Pinang Gazette and Straits Chronicle, 8 January 1923

Total Pages: 12
1 12 Pinang Gazette and Straits Chronicle
  • 20 1 Pinang Gazette AND STRAITS CHRONICLE PUBLISHED DAILY. ESTABLISHED 1888. No. 6. VOL LXXXI. MONDAY, Bth JANUARY, 1923. PRICE 15 CENTS.
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  • Page 1 Advertisements
    • 760 1 llH|tl| l ;!|W |f'l”!' -KM, ll!llfl!lllllffl l|l|lllll!l!lll ««111'11'1 J NIKKO j j MODERN art j j photographic I I STUDIO I I \'o 7 Northam Road, Penang. S'* I Telephone No. 579. TODELTTE I mascots. 1 -K—ax *n Many of the Mascots which decorat® gw (REGISTERED) T the cars one
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    • 35 1 a «■■■■■««■>■*■■■■■■■ a k x ,S72 I PATtONIZEI) BY ROYALTY The Only Reputable ouse for J iJEWELLERYs ALWAYS SOMETHING NEW Enquiries Attended to SB. P. de SILVAs No. 1, BMW STUET. PKiANt. 62-3, fIMB STMET, SMGAPWE.
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  • 699 2 WOMAN’S WEAKNESS. The reluctance of ladies of title to pai with their titles after death or 'he divorce court has parted them from the husbands who gave them titles seems to be a common weakness of the sex. There are at least a score of women in
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  • 233 2 To investigate sand-fly fever, which i*very common in Malta, Crete, end other parts of the Mediterranean area. Major Harold Whittingham, M.D., took from Malta a number of sand-fly eggs, from which he has succeeded in rearing a new generation of sand-flies at the R.A.F Hospital, Finchley, N. Major
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  • Page 2 Advertisements
    • 1587 2 J- nrrmuim jounrjJULMJ aiim-.irtr--r‘-—">r-.r*.«T- ~rr»-. xbx tv < n. POSITION WANTED. NOTICES p«cnnnm™™™ninnj»«Mwa 5 zCZX I Energetic Youth, well up in Mercan- PENANG TURF CLUB. < 1 9 tile and Estate Accounts. Typewriting g f '”3 j z^L\\ B and General Office routine, seeks position Applications for use of Private
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    • 513 2 IT PENETRATES without rubbing. At the first sign of pain— I think of EQfinSES Sloan's Liniment. llKllulmll Don’t imagine there’s no help for your Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Neuritis or Lumbago because you’ve tried other /1 remedies. Sloan’s Liniment is so pene- A trating and effective, it gets right down J to
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  • 1022 3 BOXING BOLT WITH AN ORANGOUTANG. The king cobra had to be moved into a nit w box. He was a very wild ;rake, and '‘henever his captor approached him the cobra beat- its head against the wires of the cage. As this cage v/as o n]y a
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  • 418 3 PROTEST BY EASTERN EXTENSION COMPANY. The following letter appears in the Straits Times.” Sir. —I notice in the leading article of your paper, of yesterday’s date, statements about the Cable Service which are absolutely false. Your remarks all but the Urgents are treated as no consequence is casting
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  • 132 3 At a luncheon given by the White Star Line on the the S.S Pittsburg at Bremerhaven to inaugurate the Company’s new service between Bremen, Halifax and New A’ork. calling at Southampton, Colonel Concanon, joint manager, said they were assembled as business men whose only thought
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  • 142 3 Messrs. Guthrie and Co., Ltd, Singapore, reported on the sth January:—The New Year saw 7 the Rubber Market touch the !/3d mark for the first time since the commencement of restriction. The rise was followed by some profit-taking in the local Market and, in consequence, slightly easier
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  • 35 3 Jan 9—Penang Assizes. Jan 23, 25 and 27—Penang Races. Jan 25—“ Tons of Money,” Bandman’s New English Farcical Comedy Company. Feb 9 and 10—Perak Gymkhana Club’s Spring Alceting. Feb 20—Court of Appeal. Penang.
