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"ASAMA MARU" N. Y. K. ORIENT-CALIFORNIA SERVICE
MY NISH'S
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THE HONG KONG DAILY PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1929.
IT HAS THE PRE-WAR FLAVOUR!"
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STAGE LURES AN ACTRESS WIFE. ·
HUSBAND A "MOST WONDERFUL LOVER."
SOCK DARNING.
PLUCKIEST CHILD IN BRITAIN.
MONTHS OF AGONY IN COTTON WOOL.
FIGHT FOR LIFE.
There is a little girl lying in the Queen Mary's Hospital for the East End at Stratford, who is, per- haps, the most gallant child in the world.
The remarkable problem of a young actress who wrote to her husband, an omnibus driver, My most wonderful of layers," and in another letter that she was going back to the stage because she could not help it, came before the Willes-most unbearable agony, yet she has faced it, not only bravely, but den magistrate last month..
with a courage that is heartbreak. ing to me.
Mr. W. B. Lase, the magistrate, dismissing a summons against the husband for failing to maintain bis wife and two children, said that the wife would be far better em- ployed in looking after her hus band, bome, and children than amusing the public.
The actress was Mrs. Phyllis Blok, aged twenty. Her husband, Harold Timothy Blok, works for the Cricklewood garage.
Married at Fifteen. Mrs. Blok said that she was re- hearsing for a play at Daly's Theatre. She married her husband when he was fifteen and earning £6 a week on the stage. Her mar ried life had been five years of continuous quarreling.
She left her husband a number of times to return to the stage, and relatives took charge of the children. She was on tour when her husband wrote her letters in which he signed himie "Your disgusted husband." He wrote in one letter-
"The children's lives are in the melting pot, so I came to you at the theatre seeking reconciliation, but you were worse than I thought Do you forget the marriage you. wow you made in church, or is your memory as short as your heart wounds heal quickly! would not live with you again if you were smothered in diamonds,"
Mrs. Bick admitted that she wrote to her husband while the was away acting :--
"The fool in me won't let mo love you, anil I simply cannot come back to do the 101 jobs I leathe in the house.
It is too awful to contemplate,
For mouths she has endured
Last December thirteen-year-old Betty Fitch came from her home. at Brentwood to stay with relations at Stratford.
"One night as she stood in front of her bedroom fre ber night dress caught light. Her sercams brought help, but not before the child's body: had been burned from shoulder to foot, and only by a miracle was her face saved.
They carried her to the hospital, & poor little tortured crap of humanity, and from that day, to this she has lain motionless on her back, utterly helpless and with only her head showing above the cotton wool in which she is wrap- ped.
Medal For Fortitude."
When the burns have to be dress-
ed Betty has to be laid in a bath filled with before the unbandaging can be special preparation
attempted.
Last month the Queen, who is the patron of the hospital, paid it a surprise visit with the Duke of Gloucester, who is the president.
"She asked me how I got bura- ed," she said to a Press repre sentative, "And whether I should" be scarred much. And, do you kase, and here the whisper was eager and wondering], she even noticed my bookrest, and asked if I could turn the pages myself 3"
And can you, Batty?" "No," said Betty, with a funny little mila
Betty Fitch is a Girl Guide and has been awarded the most covet- ed medal of the association. Her mother, who stood with me by her bedside, told me about it, and pick.
I cannot come back to you again,ed up a little case from the locker. even for the sake of the children."
"I Must Go Back.** She wrote in another letter to her husband:-
"Tim, you are simply great. If I had smiled and sang through it all as you did, things might have been different, and I might have been at home now, darning your socks.
It was empty,
"It's pinned on me. mummie," whispered a little voice. A nurse moved forward and drew back the
blue bedjacket that spread under the child's chin and round her face. Under it was revealed the cotton wool that covers the dressings. and there on the sheet wear the blue medal, with
." For Fortitude.
She is a wonder," said Major
the
wurde
pisal, and his words were eclipsed by the nurse who looks after her.
But I can't do it, Tim, and I wile. shall never come back as your 1 am going back to the stage beJackson, the secretary of the hos ehuse I annot help it"
"Forgive me, my most wonder- ful of lovers, but I can never re turn to you. I could not back to home life for 1,000 babies."
come
The husband said he would have his wife back if she would give up the stage, and, as she expressed it,
darned his socks."
Mrs. Bok, asked if she were still infatuated with the stage, replied, "No, I am not now; but I shall go back again. 1 "must."
Mr. Luke, said that it was an unusual care, and one which went to the roots of matrimonial life. The wife's remarkable letters re- vealed the fact that she knew her own failings and her inability to discharge her duties as a wife and mother. They also gave evidence of the love the still bore her hus- band.
SECRET HOARD OF CZARS.
BURIED IN MYSTERY
VAULTS.
PRICELESS BOOKS.
