PACKARD PLYMOUTH. CHRYSLER. DE SOTO
Motor Cars.
Sole Agents:
REPUBLIC MOTOR COMPANY
OF CHINA
་
30-32, Des Voeux Road C. Tel. C. 1219 and C. 6252.
The
China Mail
Thursday, October 3, 1929.
Ninth Moon, 1st Day.
HONG KONG
“OVERLAND CHINA MAIL"
SEND IT HOME!
THE WEEK'S NEWS
ILLUSTRATED.
大英十月三號
#NA
中華民國已巳年九月初一日
25 cts.
THE
BLUE FUNN
LINE
REGULAR AND FAST, FREIGHT AND "PASSENGER-SERVICES
LONDON SERVICE.
15th Oct. M*los, Londen it'dam; & H'burg. 20th Oct. 'les, London R'dam, & II"burg.
"MENELAUS" PAENEAS LIVERPOOL SERVICE. -
"OANFA"
AUTOLYG:8"
20th Oct. Genoa, Havre, Liverpool, & Glasgow 20th Nav. fieson, Havre, Liverpool, & Closgow
NEW YORK SERVICE,
(with transhipment at Singapore). Leaves Hongkong
"AENEAS" 29th Oct.
Leaves Singapore
* DAI DANUR” Îlth Nov. Hongkong to New York 61 days.
PACIFIC SERVICE.
via KOBE & YOKOHAMA.
TAITHYBJUS" Jib net. Victoria. z Vancouver *IXION"
26th Oot. Viatoris, & Vancouver
INWARD SERVICE,
Arrive New York
19th I'ec.
"PERAFUS* Due 9th Ook For Shanghai, Moļi, Kobs & Yokohama “AUTOMEDON" Dus 9th Ost. For Shanghal, Moji, Kobe & Yokohama PASSENGER SERVICE,
"AENEAB"
29th Oct. Singapore, Marseilles à London
Also cargo steamers with limited passenger accommodation at apocially reduced incor
For insight, passage rates and Information apply to :-
> Butterfield & Swire,.
POST OFFICE NOTICE...
RADIO
NOTICE.
The following is the 1st of ships expected to be in wireless communication with Hong Kong to-day: Malacca Mary: Hong- kheng; President Hayes; Atsuta Maru; Mishima Maru; Oldekerk; Seangbee; Szechuen; Paling Maru.
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4. U.S.A. (Seattle, Sept. 4), Canada, Japan &
Japas and Shanghai
Shanghai
SATURDAY,
Australia and Manila
ESTABLISHED
1845
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1929.
IMPERIAL SHRINE
POLICE SERGEANT'S
SACRED MIRROR OF JAPAN
DEATH
A POETIC CEREMONY
- TRANSFERRED
NO
SAD ÁFFAIR
DOMESTIC TROUBLE AND "PERFECTLY. NORMAL”·
JURY'S VERDICT
www.
Tokyo, Yesterday. At lae, in the solemn setting of a giant cryptomeria grove, and to the plaintive wailing of ancient music, with the darkness broken only by the flickering light of At the Central Magistracy, yes- pise torches, the Sacred Mirror was terday afternoon, Mr. E. W. Hamil transferred this evening to the newton, and a Coroner's jury compris Imperial shrine, where it will re-ing Messrs, V. F. d'Azevedo (fore- main undisturbed till 1949, when a man), A. B. Carvalho, and D. F. similar ceremony will again take Lopes, held an inquiry into the death of Detective-Sergeant John place.
Dyerson, of the Hong Kong Police, who shot himself at Headquarters on September 7.
Though only a few hundred pri- vileged spectators were permitted to witness the solemn procession of Shinto priests and Court ritualists,
The first witness was Dr. T. W.
BRITON'S FATE
PEKING MANAGER BEATEN
BY COOLIES`·
SHOCKING INCIDENT
Peking, Yesterday. Mr. B. C. Hale, the British
manager
of Mesars. Thos. Cook's Peking office, was this afternoon badly beaten up by risha pullers, who invaded his office in the Peking Hotel and dragged him out to the street.
It appears that the trouble arose through one of Messrs. Cook's guides decamping with the money with which he should have paid the pullers for carrying a party of tourists, whereupon the coolies revenged themselves upon the innocent Mr. Hale, who is suffering
He was finally rescued from about
garbed in flowing robes of archaicWare, medical officer in charge of most from severe kicks on the body. design, tess of thousands of pil- the Government Civil Hospital. He grims from all parts of the country said that when he saw Sergt. Dyer twenty coolles by the hotel manager gathered in the neighbouring town at the hospital he had an parently just died. There was a bullet wound in his head,
in the past few days for the purpose of praying before the shrine to the
Later in the day, witness held e Sun Goddess, which is the mecca of post mortem examination and dis- all good Japanese, while thirty-five covered that the bullet had entered warships assembled in the neigh-in the region of the right temple bouring bay.
Ancient History
eater.
