Pinang Gazette and Straits Chronicle, 26 October 1915

Total Pages: 8
1 8 Pinang Gazette and Straits Chronicle
  • 20 1 Pinang Gazette AND STRAITS CHRONICLE. PUBLISHED DAILY. ESTABLISHED 1833. No. 246 VOL. LXXIII. TUESDAY. 26th OCTOBER, 1915. PRICE 10 CENTS
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  • Page 1 Advertisements
    • 845 1 U IT WANT TO SHIP, 1 BUY O’» BELL *RUBB er Ol TO fl FORWARD DOOM |r© AHY PART ov WORLD ALLEN DENNYS Co., I V. ***>■ ITMMT. kJ V K »>■■■■■■■■■■■■« IT| 1 KK» J the j HIGH-CLASS CIGARETTES AT MODERATE PRICES. jap» Mail Steamship Co. id. Northam House
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    • 60 1 uaoouoiaaaoDiuaraDNDQDDan g FOB $BO g g X7OU can have the Pinang g B X Gaaette n poetad every day o fQK. a whole year to your address. (LOCAL SUBSCRIPTION, >27). O q Proportionate Quarterly and g a Half-yearly rates. q Subscriptions are payable in advenes and remittances should g ba
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  • 1012 2 Her Highness the Maharani Sabeb of Bhavnagar has sent to England two thousand religious threads for Hindu sepoys at the front. Dr. Lim Boon Keng delivered a lecture in the Y.M.C. A., Singapore, on Monday evening, on The Peace of the World.” H.E. the Governor presided. A
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  • 32 2 To-day’s quotation for unrefined ti> in Penang was $74.80 per picul, buyers, no sellers. Tin is quoted in London to-day at £153 15s. Spat, and £154 10s. three months
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  • 244 2 The homeward mail «loses on Friday, the 29th instant, at 7 p.m. Registration up to 5 p.m. the same day. The Department of Agriculture at Semara* g has notified all the rise merchants there that on and from the 2nd instant, the export of Saigon rice from that
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  • 929 2 MR. W. R. JONES’ THEORY. At a recent meeting of the Geological Society of London, Mr. W. Jones, formerly Assistant Geologist, F M S, delivered a paper on. The Origin of Tin-Ore Deposits of the Kinta District". In the course of his paper, Mr Jones,
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  • Page 2 Advertisements
    • 758 2 NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. wanted /’''HINEBE CLERK who can read and FURNISHED HOUSE. t Pr Reply No. 85, c/o Pinang Gazette l WANTED Married Couple or two Bachelor* to «hare commodious J i u furnished bouse with gentieman, or would let to good tenant. m Convenient for town. Electric light. GOVCYAIUCIIt 01
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    • 232 2 THREAD A NEEDLE AND SEE IF YOUR HAND TREMBLES. The state of one’s nerves may be gauged by threading a needle; People who find it difficult to keep their hands steady enough to thread a nee lie may be certain that their health is failing. This is a medical fact.
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    • 417 2 KRAMAT PUL Al, Lt(l (laeorporated i a England). THE DIRECTORS have declared A second interim dividend o f shilling per share, less income tax nav.u® on 30th October, 1915, on the current year. NUTTER PEARSE, General Ipoh, 21st October, 1915. 1006—26-10 buccaneer M" OTICE is hereby given that the Trade
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  • AHEAD OF THE MAIL.
