12
SERVICES CONTRACTUELS DES MESSAGERIES MARITIMES.
CONSIGNEN NOTICE.
8.8. "OKENONCEAUX”
ARRIVED · HONG KONG ON WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26TH, 1930.
· HAMBURG- AMERIKA LINIE. NOTICE TO CONSIGNEES.
T
HE Motor Vensel
"DUISBURG"
having arrived, Consignees of Cargo an hereby notified that their Goods are being landed and placed at their risk in the Hong Kong and Kowloon Wharf and Godown Company's godowns at Kowloon, where Delivery CONSIGNEES of Cargo by the obtained as
FROM MARSEILLES, &c. "
above named Steamer so hereby informed that their Goods with tha¦ exception of Opium, Tressare and Vain ables are being hoded mas placed at their risk in the Godowns of the Bong Kong and Kowloon Wharf and Godown Co, Ltd., Kowloon, whence Delivery on be obtained as the Goods are landed.
Goods not cleared within 7 days in. slading date of arrival, will be subject to
Bent
All Ulama must be sent to the Under
1930, or they will not be recognized.
THE HONG KONG DAILY PRESS. TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 1930.
be
"
are further notified that! the
"DUISBURG" has taken at HAMBURG Through Cargo for
MUENSTERLAND Hong Kong or from ANTWERP.
Optional Cargo will be landed, unless Notice has been given prior to Vessel's arrival.
No Claims will be admitted after the Cloods have left the Godown and all Goods remaining undelivered after the 8th March, 1930, will be subject to Rent All broken, chafed, and damaged where they will be examined on 7th March, 1930, at 10 am, by our Surveyor, Mesars Goddard and Douglas, All Claims must reach us before the be 22nd March, 1930, or they will not recognized.
signed beforo Friday the 7th Marcb. } coods are to be left in the Godowns,
Damaged Package must be left in the Godowns for examination by the Consignes and the Company's Sur veyors, Mass. Goddard & Douglas at 10 am on Tuesday, the 4th March, 1930.
No Claims will be admitted after the Goods have left the GodownE.
No Fire Inxaramos will be effected by us in any case whatever,
L. LESDOS,
Agent. Hong Kong, 26th Feb, 1930. [9091.
EXPRESS
BAGER
No Insurance will be affected.
MISSING FOR FIVE YEARS.
WIFE'S REUNION WITH LOST HUSBAND.
سی
"TOO ILL TO HE' QUESTIONED,"
wwwwwwww
LET BABY BANG
THE TABLE.
VERY WRONG TO STOP HIM.
DOCTOR'S ADVICE TO PARENTS.
"If a baby irritates you by con The return after a five years' abtinuous banging on the table with sence of Edmund Rose (34), the a spoon on no account must you elder son of Mr. Robert Rose--for take the spoon away and substitute
something soft." over 40 years secretary of the Hyde Co-operative Society, of. Great Norbury Street, Hyde, was as re- markable as his disappearance.
He was found walking along the main Norwich road by a motorist who pulled up, and, taking pity on him owing to his distressed can dition, asked if he could give him a lift. When asked where he want Bill of Lading will be countersigned cd to go, the wanderer could not by the Undersigned,
tell, but when the "motorist' men- tioned that he was bound for Man. chester Rese brightened and said he wanted to go there too. He was brought to the city and handed over to the police, who however, could get no coherent statement from him. He was then taken to Nell Lane Hospital, where he was left in a serious condition, suffer
JEBSEN &00,, Agents Hong Kong, 1st Mar, 1930. [0097
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This piece of advice offered by Dr. J. Reaney, Lecturer in Hygiene at Furzedown Training College, caused considerable amusement among the health visitors and school nurses attending their ninth winter school, which was resumed at Bedford College for Women, London, last month. Dr. Reaney was lecturing on the psychology of play.
Concerning the baby and the spoon, Dr. Heaney pointed out that the noise of the banging which at- tracted the child was the very thing which irritated grown-ups. To take away the spoon and substitute something which did not make a noise was very bad for the child.
"If the baby puts out its hand to take a piece of live coal I agree give it something bright red in ita you should stop it, but you must
place. All experiments of little children, such as turning on gas taps and the like; should be given plenty of scope. When the child you must. frst say Don't and sit down, but then you must give the child something equally difficult to do. A lot of delinquent children are produced by overfond and kind parents who don't give the child n chance of roughing it and fading out things for itself.
FINGER PRINTS AS A PROTECTION.
MAN WHOSE NAME WAS USED BY ANOTHER.
At the close of a cassat" Bow- street police-court recently, the de- fendant, replying to the magistrate, said he had no objection to giving his finger prints to the police-for his own protection.
He had previously denied with emphasis that his name was Richard Riley, that he was arrested a
trunkenness on December 7, and that he failed to answer to his bail on the following day. He declared that he had not previously seen the sergeant who gave evidence of ad- mitting him to bail, of the constable who said he arrested him. His name was James O'Riley.