Central Police Station, said that by 11.30 p.m. on September 6, the deceased was in bed and he appear- ed to have slept well. He was and had gone clean through the normal in every way. On one oc- hend. His opinion was that the casion he had complained to wit- Though the original mirror,shot was fired from very closeness that he had sent the "boy" out; which is here enshrined, is reputed range, within a few inches of the to have a history of thousands of temple. years, the ceremony of replacing the resting place and removing the mirror every twenty years originated about twelve hundred years ago. This evening's core- mony marks the fifty-eighth re- moval.
The wound was of the type one would expect to find if a person had shot himself,
Diseased Brain
I
. Dr. Ware added that the shot did not immediately cause death but it would certainly have caused un- consciousness. though the person would probably live for some hours. On examining the brain witness found that in addition to injuries caused by the bullet the deceased had inflamation of the brain which witness diagnosed to be of a tuber- cular nature.
While the ceremony was taking pince at Ise, the Emperor, as spiritual and temporal head of the nation, simultaneously performed an ast of "distant worship." facing towards Ise, making obeisance to the progenatrix of Japan'd un- bruken line of sovereigns. The He was very much surprised at mirror, a replica of which is kept the discovery as with such a condi- permanently in the Imperial Palace tion of the brain Sergt. Dyerson in Tokyo, except on the occasion of must have carried on his work while an enthronement, when it accom- suffering from very severe head- panies. the
to Kyoto,aches. This condition of the brain, Emperor symbolises purity and is supposed in witness' opinion would cause in to reflect the spirit of the Suntense depression. Goddess. It la regarded 118 too sacred to be seen by human eyes, and is always covered. Not even the Emperor is permitted to gaze upon it.
The New Shrine
The new shrine is always an exact replica of the old one. Every stage of construction, even the selection. and felling of the timber, is carried out with elaborate ritual, while the workers are specially selected and undergo purification rites, wearing, special garments.--Reuter.
INWARD MAILS.
From
Per
THURSDAY, OCTOBER
8.
Shanghai and Amoy ....
,Luchow
Mishima Maru .Haruna Maru
OCTOBER
5.
.Aratura
Sinklang
B
President Adams
.Empress of Russia .President Grant
.Antung
Temperature, 10 am, to-
day
For
Per
Degrees
78 Temperature du platting
THURSDAY,'
Wei Hai Wei
OCTOBER 3.
Shoko Marn
yesterday
Shanghai
Rosandra
3.80 .p.2. .49.0 p.m. 4.30 pm
Humidity, 10 am, to-
day Humidity, 4 p.m., yes.
terday
79
66
Japan and Shanghai
Manila
Manila
Shanghai and Swatow
U.S.A. (San Francisco, 6th Sept.), Honolulu,
SUNDAY OCTOBER
Europe via Negapatam (Letters & Papera,"
London, September 5)
OUTWÄRD MAILS.
Sam Shui and Wüchow
FRIDAY,
Salgon, Straits, Ceylon, India, Mauritius, & S. Africa and *South American Ports *Manila, Australia (except places North of Brisbane), and New Zealand via Brisbane
Tai Hing OCTOBER
La Mata Maru
Burma. Maru
12,80 p.m.
p.m. p.ms
Haruna Maru
5 pm
Manila, Sandakan, Australia and New Zealand via Thuraday Is- land
Swatow, Amoy and Foochow Air Mail for London... Straits, Ceylon, India, Mauritius
E.& 8. Africa, Aden, Egypt & Europa via Marsailles
K.P.O elstration.......Dcf 4, 4.30 p.m.
Due Brisbane, 21st Oct.) Registration..Oct. 4, 11.45 an
Letters
St. Albans
(Due Thursday Island, 19th Oct.).
et. 4. Noon." .1.45 pm.
Parcels Registration
Letters
Halyang
Haruna Mari-
(Due Marseilles, Nov. 8.)
Registration ..Oct. 5, 845 á.m. Letters OCTOBER – B
Kwai Bany
Due Victoria, B.GUE
Swatow Jagan and Cana
Oct. 5, 9 8.m. SATUR
Talthyn
9.80 a.m
1
By the Coroner: Definitely, while the condition was on, it could affect the sufferer's sanity. If the man had not died from his injury he would undoubtedly have died from He might have gone the disease.
this disease never recovered. on for a week or so, but cases of No cure was known. The disease was at common in adults but was found more often in children.
8013
for aspirin and had been brought the wrong kind.
Perfectly Normal Speaking about the, morning of September 7 witness sald that at *7,45 a.m.
Dyerson was reading a newspaper and read aome extracts to witness. He appeared still to be perfectly normal. The deceased
ved and then at 8.45 a.m., he went to the bath-house.
He was fully dressed except for his cont.
Sergt. Davis stated that at 8.55 Pm. he went to the European lavatory. He heard a sound like someone groaning, and looking to- wardrer the compartment. for which it came he saw blood running from. underneath the door. Witness then lost no time in sending for Sergt.
Nolan.
