1935-08-07 — Page 2

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For irritable Children

"I have examin- ed many so- called difficult and cross chil dren and could. prove that in. most instances the children suf- fered from lack of calcium, in the body,"

writes a well-known specialist.

In the Strand Magazine" of March 1933, the well-known food expert, Miss Kathleen Dane, writes:

* Many children of the irritable, nervous" type, owe their state to a deficiency of organic salts, particularly calcium, notwithstanding the fact that the dietary appears to be properly balanced. Such youngsters do well when the diet is reinforced by a well-retained mineral food, such as 'Kalzana,' which medical men « all over the country are now recommending." Your quickly-growing child needs, extra calcium to help the formation of straight bones, healthy teeth, and a strong constitution. Start your boy or girl on a course of Kalzana you will be surprised at the all-around improve- ment Kalzana effects. Irritability disappears, apperite returns and soon the formerly "difficult" child will be a happy, healthy youngster again.

Kalzana

The Mineral Food for Better Health

Obtainable at all Chemists and Stores.

HUNG KONG DAILY PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7. 1935.

THE LAST GOOD ALOOF AND SHY MANY GIFTS TO

DEED

Two Men Rescued In Heavy Seas

Overseas Visitors And Britons

Overseas holidaymaker's some- times find that we are still shy. rather inaudible, and aloof, writes

A kited piper playing a lamenta correspondent in a London daily.

CHARITY

Father's Wishes

Recalled

Big bequests to his wife have on the dockside in the early grey we speak, as a rule, only when we been left in the will of Henry of the morning brought to the are spoken to. When we do speak Neville Baron Gladstone, of Hawar- Mauretania's obsequies their final we frequently mutter and "swal-der. Castle, North Wales, only son of the late W. E grace. At six am. the liner en-low" our words We are still some surviving tered the pler heads.

times accused of being "stlf" and Gladstone, for thirty years senior partner of Ogilvy, Gillanders and, "cold" and unfriendly.

Co., of London and Liverpool.'

.

The half-gale whistling down the Firth of Forth caught her under the counter and blew her against It the dock wall. She shuddered, was a kind of death-three. Then her engines were stopped. The old heart had beaten its last.

Such views, gathered from over-

He died last April, aged eighty- seas holidaymakers by a reporter, gu to prove how right the Prince three, and his will was proved at of Wales was in his analysis of £473,274 gross, with net personalty why Britain is often misunder-444,663 188, 8d. Estate duty of stood when addressing the British £143.355 has been paid. Council for Relations with Other Countries.

WHAT PRINCE SAID

In more palmy days, said the Prince, we were led owing to our

To his wife Lora Gladstone left £50,000 free of duty and £50,000 upon trust for her for life.

£5,000 FOR INFIRMARY Gifts to institutions and charities-

The end came most tingly The previous night the liner say- ed the lives of two young men in motor-boat. In a heavy sea, the boat crashed against the Hner, and the young men were rescued dren-national shyness and Insularity-include

5,000 to the Chester Royal In- ched and scared. This was the to believe that the foreigner would

come to us in any event, and that Armary. Mauretania's final service. :

there was no need to offer him £2,000 each to University Col- any special Inducements or to care lege, Bangor, Bursary Fund; the how much or how little he under- Liberal Agents' Benefit Fund: stood us and our, somewhat hap-King George's Fund for Sallors: for Hawarden Parish Council. hazard way of doing things

But things are changing for the charitable purposes; and Univer- better. Big strides are already sity College, Bangor. Musical Do- being made in the directions indi-partment.

MAGIFICENT SIGHT- When she came under the Forth Bridge "it seemed that her bulk would tear some of the tremendous structure down, although 40 feet had been taken off her masts. The bridge made a magnificent frame for a sight that may never be seen again.

cated by the Prince. Slowly, but 1,000 to the Proportional Re- surely, we are learning how to presentation Society, the R.S.P.C.A. welcome overseas visitors and how the N.S.P.C.C., and the Children's to afford them just those little Country Holiday Fund.. The naval dockyards are only a

pleasures which make all the £2,500 towards increasing the Hittle way beyond the bridge. It diference between а memorable stipend of the officiating minister was planned to take the Maure-holiday and one soon to be for- of Hawarden Parish Church. tania right into the basin and turn

gotten. her to lie alongside the scustled Bayern, floating upside down. But the wind was too strong and the liner had to be left where she was a Kight fit in the lock, until the wind's force abated.

