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THE HONGKONG DAILY PRESS SATURDAY, APRIL 15TM#, 1816,

FOUL BREATH.

WOMEN'S GREATEST MISFORTUNE.

#

The old caying that "distance lends enchantment was never more aptly to the point than when applied to those people whose breath is laden with evil smelling odours. Many persons appear most attractive at a distance, but produce a feeling of pity and disgust when close to because of the condition of their breath. For instance, it makes little difference how beautiful a woman may be, or how charming her manner it her breath is foul, her charm is gone and she is at a clis- advantage when ever she comes in contact with other people. Foul breath in women arouses in man a feeling of repugnance and a desire to get out of the company of such a woman as quickly as possible, and even women will avoid her. It is therefore important for every woman who values her personal attraction to take such care of herself that this unpleasant and unnecessary complaint is avoided or corrected. Men, women and children who are troubled with this compleiz! will drive their friends away more rapidly than any other affliction. People do not realise their breaths are bad because they are like those who are constantly employed among paints and varnishes they get used to what is to others a most offensive smell. In nearly all cases this condition is due to Constipation and a disordered Stomach, and a coated Tongue, slight Headache, and feverishness are the sure signs that the digestive organs are retaining quantities of impurities from which the system should be free, thereby causing the Breath to become charged with the foul odour. In Dr. Morses' Indian Root Pil's there will be found searching, cleansing remedy which will drive the masses of decaying. corruption that poison the Blood and contaminate the breath-from the system through the regular channels. They get at the cause as no other remedy does. They get at the the foundation of the complaint. They give you clean bowels, a healthy stomach, a lively liver, and blood that is rich and red. They are safe, sure and reliable remedy, and will prevent many of the complaints so common if taken once or twice a week to keep the system in a healthy condition. They are purely vegetable, and their action is not accompanied by any nauscous or griping sensation, but is mild and gentle.

"MORSE'S INDIAIR

ROOT

For all complaints arising from Imperfect DR MORSES

arc

Digestion and Impure Blood these Pills unexcelled. They are a Perfect Blood Purifier 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.

INDIAN ROOT

FOR

THE

IVER

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.

Cutler Fulmer & C

Latina Merchany &

|

NAPIER JOHNSTONE'S

“SQUARE BOTTLE”

WHISKY.

UNVARIED FOR OVER

150 YEARS.

THE SAME TO-DAY AS IN

1745.

BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.

LOLE AGENTS IN HONGKONG!!

LANE, CRAWFORD & CO.,

and from ALL Wise MerchanTS,

ASA HI

DAI NIPPON BREWERY

SAHI

[38

BEER

BEER

CO. TOKIO. JAPAN.

OBTAINABLE EVERYWHERE

HITSU

SOLE AGENTS

BUSSAN KAISHA HONGKUNG

108

YOUR HAIR

WILL

LOOK BETTER

will be floor, sofer, smoother, Beurt and Landrat will disappear, -if you take cums of it by ULLARE"

ROWLAND'S MACASSAR

OIL,

wb sit wil Freseres, Nourish, and Rivingthen it. mal na it pruetralen to Live TODEN WIR vejland this loss of the Natural Oil: fn Use Hair, the wint of which mantan Baldness. It is molt la m Dallas Colone for Fair Hele, of Stores, Chominis, Hurdressers, and Bowhud's, 5. Battou-gardens, Lorden. Aroid Cheap worthless Imitations under the

sant or eligibır name which have 10. Hestorative Properties and do not contain that delightful veRTILOR. Otio of Roses- for which Bowland's Moolaser Oil baş boen so long tamens.

BEETHAMS,

la-rola

YOUR SKIN AND COMPLEXION canbe kept in a Parīzei Conditiom nil the year round by a regular HERE, Banthan's La-rola. It effectualy remores al Rougines, Rednem, Tan Interen, te and is delightfully Soothing and Refreshing at ali timen, Of oil highselan Chemists and Stores,

factured by

·M BEETHAM. & SON

CHELTENHAM, ENGLAND.