Found Dying
Sergt. Nolan said that when he got to the lavatory, he found there was apparently somebody lying He entered the against the door. adjoining cubicle and climbed over the top. Then he saw deceased on the ground, doubled up with his right shoulder against the door, and facing downward. A revolver was loose in his right hand. He did not appear to be conscious. Witness told the mess and then rushed down- stairs to inform the Inspector-on- Duty, and to send for the ambul-
ance.
By the Jury: European menî- hers of the Force kept their own revolvera and it was not uncommon for them to carry a revolver even when off duty,
Rushed to Hospital
A Powerful Man Witness added that Sergt. Dyer was otherwise a remarkably According to orthodox belief, the healthy and powerful man in very San Goddess presented the mirror good condition. On the top of the to her grandson. whose
great-left lung, there was a tiny patch
Chief Detective Inspector Rey- grandson, Jimma Tenno, was the
which showed that in his child.nolds also gave evidence of finding Brat Emperor of Japan. Hence the hood days, Dyerson had a small the body. The revolver was of the ceremony of transferring the sacred tuberculous infection. It had com-Service type and had been issued to emblem once in twenty years in re- garded as an important national pletely healed when Witness saw it the deceased. Dyerson was wear event, requiring the attendance of and the lung was normal for a maning a belt with a holster attached. the Premier and other bigh off- [of Dyerson's age. There might clale.]
have been an injury, to that patch and the blood stream might have got to the brain.-Witness felt cer tain that Dyerson must have known that there was something seriously wrong with his brain, though he
Dyerson was carried out of the would probably not have known its lavatory and laid on a blanket. Dr. nature. The pain must have beenA. Cannon then. arrived and first Intolerable,
aid was applied according to the doctor's instruction. On the arri (Continued on Next Columu.)
WILLIAM FOX
presents
Comrades' Evidence
Sergt. C. Mottram, who lived in the same room an Dyerson in the.
Adventure on the Sands of Art
On "breaking" the revolver wit- ness found that one round had been fired and an empty 38 cartridge was found outside the passage of the lavatory.
FLEETWING
With
BARRY NORTON, DOROTHY JANIS
THE STORY OF A YOUNG SHEIK WHO DEFIED TRIBAL CUSTOMS "AND DESERT LAWS AND WON FROM THE TOILS OF THE HAREM : THE GIRL OF HIS. CHOICE A FLAMING ROMANCE OF THE SAHARA.”
TO-DAY TO SATURDAY 2:30-15.30 7,15 & 9.15 pm
AT THE
MAJESTIC
NATHAN ROAD, KOWLOON
PETER B. KYNE'S
25 cts.
TIDE of EMPIRE
"
"
with RENEE ADOREE.
Cosmopolitan Froduction
GEORGE. DURYEA,
FRED KOHLER.
ADDED ATTRACTION!
"THE HEART OF
·GENERAL ROBERT
E. LEE."
You'll never forget these thrills of the Great Californin Gold-“
AT THE
QUEEN'S
Rush!
TO-DAY TO SATURDAY
At 2.30, 5.10, 7.15 & 9.20.
It'll slide you into an Ocean of Laughs!
Warner Bros present
A SAILOR'S SWEETHEART
*FAZENDA
COOK
A WARNER BROS PRODUCTION
TO-DAY TO SATURDAY At 5.30 & 9.20
EN STAR
THE
SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE'S
THE
ANCIENT MARINER
with CLARA BOW, LESLIE FENTON
AT THE
WORLD
But the Greatest" of all
Bayer
Tablets of
BAYER
TÓ-DAY TO SATURDAY
BAYER
ASPIRIN
for Headache, Toothache,
⠀ Rheumatism, etc., etc,
Obtainable everywhere.
Continuous Performance from 1.15 to 1115
val of the ambulance Dyerson was after examining the deceased's rushed off to hospital. Even at effects there was no financial or that stage, Dr. Cannon had ridicat domestic trouble
ed that the deceased was “practic-}", "I can assign no motive for this -Foffoer taking his life,” added Mr. ally hopeless."
Witness said that from the fa- Murphy, who concluded by saying. quiries which he had made, he was that Dyerson had never reported satisfied that Dyerson had com illness and that if he had been sick mitted suicide. Deceased was 81 the poor chap must have been suf- years of age and joined the force fering in allence. on October 26, 1923. He went Home in October Inst year and returned on September 1 this year. Witness added, that, Derson was a very re- served man and was seldom seen with anyone. He was quite temper
Sunde Never Gave Trouble -
The Jury returned a verdict to the effect that the deceased met bis death from a revolver shot fred by himself during temporary insanity... They expressed their sympathy with Dyerson's relative,
The Coronor agrood with, the Jury's verdict, and associated him. Mr. T. Murphy, A.S.P., stated that self with their expression of Rym the deceased was a capable and pathy. Mr. Hamilton hdded, that energetic Police officer who took he wished to express his own sip
interest in his work, He had cere regret that the Hong Hong glyen any trouble and Police Force should have surrered as far as witness could ascertain | the loss of such a capable omsér..