INDIGESTION FIRE IN AERO-
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sciones.
Bisurated' Magnesia, is a com plete treatment for the relief of tomach troubles--it neutralises the barraful acids that cause the
trouble and it spreads a soothing, protective film over the stomach lining,
Git Bisurated Magnusin pow. der or tablets from your chemist or tore to-day, but be sure to look for the oval 'BISMAC' sign if you want the quickest-acting stomach remedy doctors know.
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YOU
WANT ADS TIME
SAVE
PLANES
(Special Air Mail Service)
London, Aug. 20.
The International Union of
HONG KONG DAILY PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 31, 1935.
SCOTLAND ROUT
ENGLAND
<Special Air Mail Service;
Londen, Aug. 10.
SOIL WASTAGE DANGER
(Special Air Mall Service)
London, Aug. 10.
NO PETROL ON
SUNDAYS
(Special Air Mail, Service)
London, Aug. 10.
The fact that the kirk session of
Aviation Insurers is shortly meet phase of the International amateur Northern Africa is familiar with Evelix Church frowns upon dan-
England entered upon the last Every travellar in Asin auct ing in Stockholm, and the ques-golf championship, on the Royal the remains of what were evident-cing to the point of banning the tion of üres following air acci Lytham and St. Annes course harey once great cities, requiring vast dents will be raised before it today, with The question is serious. For the but they failed ally in the tour supplies of food, situated in dis. From church attendance for six
an unbeaten record,
Provost of Dornoch and his family average person the fear of being somes against Scotland, losing all of feeding more than a few sheep of
tricta which are now incapable months is evidence of a current burnt alive (however small the five. actual statistical changes) is pro-
or goste. Mr. Kennedy Shaw has through the Northern Highlands religious scruple running bably a more effective deterrout
of articles on
"Dead "Libya.* What is now desert was clearly once fertile country carrying a numerous
and highly civilized population. It
was thought at one time that the desiccation way the result of climatic charges, but
Timgad in North Some of the deserted citir example and the sister city Laun Lochinver. As there are long dis- Africa for end of Strath Oykell and at bese were busy and populous tances between available supplies is no evidence of any catastrophic batarian move may occasionally centres in Roman days, and thereof petrol in these areas this Sab- hange of climate since that time prove awkward for touring moto- The theory is ∙now generally rists.
Both Scotland and Ireland had described such finds in his series these days, writes a correspondent. been beaten once, the latter by Eug land on the first day. If Scotland defeated England in to-day'a match, and Ireland wern successful against Wales they won the four somes 3-1 with one halved-the re- mult would be a triple tin.
from air travel than some trans- port authorities can admit. What safeguard exist? Many people wonder why the heavy oil engine is not in more general employ meat. The position about this engine is curious. Technically it
a motoring correspondent informs us. that at two places in Suther- landshire during last week-end he encountered the notice, "No petrol sold here on Sunday." The notice was prominently displayed attach-
has been a complete success. In: To-day there was a cold brees, there is little to support this view.ed to petrol pumps at the western
ho
and rain seemed in the offing. Eng and played the same team as yes terday, but moved Bentley to play and gave Zacharias the bottom in the top foursome with Woollam single instead of Walton, on the ground that he might be more re. fiable in a tight finish.
abaniloned reason
for the convincing A GREAT STRUGGLE
that the process
can be seen going on to-day as the plain The top match between Bentley result of man's own ignorance and Woollam and McLean and Mound lack of foresight in his treat Buvie was a great struggle with nothing much in it all the way. There were no 88's but it was good match-play golf
Scotland were one up at he two up, but Bentley holed from teenth and locked like becoming
from two, so it five yards and MeBovie missed was all square again.
