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The 19th Issue of the
CHINA YEAR BOOK
(1938 Edition)
EDITED BY H. G. W. WOODHEAD, C.B.E."
37
The new edition of the CHINA YEAR BOOK will add another volume to the series (dating from 1912) which constitutes a very remarkable contemporary history of China. It arms its reader with all material necessary for forming correct judgments on the Far Eastern situation and embodies all important documents and statistics of the year.
Among the subjects dealt with by foreign and Chinese experts are the following:-
Sino-Japanese Hostilities (Documented) Mongolia and Chinese Turkestan
Public Health and the Leprosy Problem
Finance and Currency (including War measures) Chinese Art✅
Catholic and Protestant Missions
Chinese Army and Navy
Modern Chinese Industries: Labour.
The Kuomintang and the Government
· Royal octavo, 620 pages, cirth bound, -$18 not.
Obtainable at all booksellers or from the publishers: THE NORTH-CHINA DAILY NEWS & HERALD LTD.
P.O. Box 707, Shanghai
THE CHINA MAIL, JANUARY 12, 1939.
MR. CHAMBERLAIN GIVEN REMARKABLE SPONTANEOUS WELCOME IN ROME
Rome, To-day. Bugles sounded as the special train in which Mr. Neville Chamberlain and Lord Halifax travel- led from Genoa entered the lavishly decorated station at 4.25 yesterday afternoon (local -time).
Dense crowds gave a full-throated ovation as Mr. Chamberlain, Mussolini, Count Ciano (Italian Foreign Minister) and Lord Halifax warmly shook hands.
During the playing of "God Save the King," which the Grenadiers Band played before the Italian Anthem, British residents sang so lustily that the band was almost inaudible.
Mussolini (who arrived at the
station at 4.15) wore the black
overcoat of the Corps of Fascists, JEALOUS HUSBAND
and was accompanied by a guard of thirty Musketeers.
While waiting, Mussolini was in evident good humour, and chatted with Lord Perth, the British Am- bassador, Count Dino Grandi, Ita- lian Ambassador in London, and the South African Minister.
FINE WEATHER
ADVISED BY MAGISTRATE
An alleged attack on a Chinese in Shanghai Street by a Chinese constable No. C633 and another man, was this morning heard at the Kowloon Court.
to
The past days of brilliant sun- shine had given way to clouds but the weather was quite fine as the
It is alleged that the constable party, after reviewing the guard of honour, Mr. Chamberlain grasping had helped the other Chinese the famous umbrella, smiling, bow-beat the complainant, who had taken ing and waving his top-hat, entered his wife out for a walk.. cars and drove through cheering, beflagged streets to the Villa Madama.
in
It is estimated that from 40,000 to 50,000 people were massed the precincts of the station.
Twenty minutes after reaching the Villa Madama, Mr. Chamberlain and Lord Halifax drove to the Quirinal, where they signed the Golden Re- gister, and at 6 o'clock they were received by Mussolini at the Palazzo Venezia.
SCENES OF ENTHUSIASM There were wonderful scenes of enthusiasm outside the Palazzo Venezia when Mr. Chamberlain and Lord Halifax arrived.
The Square was packed with 100,- 000 people who cheered heartily. Mr. Chamberlain waved his silk hat and seemed extremely pleased. No troops or police were in evidence, as is usually the case on such occasions.
The Romans' welcome to the Bri- tish statesmen has certainly been friendly, good-natured and spon taneous,
and there is a cheerful happy atmosphere among the crowds.
MAN WHO SAVED PEACE As there had been no official in- vitation to the public in the press to welcome the visitors, people had gathered entirely of their own free will to see the British statesman, who is remembered by everyone here as the man who helped to save the peace of Europe in September.
-Reuter.
"
CHEERING THRONGS
Rome,, To-day. Count Clano, and the Fascist Party Secretary, Signor Starace, as well as the British Ambassador, Lord Perth, accompanied the British guests to the Villa Madama where they will reside during their stay in Rome.
The streets through which the cars drove were lined by troops and formations of the Fascist Party, behind whom were countless thou- sands; of spectators, who cordially cheered the representatives of Great Britain. Trans-Ocan.
Though complainant said that he had taken the defendant's wife out, he said that there
nothing wrong in it because his own wife and son were with him at the time.
was
The magistrate advised defendant to to go and earn enough money
He take care of his own wife. also added that it was clearly a case of complainant trying to take care of another man wife. "Com- plainant and defendant were put on bail of ten dollars each on the con- dition that there would be no more fighting between them.
TRESPASS ON MILITARY GROUND
Hui Kwong, aged 21, unemploy- ed, was charged before Mr. R. A. D. Forrest at the Central Magistracy this morning, with trespassing on military ground and larceny of a piece of wood from the Royal En- gineers building, east of the Gar- rison Sergeants Mess in Queen's Road East, yesterday.
Inspector A. V. Baker said that defendant with another man who was not arrested, went into the R. E. quarters, and took the piece of wood. They were eventually seen by Sapper F. Owen, R.E., of Wellington Barracks, when the alarm was raised, the other man- got away, and defendant was ap- prehended.
A sentence of one month's hard labour was passed.
MONTH FOR SEVEN CENTS
Charged with stealing seven cents from a man in Spring Garden Lane, yesterday, Li Wing, aged 17, unemployed, was sentenced to four weeks' hard labour by Mr. R. A. D. Forrest at the Central Magistracy this morning.
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