THE CHINA MATE, MONDAY, JUNE 21, 1946.
ROYAL INTEROCEAN LINES
A
Incorporated in the Netherlandt ma KONINKLIJKE JAUN-CHINA-PAKETVAART LIJNEN H.V. AMSTERDAM
JAVA-CHINA-JAPAN SERVICE
"TJIBADAK”
Arrivals
-from Amby
21st June
“TJITJALENGKA" from Macossar
“TJISADANE"
& Java Ports .. 22nd June.
hom Mucansor
& Javapurts 4th July
Ballings
to Javuports
& Macassar,
23rd June
to Java Ports
& Macassar
7th July
to Juvaports
Macassar
21st July.
ASIA-AFRICA-SOUTH AMERICA SÉRVICE
“TEGELBERG”
"RUYS"
*STRAAT MALAKKA"
from
Arrivals
South America, 'South Africa,
2614 June
from
South Africa
Suth America
and July
fre
South Africa 13 August
Sailings
to Shanghai Japan
28th June
to South Africa,
South America,
12th July.
to South Africa
South America
Mid August
to Suuth Afrlen & South America via Malla Straits & Butuvia 24th Sept. Transhipment cargo on through Ba/L to Dar-Es-Salaam,
Mombasa, Zanzibar accepted on all sailings, SUMATRA—MALAYA-CHINA SERVICE
Arrivals
Sailings
"VAN HEUTSZ"
Iran
H. Del
to Straits &
B. Dell
and Steps 200), June
8th July
Agents: HOLLAND-EAST ASIA LINE
"MARIEKERK”
*MOLENKERK"
Tanks Avoidable
for oil in fnak
"MEERKERK"
Arrivals
From Japan & Shanghai 29th June
from Europe, 20th June
End July
Sailings
to Europa
vin Straits
30th June,
to Europo
via Straits, 28th July
End August
Transhipment cargo on through Bs/L accepted to
Mediterranean and Northern European porta.
Agents: SILVER LINE LTD.
"SILVERBRIAR"
Arrivals
Sailinga
from U.S.
to U.S.
Atlantic Ports,
via Shanghai
Brel June
Office Address: King's Buliding.
23th June
Phones: 28016 & 28017
DE LA RAma Lines
Londa
EXPRESS Cargo liner servicES
TO AND FROM PACIFIC & ATLANTic coaste
LOADING DATES IN U.S.A.
Date
Vensel
Atlantic Coast
Los Angeles
Karly July Lato July
my. "TONGĦAI"
m.v. "MINDORO”
· ARRIVALS
Date
{
Fron
Atlantic Coast
Win
Los Angelos
Foe
-Atlantic Const—;)
Los Angelos
Attaulle Const via
San Francisco
& Los-Angeles
>
in port
Mid. July
Mid. August
SAILINGS
Date
22nd June Mid. July.
30th June,
-
Vessel.
1.8. "DONA AURORA” DEV, "DONA NATI“ mr. "DONA ANICETA"
Vorel
4.3. "DONA AUROKA“ mi.y. "DONA, NATI"
2.7. "HALLAND"
BOOKING AGENTS for P.A.L.
THE DE LA RAMA STEAMSHIP CO., INC.
(Incorporated in the Philippines)
CHINESE SHIPPING OFFICE Tels. 28788-20158
MARINA HOUSE Tels. 28676-22675
CHINA MERCHANTS S.N. CO.
15 Connaught Road West,
S.S. HAI HSUAN
S.S. "HAI HSIA"
SAILINGS
Telephone XIBEL.
Singapore & Bangkok June 22 Singapore June 23
(With Passenger accommodation) Cargo for Taing-Tao, Hankow & Tientsin acceptable
on through bills of lading.
́FOR FULL PARTICULARS PLease apply tO THE ABOVE
TAY &
KEE
& Co.
STEVEDORES, TRANSPORTERS, & GENERAL CONTRACTORS
Suppliers of Janks, Bargon, & Steam Launches.
Special Work for Heavy Cargoes, rollable
and reasonabis charges
Tels: 31518 & 28836. 5th Floor, David House No. 07 Des Voeux Road, Central, Höngkong.
