Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 161, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 November 1927 — Page 7
WoV< 14, 1927.
HANKOW FIRED AFTER ROUT OF RADICAL ARMY City Looted by Disorganized Troops; Leader Flees fluring Siege. Bn United Press SHANGHAI, Nov. 14. —British wireless dispatches from Hankow said this afternoon that fires in the native city had been extinguished. These denied earlier reports that American and British marines had been landed to protect foreign lives and property. It was expected, the dispatches said, that Nanking troops would enter the city peacefully tonight or tomorrow morning. Marines Guard Property General Ho Chien, it was added, had established headquarters at Yan-Yang, across the Han River from Hankow, and might decide to defend Han-Yang and Wu-Chang. French and Japanese marines, it was said, were guarding foreign concessions against looting. Nanking troops, the dispatches said, were searching all' Yangtze river ships for Tang Sen-Chi, whose desertion of his post as commander of the Radical Nationalist garrison at Hankow percipitated the present crisis. s Tang abandoned his post before COLDS THAT DEVELOP INTO PNEUMONIA Persistent coughs and colds lead to serious trouble. You can stop them now with Creomulsion, and> emulsified creosote that is pleasant to take. Creomulsion is anew medical discovery with two-fold action; it soothes and heals the inflamed membranes and inhibits germ growth. Os all known drugs, creosote is recognized by high medical authorities as one of the greatest healing agencies for persistent coughs and colds and other forms of throat troubles. Creomulsion contains, in addition to creosote, ther healing elements which soothe and heal the infected membranes and stop the irritation and inflammation, while the creosote goes on to the stomach, is absorbed into the blood, attacks the seat of the trouble and checks the growth of the germs. Creomulsion is guaranteed satisfactory in the treatment of persistent coughs and colds, bronchial asthma, bronchitis and other forms of respiratory diseases, and is excellent for building up the system after colds or flu. Money refunded if any cough or cold is not relieved after taking according to directions. Ask your gglst.—Advertisement.
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advancing moderate nationalists of the Nanking government had forced his army into a disorderly retreat, it was said. Tang, it is reported in Shanghai, has succeeded in evading his pursuers and will arrive here tonight aboard the steamer Han-Yang. Generals Switch Alliance It is reported that Ho Chien is negotiating with the Nanking leaders in order to .prevent looting of cities in Wuhan province. It is considered likely, from the tenor of reports, that Many defeated radical-nationalist generals will go over to their former allies of Nanking. Fires and looting in Hankow, that threatened for a time to reach serious proportions, were the work of Tang’s demoralized troops. FIND PASTOR’S WIFE AFTER FIVE WEEKS New Hampshire Woman to Enter Baltimore Sanitarium. B ii United Press CANAAN, N. H., Nov. 14.—Found after a three-week search, directed by her pastor-husband, Mrs. Anne Ramsay Forbush of Canandaigua, N. Y., left here early-today for Baltimore, where she will enter a sanitarium. She was accompanied by her husband, the Rev. Dascomb E. Forbush, pastor of the First Congregational Church of Canandaigua, and by Mr. and Mrs. Fred R. Hutchison, friends of the family. Mrs. Forbush, who disappeared from a Washington theater Oct. 19. was discovered Sunday in the woods near Claremont.
