1935-02-18 — Page 14

Hongkong Telegraph 港電新報 士蔑新聞 All

MOTHER CALLS IT MIRACLE

Child-always fretful,

never hungry-

Now has Big Appetite... is Sturdy and Strong

SOMETHING TERRIBLE

(MUST BE WRONG WITH HIM. 'HE WON'T EAT, HE'S ALWAYS

CROSS, SEE HOW PALE

DON'T WORRY ANOTHER DAY JUST GNJE' {HIM A LITTLL CASTORIA. IT WORKS

WONDERS!

Doctors Adviso This Natural Way to Make Child Hungry ...Restore Buoyant Health!

Almost all child ailments that cause mothers so much worry nio dua lo just one thing-puthorities call it the Intestinal absorption of poisons, This distressing condition occare even When chlid's habits may seem reg- ular. The stomach is upset. The child won't eat... becomes nervous and cross.

Now this insidious condition can be corrected naturally and quickly with little Castoria which tastes so very good, children beg for 12.

Thisremarkable preparationswiftly purges the system, banishes poisons, Bettles the stomach and improves di gestion. Then Nature does the rest, Appetite returns. Disposition im proves. And soon the child is again sturdy; healthy and sunny.

Let Castoria take care of your child's health. Give it at the first

NEXT DAY

WHAT! ADENOU STILL HUNGRY |

* AFTER THAT GREAT BIG MEAL...

THAT'S WONDERFK.

ROSES WILL SOON

› BE BACK IN

·YOUR CHEEKS},

[EVERY MOTHER SHOULD KNOW › ABOUT CASTORIAT THE WAY. IT BENEFITS CHILDREN (5) A MIRACULYÒ | SEE HOW HEALTHY, AND STURDY

MY SON 13.

warning sign of trouble. Results will surpise you.

CASTORIA

MEDICINAL SYRUP

from babyhood to oloven year

Acceptable Everywhere

a

Quality that has become traditional has

won for State Express 555, world-wide reputation as the premier cigarette. They are eagerly sought, thank- fully received.

STATE EXPRESS

VIRGINIA

KAGEROUS

CIGARETTES

POKING toucank per mes They Are

Beware of sharp tiger manufactured thera

LTD, LONEM R

THE HONGKONG TELEGRAPH MONDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1935.

ART'S USEFUL PLACE

BROCADE SATIN

[Material In Woven Pat- tern Again Popular

WHAT BRITAIN

TAUGHT

NOTABLE EXHIBITS

By NOEL CARRINGTON RECENTLY at the Royal Aca

demy of Arts, in the holy of holies of fine art, in the most con- servative club in all Britain, the Prince of Wales opened the great Industrial Art Exhibition of 1935. A publie accustomed to the annual winter collections of old master- pieces may well rub its eyes when it sees the transformation

that

has taken place. It may still be

in Picendilly, but it will no longer

be in Burlington House.

the

The portrait painters, the landa- capists and the sculptors have made room for And

terms with machine. The occasion may seem a trife accidental and to some ridiculous, but the historical digni- ficance is Immense. For this is publie acknowledgment of a renai-i sance which has been going on be hind the scenes for thirty years.

For three centuries art had been' getting further and further away (ever since the from industry Renaissance, to be exact), until the Victorians elevated it into a religion and called It Art. If It touched industry at all it was called Appiled Art. And it was never "appiled" more Invishly than at the Grent Exhibition, the Prince Consort's Exhibition of 1851.

Later came William Morria, the prophet and artist, who anid rightly

WORN WITH LACE

"Attractive Brocades." "It is interesting to find brocaded antina becoming fashionable sprin They are exquisite materials, the pattern so rich- looking because it is woven in and not just printed." The brocade tunic dress sketched has a stiffened collar and bell sleeves of lace.

MOCK HAGGIS

Girls And Health

SIR G. NEWMAN'S WARNING

VALUE OF DANCING:

A warning regarding the health of the women of England was given by Sir George Newman, Chlof Medical Officer to the Minis- try of Health, when he attended a | display of gymnastics and national

dancing at the Albort Hall,

Tho dispiny was organised by the National Council of Girls' Clubs, and was watched by the Duchess of York, the president.

