SOMETHING FOR NOTHING
Police Called Out To Disperse Crowd
WRONG ADVERTISEMENT
RESPONSIBLE
The advertising scheme of the Auw Pit Seng's Trading Company was a tremendous success to-day, No much so that the police had to
be called in to clear the crowds.
An advertisement appeared in the Industrial and Commercial Daily Press yesterday morning, and In the Kang, Sheung evening paper? last night, stating that the above: Company would distribute 100,000 sample packets of Tempters candy couled gums, Adams Chiclets, and Sen-Sen.
By 5.30 p.m. yesterday all the sumples were gone, the manager stating that the papers had made a mistake by printing that there were 100,000 packets instead of 10,000.
Notices. Disregarded-
Throughout yesterday crowds an sembled outside the French Build- ing. Queen's Road, and received their samples. the doors being closed at 5.30 p.m. when the stock: had run out, leaving thousands of Chinese waiting outside. Again Ibis morning, although notices saying that all the samples had been dis-i tributed were pit up, there were a number of people still outside, causing the employees to force their way into the office.
The crowd was augmented with each hour, and at 11 o'clock this morning the manager had to ring up the police station and a number of men were sent down to the
French. Building.
The police left at noon, but people
THE CHINA MAIL, WEDNESDAY,
Prince Louis Ferdinand, grandson of the former German Kaiser, awaits patiently, atop his luggage, the royal pleasure of the Cus. toms men, as he arrives' in New York on his way to resume work in the Ford factory in Detroit. Inset is Miss Adele Schwarber, New Jersey beauty, to whom the Prince was attentive on the trip from Germany.
¶¶¶¶¶¶¶
were then still coming and being CORRESPONDENCE.
sent away.
DOG OWNERS AGAIN
IN TROUBLE
Colour Of Dog Is Queried
KARAKATOA FILM PERFORMANCES
To the Editor, "China Mail"] Sir, I have been asked by many of-my fellow-students to express, through the medium of your esteem-
HONG KHENG SAILS HOUR LATE
Captain Fined $25 For Not Informing Police
'Today's Short Story..
SEPTEMBER 26, 1934
Unhappy
Stowaway
STRAW hat incongruously
By F. Morton Howard
"Yes, a―a young lady," admitted
A topped the mournful figure the youth.
Beside him lay a suit-case. The quay was silent
At last thoro camo clumping over
"Flirting," intoned the other in lofty scora.
"Well, then, you're wrong!" con- the cobbles a plump, middle-aged tradicted the young man, with un- worthy in a blue jersey, and wear-expected spirit. I wasn't flirting ing an aged bowler hat of remark- with her. I-I was dead serious.
met her in the boarding-house. able height of crown.
"Ullo?" he remarked, pulling up She don't live so very far off me in and surveying the dejected young London. We've as good as kept on the bollard. "Anything company the 'ole of my fortnight wrong?"
"Everything," stated the other,
man
with a slight groan.
But the plump man unconcerned-
"So I thought," declared the elderly passed on with a shrug of his man. "You looks as if you was shoulders. It was not long, how- ever, before he trudged back to the thinking about suicide.”.
brooding figure.
"I am," sald the young man, tonelessly. "Or, rather, I was.
I'm getting over it a bit now."
The man surveyed him and then said:
TO-MORROW'S STORY
To-morrow's story will be "A Drink From A Running Stream," by Lord Dunsany.
"You're like all the rest of the young fellers. You come down l'ere, pertending that you're mil
fionaires in disguise, and you per- tends it so thorough that you be lieves it yourselves before you're done. You throws your money about right and left Been said.
"Yes, you are in a bad way," he "Chucked by your young
showing off to the gala, I s'pose, and lady, pretty nigh broke, got to the all that?"