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CHAPTER VII , a E have left to the last the inYI U telligent and esthetic achieveYY ments of China. They rise naturally out of a profound respect for letters and the arts; never has a people so poor in material goods given such time and effort to education, or shown such reverence for the things of the mind. It is true that much of the education till 1911 took the form of memorizing the “Book of Odes’’ and the precepts of Confucius; even so, it might have been worse; for a man could not be in some degree ennobled by carrying the old master’s wisdom in his memory. But the very proverbs of the people indicate how education spread from these beginnings to the widest scholarship. “Husbandry and letters,” says the old maxim, “are the two chief professions. All pursuits are mean in comparison with learning. Extensive reading is a priceless treasure; and scholars are the richest ornaments of the feast. Who teaches me for a day is my father for a lifetime.” .* * * mHE Chinese, says Sir Robert Hart, “worship talent; they delight in culture, and everywhere they have their little clubs for learning, and for discussing each other’s essays and verse.” It was this people that invented printing eight hundred years before Gutenberg; they who in 600 A. D. had, in the Imperial Library, a collection of 54,000 manuscripts, each a work of calligraphic art; they who invented the writing of history, who produced lyric poetry a thousand years before Chris experimented successfully with "free verse” when Europe was still in savagery. Over a thousand poets flourished under the Tang dynasty, and are known by name and production to the historians of literature. Add to these the prose writers, the scholars, the architects, the sculptors, the painters, the porcelain workers, the scientists and the philosophers who graced the same age, and judge our provincialism in
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thinking of civilization as a flower that grows only in the West. * * * r-rn HINESE poetry, like everyIP thing in Chinese manners 1 and art, is a thing of infinite grace, whose power lies concealed under a delicate simplicity of utterance. It avoids exaggeration and passion, and pleases the mature mind by understatement and restraint; it is seldom romantic in though its classically quiet expression may reveal the strongest feeling. Let one anonymous poem stand for all: Men pass their Jives apart like star that move but never meet. This eye, how blest it Is that the same lamp gives light to both of us! Brief is youth’s day. Our temples already tell of waning life. Even now half of those we know v r e spirits. I am mo'Sed in the depths of my soul. And now how shall we do Justice to the art of China without overflowing from an essay into a volume? Let us put aside at once its architecture and its sculpture; in these it is not great, for the Chinese excell in. artistry of detail rather than in grandeur of conception or sublimity of execution. Perhaps because slavery never attained to any considerable scope in China, the buildings were made of wood, very seldom of stone; no structure survives in China older than the eleventh century A. D. Most buildings were of modest height, and the roof was their only glory; in many instances three roofs were laid one over the other with gracefully recurved eaves, as if the form had developed from the tent, and often the. whole was covered with brilliantly painted tiles. Under the eaves, and in the interior, wood delicately carved in queer designs showed the inclination of Chinese art to decoration rather than construction. Only the temples and pagodas rose to the dignity of several stories, and even these had a certain fragile quality in their grace, like the beautiful Porcelain Tower of Nanking, which was destroyed in the Taiping Rebellion in 1854.
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aT was in porcelain that China topped the world, and through porcelain that her name became a household word in lands that knew nothing of her greatness. Large part of every museum’s pride is its Chinese pottery, not even the Greeks could equal it. As early as the Han dynasty (206 B. C. —221 A. D.) it became supreme. One city alone had 500 kilns, and in 1000 A. D. the imperial porcelain works employed a million people. But most of the kilns were destroyed in the Taiping Rebellion, and the art of the potter rapidly declined. For art and war are restless rivals, and man periodically interrupts creation in order to kill. In cloisonne (approximately the same process of burning colors into copper as porcelain work in the burning of colors into clay), in the cutting of jade and ivory, in the making of bronzes, the working of brass, the carving of lacquf * —in all of these subtle and complex arts the Chinese have been masters. And finally in painting they have produced not the greatest, but the finest, work in history. Slowly the art evolved from the decoration of walls, panels, and pottery, untyl it grew into delicate water-colors on paper or silk.
BACK TO HEALTH; FEELS FINE AND PRAISES KONJOLA Morton St. Lady Relieved of Stomach and Kidney Trouble by the New Medicine. “I can certainly Indorse Konjola, because it has restored me to health and I don’t remember when I ever felt better in my life than I do since I got this medicine,” said Mrs. Della Craig, well-known Indianapolis lady, living at 2313 Morton St., this city, while talking with The Konjola Man
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at Hook’s drug store, Illinois and Washington Sts., Indianapolis, where large crowds are calling daily to find out for themselves about this surprising new medicine. “I had been suffering a long time from stomach and kidney troubles,” said Mrs. Craig, “and I almost.believed I would never enjoy good health again. I couldn’t eat a thing without suffering afterward. My food would seem to form into a hard lump in my stomach instead of digesting properly. This would cause terrible pains and very often I had spells of nausea, belching up a sour, bitter liquid. I was going down in weight and losing my strength faster each week. I couldn't sleep at night, due to kidney trouble, and was subject to rising three and ! four times every night. When I j got up in the morning I felt like I I had no rest at all, and I was always | suffering with terrible pains across Imy back. And along with this trouble, I also had dreadful head- | aches and dizzy spells. I ”1 read so many testimonials of Indianapolis people, who benefited by using Konjola that I decided there was something to this medicine, and I started taking it myself. The first bottle helped me wonderfully and now since I have taken my third bottle I am feeling like I never had a sick day in my life. It is a pleasure to enjoy my meals now, without any fear of stomach misery afterward. lam never troubled with indigestion pains, because my food agrees with me and is building me up in a wonderful way. I have gained back my strength and never suffer with bachaches like I used to. The headaches and dizzy spells to not come, and I am relieved of night risillg and the other miseries I used to suffer. I feel fine in the mornings when I get up. In fact, I enjoy better health in every way and can certainly recommend Konjola to others.” This Konjola is anew medical formula, containing the medicinal juices of 22 natural plants and made into one compound which restores the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels to more healthy, normal action. Konjola banishes the poisons from within the system cleansing the important functionary organs, thus ending the aches, pains and miseries so common among people today. New feelings of health come from the effect of Konjola in a natural and safe way, yet the action of this medicine is amazingly quick and the relief is generally permanent and sure. The Konjola Man Is at HoOk’s Drug Store, Illinois and Washington Sts., Indianapolis, where he is daily meeting the public and introducing and explaining the merits of this remedy. Konjola is being sold by every Hook drug store in this city, and by all druggists in the nearby towns.— Advertisement.