    • 822 3 MR. GIBBS’ NARRATIVE. London, 29th September.Mr. Philip Gibbs telegraphing from British Headquarter» in France, to the <* Daily Chronicle on Sunday, stated that a big battle commenced at dawn yesterday. The enemy, suspecting the movements of troop» behind our lines, expended a quantity of shells, especially on
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    • 738 3 Paris, Oct 3. Le Pe r it Parisien describing the recent British victory at Loos, B *y» the sight of the human wave rolling up to the summit of a little hill was like a windswept sea—a marvellous spectacle, lhe English troops from behind this hillock
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    • 195 3 London, September 29.—An officer of the Gurkhas states that the Neuve Chapelle battle was a trifling affair compared with last Saturday’s engagement. We lay (he declared yesterday) in the trenches on Friday night, unable to sleep, owing to the awful crash of artillery. The Gurkhas were
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    • 205 3 A wounded French officer, describing the Crown Prince’s latest attack in the Argonne, declares it was the most furious of the war. There was a tremendous bombardment, to which the French guns replied with little effect. The French parapets melted away but the French did not
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    • 75 3 German counter-attacks in the Argonne are not likely to interfere with the French movements in the Champagne region. The Crown Prince has sustained a serious reverse and has been hurled back four times with heavy loss. The failure of his desperate attempt to break through to aid
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    • 130 3 London, October 4th.—A romantic story is told about the escape of two German lieutenants, Keil back and Thelen, from a concentration camp in Leicestershire and their subsequent recapture on board ship. The pair and two other officers collected £5O from their fellow prisoners and Keilhack and
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    • 69 3 Johannesburg, Oct. 4.General Botha strongly repudiates a suggestion circulated by Nationalist opponents in the election compsign that the late President Kruger, before fleeing from South Africa, handed to him 244 bars of gold, valued at a quarter of a million sterling, which have not since been
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    • 249 3 London, October 3.lt is officially announced that General Smut?, South African Minister of Defence, barely escaped assassination through a hooligan plot at Newlands, near Johannesburg, on the 23rd September. Two thousand men violently interfered with, and broke up a meeting General Smuts was addressing, in addition to
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    • 73 3 London, October 1 When asked in the Hou-eof Commons yesterday for details of the reported torpedoing of a German cruiser in the Baltic late in August, Mr. Balfour replied that he was unable to give any information beyond that contained in the Russian report.
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    • 238 3 Berne, September 28.—A member of a Zeppelin crew, writing to the newspaper Der Bund,” state» London is beyond our range, although it is p essible if there is a steady east wind by which we can float for a considerable distance, conserving our petrol. Unfortunately the weather is
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    • 362 3 London, Oct. 4.The streets of London which for months have been gloomy and dismal at night time, are now darker than ever. The new regulations have doubly shaded street lights and there is but a fitful gleam for traffic, yet buses and taxis, dimly lighted, rush through the
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    • 341 3 London October 4.—The Bishop of London has uttered a vigorous denunciation of the night clubs of London, which he says are mostly haunts and hunting grounds of sharp and loose women and their existence in war time is a national danger. The Bishop states the London Council
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    • 57 3 London, October 15.One London recruiting station took seven fold the recent average number of men on the day after the Zeppelin raid. Picked Aviators to Repel Zeppelins. Vancouver, October, 3.—A London cable reports that nearly a dozen picked aviators have arrived in England to assist British fliers
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    • 176 3 London, September 30.Reuter’s correspondent at the Dardanelles, writing on the 10th instant, stated :A fall of temperature with equinoctial wind? has commenced and a north-easter is sweeping the Peninsula and tossing the Aegian about. The cliff», however, afford shelter for landing places and even the open Bulva
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    • 95 3 London, October 4.King Ferdinand of Bulgaria, when recently conversing with a diplomatist, thus described his position:l am like a blind man running with a lighted torch among the haystack». Whichever side turn I must set fire to enmeshing.” In diplomatic circle?, it is pointed out that Russia’s ultimatum
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    • 44 3 London, Oct. 15.The Central News” correspondent at Rome sends reports emanating from Bucharest to the effect that the Bulgars captured on the Danube seven Russian barges with grain for Serbia and destroyed a munition train from Russia at Tabakovts station.
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    • 78 3 Petrograd, October 3.Unheeding the appeals of officers to take shelter from a hail of bullets, Mira Wanova, a nurse, tended the wounded in the thick of a battle on the 21st September until all the officers, including her brother, had fallen. The men were wavering, but Mira,
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    • 25 3 Rome, October 4.—-The Corriere della Sera’s correspondent states that Russia has a new army of 1,500,000 men ready in the Petrograd district.