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  • Page 3 Advertisements
    • 494 3 gjjSorainiDl'.' ££QXLraxilu.UJx'JUJ tk« I /IWk Eandl J JSS Rnrkp’c 0 5 O is the most perfect trans3 A 3 mission system yet devised, 3 II HHH a. 3 providing a solid drive with x fl B all the flexibility of a belt. U •;'.j'l Ofl Hi It is the mount
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    • 380 3 Talk to Advertisers and Buyers The man with reliable goods to sell is the man who advertises— and ad vertises discriminatingly. The reason is obvious after a moment’s consideration. No amount of advertising will secure large and permanent sales for inferior goods. Advertising in this case is mere publication of
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  • 1446 4 SOCIAL PERSONAL. Lady Campbell arrived by the Delta from London to-day. Air. Sydney Smith has gone to Pahang to assume duty as State Engineer. Dr. J. R. McVail has been seconded for service under the Kelantan Government. Mr. D. S. Gardner, Manager of Castlefield Estate, Pucliong, leaves for Europe this
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  • 234 4 TWO CHINESE CHARGED. A remarkable case, the first of its kind to occur in Malaya, was mentioned by Chief Detective Inspector F. Mann, in the Police Court, Penang, before Air. H. C. Bathurst this morning. Two Chinese (Kehs) answering to the names of Chin Foo Seong
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  • 587 4 “S.T.” The “Peking and Tientsin Times” reports another serious anti-foreign outrage- It appears that on December 16 Signor Boveri, the Chief of the Italian Police in Tientsin.. Signor Zotti and two Russian chauffeurs left. Peking for Tientsin by road- At the south barrier of Tungchow
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  • 1307 4 Keen Rivalry. Good weather favoured the InterCompany sports held by the Penang Volunteers at the Esplanade on Saturday. -There was a slight shower of rain in the forenoon, but it was not sufficient to materially affect the ground. Each event was keenly contested and there was a
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  • Page 4 Advertisements
    • 521 4 I.'EW AD7EMISEMENTS. NOTICES. The Anglo-Chinese School will re-open January 18th, 1923. N. Y. K. BOMBAY LINE. s.B. AWA MARU for Colombo and Bombay, is expected to arrive here on or about the 19th instant. Paterson, Simons Co., Ltd., Agents. NATAL DIRECT LINE. s.s. “UMSINGA” is expected to leave Calcutta for
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    • 369 4 THAT LAZY, LISTLESS “DON’T-CARE” FEELING! IT’S YOUR LIVER. Dissolve a pinch of Alkia Saltrates in your tea every morning and soon feel fit as a fighting-cock, says PETER LATHAM World’s Champion at Racquet, 1887-1902. World’s Champion at Tennis, 1895-1905, Retired undefeated. Ever have little lazy, listless, don’t care feeling of
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  • 1007 5 L\Cl< <)F I'NITY at SINGAPORE. quorum was only just reached in the t tt< n<l:uice of members of the Singapore Eurasian Association at the third annual .ii<Tal meeting at the St. Andrew’s School, at Singapore. The president, Mr. B. Westerhout, took the chair and tli<>se present included Messrs
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  • 799 5 WOMAN TRAVELLER S EXTRAORDINARY VISITOR. Mis. Charlotte Cameron, 0.8. E F.R.G.S., one of the world’s greatest woman travellers, has just returned to Sin gapore after a three weeks holiday trip to Borneo. To a “Free Press” representative, Mrs. Cameron said she xfas surprised at the development and civilisation,
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  • 899 5 SCOTT’S LAST JOURNEY. Mr. Apsley Cherry-Garrard, in The Worst Journey in the World” (Constable, 2 vols., £3 3s). has written a really fine and notable book, says a review in the Daily Mail.” It is an account of Scott’s last Antarctic expedition, with much additional information
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  • 286 5 TO-DAY’S DEPARTURES. van Hogendorp Deli and Langsa. Berak [E.S. Co] for Teluk Anson. Kedah for Dindings and Sitiawan. Lady Blake for Mergui, Tavoy, Rangoon and Moulmein. Willesden for Port Swettenham, taking mails for Klang, Kuala Lumpur, Singapore and China. His Majesty the King will not be advised to
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  • 366 5 CLOSE. DAILY (except Sunday). BY TRAIN. Registration and Parcel Post, except where otherwise stated, close half-an-hour earlier than the Ordinary mail. FOR AT Federated Malay States, Malacca, Johore, Singapore and Hongkong Ipoh, Batu Gajah, Tapah Road, By train Teluk Anson,Kuala Kubu, Kuala I 7.15 a.m. Lumpur, Klang, Port
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  • Page 5 Advertisements
    • 161 5 Simonds B Bottled Ale ft sparkles- it foams, and IUwM the s avoUr is splendid. It will give you an appetite. You will enjoy it as y° u never enjoyed a beer before. jbm A BRITISH ALE Brewed Expressly for I wl qOmMhIW Residents in the East. I Be sure
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  • 18 6 Turner.—At the Maternity Hospital. Singapore, on January 5, to Mr. and Mrs. R. Rennie Turner, a son.
