NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
H. M. DOCKYARD, HONG KONG.
EXAMINATION FOR LOCAL
CLERKS.
A limited competitive examina- tion for vacancies for Local Clerks, Grado III, will be held at 9.30 a.m. on Monday, 7th February, 1938. Candidates must be between the ages of 19-30,
Application for selection to, compete must be made in the can- didate's own handwriting and should reach the Commander of Dockyard, H.M. Dockyard not later than am. 22nd January.
NOTICE.
Effective-15th January, 1938, we have been appointed Managers in Hongkong and Canton for the Crown China Co., General Agents in China, for the, Crown Life Insurance Co., Toronto, Canada, GILMAN & CO. LTD.,
in Des Voeux Road C.,
Insurance Phone 30967.
NOTICE.
THE
HONGKONG ̈· TELEGRAPH.
BOMBING OF
PANAY
WEDNESDAY,
THE FUNERAL
OF MRS. RODRIGUES
Το
Italian
Experiences Rotary
Journalist's
Told Club
· Mr. Luigi Barzini, special envoy of the Corriere della Serra, held the interest of á large gathering at the Hongkong Rotary Club yesterday, with a description of his experiences on the U.S.S. Panay, the gunboat sunk by Japanese aircraft on the Yangtse river Inst month.
►
The speaker referred to the death, as a result of the attack, of an Italian fellow journalist who had survived several wars only to meet his end in a strange country where he was doing the job appointed to him,
+
+
Major R. D. -Walker,' Přeuldent, introduced the following: The Italian Consul General, the Marquis G. Pagano di Melito; Rotarians N. F. Allman, F. S. Marsh, Yinson Lee, Shanghai; G. P. Maston, Hankow; P. Chau, Canton; E. P. Mathewson, Arizona; and W. II. Tan, President of the Shanghai Rotary Club. Mr. Tan took the opportunity of practically skimming the Panay each thanking the Rotary Club for the time. They came as low as 'five or hospitality "that had been extended to six hundred feet, and the dropping temporary evacuees of Shanghai, and bombs made a noise ilke steam especially Mr. J. P. Sherry who had escaping from a locomotive; each the boat fremble shown kindness to several families ofį explosion made. Shanghai Rotarians while they were like a wounded animal. Some of the in the Colony.
engineers had released the steam from the Panny bollers for fear of an explosion on board and the steam was hissing out from the boat at the same time
་
run
We take pleasure in advising
The
President Introduced the our Policy holders and Clients
speaker, and said his talk was under that Messrs. GILMAN & CO. LTD.,
the title of "Recent experiences on the Yangtse." da Des Voeux Road, have been
Mr. Burzini said: To be bombed appointed Managers for Hongkong
on a small boat little larger than and Canton, effective 15th January,
the ferries which
between 1938. By mutual arrangement,liongkong and Kowlooh, in the mid-
dle of a very wide and cold stream Mr. Paul Servanin, who will
because December is not a very mild remala na an authorised agent, month in China-when one is going has relinquished the managenient. about seven miles per hour with no
All communications and
possibility of hiding anywhere or jumping into the water to get ashore, quiries should be addressed to
is very disagreeable, Mesars. Gilman & Co. Ltd., or lo Crown Life Insurance, Co. G. P. O. Box 804, Hongkong.
en-
CROWN CHINA CO., General Agonts in Chinn for Crown Life Insurance Co.
Toronto, Canada.
THE HONG KONG SOCIETY FOR THE PROTECTION OF CHILDREN.
1
What to do to help a child
Anyone knowing of a chlid who has been assaulted, neglected, or
-treated in minner ilkely to cause unnecessary suffering or Injury to henith, or knowing of a parent who is seeking advice on any matter concerning a child, would be doing an act of kindness by communicating al once with--
The Hon. Secretaries, H.KS.P.C. c/o G.P.O. Box No. 513, Hongkong, or the Inspector, 40. Pokfulum Road, 1st floor; or the Inspector, Violet Peel Health Centre, Wanchal; or the Inspector, 12, Sai Yeung Choi Street, 1st floor, Kowloon,
All further stops will be taken, and expenses borne, by the Society.
