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NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE

(Through Reuter's Agency)

New York: Many 1979

QUOTATIONS

New York, London Cross-rate Now York Cotton-July New York Rubber-July Chicago Wheat -July Chicago Coun

Today's

Last High Low Close Close 4.9%) 4,917 1918 1912

HONG KONG DAILY PRESS. MONDAY, MAY 20, 1935.

THE “ILLAD”

t.#1

And Gallipoli

Changs up Easler

19.10 11.99. 114 18.00 .00 off

12.18 19.33 19.18

BIT MIC

*i

-Jaly

Montreal Silver --Dec.

Silver-Ollicial

Amer. Can (4)

Am. Comm. Alcohol

(.25)

Am. Cyanamid. "B"

Am. For. Per

(:25dr.)

861

Am. T. and T. (9)... 1201

Am. Tab "B" (5) ...

Am. Waterworks (1) 11 Am. Waterworks 38

1.

Lorill (1.20) Mcintyre (22) Mont, Ward

Nat Bise. (2)

Nät, Steel (1)

Otis Elec. (.60)

Uhings **

(Special Air Mail Service)

London. April 30.

"We, who tought at the Dar- danelles, and

the have read 'Illad, saw how history repeated itself, said Gen. Sir Ian Hami- ton yesterday to the members of the newly-formed. British Empire Service Club at luncheon at the St. Ermic's Hotel, S.W.

"The Illad' contains what we should now call 'Despatches from the Siege of Troy'-and that cam- paign was almost the duplicate of ours. Instead of a wooden horse we made use of a steel ship that W18 about the extent of the

difference

EMBASSIES IN

CHINA

P

Satisfaction Felt By Press

be

the

London, May 18, General

w suusfaction caused at the elevation of Legation at Peiping 10 bassy, declares the "Times" in a leading article. The Chinese are ode of the greatest races in the word, not only in numbers, but as heirs of an ancient civilisation, with achievements in art, litera- ture and philosophy which the i rest of the world is beginning to appreciate at their true value.

From the time when China first came into contact with Western "Before another 1,000 years have civilisation Britain has played a passed the two legends will have leading and "honourable part in blended together, and the bisher development. There is a long tories will be expounded in the tradition of friendship, cemented schools as beautiful Images of by the services rendered to China wicked happenings of long ago. by men like Sir Robert Hart and

"Yet all the same... wicked.

or | Bir Frederick Maze, and more Bri- not, if that bald and toothless tish money is. Invested in China professor 15 able to trace his

than in any other foreign coun- descent from a man who fell at try; and, apart from other con- the Dardanelles he will not fallsideration. Britali hag a great to let his students know it, for material interest in the progress those who died there will never be and prosperity of China.

fargotten.

"The memory of that great event does not grow fainter now, or less frequent with the years. To-day is only the 20th anniver- sary of the landing of the Anzacs

on the most romantic battlefield of the Old World, yet see how our memorial services, are growing)

The wonder of seeing these young giants come sailing up in their ships to help their King in his trouble grows, and ever since the grip of the picture has been tightening upon our imagina- tiona"

up

79.70 80.00 .30 up

17:

unchanged

Dow Jones Averages High-1933/34 Low: May. 17. May. 18.

30 Industrial

£16.58

84.58 116.81-

20 Rails

54.98

#7.11 31.0

30 Utilities

31.03

14.30 19.64

114 58 31.38 19.44

40 Bonds

97.47

84.73 95.26

..96.19

11" Commodity ladex

85,25

41.98 30.35

50.00

1.23 of 22 off

077 of .10 of

Last Sale

Last Sale

Stock & Div.

May 17 May 18

Stock & Div.

May 17 May 18

Adams Expres.....

61

53

Gold Dust (120)

151

151

Alaska Jun * (1.00%) 17} Allis Chalmers

18

Goodyear

19-

19

Int. Cement

291

287

Am.

Brake

Shoe

1 1

Int. Hary 1.60)

421

414

(80)

Int: Nick (60)

281

281

1254

1241

Int. Tel. & Tol,

91

Johns Manville

51

50

Kennecott (.15!)