RIGAUD'S

KANANGA

OF JAPAN

TOILET WATER

Beware

of imitations,

RIGAUD & C

8, rüs Vivienne, 6

Parie-France E

THE NEW FRENCH REMES VA THERAPION No-1

USHESDECHARGES, KITFALSEK WITHOUT INJECTIONS

THERAPION NO. 2 THERAPION No 3

GURES BLOGA FODOR, MID LEGS SEM ERUPTIONE,

· PRICE IV EMOLAND, 29. 14. STAMF ADDIRES ENVELOPE OF CURD GREK #GON TO DR. LEGLER KUI COU HAVERSTOCK.RD,Hampstead, LONDON FOR YOU TRUMEN DRAGGER TASTELIN/FORE DO RAST TO TAKE

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HIMROD'S

Alves Instant fallaf ⠀⠀ No, master what you migranaty organs may be andfarlog trawyirbochar ASTHMA, INFLUENZA, WABAL DATARRH,ar ORDINARY DOUGH. - «zuis will find la this-ixmous ready restorative power that in alusply. Qoque led

BO TRANS

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SURE OF 7-

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120 MARTIN'S

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→→ MARTIN'S

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Most Certain Cimo. Physcians recommand tham,

THE NEW BROTHERLY KINDNESS.

war.

ENEMY PRIEST'S NOBLE ACT SAVING BRITISH WOUNDED FROM

DEATH.

A soldier tells of how a German pricat. under a fusillade of fire from the British, rushed to the assistance of one of our wounder and ministered to them in their dying moments. It happened in a recent engagement in which at a certain point. the enemy made a determined thrust to find n week spot in our lines.

"

for

Our dada almost lost their reason the time being, and heedless of shells and bullets mounted the first Gorman parapet. We killed many of thein, but it is fair to say they didn't give in. They quickly had reinforcements, and we were compelled against heavy odds to yield the french to the enemy. Angry fighting continued, and our game now was to lure as many of the Gegmang towards our lines as possible so that we could now them down with our guns. On they came, many hundreds of theru, and as quickly they fell,

fix.

OVAMBOLAND.

COUNTRY THE GERMANS COULD

NOT COLONISE:

BRITISH CREDIT

THE ONLY OPEN GOLD MARKET.

NOTES WITHOUT GOLD COVER. Contrast this with Germany, where the stock of gold in the Reichsbank, which re- presents by now practically all the gold in the-country, amounts to £122,792,000, against a note circulation of £318,715,000. And whereas our Bank of England and Treasury notes constitute the whole of our legal tender currency, there are in Ger many any number of war societies. loan bau, credit banky, mortgage banks. ote, whose notes are equaly as much legal tender as the notes of the Reichs- bank, though they have not a vestigo af gold cover behind them

FOUNDATIONS OF CREDIT.

The foundation of banking credit is tho gold reserve, so long as gold in the reoog- nized mediuin of exchange, and we may be thankful that with the British Empire fur nishing 61 per cent of the total gold pro

of the world we are in position normally to control two-thirds of the an unal output of the precious meal. The exchanges may be temporarily affected by the faws of supply, and demand, just as

D

erican dollars were recently at a dis- count in Dutch corroney though no one would suggest that the credit of the United Staten was inferior to that of Holland..

BY AN ENGLISHMAN.]

The City Editor of the Daily Telegraph The speeches delivered in the House the

wrote on February 23:-There will be no other day by Mossis. Trevelyan and Pon-

disagreement with Mr. McKenna's state- sonby suggest a curious problem of

ment on Monday evening that it is marvel- psychology: These gentlemen do not pus

lous that after eighteen monzan" of war, Boss any practical importance. If we took

wo are still most the only opon gold a aincare interest in mandates and con-

country in the world and that we are still. stituents and all the absurd apparatus of. democracy, which are happily out of

Wo and not altogether expected this Prepared to give gold for every note pre- sented at the Bank. It is well that the fashion, we might still dismiss the atter move on the part of the Gorinans," said the wou

would-be currency réformers should realiza ances of the two sentimentalists as wholly soldier, though there were rumours that uns remarkable evidence of British credit,

-this futile. They represent nothing and he was on the alert. Ons evening we were

and since we have so far weathered our nobody but themselves. Their careers of all merry and bright as usual, but no off difficulties and restored the American ex- inutility will be brought to an end if ever duty we were in Trenchtown. There was change to a reasonable level in face of the another talection be held. Meanwhile, a little sing song in my trench. Suddenly huge adverse trade balanco, we may well though they can hardly be unconscious of a homb was flung amongst us, but in the bolove that our credit will be maintained, their impending doom, they persist in a

nick of time we snatched it and returned however long the war may last. folly which unfortunately bag made itself the compliment to the thrower,