The Informant's name will be kept strictly private, except in cases where malice is proved.
TEXAS OIL FIRE Well Blazing In Centre Of Town
Kilgore, Texas, Jan, 18.
five cities, using Firemen from chemicals, are trying to quench a blazing oil well in the middle of this town opposite the City Hall. Damage estimated at $130,000 has already been done,
fr
to
The Bremen have succeeded preventing the fire spreading nearby buildings, but it is feared that a shift in the wind may cause the fires to break out again.
Flames also jumped up at the rear of the Crane Memorial Hospital, forcing the removal of five patients, including a now-born baby, before they were quenched,
Later.
Unable to exunguish the blazing oll well, fireman ure attempting to tunnel a way through to a neigh- bouring pit in an endeavour to halt the flamesUnited Press.
WHAT'S WRONG WITH BRITISHI SHIPPING?
(Continued from Page 6.)
to be more efficient, looked at on a purely technical basis. This is not altogether a question of subsidy, par- ticularly in the Scandinavian
and Dutch mercantile marines, neither is it entirely a question of first cost.
Dislike Of Modernity.
I would seem that the technicol
adviser of the British shipowner --and again, one is not making a com- plete generalisation-has Π conTM stitutional dislike of anything Unt is now. This may be the fault of ship- owning, for the technical adviser is not usually highly paid, neither had He any seat on the board.
Both of these factora make for lack of progress and for the production of ships which are neither as fast nor as well-equipped as their foreign
rivals.
All things taken into consideration, therefore, the problem of Empire shipping and its future is not an easy one, Foreign competition is an im- portant factor affecting the future, and so is air transport.
anyone.
I say that because I cannot say of us felt fear. You feel fear when a bull chases you across a field, when a gangster is pursuing you or when you are fighting against soldiers; but during the 50 minutes of bombardment all we could do was to keep still and let fate decide on our lives. I was like a tragic lottery in which we were expecting our num- bery to be drawn at any moment; we some of us would live and some of us would die, and there was nothing
Mrs.
JANUARY 19, ́ ́ ̄`· 1938.
NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE.
SWAN, CULBERTSON & FRITZ LATEST REPORTS
New York, Jan. 18.
S. C. & F. Dow Jones summary of yesterday's markets:
Anna Dorothea Rodrigues (nee Koch) aged 67, died at the Monday, Queen Mary Hospital on The late Mrs. Itodrigues was born in Hongkong and spent most of her younger days, in the Italian Convent, where she was well liked. She felliquor and El twb months ago, and never re- covered. She leaves two sons, Messrs. C. H. and F. J. Rodrigues,
The funeral took place Roman Cathelle Cemetery, Happy Valley, yesterday, in the presence of many people, Among these were students of the Italian Convent. The Rev. Fr. J. M. Spada conducted the burlui service
B.
POST
OFFICE.
BILANGHAI AIR SERVICE
Ale Mall Service to Shanghai te
temporarily suspended,
AIR MAIL TIMES Ordinary air mail letters for Im-
ly lower trend on a thin
Prices to-day declined in a general-perial Airways Direct Service to market. Europe etc., will, until further notice,
VIA SIBERLA ROUTE Trading sentiment - was depressed be closed at Kowloon Post Office and
Letters and Postcards for Europe and losses ranged above 2 points In General Post Office 9.00 a.m, on Sun and South America are forwarded
building shares. Eric days. Letters for this Service may "via Siberia" if so superscribed, Balfrond reached new lows on a de- cision to Be a bankruptcy petition.
