1915-10-19 — Page 6

Daily Press 孖剌西報 All

Ceather Falmer &&

“V the Casi

The Wine Merchany of

INAPIER

JOHNSTONE'S

"SQUARE BOTTLE"

WHISKY.

UNVARIED FOR OVER

150 YEARS.

THE SAME TO-DAY AS IN 1745.

BEWARE OF IMITATIONS!

SOLE AGENTS IN HONGKONG LANE CRAWFORD & CO.

and from ALL WINN MERCHANTS.

[64-

SCALES AND DANDRUFF ON HEAD

Baby's Head a Mass. Night After Night Was Sleepless. Itching Burning Pimples Spread Over Face. Used Cuticura Soap and Ointment. Now Well Again,

King's Cottager, Hale, Nr. Brucking, Northants. Eng.--"When my baby was five months old his head became a man of ́ecales and dandruff. Then on his face came

red plmylos running clear Night after nighti

ater.

was zicopters, we could oot get rest with him and his hand had to be glove) to prevent hasratching. The plimples caused itching and burning. They told me it was eczema. It began -to sprend all over his face.

Ho suffered seven months and was a drond- ful sight so that I was zshamed to take him out.

“Treatment did no good and it began to spread all over his face. I tried all sorts of pintosent which failed to do any good and i got worse stad of better. So I aw an advertisment of Cuticura Bosp and Oins- ment sad at once i seint fór s ziple. After the first dreading the itching and burning disappeared. Used Cuticura Boap and four boxes of Cuticurs Ointment and now be is well again.” (Bigood) Dire. W. ßhep- pard. Jan. 24, 1914.

Samples Free by Post

Cutler Boop and Oatment are sold everywhere. A single zat is often sufficiat. Bample of each with 32-0. Hin Book fren from nearest depot. Addrám: F. New bery & Sons, 27, Charterhouse 8q.. London. or Potter D. & C. Corp., Boston, U. 8. L

Isay

KEATINGS LOZENGES

cure the worst Cough

MARTIN'S

SAPIOL ESTREL

RZEPILLS

[68-4

A Fransk Famaty fap als Truncularition

20

des of say Treaquiarity of the system A Bodily does may be administered. Those who ARA KERAS PAROtamnă, kham, hanes thalianar.. more sale. All clientele und Stores will buon

EZLETEI, Chemin), Bruthainsson, Eng

• MARTIN'S

SAPIOL &STEEL acton PILLS

GRIMAULT'S

SYRUP

OF

VISITORS AT HOTELS.

HONGKONG HOTEL.

Mr A. Adlor Mr Gea E. Anderson Mr & Mrs F. X. d

A'omada e Castro

Missd Almada e Castro Master d Almada o

Castro

VrJ H Back-we Mr J. d. Baring Mr B Murray in Me R. K. Batchelor Mr. E Betkios. Mrs E. B. Belilion Mr C. D. J. Ball Mr&Mrs E. Barnheim

and child

Mr G. Boumas Mr B Brodsky Mr J P. Browse Mr & Mrs R. D. Buna

and abold

Mr & Mrs R J. Carter

and children

Mad. Cozile Mr H.-Chetham Mr C. Champkin

Mr P. H. Cobb

Mr. ‹ollot

Dr W. H. Dade

Mr & Mrs F. E Davis

Mr F. S. Dougleg

Mr & Mrs R. K.

-Douglass

Mr J. M, Dor niton Miss M. E. Duity Dr G. H. L Fitz

williazzo

Lísat. Comdr. & Mrs

V N, Gascoine Mr. J. Gibb

Mr J. Gould

Mr V. Gouldbourn Mr & Mr W. Hannibal

Cupt T. P. Hall

Hon. Mr E. A. Howati

0.1.0.

Mr W. J. Hodge Mr LG. Holgate Capt Hopcrofi MJ.SC Hant Mr Robert Hunte Capt 1. Inness

ET R. B. Jopaon Mr E. M. Joseph M› E. F. Jabson Mr Y. Juzumi

·

THE HONGKONG DAILY PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19TR. 1915.