It is needless to point out that, conspicuous when

whenever England has been at We continued our concert because it

ing to the last Bank of England return, is nothing new for Gorman bombing patties the stock of gold amounted to £54,819,000 Masers, Trevelyan and Ponsonby want to bush up an entertainment in our tres- peace. They are not singular But they ches. In a few minutes, however, there against 2,565.000 notes, in oirculation, so that Bank of England notes are covered want peace without the trouble of fighting was a further attack and a fairly large by 168 per cent. of god. As regards this for it. Reave it any price secus desirable party of Germane surprised us Things Treasury notes, the gold backing only. in their eyes. Lot ng suggest terms and

were a bit lively for a little while, and nimounts to about 29 per cent. the actual consttier proposals, they cry, So easily although we lost some men we managed to gold set aside being $28.500.000, against a are they duped that they consider it still retain our ground. Then the word circulation of some £98,000,000. But it is possible to dineway the situation with the that we were to go for the enemy's first

well known that the gold which the £1 German Chancellor as with a man of hon lino, and we did. Our artillery started оцг.

ment's control in some secret place of safo While one of them depreented the the music, and iva minde our efforts have displaced is under the Govern- smallest suspicion of a desire to crush Ger many, the other marmured the usual com

keeping, and there is no doubt that gold could be paid against every one of the monplaces about the community of nations All the lessons which history and experi-

currency notes that are in issue. ence have to teach are thrown away upon then. They are complete strangers to the comment processes of reason. It has been their own fault if they have not noted the conduct and policy of Germany as they have been displayed during the East eigh teen months. Ye they refuse to under stand the plain truth that a patched peace would mean a swift renewal of war And though they both sim, at the same point

Our follows got it, too, and one little of a comfortable surrender, they are not party was absolutely at the mercy of the agreed upon its result. Mr. Trevelyan, enemy. Two of our young officers and five for the sake of argument, believes that men were severely wounded, and their posi- when peace comes no notion will be abs tion was helpless, for it was impossible to to build up argents again on bank rescue them. Despite our tremendous fire the Germans, with fixed bayonets, tried to Mr. Ponsonby, with a liko ruptcy.

The credit of Great Britain has been maintained because everyone knows that in utive, is sure that if we persist in af- reach the party, and their intention was taining a military triumph wo are but layubvious. They got within a few yards of the last resort gold will be obtainable for the foundations of another conflict the wounded, when one of their number our obligationg To fill up the gap be What a pity they did not compare notes sprang in front of them and flashed a cruci. tween our reduced exporta to and vastly before speaking!

Stop he shouted, and then he knelt increased imports from America, we ship- But the interesting point in these and

by the side of our men and blessed them.ped over £60.000.000 in gold to the United ather foolish attempts at statecraff is this: The other Germaans immediately withdrew. Siates last year, in addition to stranging The peace-mongers begin with a firm belief "Then we managed to reach the wound-

the Anglo-French loan for 100,000,000. that all wars are the invention of the Eviled, and our officer tanked the priest for We also sent Large amounts of gold to One. Finding, no support for their falla- the brave way in which he had behaved Spain, South America, and other countries cies in their own country, they proceed to in the face of his own ten. Tako mu to meet our liabilities, and this is pactly the unwarranted eonclusion that England said the priest. I am your prisoner. why the exchange, with foreign rentral is in the wrong, and by a natural trans- The officer said he would not do that, but countries are only moderately against us. tion of thought they proceed to a hall he would see that he returned to the Ger

if at all, concerted sympathy, with England's man lines unharmed. The promise was eneules. They show in spite of themselves, kept. and before they parted the priest, an undue tenderness for the Germans. falling on his knees. thanked our office: They are nimble in excuse for the atroci warmly, adding, God bless you, and good ties couitted. We have seen the edifying luck 17. spectacle of a university don refusing to believe that the Germans were guilty of atrocities in Belgium, though preof which might satisfy a man of scientific habits of thought was brought to his eyes. We have heard a well-known professor insist that

yhen we have conquered our foes, an we are surprised he faced without f

In the north of the former daran ing, we should make no peace that was not co any of South-West Africa there is a acceptable to them. That is to say, we race of 180,000 people, known as the Ovam- are wantonly to cast away from ourselves bos, whom the Germans had been unable to the right to punish. We are to forgive conquer. Major S, M. Pritchard, tho the worst outrages that have been com afficer-in-charge of Native Affairs in the aitted upon our woner and children; wo new British Protectorate, paid a visit to are to smile indulgent y upon the wreckage Ovamboland in August last, and the re- of international law. And we are to dosult of his mission is published in a Blue, All this in the deluded hope that brotherly book

What would the se ove shall continue.