be posted in the ordinary posting Other ralls weakened. Utilities were boxes at Kowloon Post Office and Coppers at the mixed and movements were narrow, f General Post Office. They should be
fractionally down. clearly marked "By Air Mail" and closed 15 minutes earlier than the. Home Siate reached a new high, ar sufficient postage. Insufficiently time given below unless otherwise double the deficiency or forwarded to close at or before 0 a.m., registered while other gold-mining shores show-prepaid letters may be taxed with stated, and where mails are adverileed farm equipments,
guins, Steels, some by Steamer Service, at the discretion and parcel mails are closed at 5 p.m.
electrical equlp-
on the previous day. ments HASDA and specials showed minor of the Post Office. lossen. Oils were comparatively steady. Airplanes were firm.
INWARD MAILS
The chilet mourner was Mr. A. J. M. Rodrigues, and others present included Messrs. T. Alves, C. A. Barretto, M. A. Baptista, V. M. Barrodos, H. A. Barros, H.
Barros,
A. Bapusta, A. F. Castilho, J. A. Delgado, A. F Delgado, A. A. Guterres, J. J. Guterres, A. A. Philippens, H. Pomeroy, J. F. Da Roza, H. Á. Da Roza, A. C. Riberiro, J. R. Remedios, A. M. Humjahn, D. Rozario, A. Remedios, A. E. Souza, R. So. II. Sequeira, A. E. Tavares, T. Vas, P. N. Xavier and many others.
FLORAL TRIBUTES Beskles three family wreaths, which were buried with the comin, floral tributes were sent by: Rosle, Elsa and Doris Yu, Bowena Wal, Daisy L, Esther Li, Amy Li, Doris. Li and Helene Ma, Mr, and Mrs. J. J
Guterres, Mojor and Mrs. Minheed, Mr. and Mrs. A. Philippens, Mr. and Mrs. A. A. M. Hodrigues and family, Mr. and Mrs. P. J. M. Rodrigues, Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Rumjahn, C. Santos;
Mrs.
The wounded men were cursing. Assistant Teachers, Italian Convent and the machine-guns were rattling School: Class 2, Italian Convent; during the bombardment. The cur- Class 3, Italian Convent; Local Staff of the Chartered Bank of India, sing was such that I had never heard before, I have heard cursing but. Australia and China; Manufacturers never by seventy men cursing in Life Insurance Co.; the Staff of the game curses the whole time. It was N. V., and others. every breath find practically the Nederlandsch Indische Handelsbank, not profane cursing bul more ex- pletive and definitive of the char acters of the people who were doing
the bombing: (Laughter),
every
Every window-pare and piece of glass, and practically every- thing else was broken, We began gathering blankets.
I had a pretty good idea how many bombs there would be in the bombing racks, and I counted and thought that after twenty minutes they would be exhausted; however, they seemed to go on endlessly. Even when the ing people ashore, the bombing went on. I was talking with a felend and Baid to him that It would be a terribly silly thing to be killed now when the whole thing was nearly ever, but the danger there.
CORRESPONDENCE
Sun Fo's Interview In Singapore
To The Edilor,
Hongkong Telegraph.
Sir, In your
editorial, "Better
were
ed fractional
were
Curb stocks and bonds lower, but United States Govern- ment issues were higher.
S. C. & F. correspondent cables: Stucks: Prices continue to show a moderate recession, s trotters lighten their lines. Further irregu Jurity is indicated. Business failures for the week totailed 203. Bank de- posits
amounted to $14,463,000,000.
for the week
Cution; The Farm Bill is still In- complete, but the conferçes are re- ported to have agreed that the mor- keling quotas will become effective when supplies reach 19,500,000 bales, so that the quotas will probably be come effective either this year or in 1930. The continued uncertainty of the French situation and the failure of the renewal of textile demand were discouraging factors.
Wheat: The mill and foreign mar- kets are easier and no`exports have been reported. There have been some private reports of moisture in the South-West, while rumours of dust-storms come from other areas. A good cash demand, is reported.