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  • 105 6 Vanrenen—Wilkinson.—On Dec., 30, 1922, at Perth, W. Australia, Frank A. Vanrenen of Kuala Kangsar, Perak. F. M. S.. to Mary Alicia Wilkinson, third daughter of the late R. A. Wilkinson, of Ballarat, Victoria. Pratt—Trowell.—Dec. 9, at Seacombe, Edgar Charles Bothwell, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Pratt, of
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  • 989 6 S. T.” While interest in the matters which brought together the Premiers’ Conference at Paris has intensified rather than subsided with the breakdown of that gathering, the Lausanne Conference again comes into the limelight. For over a month the Allies and the Turks have been trying
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  • 1287 6 The victims of the removal of the Rent Restriction OrdiThe Rents nance are hopeful that Crisis. the petition sent to the Secretary of State will have the desired effect. This can only come about if the petition has the backing of the local Government, and in view
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  • 414 6 A homeward mail by the Calchas, closes at 5 p.m. on Thursday, the 11th instant. The homeward mail by the Teesta. closes at ]0 ''a.m. on Friday, the 12th instant. The Seletar Riffe Range. Singapore, in the Seletar Reservoir catchment area, is almost completed, and, it is expected,
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  • Page 6 Advertisements
    • 376 6 LYRIC KINEMA, Z“ u Bth, 9th and 10th January, 1923. THE GREAT CARLTON (Late Understudy of HOUDINI) and his Original Company of Entertainers. THE WORLD’S GREATEST MAGICIAN and ILLUSIONIST Presenting a Bewildering Display of Illusions, Transformations and Scientific Problems. The World’s Mystic Thrill The Elusive Woman I! rp he Most
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    • 45 6 “E. O.” Tuesday, 9th January, Dinner and Dance. Wednesday, 10th Special Tiffin Orchestra. Orchestral Concert 9-45 p.m. Thursday. 11th The Dansant 5 to 7 p.m. (Tables can be Booked.) Friday 12th Guest Night—Dinner and Dance. Saturday, 13th Special Tiffin Orchestra. Dancing after Dinner by Request.
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  • 167 6 DEATHS. Laing.—Dec. at Southsea, W. D. Laing, late Eastern Extension Telegraph Co. Lee.—At 29, McAlister Lane, Penang, on the 6th January, Tan Saw Sim Neoh age 85. The deceased leaves his only son Lee Boon Hooi. (two grandsons, Lee Cheng Ewe and Lee Cheng Liang), three grand daughters. (Lee Guat
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  • 1259 7 Press Hopes and Fears. AMERICA'S RHINE TROOPS. Reuter’s Telegrams.) London, January 6. I he Parisian Press continues to court the hope that Britain will range herself alongside Erance in the contemplated auainst Germane. Some papers measures emphasise that room will be provided for V n glish participation
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  • 65 7 Paris, January 7. The “Matin” says the Soviet Government requested the French Government to send to Russia a military mis sion, headed by Marshal Joffre. to reorganise the Red Army. The French Government replied to the effec t that it is not disposed at present to semi
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  • 45 7 THE RECORD OF 1922. London, January G. Last year, 113 new Limited Oomnanies were registered in Czech Slovakia, with a capital of £6,000,000 while the failures of 100 large firms totalled nearly the same sum, and 1,43-5 firms sought judicial settlemeu of their liabilities.
