7
12"
DAILY SHARE QUOTATIONS
Hong Kong Stock
شرت
3370
TAI
33.10
SPI
Exchange
VALE Namitasi
****** *****
4
i
Snareprokers'
Association
TUESDAY. OCTOBER, 1. ayers
* Banks
H.K. Backs
***$1,016
£100
Do (London)
Chartered Banks ...
£13
250)
Meresaule Mks. "A"
£13
Hank of East Asia...
100
Uju.
N, C. & S. Barks .... Am. 0. Fia. Corp: B Ch. Fin. Corp. ord. 8.
1o. Pruf. s] Incara.song
་
dellort
***
$106
$13
Pta
Canton kusuraUÇUM.......
$180
3180
Underwriters
$1.10
$1.10
Union insurELOGS .......
$374
China Faro
$382
1390
H.K. Pires...in
$180
$180
International Amoa. 3.
Shipping
$38
Douglases B...
535
Steamboat
134
130
indos (pret)
$30
$0. (KUA)
80/41 SU
Sarkis
701-
SIL
Mining
176 ots
Amtamoks
| 74jeta.
$14
Bajatuos
9 cta
[21 ote.
Baguio Gold.....
$11 Benguet Consolidated $10.90 ex div
113 cc»
Do.
Exploration 9 ezü
116 otx. Do. Goldfield
8 st. Big Wedge........
ata.
7 CC
Gold River 3 ct..
30 cla.
Gold Creek..........
United Faracales...
30 ole
16 et.
Salacos Mining..... 13 ots.
90 024.
Ipo Mining...
36ate.
Itogons
11/3
Kaliana sess
11/3
$13
Langkats (single) d.
3101
*
Explorations
de
321
#5}
Shanghai Loma
33
37
ez div. 38)
$2.10
: 372
8:0
3b ots.
20 cts.
+9
"UU.
(new)
(new)
$2.30 Vuzuela Gold Flus
་་་
Docks, WharVOS,
Godowns, els.
RK & K Whares.
Do. (oid)
Providents (oli) ...45 eta,
Du.
H. K. W. Docks.
5. Chana MotumˆA'
Do.
*
Shangazi Docks S. New Engineerings8. dongkewa ...... Lands, Botals, and
w
H.K. Howls....
*******$3.15
B.K Lands $24
Lkr. 4% Debentures
Daugiau....
མལླ
378
$4
$240
Cotton Mill# -
+
$73 $71
10 său.
Fat
; མ;
$80
34
37
135
241/25
$100
$10
$10
Metropolitan Landı..
34
H.K. nesta
34
Chins Domode
Da DaiNLU.ESÁ
171
Humphreys ******
Now Azia Hotel
As Konitics "A" N.
Do. "B".
386
Chinese stated.......
$6.30
Yu
105
D'un Coltonatuid 3.
16:
$40
JJu
$40
304
Lorong Blugs S
BN
$25
Wing tiles(5)
$25
Public CellicION
JL.10/11.00
311.10
$51
35
2
$78
star FurricN
877
$17
Yaumas Forriss
140
$181
37.95
$8.00
China Ligtite ............
553
Electrica...
$7.95 $52)
Tramwaya m
Truss (old)...
Do. (wow)..
$17,80 43ophones fold
Slit
10/6
►
29/0
$20 ecuo do,
Sandakan Lights...
9611 Dia. .(LGW)
重
China Buses
Fractions
thu ((protju s
industriais
Malabou Dugari ....
Caldbeck, "joru, 201
זוי
***
$18.10
$8.10
*10
813
Mogregorafpret.18.]
$1.60
Canton is................ $14
$305
Cements
3 05
tupad
$1.15.
$1,00
¿liscellaneous T
$14 Dairy Barını
144
$1.10
15 eta,
13
$7
36
$2.90
amussinents
Ch. Etainmontf................ Constructius, (old)
Djo,
Lane Crawforta............. Mackintoale
Nanyang Tobacco...
Slucerea /
Watsons ago. $2.90
Tuote. Wm. Powells .........................
Do.
HONG KONG DAILY PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1935.
