Pinang Gazette and Straits Chronicle, 23 June 1931

Total Pages: 16
1 16 Pinang Gazette and Straits Chronicle
  • 20 1 Pinang Gazette AND STRAITS CHRONICLE ESTABLISHED 1833. PUBLISHED DAILY N>. 140. V3L LXXXIX. TUESDAY, 23rd JUNE, 1931. PRICE 10 CENTS
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  • Page 1 Advertisements
    • 659 1 NAGATAI riOTHEBb I DENTISTS Lkad Office next to Th« Dispensary. I 'chOffi Leith Street 1 I 111 «*-ri.jm. i ■«mi ■■■win _jj «Whiiii mi^— wdwiiiMHßimcwi^rwwww— i jewirm, i i«nmn im ■iitw ■■< wtaMnotmmiMimi i n i—i mai ~-.-ww. t 1 FagRBFCr ■m ■■iiiiMiimii isanHnHmannßMßaßßßnni i hpiii i ififii ni' h
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    • 24 1 19. TOKISATSSJI I STUDIO wsth up-to-date Phote* H fTßphy by elect rle Ji Thone 7TB. 8 M TO, BISHOP STBBM, I j PENAN9. I
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  • Page 2 Advertisements
    • 1841 2 miscellaneous (Straits Settlements Police BANKS. L 7= XJMniYQ. I RESULTS WANTED House or Bungalow, 9 i OP Led or n nf O rni«hed. Bnitebie young Ordinance No. 136 (Arms and THE MERCANTILE BANK NEDERLANDSCHE HANDEL y S. A. A. HILL CiLIMB A P "yßoxNVio2, t /X.og GBZBtte.’ Explosives) OF INDIA,
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  • 355 3 HIS PLAIN COOK BETTE < THAN FAMOUS CHEFS M Andre Terrail, millionaire hotel king” of Paris, has lived so much in luxury that now he hates it. He has come to London toescape what he calls the “soulless perfection” of his hotels in the French
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  • 167 3 The Duke of York discussed whether e library was a luxury or a necessity wher presiding at the Royal Literary Fund dinner in London. "Authors and printers h.ve to face hard times,'* he said. "The whole wo. 11 fs passing through a period of depression, and in order
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  • 84 3 3 "Fashional la women are putting on tbeir summer comolexiom with the brighter days Wumen have learned from the beauty experts that 'make-up* should be tempered to the the tone of clothes, and so, with the pastel tins of early summer, we shall see rose-petal lipsticks —Extract from
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  • 148 3 RO3ER RETIRES TO A HOME OF REST A riderless horse found by an English officer on the Somme in 1916 is spending the last days of his life in the Heme of Rest for Horse?, Cricklewood. The old charger was chr siened Roger. Noboiy knew
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  • 118 3 Anyone who has passed through the hands of the gentlemen of the American Press will appreciate the story which has got to London of a member of the King of Siam’s suite oa his visit to the U.S.A. The King’s train arrived to Chicago very early on
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  • Page 3 Advertisements
    • 330 3 1 wincarais nurse you &>/?■> back to heafcji /1 y Srji--Tj *“-sS£r >.*-/■& I \y I fe.W WHEN the crisis of an illness ‘yt-** ■”>3' is past, when doctors can do i/’ no more for you, and your feet are set upon the long tedious read to I recovery, that
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    • 164 3 you heard the A Wonderful Corn Cure? XX I Apply a few drops to the aching corn and the pain is relieved at once. After two or three 2x days it can be lifted out, easily and painlessly. I “GETS-IT,” the universal corn destroyer, l\ ha> "«ver failed to I
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    • 127 3 »M ww.il .flt I Agents: N. V. STRAITS JAVA TRADING Co., Penang BMPYI iMtetX-V/ T^ynrraMr Pocket Ben IT’S the watch for any man who needs a sturdy, depend- IL able timepiece. The ideal watch for every day use, combining quality and good looks with low <OSt. New in design and
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  • 176 4 FRIENDLY CHAT Prince George In Hotel Bar Prince George visited the saloon bar of the Wellington H )tel in the Strand recently and drank beer with some of the other visitors. THIS happened during the interval of the Russian Bdletatthe Lyceum Theatre, at which the Prince
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  • 217 4 COMPANION A GIRL OF 16 The State will seek a speedy dea'h sentence on “Two-gun Francis Crow by,’’ the diminutive, curly haired desperado of 19, who was captured after a spectacular siege of a house in fashionable West Ninetieth street. This frail youth, little more tha