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  • LAUSANNE CONFERENCE.
    • 326 7 (Reuter’s Telegrams.) Lausanne, January 6. The Turkish delegate Rizanur created a dramatic scene in the Minorities SubCommission by angrily refusing to discuss questions of an Armenian national home or relating to the Chaldeans and Bulgars. He stood up, shouted, waved his arms, charged the Allies
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    • 1211 7 THEIR HISTORY AND NATUREThe Capitulations—that is, ihe treaties ensuring extra-territorial rights to various foreign! communities in Turkey —were abrogated by the Turkish Government on September 28, 1914, upon Turkey’s entry into the war. But when the Allies occupied Constantinople in December, 1918, they reimposed the Capitulations, on their
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  • 86 7 Rebels’ Dastardly Act. (Reuter’s Telegram*. Loudon, January 6. A train smash, attended by serious damage to life aud property, was caused by armed men, who held up a goods train at Raheny, five miles from Dublin. They uncoupled the engine which they sent at full speed towards
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  • 77 7 SCHOONER BADLY DAMAGED. London, January 6. 1 he Dakar Marti and a Danish schooner were in serious collision in the hannel. Both vessels are still afloat. Steam tugs from Dover are standing by for salvage work. Towed to Dover. London, January 6. Lloyd’s report states that the Dakar
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  • 77 7 A HELP TO TRADE. London, January 6. It is expected that the export trade will he stimulated by the establish inent between Harwich and Zeebrugge of a train ferry, for which an agreement. is being signed to-day between a Belgian and an English Company. Il is hoped the
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  • 58 7 London, January G. Sir E. Stockton, M.P., writing to the “Manchester Guardian.’ expies ses his pleasure that Italy has now giv en way as regards the Chinese customs duty. He says provided the policy of force is abandoned, there will be a new era of negotiation in
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  • 44 7 London, January G. It is claimed that the current issue of the “Investors’ Chronicle” is the first newspaper printed on rubber latex paper. The journal thinks rubber in this form is likely to prove a valuable ally of the paper manufacturer.
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  • 46 7 Washington, January G. The British and American diplomatic representatives simultaneously lodged a complaint against the action of the authorities of the State of Durango in expropriating 200,000 acres of land, comprising Tlahualilo Plantations, the stock of which is held by British and Americans.
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  • 22 7 London, December 23. —The “Gazette” announces that a receiving order has been made against the Duke of Leinster.
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  • 21 7 London, December 23. —The “Gazette” announces that Viscount Cave has been granted a contingent annuity of £5,000.
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  • 21 7 London, December 22. —Hitherto 673,0C0 signatures have been appended to the petition/ for the reprieve of Bywaters.
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  • 39 7 London, December 21. —Mrs. Helena Normanton, the first woman barrister to appear in a London Court, secured a decree for a deserted wife in the Divorc Court to-day and was congratulated by the male counsel present.
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  • 38 7 London), December 21. —The death sen tence passed on the woman who was con demnied for thd murder of another woman in North Kensington, with whom her hu> band had had relation’s, has bee» respited
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  • 69 7 Even Play in New Zealand. (Reuter’s Telegrams.' Christchurch, Janu iry f. When the second Test match was resumed in lovely weather and on a good wicket, there were seven thousand spectators. New Zeala ad had made 313 for seven wickets, and ihe innings closed at 375, to
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  • 46 7 TILDEN’S SUCCESS. Chicago, January 6. Mr. W. T. Tilden, in his first match since the amputation of a finger, defeated Mr. Francis Hunter 3-6, 7-5, 6-4. Experts expressed the opinion tha, they have no doubt that by the summer Tilden will regain his usual form.