practica nobody appear to want it. Mr. A. R. Fedden wrote re- cently in Flight" that though the heavy-oil engine which designed had passed all its teata successfully, and though the Air Ministry officially encouraged the use of it, not a single production urder has been obtained... Bil Ilo pot see the least chance of any such order being, forthcom- ing." Why? Simply because B heavy-ail enging gives a third less power output than a petrol engine of the same weight. Against this it is more economical of fuel, but this advantage does not begin to tell until the aeroplane has flown at least 1.500 miles. aeroplan habitually fies such a Since no distance to-day, there is mand for the heavy-oil engine no de- Air-line operators would rather face the increased fire risk and две the lighter petrol which will not handicap them 49 against their competitors. Even Government might take this step, hoping that development would soon make good the de- ciency, if the "thoughts of all Governments and aircraft mani-báčk. facturers were not directed chiefly to the more efficient petrol engine because of its military advantages The heavy oil tugine seems to have appeared too late in the develop ment of aviation-or possibly too early, for there is just a chance that its advantages in long-range econoiny might come into their with the transatlantic air services of the future.
then a
OVNI
Then came engine.
EARL OF MACDUFF 21
(Special Air Mail Service)
London, Aug. 10. The Earl of Macduff, only child of. Prince and Princess Arthur of Connaught, and heir to the Duke: doms of Fife and Connaught, was twenty-one yesterday.
At present he is with his regi cut, the Scots Greys, but next month Braemar and all the coun- try round Mar Lodge, his parents' home, will join in cele brating his coming-of-age.
It is hoped that the King and ueen, who will be as Balmoral, will participate in the festivities,
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out of the soil by which he lives. In America this rake's progress is particularly rapid, but it is not peculiar to America. Soil erosion
J5
in
HAVING IT BOTH WAYS Our correspondent is inclined to wax sarcastic at Sutherland's expense: "These people," he says, "would like to have it both ways.. They would make us cease from Sunday motoring in order to at- tend the church, and then they would ban us from church attend- ance if we did not order our lives
according to their ideas of cir- cumspection." He wonders what the Come-to-Scotland movement, the Automobile Association, and the petrol companies think of the withholding of n-up" facilities
Northern Europe, where soils are practically unknown
torrential downpours and scorch- almost continuously damp, and ing winds are rare experiences. In South Africa, in parts of Aus- tralia and Canada, and in inany a tragedy for Eng other countries with seasonal rain- land. The opposition went from fail it a very serious menace one bunker to another, but Eng. Owing to faulty land management land, safely on the green in two valuable agricultural land in took three putts, Bentley hitting French and British Nigeria and
at certain points. Humour "ob- the ball four feet too far down the in the French Sudan is being con-
trudes itself alongside. A crude hill, and Woollam missing the onequered and absorbed by the Sahars notice at a wayside pump pro- Desert at a rate estimated to exclaims-"Home-baked scones and
tea-Fill up here."," ceed a kilometre a year,
when the
THE RABBITS SHUT OUT
It was
COME INSIDE..
then came another tragedy. Bent A goud half in four followed, but ley, with a high slic, left the Eng- exploiting the soil deprives it of What happens 18 that man in ish ball practically unplayable in its protective covering, clearing A correspondent who has been. the bushes round the flagstaff-away trees, burning off.
over on holiday in the South tells this best part of 100 people looked for the humus by constant cropping a small rural church. There was which the ball hit in passing. The grazing the herbage, or exhausting tale. She attended a service in some minutes for he ball, and even without replenishment. During a congregation of nine. including the dry seasn the ground surface the clergyman and the bell-rin- tually found it.