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  • 166 4 NO ’PAINTED DOLLS” FOR THIS MAN An ultimatum has been issued by Commissioner McGu'gm, who has charge of the affaire of the Galway Board of Health, tint all tenants of labourers’ cot tages must get married or get out. Decree was given for poesetalon of
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  • 144 4 ’‘lf only we had a Pr»nce of W.-des,” sighs the Paris ‘Journal” in the cruise cf a striking tribute to the Prince as Ambassador of British trade. Since the war, says the paper, two other countries, the United States and France, have arranged good-will tours to South
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  • 198 4 FOR 23 YEARS And Was then Divorced There is a woman in England who twenty-three yeirs ago began an action for divorce, was reconciled tn her husband, let the petition remain in abey-mce for twrnty-tbree yeere, and then revived it because she taid he had ag«in given
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  • 159 4 AFTER FIFTEEN YEARS The King has granted a free pardon to a Birmingham man who was conv cted during the war for receiving a pair of boots. The man was convicted in 1916. The first situation he was tble to obtain after the war was a
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  • 144 4 GUARDED EARS Their thirst apparently unquenched fter a four-day cruise to Bermuda, passengers in the “Muretania’’ threatened to storm the bars, which had teen closed ss the liner neared New York. So serious dia tha situation that the captain posted guards in front cf all the
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  • Page 4 Advertisements
    • 199 4 jnr- -r-1 1 IN ALL PARTS OF THE WORLD •OLD a rxcommendkd A A wF A ■v VTOU3 KVUYWHUS W** Z 1 X. Olaetndhsn v. R. vick a co, <w jr 1| *>■» m armalaae is acclaimed The Aristocrat of th< Breakfast Table.” Jaded appetites xgx gladly respond to its
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    • 162 4 THE TOFJtmE OF PILES. Why continue to suffer? With DR. VAN VLECK S ABSORPTIVE PLASMA no case of this painful malady is too stubborn or too long standing to be completely and peiaaanentSy cured. The easy application and wonderful power of absorption of DR. VAN VLECKS ABSORPTIVE PLASMA is amazing.
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    • 358 4 USĔTIOUE j Rest ™S in AWAKE.WH PAIN l Ex P erl Strin ?«rs. Rash at Back of Neck. Healed by Cuticura. F 4 “The rash I suffered with began five years ago. It started with small, itching J pimples at the back of my neck which jl gradually got worse
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  • 504 5 OVER 290 DELEGATES Form J Opening Last Night The formal opening of the tenth Malayan Er worth League Conference took place at the Anglo Chinese Girls’ School, at Anson Road, ’at. night, when over 200 delegates from all parts of Malaya, and a contingent of 19
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  • 172 5 FAY OUS "RED BRICK’ HOUSE AS BAZAAR The long standing project of converting No 278 Penang Road, the familiar "red brick” mansion opposite the Chowrasta Market and next to the Detective Station into another "Jual Morah’’ is about to materialise and the work has already
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  • 83 5 A friend of mine, who hid been on a long sea voyage, returned to her country cottage and visited an aged inhabitant of the viJage (writes a ’‘Morning Post” correspondent. The old dame was thrilled to hear the de tails of the voyage, but one point
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  • 691 5 SOCIAL PERSONAL. Mr. G. R. Stevenson has been appointed Manager of Senama Estate, Bahau. Miss Pearl Brown, late of the staff of the Suydam Girls School, Malacca, has left for home. Mr. J.L. Isache, of Kubang Estate, Nilai, and his wife are leaving on Wednesday for home. Mr. C. G.
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  • 276 5 CO CHET BEATEN Sharpe Wins in Straight Sets London, June 22 The Wimbledon Tournament opened in fine weather to-day. There was a first round sensation when Nigel Sharpe (Eng land) beat Oochet France) 6—l, 6 8, 6—2. Cochet was one of the seeded players. On the centre
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  • 32 5 Reuter. LEN HARVEY RETAINS TITLE London, June 22 At the Albert Hall Len Harvey retained the British Middleweight Championship outpointing Jack Hood, the Welterweight Champion, in a fifteen round contest.