201

20

Krog. Gro. (1.502)

231

23

19.

Lehman (2.40)

784

78

41

La. Carb. (1)

291 30

Am. For. Pwr. $7 1st

PL.

Loew's (1)

391

391

20

20

204

20

Am. Locomotive

131

Hi

44

Am. Metal Co.

201

261 261

Am Radiator

15

261

265

Am. Smelting

401

Nat City Bk. (1) ...

201*

Am. Sug. Ref (2) ...

Nat Dà. P. (1.20)... 151

Nat Distillers

251

254

Nat. Pwr., Lt. (.80)...

8%

49%

481

NY. Central

163

181

pret (8)

621

(N. Amer (50c. 4%) 137

131

Anaconda Copper... Atch. T.

171"

181 191

and 8. F.

Pac. Gas (1.50)

191

(2sd.)

411

411

Pac. Ltng. (3)

29⭑

29 **

4

91

Auburn Automobile 214y

Pennroad Corpn. Penn. Rly, (1)

2

2

at

201

213

Baltimore & Ohio... Bendix Aviation

114

221

21}

15

Pierce Arrow .........

!

Pub. Ser N.J. (2.80) 30

29

War,

Radio Corpn.

51

Borden Co. (1.80)...

231

Borg Warner (idr.) 35j

Repub Steel Rey. Tob "B" (3)

137

337

491

Case

5582

57F

Schenley

252

26)

Canadian Pacific

111

Sears Rocbuck .........

391

38

481

Shell Union Ol...

81

O'Peake Corp. (2.50)

151

15

C'Peake Corp. and 431

151

Ohio (2:80)

44

434

17

163

Chrysler (18)

481

104

103

Col. Gas & · Elec: ...!!

61

atan. Brands (1)

15

15

Stan. Gas

4

3

Comm. 8thra.

11

Sta. Oli Cal. (1)

371

37

Comm Sthra. $8

cum. Pf. (8)

46

46

42

.64%

64

Congo-Nairn (1.60)

231

223

Cons, Gas. NY (1) 23

35

343

Cons. Oll (28)

104

6

Cont. O (25)

221

Un.

Corn Prod (3)

721

(1.40)

58+

572

Coty Inc.

51

Un. Pac. Rlys. (8)... 961

S. M. Bruce (High Cominissioner

Cwn. Cork $2.70 P.

131 for Australia) and Sk James Parr

(3.70)

46 ⚫

64

51

(Figh

Curtiss Wright

28

Uni, Gas Impr. (1,20) 131

134 lessons.

571

27}

991

U.8. Rubber

13

the

z

US. Rub. $8 1st Pf. 334

321

341

1131

13.

352

Atlantic Ref (1) 263-267: Atlas Corpn.

Bethlehem Steel... 273

Boeing Airplane...... *8+

Caterpillar Tract

Ch. Nat. Bk. (140)... 218*

Comm. Solr. (80)... 201

Curtiss Wright "A" 87

Delaware & Hudson

Douglas Aircraft

Du Pont (2.60%)

East. Kodak (4)

Elec. Autolite Co... 223 Elec. Band & Share Elec. Bond $5 P1 (3) 51

74.

Elec, Eond $6 F1 (6) 571

Bec. Power & Light

For Film, "A"

Gen. Elec. 1,60)

Gen. Fooda (1.80)

Gen. Motors (14) ... 321

Gen. Rly. Bigs (1)... 23

Gilletté Saf (1)

Glidden. Co. (1)

Bid

ནཱནྟུ ཛུཏྟཊྛཱཀྐཎྞཱ 8ངྒཀྐ ཝིཊྛཱ བྷཱུ་ྙནäབྷཱཝཊྛོལདྷིཀྐཊྛཏྠཾ ཡཐཱརཱ ུ・ཨོ# {R!ཧྥུབྷཱཝ7##ཀྰ

Packard Motors

Phil Petro (1)

Simmons Co.

(.60)

Boc.-Vac.

Srn, Cal. Ed. (1.50) 157 Southern Pacific

Southern Rly.

Sta O NJ (1)

Ster. Pro. (2.80).