"No. At least~"
"A gal, then?" amended plump man.
end of your *olidays, and lost your return-ticket! There ain't much the else as could 'appen to you, Is there? 'Owever, lucky for you, I've got a kindly eart, and I don't mind try fing to 'elp you through some of your
TWO WEDDINGS troubles Ow much did you say
ANNOUNCED
Police And Navy Bridegrooms
you'd got left?"
"Three-and-nine."
The plump gentleman gazed] warily up and down the quay. "See that vessel there?" he asked in a whisper, indicating a small coaster that lay berthed adjacent. "That's The forthcoming weddings are the Effort. I'm an a.b. aboard of 'announced:-
l'er. She's sailing at midnight to- Mr. William Marett, of HMS. night and she's going as Oswald, to Edna Joyce Coleman, London Bridge. She'll be there the widow, of No. 150 Prince Edward day after to-morrer. There's no chance of working your passage, Captain D. M. Hood, master of Mr. Timothy Collins, of the Hong Our skipper's dead against that sort Hong Kheng, was fined Kong Police Force stationed at of thing. But you might be able to
"WASTES TIME AND MONEY"
the 8.8.
Road..
far as
cd paper, their displeasure at the/$25 by Mr. E. I. Wynne Jones at Quarry Bay, to Miss Elizabeth lost to London Bridge in 'er as a
the Kowloon Magistracy this Maher, of Kilbrogan Hill, Bandon treatment of the King's Theatre's morning for net sailing at the County, Cork. Mr. E. Garneys, of No. 2 Maga-Management towards the boy time given to the Police, which zine Gap Road, was this morning students during the special matinees fined $8 by Mr. Q. A. A. Macfadyen of the "Karakatoa."
at
was 4 p.m., on September 9.
Detective-Sergeant Davies who
party stated that the search was
the Central Magistracy, for Above all, there was no booking, allowing his dog to be at large and when tickets were bought by a was in charge of the police search
without a muzzle.
school representative there was no
AUSTRIAN WITHOUT
PASSPORT
stowaway!"
"Anything so long as-
Mr. Garneys pleaded guilty to the notification as to what seats that made just before 4 pm, and that Stowaway On President fort like that!
they had to stand-by for an hour summons, but said that his dog had school's students should occupy: before the ship was under way.
been innoculated.
Without A License
Liner
"You've got your luggage, I see. Well, if you was to allp down inte the 'old, now,, while no one's look- ing, and lay low Fre; come back! Don't go rushing aboard !Ow do you think you're going to get on for) food and drink, eh? You'll want Consequently, the students presumed
Capt. Hood stated that they had that they might take any vacant
Hartmann Yakob, a 34-year-old someone to slip 'em to you, you] seats in the Theatre. Some boys only arrived at noon that day and.
were discharging cargo, and at unemployed Austrian, was charged know, and you'll need someone to Mrs, J. Wells, of No. 6 Village therefore went to the Theatre early the last moment he had orders before Mr. E. W. Hamilton at the give you the tip when the 'old's Road, second floor, was cautioned and filled the Dress Circle seats. by the Magistrate, for keeping a However, they were later dragged to unload an additional 1500 Central Magistracy this morning, likely to be visited."
"Of course, and I shall want someone to help me get away, un- black and white Pekinese without a out and saw their seats being taken bags, which he knew would take with entering the Colony without a
an hour extra, and it was then valid passport on Monday. up by girls, teachers, and religious
Detective-Sergeant Mottram suid seen, at the other end, shan't I? Mrs. Wells said that it was a new people. What does this mean? Is too late to inform the police.