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  • 128 5 PENANG SELANGOR SIDE v THE REST On the Esplanade on Saturday 27th June 1931 at 2.15 p.m. and Sunday 28th June 1931, at 10.30 a.m. Penang Selangor Side:— G Aste (Captain), S V Adams, A F Baughan, A J BrunK J G Carr. J E King, M E
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  • 260 5 KEEPING WATCH IN A CAR The girl bandit believed to have directed recent country house robberies and smash and grab raids is thought to have been concerned in an attempted shop raid in the small hours of the morning. The affair was an effort to rob
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  • Page 5 Advertisements
    • 132 5 THE WORLD'S BEST RIDERS > CHOOSE THE B I WORLD’S BEST OIL K WAIUFISUD I MOTOR oik I Record speeds were attained by the winners of the Junior, Lieghtweight fi and Senior T. T. Races in 1.0. M. June 15, 17 and 19. g J AND AI L WERE WON
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  • SPORTING GOSSIP
    • 2638 6 CLOSE BUNKERING MEANS BETTER GOLF //ZIOME round this evening, whnlgiveyou a call, I am very busy and cannot make a definite appointment,” replied Mr. Fred Davies to my inquiry. So writes J. P. in the Irish Times. In due course the call came through, and I spent a
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    • 176 6 ITALIAN’B EXHAUSTING WIN IN OUTBOARD RACE Soaked to the skin, the cjlour from hie bright blue- be r et stre .ming down his fice, 3.l v one of Italy’s greateet wa l er speed had to be assisted ashore when he c?me into Pot ie Harbour after winning
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    • 342 6 TRACING THE EVOLUTION OF THE G IME AT WIBDEN S "Wisden’* is a household word in cricket, not onlv by the publ cdion of the immortal "A’-mmack’’ but by the fame erjoyei fur the choicest of willows and the standard ball issued from the sheltered factory in
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    • 127 6 DAZED EOX-R’S LAST PUNCH GEiS HOME It was the referee who was knocked out at 3 boxing contest held in Sheffield in nza’’ week. Twc 1< c 1 lade, J .ck F.ther an! J ck Humphries, hsd fought for four rounds d F.she bal ’a on such
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    • 103 6 UMPIRE’S RUL NG THAT STOPPED MATCH K. S. Duleep-iinhf, he Sussex captain, it is revealed, went co Lora’s and entered a formal protest against the abandonment of the match with Surrey at th? Ova’. Sa-sex apparently had the home side s°t for a bea it g. The bowlers’
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    • 51 6 Mie. Sof.er Whitburn, who fo r tra y years has been prominent as a rec horse o ';ner and a patron cf the famous Seven Borrows training *ĕtabli?hment at Lsmbourn» will b« selling all her horsts in tia’uirg at the F rtt July N wmarket
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  • 544 6 IS IT LONGER THANA STE iMER Inexact to Generalise THE cost of motor ships is generally considered to be higher than that of steamers. It is, however, inex ct to generalise, and it has a’naly b?en established that highches f-•.Bi cargo liner tonnage can he
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  • 425 6 INSTITUTION OF T-tE REV. GRAHAM WHITE i The institution of the Rev Graham White, M.A., former Chaplain of South Perak, as Archdeacon cf Singapore, took p’ac? in St. Andrew’s Cathedral on Sunday during Evenrong. The Bishop of Slrgapor*, and the following clergy were present: Rev. 8. W. G.
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  • 836 6 FIRST BILL IN BRITAIN Fierce Opposition When First Proposed THE census met with fi erce opposition when it was first proposed in Britain. When in 1753, a Bill for the purpose was introduced into the House of Commons Mr. Thornton, th member for York, said
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  • 90 7 Reuter ALL OUT 61 Hopwood 4 Wkts. For One Run London, June 22 and Yorkshire found two days sufficient to defeat Gloucester and Middlesex respectively. The scores were as follows Lora*: Yorkshire 302 (Sutcliff* 120, jetirtd hurt). Middlesex 111 (Bowes 539) and 126 (Bowes 6 63’. Yorkshire won
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  • 93 7 SWEEP DETAILS The following is the result of the Unlimited Sweep held by the Taiping Turf Club on S' turday in connection with the Anuceur Meeting and details showing the distribution of the prize money Number Horse Prize 1814 Jadi Ist 2105 Roaming 2nd 2081 Ponpy 3rd
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  • 225 7 TEA PARTY AT TELUK ANSON The parishioners of the Church of St. Anthony, Teluk Anson, entertained the Rev. rather B. Baloche. Vicar of the church, to a tea party on Thursday last at the church compound on the eve of his departure to France on leave.
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  • 166 7 FUNERAL THIS AFTERNOON The death occurred yesterday at his residence, No. 81 Merican Road, Penang, of the Rev. Velaytham Samuel, Headmaster of the Anglo Chinese School, Parit Buntar. The deceased, who was 44 years old, was ordained a minister of the Methodist Church in 1917.