ELECTION UPSET IN LITHUANIA
Final Figures Held Up
<Special to "Hong Kong
Dally Press"). (Bs Telegraph, Copyright,' Tele-
Ordinance. graphic Messager
139.4. Received, October 1. 7.30. p.a.)
Memel, October 1. Although, the elections ended officially on Monday evening at 6 p.m., the number of those who. thanks to the Impossible electoral system introduced for the, occasion by the Lithuanian authorities, had up to that time not been able to record their votes, was só great that in most of the larger districts voting continued tih 11 p.m.
It
was not before the early hours of Tuesday morning that the Arst figures concerning the per- centage of the electoral participa- tion were published.
In the city of Memel 22,457 of the total of 24.273 qualified voters had gone to the polls which amounts to 92 per cent, and seems to have been about the average attained by most of the other The final figures will
districts.
because as previously reported, the Lithuanian peasants had invalidad the polling station at Juguaten and destroyed and scattered ballot paperi.
Eranaceum Kun Man
DUTCH CRITICISM
Amsterdam, Oct. 1, .. Discussing the Memel elections," the "Lelegraaf" declares In
a
►
GIRL GOLFERS' TRIUMPH
Miss Nancy Jupp Beaten
(Special Air Mail Service,
London, Sept 10. Miss Nancy Jupp, of Longriiddry, near Edinburgh, the British girls' champion, has made golfing his tory. At the age of 14 she bas contained and led to victory a Scottish team, some of them near- ly 19 years of age; in the first in Lernational match against Eng-
leading article that the Lithuanian land.
Government had never.command-
This interesting event, which ed great respect and in the Memebattracted a good many spectators question committed every imagin-to Stake Poges yesterday to see the golfing prodigy in action, was won by Scotland by 5 games to 2.
uble mistake,
The
from the Lithuania's position very first was weak, because it had seized Memel territory illegally. circumstances the Under these least one might have expected was that the administration of Memet would leave no cause for criticism But for a long time past "those .hat the people have doubted
were willing and Lithuanians capable of doing this,
Was present election
2 consequence of glaring fiasco in the totally inadequate prepara- tions. The responsibility for this les" solely with the Lithuanian The electoral commission meets Government. It is no wonder that on Tuesday at noon, in order to on the German side the cause of decide when the counting of votes this election should be regarded as was that Lithuanla It is will begin.
proof quite possible a that the official
epunt will be unfitted to the task "taken upon deferred till after October 8. wherl itself when the, watchfulness the election in the Juguater' dis- the world was relaxed.- trict. will have taken place again. Transocean Kuo Min.
not be available before Tuesday evening and nobody appears to have the slightest idea when the results will have been compiled.
Problems Of Expanding
11
Populations
BRITAIN'S FORTUNATE POSITION
(Special Air Mail Service:
London, Sept. 10.
To-day the British Association has called forth one opinion bear- ing on the dispute between Italy and Abyssinia and on the course: Con- to be taken by Great Britain. cluding his public lecture on science and population' problems this evening. Sir Arnold T. Wilson, MP. for Hitchin, said:
We are faced to-day by the pro- blem of population in a form more acute than we have known it in inis generation. Each man must decide for himself what line he will take. Speaking for myself I would De a party to no policy which might involve us in going to war expansion of a to prevent the
ev
growing nation unless I was satis- ned that we, who occupy most of the unpopulated but habitable portions of the earth, have played our part by offering to make room somewhere. We must enter the lists, if at all, with a
clear con- *clence and clean hands If such R policy is not to-day practical politics-ana it is not-then we Dust stand aside.
of
Miss Jupp did not win, partly because the importance of the oc- casion, weighed a litle heavily on her young shoulders, and partly because a violent rainstorm, which lasted an hour and completely drenched the players, disorganised her game
To batter a ball through almost solid sheets of rain is a man's job; in the case of the slender Miss Jupp the task "was hopeless. She won two of the first three holes each in 4, and wis one down at the inth (429 yards), which her tall. sturdy opponent. Miss Peggy who is Falkner, of Worplesdon. close on 19, won in 4. Then the atcrni burst, and the little Scottish girl, swept off her feet, lost by 3 and 2.
CHAMPION'S SISTER WINS
ป
Miss Jupp's sister, Rhoda, who is shree years older than the cham- Dion, won her match comfortably. She bea, Miss. Sonia Swinburn Janson, a sister of Misa Norah Swinburn, the actress, by 4 and 3.
and 5.