Mr. Fry (the magistrate) asked one of the police, witnesses if it was possible there had been a mis- take, and this possibility was ad- mitted.
The magistrate told the defendant that there was a dangerous fellow apparently going about and getting drunk and taking his name. He discharged him.
very young child, especially by taking it to the kinema. I do not believe in the kinema for young children.
Job for a Sensitive Bay,
Mr. A. Macrae, who is in charge of the vocational, guidance, depart- Industrial Psychology, dealt with the problem of choosing a vocation.
ing from loss of memory and gen- / shows a desire to turn on a gas tap ment of the National Institute of cral physical exhaustion.
In response to the police descrip tion published in the Press, mem- hers of the family went to the hos pital and identified the man as Ed- mund Rose, who five years ago left he home at Stanley Park Avenue, Liverpool, one day after lunch, to go to work at the Liverpool Co- operative Society offices, where he was employed as a clerk. He did not arrive at the offices and had not been heard of since The fami- iy spent hundreds of pounds in trying to trace him by advertise ments and by scouring the country whenever they saw an account of the finding of an unknown man.
Never Lost Hope,
We all know the clumsy person who comes into, room and trips over something and then goes to the table and knocks something over. Well, the clumsy person springs from the child who by some means has been thwarted during its early experimental years.
4.
any boys, he said, took up vocation simply because it was the one followed by their father and re- gardless of their ability for it.
"I know of a father who had a fairly well paid job in a slaughter- house, and he decided that his boy. should work there also. This was regardless of the fact that the boy was very sensitive and had devoted his leisure time to the care of his
numerous
animal pets. Parents very often make the mistake of confining their attention to. the at "There are four definite play tractiveness of an occupation in periods in the development of a general rather than its appropriate. child," said Dr. Reaney, and theness, For instance, they would first, which Insts from birth till choose a safe job without troubling five or six years, is the experi- to inquire into whether their son mental, imitative, and imaginative: has a salety first' temperament. The danger with our nation is that we do not have enough imaginative play among our children. It is the one thing which stops morbid-mind. edness, which, as a nation, I think, we auffer from a great deal.”
Origin of Games,
"Then again, they say to them- selves, Here is a boy who has a good bedside manner; we will make him a doctor,' or 'Here is a girl who has won a prize for essay writing at school; there will be a fortune waiting for her in Fleet Street."
Mrs. Edmund Rose has never lost hope that her husband would re- turn, and throughout the long period of his absence she has kept the home going by working as a collector for a Liverpool concern. After visiting Manchester to see her husband, Mrs. Rose said in na interview. He is too ill to be questioned, and I have no idea how he came to be in the district) Dr. Reaney showed how the
Married Women Teachers, where he was found. I thought as majority of games played by child- times my husband must be dead, ren had their origin in primitive Miss Dorothy Revel, in a lecture but I never gave up hope.'
instincts and customs. Oranges and on "The use of discipline in edu Rose, before he left home, had lemons, for instance, was the surcation." described overcrowding in suffered for some time from ab-vival of the instinct for tribal con- the school room as the worst evil Sceases in the head and ears, and tests. All ring games were a copy in education to-day, and said that had complained of paina in the of ancient religious ceremonies.
classes of twelve in clasa-roomis bead. He was well known in From six to nine years the animal built for thirty was the ideal for Hyde, and for many years was instincts inherited by the child which, she would like to work. actively connected with St. George's began to develop, and hunting, Referring to the danger of a child Church as, a chorister and deputy chusing, and fighting games were receiving too much or too intense crganist. A member of the men's played, all of which were important affection from unmarried teachers, class, he was an intimate friend of to the development of the adult. Miss Revel suggested that an en- the present Mayor of Hyde.. One of the most primitive in-lightened Board of Education would Alderman Middleton, the Mayor, stincts of all was to be found in not pursue a policy of dismissing who is known as an historian the game of hide and seck, which married teachers; it might even. and writer, recalls. that on was popular with both growns-ups reverse it and order that all ten- occasion Rose suggested to him a
and children.
chers on reaching the age of 35 plot of a story which was almost
should be married or dismissed. identical with the circumstances of his disappearance and retura.
ORA
Mr. and Mrs. Rose, the parents, who are 81 and 78 years of age respectively, have received many messages of congratulation and sympathy.
The third play period from nine to twelve years was the realistic period, and in the fourth period, from twelve years onwards, the play was always.co-operative. The great danger of the present time is over- stimulation of the emotions of the
(Continued on nezt, Column.)
A certain amount' of sacrifice by parents for children was good, but there had been in recent years foolish tendency to overdo it-a sort of child worship which was bad for everyone concerned, and especially for the child.
BIGGER & BETTER THAN EVER
CHRONICLE
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DIRECTORY
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1930
the "Daily Press' Now IN PREPARATION.
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