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  • 92 7 ORPHAN WHO STOLE SALT FISH Ong Eng Chuan. who was described as a hcmeless orphan and who pleaded guilty to a charge of theft of salt fish from a house at Transfer Road was produced before the Police Magistrate this morning for sentence. Detective Inspector Gordon produced
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  • 746 7 DOCTOR'S EMPLOYEE ihree Lawyers Appear for Defence The charge of the management of a common betting bouse preferred against h Kok Song, a dispenser in the employ of Dr. Lee Boon Choe, the owner of a dis pensary in Chulia Street was enquired into by Mr
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  • 111 7 BY BURMA RIFLES What promises to be an unique display is being arranged by Major H. G Gauntlett and the officers of the 1/20 Burma Rifles, Taiping, for July 11. This will be a Floodlight I attoo and will be held at the Burma Rifles
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  • 534 7 "NO INSTRUCTIONS” Client Says He Paid Balance to “Krani” Two suits which were down for hearing in the Penang Supreme Court this morning were postponed, one because Counsel for the plaintiff had received no further instructions and asked leave to withdraw from the case, an application
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  • 60 7 There will be Moonlight Performances at the Esplanade on June 29 80 and July 1 f-om 8.30 pm. to 080 p.m weath r permitting. Mr. Tan Chong Ewe of the Municipal Electric Supply Department, wishes it to be known that he is not the person who appeared in
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  • CORRESPONDENCE
    • 319 7 (To the Editor of the Pinang Gazette Sir —Reading between the lines the proceedings of the General Meeting of the Junior Civil Servants as published in the local papers recently, I believe that most readers who have any knowledge or recollec tion of the origin of
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    • 604 7 Sir,—"Anti greed’s” letter in your issue of the 19th instant should be an eye opener to those Chinese here whose love for China is so great that they will not return to China to show it in great and heroic d eds there, but who will
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    • 98 7 Sir, —I shall be glad if you can enlighten me on the following problem In spite of the fact that it is ona of. if not, the most used and important thoroughfare in Penang it has taken the IVunicipality X months to repair that section of the
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  • Page 7 Advertisements

  • 481 8 THE P.R .C. BUILDING Rumour, which has had unrestricted licence with our Esplanade padang for many years, asserts that the Government contemplates extending the padaug to include the whole of the area of the Fort ruins, and that the new Penang R ‘creation Club bui ding, erected recent’y at a
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  • 273 8 If the attitude of the British Govern ment towards sweepstakes in general be interpreted rightly, they are inventions of the devil and those who run them re his servants. There are doubtless many who subscribe to this view but they are in a hopeless minority as is
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  • 149 8 In a case in a Singapore court yesterday it was stated that a prisoner, regarding whom a Foreign Office warning circular had been issued, had gained entry to the Colony by assuming a different name in order to obtain a passport In our opinion, the prisoner concerned need not
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  • Article, Illustration
    1129 8 Penang, Tue day. DEMAND to be tried by J my peers,” declared Lord Busok de Busok, when arraigned in the forty-second police court this morning on a charge of having < tiered for sale samsu upon which duty had not been paid. The alh ged scene of
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  • Page 8 Advertisements
    • 390 8 PRTICHARD CO., LTD. Stocktaking Bargains IN Gowns Hats Morning Dresses, bmall sizes only ss'" slo' Also in large sizes $l5 Afternoon Gowns slo°°tOs25 00 Evening Gowns, all sizes, very smart models q* 1 eoo 0 in Satin, Georgette, Net, Organdie, etc LU 4>OV Several Large Silk Evening Gowns, to clear
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    • 65 8 E. O HOTEL. To night, 23. «1 Jane, 1931, at 9.39 p m. AFTER DINNER DANCE Thnrsd y, sth Jone. 1931 at •30 p.m. AFTER DINNER DANCE P. O Outward Ma i.- Dr ss Optiaual Friday. 26th Jane ’931, at 9.30p.w AFTER DINNER DANCE Sunday, 28th June, 193?, 8 p.m.