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    • 159 3 London, October 3—The Daily Choronicle states that the American Ambassador at Constantinople approached the Ottoman Porte with an off-r to transport to America the whole of the Armenians driven from their homes in Asia Minor. The Ambassador offered personally to provide 1100,000 (£20,000) and to find another
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  • Page 3 Advertisements
    • 298 3 1 Debility 1 h When you feel limp and washed out, weary fl f and fatigued with no inclination for exertion— U K your body is in a run-down condition—you are A g debilitated. You need something to put fresh g X "go into youyou need a fortnight’s iron Jelloids’
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  • 743 4 Most of us in pre-war days have had agreeable social relations with Germans We met them in business and in sport. They had places of honour and influence on our Chambers of Commerce, and in our Clubs. We entertained them and they generously returned our hospitality. Those
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  • 43 4 We regret to announce the death in action of L eut Cyul Newcomb, 12 Battalion Royal Fusiliers, which took place in France on September 25tb. Mr New comb was formerly an Assistant in the Bukit Mertajam Rubber Coy., Kulim, Kedah.
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  • 1631 4 Victory,” Joseph Conrad, Methuen s Colonial Library. Mr. Joseph Conrad has given us fascinating stories of the Malayan Archipelago, in the past, which one recalls with pleasure. His people of the East and the West are not bloodless individuals. Mr. Conrad, too, knows the Islands,” and see*
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  • 120 4 The Hon. Treasurer sends us the following list of further contributions to I above Fund, forwarded to the Charterer Bank, Penang. Balance on Oct 21 ...139,622.38 Amount collected by Mr J H Phipps Audit Office $11.50, Public Works Department and Survey Office $31.10,
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  • Page 4 Advertisements
    • 118 4 FRESH STOCK JUST RECEIVED. j ACETIC ACID: 99/100/ PURE GLACIAL. Genuine Morni Wood Cases 19" by 19" by 24'. JJ M i White Porcelain Rubber Cups, J TUMBLER SHAPE. J Price on Application. J The Eastern Trading Co., PENANG <* IPOH. M aiiiaaiiaiißaMaiMiiaiiiiiiaai r 5 FOR Rubber, coconuts, coffee, etc.
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    • 97 4 FRIDAY, 29th OCT. THE Misses Eileen Doris Woods will appear in their renowned Cabaret Entertainment ACCOMPANIED BY Mrs. HARRY WOODS AFTER A Special Dinner AT THE E. &O. HOTEL. NOTICE. TO SUBSCRIBERS TO THE PINARG GAZETTE." The accounts of the "Plnang Gacstte,” hawing* been issued, subscribers are reminded that all
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  • Page 4 Miscellaneous
    • 35 4 THE TIDES. The following are the tides for tomorrow, Penang Standard Times High Water. Low Water. 1-15 a.m. 8- 3 a.m. 1-38 p.m. 7-47 p.m. 1- a.in. 8-26 a.m. 2- 3 p.m. 8 7 p.m.
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  • 430 4 OBITUARY. MR. ALFRED DE WINDT NEUBRONNER. We deeply regret to record the death of Mr; Alfred de Windt Neubronner, the father of Mr. H. A. Neubronner, which took place at his residence, No. 3, Perak Road, early this morning. Mr. Neubronner, who was born on the 26th March, 1844, was
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  • 492 5 THE ALLIES* MEASURES. the attack on dedeagatch. PRINZ ADALBERT SUNK. french success in champagne. GERMANS ACTIVE NEAR RICA. The French have been successful in an offensive effort against a salient in the line in Champagne, capturing strong positions over a front of 1,200 yards, after very severe
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  • France and. Belgium.
    • 122 5 [Reuter’s Telegrams.] PIPERS IN THE TRENCHES. [Copyright Telegrams.] (By Submarine Telegraph.) London, October 26. A correspondent at the British Headquarters states as one of the incidents uf the British attack at Leos that the Black Watch went into action with the Ppers playing Heiland Laddie.” The
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    • 141 5 IMPORTANT SUCCESS. Paris, October 25. The French have gained another important success in Champagne. The c mmunique says We took a German salient, comprising a very important work, and four lines of trenches, strongly organised, along a front of 1,200 yards, with an average depth of
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    • 154 5 The fifteen miles of front on which the French were fighting in Champagne recently lies for the most part immediately north of the old camp of Chalons, so that it is ground well known to the Fiench Army. It is up'and here and ther»broken by small woods.
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    • 551 5 It is constantly suggested, says a London correspondent, writing before the great offensive started in the West, that the Government are not telling the people the whole truth. There are many details of a great war that, of course, cannot wisely be divulged. But so
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  • Russian Campaign.
