The Straits Echo (Mail Edition), 16 June 1926

Total Pages: 36
1 640 The Straits Echo (Mail Edition)
  • 20 1 THE STRAITS ECHO MAIL EDITION. >lB PER ANNUM. SINGLE COPY 40 CENTS VOL. 24 PENANG: JUNE 16, 1926 NO. 24
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  • Page 1 Advertisements
    • 316 1 4 ccKTEr;.rs LEADERS MISCELLANEOUS: (Continued) M News From China 622 Kfl The Next War 607 Penang’s Progress 623 a» English Politics To-day 611 Singapore News 623 |7u 2? A Cricket Occasion 615 Malaya’s Latest Invasion 623 cjjj Malaria 621 Penang Library 624 jrti 04 Rubber and Tin 629 Rangoon to
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  • Page 2 Advertisements
    • 197 2 jt TH< 3f STRAITS ECHO I MAIL EDITION. Published the day prior to the departure of each mail for Europe, JG and contains the latest local and States news originally published in the daily issues, as well as all important news from various parts of the Far Wj East, including
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  • 966 607 A section of the American press is always ready to inflame the latent hatred and jealousy which a minority of die people of the United States feel with regard to Japan. Strategists of every country are agreed that somewhere in the great expand of the Pacific, an
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  • 450 607 lhe Ch.ci Justice (Sir William Muri, soli) and Mr. Justice Deane were engaged in the Johore Court of Appeal on Monday. Mr. R. A E Clark, who met with a motor accident at the junction of Perak and Pangkor Roads recently, left the General Hospital yesterday. A sum of
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  • 1201 608 Peeresses in the House of Lords Peeresseß holding peerages iu their own right, ino uding the charming Baroness Clifton, who was recently in Penang, have determined to make another effort to secure recognition of their claim to sit in the House of Lords. They have formed a committee,
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  • 1389 608 (By Anna Carey) On tbe platform there are three or f 0 Europeans "mongst a crowd of laughing, dus'y facts. Outside, the heat clutohes with mt isfc finger?, but in her a gentle coolness me ps out of the shad? The?e propln langl not at wi
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  • SPORTING NEWS
    • 187 609 Practice Game A practice game of Association football was played yesterday on the ReDong ground between Colours and W bites: in other words between the probable Penang team against Perak on Saturday, and a Rest” side. The probables won comfortably by six goals to nil. Ismail opened the
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    • 65 609 Penang v. Perak i’enang will play oft her first Malaya Cup Association I’ootbalf match on Saturday in Ipoh against Perak, Fhe learn will probably leave on Friday 4 ihe following, it is understood, have been selected to play for Penang: Walker; Khay Seng and Park San; boo
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    • 484 609 SECOND DAI’S RESULTS A Few Upsets (From Our Own Correspondent) Kuala Lumpur, June 8 There was a big crowd tor the second day of the Summer Meeting which was run off in good weather. The going was also good. Amongst those present were Lady Guillemard, the Sultan
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  • 136 609 To the Editor of the straits Echo) Sir, As the largest distr butors of Goodyear Tyres, we have pleasure in advising you that effective from. June 5 the prices of Goodyear Tyres and Tubes are reduced 10 per cent. It is the third substantial reduction office the beginning
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  • 596 610 ANNUAL REPORT The following report is to be presented to members on. June 12:Gentlemen, Your Committee have much pleasure to present herewith the report and the honorary treasurer’s statement of accounts of the financial year ending March 31, 1926. There have been held eight (8; Committee Meetings
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  • 427 610 Ou Saturday a correspondent wrote calling attention to the anniversary of the death of Sir Thomas Stamford Raffles, the Founder of the Colony. The correspondent assumed that June 5, 1926, would be the centenary of that event. Another correspondent now kindly calls attention to the fact that
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  • 650 610 "WE CANNOT HAVE THIS SORT OF THING’ Mr. Tait’s Evidence Hie case in which Messrs. W. D. Tait and C. Breyer are charged with assaulting Air. H. R. Bull, the Second Alagistrate, at the Sea iew Hotel about 11 p.m. on June 1, was resumed on