Me F. G. Jones Mr A. M. Kirby Air & Mrs S. B. Knox Mr C. I auriteon. Alr G. T. Lloyd

MS Longfield

Mr & Mrs W. Alining Dr & Mrs O. Marcion Mr G. Mavor Mr S. M. Mayas

Mr D. McMurray - De G. M. McKean Mr J. Merooki

Mr B, K. Mehta Mr H. Moldra Capt H. E. Morton Mr W. Moore Mr & Mr W.

Neighbour

Mr A, Mesim Mrs Niss m

Mr J. Ormiston

MrJar Ormiston Pats by

Mr T

B.

Mr H. H. H. Prías log

Mr A., P.tober

Mr E A. Pritchard

Mr & Mrs

Kaymond Mr. Kay Miss F. Rey Ars C. Bood

E M.

Mr & Mrs J. R Shaw

Men Shocker

Mr V Sorby

Mr C. H. Spitiles

Mr H. H. Taylor Mr & Mrs W. M. Tobia Mr&Mra W. S. Toller

Mr C Trimm MrB Waiten Mr T. Watanabe

Mr C. E. Wakkinn Mr W. r. Wenyon Mr H. Willemse Mr J. Wilkin Me . G. Word Dr & Mrs Liudnay

Wcoi

King Boward Hotel.

Mrs B Almond

Mr J. P. Barnes

Mr W. Budge

Mr & Mrs T. 8. Chong

Mrs F. L. Cooke

Mina J. F. Coolce

Mr & Mrs Kuhn..

Miss Lambden

at W. U. Lee

Mr Lernor

Mr E. C. Norris

Mr D. A. Maoi od

Masters G. M. J. F. Mr.J. Manning

Cooke

Mr J. H. Cook

| Mr A. Jonryo

Mr J. H. Davison

Mr R. G. Deane

Mr F. F. Duckworth Xr W. T. Elson

Mrs C. Foo

Mr F. E. Fraser

My C. Frits Mru Goo

My T. M. Gregory Mr E Grieve

M. T. Guan... Mr & Mrs Hammes and

children

Me J. H. Holm

Mr & Mrs Wo.

Jackson

Mr T. B. Jones Mr J. Joseph Mr D. Lambden Mr K. C. Loo

Mr V. Moyer

Mr H. Murphy

Mr & Me Nowmsu

Mrs W. C. Pammore Mri R. A. Rammy Mr O. E Richard son Mr Robson

Mr L. R. Sawyor

Mr E. M. S'elga

Mrs D G. Smith

Mr C. H. Soper

Mr H. E. Stoneham

Mre d. Sylvester Mr H. C. Faylor

E. Taoraton Mrs E. 1. Toartelisi Mr & Mrs J. B Underwood

Mr D. H. Wachell. Mr & Mrs J. Witchell

Mr Wong

Mr A. Youngeon

JEAK

HOTEL.

Mr W. Armstrong Mrs Bowdler" Me a Mr. L'arminnaal Mr F. W. Cary

Med Mrs C. D.Carulli

Lt & Mire Cooney

Mr & Mrs A. Consland

CoL Darling B.E. Mix Denman Fuller' Mr & Mas Dobie Me & Mm B. A. Hais Capt & Mrs Hammond

sad child Mr & Mrs

Janan

Mr B, W. Hind

Mr Lee Jones

W. T.

| Mrs T. J. H. Johns

974

M. Lembelst

HYPOPHOSPHITE OF LIME

FOR

STUBBORN COUGHS

BRONCHITIS

WEAK LUNGS

CATARRH

CONSUMPTION.

Major Morgan

WEATHER REPORT.

On the 18th at 11.55 am-Pressure has in- areasel moderately over the Loochoos, and, with exceptions, bas decreased lightly to moderately over the remainder of the aron; it is highest to the N.D. of Japan.

south of Tokio; the southern has entered the The northern depression has mored to the

At nam Coast to the north of Tourant, and in al ng up.

Hoogkong rainfall for the 24 h are ending at 10 m. to-day, 4.28 inches.