FINANCE AND
COMMERCE
AMERICAN EXPERT WARNS AGAINST LOW PRICE RUBBER POLICY
New York, June 19.
major stronghold Currency Arrests Customs
"Fortuno” magazine warns that if the United States falls to sustain natural rubber prices the wos; tern world will lose its "last in Southeast Asia.” The warning is contained in a letter from Singapore by Fortune correspondenf Gilbert Burck, pub. lished in the June issue. Tín and rubber, he said, make the US more-dependent on Malaya. than on any other colonial area, and converse- ly Malaya's whole life depends on this country,
Poles Migrate To Argentine
af In
Burck
Kuvo details postwar developments Malaya, including Governor- General Malcolm MacDonald's assurances last autumn that "the new constitutions are only the first steps to be followed by others. The constitutions will be altered, amended and improved as a result of ex- perience, discussion, and agree- ment as time goes on."
The
บริ
Southampton, June 18, One thousand Polish emigrants, most of the members of Gen.
correspondent continued Jern Anders Second Army, sailed that Mr. MucDonald's "promise"
for Argentina today aboard the
was a good exposition of the de- Empire Trooper to become form-mocratic process as it is venerat- ers and factory hands.
ed in the U.S. and Britain.
"But this statement getn right back where we started, to the small holder sitting on his
and porch
complaining about the price of rubber. The tight Honourable prospect the Malcolm MacDonald advances is reasonable only so long as the and the price market is good ma right.
Among the emigrants was Eva Miszewka who founded the Poush Wrens in 1943 and com- manded them until disbanded a low months ngo.
She usvaped Iram Poland in 1939, worked as ja nurse in France and exempel to England just before the Nazis seized Paris.
She is going to Mendużo to live.
Laksinki, Z Major General commander of the Polish troops in England's Southern Command, told the emigrants: "Poland will of your one dny hands and your hard won experi- ence to help her rise from her ruins and flourish again with a newly won freedon among the nations of the world."
need labour
front
In Germany
London; June 19.
A first batch of B0 people... who attempted to cross klid. gally into the Soviet zone with large quantity of bank. notes were arrested at Henne- berg in the Meinigen district, only a few hours after the #nnouncement of the currency reform in the western zamas of Germany, it was reported tonight by the Soviet İlcensed news agency.
These persons, who were in possession
of 10,000
to 30,000 marks on the average *re accused of trying to throw the coonomics in the eastern
German zanes "out of gear,” the agency sald.-Reuter,
Navy Arrest Pan York's Skipper
hours of
•
Strike Near Settlement
Authoritative
*
PRESIDENT LINER
Sailings
REFRIGERATION-SPECIAL CARGO OIL TANKS--
CARGOCALRE-SPECIE
TO MANILA
S.S. "General Melga"
July 3
TO SAN FRANCISCO
8.8. "General Meigs” (vla Manilay
July 2
S.S. "General Gordon" (via Shangbai)
July. 31
S.S. "President Wilson" (vin Shanghai)............. July 17 TO SAN FRANCISCO AND LOS ANGELES
5.3. "President Grant"
June. 23
8.3"President Tafi".
S.S. "President Pierco"
July 0
TO NEW YORK, BALTIMORE and BOSTÓN via PANAMA
Victory"-
Cus-
9.9. "Dartmouth
8.8. "President Harding"
the
Shanghai, June 20.
Chinese toms sources
disclosed yes- terday night that the go- slow strike of 2,000 Customs employees was "being settled" with the assistance of Ministry of Finance.
One of the strikers, quoted by the China Press, said the strikers' principal
demand was for ro cognition of their Welfare As- sociation, although they are also asking for a one-month loan and n pay-scale adjustment.
By
the Government order Welfare Association was ordered dissolved in favour of an approv- ed and 'demneratie" Staff Asso- ciation some time ago.