ST specialized above all in landscape, where it has never been surpassed; in the representation of distance and filmy horizons; in th& following of water wandering among hills; in the study of animals caught in their natural lairs; and in such quiet scenes as a fisherman drifting idly on a lake, or a philosopher musing under the moon. It is true that these paintings ignore the “laws of perspective,” and the uses of reflection and shadow; but they have a mystical suggestiveness, and a technical and spiritual perfection, which have been the idol and despair of many modem artists in the West. Nevertheless, the greatest and most characteristic product of the Chinese is philosophy; it is wisdom rather than Jieauty that we find in their faces and their history. Not mere knowledge; in science the West has gone far beyond them. Time and again they made discoveries which with us have revolutionized life; and then they dropped them and passed on, seeking not power, but peace They had great physicians before Hippocrates, and knew, two thousand years before Harvey, the circulation of the blood; they invented the compass, made gunpowder (for fireworks and not for war), and developed a credit system before 900 A. D. But these were little things.
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Sugarcoating Trouble Nature Sets Her Own Standards and Lays Down Her Own Rules i The quotation given here from a Health Bulletin by Dr. Copeland, formerly Health Commissioner of the City ofNew York,is worthy of the thoughtful consideration of sufferers from constipation. It is the opinion of a nationally known health authority .Readitcarefully. The reference to water, with the proper mineral content, describes accurately Pluto Water, which for more than a generation has been recommended by physicians for constipation, however stubborn. Pluto
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mHE great thing was to deepen and quiet the soul with understanding. Lao-tse succeeded by one way, Confucius by another; and when they died, Chinese philosophy had still long centures before it, and supreme names. Chuang-tse (fourth century B. C.) followed Lao-tse’s lead, pleaded for a government that would govern least, and praised the life that would most conform to nature and be most content with natural things. . He scorned materialism in life, but in theory he united strangely the sceptic, the agnostic and the Idealist: — Coming into existence with this
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mortal coil of mine, with the exhaustion of this mortal coll the mandate of the soul will also be exhausted. The body decomposes, and the mind goes with it; this is our real cause for sorrow. Can the world be so dull as not to see this, or is it I alone who am dull, and others not so? , . . Let knowledge stop at the unknowable; that is perfection. . . . (Copyright 1937 by Will Durant) To Be Continued By placing his fingers on a conetype loud speaker, F. J. Bhaunesey of Rochester, N. Y., who is deaf and dumb, is able to “listen” to music and pick out the various instruments in an orchestra.
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ROYAL 'S. COPELAND, M. D. V. S. Senator from New York and formerly Health Commimoner of the City of New York Dr. Copeland says: waters of the right sort are preferable to many of the cathartic compounds on the market. Their power to overcome the immediate effects of constipation is unquqftioned. They are soothing and healing to the tissues. Sugar coated pills are pleasant to take which may add to their danger. That is the reasdn they are coated with sugar. They are no less drastic and habit-form-ing because they appeal to the taste. Mineral waters pass through the system, doing nothing else but to flush and cleanse the intestinal tract.”
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