The forecast for the 24 hours" ending at noo to-day is as follows com

Dierilor.

* Hongkong & Neighbourhood

Formosa Chazinsi

FORECAST

*** to moderate.

South coast of China between; The same n

Hongkong and Lamooks. 1 No. 1. South court of China betweenƒThe same g Hongkong and Hainan.. { No. 1. loud and S.F. winds, light to moderata; cloudy, driss ing rain. Wind freshening and weather improving later.

CHINA

Station.

CHINESE MUSIC.

Oh for a burst of song Exultant, deep and strong,

F.R.H.

of

To reform miners and change

customis There is nothing so good as. Music.

CONFUCIUS.

corner

When a gang of men are raising any great weight and it is necessary that all should put forth an extra effort atia oir- tain moment, the head man sings a few boas of music without words, and the men know just when to reply with a heave.** Then they rest while the louder yodels again, and then heave again, till they get the load into its place.

whether of organ, Western music, melodeon, or concertina will always draw a crowd of Chiness; but our music does emotions. not yet touch the deepest chords of their

And in this themes a marked kinship of When eight or twelve meni ars carrying feeling, though, of course, greatly a heavy coffin, and it is necessary for modified by the limitations of the their own comfort that they should keep instrument.

step, the first man sings a dirge:---* :* The second theme: "Coafucius com.s.mi.r. :d::His words notify the me One wave of Music's billowy might posing the Book of Changes," is more at the back the condition of the road; To bear my soul away,

abstruse in character, and its interpre where there is a hole or a bump; a rut Into the realms of day,

tation less evident, but it gives the im- or a puddle, a bridge to cross or From these dim glacier-caves pression of grout labour and conce to ture; the aspect of the sky, or the

Life's cold night.

Fration of thought.

length of the road. The main at the back Though the opportunities for hearing reply in the sains mournful tones, what may call Chinese Classical Music are very fow, we have every facility for becoming acquainted with that which Morning and enters into every-day life. evening, at dawn, and dusk, we hear the It is not interesting to find this bond chime of bells and boom of drum from of sympathy between Miss Havergal and the temples, and we know that the priest Confucius? Across an interval of 2500 is making his round of the idols, lighting years and a distance of 8,000 miles; in sticks of incense, bowing down to spite of all the progress in education and ground, and tapping the bells hanging N. winde, light development of social life that accentuat the side of the shrine to call the aves the contrast between then" and attention of the god. On the eve of the chamacteristics that differentiate the Eug deal more ceremony is used, as they are "now" and in spite of the racial first and fifteenth of each month a great

Curiosity is always excited lish and Chinese races-music and poetry the periods for Opening Hell." Drum

by the new and the strange; and link together henshen philosopher and ming begins with a long, slow bout, and Christian lady. Can we say, then, that

of harmony, holds the field of the senses; continuous roll. Then suddenly it stops | while" the musical faculty pronounces these Chinese are of goal kinship with the gradually quickens until it becomes a curiosity, excited perhaps by the novelty. The power of song is well with an emphatic bang, followed by approval on the new instrument and says English! known among Western nations, and music or three strokes on the great bell.

it sounds well.' holds a prominew place in public life, pause, then the slow beat begins as The boys and girls of our schools who in the worship of the sanctuary, az social before.

are being trained in the new notation, gatherings, and at military parades. But

and becoming familiarized with Western can it be said that music has such rogue in China? Are the Chinese musical ?"

festivals at the important city temples, musical instruments, will in time become Contradictory answers might be given when a good trany priests are in attend susceptible to the influence of unsic as their more highly favoured brothers and to these questions. Those who have been once, the sound of continuous chanting sisters, in Christian lands, and we may

by present at a Chinese theatrical perforis heard, accumpañiad gentle music mange, whose cars have been almost from hand-gongs, small bells, and he hope that the soul-stirring melodies and deafened by the clang of cymbal, bang shells of hard wind struck by a small Cospel songs of modern evangelistic of gong, and boom of drum, might reply olapper. The instruments vary in pitch, campaigns will find yet a wider field for winning spiritual victories. Already they If noise constitutes music, then un but blend into & pleasing harmony.

have begun to make good."