A kong, clean and crisp hitter. she was on the first gr:en (440 yards) with" a "drive and an iron. Miss Johnson failed to maintain his standard, a sight attack of "nerves" preventing her, doing full justice to the game of which she is capable,
}" The Scottish girls proved far New Zealand cannot be expected
For of a to strong and experienced. to welcome immigrants different race in her small term-instance, Miss Shella Stroyan, who tory. Canada has opened for gates is scratch on the ladies' course at 4 handicap wide to Europe and is disinclined Sunningdale and to open them wider. Australia, L.G.U.. beat Miss Angela Noble 63 with vast areas undeveloped, is against any large expansion.
"That is the problem. I have stated it, but offer no solution."
HEALTHY-MINDED TEACHERS
Psychologists and teachers at- Joint meeting of the tending a
Educational Psychology Science Sections of the British Association at Norwich were sur- prised to be told by Mr. N. F. - Sheppard, a teacher, that "it is an there are unfortunate fact that two studies or professions which attract people, with maladjusted minds and inferiority complexes in particular-psychology and edu. cation."
and
Contending that the minds of teachers should be made as healthy as possible, Mr. Sheppard salt.
Miss Stroyan, who is nearly 16, tall and sturdily built, has some excellent, achievements, to her cre- dit. P.aying from scratch she re- sently won a Sunningdale tourna- ment with a score of 69. What, however, gave Miss Stroyan even greater satisfaction was a match at Royal St. George's, against her father, a scratch player. Receiv- Ing halt a stroke, and playing from the men's tees, she halved, though
father was round in level 4's. Miss Thelma Ramsay, of Mus- well Hill met with an experience
not by any means uncommon. At the fourteenth she had to stand- more than ankle deep in water in a bunker in order to play the ball, which was scarcely visible.
call him a development supervisor. He would weigh and measure and test the pupils and record their Intellectual and bodily and social development. He would have to see that they had enough of the right kind of recreation, work, rest.
One hears of girls schools in which even gymnastics is done in long-sleeved shirts and skirts be- The need is not merely for a It had been suggested that if cause the head mistress has un-sychologist. I should prefer to all nations adopted a system of healthy suppressions about the human body. For infectious bodily 1rce exchange or raw and manu-
allments we have isolation hospi- factured commodities, with ade- quate monetary mechanism, ali tals, but infectious mental illness the material wants of humanity is not regarded in the same way. could be met. Mr. Colin Clark had While many people would, for their own sakes, like to see Mrs. suggested as inuch when address- 36 eta, ing the British Association last Grundy put in an isolation hospi-exercise, and food.
12'
week, when he said that food pro- tal, they do not realise the harm
that she may be doing to their duction pressed upon population rather than population
children. the umits of subsistence. That was, 56 cts. broadly speaking, Mr. Lansbury's
view.
3142
34 $1.10
$3
$31
$2
M. Greyhounds .......
$1.35
91%,
prema z
a. C. Enterprises ....... ULG.871925.Bds. 89%
HE. Govt 4% Losu=['8]*%.
14
B
17.
Wallace Harper
35B
B.K. Wing Un
150
$4
#611 $3
Bhai Do Vibro Pileng
For returning from banishment before the compistion of this term." Chan Sul, 30, unemployed, was sentenced to nine months" hard labour by Mr. Macfadyen in the Central Police Court yesterday. Defendant was banished for ten years from March 22 last. Bub- Inspector J. J. Walsh prosecuted.
•
-Kwok Płu, 31, street cooile, who admitted striking Ho Sam, 41, also a street coolle, on the head with a bamboo pole, was bound over by Mr. Macfadyen in the Central Pollco Court yesterday and ordered to pay $3 amends, or Ave days" hard labour in default Sub- Inspector J. J. Walsh stated that yesterday a boy was playing with the defendant's bamboo pole and fell into the harbour. Defendant
requested him to get it back but the lad refused, whereupon the de- tendant, began to beat him. Com- was plainant remonstrated and struck on the head with a pole by the defendant: The wound neces- stated a few stitches.
Unusual Honour-systems are being put into operation in poys' reforma- tortes. This will make the boys feel very strange when they come out into the world again.