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  • 229 7 London, January 1. —The following are the results of to-day’s Association mat ches:— League Division I.—Blackburn l 0 Arsenal 5 Everton 3 Tottenham 1 Newcastle 1 Oldham O; Sunderland 2 Stoke 0. League Division? IL—Manchester United 1 Barnsley 0; Wednesday 0 South ampton 0; South Shields 3 Port
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  • 190 7 Calcutta, December 26. —The Governor and Viceroy attended the races to-day. They came in state at 2-30 p.m. and 2-10 p.m. respectively, and remained spectators till the end. The Viceroy saw the race for his cup run, and congratulated Mr. Ramjee on his success. It was only
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  • 193 7 —“M.M.” Our first thoughts in matters of education must naturally turn ito the man who “directs” the Education Department- the Hon. Mr. E. C. H. Wolff- To expect him in the short space of time he has been in/ that office to restore order out of the chaos
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  • 1014 8 THE CASE OF NAURU. The disclosures made to the League of Nations Assembly upon British mandate operations in Nauru ana Samoa hiv> revealed something like an international scandal which British public opinion should insist upon rectifying without delay writes Mr. John H Harris in the “Manchester Guardian.” The
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  • 256 8 KEEPING THE PEOPLE ON THE LANDCount Ahlefeldt-Laiurvig, the Danish Minister, was entertained at luncheon at the Cafe Royal by the Foreign Press Association in LondonM J. Dei Marsillac (Le Journal) who presided, referred; to the very courteous and helpful treatment extended to foreign correspondents in DemmarkSir H. Rider
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  • 111 8 PENANG, JANUARY 8, 1923. (By Courtesy of the Chaptered Bank.) London Demand Bank 2/4 5/32 4 months’ sight Bank 2/4 1/4 3 Credit 2/4 7/16 3 Documentary 2/4 15/32 Calcutta Demand Bank Rsl74U 3 days’sight Private s Bombay Demand Bank 174| 2 Madras Demand Bank „174 3 days’sight Private
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  • Page 8 Advertisements
    • 259 8 fH Q Q Q E„_ PLUGS I Lodge Plugs, made at Rugby, England, in a factory exclusively devoted to the manufacture of Lodge plugs, are the recognised leading plugs of Great g Britain. Their sales are far in excess of any other British spark plugs, and they g are factory
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    • 253 8 A RIFLEMAN’S RECORD And Why He Was Able Tc “Carry On” Wounded three times, gassed, blown up in a trench, and kept a prisoner of war for a brief period, is the record of Rfln. E. T. Hoyland, whose home is at 18, Woodcote Place,. W- Norwood. London. “The continual
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    • 407 8 I i EE —l i I LATEST MODEL I I s s CANADIAN s FORD I CARS ARRIVED I I g A number of improvements have X g been incorporated in the new model FORD I INSPECTION INVITED. a j WEARNE BROS. Fl LIMITED. giiiiiiniiuiiiiinii PENANG. I I GROSSMITH’S 1
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  • 636 9 [[EI’OBT by mH. MARKWELL. „,„.un g »f the E*»'*™ Trad >’ C<>m- the South Australian Chamber Jaetures was held on November 17. T Cha.rn.an (Mr. E- Allnutt) sa.d the W as to welcome back Mr. A. A.""’'ll who had just completed a tour hlWh Java, the Malay
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  • 222 9 WORST EXPERIENCE SINCE 1919. (From Our Own. Correspondent.) Ipoh, January 8. Heavy rains in the Kinta Valley, above Ipoh, and a local downpour, last evening and at night, caused serious flooding in the Old Town of Ipoh, the worst experienced since the record flood of 1919. The water
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  • 572 9 New York. December 6—Mr. Mellon, the Secretary of the Treasury, in his annual report, presented to Congress today, makes as his chief recommendation a reduction in the maximum of income surtaxes from 50 to n °t more than 25 per cent., and urges Congress to expedite the