W. L. KNITE... doubtedly the Chinese are musical. Buddhism in Western China knows no- But even missionaries, and those of them thing of congregational worship. If thereChurch Misionary Resiew: who should be best qualified to give an are any of the public present on these opinion, men and women with musical occasions, it is as spectators that they souls, with ears trained in the harmonies are there, and not as worshipper®, of Bethoven and Mendelssohn, having heard, perhaps for the first time, a Chinese congregation singing a hymnu which in English as a wealth of tender associations, might with lacerated nerves emphatically protest that the Chinese are no musical. As the heathen Chinese have irreverently described such singing dogs-howling, perhaps These musical missionaries bave a right the shooked.

COAST METEOROLOGICAL

REGISTER

18TH OCTOBEL AM,

Vladivostock... Namaro

Hakodata

Tokio YAR

Nagaanki

Kagoshima

Ugnimas mokast

GLIBC

Mar 14, Lahi'yma donin l. insom Chefoo

Wandiwor

·HALLOW Ichang

Kinking, Changsha Shanghai...

LUTHIKË

*200 FT

Wina

Barometer

** Eru · Level.

*emperature.

Humidity.

Wenthar.

Digiction

Foren

7 a

a. 29.18

30.09

#

» 2981

1 2984)

29.91 39 90

29.87

21,81

i, 29.89

29.89

29.90'

29.93 64 29.9

Sharp d'unk ... Amuy

25.68

faiboks....... 5.29.84 73 96

Faicin toda Talent

*80 75

2

2981 77

291 15

L'Osona.com

Unto

nongkong

Ung Boas N YLROAD

Wachow

PREGOL

l'auben

Touran,

Capo sit. James

Aparri

Д

Dagupan

Legaspi

Tasioban

Mr & Mrs a£ons and

anita

Mr MacGowan and

obrid.on

Mrs Olineoraba

– Me 15 J. Parkins

Mr & Mis J. Plamme MIT Ú. SKULL

Mr & Ates Grant

Imita

Mr & Mrs A. Findlay

Smith

Caps & Mrs Stewart - Mr G. E. Stewart

Mr S. Steckmost ·· Men W. E. Tisdal} Mr G. Tisdall

Mr J. A. Traba

Mrs V. Mar tin and Maj-Gen. Ventria

shildren

GRAND HOTEL

Mr W. Lawrie

Mr E. M. Abbɔit

Mr G. Angelo MrJ. U). Anker

Mi C. R. Arnott,”

Mr O. H. Booth

Mr E. **. Britt Mr A. B. Grow Mr A. Danrich

Mr P. 9. van Dyk Mr C. J. de Grann Mr K. B. Hassel Mr F. G. Mama Mr B. James Mr & Mr Johnston

and children Mr J. de Klerk

Mr J. Manteiro Miss G. May

Mr P. Philipp

Mr C. W. Reynolds

Mr E. Ryan Mr J. Smith MrJ. K. 8. Stanton Mix & Mrs J. B. Stobo

Mr G. L, Stockwall Mr H. F. Thorig Mr Veon W. B. Van MaE J. Wels Mr & Mrs C. E.

Whiting Mr B. 8. Wright

DIRECTORY

OF

|PROTESTANT

MISSIONARIES

FOR

CHINA, JAPAN AND

On Sale at the

COREA.

Maula ENG

27.79 7595

in 29.19

29.79

*976 75

2|"Î`II = " ལ ཻ FLLL『K,Žrསྒོ

བ}+།།་ས་5

0

49.18) 7996 www 2 >

29.79 7582

78 7799

DE

|29.76′ 77 | 95 | SEW

Let it be granted that the Chinese are not so susceptible to the influence of sweet scunds as the old Indy on Aniwa, New Hebrides, She was so enraptured with the music, drinking it in at every pore, when Mrs. Paton played the organ and sang to her, that running off she brought all the women and girls of the bokis sing" and ever village to hear the afterwards there was no trouble to get them to attend classes. The power of music had brought them to give heed to the good tidings of God.

song.

sure

A

This continues for half an hour or more. In large temples which are used as monasteries, and on special

Among the prominent characters in a Chinese city are the blind fiddlers. Besides being musicians they are also fortune-tellers. Many of them are quite accomplished performers, but as each one has his own special tune which he plays incessantly it is natural that the execution of that piece should be perfect. Considering the instrument on which they perform, it is wonderful what music they can produce.