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  • Page 8 Miscellaneous

  • 1192 9 British Government Signifies its Approval Socialists and Opposition Unite Strength and Activity on International Stock Exchanges Commodity Markets Respond In the House of Commons last night Mr. MacDonald, the Prime Minister, cordially welcomed President Hoover s moratorium offer, and announced that the British Government was
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  • 124 9 $6,000,000 Scheme PORT DEVELOPMENT (From Our Own Correspondent) Singapore. June 22 On official enquiry to day, it was learned that the proposed development of Kallang Basin Civil Aerodrome, for both sea and land ’planes, is being proceeded with. The Government recently stated the scheme was suspended
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  • 60 9 Majority Disappears in Ardwick Election London, June 22 The result of the Ardwick by-election, caused by the death of the Socialist member, Mr. Lowth, was as follows Joseph Henderson (Soc.) 15,294. Sydney Elborne (Con) 14.980. Soc. Maj. 814 —Reuter. At the general election the poll was T. Lowth
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  • 83 9 —Reuter. Miss Ruth Nicholls Injured in Landing at St John's St. John’s (New Brunswick), June 23 The airwoman, Miss Ruth Nicholls, who arrived here on the first stage of her trans Atlantic dight was injured through a faulty landing. She was sent to hospital but not
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  • 59 9 (From Cur Own Correspondent) Bangkok, June 22 A new law has been promulgated for the protection of literary and artistic works. The < opyright Acts of 1901 and 1914 are now repealed under the new Act. The author of any literary or artistic work is entitled to
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  • 130 9 Thamby who < ollected Betting Slips Mohamed bin Nagoor, a tamby employed at a Penang bank, who was charged with loitering in Beach Street for the purpose of book making or receiving bets or wagers and who had claimed trial yesterday, changed his plea this morning and entered
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  • 264 9 Frenchman Sentenced al Singapore FAR EAST PLOT (From Our Own Correspondent) Singapore June 22 Le Franc the French Communist charged together with fifteen others, all Chinest except one, an Indian, was yesterday con victed on a charge of i ssisting in the management of the Malayan Communist
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  • 9 9 —Reuter. CHINA AND THE POWERS
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  • 102 9 —Reuter Graf Zeppelin Flight to Pole Abandoned London, June 22 Sir Hubert Wilkins’ submarine Nauti us towed by the United States cruiser Wyoming arrived off Cork Harbour this morning. —Rugby Radio Service. Berlin June 28 In view of the difficulties of the Nautilus Commander Eckener has
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  • 59 9 Reuter. Grain Elevator and Boats Destroyed St. Johns (New Brunswick'', June 22 Damage estimated at ten million dollars has been caused by a fire on the harbour front of the terminal warehouses of the Canadian Pacific Railway. A grain elevator and many boats were destroyed. The Government immigration
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  • 25 9 Rubber stock figures issued in London yesterday London 82 919 tons, decrease 937 tons. Liverpool 54,422 tons, decrease 890 tons.
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  • 144 9 Reuter. Leading Counsel for Crown Faints London, June 22 At Bodmin Assizes, Cornwall, the closing stages of the trial have been reached of Mrs Sarah Ann Hearn, forty six, accused of murdering by arsenical poisoning her sister Lydia Eiterard in July 1930 and Mrs.
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  • 37 9 —Reuter. Bail of £5,000 to Be Funrshed London, June 22 Lord Kylsant and Morland were committed for trial on all charges. Both have to furnish bail of £5 000 each in their own recognisances.-
    —Reuter.  -  37 words
  • 90 9 Arnold Bennett, the well known author, whose will was proved yesterday, left estate valued at £4 000. The Geneva Conference on Limitation of Narcotics has adjourned for two days to enable the Franco Japanese delegations to work out their scheme. The Foreign Secretary, Mr. Henderson, on
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  • 331 9 i —Rugby Radio Service. Muslim Unity Unattainable London, June 22 The Secretary for India, Mr. Wedgwood Benn, answered in the negative the question of whether the Government would consider the advisability of postponing the meeting of the Federal Structure Committee until certain ruling princes who had recently
    i —Rugby Radio Service.  -  331 words
  • Page 9 Advertisements
    • 9 9 DANISH C REAVf ci r 1 c h 1
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    • 116 9 1 fig— l BRITISH MADE Lawn Mowers Garden Rollers BEST VALUE 1 IN MALAYA The Ball I" QualcaSt earing $22-50 $27.51 (MODEL *‘H”) BARFORD PERKINS Patent Water Ballast Rollers. Prices on Appication. John Little Co., Ltd., Penang. Reirporated in England.) Aho Singapore, Kuala Lumpur ipob. Egg— ilMlll!■■■■! li I 1
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  • 1237 10 A STAGNANT POSITION Conservative Tapping Systems Except that the ana r >f rubber placed definitely out of tapping has shown a comparatively 1 rge increase the situation in Malaya during the paH has remained prac'Jcnlly unaltered, wr’tes the M> 1 iyan correspondent in the May issu the
