CHAVEN
These are the days
to be careful
of your, throat-
I always um--, smoke Craven 4
They
never
Vary!
B
IN 'EASY-ACCESS' INNER FOIL PACKETS, ALSO IN "TRU-YAC" (50' TINS
When we sell the TRU-VAC airtight TIN the FACTORY. FRESHNESS of CRAVEN “AN
is securely imprisoned until che seal is broken by pulling the rabber tab cutter; inezed edges.
по
Remember
HONG KONG DAILY PRESS.
CRAVEN
VIRGINIA CIGARETTES
CRAVEN
CRAVENA
ARE MADE SPECIALLY TO PREVENT SORE THROATS
MADE IN LONDON, ENGLAND, BY CARRERAS LTD
TRU VAC
CAREER IN
CRAVEN A
VIRGINTES
CALISS
The Job Printing Department
Book Binding...".
Machine Ruling,
of the
HONG KONG DAILY PRESS.
is equipped with all the latest and most up-to-date appliances for the production of first-class work.
All descriptions of Illustrated Catalogues, Circulars, Visiting and Invitation Cards with latest Royal Script Type.
F
COMMERCIAL PRINTING turned out accurately, and with the greatest despatch, under the direct supervision of experienced Europeans.
--Gold Lettering, and Marbling, etc.
#
All executed on the premises at the shortest notice.
Law Work,
Ledgers and Account books.
A speciality, and at prices which compare. favourably with any printing estab, in the Far East Estimates furnished.
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1935.
NOTED SCOTS HONOURED
Freedom For Two
Peers
11
(Special Air Mall Service)
London, Sept. 28. Two sons of Aberdeen who have earned high distinction in their services.to the Empire-Lord Mes- ton of Agru find Dunottar and Field-Marshaj Lord Mine of Salonika and Rubislaw-received the freedom of their native city yesterday.
Among the 2,000 people who attended the
in the ceremony Music Hall. Aberdeen. were 300 boys and girls from the secondary und Intermediate schools of the city.
Lord Provost H. Alexander, pre- sided, and the platform party in- cluded, in addition to Lord Meston and Lord Milne, the Marquis of Aberdeen, Viscount Arbuthnott, the Earl of Caithness. Lord Pro- vost W. H. Buist, Dundee: Provost Hunter, Perth; Sir Robert Williams of Park: Principal Sir George Adam Smith. Mr. J. G. Burnett. M.P.; Dr. G. A. Morrison.. M.P.; the magistrates and members of Aber. deen Town Council, and represen- tatives of the professional and business life of the city...
BIG ACHIEVEMENTS
Meston Lady
and the Hon. Dougall Mestun and Lady Mine und
Juan "Milne the Hon. seated in the front of the hall.
NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE
(ihrouga Menier's Agener!
New York: October 18.
QUOTATIONS
New York/Landon Crows-rate Now York Untton-Vet. New York Rubber-Dec. Chicago Wheat --Dec: Chicago Corn -Dec. Montreal Silvar -Dec. Silver-Official
Dow Jones Average
30 Industrials
20 Kil
20 Ucilitie
Last Today's
High Low Close Close Chango
TO-DAY'S RADIO PROGRAMME
Broadcast by Z.B.W.
on 355 Metres
4900 1901 1.90% 4.903 unchinged Quiet 12.30 to 3.15 pm-European Pro-
JURI 10.82 3.AS 10.84
01 off
:X.75 12.83 1274 12.5 104) 1024 194 1028 Bà 601 th BOL 66.44 86,44 €0,50 €6.50
·63€. 05
48 off
2 off.
#off
High-1834/35)-Low: Oct 11.
136.94
84.58,133,86
7.14 39.-0
$2.06
31.03
14.39 25.8
40 Bords
97,47
84.73 95.7L
11 Commodity lader
€0.35
41.98 57.09.
Stock & Div. Adams Express Amer. Can (4) Am Cyanamid "B"
(.25dr.)
Am. For. FWI Am. For. Pwr. $7 1st
PI.
unchanged unchanged
Oct. 14. Change 135.03 1.47 up
33.18
3e up.
25.94
.13 up
05.0
*56.71
15 uH ,3% off
Business Done: -1,580,000 shares.