Major Pritchard," says the Cape gentry say if we asked them to endow with commenting on the publication."was ad. a pound a week and loving kindness the viced to take a strong escort, as both the Ovambos and the Bushen might be ex- burglar who had suplied their houses 1

From whence comes this dangerous aber pected to be hosti'e. This advice he ration of mind? From vanity and vanity ignored, and he had no reason to regret alone. At the outbreak of a war these his decision. He refers particularly to patient men, who pretend that they like the nervous apprehension which many Ger nothing as well as to forgive an affront, mang experience when faced with the nexes who are determined to detect no offence sity of moving among the natives unsup- save in those of their own race, fed them- ported by force; and he adds I do not selves in a hopeless minority. Nobody think it is too much to say that to these istens to them; nobody approtes their lack very deficiencies of temperament, prompt of patriotism or believes that they really ed, as I believe they are, by the conscious love their enemies with a constant heart. ness of the brutalities in their treatment And so they are compelled to force the of natives, of which so many of them have sub Without nopriety they cannot live been guilty, and giving rise, as they so

CHURCH SERVICES. at their ease. They must see their names frequently do, to acts of frightfulness, in the Press, and sincs if they were on culminating in serious assaults on, nud

St. Jour's CATHEDRAL. Horgtong. 6th their country's side they would pass up- oven in the murder of, natives, much of aoticed, what resource have they but to the trouble between Germans and natives Sunday in Lent, 16th April, 1016. Holy Com

munion (9.5 m.) Maliña (11 am.) Responses in this country can fairly be attributed." ry peace when there is no peace and to

Ferial Venite, empta Psalms, Weldon that

"The Germans may have good reason hapless peak respectfully of destroyer of craps

Herr von

to avoid going among the native tribes and Rimbanl; To Do, Lawes, Cooke and Toplica; Jubilate Goodson; Anthem, "O Bethmann Hollweg ?.

without strong armed escorts; but Major As I have said these wiseacres have Pritchard found that he needed no escort Saviour of the world. Go s; Benin, 99 F.3. Psalm. 7', verses 1, 5, 6, 9 and 14 lo unbon; lways hebe busy when Eng and was at at all. The fame of the Fox Britannica Palm 80 vere 3, 7, 14 no 10 in unison. war, Our great conflict with France in bad penetrated even to that closed land,

God Save the Kug H∙ly Communioi (12 e eighteenth century encouraged them and its representative Wax welcorned Noon), Evening, 5.5 Responses, Ferial exceedingly. They came forth then like equally by the Christina Chief Martin Falms, of the 16th venia ; Magnificat, Cooka wasps in the sunshine, England was fight and the savage Chief Mandume The (lath morning); Nuss: Damitting Himbolt ing for her life. Surely that was the former showed a keen appreciation of the 17th morning): Hymns 958 bud 94. N.B. asent to demand unit Parliments; economic advantage of sending the young-Oratorio Selections on Good Friday, at erhood suffrage, and the other trum- Toen of his tribe to work for the white

P.76 p.m. very dear to the heart of the sentimental Iran; and the latter accepted without pro- lats? They made plans of edition test a blung intimation that be would no thrunghunt the kingdom. They sketched ittle directories their own and imagined themselves as

many Dentons and St. Tusis on a smaller scale. They were glib, intellectual in the very wars sense, as Messrs. Travelyan and Ponsonby are in tellectual, and they would if they could "At Major Pritchard's first visit to have brought Great Britain to ruin. It this chief he revived-courtesies which, le was in Edinburgh that they showed their was assured, no German offer had ever greatest activity, and it was in Edinburgh | enjoyed. – Major Pritchard appears to have that they provoked the wisest comment laid the foundations woll and truly for the upon their perilous benevolence to their establishment, under the British flag, of a (country's for "Ye're a verra clever chie.. more enlightened policy in regard to native man," " said Braxfield' when be sentenced ù | affairs than Ovamboland would ever have culprit, but ye wad be nane the waur heen 1 kile to know under the Germans.”