    • 90 5 THE EXPECTED OFFENSIVE. London, October 26. The Times says the Russian Headquarters has authorised its representative with the Russian General Staff to state that the crisis for the Russian arms, which whs due to the enemy dealing uninterrupted blows over a front of 700 miles, from May
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    • 92 5 THE MENACE TO RIGA. Petrograd, October 25. A Russian communique states that the Germans captured a village south-east of Riga. A Zeppelin bombed Riga on Friday night. Fierce fighting has been resumed on the Dvinsk front. The Germans, on Saturday, captured Illuxt, after several attacks.
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    • 595 5 The capture of Riga and i’s Gulf would be a hit for the Germans. There has been ample evidence of the stubborn defence with which the extreme Russian right wing is opposing the German attempts to seize Riga by frontal attack. It may ultimately become necessary for
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  • Turkey, and the Near East
    • 264 5 EXTENT OF NORTHERN ADVANCE. Paris, October 25. A French communique shows that tbe village of Rabrovo was occupied by the French, nine miles south of Strumnitza, on Thursday, not on Friday. The French losses were very slight. Another telegram from Salonika says the Serbians, on Friday,
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    • 95 5 REPORTED LANDING OF ALLIES. London, October 25. An account of tbe bombardment of Dedeagatch, published in Athens, says twenty battleships participated, and that the attack lasted for four hours, on Thursday afternoon. An aeroplane over the town directed the warships’ fire. A thousand soldiers were killed,
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    • 45 5 GERMAN MINISTER TO TURKEY Amsterdam, October 25. A Constantinople telegram states that Baron Wangenheim, the German Ambassador to the Porte, has died, after a brief illness. Deceased was responsible for the Goeben and Bre’lau coming to Constantinople, with all the attendant results.
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    • 214 5 A SOLDIER’S NARRATIVE. London, October 25. Reuter’s correspondent at the Mediterranean Headquarters gives an Armenian war prisoner’s narrative of the Turkish atrocities, when returning invalided to his home at Zile, north-west of Sivas. He was an eye-witness of the Turks shoeing tbe Bishop of Sivas like a
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    • 21 5 London, October 25. It is stated from Bukharest that the Goeben Las arrived at Varna, in the Black Sea.
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    • 329 5 Preparations in Syria. Paris, Sept. 22.Details are given of a project for renewing the Turkish attack on Egypt. These details are derived from a source which the Journal dea Debata descri be, as absolutely trustworthy. Preparations are being pushed forward actively and openly for a fresh attack
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  • Naval Operations.
    • 38 5 GERMAN CONFIRMATION. Amsterdam, October 26. A Berlin communique states that a submarine sank the large German cruiser Prinz Adalbert with two torpedoes, off Libau, iu the Baltic, only a few of the crew being rescued.
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  • Italy’s Campaign.
    • 103 5 BIG BATTLE ON CARSO. Rome, October 25. An Italian communique states that the Italians continued their successful offensive, occupying a village aid heights in ithe Ledro valley, storming two redoubts in upper Cordevole, c mple iug the seizure of the south-eastern slopes of Mozli, in Monte Nero,
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  • 48 5 TRUST COMPANY FORMED. Washington, October 25. Mr. Redfield, Secretary for]Commerce, announced the formation of an American Trust Company, similar to the organisation, Netherlands Ove seas Trust, which will handle all American products for abroad, with assurances that they will not reach the belligerents.
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  • 19 5 Amsterdam, October 25. Emperor Francis J <seph has knighted Dr, Dumbs, who recently returned from America.