Last Sale Oct. 11 Oct. 14
81
Stock & Div Gold Dust (1-20)
Goodyear
8 142
241
322
*
1421
281
171 17
Am, Locomotive Am, Radiator Am. Smelting........ 513 521
141
Am. T. and T. (0).. 1397 Am. Tob "B" (5), ... 1014 102 Am., Waterworks (1) 167 17 Am. Waterworks
pref (8)
The Lurd Provost, referring to Baltimore & Onio
Lord Meston and Lord Milne, said that both were born within the city, both were students at the University of Aberdeen, and both had risen to the highest place u the respective fields to which they had devoted their native gifts and in which they had rendered out standing service to the nation. Lord Mestun stood for the great. administrative services of the Em- pire, and Lord Ming for the de- fence services of the Empire.
Presenting Lord Meston, the Lord Provost said they thought of him that day in the setting. of those great Imperial duties in which he was for so many years engaged in India, of those academic interests and activities to the encourage- ment of which he had contributed
Bethlehem Steel
Boelug Alplane Borden Co. (150) Borg Warner ar Case
བྷུ་ ཡོ ཀཀྐནྡྷནྟི,
ཚུཝž།ཀཝཎྜཏྟཱ
ཨིསྶ
ན,
#38ནཱ·ཙྪཱཛྫི
ཝབྷཱཝཝནཱ སྶ, མཧཱཏཱ
Int. Cement
Int. Nick (60) Int. Tel & Tel. Johns Manville Kennecott (.151) Loew's (1) Lorill. (120) Mont. Ward
Jas, Sale
1:
Oct. 11 Oct. 14
161
151
171 174
311 314 91 101
79
792
25
44
25
901 33
281-
Nat City Bk. (1) ... Nat, Da. P. (1.20)... 17) Nat. Distillers Nat. Pwr. Lt. (80)...
Schenley
Sears Roebuck -Boc.-Vac (60)
Southern Pacific
* * * * = = = = * ~ ====*===~27 ÷ = = = = = ‡ ‡ 8=-29
31
Sú
85
84 NY. Central
211
Anacorida Copper
22
N. Amer. (50c. $
20%
were
Atch. T and a. F.
(2sd.) Auburn
Pac Gas (1:50)
273
.........al
451
467
Automobile
381.
401
Pac. Ltng. (3) Packard Motors
431
51
131 14
Penn. Rly. (1)
251
387
Phil. Petro (1)
152
157
Pub. Ser N.J. (2.80)
30 401
Radio Corpn.......
74
Key, Tob "B" (3)
55
441
91
58
512
111
293
30
Brn, Cal. Ed.
(1.50)
221
431
162
Stan. Brands (1)
13.
441
44
Stan. Gas
3+
811
Sta O NJ (1)
441
13 13A
11 13
Ster, Pro. (2.80)...... Studebaker Compn Texas G, Bulp (3)
641
211
308
Transamerica (112)
8
59
594
Τα
Car and Carb
3
(1.40)
69
8
Un, Pac. Rlys. (6)... 90
201
202
Un. Aircraft Corp.... 191
611
Un. Air Line Trans. 103"
311'
United Corpn.
51
134
135
Uni. Gas Impr. (1.20)
181
161
Elec. Bond & Share
131
13;
Univ. Leaf Tob.
(2)
65
341*
had laboured 30 zea-
Elec. Bond $5 P! (5.
US. Indus Alcohol... 44
441
65
UB. Rubber
131 13
U.S. Steel
441 45%
344 35%
Vanddium
177 18
323 47
321
481
311
31
Warner Bros. Picts. West E. & M. (.85)... BOL Call Money
10%
341
.ex. div.
Canadian Pacic Caterpillar Tract Ch. Nat. Bk. (1.40 C'Peake Corp. (250) C'Peake Corp., and
Ohio (2.80) Chrysler (id) Col. Gas & Elec. Comm. Solv (60)... 18) Comm Sthen. Comm Storm.
cum. Pt. (6) Cons. Gas, 'NY (2) 291 Cons. Ou (28) Cont On (25). Corn Prod (3)
Douglas Aircraft
so much, and of those greater Du Pont (2.60%)
issues of world peace in
mcrai which he iously
$6
བྷཱཌ
ཨྠརྣམཨྰཿཀྰ1}ཊྛིཾ
Enū7,
38ཚཡྻུཊྚཀྐཾཏྟཾ
Elec. Bond $6 PI (6) 64 Fox Film "" Gen. Elec. (.60) Gen. Foods (180) Gen. Motors (14) Gen. Rly. Sigs (1)....