Corn: There is news of beneficial rains from the Argentine. Country offerings are light and there is a possibility of a better feeding de- mand due to the prevailing cold weather.
Is
Rubber: Akron reports that there encouragement in some quarters due to expectation of a cut in the quota and the possibility of An Increase in automobile produe- tion. Tire sales are slow, but in- ventories are reported to have been reduced materially,
Sugar: The market was dull and prices were a shade easier on fur- ther scattered liquidation.
Steel mill netivity during the week January 15th.. according to
knew some of us would be wounded, motor-boats and sampans were bring- Left Unsald", which appeared on ending ican Iron & Steel Institute.]
we could do to save ourselves.
SENSATION OF SURPRISE The strongest sensation we had was that of surprise. was on the after deck when the first plane flew,
We had just had luncheon
over us.
and I was talking with some news- paper men looking out at the landscape. Somebody had just said:| This is a very peaceful place to anchor." (Laughter).
is a sort of metal tube
What we
A MISTAKE
was
always
did after the bombing depended on what we thought was the reason for the bombing.
We had a little meeting, hidden in the rushes at the side of the Yangise.
It was only Inter that I learned in
The
was al 29.8 per cent. of capacity, as against 27.8 the previous week,
Dow Jones Averages Jan. 17.
Close 132.49 131.53
31.81
31.00 20.05
20.78
91,05
90.9
53,75
11 Commodity Index 54.15
U.S.
COMMODITY PRICES
-LATEST-CABLED
QUOTATIONS
January 7th, you took exception to many things that Dr. Sun Fo was re- ported by United Press to have said at Singapore. You particularly ob- jected to two items in that report:
30 Industrials "Japan (1)
wants to step into 20 Rails Hongkong. But- If Britain allows 20 Vitlities that, she might just as well let the 40 Bonds Singapore Base go too."
(2) "China's ability to hold out depends upon whether she continues kong to get munitions by way of Hong- Hongkong to be Isolated, nor can Britain cannot allow China, whose other opportunities of I had seen another war in Ethiopia Shunghal and from the newspapers, obtaining munitions are very slight." and I had had a tragle experience that the bombing was due to a mis-
It Dr. Sun Fo had really said the take. They had received a message then that bombing planes do drop tak bombs-by-mistake sometimes. Therethis was not published but was told above, then your comment-upon-It bombs do get stuck once in a while a Chinese boat, loaded will troops, have been perfectly justifiable, and in which me by a high Japanese oficer--that and something other of propaganda
something of bad taste". und, when the first bomb dropped, would go upstream camouflaged by my first Impression WAS
American flag. The message Dr. Sun Fo's friends would have the the
New York, Jan. 18. plane was returning from a bernbing came by a usually reliable Chinese nothing say to it. Unfortunately, expediuon and
The following quotations on the one of its bombs had spy I suppose, and the order was your editorial was based upon a re-
given to bomb the ship. sluck and dropped itself,
port which had "grossly misquoted" New York commodity exchange are It was a disagreeable and anxious We did not know a anything about him, according to a wire from him Issued by Reuter: experience but that was all I felt; I that at the time, and thought that it at Rangoon on January 9, in jnswer thought that was the end of it was a declared war. We also thought to enquiries from his friends in Hong- However, the plane and other planes)
it might be the Intention of the | kong. circled round us, dived again and Japanese to destroy the gasoline-
a. time like the present when March dropped d more bombs. There was no carrying convoy which was with the rumours are so easily mistaken for May gospel truth, when remarks in- July were bombing uf.