Its neck

A WOMAN'S LAUGH.

MR. KIPLING'S PARIS IMPRESSIONS.

Mr. Rudyard Kipling has written twò letters of characteristic insight to a French friend in Paris, one before his recent visit to the French front and one after.

"1

"What strikes me most," he writes, while passing through Paris on the way to the Army, is a certain look in the eyes of the women; not a dreamay look but one of realisation, as if the eye had grown accustomed to greater distances. Another strange thing I heard a laugh that has not been heard, I suppose, sinco the Revolution, the guttural laugh of a woman of the people telling some story of the killing of Germans. It was after she mentioned the number killed that sho Laughed like that.

"What a wonderful day of commemora tion of dead the English and Frenols will have in common each year in future! I onn imagino boatloads of pilgrims coming over for that celebration. Nothing inte reated me more then to see our soldiers in France and the real harmony between your men and ours."

was.

AMERICA'S WAR ORDERS.

The Chinese fiddle differs very widely from the Cremona pattern. Its body is a section of bamboo about two inches in diameter and four or five inches long; one end is covered with snake skin stretched very taut, that is the sounding board; the back is left open. is a bamboo stick half an inch is diameter and two feet long, which fits into holes cut in the body, and projects little to form the tail pin. At its upper end it is furnished with two large The wooden pegs to tune the two string. The Chinese are probably as richly bridge is a small piece of wood or bamboo just large enough to raise the stringe endowed with emotions as other races. Some of these emotions lie near clear of the sounding board. The strings. the surface and easily stirred; are of twisted silk, and both may be of athers lie

ara deeper,

seldom the same thickness, as the difference in manifested, and remain

their being of unknown pitch is gained by

A piece of string except to those whose acquaintance with different lengths. the people is long standing or intimate, encircles the two strings and the neck. It would be making far too sweeping at a little below the pegs and acts as the statement to say that the Chinse are not end of the finger board. musically inclined, or that they are im pervious to the influence of music and It must be borne in mind that, as there is an immense difference between the musical instruments of the East and the West, there must also be a corres ponding difference in the ideas of what constitutes music. There seems to have been no more progress in the construction of musical instruments during the last 2000 years than there has been in the

While the Westinghouse Electric's big- manufacture of implements of husbandry. Is it any wonder that as China has not

gest war order is for 1,800,000 rifles, its produced a Stradivarius to perfect the

order for shells is an exceedingly impor The first Chinese violin, so also no Paganini has

tant item to the company. arisen to demonstrate its power?

shell order was for 84,500,000 (gold) but Neverthless, music is regarded as one

the amount has now grown far beyond the of the fine arts, an occupation worthy of

expectations of the company when that At the rate at which saint and sage. If we may judge by the

order was booked lutes to be found in Confucian temples,

these shells are being handled a profit the ancient fute on whch Confucius was

cstimated of approximately 800,000

At that rate the present a performer was a convex board about

a month. dividend of 4 per cent. on the common four feet long, eight inches broad, and Dearly an inch thick, on which two sets Besides being the blind fortune-teller's stock would be earned about every three of strings were strung, one set higher companion, the fiddle may be regarded as months. An interesting phase of the than the other. One day, visiting the chief instrument in the theatrical shell manufacturing business is the fact Confucius temple which was undergoing orchestra

concerns which undertook The score, which is written that many repair, I saw several of these instruments in Chinese polation, is in the hands of the these contracts with some misgivings as lying thick with dust. I touched their chief violinist, and he may be regarded to their ability to handle them econo. strings, but found them relaxed and out as the conductor. Drum, gong, and mically and satisfactory have found their of tone.