* Bid
ARAB REVOLT REPORT
*possible Dátion
SCHOOL TRAINING
NOTHING TO FEAK
Lord Meston said that for the future Abergeen had nothing to lear. Croakers told them that decadence was upon them, that the rising generation would And the world smaller, "narrower, and less Interesting. He did not for a moment believe one word of those gloomy forebodings. The Jab would be diferent. the crientation strange, but the challenge to the
The Board of Education recently young Aberdonian would be as
issued an interesting and instruc vivid as ever And Aberdeen.would
tive report giving the first de- respond.
finite evidence of a decline in Presenting Lord Milne, the Lord well-known collector of historical school attendance. This decrease
and literary manuscripts, is re- Provost
in the number of school-children scid i. they acclaimed
turning to New York with a pre- Lord Meston's services in civil
is not in the least surprising in cldus prize. It' is the administration no less did they re-
original view of the high birth-rate in tuc cognise, Lord Milne's long and de-manuscript of the statement in years immediately following the vored and honourable service in the field. Lord Mine had fought in three wars, he had risen to the rank of Field-Marshal, the highest rank ever attained by any son of
Aberdeen, and he had gained dis- tinctions innumerable. No acci- dental or incidental advantages had been his. This native talents alone his career was due.
Lord Milne said that not only was he born in Aberdeen but he was wholly educated in Aberdeen, He deferred to a number of dis-
tinguished men that his school had turned out, and said he could not help sometimes asking "Why is it necessary for the sons of Scotland to be sent for their education to the wrong side of the Tweed?"
(Special Air Mail Services.
London. Sept. 28. To-day Dr. Gabriel Wells, the
gramme,
12.30 p.m.-Recorded Music,
I p.01.-Local Time and Weather
Report.
1.15 p.m.-Hong Kong Hotel Or
chestra...
1.30 p.m.-Reuter Press Bulletins
Rugby Press News. etc.
15 p.m. Close Down.
4 to 7p.m.--Chinese programme.
6 to 8.15 p.m.-Children's Studio
Concert.
to 11 p.m.-European progrumme. 7 to 7.13 p.m.-"Crown of India
Suite, Op. 66 (Elgar) played by the London Symphony Orches
tra.
7.33 to.7.26 p.m.--
R
Four Violin Solos by Efrem Zimbalist
1. Kuruka Kuruka (Yamada),"
2. Improvisation on a Japanese
Tune Zimbalist).
3. Persian Song"(Glinka),
4. Burlesca (Suk).
7.25 to 7.47 p.m.-
A Jazz Plans Recital by Patricia Rossborough
1. Here is my heart-Selection.
2. Dames.
3. Anything Goes-Selection.
4. A Cavalcade of Martial Tunes. 5. Sweetmeat Jose the Candy
-Man. 7.47 to 8 p.m.-
Four Tunes from "Curly Top" (commending at the King's Theatre on Friday)
(a) When I grow up—Fox-Trot. (b) It's all so new to me--Fox-
Trot.
c) Animal Crackers in my soup
-Fox-Trot.
d) The Simple things in Life-
Fox-Trot.
+
8 p.m.-Local time and weather
report.
3.03 to 8.30 p.m
From the Studio !
A Recital by Mrs. D. M. Richards
(Soprano) and
(Pianoforte).
Nura Kanis
PROGRAMME
1. Songs:-A Selection of Irish
Airs.
1. Danny Boy.
2. I know where I'm going.
3. Killarney.
2. Pianoforte Solo-Selected.
3. A Selection of Russian Peasant
Songs
(a) The Red Sarafon.
(b) Nature has gone to be rest
love.
4. Planoforte Solo-Belected 3.30 to 9 p.m.-
Military Band: Selections Kirkby Malzeard Sword Dance→→ Folk Dance (arr. Ceell Sharp). The Flamborough Sword Dance- Folk Dance arr. Cecil Sharp). Americana (Thurban), Youth and Vigour (Lautensch-
lager).
Colonel BogeyMarch (Alord), Steadfast and True-March (arr.
Bidgood),
Semper Fidel's March (arr.
Hewitt).