October.. Hypothesis formed in the mind of the better off we would be, so we did laborious ingenuity into dark sayings December
the stream to meet the of sinister import, and when it be Spot all of us because pobdily could speak. not cross We all thought that Japan had de- Japanese Infantry on the other side. hoves everyone who
has the good clared War on America for something, and then walked to a village which China at heart to be studiously care- We hid in the rushes until darkness, relations between England and of which we knew nothing; that ne something had happened somewhere had been found by our Chinese cook
to avold
even the suspicion of
will agree with me that it is un-
that
to
mistake we were the target. Theythest we could get from the Japanese nocently made are often twisted by Panay. We all thought that the fur-
New York Colton
Opening Closing
0.48/47 8.43/43 8.55/55 8.40/40 8.59/59 8.55/50 6.60/60 8.62/63 8.70b/71a 0.00/60
8.53
From
Per
OUTWARD MAIL, TIMES Registered and Parcel Malts .oro-
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Sinking
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many via Hamburg.
Air Malt for Manila, Guam, Ilono- Pan American Airways Plane
Wed, Jan. 10.
lulu, and U.S.A., by the "Pan-
American Airways Direct Ber- vico
Kowloon P.0.
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..Jan. 19, 5 p.m.
(Due San Francisco, 27th Jan.)
Ord,
*** G.P.O.
Jan. 10, 5 pm.
Reg.,
Jan. 19. 5 pm.
Ord..
Air Mail for Chungking by the C.N.A.C. Mane
"C.NA.C?__Airways_Direct_Jer-
„Jan. 20, 6 z.m. .Wed., Jan. 10.
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vico."
RCE..
Ord.,
Reg.,
Orth
Samshiu and Wuchow Kongmoon
Haiphong
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Japan and Europe via Siberla
Thursday
Jan. 19, 5 D...
Jan. 10,
G.P.O.
p.in.
.Jan. 19, 5 p., Jan. 20, 6 am.
Tal Hing Thurs., Jan. 20, 8.15 am. Tal Lee....Thura., Jan. 20, 11 am. Canton......Thurs., Jan. 20, 2 pm. Carthage ..Thurs., Jan. 20, 3.80 p.m.. Kamo Maru .Thurs., Jan. 20, 6 p.m..
Manila, Australia and New Zealand Kitano Maru
Fri., Jan. 21, 1.30 p.m.. Fri., Jan. 21, 2 p.m.
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Jan. 21, 5 pm
Fri., Jan. 21..
......Jan, 21, 5 p.m..
Jan. 22, 9.45 am.. Jan. 22, 10.30 am..
.
Friday
Shanghai and Japan
Holhow, Pakhol and Halphong Dairen..
Felix Roussel Kingyuon
Fulda
March
The First Notice Day for March Cotton is Feb. 23 with Delivery date March 1.
New York Rubber
14.75b/820 14.01 /91
via Thursday Island-due Thurs-
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day Island 3rd February. Strelta, Sandnican, Ceylon, India, E. Corfu
and S. Afrlen, Aden, Egypt and Europe via Marseilles--duc Mar- selles, 18th February.
Ord,
15.21b/233 15,36N
Air Mall for "KL.M.
Service"due
Amsterdam
Saturday Airways Corfu
301h
G.P.O. and K.P.O..
January,
Reg.
Ord
Formosa
... Hongkong Maru
in the world of which we were after some scouting round. ignorant and probably American It was a sad party. We found some fishing in troubled waters, I think ships were being bombed in Shanghai. coolles from the villages round about wise to jump at conclusions before the and gave them $5 each to tako ́us to TAKING REFUGE
Hoslen, which was about seven miles relevant facts upon which to found May from the arst village we struck. No- sound conclusions are known. The July 15.03 702 body spoke. We were all walking thing that any responsible Chinese September. 15.14,/14 draped with blankets and still kept particularly Dr. Sun Fo, would like December..
Sules for the day:-1,470 tons. our safety belts on because they were to see is to have England embroiled padded and gave us some warmth.
the In
present Sino-Japanese War. that China can only be saved through her own efforts, and most certainly July
There was no time to linger in hypothesis of that sort, and we tried to And a Bate refuge. The Panay is a very slim worship built of nothing heavier, I should think, thun the usual metal plating of all boats, and wounded. she was designed specially for bandits and such people on the banks of the
halt.
one, I don't know where
Our extra clothing was put on the We Chinese realize only too clearly May
DEATH OF SANDRI
the
well.