Untli she is cut down, she will be a splendid if diminishing spectacle for passengers in the trains, going over the bridge and in steamers pleasuring up the Firth,

From Sunday until July 14 the Mauretania will be on view to the public.

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An interesting suggestion for developing things as the Prince proposes was that another great international exhibition should be staged in Britain to attract people here

IN BRITAIN TO-DAY

A Dutch tourist said that in Britain to-day a foreigner gets a courteous and friendly welcome that he would not have received ia quite the same way 20 years ago..."

In Holland the English language is part of the education of every child in the elementary schools,” he said. "Railway porters at the Hague will talk to you in English --and they have been known to refuse a tip, so grateful are they for the chance of practising their English.

£2,000

House to Dunford Memorial Cobden Scheme, or the Cobden Club, or to such other society for the promotion of Free Trade as his executors shall determine.

He directed his trustees, if they shall think fit, to pay to the Parliamentary Liberal Party a sum not exceeding £6,000. £10,000 FOR MUSEUM OFFICIAL

The sum of £10,000 is left upon trust for Arthur Tilney Bassett, of, the British Museum, while acting!

as registrar of the papers and re- cords of the late W. E. Gladstone.

hts

Bequests to employees include £5,000 to his secretary, William! George Binding: £1,000 to valet, John Thrush, and £1,000 to wiltam Johnson, managing clerk.

The Hawarden estate is to follow the trusts of a settlement. Lord "A German who does not speak Gladstone drew the attention of English apologises to youtw | the possessor to B clause in his German, of course for not doing late father's will which reads:- so. It is the same in other coun- tries. Already English is a tongue with a world-wide range. For that reason, Britain offers a tremendous number of attractions for people from abroad."

LITTLE RAYS OF

SUNSHINE

"I charge the possessor of the Hawarden Castle estate, being my descendant, to bear in mind that he has been endowed with the principal part of my worldly 'goods and as he is the head of- the branch of my family so it will be his duty to extend good offices to the other members thereof according to his ability and their manifest needs and merits."

He also desired his successor to revive the honoured name of William and to prefix his mother's family name of Glynne to that of

Cheery Facts For Gladstone.

Nation

The residue of the property he left as to one-fourth to his nep- hew. Albert Charles Gladstone, and three-fourths for such char table, ör other uses as he may indicated in a memorandum, his executors may deter-

Little rays of sunshine, as he have called them. were released by the eras Chancellor of the Exchequer when mine. he moved the third reading in the Commons recently of the Finance BILL

Mr. Chamberlain said

there had come the usual applications for usual concessions.

He had been unable to yield to them, because his resources were limited and not even a Chancellor

OP

the Exchequer could get a quart out of a pint pot."-

"This, the fourth Budget I have. introduced," he proceeded, "brings me very near to the completion of one of the alms I set myself when I took office.

"This was so to conduct, the finances of the country that it would be possible safely to re- move from the shoulders of the people those burdens which were imposed on them in 1931. "

230,000 teachers; 430.000 soldiers, sailors

airmen; -and

and

420,000 Civil Servants, making a rough total of nearly. 1,200.000 persons who were sharing in the benents or the Budget this

year,

Finally, entertainers and enter- tained, musicians and performers, and those who frequented cheaper seats in the cinemas and other performances, had their little bit "of "sunshine." -

.

While in other countries they were having to contemplate fresh economies and fresh taxation, here we saw the burdens grow. lighter year by year."

Exports were up by #18,000.000; for the first five months this as compared with last year

Looking ahead, the best baro

Reliefs to income tax payers an the lower scale would not reach their full effect until next year, when they would amount to £18,- 000,000 as against only £10-meter they could have was the 500,000 in the current year.

Over two and a quarter million taxpayers would be directly bene Eted by the increase in the in- come tax allowances.

In addition to that, on Monday last there came into theenjoy. ment of the full restoration of the cut some

imports of raw material and these imports were up a millon more than they were in May last year.

All the figures he had quoted were signs and pointers to show the direction of the wind,,

They all pointed in the same direction, and in his view they were all hopefull and justified the spirit of reasonable optimism m 30,000) Insurance doctors and which the Buudget had been

65,000, pouce

chemista

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THE WONDERFUL HERBAL OINTMENT

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Zam-Buk is so highly-refined that it soaks readily into the tlay. pores, purifying and hasling in deeper tissues as well as the surface Skin. The marvellous soothing and curative powers, of Zam-Buk are due to its rare herbal origin, refinement and guaranteed free- dom from animal fat. Never be without a box of Zem-Buk.

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