"The trouble is that you kept
that accused came to the Colony by "Exxackly," concurred the plump dog and that a license was taken the girls teachers' and religious the police waiting such out immediately after the sunimons people's money better than the boys".
the 8.8. President Pierce from worthy. "And I'm game to see to a long
He was all that for you! Ten bob, at least, time, and that wastes time and Manila as a stowaway. was served.
money, or more worth? All paid
not found on board, but was later la what we usually gets out of a ," said Mr. Wynne Jones. money," "Not Right Dog"
30 cents each. Why should there
stowaway for 'elping im men- Mrs. W. Kappe, of No. 38 Ken- be a distinction? Among students. Capt. Hood: "It was impossible arrested by the police.
to sail to time as a shower of Sentence of 14 days' imprison- tioned the stout man. "But accing nedy Road, pleaded not guilty to a boys and girls are the same, and
Train had beld us up."
ment was imposed, and he will be you've only got three-and-nine, I'll summons for allowing her brown out of school hours boys and
expelled from the Colony on the make that do this time. Brass up termination of his prison term..
now," he stipulated. "I've ad cus- chow dog to be at large without a teachers are friends. muzzle.
towers slip away without paying, before now.
license.
་
until next Wednesday.-
Mistake Alleged
for Man
80
·
TYPHOON NEARS HONG KONG
Mumbling his thanks, the young man thrust the coins into the other's hands.
"Now you slip aboard quick, while no one's about, and leave the rest to me. Foller me, and don't make a sound.”
With parting words of caution, the big man tiptoed from the vessel.
The Theatre Management seem {PACT OF MUTUAL ASSISTANCE Mrs. Kappe said that her dog had to have absolute power to make any
IN SOUTH CHINA always been keep under observation law any time and in any way they At one moment they re and had never been allowed to leave please.
(Continued from Paje Ï) the house unless accompanied, and serve a certain section
The circular telegram of Sep- that her dog was not a brown chow Sang College when there were no tember 8 has apparently besk May Pass South dog but a cream coloured chow dog, reservations at all for other col-ignored by the Central Authorl- The summons adjourned leges, and at another moment they ties, who are believed to take the
was
Although no warning has been let a mixed crowd All that section, view that no reply is necessary as raised yet, the typhoon is now ap No wonder there were many it is a mere circular telegram adproaching the Colony, although quarrels between some boya and the dressed to the nation at large. tending to pass to the south. ushers. Many students were drag-
Mr. Sun Fo, Freeldent, of the The Royal Observatory, at 10.40 ged from one extremity of the Legislative Yuan, stated at am-gave the position as latitude Not ten minutes later the paving ed for a similar offence for allow Theatre to the other from the Shanghai that any suggestions 19 north and longitude 119 cast, of the quay rang under the quick ing his dog to go out without a back-lines of the Back Stalls to the should be sent to the Fifth Na or to the West of Balintang Chan-footsteps of a still stouter gentle muzzle, Mr. Rosselet pleaded not front-lines of Front Stalls, and they tional Congress and mildly re-nel, about 300 miles south-east of man. guilty saying that the constable had
were good-natured enough to obey proved the 22 leaders here for Hong Kong, moving west-north- - "Anyone what says the Cutlass mistaken someone else's.dog for his the ushers Instructions. Again, expressing their views in the form west or west.
and Cannon's cat is bigger than some small boys were put two in at a circular telegram. Mr. Sun The Manila observatory, in an ours is a liar," he avowed to him seat when they paid for a seat each further declared that no repre earlier warning, received through self, "and so I'm jolly soon going
After all, it is the boy students sentative will be sent to Canton to the American Consul, gave the to prove 'em!" that gave the greatest patronage to conciliate the South-eat before position as 119 degrees eastion-
Mr. Chas. S. Rossalet of No. 16 Dragon Terrace, was also summon-
The Chinese constable, In evid-
ence, said that he had followed the
dog to Mr Rosselet's door and had
spoken to the amah, who admitted the ownership of, the dog.
gress,
And, arrived on the small coaster,.
the Theatre at these performances, the meeting of the Fifth Congitude and 20 degrees north lati. the newcomer began to call, The case was remanded until but, sad to say, they were given the -next Wednesday. "
tude, moving west-north-west. "Prudence! Prudence! Come on, The Manila position would pretty pussy! Prudenice, where har bring the typhoon almost directly you
CUNARDER. 534 LAUNCHING
(Continued from Page 1)
which
poorest accommodations and the most unsatisfactory-treatment. Our boys do not expect nor wish to have better treatment than the girls, but would like to see that the fair policy, First come, first served" be held by the Management; Will the Management apologise toled from the same, yard on August
bottle of wine, which will be our boy students?
amashed against the bows, another
to release the holding apparatus,
and the third to operate the hydrau-
lle driving rams.