G.P.D. and K.P.O. Parcels, Reg., Ord,
.Bat, Jan. 22..
Jan, 27, 0.30 am,
Jan. 22, 10 am
Sat., Jan. 22, 10.30 a.m.
Air Dial for "Imperial Airways Imperial Airways Plane Sat., Jan. 22.
Direct Bervice"
(Duo London, 31st January)
Air Mail for “Australia by Imperial Imperia! Airways Flane Sat, Jan. 22.
Airways Service"
Chicago Wheat
00%/00% 96%/06% 90/90 81/01%
00%/90%
Monday's
Sales:-
17,040,000 bushels. Chicago Corn
00 100% 00%/60% 00%/60% 01/01
01701%
Winnipeg Wheat
135/124
124%/124% 117/117, 100%/100%
Swałow
Amoy and Shanghai
July
I was walking behind the stretcher not by creating bad blood between Sept. .... river. Her only defence was one on which my wounded colleague, England and Japan over Hongkong. machine gun ballet-proof shield Sandri, was carried. I was talking
WEN YUAN-NING. which went round the lower aft deck. with him as we walked along The engine room was protected by a similar shield and the two shields where rice grows and the land is
moonlight. He was from Milan, but doing a job and doing that job May over-lopped for about a yard and ant. It must have looked very much WELCOME ADMIRAL
September like the shores of the Yangtse with That was the safest place and that its rice fields, country houses and the mg and the telephoning the American Of course you know, of the walk- was where the fragments of shell sound of bells-we heard were stopped. They went through sounding the air-raid alarm-must trying to reach
them missionaries round-the countryside the first shield but did not have the have seemed like convent bells to brandor to get the news out, and
the American Am- May strength to get through the second him. He did not know they were air how we arrived at the shores of the October quired such knowledge of engineering dying because of a stupid mistako.
We raid alarms. He knew he was dying: Yangtse again where Admiral Holt, that we did, but it is a magical fact He had been
the Commander of the British shipė that a man can find the safest place Morocco, in the Sahara against the
through wars in on the Yangtze, was waiting with in a landscape of which he knows Arabs, against the enemies of the
sandwiches and cold water, i never nothing.
felt the need of cold water so much Facisti, in Ethiopia and The fifty minutes we spent under months in Spain. Ite was killed with you warm tea.
for ten as in China where everybody offers bombardment were the most appall- Ensminger, the American sailor.
Macdonald said: “I hope when I Ing minutes in a man's life. We stood Sandri said to me: This is there and walted. Norman Alley, stupid end." He naked ma to see his miral there with sandwiches
get to Heaven I find a British Ad-| Universal Cameraman, Soong, the wife and children, I told him to New York Times photographer, and buck-up but he knew he was dying.
cold water.”. (Laughter). Meyell, the M.G.M. cameraman, rush and he asked me for a drink of water. ed out and took pictures. We were I told him it was not safe to ask for thinking that if we were going to water, but I would get some hot tea. live through it we must and refuge He laughed and said "It is safe for ashore.
a dying-mon.”
As we were getting near Hoslen, he
and
With the death of Sundr! and the
TOY SHOP ENTERED Burglar And Receivers
Sentenced
Japanese toy shop. in Nathan Rood Pleading guilty, to breaking into a on January 14, Ho Kwok-tung, 24, labour when he made was sentenced to three months hard another ap- pearance before Mr. H. R. Bulters at the Kowloon Magistracy yesterday, He was accused of taking about $600
unhappy bombing of the Panay, lost two of my near and dear friends. was Neall of the Associated Press, Another one who had died in Spain
I am afraid now that my job is more Wo carried on, gathering the things we would need Inter very coolly said to me
dangerous than that of a General "I have been thinking conducting baltic! This is the Macdonald, the London. Times man, about it and I don't think those were third or fourth close death. I havO said, "we must get cigarettes," and Japanese or Chinese planes; they seen in the last few years, and my worth of toys and crockery. I went round looking for my over- must have been Russian planes." I friends are beginning to call me Convicted of receiving "and dia- coat and filling up my pockets with told him he might be right.