The authorilica frowned 011 the Welfare Association as a dia guised labour union,
The Customs workers have now renewed their demand for officiul recognition of their Welfare As- Haifa, June, 10. sociation coupled with the right British Military Headquar-that it may be used as an instru- "Many Malayons do not think ters tonight announced that ment in the settlement of labour
captain of the Jewish tilsputes. the price of rubber is right. One the
The go-slow strike which Arsi of the things we and it hard to ship, Pan York, was arrested begun
on Friday ofternoon, Is says Fred Kemle in the early unde stand,"
this hampering“ general Custom.. morning for "disobedience of operation, although " managing director of Harrisons
certain Crossfield (Malaya) a how the Royal Navy orders".
amount of work is reporteri ko U.S. can spend billions On the
The Pan York The
the Pon have been accomplished.---Reuter, one hand, Marshall plan with atu with the other beat down Crescent, which British warships escorted to Cyprus in January, The Empire Trumper
the price of rubber," is thr former German "Gap Norte" and
course Mr. Kemle is just arrived empty In Haifa Bay short- ly ofter midnight (local time) was wellknown ofi
wicked rubber trader, Interest from Cyprus, presumably for re- the South R American ruin before the war. ed only in making more money.
A party from the British litting. interested also naval tug. Brigand, was reported The British seized her at the out-But others less
find it hard to see how the Rub- to have boarded the Pan York an breaks of war.-tinited Press.
ber Act of 1948, designed to pro-hour later in the glare of search- teck national security by
Roger Lapham
In Tsingtao
Tsingtao, June 18.
endur-i
and
China's Trade With India
What remains is the probability American Consulate said they had be played by the Indian that if the U.S. runs into a de-
not been notified of the incident.chant community a de--Reuter.
Shanghai, June 20. a supply of synthetic his and took off the captain ing n
D1CF;| tarcibly. contributes
Hope of much closer trade T impressively fhoi
tn
Unconfirmed reports said the lotions between India and China, security by depressing rubber to captain, who was tonight still un-arising from changed political its pre-war price and legislating der arrest in the port area, was conditions in the Far East arul for a large synthelle output. The an American citizen, but the the Increasingly greater part fo act is now beyond
mer- Int Shanghai, whe expressed by Mr. Sardar Panikkar, the Indian
Ambas- sudor in an address before the Indian Merchants Asscelation yesterday evening.
The ECA Chinu Mieston chief, Mr Roger Lapham, and members of his mission were told of the | requirements In Tsingiso by pression or otherwise stops buy- Mujor Li Hsien-flang yesterday, ing rubber at a fair price, the West's greatest. If not last strong- when he arrived by plane for the hold in Southeast Asia is done first visit to this city, where the
United States Western Pacific for."United Press,
Navy Headquarters is located,
At a conference held in the Ame American Consulate, Major
urged
Danger To Atom
SILVER AND Energy Programme
early allotment under GOLD MARKETS
Chinn aid of 6,000 tons of food-
stuff every month for the ratlon-
of
per
ing system and 800 toris for re- Bombay: 50ver: Ready,
requested 100 tolas, 174 Rupees, 02 Annas; fugee relief. He also 3:000 tons of coal and large quan-Forward, per 100 tolas, 174, 08: tities of raw cotton to enable Marwari (unofcial), 174, 04. operation by Tringtao mills— United Press,
STEEL SHIPMENTS STOPPED
Washington, June 18. Senator Wherry said today the Government has decided to hold up shipments or steel for the construction
"In expanding the economies in China and India," Mr. Panik- kur said. "we can be complimen- lary to each other and develop trade relations which would be Jof benefit :10 both countries. Washington, June 19.
"I assure you
this that in David E. Lillenthal, Chairman
conditions will country
nor- the U. S. Atomic Energmalise themselves and its vasi Commission, tald that grave danger to the atomic nessed, will
senators today resources.
when Buitably har- benefit not only unergy
has been programme
this country. but with closer House of Retrade
relations
-Indip between caused by the
cuta in funds for and China will bring prosperity Presentatives the Atomic Energy Commission. to 800 million
of people
the Addressing the Senate appro world."-Reuter. equal to 4th of ource.) priations sub-committee, ne satt
Buenos Aires-Sovereign, buy-in our considered opinion the crs 93,00, sellers 90.00; US cuts may threaten the
103.00. Eagles, buyers
sellent foundation upon which world Gold, Bar, per gramme, leadership 168.00;
by this country in buyers 8.90n, sellers
stemic energy depends,' 9.000.
