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Handy Silver-Wrapped Tablets

Peps

"The Remedy You Breathe'

THESE wonderit! Peps breathcable tablets

bring the valuable air-like medicine of the Fine Forests into direct contact with the throat and bronchial tubes. When dissolved slowly, in the mouth, these valuable soothing and artiseptic fumes are liberated and carried with the breath deep into the chest and lungs— where liquid medicine cannot possibly penetrate..

Deep Into Chest and Lungs.

In this direct way, Peps illay soreness and inflammation inside the bronchial tubes. They cut choking phlegm and quickly clear and strengthen all the breathing passages. Peps have solved the problem of ending throat and bronchial troubles without the aid of dangerous drugs like lagdadu, chlora!, morphia, etc.

for COUGHS, BRONCHITIS SORE THROAT & COLDS

Zia maknaez de către mai steng in handy soudit & - Tháku

If only every

mother knew

Tears cease and baby's pain is soon soothed away with a teaspoonful of Woodward's Gripe Water. Woodward's checks fermentation and ensures complete digestion. It removes the cause of discomfort in a natural way. Woodward's". contains no opiates, and is safe to give babies of any age.

WOODWARDS

MOKOWARD'S CELEBRATIO *GRIPE WATER

GRIPE WATER

HONG KONG DAILY PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1934.

DUKE'S WEDDING PRESENTS

Stock Of Glass And Piano

<Special Air Mall Service)

London, Nov. 15.

ST. ANDREWS RECTOR

Marconi Elected

AUSTRALIA AIR MAIL DELAY

AID TO PAY WAR DEBT

Start Postponed By Disaster

(Specia) Air Mail Service)·'

London, Nov. 15.

(Special Air Mall Service)

London, Nov. 15.

of St. Andrews The students University elected Marchese Gug- The Duke of Kent is having a lielmo Marconi to be Rector of wonderful stock of glass given University in succession to Gene- Next month's inauguration of him by a friend. It is all being ral Jan Christiaan Smuts, whose the England-Australia air mail made by a British Bim and is three years term of office has ex-service has been postponed pend- copied from old English glass. pired. The Marchese was elected ing the outcome of the inquiry It Includes brandy glastes, by a majority of 100 votes over into the mysterious crash near liqueur glasses champagne glasses gir James Jeans in a "straight Longreach, Queensland, of a plane and some modern innovations aght."

Intended for the service. Three Imperial Airways fillers and an Australian passenger were killed.

little

like cocktail glasses and dishes for savouries

The Duke is anxious to possess & special Bechstein plano and this may be given by the Greek colony in London instead of the Chippendale chairs they originally suggested It is understood that

cost the instrument will £400.

t

Over

Honeymoon House Himley Hall, where the royal couple will spend the first part of their honeymoon, was trans-

formed by the late Lady Ednam from a rather gloomy mansion into one of the most attractive and comfortable, country houses In the kingdom.

Lady Ednam was the, Arst hos- tess to use glazed chintzes for country house decoration in com- bination with pastel-painted wal's! and masses of flowers arranged in a nature way.

The

As She Left It

14

four-poster and Regency beds and the old furniture with which the house is filed are set off by this fashion in colourful decoration which has been copied by every" country houre hostess since.

Himley is just as Lady Ednam left it at the time of her death. with the exception of two rooms that she never had time to com- plete. One of these. a Chinese room, has been decorated for Lord Dudley by Lady. Colefax Kuo Min.

DUKE PRESENTS PRIZES

IN AIR RACE

Melbourne.

at 100,000 A crowd estimated was present at the aerial pageant at Laverton Aerodrome. Mel- bourne, when the Duke of Glou- cester presented the prizes for the

England-Melbourne centenary air

race.

Seldom has there been a recto rial election at St. Andrews in which less interest has been

The chief pilot. Ft. Lt. R. A. evinced by the students This Frendergast, was not in charge of may be accounted for in part by the 'plane at the time as his body the circumstance of the late was found in a cabin at the rear. rival of General Smuts to be in- stalled in office.

The sult the members of the various sports teams voting start- ed at the early hour of 7.30 and closed at

taking noor, polling place simultaneously at the Younger Hall. St. Andrews, and at University College, Dundee.

The only evidence that re- ctorial election was in progress was the wearing of conclours, red and green favours for Marconi and blue for Jeans, and

some skirmishing for the possession of rival banners.

It is presumed that the pilot at. the time was Mr. Creates, the co- pilot and wireless operator.