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  • 484 9 Messrs. Fraser and Co.’s weekly report dated Janfuary 3, states: In spite of the break occasioned hy the New Year holidays, the local share mar kert has evinced considerable activity and with a somewhat sensational rise in rubber, and a steadily appreciating price for
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  • 243 9 —“S. F. P.” REVERSION TO EARLIER FORMALITIES. When the first Singapore Assizes for the year opens on Tuesday morning it will be attended by the ceremonial and formality I which used to be the rule years ago. The announcement was made by the Acting I Chief Justice,
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  • 48 9 The total value of foreign imports of merchandise into British Malaya for November 1922, $42,076,152—£4,908,885. December 1922, $37,459,474=£4,370,272 Imports decrease $4,616,678=£ 538,613 The total value of foreign exports of merchandise from British Malaya for November 1922, $44,864,344=£5,234,173 December 1922, $43,437,697 =£5,067,731 Exports decrease 1,426,647=£ 166.442
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  • 191 9 Benares Opium p. chest $5,000.00 110 m. Cloves 90.00 sellers Gold leaf 72.00 Mace Pickings no stocks Nutmegs 80s 1105... Coconuts per 1,000 30.00 sellers Copra Sundried 10.35 sales Rattans 11.20 sellers Rattans Coarse 10.50 Green Snail Shells 13.00 Siam Rice No. 1 ',15.00 perbag do do do
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  • 192 9 Per Blue Funnel Line, s.s- Teiresia*, from Liverpool, December 9. —To Singa pore Mrs. Burr, Misses Burr (2), Mr. J A- Campbell. Mrs. Cochrane and child Miss M. Cullen, Mrs. F. W. Douglas, Mr. C. G. Dunn. Mrs. Finlayson and child Captain and Mrs. J- G.
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  • 101 9 The mail from Hongkong yesterday, says Saturday’s “Free Press,” brought us down a bundle of home papers that should have been delivered in Singapore a f< ifniight ago, but which apparently were carried on to Hongkong- Instances of this are getting rather frequent and scarcely an English mail
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  • 177 9 The following figures, which are in centals of 100 lbs, represent total exports from all the ports of British Malava. Statement of quantity and value of rubber exported during December, 1922. Export during Value of RnbExported Previous Total export similar period ber exported Value for Destination during
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  • 226 9 The following are the latest quotations in Messrs. Kennedy Co.’s share list:— Saturday To-day. Ĕ Shares. >» zs s C S 3 m QQ PQ QQ sc. sc. sc. c. Rubber (Dollar). Allenby 75 85 80 90 AlorGajah 1.20 1.40 1.25 1.40 Bassett 95 1.00 1.00 1.10
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  • 43 9 Bth January, 1923. Local. cts. {Smoked Sheet 50| Fine Pale Crepe 50 Unsmoked Sheet No. 1... 43 SINGA- (Smoked Sheet 51| pore (Crepe 51 London and New York. T (Smoked Sheet ls.2|d LONDON Crepe ls2 j d New York G 27
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  • 39 9 The following are additional rubber outputs for December lbs. Alma 22,000 Ayer Tawah 30,930 Bukit Toh Alang 38,030 Chemor United 23,116 Dindings (Suffolk) 21,701 Kelubi 5,789 Malaysia 28.066 Shanghai Klebang 7.840 Shanghai Malay 19.156 Tanjong Pau 18,974
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  • 64 9 Local. The Straits Trading Co., Ltd, Jan. 8: Singapore buyers no sellers at s9og. Penang buyers no sellers at $9O«. Messrs Boustead and Co., Ltd:— To-day’s quotation for Singapore refined tip $90.372 per picul, buyers no sellers Penang refined tin $90.37| per picul, buyers no selles; unrefined tin
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  • 77 9 Tongkah Compound No. 2 N. L. for December, hours run 579 hours, yardage treated 67,635 cubic yards, output 483 piculs. Tongkah Harbour Tin Dredging Co., N. L. from 31st December, 1922 to 6th January 1923 (being one week) 17 tons. The total number ot Chinese immigrants arriving at
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  • 1114 9 KENNEDY CO’S SHARE LIST. w S NAMES i; I ao fiQ j an E-» S RUBBER [Dollar.] c S c Allenby Rubber Co 80 90 Alor Gajah Rubber Estate 1 25 1 40 Amalgamated Malay Estates 2 10 2 25 Ayer Hitam Planting Syndicate 13 0013 50 Ayer Kuning Rubber