Illenthal asked for restoration
Gold: Delivered, per tola, 114, 00; Forward (unomeial), 114, 03 Sovereign, 75, 00. (One tolu is
furt
very
of an oil pipeline took and Gold, pero of the "$48,000,000 2ût made by
peross the Arablan desart.
RUHR COAL-
EXPORTS
Besen, June 18. -Ruhr coat fotulling over one million and ten thousand tors exported to 12 European countries last month for payment. in dollars, the British-United authority an-
102 piastres; Egyptian 400; Sovereign, 501; Tur- the House in the commission's koy pound, 300; Napoleon; 370; appropriations for the fiscal year was that reporters three Cabinet officiala have Dollar (piece de cing) 490; Silver starting on July 1.
The House had. recommended
Wherry told
(plastres) per Kilogram. 823.
"dicrhem" is equal 1/10th of an ounce)-Reuter;
EGYPTIAN RICE -FOR-JAPAN-
assured him that no-new-exports will be approved
at least until (One the second week of
of September. Wherry is chairman of the Senate Small Business Com- mittee. That group has received complaints that American busi- ness men have been unable to get needed steel pipe while ship- ments were going abroad.-Asso- clated Press.
PI IMPORT CONTROLS
a total of $501,830 plus $400,000 States Ruhr coal to
000 in contract_authority-As-nounced today. sociated Press.
Chief receiving country was France with 276,474 tons. Other i allocation' went to Luxembourg,
-130,012, Denmark, 70,693;. Bel-
74,336
MONEY FOR NAVY 157,324: Holland, 132,226; Italy.
Washington, June 17,
74,578; Sweden, glum, The U.S. Navy will have about Finland, 34,585; Greece, 23,203- $3.749.000.000 for the year begin-
Switzerland, 21,045; Portugal, ning June 1 under a compromise 3,843, and Norway, 2,378 tons.-- agreement reached by Senate and Reuter. House conference last night,
Tokyo, June. 18. The first postwar shipment of Egyptian rice, totalling 8,530 tons, to expected to arrive in Japan next month, according to sources close to the Japanese Board,
Members of both Houses have The shipment is part of a con agreed to the Agure and both tract for 25,000 tons of rice and Houses are expected to accept it Manila, June 19. 24,000 tons of barley from Egypt when the measure comes up. for President Quirino today sent a Prospectively rice imparts into approval. The
about message to Congress, which is Japan include 50,000 to 70,000 $200,000,000 less than the Navy) now in special session, certifying tons from Blam, and about 50,000 had asked.-Associated Press. the urgency of enacting the im- tons from Korea. portant control nieasure, whose,
The authorities here are pre-
aim is to conserve dollar reservesparing to send a Japanese trade
machinery-Reuter.
total
Melbourne, June 18.
JAP RAILWAY STRIKE
Tokyo, June 19. The strike
of the al-Japan Private Railway Workers Union {today entered its second day an the Union and management falled
by limiting imports of non-es-mission to Blam to arrange a sential goods and also to a cerbarior contract covering rice from Australia has reduced the ex-to-reach an agreement despite tain extent protect Infant indus- Siam in exchange for Japanese port price of wheat from 20/0d continuod negotiations. tries by Hmiling imports of com-rolling stock and electrical a bushel to 18/-, it was official-stranded in Tokyo's suburbs n
The number of office workers peting goods-United Press,
125 announced today.--Reuter, result of the strike was yesterday estimated t.050,000 and has to- day risen to an approximate one milton, according to latest re- ports,
Pacific Far East Line Inc.
Fast Regular Trans-Pacific Service
OVERLAND
NEW YORK.CHICAGO-DETROIT-TORONTO, MONTREAL AND ALL AMERICAN | | CANADIAN CITIES.
DIRECT
SAN FRANCISCO LOS ANGELES
VESSEL
From
For
|*.8. “IRAN VICTORY"
June 22
+
15. "SURPRISE“.