One strange feature of the cymbals, clanging, clashing, rumbling, difficulties much less than they bad ex- In a sense, the work has been instrument was that the lower strings are, so to speak, the martial applause pected.

Westinghouse' The fount fairly simple. were in the spaces between the higher to hercies or heroic sentiments strings, and difficult to reach. I recitative and solos are accompanied by rifle manufacturing capacity has been in- inquired into the method of plying this the fiddles." When the scene is one of orcased to about 8,000 rifles a day by lute, but my Chinese guide could give me loneliness, despair, or sadness, and the acquistion of the Meriden Arms plant no information. He said that at the time acting is a woman's part, though taken Apart from the additional capacity this of the Confucian sacrifices a man was by a man singing falsetto the fiddles plant gives is the fact that it offers a Dats called in to tune them, and they were wail and cry in true symphony. It is supplementary factory on which the com used at those seasons, but very few at these times that the emotions of the pany may fall back in case of emergency. people knew how they were played. One audience are most deeply stirred; even Hence

In the second letter Mr. Kipling, speak- ing of what he saw at the front, says. The bow, which "It was a veritable revelation, and one is shorter than outs, is a thin baraboo that makes me want to prostrate myself It is before every Frenchman I meet, only stick, bent into shape by heat strung with about thirty hairs; these are there's the risk that the action might be knotbed together at each end; one end misunderstood." In a postscript be adds: is throaded through a small hole in the I still mainain that a year ago France handle end, the other is first passed herself did not know what she really through between the strings of the fiddle and then inserted into a small cleft at. The rosin is melted on the other end. to the body opposite the tail pin, just where the bow passing to and fro between The compass of the strings can rub in the fiddle is two octaves Chinese music it in the Pentatonic scale, the five notes corresponding to doh, re, mi, so, la, of the Diatonic. The inner string being fastoned on the upper peg gives the lower

B scale, which ranges from F to D on the staff. As the wound box is so small, the music is more shrill than resonant, and is more pleasant when heard at distance, or in a hall, than in a small

D

29.74 76 | 94 | W 1 0

C. W. JEFSALEs, Director.

A Bazoxazza, ređajed to 25 degrees Fahrensei ANN NAN ANTAL, DE 100 100 13 Equizen, beacon' and

2 TRKPRIATERI, in the ahada, ` ka

A KUMENTY, in percentage of mogzakon, 13

AUSSITATE DE ALF Maskessed with moniature being link

• Danmozion or Wino, to two DOIROL -

* Foron or Wrath, nosording to Busafors Bosts.

L STATE OF WRATHER, b blue sky, a demanded olond, d driusling rain, I fog, g gloomy, a bány lightalag, overcast, p pasting showers, agua

2 rain, a snow, a thander, v vaibilitą, w daw (was

4 Bain in inckan, i teaths and hundredske.

HONGKONG

METEOKOL JOICAL

REGISTER.

Hongkong Observatory, October 18th.

at

Previous On Date On

Day et

{at 5 p.m. 6° x.m

Barometer Temperature

29.83 76

29,85

2 p.

19.83

76 80

Humidity ........... 93 Wind Direction ... Eart

Foros

93

$2

NE

East

Weather B

3 od

3

Cr

0

4.28

Bala om.z.RIGID=+=

Bighest open air Température on 17th... BO Lowest open air Tyrsperkurs on 17th ... 76°

HONGKONG TIDE TABLE.

Days of

room.

WEIGHT.

Thin men and women who would like

of the excuses given for this retrogression men have been moved to tears. shows the high esteem in which music is it will not appear strange that when THIN PEOPLE CAN INCREASE held. No one but saint or sage is young men are out walking, or travelling suppowd capable of understanding this on the road, one of them should now and instrument China does not now pro again sing staves from these operatio duce sages, hence the art of playing it is songs. lost.