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  • 184 5 Heer Regout, the Dutch Minister at Rome, is seriously ill. At a meeting of the importers of Java and Sumatra tobacco Heer van Aalst declared that the Overseas Trust should continue to import tobacco, coffee and quinine without re’triction of any kind. The Trust made it a condition
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  • 283 5 Turin, September 22.—-The Secolo,” the chief Radical organ of Italy, has an editorial article on Mr. Lloyd George’s perfaoe to his speeches. The paper says What interests and pre-occupies tbe nations allied with Britain is not that England should work an internal political revolution fraught with such radical
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  • 1124 6 WINTER SUPPLIES READY. Of its 600 kilometre» front, the Italian army ii fighting on a line of Alp» 450 kilometres long. This colossal barrier which, considering the quality of modern weapon», and the nature of the defence, constitutes one of the most difficult theatre» of operations in military
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  • 634 6 The following steamers arrived at Sabang during the present month 2nd October, es. Yeddo (Swedish) from Gottenburg to Colombo. 2nd October, ss. Baron Lovat (British) from Manila to Colombo. 3rd October ss. Ocean (Norwegian) from Padang to Calcutta. 3rd October, ss. Roepal (Dutch) from Batavia to Suez
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  • 451 6 AN AMERICAN VIEW. All previous attempt» to implant conscription in English-speaking countries make one regret that the present moment should have been chosen for another campaign in its favuir says the "New York Herald.” Conscription in England may become necessary. That it is not yet necessary i»
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  • 191 6 The following is a translation of Emile Carnmaert’s Puem in the "London Observer.” What would you have They only do Just what they c.n not much, tis true. Widows and orphansquite a few To make, and soldiers too to slay In one whole year. But
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  • 152 6 The business for th» meeting of Penang Municipal Commission to be held today is as follows Special Meeting. 1. Minutes of last meeting to be read and confirmed. 2. To consider Draft'Budget for 1916 (as framed). Ordinary Meeting. 1. Any special business the President may bring forward.
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  • Page 6 Advertisements
    • 222 6 Safety First ww /®A K W t &/T ._«> zßu I’B ®J W/ ISt vffi'v 7 |gfrJwj3BlEi iMK\® lIU Uli a 111 fIVMfY r iwu I w 5 WIR pjjir «wwa-* a s x uMI uMIW pL H X nwn i u l i r a i;J tiki i lUll
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  • Page 6 Miscellaneous
    • 117 6 The Emphatic Programme of the Week. TO-NIGHT TO-NIGHT AT THE Kuala Kangsa Road Theatre, Under the new management of the Straits Cinema Co. The Queen's Jewel, 3 reels 3 reels A meritorious drama of high value, replete with sensational and thrilling incidents in the mid-air, such as Aeroplane tray The
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    • 302 6 We pick feature films that are real features! The Perils of Pauline" has been put into real life 1! THE STRAITS CINEMA Phone No. 628. EMPIRE HALL, PENANG ROAD. TO-NIGHT I PRESENT TO-NIGHT 11 The PERILS of PAULINE, 2 Reels Episode 111 Reels 2 2 Reels Episode IV Reels 2
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  • SPORTING NEWS.
    • 319 7 The shoot at Bahru i yesterday <»soited as follows igg irrac (Monthly Prize Opzs. 2-? E C T ®T3 -s 4-0 J? O c M «M CM t“ Mm Luton 33 30 28 91 Mrs Holme-Sharp 28 31 30 90 Mrs Wright-Motion 30 27 29 86
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    • 64 7 The following ties have been* fixed for to-morrow Championship—E H Everett vF W Harries (final) (4) (unfinished). Profession PairsHotchkis and (Perrin v Bennett and Prentie (5). Doublet Handicap AWinfield Jg (and Blackford v Bavi and Gregson (6). -~ig: Veteran»Swan ani G E W Motion Sr v Hutson
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    • 252 7 Orescent Star Sports Club v. Krdah Accepting a challenge from Mr. N. A. M. Grifhu, of Kedah, a team from the Crescent Star Sports Club left by the morning tram on Saturday, arriving at Alor Star at 11-45 a.m. The visitors were warmly re ceived by the Kedah people,