1
to 9.15 p.m.-A Relay of the Daventry News Bulletin (Copy- right by Reuter
support of the Arab case which
war, and the decrease In later915 to 9.30 p.m.- January, 1919, at the request of general attendance disappointing
Lawrence of Arabla" supplied in
years. Neither is the decline in the American Delegation to the Peace Conference.
12
After
Vocal Items Clarice Mayne-Medley. Blue Moon.
You and the night and the Music
Lesile Hutchinson.
0:30 to 19 p.m.
From the Studio "A few remarks on Civil Engl- neering in Ecuador" by Mr. G. B. Gifford Hull.
in the view of the educational authorities. for it has been accom- The manuscript. gives, on quarto pages, and without a single school-children passing from ele
panied by an increased number of correction, a lucid and succinct mentary schools to secondary and account of the Arab revolt. writing it Lawrence sent it to a
technical schoola. This is most
means military member of the American!
satisfactory, for it
thu Delegation at his hotel in Paris.
more children are obtaining valu-. Dr. Wells also has the envelope in
able training at an age when it will be most useful to them. The Lawrence's hand.
present educational secondary and technical schools system in turns out young people who have every chance of becoming good and 10.45 to 11 pm-
The existence of this uriginal account of the Arab revolt had been known for some time, and many people were ready to make tempting offers for it. But nobody
knew the owner
It remained for Dr. Wells, who has keen agents in every European capital, to run his prey to earth! and to proffer a price that proved irresistible.
useful citizens.
EFFICIENT YOUTHS
the schools of the nation to pro- Employers are now looking to duce youths eficient in the skill- ed trades.. The apprenticeship system has proved inadequate, but the school training provides an apt substitude. In the Junior
FUTURE RULERS They had done something to-day which he thought was unique in the annals of the town. They had asked a large number of the future rulers of the country to be present. Addressing the school children. NEW JAPANESE CRUISERS technical and trade schools train-
1.
Lord Milne said that he envied
Ing of a specialised character is) them for what the future held in
given, and young workers are! store for them, and for what they
<Specia) Air Mall Service› beginning their working life with were going to see in the world
London, Sept. 28.
more than an elementary know that was to come. On them de- The Wo new Japanese light ledge of the trades which they pended the future not only of cruisers, Mixuma and Mogami, lald
are to follow. Although these Aberdeen, not only of the country down in 1931 at the Nagasaki schools are yet few in number, that led the world, but of the Dockyard and Kure Naval Arsenal the report shows that a large world itself.
respectively, are shortly to be percentage of boys achtere posi- The Lord Provost tled the bur-launched. Each is of 18,500. sons tions of responsibility in a short
hats.
to
10 p.m. Big Ben: Reuter Press
Bulletins.
10.05. to 10.45, p.m.-
A Relay from: Daventry The BBC. Dance Orchestra,
directed by Henry Hall.
Vocal Gems The Chocolate Soldier (0.
Strauss).
The Gelsha (Jones). 11, p.m.-Close down.
"BERLIN PROGRAMME p.m.-Call DJA, DJB, DJN (Germ.,
Engl.).
German Folk Song. Programme Forecast (Germ.
Engl.).
9.15 p.m.-Letter Box. 9.45 pm-News In English on DJA
and in Dutch on DJB, DJN, 10 p.m.--Happy. End!
Finales from famous, Operettas. Connecting Words by Irmgard Zehner. Directed by Eugen Sonn-
tag,
gess tickets the recipients' and is equipped with 15 six-inch space of time. Education being 11.30 p.m.-Current Events,
suns. They are to be the nucleus A company of about 250 attended of a new seventh light cruiser * civic banquet afterwards in the quadron..! Town and County Hall, Aberdeen..
Lord Provost Alexander presided,
and in proporing "Our Youngest of sticking the burgess ticket in Burgesses" mentioned that the the treeman's hat had a history banquet and the curious practice of at least 300 years.
28 by Ludwig van Beethoven At the Plano Iringard Mann-
staedt.MAR
recognised as one of the most | 1145 p.m.-Sonate in D¡Måjor op important aspects of life in the case of every individual, reforms have been constantly introduced and conferences are perpetually | 12.16.a.m-News in English on-DJA being held for
the purpose of and in Dutch on. DJN., securing useful suggestions for 12.30 am-Close DJA, DIN (Germ.
eneral Improvement.
Engl.).
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