swept ger. Woollam knocked it out side. becomes powdered and is ways, and then Bantley put in away by the wind, as occurred which ended with the remarks. a pleasant service, with disastrous results over a great bunker by the green. McLean
from the pulpit "Will the last flicked his ball five feet from the area of the United States, this
one to have shut the door so that flag with great ease, and Woollam, spring. The soil is reduced to a left with one shot for a possible or physical condition, unable to the rabbits may not get in?" half, hit the clubhouse wall full retain moisture; and, pitch. It was a farcical and, from rains come, especially if they are at all heavy, it is either washed tre English point of view, very away entirely or loses its valuable here nor there in Scottish cricket, A score of 31 runs is neither dispiriting end to a good match,
soluble. salts. Dr. . E. Baker, where we can always excuse our- leading American authority on economic geography, has estimated selves by saying that after all that since America was settled on an area has been rienuded of its sur-when Yorkshire, that great face soil squal to the total area cricketing county, are put out for of cultivated land in Germany. so small a total there must be a The danger for a long time was hanging of heads that the game disregarded. When
one part of has fallen so low. Wednesday's the country lost its fertility settlers unhappy experience seems to have moved further West, and in any unnerved the Yorkshire side, for case the land was regarded as the misuse, or even to destroy, as he they all out for 99, and Essex wor settler's
at their second venture yesterday own property to use or
pleased. Recently the rate of the match very handsomely by a devastation has become accelerated innings and 204 runs. In yester- to such a pace that Governments day's "Yorkshire Post.one notice: have been forced into action that the winners of the Yorkshire Last year, for example, to protect Mental Hospitals Cup scored 141
Middle West, President
In the second game Thomson and Walker, for Srtland, sonn bad the measure of Fiddian and Wai. ton, and were four up with six to play. The Englishmen, however, were not yet done. They did the par four thirteenth in three, and then Waltor, put a brassie shot right against the hole at the four teenth and brought it down to two. They halved the fteenth, but that war the end, and they
lost the next hole.
MISSED BY A MILE
The third foursomes went the same way through the brilliance of Dykes and McKinlay, who, when they were one down, had four threes in the last seven holes.
Riadon-was the guilty man in the fourth game, driving into a bunker at the last hole when they were all square: In the end Hartley "bad"a ten-foot putt and Peters had one a yard shorter,
the
cricket
is not
our game.
But
Roosevelt began the planting of a runs. This seems the Occasio:1 great belt of trees 1.000 miles long for reviving an old story. and 100-wiles-broad, stretching from Texas to the Canadian fron- tier. Preservation of the soil over a great area which was being rapidly devastated is one of the main objects of the Tennessee Valley enterprise. The losses al are irreparable;
have endeavoured, without much generation scientific geographers. effect, to rouse them to a sense of Both the Englishmen lay fat ready suffered.
the national danger of soil was tage. The latest and most urgent on the green for along time but energetic statesmanship, back American engineer, Mr. Morris warning comes from a distinguish- studying the lie from both ends, ed by an awakened public opinion, Llewelyn Cooke, whose appeal is with the natural result that the could certainly check the pace a summarized in an article by our putt was missed by a mile.
which the ultimate basis of Ameri- The Scot. on the other hand, and can prosperity is being destroyed.
Washington Correspondent on this #ith no preamble, knocked the ball So far however few Americans there is a
page. He predicts that, unless straight into the -hole.
drastic change in the over the way
in which the soil is now England also lose the last four-prospect. It is the old tradition treated, the United States has sonse, thus making their task for that the resources of the United left to it less than 100 years of the afternoon, roughly speaking. States are inexhaustible, only re- virile national existence. Mr. impossible.
quiring to be exploited. This Cooks may exaggerate the danger. SCOTLAND BEAT ENGLAND 50 persistent apathy is not due to That it is real and urgent is not
any lack of warning. For over a to be denied. J. MoLean and E. A. McRuvic beat J. Woollam and H. G. Beut- It, :1 up.
J
H. Thomson and R. S.. Walker best E. W. Fiddian and A. R. Walton 3 and 2.
J. M. Dykes and S. L. McKinlay beat T. J. Thirsk and S, Lunt and 1..
:
W. Campbell and G. B. Peters beat H. W Hartley and P. W. L. Bidson 1 up.
Lindsay and W. McLeod heat A. 8, G. Thompson and J. F. Zenharias 3 and 1.
IRELAND BEAT WALES 3 MATCHES TO 1 WITH 1 HALVED
J. Burke and C. J. McMullen halvat with 3. L. Black and B. B. Roberts.
R. M. McConnell and W. JA O'Sullivan beat H. R. Howell and A. D. Evans 6 and 5.
J. L. Brown and Dr. MasCor. mack lost to R. M. de Lloyd and G. S. Noon 1 up.
R. C. Ewing and Dr. J. A. Flaherty, beat N. E. Jacob and R Chapman 2 and 1.
G. H. Owen and W. J. Gill best D. Lewis and C. B. Eaves & and
show
any real concern
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