Excavations the results of which may eclipse even the wonderful dis- coveries which were made in the tomb of Tutank-Auen are about to be undertaken in Moscow,
For nearly six months there has been a daily fight between life and death, but now Betty is pronounced "out of danger." At first it was thought that one hand and arm would not be saved. But surgical skill has averted the calamity of an amputation.
chives of the Kremlin which sup- port this belief, and he hopes that, ith their help and with modera methods of research, he will succe ed in unearthing the hidden vaulta and their secret contents.
Ivan the Terrible, who rebuilt the citadal about 1530, ordered his Ita lian architect, Fioraventi, to con- struct beneath it an elaborate system of underground passages, chambers, and dungeons, in which he might bile his treasures, his prisoners, and if need be, himself from the eyes of his foes.
Czar Ivan was" above all an in- passioned book-lover. He had in- herited a priceless collection of classical manuscripta from his grandfather, Czar Vassily, to whom They had been pressented by the Patriarch of Constantinople, More over, he spared no exertion in ob- taining other rate works -Hebrew, Latin, and Greek manuscripts.
Golden Library.
DAILY SHARE QUOTATIONS.
HONG KONG STOCK EXCHANGE.
SHAREBROKERS' ASSOCIATION.
Buyers Ballora Bilin Nomina!{
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Banks
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M800 Yangtze Ins.........
$310 #815
China Fires **** H.K. Fires....
$310
$810
To keep his skin and scalp clean and howlihy, and Cudeura Ointment to soothe and heal mahes, itchings and irritations and to prevent the for mation of blackheads and pimples. Sample each Soap, Ointment and Talcum free upon request, from Dayton, Price, it Company, Lulu F. O, Bay 850, Shrasil.
·ENG" B+14 Throughout the World.
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THE TIME FOR BLANKETS
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"EMBERS of the Committee at-
Mtend at the Society's Hoom.
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HONG KONG BENEVOLENT
SOCIETY.
(EST. 1889.) [8348
600 ARMED MEN HUNT A MONKEY. ANIMAL INOCULATED WITH DEADLY GERMS.
35
14 M
$1.95
$18
Six hundred men armed with revolvers are searching the great Mount Royal Park in Montreal for 3%
monkey which has escaped from the McGill University after hav- ing been inoculated with the virus of infantile paralysis for research
purposes.
cities.
The monkey, a savage animal of a South African breed, 'was secur- He had, too, the underground lied for the University laboratory brary of the Grand Duke Jaroslava week ago to be used in urgent re the Wise brought from Kiev to his search work which is being carried secret rooms. In the Kremlin. By out in an attempt to check the wave The Russian archeologist. Pro- the end of his life he had ac of infantile paralysis which is Ecesor Bteletsky, has obtained per-cumulated a wonderful library of sweeping through several Canadian mission from the Soviet Govern many hundreds of volumes, consist ment to begin investigations at the ing chiefly of original Greek and world-famed Kremlin, once the Latin manuscripts of priceless palace of the old Czars of Russia value, many of which were the only in Moscow, and now the seat of existing copies in the world. the present Government, with the object of finding out what truth is contained in the legendary stories connected with this ancient citadel.
For many centuries the belief has persisted in Moscow that beneath network of underground passages and secret chambers, in which are buried gold and silver treasures of the time of old Novgorod, valuable pictures and historical jewels and relics in extravagant abundance, and-most pricelesa of all-the se cret "Golden Library" of. Ivan the Terrible.
the Kremlin there lies hidden a
All these books he had bound in thick ornamented gold plate, and this "Golden Library was stored away in his secret subterranean caverns, out of the reach of prying
yes.
The way down to the biding places was kept strictly secret. Any person who by chance found it out was promptly put out of the way. The Architect himself, Fioraventi, was blinded by order of the Crar. Only seven persons had admission to the secret library, and these had. charge of the work of translation. Three of them were Russians and four Germans. They got on 50 slowly with their translating that shortly before his death the annoy All these treasures according toed Czar had all the secret rooms the tradition-were hidden away walled up and sealed-with the under the earth by successive Cars, translators inside! and have lain there, inaccessible, According to an old chronicle, since the early fifteenth century. the library contained classical Professor Steletsky has now works of unbelievable value, includ- found certain documents in the aring first manuscripts of Cicero,
(Vontinued on next Volumn). Tacitus, and Titus Livius.
Documents Found.
Vain Search,
It became unmanageable and The keepers, burst open its enge. dreading the consequences of a bite, could not restrain its attempts to cape, and it dashed from the University buildings to the wooded slopes of the part.
Armed members of the university staff carried out a fruitless search throughout the night, and the aid of the city police was sought.
Police motor-cyclist patrols have been organised to guard the district in which the animal is believed to be hiding, and to warn members of the public of the risic which an en- counter with it might involve,
Traffic policemen, plain clothes detectives and uniformed constables have been formed into a body to hunt it down. Each man has a revolver, and is ordered to shoot the monkey on sight.
The university authorities de clare that, in spite of the inocula- tion, there is no risk of infantils, paralysis, infection from the bite of the monkey, but the police are! taking no risks.
4
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