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  • Page 9 Advertisements
    • 90 9 D°es the Distance from which you do your buyin make any difference to you, providing you get Sood English Merchandise at MUCH o I OWER PRICES Pur ch«.° U r nte to *•*»"< th* not y o" y p^c tl h,Oh SencL 'tkid Y w w «-V buy Briti,h B<xxi»—but
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  • 1093 10 HOW SPARKLING WINE IS MADE. The making of champagne differs greatly from that of all other wines- W hen the grapes are brought from the vineyard they are carefully weighed' and the vigneron is paid for them by weight- 'I he wine-presses are peculiar to the
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  • 505 10 CHOWRASTA MARKET. Penang, January 8, 1923. cts Government Mutton Head, sheep or goat each 80 Liver with heart lung do 1.20 Tripe do 1.00 Goat or Sheep per lb 52 Sweet Bread pair 30 Leg of Mutton lb 52 Kidney pair 30 Feet the four 40 Mutton Head,
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  • Page 10 Advertisements
    • 279 10 I PRICES REDUCED.! YOU can now buy a British made iron frame EE Piano, Tropica] Model, for *pOOv HE ss This instrument has a full mellow tone and all the charact- EE eristics that have earned our Pianos their reputation for lasting EE quality: furthermore, we can arrange easy terms
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    • 783 10 BANKS. CHARTERED BANK OF INDIA, THE MERCANTILE BANK Of AUSTRALIA AND CHINA, i INDIA LIMITED. (Incorporated in England by Royal j (Incorporated in England) Charter 1853.) Paid-up Capital £3 700 000 Authorised Capital Reserve hund t.>,/uu.yyo Q -u j t U/1 Reserve Liability of Proprietors £3.000,000 mm, j Fam-up 1.H,,0
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  • 467 11 GOOD RESULTS PRODUCED BY CARBONIC ACID SNOW. Professor Alexander Paldrock, Director of the Dermatological Poly-clinic of Dorpat University, in Esthonia, claims to have discovered at last a satisfactory treatmen; for leprosy, says a corresponded to ‘‘The Times.” In 1914 Professor Paldrock conceived the idea that the bacillus,
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  • 389 11 Mr. Arthur Weigall, late Inspectol- of Antiquities to the Egyptian Government, says the greatest archaeological discovery in Egypt in modern times was made in the Valley of the Tombs of the Kings, a desert ravine lying behind the barren cliffs and hills which form th?
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  • Page 11 Advertisements
    • 518 11 Skin Disease Carried Arm in a Sling for Years. Furrowed with deep cracks and intensely painful. Cured by Germolene. Mr. James Light, 12, Lyndale-road, Redhill, Surrey, Eng., says “Seventeen years ago a poisoned scratch caused a rash to break out on my shoulder, which spread aJI down my arm to
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    • 245 11 j THE ASIATIC PETROLEUM CO., (S. S.) LTD., j H (INCOarORTAED IN ENGLAND.) g I “FISH” BRAND KEROSENE OIL. I j THE BEST ILLUMINATING OIL /A S FOR THE HOME: OBTAINABLE J- <|J <LZ xJ* g S AT ALL THE LOCAL STORES PER TIN ■r. TJI IT IMIIIH H-I 1
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  • Page 12 Advertisements
    • 1430 12 rt r tit TIXJIVI7T t tnttt E*uLERMAN LINE. Nippon Yuscn Kaisha. IH.iL _T IJININEJL LUNE, ELLERMAN AND BUCXNALL (Incorporatedjn apan. INTENDED SAILINGS FROM PENANG. STEAMSHIP CO., LTD., UNDER MAIL CONTRACT WITH T HOMEWARD. (Incorporated in England.) IMPERIAL JAPANESE GOVERNMENT (Subject to alteration without Notice.) NELEUS January 8 London, Rotterdam and
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    • 662 12 P. ().-BRITISH INDIA AND AVCAR LINES. (Companies Incorporated jx England). MAIL, PASSENGER CARGO SERVICES. PENINSULAR AND ORIENTAL S. N. Co. (Under Contract with His Majesty’s Government) P. O. SAILINGS. LONDON—FAR EASTERN SERVICE. From London Due Penang. To Marseilles London Leave P about abf enao plassy SARDINIA Feb MOREA Jan 19
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