Although the health of the wo men of England was good it was not as good as it should be, anid Sir Georgo. There was an excess of sickness among Insured women which was largely preventable;" there was much more fatigue, weakness, and lassitude among girls and women than was their normal share; the great socini disease of tuberculosis was more provalent among young women than young men; there was too much preventable anaemia in girls and women; and it had been found by Inquiry that among twelve- year-old girls as many as forty- two per cent, showed defects of posture and carriage na compared with thirty-one per cent. In boys of the same age.

There were also, he said, the risks of motherhood, which were not being reduced as they should be in the light of modern know- ledge.

"ONE ANSWER."

"There is one primary and

that art must grow out of craft, TOAST one b. oatmeal in the fundamental answer, to these pro- but who so hated the machine that

oven, mix with it. 1 1. chop-blema," declared Sir George. "It he tried to send us back to handi-ped suet and

two good-sized is that we must train and eduente crafts. He failed magnificently in anions, also chopped, and senson our children in the physical art that, but the seeda he scattered fell with a dessertspoonful, salt, and of good living, for their problems some on fertile ground and this teaspoonful Jamaien pepper, Bind cannot be solved without that. exhibition is one of the flowers, I will one or two eggs, press into n

PURE AND SIMPLE

- bowl or mould, and steam for 1% hour. Turn out and serve very

Morris' personal creation wha hot. the Arts and Crafts movement pure and simple, very Pure and very

often

"I do not say that English girl- hood is not still the best upon earth, but I do any that there is indisputable evidence, which pro- ves that there is need for the

Simple, to which the Academy has their way steadily towards a logical national development of physical opened its doors, and which, solution. I do not suppose their training, culture, and guidance in splic of degenerate offshoots vianants will figure in the Academy for all girls of all classes in this Brummagemon to the sixpoany catalogue, yet had it not been for country." bazaars, is still alive to this day their falth and labours neither the

dustry.

MORRISON ORGANS

We are now manufacturing small Four-Octave Organs for Church and Mission use in the Far East.

Bullt of the best materials with the same care and precision, as Morrison Pianos, they give many years trouble-free service in any climate.

Two styles are available-Folding, and Non-Folding. The polish of the Instruments is finished in Walnut, but other shades can be supplied if desired.

For further particulars please call or write.

TSANG FOOK PIANO CO

29

9 Ice House Street

HONG KONG.

OUR BRITISH CROSSWORDS

Acress

125

1 Rule in ways that are quite out

of order. Hat rescuer (anag).

10 Spectacles to be seen when a

vessel has been dry-docked.

11 Taken by the traveller and kept

by the police.

12 Unwilling to include an impreen

tion.

13 Steam trawlers

these fish.

Hover

catch

15 Use for a selfish object; it's sure to be something out of the ordinary.

Between 700 and '800 working It took root also in Austria, Gor-men nor the things would exlst to-women and girla took part in the mary, Holland and Sweden, and day to make this exhibition possible. performance. They included fac

the whole modern There was William Lethaby,,; from it grew

scholar tory. workers, shorthand typists, movement in architecture and in-and architect, who as far back assenmatrosses, and domestic work.17 Question,

1900 was telling the architects that ors from all parts of London. All these countries went through farchitecture was "human skill and an Arts and Crafts phase 100-the feeling shown in the great neces- There was a display by forty town hall of Stockholm is the great-sary activity of building.”

unemployed women from Lanca est physical monument to Morris,

shire, who had joined classes of It was through Lethaby, Johns-the Council. Not one of those

| though of course it is quite archaic

10 Not at all a popular goddess. 21 0, Rachell (anag). 22 Resigned in the manner of a

draughtsman. 24 "The despot's heel is on thy share, Marylandf lis-la at thy temple door, Maryland. (J. R. Randall, “My Maryland."). Not a Fen feature.

28 No word to describo a London

pavement. 29 How money must be spent in order to acquire regal dress. 30 Disorder.

Down

1 Army officials who get snubs

later. 2 Arterial way.