Studebaker Corpa

Texas G, Sulp (2) ...

Transamerica (1,124)

Car and Carb

Un. Aiferaft Corp.... 13

Un Air Line Traris...

United Corp¤.......... .. 23

Univ. Leaf Tob (2) 58

US. Pipe Fdry. (.50)

U-S, Steel

US Steel 7 PI. (2)

Vanddium

Vick Chem (2.402)... 36

Warner Bros. Picts. 3

West. Union Tel.

West E. & M. (.55).. 487v

Wilcox Oil and Gas

Woolworths (2-40)...

Call Money»

ཨྰཿReབྷཊྛིཧྲྰིཛྙྰནྡྷཏྟཱཡྻུཙྪཱཙྪཱཙྪནཱཙྪཙྪཏྠཨརུཊྛོ།aནྡྷ=ཨྰཿགླུ-17eཎྜgཎྜaesväཨྰཿཝ ཊྛཊྛཱནཱཡཝཾནྡྷཊཱ |སྐུཏྟཱརྞྞ1གྷོལ་ཚོ

"STOOD BY MOTHER COUNTRY" Mr. J. H. Thomas, who presided the luncheon, which inau- gurated the Empire Service Club, spoke of the part played by the people of the Empire during the

They were not concerned,

he said, with the rights and wrongs of the dispute. All they were concerned about was to stand by the Mother Country.

It was high time for the change and Sir Alexander Cadogan: bas well earned the title of firat Exi- tish Ambassador to the Republic.- Beuter.

Chinese

CHINESE COMMENT

Shanghai, May 18, The leading Chinese newspapers elevation of the commend the Chinese and Japanese Legations to Embassies, and the British and American announcements regard- ing similar plans.

"

The "Sin Wen Pao" says that the action is an expression of mu- tual respect, on which the settle-! ment of future questions must be based, and urges Japan to respect

Chinese territorial integrity and independence in Central China.

The "China Times" declares that Chinese and Japanese rela- tions cannot be improved by the elevation of Legation but by Japan changing her aggressive policy to- wards China, and adds that the elevation of the three foreign 'Le-

"We see," he continued, "dicta-gations may pave the way to a torships of the Left and dictator ships of the Right. Monarchs are deposed and Constitutions are

torn up." Yet in a few days we of the Empire will do honour to our monarch, and we will be able truthfully to say that our King reigns over one of the few demo- cracies left in the world."

LONDON'S REMEMBRANCE Earlier

in the day Sir Ian

settlement of existing outstanding problems.-- Reuter.

BERLIN INTENTIONS

Nanking, May 18. Under instruction from Berlin, Counsellor Lautenschlager called at the Foreign Office for the pur- pose of conveying the Reich Gov- emment's decision to promote the Legation to the rank of an Em-

Hamilton attended A Gallipoli-bassy.....

Anzac Day service of remembrance It is understood that the Chi-

at the Church of St. Clement ese Government also expressed its

readiness to take similar action.

Danes, Strand. Wreaths were

placed upon the war shrine by Mr.

Meanwhile a mesage received in Peiping from Beriln states that Dr. Trautmann wil remain

1

Commissioner for New China Bs "German Ambassador

"Zeñand), ́ who also read the when the status of the Legation

is raised to that of an Embassy.--

Many wreaths were afterwards Reuter.

laid on the Cenotaph. Oue, from Mothers' Union of New

Zealand, and made of New Zealand

flowers, arrived in a block of ice.

Those who laid the wreaths were:

Sir James Parr and Sir Henry Gullett trepte, the Govts. of New Zealand and Australia respective-

21

121

1);

251

West Air Brake (1) 217

213

344

48

60

593

141

277

1 ex. dily.

ENTRIES CLOSING FOR SPORTS

Chinese Athletes Hold Extra Trial

Shanghal, May 12. At the extra trials which took

· place yesterday afternoon at the Stadium for the selection of Chinese representatives for the coming international track and feld meeting, to be held during the next week-end, £ye candidates were picked.

