1939-02-21 — Page 16

China Mail 德臣西報 中國郵報 All

WAILWAY

C EMPRESS / Onerica, Europe

press Kong cf.

Leave Arrive

Hong Shang-

hal

Naga

anti Kobe

Leave Leave

Toko hama Honolulu

Leave Leave:

Van.

conver Victoria

Arrivo

Canada Feb. 21. Feb. 23 Ruzala Mar. 9 Mar. 10 Mar. 13 Japan Mor, 17 Mar. 19

.L

Feb, 20 Feb, 28 Mar. 7. Mar. 14 Mar. 16

Mar. 12

Mar. 25

Mar. 22 Mar. 24 Mar. 30

Apr. 4

THE CHINA MAIL, FEBRUARY 21, 1989.

Air-conditioned equipment on C.P.R. Trans-Continental Trains. Frequent Canadian Pacific Atlantic sailings to European ports.

TO MANILA

Empress of Japan on Friday, March 10th. Empress of Britain on Saturday, March 11th. (First Class only).

Canadian Pacific

Union Building

SPANS THE WORLD

Telephone

20752

G. FALCONER & CO. (HONG KONG LTD.) WATCHMAKERS & JEWELLERS, DIAMOND MERCHANTS, UNION BUILDING (opposite G.P.O.)

Agents for:¬ADMIRALTY CHARTS, ROSS BINOCULARS and TELESCOPES, KELVIN'S NAUTICAL INSTRUMENTS, ENGLISH SILVERWARE Direct from Manufacturers,” - High Class English Jewellery

PRESIDENT LINER SAILINGS

SAN FRANCISCO AND O LOS ANGELES

KOBE, YOKOHAMA AND HONOLULU

3.8. "PRESIDENT TAFT"

ELS. "PRESIDENT CLEVELAND” ALS. "PRESIDENT PIERCE” *S.S. "PRESIDENT COOLIDGE”.

• CALLS AT SHANGHAL

NEW YORK AND

£8. "PRESIDENT GARFIELD" 8.8. "PRESIDENT. MONROE" 'BS. "PRESIDENT ADAMS”.

8.8. "PRESIDENT VAN BUREN"

SAILS FEB. 25th at 4.00 P.M. MAR 11th at 4.00 P.M. MAR, 25th at 4.00P.M. APR. 8th. at `8:00 AM.

BOSTON. VIA SUEZ

SAILS MAR. 17th at 12 Noon MAR. 20th at 9.00 P.M. APR. 14th at 12 Noon APR. 28th at 12 Noon:

MANILA

8.8. "PRESIDENT TAFT" 8.8. "PRESIDENT CLEVELAND. 9.8. "PRESIDENT GARFIELD" SS, "PRESIDENT: PIERCE"

SAILS FEB. 18th at 6.00 PM. MAR. 4th at 6.00 P.M. MAR. 17th at 12, Noon MAR 18th at 6.00P.M.

✰✰ ✰✰ AMERICAN ★ ✰

PRESIDENT LINES

ROUND WORLD SERVICES.

12 PEDDER ST.

TELEPHONE 28171

Ray Milland, as a gay American playboy, and Olympe Bradna, as his Freitch bride, in "Say It In French." This Paramount comedy opens simultaneously at the Queen's and Alhambra Theatres on Thursday.

They Can Reply In

The Squire...

There was alarm among the cot- tagers of Aldenham, only fourteen miles outside London, -a fear that Aldenham was to lose the kindly Squire who has made it one of Eng- land's happiest villages..

...

That fear was groundless. Mr. J. Pierpont Morgan, the American multi-millionaire banker and finan- cier, will continue to be Aldenham'a: Squire.

His agent, Mr. J. Fleming, said "The report that Mr. Morgan is to sell his farms, Church Farm and Blackbird, is unture. Actually he is only going to let them. He is cer- tainly not giving up Wall Hall and the estate, and we hope he will con- tinue to pay his annual visit here."

So the staff of servants is keeping the castellated mansion, amid its 400 acres of parkland, ready for the Master's visit in the summer,

Seventy-one-years old Pierpont Morgan will not miss his visit to Wall Hall while his health and strength permit him to cross the -Atlantic. It was the favourite home of his wife, who died in 1926 after thirty-five years of happy married life.

EX-CONVICT WAS

BUSINESS

SUCCESS

Three months of every year... Mr. Morgan stays in Britain. Most of the time he spends at Gannochy, his Scottish shooting estate, where the King and Queen were his guests last autumn. But he has a few days, sometimes extending into weeks, in the home his wife loved.

The villagers meet him, a couple of dogs at his heels, walking through the village most of which he owns.

Mr. Morgan has had many of Aldenham's cottages improved in the thirty-eight years he has been the Squire here. Some of the old workers live on pensions he has pro- vided.

You cannot learn to skate without tumbla or two, but your bruizos and abrasions will trouble you little if you treat them with She-Ko, the Dr. Williams Medicine Co.'s akin remedy,

Convicted seven times for house-This delightfully soothing, antiseptic ointment quickly heals when rubbed. breaking and larceny, George Drew into a bruise or when spread lightly on went to penal servitude in 1927. an injury if the skin is broken.

When he came out in 1929, he Tho curativo properties of She-Ko "went straight:" he ran a series are remarkably effective for the speedy healing of cosema, itch, ringworm, wet of roadsido cafes, some of which and dry sores, chapped lips and hands, were highly successful. He sold one and for the relief of external piles. for £8,000, but the instalments ar Obtainable at chemists' overywhere, ranged had not been kept up and a

caso in the Chancery Division re- SHE-KO

sulted in E

-¦ Then he lapsed and was at North- ampton Assitos sontenced to nine montha for housebrealding,

Heals Bruises an) Bumps.

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