.... At this point, 40,000 tons "D!| fashioned steel, steadied by 2,500 tons of drag chains, will begin its slow - two-minute
run down greased slipway into British Wireless Service?
A STUDENTÁS:
HAI CHEN LAUNCHED AT GLASGOW:
(Continued From Page: 1) The 8.5. Hai Heng was launch-
28, © amid great Chinese core mony, which was attended by the Chinese Minister, to London, Mr Quo÷Tal-chi, and his wif Among the passengers who arThe latter performed the naming
thla mo
to Hong Kong, but the local post-Fast asleep, down the old, I tion and direction indicates that speck he growled at length. And, it will pass to the south.
taking up a lantern, he clambered down into the hold.
ST. ANDREW'S SOCIETY
general
meeting
Vibe annu
out sud- denly at the unm afable sound someone blindly
-16st in the gloom.
"Oo the blazes are you de
IN THE
ROOF GARDEN HONG KONG HOTEL
ENTERTAINMENT
In Song and Dance and Instrumental Musto by a Tenn of Two Clever Ver- satile American Sis- ter Artistes MARYA
and MARTA And the Popular Personality Pair
SANDS
and DAWN.
-ON-
SATURDAY
29th SEPTEMBER Till 1 A.M.
MARYA AND
MARTA
And
SANDS AND
DAWN
at a
SPECIAL DINNER DANCE
For Table Reservations. Phone 30281
THE HONG KONG & SHANGHAI HOTELS, LTD.
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KING'S STUDIO
相影
No. 18, Queen's Road C.
lat, foor of Wang Hing“
Jeweller's shop.
FURNITURE REMOVALS.
星景
Manager: K. N. WAN Tel. 28755.
with Security & Protection.
Telephone 27761.
MOTOR TRANSPORT SERVICE.
Sale
CHINA YEAR BOOK
1934
The China Year Book should be immediately accessible to the staff of every office in China. Its 850 pages: cover the whole field of political, financial and commercial activities in easy reference form, and makes its absence a defnite handicap as much to the small trader as to the diplomat. Very little of the contents of this edition has appeared in previous lases. In the current issue, among other important documents, will be found:
The Hajchman Report -- Draft Permanent Constitution Banking Laws
Manchurian Raliwaya Sino-Japanese Issues
Price $20
Postage China 50 ctu. Hongkong-89 ctu,
Abroad -$2.0
and special articles on currency, communications, cost of living, trade prospects and statistics: the Chinese Government, public Justice, telegraph, telephone and postal Information, and a Who of nearly a thousand prominent Chinese personalities.
The China Year Book is not written by one man, but by number of the principal Foreign and Chinese authorities on the various subjects dealt with. Aming them are:
-Father Cherali The Climate of China
Currency and Banking 5MP, El-Kann:
Father P. MD'Ella®®® E.- G-Misalons
Dr. Ta Chan Labour: Problems
"Dr. M. T. Z. Tyan Greater Shanghai
- Mr. Owen: Lattimore:" Chine
Turkestan and Mon
Rev. G. Boyntons Protestant Missiona
Dr. J. B. Grant, Public Health
The Editor, who is himasit a leading authority on Chinese) affairs, is the author of several works of China, Editor “Oriental: "Adairs", and has lived for over thirty, yaurs in the
On Sale at
Messrs Kelly & Walsh Ltd.,
NORTH
"ike prin
DAILY
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