links of Great Britain are studded with the results of such teaching. recognico them anywhere-men playing stiffly, awkwardly, and anxiously, with the hands far apart, the left arm beut like
You may
off the tee being one which custom has not The teaching of a thing is a science staled even for the jaded professional, quite different from the performanes of how, the club overswung till it is pointing almost to the ground, the heels "Do it more like that, he says, and it. As a rule only a man can teach of their drivers marked as though with a reluctantly surrenders the club into the thing who has either learned it or who
puuch.
They are happy or unhappy, hands of the beginner, who by this time, has thoughtfully analysed and discovered according to temperament, but what they stimulated by admiration and the the principles which govern his instinctive are playing is not golf. The considera appearance of ease with which it is done, and natural doing of it. But thetion of what might have been done with is thirsting to have another lunge at it. ordinary golf professional is equipped in them must be left for another article.
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