'a hanging

It is vanity, then, which inspires: cur

which inspires: qu peure-mongers to loquacity. There are

Clicet Eron the paymaster of treachery despises ab 28 Hymbs, 25, 49, 191 and 71

Evening other English enemies of England who are his bare instruments when he has no longer Service at 6. Hymnr. 31, 1, 64 and 15. inspired by a worse motive. The miscreant need of them. But whot words can be Precer: Bar J. Kirk Match e. Ori who, Like Judas, betrays his master for found to suit the vilest of them all, the so many pieces of silver is not common in cretinous, crapulous Hour on Chamber the world's experience. We must all in This miserable degenerate has lived regret that this was has revealed not song on foreign gold that he must long fow traitors, who wish nothing better thans ace have lost all sense of shause. Á peli- to sell their country for a full pocket|sioner of Bayreuth, he do what be is told, When Herr Dernburg announced that be and it is plain that recently he has been was really to pay for treachery, overal urged to a fresh exercise of his base gar- debused Englishmen, with shrine be it said, rulity. After al, the Iron Cross with a borrowed money enough to pay their fare white ribbon must be paid for. So he has to New York that they might share in the come forth with a new pronopnemen. golden harvest. They have earned their** Let a ruthlessly exploit specifically money wall. With en infamy rare in the Gortona idealism,” says he, “ against Eng- worlds annals they have written the inish idealism in every direction. What Sunday-Gospel Meeting, 8 p. salts, in a barbarous English, that their orice were you paid, Her Kammerdiene. Monday: Gospel Mesting for Chinese, German masters demanded. And our single for that monstrous piece of treachery f consolation is that after the war they will And when will you have earned enough. Tuesday: Exposition of Scripture, 8 p.m. "be driven to a wa'l-deserved penury, of enemy gold to buy a potter's fed of Thursday:-Bible Class, 8 p.m.

Gratitude is not extended to the traitor. Four owe –Dady Mail.

Saturday: Frayer Meeting, 3 pm.

Times

longer be allowed to murder his tribesmen at his own pleasure. The Chief Martin stated frankly that he and his people had no love for the Germans, and had always wished that the English would come into the country,

But confidence in the ability of un- try to honour its signature in god if acces sary is the main support in the long run, and with Germany having long, since de glined to pay goll against her notes, which. indeed, would now be impossible, the cause of her depreciated currency in America, Holland, and Scandicar a is obvious, What it means is that Germany met pay from 24 to 33 per cent. more for every- thing she inports, assuming people are willing to bake her paper. which the Swedes are not, according to recent reports. internal legislation directed to and no fixing rates of exchange can compot for- eigners to accept her terms. Perhaps the latest effort of this kind is the strongest. evidence of a commencement of economic breakdown in Germany which we have had og yet.

C

ST. ANDREW'S CHUCH, Fowloon 16th April, Pala Sunday Morning Prayer. Responses, Ferial; Venite, faraby, Psalms, As Set; Te Deum, St. Jude: Jubilate, Hoyes; Hymns, 161, 161 and 159 (tene :55 A and M. Kyre, ward r. National Anthem, Evening Prayer, at & Respousie, Ferial; Fealms. An Bet Hagaificat, W A. Chart Nec. 533 Nano Dimiti, WA Chent, No. 603; Hymns, 201, 020 and 619; Vesper Hymn. National Atihem. Holy Communion at ir 9m, Choir Practice will te bold on Wednesday, at 6 pm,

ST. PETER'A CHURCH, West Point, Sun- Joy, 15th April - sm, Holy Communion 11 am, Morning Prayer and Sermon Freacher, Ber. WT Featherstone.

UNION CHETON, Kennedy Brad, Sunday, 16th April Merring Service, at 11. 1am

Calvary

Wedzosday 19th 1 s... Main'e, a fa red. Cartin, Olivet to Calvary," will be renderat by az azgmented Choir ap.. Serios on God Friday, at 31 m.mat

GOSPEL HALL

30 AND 12 PEDDER STRESE.

Weekly Services:— Sunday:Breaking of Bread fo, Believers

only, 11 a.mx. Sunday - Children's Sunday School 5

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