This has a stamped C.H1208 on what looks like something underneath that has been scratch out, also a smaller bit has been scratch out on another part of the run off.
"In 1920 Pathé introduced a line of "needle-cut" records, at first only for the USA market. The needle-cut records were laterally-cut discs designed to be compatible with standard phonographs, and they were labelled Pathé Actuelle.[3] In the following year, these "needle-cut" records were introduced in the United Kingdom and within a few more years they were selling more than the vertical Pathés, even on the continent. Attempts to market the Pathé vertical-cut discs abroad were abandoned in 1925, though they continued to sell in France until 1932."
"Scala records first appeared in Britain in 1911, part of the cheap German import invasion which helped drive prices down at the time. They used mainly Beka masters at the time. Following the end of the war, Scala made a re-appearance [...] ; this time made in Britain and using masters from Gennett & Vocalion in America and home-produced masters with a CH-prefix. Only the CH- ones which are hand-scribed are genuine Scala matrices. If the number is type-stamped, it is a control number covering a master from English Vocalion. The label was discontinued in 1927 along with many other Vocalion-styled 10" records, when they decided to concentrate on 8" issues. The catalogue numbering started at 1 originally, and the same series used post-war, reaching nearly 900, though some early issues had a 1 in front of the normal catalogue number (when the number had reached over 100). I think this was to align it with the same issues on Coliseum."