The 'plane a D.H. 96"four-engine bi-plane, was the second to arrive in Australia of four "which have

bren designed for the England- Australia service... She belonged to the Qantas Airways, in which Imperial Airways have an interest.

The crash occurred in fine wea ther and open country. about & quarter of an hour after the machine had left Longreach. She took off at 5.30 am.. and the pilot's clock was found afterwards to The Marconians attacked some have stopped at 5.47. An eye- of their rivals, but the banner-witness said he saw the machine bearers sought safety in fight.make a sudden nose-dive. She and were still in possession when appeared to be turning back to their pursuers gave up the hunt Longreach at the time. some six miles away in the direc- tion of Ceres, but the Marcorians had the satisfaction of knowing that the Jeans supporters could not arrive back in time to regis- ter their votes.

To while away the time of walt- Ing for the result of the election the students staged an exhibition of fireworks on the sea front.

HAMBOURG'S SILVER JUBILEE

(Special Air-Mail Service)

London. Nov. 15.

This is the second air disaster in Australia recently. The Miss trobart, a sister machine, was lost a month ago while on "her way from Hobart (Tasmania) to Mel- bourrie. It was presumed she had fallen into the sea, and all hope for her nine passengers and two pilots was abandoned after a three days' search.

"

Lt. Prendergast, one of the victims of the crash, was a South African, Mr. W. V. Creates was a native of Dulwich, and lived at Wallington. Surrey,

Engineer F. R. Charlton came from Croydon. Mr. E. Broadfoot, In a London hotel recently one the passenger, was an Australian, could have listened to a screech-employed by the Shell Oil Co. ng, false-toned wax

disc-the

rst gramophone record ever made by Mark Hambourg. When the company had endured it for

a few moments the needle was

lifted, and Hambourg went to the plano in person. He played a brief composition to soothe. The Duke had his first ex- perience of an Australian traffic jangled musical nerves, and im- Jam. Tens of thousands of cars mediately he had finished a switch converged on the aerodrome for was pushed over and from the recording studio several miles the presentation ceremony. Some

sweet and distance from the aerodrome the away there came a Duke's car was stopped by a taxi- accurate echo of His performance. driver, who warned the royal It had been relayed by telephone party of the jam ahead and pilot-ine and amplified ten

times. This little demonstration ed them by a circuitous route, but

"marked the celebration of Ham- where they joined, the main road

million

KEEPS BABY WELL again hear the aerodrome there bourg's silver jubilee as a gramo

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CAIL FLAR: "NUMERAS ONE” OYEK, “ PENFANT ANs,

was a complete blockage. Even- tually the police found a way for

the Duke's car.

C. W. A. Scott, joint winner with Campbell Black of the speed race, was presented with a cheque for £10,000 and the gold trophy. These were accepted, on behalf of the owner of the winning Comet, Mr. Edwards, of Grosvenor House, Mrs. Melrose, mother of the young Australian who won the second prize in the handicap section, re- celved the £1,000 price as owner of the winning machine. Melrose received a medallion.

The Stodart cousins, who lodged an appeal in connection with the handicap race, and Lieutenant Hansen, the Dane, together with his companion, Jensen, also re- ceived medallions.

THE QUEEN AND A CORNET. PLAYER

(Special Air-Mail Service)

London, Nov. 15. The Queen-God Bless Her! That is the sentiment of an old soldier to-day. For she has made him very, very happy.

phone recorder. It was in 1909 that his planistic interpretations were first distributed in single- sided records at one guinea aplece. To-day Hambourg has made 500 different recordings, and it claimed that with 3,000,000 of Els records

wider sold he has gramophone public than any other pianist.

MR. CHURCHILL'S MISQUOTATION

(Special Air Mall Service)

London, Nov. 15. Mr. Churchill should go to the bottom of the form.

In the Betting Bill debate he compared Capt. Margesson to the illustrious trimmer, of Charles IL's reign, Lord Halifax, quoting Dry- den's lines in "Absalom and Achl- tophel."

Hansard prints it as:

Nor changed. alone, but turned the balance. g

So much the weight of one brave man can do, ***

As thus given the verses neither thyme por scan. --

"Then Chose The Better Side" **

While visiting the antique shop In the Press reports these de- of Mr. Albert Clayton, in Crawficiencies are made good but still ford street, W., the Queen saw Mr. Churchill's quotation does not and heard the "old soldier-T South of Knox-street, Marylebone tally with Dryden.