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  • 1080 611 Twenty years ago the Liberal Party 1U the House of Commons numbered ;jB7, as against 168 Conservatives and Unionists, 84 Irish Nationalists and 41 Independent Labour members, From 1908 to 1916 Lord Oxford, as Mr. Asquith, held sway as Prime Minister. During the latter stages of
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  • 420 611 Lady Guillemard is due in Penang this evening by train from Kuala Lumpur. Mr. P. Montgomerie was a pas <cnger to Penang to-day frem Teluk Anson by the s.s. Renong. Air R. Knight, of the F.AI.S. Rail way Department, is due back from Home leave by the P. and
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  • 548 612 Manner and Matter The well educated Malay of the oldei generation ie, we know, a master of courteous manners and quiet dignified language He creates difficulties by hie very amiety to avoid expressions of opinion that may seem to disagree with the view of the person addressed. It
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  • 793 612 FIGURES AND A MORAL Statistics, says the Straits Times, are ;»'v things but as a rule they are useful lelping to point, a moral, and the figures contained in the Federated Malay State- trade and customs report for 1925 are no exception. From these figures, it is possible
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  • 356 612 Police Constable Hoodwinked S. F. David, the Tamil ex-Govern-ment clerk, who stands charged with forging the names of several well-known European gentlemen on orders on Messrs. John Little and Co., is now wanted by the police, says the Malay Mail. David was in custody, as no bail was
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  • 598 613 A text has been provided for the Straits Echo bt the departure for Home of two veterans of journalismMr. Makepeace, of the Singapore Free Press, and Mr. A. W. Still, of the Straits Times. That text is the tone and the integrity of the Press of Malaya. The
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  • 808 613 1 hat the rubber market remains a highly speculative on»» and things are by no means always in favour of the producer has been sufficiently illustrated during the past week or two, when the price per pound has averaged considerably l>elow seventy cents, says the Straits times.
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  • 333 613 General Malcolm as President According to the J esse 1 ton correspond, ent of the Free Press, Major-General Sir Neill Malcolm, formerly General Officer Commanding the Troops, Malaya, Has been elected President of the British North Borneo Chartered Company. General Malcolm is a liberal-minded, public-spirited man and,as
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  • 1085 614 The carefully prepared and analysed review of F. M. S. Trade and Customs for 1925, which bears the signature of the Commissioner, Mr Charlton Maxwell, and has lately reached us (Malay Mail) from the Government Printer, confirms the general expectation that statistics for Malayan trade during
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  • 466 614 JOHORE AND SEREMBAN OBSERVATIONS T’he following letters, addressed to the Straits Times, are of interest, in view of the fact that they coincide in all essential details, with descriptions of the meteorite's flight as observed from many far-distant viewpoints in Malaya. The first letter, from EyeWitness, dated Niyor,
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  • 1062 615 The visit of the Hongkong cricket team to Malaya was something of a fiasco from the purely cricket point of view, the colonial side suffering innings defeats against Malaya at Singapore and against the F.M.S. at Kuala Lumpur. Only in their second innings at Singapore were the
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  • 503 615 Lieut.-Coi. R. IL Haseldine, King’* Regt., having kit t< r England, has been struck off the strength. khe Rev. Bro. .James and Tunku Hanon Rash <1 were passengers to Bela-wan-Deli yesterday by the s.s. van Ho. gendorp. Mr. J. T. Pickering, manager of Selaba Lubber Estates, Teluk Anson, is
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  • 75 615 domestic occurrence DEATH Xiven.May 10» at The Nest," Woburn Sands, Bedfordshire, John Campbell Niven, late of Singapore and Balik Papan, Borneo. domestic occurrence DEATH Kee- 0° une 7 at Sungei Bakap, p.W., Kee Tek Kow, aged 64 years. Funeral will take place at Sungei Bakap at 10 a.m. on July