Still Waiting
"A woman writer complains that jokes about spinsters waiting for some one to take them out are quite uncalled-for. So, unfortun- ately, are the spinsters:
on
INTERNAL STRESSES
Mr. Sheppard compared men and women of to-day to a flock of sheep taken from grazing in the placid pastures of classical poetry. driven by circumstances through the streets of our modern civilisa-
"I beteve this to be wholly un- true," said Sir Arnold. "The free exchange of commodities is notion and exploring every avenue,
substitude for the free redistribu-
"He should have close contact with the school societies and hobby activities: He should take over some of the functions of the form master, house master, head master, and school doctor.”
Professor H. R. Hamley said it was wrong to tell a boy he was a duffer or 3 coward. He had heard not of a few but of many cases of the kind.
STAFFROOM PROBLEMS
as sheep and politicians will. - tion of amanity on the face of TEACHERS' ROUTINE WORK the globe. We must face the fact "The average teacher," he said. that in present circumstances thets too fully occupied with lessons,
Mr. A. W. Wolters contributed' price of a certain amount of inter-games, and similar activities to national peace is the growth of consider the social and cultural an account of the replies which within those education of his pupils. The head he had received from "former stu- internal stresses countries wanse population 18 master is dealing with the organi- dents of a training college in an developing in numbers, in needs, sation, acting as chairman of swer to questions on the value of their psychological training. One and in ambitions. The longer, we committees and lord high execu-. maintain the status quo the more tioner, signing forms, taking defen-letter read:: certain and inevitable becomes the sive measures against parents, and One rather important grouse" in explosion of pent-up forces.
playing a complicated sort of chess the light of my experience is that "Are we to distribute the popu- against bogey with the school never remember being' warned lation or are we to tell 'each na- time-table. He cannot give much that some of the very urgent pro- tion to stay out and keep its attention to the individual, mental bieras of teaching would occur not in the classroom but in the staff- population down? We of the Bri- development of his pupils, In
in a Junior girls" many cases he does not even get room I am tish Empire-the Dominions-ature
enough time to follow educational school. and it is not always easy theory and technique and so'main- for cleven women shut up together tain an enlightened poller in the for the working days of the week for fairy long periods together to "There is, therefore, a growing preserve peace and concord. - In need for a specialist on the star fact, I very much fear I have sadly of each school to be responsible for belief the kindly testimonial that the wider aspects of education. I said I was an agreeable colleague.
with the United States and Russia have under our flag the soil in temperate zones in which Northern races can settle and live and ex-school. pand. Russia requires her own soll to meet the needs of a rapidly expanding population. The United States bars almost 'all'immigrants.
S E. Levy & Co.
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STOCK AND
COMMODITY QUOTATIONS
New York-London Cotton, October Cotton, May ...................
(Through Renter's Agency)
Last
October 1 Close Open 10.30-10.40 11,00 -490 4901 4902
491
10.48
10.53 10.53
10.53
10.80
10.71 10.7110.71
Rubber, December
12.07
11.99 11.99
11.01
Chicago Wheat, December Chicago Wheat, May Corn, December Corn, May
991
1001
091
1001
571
572
581
571
STOCKS
481 487
201
201 201
271-
271:*: 281
12}
12
402
47 471
9%
447
431
431-
431
44
.
-American Umelting ...........
Anaconda Copper.............. Consolidated Chas of N.X. El Bond and Share General Motors Int. Tel and Tel, Loew's Inc.
Montgomery Wi asia
· NY. Central” ........
Standard Oil Co. of NJ.
0.8. Steel
48487 481
201 201
121 ∙12) 121
3582
327 320 321 321- 33
241
241 241
43
491
45
45 451
458
451
New York Stock Exchange Quotations appear on Page
WARSHIPS IN PORT
The following warships were in port yesterday:
North Wall-Lowestoft, Perseus. South Wall Duncan and Moth. In Dock-Phoenix. Rover and Regent
East Wall-Olympus, Seamew. Ta'koo, Dock-Orpheus. Cosmopolitan Dock-Rainbow..
FOREIGN
U: S. 8. Black Hawk, U. S., B. Pope. (
V. S. 6. Ford,
U. 8. S. Whipple,
U. S. 8. J. D., Edwa
U. 8. 6. 8mith Thompson,
U. 9. 8. Barker
·U. 8. 6, Pillsbury, U. 8. 8. Peary,
U. 5. B. Asheville,
U. 8. 8, Stewart, and
D. 6. 8. Parrott,
R. F. Argus and
Brazza
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