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  • 290 10 AN EXCEPTION Great Britain Shows An Increase World exports of automobile casings f -r 1930 were characteriz’d generally by a decline in boih volume and value from the high figures realiz'd for several yia-s by a’l the principal exporting countries. Every m?jr tyre exporting country
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  • 74 10 Penang, June 23, 1931. Bv C *rr«t* 9f 9ht Chartered Oi nndin Bank Demand 2/3 23/82 4 m/te 2/8 27/32 P ivair 3 m,'is credit 2/4 1/32 3 Documentary 2 4 5/32 Oi York Bank Demand 56 France M T.T. 1,420 lidia T.T. 1551 t* mgkok T.T. 78 Ea«avia
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  • 115 10 TO-DAY’S PRICE 3 The following were the latest quotations in MESSRS. KENNEDY Go’s share list at 11 a.m. to day Yesterday To-day Ĕ 8 g Shares g >. S 3 H PQ UQ PQ UQ C. SC. Sc. to. Mining Hongkoug Tin 14/6 15/3 14 6
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  • 61 10 Latest Loudon, hew York and Local Prices TINz LONDON SpM £lOB 5 0 Up £3-15 0 3 Utatfea £llO 2 6 Up £4 0 0 SINGAPORE $54 50 p9f Bbl Up $2.25 125 tons iiM RUBBER. Louden 31 d, Up j d. Na« Tork 6j c. (asli)
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  • 117 10 LONDON (LOOSE) B.R. Sheet 9i cts. por pound =por pl 813/16 Stf a ly. London New York 6} c‘s. (gdJ) (Bv Courtesy of Messrs. Alltn Dennys.) Gteird Produce Agency Ltd. Singapore Pikes for Standard Ribbed Smoked Sheet for to-day a-e as todowo:— Spot 10 eta. per lb. July
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  • 63 10 Messrs. Boustead d Co., Ltd. 23ri Juno quotation for Singapore refined tin 154 50 per picul, business dore 125 t ns, Penang refined tin $54 50 per pica’, done 75 tens, unrefined tin 853 50 per picul, tin ore $53 50 per picul. The following were the rubber
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  • 19 10 Tnngkah Harb Tin Dredging Co. N L. From 14:h to 20. h June (one week). Piculs 200
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  • 71 10 (Rugby Radio Service) Lcnloti, Juno 22 Paris. 124.27 New York, 4.86 H; Brussels, 34.96; Geneva, 25.09; Amsterdam, 12.09; Milan 92.92; Berlin 20.49; Stockholm 18.14; Copenhagen, 18.16; O.do, 18.16; V-eana, 34.60; Prague 1641, Helsingfors. 193 f; Madrid, 50 35 Lisbon, 1101 Athene, 375; Bucharest, 817 Rio, 311 Burn oh
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  • 1020 10 KENNEDY CO. SHARE LIST NAMES I si BUB3US SIUI’xU 5 1 0 8 Allenby Rubbw Ct ?2' Alor Gajah Rubbci Bstata .0 AmalffßKiated Ayei HHarn FlaniU* Syn«n*w 81 C 3 Ayer Kunlng Bubbos A. 85 Ayer Molek Rabbet Ge 70 Ayer Pane* Babbet artebee 6 81 Balan PUutinf ByaSieite Bc.areM
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  • 199 10 DECLINING VALUES OF MACHINERY IMPORTS The d?Dr?eB?d etale of Ma’ayan trade during 1930 is r fleeted in the declining Vrlu?s of machinery imoorts, p’rt caLxL in cannec ion wiih fqaipru?nt f r the rubber industry. The eff ct of th* collapse in rubber prices on the
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  • 42 10 The homeward mail by the g.e. Ranpura closes at 6 p.m. on Sitarday, the 27ih in=tant. Toe f>p. Khyber with mails despatched from London on Jane 4 is expected to arrive here at noon on Thura ath* 25 h instan’’.
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  • 197 10 CASE POSTPONED Lim Toon Looi, a Chinese woman of good family, who was charged with criminal breach of trust in respect of jewellery valued at over SI,COO belonging to a teacher of the Penang Convent and another Chinese lady, was again produced before
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  • Page 10 Advertisements
    • 102 10 Make Your Old Auto Top New The WHIZ Way I C I Try A Tin of Whiz Top Dressing To-day! It preserves and refines your old auto top at the same time. On Sale at all garages. Distributors: K. Lee San Co., 81, Beach Street, Penang. I FUN FUN FUN
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    • 309 10 liifl Sii’*' v 11 I rjiJ I 1 Lffllenbun-3 1 I Foocls I 1 Tlie’AlleDburys* Foods art j particularly suited to (he feeding ot babies in L t i I climetes. They arc geraiirec and their use han absolute h I guarkatee ag«<nd infantile p 1 diiJ'i hoea a...! Lolcra
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  • 1216 11 REDUCTION OF COjTS Problem of Buying Power THT.OrGHOUT industry intbeUaitid Slates the necessity of reducing c s s of production and gelling pric?e of the product has been the paramount c neidera ion of executives during the r B t Eeverri months, and the progre s pjgde
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  • 446 11 ANNUAL RETORT Dividend of od. Per Share: Output Curtailed i Tr fourth annual report, for the ye*?r| ended 3l, 1931, of Kriiin t Tin Dredgirg, Ltd.» states: After providing for deprcci ‘tion of building furniture and sundry items amount'rg to £4,209.3 3 the acc unts for the
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  • 808 11 BEETLES AND LATEX A Truly Remarkable Story THE romance and the rise of the great rubber industry was told in a most interesting way by Mr. W. Carruthers Bell, of Lee, at a luncheon of the Ilfracombe Rotary Club at Southcombe’s Restaurant, says the “Ilfracombe Chronicle.”