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  • 1306 616 The Good Old Times'* To-day is an anniveisu y which remi«.di us that cor Georgian ancestors bad a drastic c ethod of cu ing an "epidemic of crime O«j Jone 11, 18U6, the following malefactors were hanged "opposite the debtors’ door” at Newgate G. Calder, for personating a
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  • 578 616 TLe health statistics for the Munici[<ility of George Town for the wee»: ©nd. ing June 5, 1926, gives a total of 72 deathss 2 males and 20 females the death rate being 27.60 per miile per annum compared with 27.98 in the preceding week and with 28 54
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  • 606 617 PURCHASE OF HOUSE PROPERTY A NATURAL MISTAKE’ In ths Suprema C uru this morning Mr; Justice Brown delivered judgment in tl e gait in which Kboa Teow ('bong, a Chinese merchant of Penang, sued Mis. Ami, Gregory, of Bcumih Road, for recision fa nontraot, etc., in connection with
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  • SPOUTING NEWS
    • 194 617 Penang v. Perak The team to represent Penang in the Malaya ('up Association football mabch against Perak to-morrow, at Ipoh. is the same as was published in these columns on Wednesday, namely Walker, Khay Seng, Paik San, Soo Hunt, Abdul Rahman, F. Reutens, K. Coombs, A. Reutens,
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    • 474 617 A THIRD DAY TRADITION Record Dividend (From Our Oun Correspondent) Kuala Lumpur, June 10 The third day’s races of the Summer Meeting provided the usual number of upsets. The going was good at the start but then rain fell and helped the light weights to come in
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    • 246 617 Tennis Results The following were the results of matches played yesterday: Men’s Singles: Tait boat Batighan 46. 6o, 6—o; Sver beat Safferv 6<2, 6—3. Men’s Doubles: Sellar A Bennett (J. R.) beat Dr. Cowan A Holden 61.8-6; Pedlow A Williams (E. T.) beat Bennett (E. J.) A
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  • 870 618 There are said to be two million hpeus in the world, a very large proportion of whom are in fnd’a and South China, and as unbroken streams of immigration from both those countries pour into Malaya it is not surprising, says the Straits T rues, that
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  • 225 618 Street Fatalities The Coroner having returned a verdict of causing death by a rash act, the Malay driver of motor bus 1529 has been defamed pending the holding of a preliminary enquiry. The accused is alleged to have knocked down a Hylam in Gey lang road on the
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  • 607 618 Our contemporary, the Straits Tinies, publishes a leader on the rinderpest scourge, and, as was bound to happen, draws serious attention to t'he s’tuation in S am, says the Siam Observer. It is not alleged that all the trouble conies from this country, but there
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  • 927 619 The bottom has fallen out of rubber for the time being, says the Malaya Triune. A steady decline throughout the whole of last week came to a temporary anchorage on Saturday at Is. BRI. One dav during the week the market went below the ls.Bd. mark and
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  • 267 619 The luscious but malodorous durian is beginning to make its presence felt in the land, says the Straits Tmes. The mangosteen, aristocrat of Malayan fruits, is also appearing in quantities, and before long we may expect to see the Conservancy Department putting in overtime on the clearing up
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  • 835 619 A certain amount of depression has pervaded the Rubber market for some weeks now without much cause, although it is plain that, having during previous periods obtained 4/7 and 2/6 for their rubber, the producers, and much more the speculators in forward positions, are now having that after
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  • 285 620 The Government Health Office gives returns for the week ended June 5: Penang Hill (2,100 feet), average mean shade temperature 72.18 deg. F., evaporation .‘llO inches, rain 3.091 inches. Taiping Hill (3,500 feet), 73.19 deg. F., evaporation .203 inches, rain 2.72 inches. Bukit Fraser (4,100 feet), 07.00