Fish:

Cense work with the metal and give it back

6 Go to this at bed-time.

SLOWLY

but the Germans in particular get lon. Emery Walker and Cockerell women was under 35 years, and to the real heart of Morris's gospel that a new spirit got abroad in the the eldest was aixty. Their dis-27 and worked it into their own cun-art schools, and soon the art school play was Rot excelled by the temporary life. It so happened men were getting into industry younger performers. that a certain Muthesius was coun-For instance, by 1901 Morgan,

The Duchess, who wore an even. cillor to the German Embassy and Gossop and Fred Taylor were doing from this vantage point he watched things in W. H. Smith's advertising ing cloak of coral velvet with a what English designers were doing, oflice which were to revolutionise bandeau of diamonds in her hair. He went back and soon the Germans commercial printing.

walched the display from the had Edward Johnston, C. R. Mac- kintosh and others to instruct was

By a curious irony of history it Royal box, and during the interval the war which proved the the performers formed a guard of them. Ehmeke and Koch in print stimulus and occasion for a group which the Duchess walked to the honour across the arena through ing and advertising. Behrens and ing of those who believed that in Hoffman in building and all indus- this civiliastion of ours we must so important to try to keep fit," platform to address them. "It is trial arts, owed their training and design for the machine. The cut- inspiration to Englishmen. By ting off of foreign supplies revealed she added, "but I know it is not 1910 at the Brussels Exhibition the to what extent the Germans had always easy in the hurry and rush German and Austrian pupils were left us standing In the design of of busy lives; therefore, I am. putting their English masters to everyday things.

especially pleased to see such n shame.

aplendid performance As The Design and Industries Asso-which I have scen to-night.” ciation was founded in 1915, just For we In England had gono 20 years ago, and if you turn up

We had gone back to the ils early manifestors you will read find a good deal of art which is pure, the geanine antique. The very much the same kind of thing "applled," because the tradition dica first quarter of this century is the that the great ones will be saying hard, but in glass, pottery, textiles, clearing the breathing iubes, soothing Are of Reproductions. If it wasn't to-day. Many of its founders have kitchens and, above all, in printing inflamed membranes, breaking up Tudor, it was Georgian. England since becomes famous in their own you will see true industrial art. phlegm, and curing coughs, sore throat wns too rich

anyway to have to trades: Morton and Lce in tex-You will see things of real beauty and colds. bother about efficiency. Only in tiles; Curwen and Meynell in print designed to be fit for their purpose trades which no one dreamt of calling: Ileal in furniture; Frank Pick and to fit machine technique. And ing artistic-motors, flight, sport in transport. And since then the perhaps in their arrangement and and women's dress-had designers young architects have been going setting you will get a gilmpse of a chance to design, Otherwise it abroad to learn, as the Germans did that most important of all the arts was expensive and scholarly camou- from us. 30 years ago.

Of chemists or post free, 75 cents) to-day, the art of construction and flage.

per bottle, from the Dr. Williame planning, the synthesis that we fedicina Co., 451 Kiangse Road But a few men and women up of this exhibition. You may still be worth the name.

That is the historical background most need if our civilisation is to Shanghai, and down the country were feeling!"

back.

CAMOUFLAGE

SALESMAN SAM

Going to Extreme s!

that

dissolving in the mouth, Respirolds release highly-curative aromatic vapours directly into the throat, nasal passages and lunga, thos

RAPIDLY

RESPIROIDS

· BRONCHIAL TABLETS

7. Below the Equator for emphasis.. 8 Novelist.

9 Shopes that change constantly. 14 Stentor had no use for them. 10 Not likely to become intoxicated,

though Indulging Immoderately. 18 Taking up in a manner

practised by the G.I.D.

not

20 There's nothing spiritual about

this word.

21 Minor. church dignitaries. 23 Concluda,

25 Crest collectors will have no room in their albums for this specimen.

20 Where once was a wound.

Yesterday's Solution. GIRANDOLTE STA MONGHINI EQUAL 8 INTERESINAUNG | T{

FINN. TIVIGOURĮ STUDUE EMTR R ̄I} MIHALDERREU ATN, BAEKURRENTE MSO)

CAPABLITBULLAT.

|||| B|1|| MEGAFC 8 AWAKENOBACH" A |T = R= | LEAN BEANCE CRISESĽU PRVE T

CLIMATI U EXETER L R NË VI

RELLGATED

IN LONDON

Chc

Hongkong Eelegraph.

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