The passage xuns:

playing a cornet outside, <^< "Tipperary," "Keep the Home Fires Burning," "Sons of the Bea," and "PackUp. Your Troubles." The comet player went through his repertoire."

When the Queen came out of the shop, Bouth played the Na tional Anthem. When she had taken her seat, in her car, she handed a ten ahilling note to Mr. Clayton for the corner player,

So the old soldier expressed his thanks in the only way he could As the royal car drove away Intip he blew, or He's a Jolly Good Fellow

01 piercing wit and pregnant thought,

Endued by Nature and by learn-

ing taught

To move assemblies, who but only

tried

The worse a while, then chose

the better side, mode

Nor chose alone, but turned the

balance too.

So much the weight of one brave,

man can do.

Incidentally Mr. Churchill re- faced his quotation by referridig in

suitably academic vein to Capt. Margesson is Patronage Becretary,

Scotsman's Will

(Special 'Air Mail Service)

London, Nov. 15.

dies Provided his daughter without issue Mr. James Bertram, a Scotsman, has bestowed the residue

P. & 0. DIVIDEND DECISION

Dividend Paid To Deferred Stock

(Special Als Mall Service)

London, Nov. 15.

No dividend has been paid by the Peninsular and Oriental Steam: of his estate (reported to be about Navigation Company on its défor- .· £300,000) to the British "Chancel-red capital, since 1931, None was lor of the Exchequer, Mr. Neville expected for the year ended Sep- Chamberlain, to be applied to the tember 30, and none is recommend- payment of war debts to the ed by the directors in their divid- United States.

end on the preferred stock will be duly paid. On the other hand, the market will be disappointed If the accounts for the past year do not reveal 'an improvement of

Mr. Bertram who came from Edinburg. was formerly confiden- tial secretary to Mr. Andrew He Carnegie, the philanthropist. says in his will that he wants his estate taken care of and "at the same time to do something for the country of his birth and the coun- try of his adoption.”

WEA

Work in Scotland Mr. Bertram early in life appointed to the secretaryship of a gold-mining" company in South Africa. He held this position for

seven years

He was then, appointed private secretary to Mr. Carnegte. When Mr. Carnegie acquired the estate of Skibo in the North of Scotland Mr. Bertram accompanied him during his residence there.

He became so closely associated with the town of Dornoch that he was looked upon as almost a na- tive.

Since Mr, Carnegie's death Mr, Bertram had been a prominent member of the Carnegie. American Trust., a position which involved extensive travel

He was 65 years old, and is sur- vived by a wife and daughter.

EXPERTS ALL

(Special Air-Mall Service)

London, Nov. 15. A formidable, body of experts waited on Mr. J. E. Thomas re- cently. These were the deputs- tion in connection with the post- tion of the South African territo- ries of Basutoland, the Bechuana- land, Protectorate, and Swaziland

Its members included Lord Lugard, Lord Selborne,

The

earnings. For 1933-3 the net in- come was insufficient to provide for depreciatian on the company's ficet at the normal rate of 5 per cent, and there was a debit balance (which was adjusted by a transfer from reserve) of £665,000 after allowance for debenture service. and the preferred dividend. actual net receipts from yoyages, however, thanks to a drastic reor- ganisation of the company's ser- vices and to operating economies. were 33 1-3 per cent up on the preceding year's figure. Not all the benefits of this reorganisation, it is believed. were exhausted in 1932-3. During the past twelve months, moreover, there has been a slight rise in freight rates, a greater volume of cargo has"pro- bably been carried, and in certain directions (the Suez Canal dues were reduced early this year) costs have been reduced. While it is not expected that full deprecia- tion and prior charges, bave yet been earned it is suggested that the 1932-3 deficiency will prove to have been materially reduced.

Lothian, Sir Edward Grigg, a for- mer Governor of Kenya, and Mr. L 9. Amery

Lord Lugard's connection with Africa goes back to the campaign. for the relief of Gordon. He is спе of the creators of modern Nigeria,

· Lord Selborne was High Com- inissioner in South Africa during the years 1905-1910; the formative Lord period of the Dominion.

DIRECTORY & CHRONICLE

OF THE FAR EAST

CHINA, JAPAN, MALAYA, PHILIPPINE ISLANDS, INDO-CHINA, NETHERLANDS INDIA, ETC.

(Published by The Hong Kong Daily Press, Ltd.)

First Edition 1862, revised and enlarged annually

1935 Edition Now in Course of Preparation

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