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  • 1084 620 SOON THEAM CO.’S SHARE REPORT Penang, June 11, 1926 Ihe price of rubber after minor fluccloses .it 1/8. Rubber shares nr>- firm but the volume of business is small. Tin made a fair recovery in pr.ee, the gain, over last week’s price being 10/- 4 1 he 1 in share
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  • 1089 621 But for malaria, British Aiuiuya imgnt rank as one of me most coveted spots in which to live. If properly and consistently attacked, however, malaria would disappear in due course. The question is not Is it possible?’’ but Will it be done A recent interesting announcement was that an
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  • 526 621 ;r. 1< u m*- sent* ia place ot Dr. temple I. i<i Gtneer, Lower I'trak 2 r. -I i Kemp and Mr. r. E. Dilv kit b\ the i <ht nail vesterday for I pon. Tile Rev Bro. Henry, of St. Xavier's In ituti »n, Penang, is < u
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  • 1432 622 When Consistency is Weakness When Cecil K-hodes was rrproohed by a partisan politician with obsrgio? his mind, be did not, as small m&n might, attempt to prove that hie new attitude was consistent with his old; be paid qaite simply Tee, I changed my mind, and as qaickly
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  • 418 622 CHANG AND WU Co-operation Against Bolshevism (From Chinese Sources) Shanghi, June 9 Marshal Chang Tso.lin and Marshal Wu Pei fu have come to a definite understanding that each of them must sacrifice individual desire for power and wealth iu order to save China from being ruined by
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  • 795 623 HEALTH OF THE TOWN disappearance of slums 111 In previous articles on the Progress of I Penang we have di'awn the attention of the I pnblio to the many activities of the Muni- I cipal Engineer’s Department. Already, I we believe, a better understanding exists I between the
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  • 361 623 Th® Lash for Arms mu«glbrs {From Our Own Correspondent) Singapo:e, June 11 Two of the Chinese crew of the steamer Carnarvonshire, who were caught with a big haul of arras and ammunition, wee sentenced to two years’ rigorous imp-iaori-ment and ordered to roc» ivs 20 strokes each with
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  • 763 623 THE COMING OF THE GIANT SNAIL An Official Statement The Malay Mail has received the following letter from the Chief Agricub tural Field Officer, S.S. and F.M.S. Sir, Since local interest has lately been aroused in the recent invasion of Malaya by the Giant Snail Achatina fulica,”
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  • 51 624 New Books From Red Sea to Blue Nile, by Rosita Forbes. History of Ireland, 1798-1924, by Sir James O’Connor, 2 vols. I like to Remember, by W Rett Ridge. The Romance o£ Soldiering and Sport, by Gen. Sir James Willcocks. We Twa, by Lord and Lady Aberdeen, 2
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  • 241 624 Sandaragasam, a Tamil youth was this morning charged before Mr. F. K. Wilson in the Police Court, with having voluntarily caused hurt to an elderly Malay, named Mohamed bin Hussain Meah, at York Road at 7.10 p.m. on May 27. Mr. V. J. Mendis appeared for the complainant
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  • 1087 624 RAILWAY CONFERENCE SUCCESSFUL Cordial Agreement In an interview with the Bangkok Observer, Mr. J. W. Spiller, Acting General Manager oi the F.M.S. Railways, said that there could be no doubt that, one day, trains would run from Bangkok to Singapore. The following is extracted from the Bangkok
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  • 1683 625  - FOR WOMEN AND MEN THE INFANT MIND (By z*nna Carey) That the influence which largely de-1 termines our characters in the future is at work when we are infants, is the view held by leading authorities who are working in the sphere of psycho-analy-sis, and these are the lines which
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  • 458 626 Yesterday's Results lue following were the results ui Lemus matcues played at tne uoil Ciuo y esterday Aieu s Dingles: Sedwick beat Pedlow 6—o, 6—3. Men s .Doubles: Bathurst a Wilson beat Austin A Daugiian. family Pairs: Mr. <v Mrs. Scott Leat Mrs. Brooke Powell 64, Io