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  • 32 7 -he following are the latest quotations ln our «Mare list Yesterday. To-day. shams A > ss x cc x Lama 50c 75c 25c 50c Au66*r (Dollar). $3.30 s3| $3.13 $3.35
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  • 916 7 THE ANNUAL MEETING. The fifth annual general meeting of the shareholders of The Temerloh Coconu‘ A Rubber Estate, Limited, was held in the registered offices of the Company No. 9, Beach Street, Penang, on SaturdayMr. W. H Thorne was in the chair and the others presen' were Messrs
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  • 886 7 AN APPRECIATION. In the Badenoch K-cord of September 25th appears the following appreciation by E.C." of the iate Mr. MacGillivrav, a Director of tbe Bungei Matang Rubber Estate, Ltd., and a gentieman well known in tbe Straits Settlements It was with a sad heart that, on tbe very
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  • 134 7 LECTURE AT IPOH. From Our Own Correspondent.'] Ipoh, October 25. Mr. A. Sharpies of the Agricultural Department F.M.B. delivered a lecture at Ipoh on The Diseases of the Rubber Tree.” The lecture was under the auspices of the Central Perak Planter», and was presided over by
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  • 216 7 Pbnang, October 26. Bkbf— eg». Soup per catty 18 Roast M 26 Steaks 26 Stew or Curry Meat 20 Rump Steak 26 Ox Tail each 50 Tongue 50 15 Heart 40 Liver per catty 35 Pork Pork per catty 36 Pig’s Head *22 Feet M 26 Tongue 36
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  • 68 7 T«<«4ay. October 26 Band, Golf Club, 6 p.m. Empire Theatre. Penang Road Electric Polyscope Co., Argyle Road. Wa4a««4a}. October 27. Band Esplanade. 6 p.m. Tb«ra4ay, October 28 Band. Golf Club, 6 p.m. Friday, October 29. Homeward Mail Closes 7 p.m Band, Esplanade, 6 p.m. Rater day. October
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  • 77 7 SHIPPING AKKTVALS. Malacca, Brit., 40 1, Dun, Oct 26, Tongkah, gen., Adamaon Gilfillan Co. Will-o-the-wisp, Brit., 148, Sampson. Oct 26, Deli, gen.. G. H. Slot Co. Cornelia, Brit., 197, Bergwitz, Oct 26, T. Anson, gen., E. 8 Co. Hok Canton, Brit., 287, Mathews, Oct 26, S pore, gen.. E
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  • 40 7 To-day. Indragiri for Deli and Batu Bahra Trang for Trang. Jin Ho for Asahan Hebe for Telus Ansou. Pangkor tor Bindings and Sitiawan. Kiang for Port Swettenham and Singapore. Gienogle for Singapore and China. Fooasang for Calcutta and Durban.
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  • 76 7 CLOSE AT GENERAL POST OFFICE. To-Moreow. For P«r Close Yen Jit Seng 7 a.m. Deli Will o’ the Wisp 1 p.m. Thursday. Negapatam. Madras and Durban Ekma noon. Tongkah Malacca 2 p.m. Port Swettenham and Singapore Ellora 3 p.m. Singapore and China Hongbee 3 p.m Rangoon and Calcutta Ceylon
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  • 251 7 Pehamg, October 23, 1915. 8. P. Tapiooa $5.30 sales. M. P. Tapioca ss| buyers Gold leaf $64.40 Pepper (W. Coast 3 lb. 5 oz). $l6 1/2 buyers Black Pepper $lB.OO buyers. White Pepper 129 sellers Trane Pepper out of season. Mace <HO nom Mace Pickings $5» sales Cloves $45
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  • Page 7 Advertisements
    • 37 7 advertising. There is only one way to succeed in business That is by constantly and persistently advertising your goods. Drive the thought of them into people’s heads, so that they will remember you when considering their requirements
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    • 307 7 INSURANCE. THE CORPORATION OF THE ROYAL EXCHANGE ASSURANCE AoyaZ Exchange, London COMMENCED business in A.n. 1717 and wu Incorporated by Royal Charter m A.D. 1710 and is therefore one of the oldeet Companies in existence. It has granted the benefits of Assurance to the Public for a period exceeding 190
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  • Page 7 Miscellaneous
    • 161 7 THE TIDES. Penang—October, 1915. Penang Standard Times—Heights referred to Datum of Soundings in Admiralty Charts High Water. Low Water h m ft. h m ft. Tu 26 m 1 15 7.0 26 m 8 3 0.9 1 38 a 5 9 7 47 a 1.6 W 27 m 1 38
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  • Page 8 Advertisements
    • 2380 8 P. intended sailings. straits Steam Ship Co., Ltd. Ocean Stcdm Navigation Co. InDIA For int,nded a.u. s**””- siwm sb» <•„ i«. t Wink.. Telegraphy fitted o. .11 ItiT I ron«.ds.ng.p.», £«7 ££*>7. I;£ P- Kkng. CHINA MUTUAL STEAM NAY. 00. LTB Steamers B eMIU NAVIGATION COMPANY LTD trO,n W qrHB
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