"Bring-yourself-back-alive" "Bərzini tributing the stolen articles, Au cigarettes which belonged to, I don't
He was an old Fascist
who had
I don't know who-nobody was paying much fought against the Bolsheviks, and death any more, but shall take things convictions, was also sentenced to think I shall challenge Yau, 20, coolle, with two previous attention to property! ·
perhapa as he died he closed on a casily from now on. (Applause), throo months, and recommended for four hawkere tragic mistake,” but he wanted to give Rotarian Mackintosh In thanking banishment. Of some conclusion to his life and it was the speaker, congratulated him on similarly charged with receiving, We were then in the engine-room logical for him to think that. I don't his command of the English language, three were bound over, and another and the noise was terrific: the planes know much about that, but it was and commiserated with him on the discharged........... came down every forly seconds or very pitiful to see him die in China loss of his friends and his unhappy Detectivo Sergeant North prosecut- so with the engines wide open and in a war he was not interested in, experience.
TERRIFC NOISE"
ed.
G.P.Ó. & EP.O.
Reg
Jan. 22, 5 p.m.
Ord..
Jan, 23, 9 a.10.
GIỜ. & ERO.
(Due Darwin, 30th January)
ner.. Ord.,
Jan. 22, 5 p..
Jan 23, 9 am,
Sunday
Soochow ....Sun., Jan, 23, 8.30 am.. Talyuan
Sun, Jan. 23, 9 .. Tuesday
Swatow and "Shanghai ........... Klungchow „Tuez, Jan. 25, 0.30 a.m. Manila, Mocasser and Sourabaya.. Tjinegara...Tues., Jan. 26, 8.30 am.. Stralis,
*India, *Ceylon,
Aden, Memnon *Egypt and Europe yla Mar
Parcels bellles-due Marseilles 23rd, Feb-
Reg
ruary and London Parcels duo London, 2nd. March.
Ord,
Air Mail for "T. L. M. Airways Memnon .....
Service"-due Amsterdam February.
3rd.
G. P.
Reg.
Ord..
Shanghai, Japan, Canada, US.A., C. Emp. of Russia
and S. America and Europe via Vancouver B.C., (Parcels for Can- nda only)due Vancouver B.C., 12th Feb, and Europe via Siberia,
Wednesday
Tues., Jan. 25.
...............Jan. 25, 11 am... Jan, 25, 12.45 pm, ..Jan. 25, 1.30 p.m..
Tuck, Jan.” 25. O. and K. P. O.
Jan, 25, 12.30 p.m
Jan, 25, 1 p.m. ..Tuca., Jan. 20,
Porcels, Reg..
..Jan. 25, 4 p.m.
.Jan. 25, 5 pm.
Ord..
Jan. 23, 6.30 p.m.
Swatow, Shanghai had Tientsin .... Chaksang ...Wed., Ján, 20, 8.30 am.. Fort Bayard and Haiphong ....... G. G. Paul Doumer
Wed, Jan, 20, 2 p.m. Manila
Pres, Garfield Wed, Jan. 20, 5 p.m... Thursday Japan, Canada, U.S.A., Central and President Jefferson..Thurs, Jan. 27.
South America and *Europe vin Victoria, B,C,—due Victoria, B.C... Parcela 18th February and Európe via-
Reg ----- Biberia, undangan pena špo
Ord *Superscribed correspondence only.
Jan. 27, 4 pm...
-Jan. 27, 6.20 bm
Jan 27,5 @pta
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