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  • 1184 626 SINGAPORE’S UNENVIABLE NOTORIETY Drivers Without Traffic Sense’’ Fatal motor accidents which have occurred recently on Singapore roads serve, says the Straits Times, to aall fresh attention to the very real peril which exists in the Colony and indeed in Malaya generally. The country is not peculiar in
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  • 1440 627 CHINESE GIRL ON TRIAL Alleged Murder of Lover Leaving her parents' home because thtv rtlmed to consent to her marriage" with a man who had the same v -h as herself, a Ch nese girl of respectable parentage eight years ago to< k the first step in
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  • 502 627 RAILWAY CO-OPERATION Mr J W Sp Her. the General Manager of the Federated Malay States Imiluay left to-day for the South, say» the Siam Observer of June 4 His stay in Bangkok has been br ef, but he has been able to gain a clear insfght
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  • 1110 628 I EAN A CO.'S WEEKLY REPORT Thur -day Evening Tin, :ifu r' d< climng further to |n 3 months, on a ri l this morning of I 1 do at £264.10;., 12.15- ab'-'( la t < »k do' ing-q not a tion. Spot tin at £265.15s commands a
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  • 582 628 It is with some regret, says the Singapore Free Press, that we have to admit that for a considerable t me past we haw received communications which allege on the pari of some sections of the Johore executive, particularly in the Courts, a failure to appreciate the nejesxity
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  • 1472 629 The Rubber Growers’ Association and the Malayan Chamber of Mines have both held their annual meetings recently, and the spokesmen of both these bodies have had comments to make which should be noted by Malayan readers. The Chairman of the R.G.A. noted the successful establishment of the
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  • 1978 630 Drunken Motorists Mo oring fatalities are becoming increasingly common, and it is uotiauaole that, in many instances, the cause can be traced to the drivers being under the influence of drink. The recent Changi Road fatality in Singapore is a striking instance of this fact, the medical evidence
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  • 142 631 r .i teaj assault on A magistrate Verlict and Sentence (From Our Own Correspondent') Singapore, Junj 14 The charge of assaulting the Second Magistrate, Mr. Bull, brought against two Eaiopeans, Tait and Breyer, concluded to day when the District Judge, Mr. David, infl'cting a fine of $5O and
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  • 377 631 A comprehensive article on '‘The Nether» lands East Indies as the Centre of International Interests,” and another on Education in Malaya,” by Dr. R. 0. Winstedt, form the m»in features of attraction of the IntenOcean magsaine for May. The high standard of p’O duation which it Sats itself is
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  • 897 631 WHERE LOVE LED Chinese Girl on Trial The following is a continuation of the evidence given at the trial of Chan Say Mooi, a young.educated woman,who has» been indicted on the grave charge of murder, the alleged victim being a faith, less lover. In our issue <
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  • 275 631 The following appointments, etc, appear in the current issue of the F.M 8. Government Gazette: Capt. R. L. Cuscaden to be a Superintendent of Customs, F.M.S.; Dr. J. J. O’Grady to be a Medical Officer, Malayan Medical Service; Messrs. R. D. Rowswell and T. H. Newey to be
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  • 438 632 The death is announced cf Major General S.r Oliver Nugent, late 60th R.fles. Mr. J Huggins, AI C., has been appointed Private Secretary to HE. the Governor. Mr. and Mrs. C W. Abrams are leaving Singapore for Home to-morrow by the Troilus. The appointment of Mr R. E. Holtturn
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  • 594 632 ANNUAL MEETING The third annual general meeting of the Old Frees' Association was held at the Association premises, 10, Leith Street on Saturday 12th instant at 3 pm. Mr. Khoo Sian Ewe, the President, was in the chair. Among those present were Messrs. Ung Boon Seong, Al.
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  • 449 632 An At Home,” followed by an orchestral concert, was given by the President, Committee and Members of the Penang Municipal Recreation Club, at the club premises, Dafo Kramat Gardens, on Saturday evenng in celebration of its second anniversary. The attendance was not so good as last year.