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  • 329 11 PROPO33D RSDUOTION OF \L The iirmtors of the Bakit Se'ffa vang Rubbtr Co. prop ss reluc’ng the sharcapita 1 so as to bring it into belt-»-relation with the sctui! value of itassets under existing c nditions. Thi* is to be effre'ed bv writing off 1?, per share on
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  • 378 11 PROFIT ON YEAR Tun e’ghth annual general me?lirg of the G rdon (Ma’i,. a) Robber L 4„ wx? itli in London on May 19, S r Fr nc 8 V u’ea, C. B. E (the claiirmm of tbe company), pre idmg. The Cirrmtn said that
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  • 194 11 Pensr? June 23, 1931. cts «a Oplnna p «hast oom ItOOO.OO C!o-w o »0.00 Geld lest fliers 72.00 dekfuy nom 170.00 V n r -r.g 70.00 H 110« .i 60.00 Coconuts ®r l«000 »i 15.00 ~oora Sundried buyers 4.10 Fattar.s ?a lea 11.15 RaVa’s Coars» 10.60 Grt -n
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  • Page 11 Advertisements
    • 200 11 —I Hl 1 1 HIM Will IkL—j i JI 1 f i I THE WORLD’S FINEST GAME i THE WOK ED’S FINEST BALL I jy=j J IOP K H «--4 I M J P I V 4 v t i l r? 0 I» ¥3 DUNLOP ’Xi Ie i n
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  • 1206 12 Port Of Penang Schedule of Principal Lines THE following is a list of vessels arriving and sailing from Penang during ihe V-k IN FORT TO-DAY mv Jitra from Teluk Kertang. Sails for Teluk Kertang on Thursday at 5 p. m. 11 H Krian from Bagan Datoh
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  • Page 12 Advertisements
    • 339 12 XJjnWßtacwd»» ■■■HMS 1 w t_■ n.: jl., Auet, excoed »11,000,000. 8. C. in «xceed »58.*****. The Great Eastern Life Assurance Co., Ltd. j (locovpcratod in Strait» Sattiementa). HEAD OFFICE i Winahattar Houn Singapore. LONDON OFFICE: 27, OM Jewry, E.C, i The Company h M £20.00© deposited with the SnpreM Court
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  • Page 12 Miscellaneous
    • 135 12 ’PHONE u Best Sound 264 n Town. 6/5 TONIGHT, LAST NIGHT 9-30 The Screen’s Talented Star Barbara Stanwyck in Ten Cents A Dance Based on the popular song of the same name. Directed by Lionel Barrymore TO MORROW Fifi Dorsay and Regitia d Deuny in Those Three French Girls Advance
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    • 123 12 ——■naw—liißiWiiinim iin i iimiiin 11 hi i iiibuhii i s Look Out For CIMARRON” with Richard Dix iVici ri”"n MJ L Penang's Premier I Talkie House. SOUND S! E M 6-15 To-Nigkt 9-30 RADIO’S Glamorous Love Epic of The Flaming Borderlands Rod La- Rocque IN Bars dH’‘ with Doris Kenyon
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  • 283 13 MBN STILL BUYING “CHOKERS” Firm 556 Years Old A London hosiery firm which this year celebrates ite 556 h anniversary states that there are Londoners with conasrvativo taites in dress who are still wearing strange-shaped coUa-s, ties, and shirts which were the vogue in the Victorian
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  • 274 13 WE MAY ALL END IN GAS The scientist who releases the energy of the atom in h's’aboratory may succ?fd in exploding the whole world and turning us all to gas. This was admitted ai possible by Sir Jam* s J jane, when he arrived here
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  • 108 13 Commander Frank Woreley, D. S. 0., commanded Sir Ernest Shackleti n’s ships the Endurance” and the Q iest, and later a ’'mystery” ship wh cl rammed a G rman submarine, and v\a’ joint leader of the British Arctic Expedition of 1925, speaking at the Harrogate Women's Luncheon
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  • Page 13 Advertisements
    • 587 13 L L L utj W —m—t f j FOR ALL AFFECTIONS OF THF WB I f 5 THROAT, CHEST AND LUNGS <.."t-~Bgßg*TC2g~‘r4" t ~BgBg*TC2g~‘ r 4 SMR~ rnTTRTfI?Kw gri id i vFii H b OgHl All I rl < A y R cco min ended by the medical pro- MBE