Just as in the old sailing ship days to increase their weight with 10 or 15 pounds of healthy stay there" fat The modern date is practically the same the sailors sang as they manned the should try eating a little Sargol with their pattern as the ancient one. but has capetan to raise the anchor, even so in meals for a while and note results. Here seven strings. There are a few perfor China at the present day music is the good test worth trying. First weigh mers among the scholar class, and some accompaniment of concerted action. The

yourself

and measure yourself. Then attain to proficiency. Among notable Yangtse sailors boat songs arrest the take Sargol-two tablets with every meal compositions for the fute there are two attention, though the words they give-for two weeks. Then weigh and mea- which should be mentioned: Streame often unintelligible. These songs seriver Bure again. It isn't a question of bow flowing from the high mountains," and the double purpose of cheering and

you look or feel or what your friends say "Confucius composing the Book of animating the men, and also of marking and think The scales and the tape Changes" The fire demonstrates very the time that the rowers may pull vividly both the method of playing and together. The singer, who often impro-measure will tell their own story, and the range of the instrument At first vises his song to suit the occasion, sings most any thin man or woman can easily add from five to eight pounds in the first the gentle plucking of a string indicates a sentence of ava syllables, and the fourteen days by following this simple the drip drip-drip of the string high immediately catob on, something in the direction. And best of all, the new fech ap on the mountain side. Then, as the following style:- sound increases you can hear the trickle

below

Singer.

Whether short or tall,

Crew.

stays put.

Sargol does not of itself make fat, but 0-o-hey, mixing with your food, it turns the fate, Yawey,

of the tiny stream among the stones, Now you brothers all, Again the volume of music swells as the rill becomes a brook flowing over its

And there ut forth all your strength, rocky bed in little cascades. comes a swift movement as the brook Make her shoot a length. & in plunges over a waterfall into the pool The tune is something like this:-

The swish of the water is repro- duced by the gentle rubbing of the Key A.

Then the stream continues its strings. course down the mountain side, but only to be caught in a rocky basin; the twitching of the strings is succeeded by erotary motion of the palm of the hand, and the music takes on a new character expressive of the boiling, seething tumult

HIGH WATER

From 19th to 25th October.

LOW WATE.

H'kong.

Mosa

Time

Kh

Mean Time

ttia.

19m 6·16

6 B 04

4.3

7 99 05

5 T

PRICE:

M. 81.25 0.80

20 m 7 15 Wed

6 7 1 0 7 508 6 2 1 82 2 5 Thari. 41 m 8 9 6 6 m 1 49. | 3 1 B 10A 6 5 2:22 7 Fri. 22 m 906 3 m 2 32 2 5 3 1 8 3066 9 Biker, | 23. c 943 60 m 3.132 1 8 50 7 8 154 3 3 24 m 10 36.56m 3 13 1 2 Juz.

0 11

117 3 5 Man. 25 11 21 $ 2 m

9 33 7

17

3 8

HONGKONG DAILY PRESS OFFICE

and Local Booksellern.

Cloth Cover Paper

**

· Hongkong, 2hat "anuary, 2976?

m:

sugars and starches of what you have 0-0 by caton, into rich, ripe fat producing Yo-way: nourishment for the tissues and blood

prepares it in an easily assimilated form which the blood can readily accept. All this nourishment now passes from your body as waste. But Sargol shops the waste and does it quickly and makes the fat producing contents of the very same meals you are eating now develop pounds and pounds of healthy flesh between your skin and bones. Sargol is safe, pleasant, efficient and inexpensive.

A. B. WATSON & Co., Lav., VICTORIA DISPENBARY, THE PHARMACY,

mdr: m:d.r:m: dds,, :d : 6, :d:- The song goes on for half an hour or more. When one man gets tired another takes the lead. The tunes and retains vary on different parts of the river and its tributaries, and some crews are more On the Ho Chow After circling the pool, musical than others. the pent-up flood at last finds a vent, and river above Chunking no words are with greater volume and impetuosity used, but the men sing in unison when rushes on till it reaches the river in the rowing down stream: 8; 8: 8: 81-81 * valley.

of the waters.

Finally with deeper, steadier

sometimes with a

flow the river moves onward to the seed----- Thoes who know the Moonlight Sonata falling cadence at the end.

QUEEN'S DISPENSARY, THE Edward Dispensary,

and other leading Chemists in Hongkong.

1900-3

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