Paul Fu was selected for the pole vault; he cleared the bar at 3,55 metres with little effort, K. K. Chang, who did the hop-step-and- Jump with a distance of 13,46 metres, was also picked. Z. Loo and K. W, Wong will wear China's colours, the former throwing the discus 33.59 metres, while the latter made 6.39 metres in the broad Jump, K. Y. Chen was selected for high hurdles.

Entries for the international track and field meeting will close to-morrow noon at the office of

possible mutilation

HEALTH BULLETIN OF. EASTERN PORTS

WEER ENDING MAY 11, 1935 Plague

Alexandria, Bassein Moulmein Colombo

Cases Deaths

1

Cholera

Bassein Calcutta

258

Rangoon

Tuticorin

Chittagong

Small-Pox

Bombay" Calcutta

Karachi

Madras Negapatam

Rangoon Vizagapatam 10 Haiphong ipina Macao Hong Kong

"the" China National Amateur Japan and Russia have already

Athletic Federation at the Stadium, sent in their lists of competitors.

(reptz.

the

Col. Sir John Brown, Adml. C. R. Payne and Mr. A. G. Webb

reptg. the British Legion);

Sir Ian Hamilton British Empire Service League);

F.-M. Sir William Birdwood; Gen. Sir Alexander Godley; and Gen. Voruz and Capt. Latham (Military and Naval Attaches to the French Embassy),

» AMERICAN AMBASSADOR

The American Ambassador, Mr. Bingham, with Mrs. Bingham. at- tended the annual memorial ser- vice to the 28th Division, Gallipoll, 1915-16, at Holy Trinity. Eltham. S.E. In a short address he said:

"A great responsibility rests upon your people, my people, the people on both sides of the Atlan- tic who are committed to peace. On us rests the responsibility that by our combined will and might we may help to bring to a troubled world everlasting peace."

..

REWARD OFFERED

Kennedy, Road Assault Recalled

In connection with the assault made on Mrs. Anderson, wife of Captain F. P. M. Anderson. R.A.M.C.. in a lonely path in the vicinity of Kennedy Road on May 8, with the result that the lady was picked up later in an uncon- scious condition after the thier had snatched her handbag from her, a reward of $250 has now been offered by the police for informa-

conviction of the wanted man. tion leading to the arrest and

The report states that the man is tall and thin, with long black hair. He was not wearing any hat when last seen, but had brown shoes and striped trousers. He la 20 years old.

Milton Cemetery, Portsmouth, by petty officers on behalf of the officers and ratings of the Aus tralla

A memorial to the 29th Division. AUSTRALIAN PREMIER IN at this church, which was com-

BELFAST

menced in 1917 by the vicar, the Mr, J. A. Lyons, the Australian Rev. H. A. Hall, is now, after 18 Prime Minister,

years' work, complete.

SERVICE ON CRUISER

who

the guest of Viscount Craigavonj. the Northern Ireland Prime Minister, A special Anzac Day service was at Stormont Castle, Belfast, placed held on the quarterdeck of the wreath on the Belfast War cruiser Australia, which is at Mernorial Cenotaph He later Portsmouth for refitting. Captain fasued an Anzac Day message, in W. B. F. Macleod," and all the which he said, "Let us while re- officers and ship's company, at-membering the valorous deeds of tended. The Australian ensign those who laid down their lives was flown at half-mast through- for a great ideal, do all in ond out the day, and two minutes" | power; In common with other sec aflence was observed. Two wreaths tious of the British Commonwealth were laid on the graves of Austra... of Nations, to fight now for the Han and New Zealand soldiers at ideal of peace."

VIT

P

alace of Luck lace of Pleasure

aradise of Entertainme

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AVENIDA ALMEIDA RIBEIRO MACAU

(A Minute from the Wharf) YOU ARE WELCOME Spending the least-Enjoying the most.

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Tea Room

Café

VITÓRIA

Fortune Hall

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Lodge

-Swimming Pavilion

-Flower Boats

OUR BEST WISHES FOR YOUR GOOD LUCK.

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NERVES?

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· this nerve lood"

“A Lendon Physielam One of the many forms in which writes: ..

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The True-Tonics

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