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  • 235 14 ALLEGED DEMAND FROM AN M. P. Man for Trial on Blackmail Charge Extracts from a letter aienaing the Bishop of Manchester, Dr. Frejeric Sump ter Guy Warman, of improper conduct with a ycung wcmai were read at Salford Police Court. Frack Thomas Bentley, ag d
    235 words
  • 135 14 SOME ONE IS POIISHING SIXPENCES Somebody is secretly polishing sixpences Ncbo< y knows who he ip, wheie he is, cr why he dees it. Lut Le has been so industrious lateiy with his brush and polish that the attention cf the Bank of England has
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  • 81 14 BURIED WITH WREATH AND VEIL: BRIDESMAIDS AS MOURNERS Juel signing the register after her wedding in the vi’l-go church at Crctcombe, near Shepton Mallet, Somerset, Mrs. Ivy Symes, Fged 22, collapsed. She died later without recoverirg sufficiently to go to the home wh ch her husband
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  • 120 14 The Rtv. James Barr, M.P. for Motherwell, tells a good story of the days when he used to officiate at marriage ceremonies. It was at the time of the last railway strike, and Mr. Barr arrived four hours late, on account of the depleted railway service to
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  • 38 14 The Union Radiophon'que Suisse (Swiss Brcadc s'.ing Association) considered that a more coherent description of themselves was needed. This has new been discovered. In future the Association will be known as the Schweizeriscl e Runcspruchgcssllschaft.
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  • 34 14 The supply cf pass-out checks at an exhibition of Sussex Women’s Insritute work at Hastings f iled, and hundreds washing to return were m°rked on the wrist with an indelible stamp.
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  • Page 14 Advertisements
    • 363 14 X—— ITHE ONLY STORE FOR Variety, Quality, Reliability Service, Wawamull’s I Specializing in all sorts of Silks plain and printed, Crepe de Chines, Georg* ttes in up to-date designs g and colours, Radium Silk, etc. Silk Ready-made goods Press-lengths Printed Scarves and Squares—Embroidered and printed Dressing Gowns for ladies and
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    • 389 14 UNTREATED MILkX BOTH WHOLE AND 1 I SKIMMED. HAS VERY 1 I LITTLE AHTI-RACHITIC ACTIVITY Ordinary fresk cows*mxl\. This autheritstive quotataon that Sresh ©ows* milh «©ntains almost no vitamin D is ©onviswing. It {follows that a {food made £resh milk epsrialfoa alrstosi no vitamsn D —BUT SUNSHINE GLAXO has Ostelin
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  • 646 15 Ptnang, Jane 23, 1131. CHOWBASTA MABKET, Mutton t eta. Mutton Indian M pvr lb 48 Head goat 120 Sheep 90 Liver with heart A'ug do 141 Tripe do 9J Goat or Sheep per lb 48 Sweet Bread B£ r 40 Suet 40 K idney pa i- 30 Feet
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  • Page 15 Advertisements
    • 436 15 PERFECTION SCOTS WHISKY I D.fLM °C ALLUM L T E D 8 N B U R G. H -A ’-•< ElOPllllili K£gSjV’<Qx y\\ J*-‘- > x > fiWjfgSH iii l| i LS'U i 2 ,j <“ li A GEN T S THE EASTERN !i AGENCIES Ll® fti> r/ Wi J
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    • 744 15 “Ordinary soaps can do great harm” says the famous beauty expert CARSTEN of Berlin “Daily cleansing with f!l n|hll Palmolive Soap is the basis of all 1 j my treatments, even the most elaborate.” J|| Mg “Ordinary soaps can do great harm. Modern beauty specialists advise a W soap made
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  • Page 16 Advertisements
    • 1939 16 THE BLUE FUNNEL LINE I uS I P imknled mailings from Penang 1 <Jfrld 7LfrliiKlC/>kN piAll/ 1-/JLIMIC/ Wx&&KLY SERVICE. LONDON N. CONTINENT. I i (Companibs Inoorpohatud *w KnqlakdJ x PYRRHUS Juae 27 London, Rotterdam and Hamburg, a A£ajvX x ACHILLES Joly 3 Mira rilles, Liniou, Rotterdam Hamburg s I MKDKKRRANSAN
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