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  • SPORTING NEWS
    • 673 633 THE MALAYA CUP Perak Defeats Penang A Close Game (From Our Own Correspondent) Ipoh, June 13 Ipoh was t’he venue of the first Malaya Cup match this season on Saturday afternoon. The weather, which had been fine all 'lay. suddenly turned stormy about three o'clock and there was
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    • 520 633 FOURTH DAY’S RESULTS Close Racing (From Our Own Correspondent) Kuala Lumpur, June 12 The fourth day’s races of the Selangor Turf Club Summer meeting were run oil in good weather and before a large crowd wfiivii included His Highness the Sultan of Perak and suite and the
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    • 233 633 Tennis Results Saturday’s results at the Golf Club were as follows: Mens Singles; Bathurst beat Williams (E. I.) 57, bu, o4. Men s Doubles: Threlfall Sy er beat Terrell Powell. Mixed Doubles: Mrs. Gregory Jones <V Bennett (J. R.) beat Mrs. Bennett (E. J.) A Scott 0-4,
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  • 675 634 fore or after the monthly meeting.—Free Press. D.ck Hancock and his merry men, true sportsmen all, leave the Colony for Hongkong with the hearty good wishes oi th» people of Malaya, lhe visitors ha\H not been very successful on the cricket held, but have played the game in
    fore or after the monthly meeting.—Free Press.  -  675 words
  • 282 634 Let me go madly flying through the night, Stark to the winds that through my body tear And stabbing rain that flogs with wild delight The sodden masses of my tangled hair, Hey 1 1 am mad, no walls were made for me, Fiercer than flame my warring senses
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  • 584 634 ASTOUNDING PROSPERITY Occasionally there is magic to be found in trade figures, but too often they tail to interest the ordinary individual, says the Free Press. Hie report of the trades and Customs department of the Federated Malay State* for 1925 is one of the exceptions. Mr. Maxwell
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  • 1002 635 Accidents in every part of this country have lately become so frequent that the public mind is obviously growing more uneasy. On every hand the opinion is expressed that steps must be taken forthwith to stem the rising tide of catastrophe. All are agreed that remedies must be
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  • 525 635 Mr. E. Vempidai, act ng Assistant Pc siimo.it r. Ip ai, ha-' been tiansferred to Ivampai a.-> 1 cstmaster. Mis. W. 11 Hurt, who was operated on recently at the European Hospital, Kuala Lumpur, is making favourable progress. Dr. Smith, the V.D. Specialist, is visiting Ta pah from the
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  • 1268 636 Girl Guiding With reference to the co .damnation of the Girl Gcide Movement by the Primate of Hang-try, it is interesting to note that this does not repres nt the general attitude nf the R -mm Catboao Church. ardioal Bourne, A ohoishop of W» s’minster, bis received from
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  • 1255 636  -  (By Anna Carey) Yas,” said the lady in th? straw with pink roses, I simply love psycho* analys s...lt’s so interesting...l'm reading Jung (she p onounoed it a? it i? spp|H and I find him so intellectual. I do fo* intellectual things, dear, they lift up roy mind
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  • 581 637 It is with great reg et that we announce the dea»h c f Mnj )r Moulton, 0 B.E M A., B, Sc. (Ox u), Cui-f Secretaiy to Governm nt, Svawak. and formerly Director of R ffl 9S Museum and Library, Sin apore Maj >r Mooltan recently
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  • 654 637 THE FINANCIAL POSITION Sih W. G. Maxwell’s Report We extract the folk wing chapter relating to Financial from the annual re. port for 1925 from the pen of Sir George Maxwell, late Chief Secretary to Government, F.M.S.: 'Hie estimates of revenue and expenditure f< r the
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  • 492 638 Kia Beaien i.-; Tame Tight Saturday night’s ooxing at J lie Happy alley was WiiU'-std by quite a good C»’OW(I, say ilic aiipupoi c )re lit SS, but tn general )Uipr< -Ann <tl the elm ol Ihe prograiiiint must have been on- 01 «•isappouiiJ icnt. outran to
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  • 1061 638 ANNUAL MEETING ON JUNE 26 Mr. Gemming to be Chairman From Air. C. Ward Jackson, Kuala Lumpur, we have received the agenda of the 19th annual general meeting of the Planters’ Association of Malaya which is to be held-in Kuala Lumpur on June 26, also a copy of
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  • 421 639 PRAI AND EDUCATION BOARD RESOLUTIONS Rubber Propaganda Thu following are the orders of the day for the meeting of the Federal Council on Wednesday, June 23: 1. (Minutes of the meeting held on March 8, 1926. 2. Messrs. William Peel, C.M.G., Charles Shuldham Alexander, Dugan Homfray Hampshire and
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  • 976 639 PENANG BRANCH 1 he above Association has acquired lhe lowers,’ Anson Road, which will be opened shortly as a Hostel, run on similar lines to one in Singapore. There ib at the moment accommodation for six boarders, ami this will be added to as the need arises. There is
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  • Page 640 Advertisements
    • 207 640 CRITERION PRESS, Ltd., <G 6C, BSACW 9TRUT, MW. y£ ESTABLISHED ISSS. A PRINTERS MUSHERS. Proprietors of the STRAITS ECHO and PENANG SIN POE The most enterprising and up-to-date Printers and Litho- 1M graphers in the Orient. WL yC Our plant is of the very latest Pattern and by constantly supplementing
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