B.A. “JULIANY
LUCKENBACIF"
#AUSGERAT, REPUBINO":
San Francisco
June 24 San Francisco June 20 9an Francisco
*** July..6--
---San-Francisco:
Jane 23 San Franciaco
via Manlia
REFRIGERATION • DBY CARGO **
June 25 San Francisco
via OkinawE- June 27 Ban Francisco
via 8'hal & Fusad. San Francisco via Okinawa
sibly
For full particulars cair denarai KRONIK UNITED STATES LINES
The lack of transport and henvy tains have left many Tokyo offices st half strength-duter.
FREE TRADE URGED
Amsterdam, June 18,
A resolution urging govern- -ments to abollah all trade, barriers and to return to a system of completely true trade was adopted 'unaufhuily at this, Intést, áession. "of "the International :--wbol, con-. › férented' which - wse--hold: yester-
day and today lu"Amstoriam. the resolution further said that the Rysiem of export and Import |ficentos "especially is a forge ob- 'n Hida. Tol. 31251. | Ketucle to international tradd
Associated Press,
CARGO: OIL TANKS
June 24', July 12
TO NEW YORK BOSTON AND HAVANA VIA MANILA, SINGAPORE, COLOMBO, COCHIN, BOMBAY,
SUEZ AND MEDITERRANEAN PORTS 8.5. "Mount Davis" 8.8. "Mount Rogers" (calls Karachi)
►
June 21 ........... July
ˋ
AMERICAN PRESIDENT LINES, LTD.
St. George's Bldg.
Tel, Nos. 28172/28175
ericam Promeer Line
Arrivals from New York, Boston, Other Atlantic Ports via Panama
"PIONEER BAY” "STAGHOUND" "COURSER”
Sailings to Manila
"PIONEER BAY" "STAGHOUND"
"COURSER"
June July July
Q
Jane July
July
Sailings to New York, Boston, Philadelphia Baltimore & Other Atlantic Ports via
Panama Canal
-Special Cargo Oil Tuake-
"PIONEER TIDE" "PIONEER BAY"
18 80
„Dur June 22
Salla July 23
Duo July 14
Bails July 15
For Full Particulars Call
UNITED STATES LINES
General Agents
Tel. 31251 (3 lines)
Queen's Building,
H.K. & MACAO LINE
S.S. “KWONG SAL”. IS.S. “KWONG TUNG”.
HONG KONG DEPARTURE: ·
2.00 P.M. DAILY
MACAO DEPARTURE:
3.00 A.M. DAILY Mow Sang Shipping Co.
3, Connaught Rd. W., 1st Fl Telephone: 81805
HONG KONG DEPARTURE:
4.00 P.M. DAILY.
MACAO DEPARTURES
10.00 A.M. DAILY Yau Cheong Shipping Co.
180, Des Voeux Rd. C, 2nd Fl. Telephonos: 31622, 20010
Subject to alteration without notice. For passage and Freight particulare please apply to abova.
KLAVENESS LINE
SAILINGS
Direct to LOS ANGELES, SAN FRANCISCO VANCOUVER, SEATTLE & PORTLAND
m.a. "FRANCISVILLE"
m.s. 'BOUGAINVILLE”
6th JULY 6th AUGUST
ARRIVALS FROM PACIFIC COAST
IL: "BOUGAINVILLE”
23r4 JUNE SAILING FOR SINGAPORE PORT SWETTENHAM,
PENANG & BATAVIA..
24th,JUNE
PASSENGER ACCOMMODATION, BULK OIL TANKS
Chinese Freight Agents. HOO FOOK PING
THE BANK LINE (China) Ltd
Apply:-
"THE BANK LINE (CHINA) LTD. King's Building. Tel. 2779|||
THE EAST ASIATIC CO., LTD.
OF COPENHAGEN
M.S. "MORELIA
loading about 3rd July
... for
ADEN, ANTWERP, BOTTERDAM, HAMBURG, OSLO, GOTHENBURG AND COPENHAGEN
Tanks `available: for the 'ORYtage of on i
of oil m baik.
THE EAST ASIATIC CO., LTD.
Qumar's Bldg, 2nd floor,
TR. 80111 & 84112.
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