SHOWING
TO-DAY
Af 2.80, 5.10.
THE CHINA MAIL, AUGUST 19, 1935.-
BRITISH EVACUATION
7.15 & 9.30 PM. PLAN FOR THE HOLIDAYS
GREAT TRADITION HAS INSPIRED A GREAT
PICTURE!-
GREATER IN TECHNICOLOR!
Kentucky
IN TECHNICOLOR.
LORETTA YOUNG-RICHARD GREENE
WALTER BRENNAN · DOUGLAS DUMBRILLE KAREN MORLEY • MORONI-OLSEN
NEXT CHANGE
COLUMBIA
4 SHOWS DAILY .2.30-5.15 715-9.30
A
20th Century-Fox
##
Picture
FLIGHT TO FAME
with CHARLES FARRELL
TAKE ANY TRAM OR HAPPY VALLEY BUR
JACQUELINE WELLS
ORIENTAL
FLEMING ROAD
WANG HAI TELL 28473
OLAST 4 TIMES TO·DAY•
THE SAVAGE SPECTACLE OF A CITY ENSLAVED!
Robinson turns fighting prosecutor... to rock the screen with
thrill after thrill running gangsters ragged.
EXMELRO G.
ROBINSON &
The Law
BARBARA O'NEIL
JOHN BEAL
WINDY BARRIE - OTTO KRUGER
A COLUMBIA PICTURE
TO-MORROW-MONDAY-TUESDAY
THE "DEAD END KIDS” FIGHT FOR THEIR LIVES!
ANGELS
WITH
DIRTY
FACES
JAMES CAGNEY PAT O'BRIEN
MATINEES◆20c.-30c ● EVENINGS 206-30c1-50c.-70c-
Swimming Season
New Style POCKET WATCH
for GENTLEMEN
Stainless Steel Case 15-21 Jewels, Lever Movement with Assorted Dials From $15.
Show your Waterproof
Don't forget the Modern Watch for you and your misses.
Watch to Accompanied Swimmer Smart L
Wrist
HUNTLEY WATCH COMPANY
148, Des Voeux Rd.
(opposite Sincere's)
How evacuation would be car- ried out, if it became necessary, in the peak holiday season, was de- scribed by Mr. Walter Elliot, Minister of Health, recently.
Mr. Elliot, apeaking at a confor- ence in Tunbridge Wells of local ́authorities In Kent and Sussex, cald that he saw no reason to be: lieve that evacuation would have to take place while the holiday season was in full swing, but if It did, special difficulties would be bound to arise in holiday resorts. The Government's plan contem- plated the dispersal of 3,000,000 people -mainly school children with teachers, younger children with their | mothers, and expectant mothers-from congested areas into relatively safer parts of the country within three or four days.
their
This operation was so gigantic and complex that the Southern Railway time-table for the exacuation of 475,~ 000 persons from London alone ran to 130 pages of close printing. This time- table was only one of many.
OVERCROWDING AT FIRST
To try to arrange for carying num- bers of people to be delivered to holi- day centres according to the season of the year would introduce an un- workable complication.
People on hollday, he said, should not attempt to take their children back to an evacuable area If an emergency arose. But all who had essential work to do would be expected to return to their poste.
There would inevitably be aver- crowding in holiday towns at the be- ginning of an emergency, and for a short while the ordinary standard of one person per habitable room would have to be exceeded. The overcrowd- ing would not last long because the evacuees would be redistributed.
Mr. Elliot announced a second addi- tion to the list of evacuation areas. He has had the list under consideration following protests from many of the Councils adjoining London against their inclusion among neutral areas. To the original list of evacuation areas published last January a number of big towns in the North were recently added. The amended list became known as Plan 2.
MORE EVACUATION AREAS
If an emergency were to arise now, said Mr. Elliot, Evacuation Plan 2 would be put into effect.
EGYPT'S NEW CABINET
Alexandria, To-day.
All Maher Pasha yesterday an nounced the new Egyptian Ca- binet. He becomes both Minis- tor for Foreign Affairs and for the Interior, as well as Air Min- ister.
The Ministry comprises six in2- dependents, four Baadists, ONO Liberal Constitutionalisto.
It includes 8irry Pasha, Minis- ter of Finance, and Assam Boy, former Minister for Ankara Wakfa (plous foundations). Reuter.
DOG TRACK VISITORS "TERRIFIED"
Reference to mysterious fears on: the part of people attending the grey-- hound racing track at Southall was made at the Old Bailey yesterday,. when Edward Henry Sampson, 53, a bookmaker, was found guilty of as- saulting George Hutchinson.
Inspr. Matthews said that Sampson had been a bookmaker for 30 years, and had been on the Southall track 10 years.
1
The Common Serjeant, Mr. Cecil Whiteley, K.C.: We have been hearing a great deal about gangs,, Is there: any complaint against him in this. way?-No, but people say they are terrified and threatened with violence. I do not know why they should be. frightened, nor do I know of whom they are afraid.
"There might have been a charge: of murder," Mr. Whitley added.
"It seems that someone used. knives."
He deferred sentence until next sessions and refused ball.
"The Commissioner of Police ought to be communicated with," he said. "Proper evidence on which I can rely should be brought forward.”
Sampson's son, Henry Edward Sampson, 30, a clerk, and George Bur- rows, 28, a labourer, charged with But he was preparing Plan 3, in causing bodily harm to George Hut- which he had reviewed the classifica-chinson and Harry Guscott, tion of areas.
found not guilty and discharged.
In the south-eastern region the boroughs of Bexley, Dartford, Erith and Gravesend, and the urban districts of Crayford, Northfleet and Swans- combe, which were neutral, would be- come wholly or partly evacuable un- der Plan 3.
With the exception of Dover, he had
STORY OF VISIT TO
not felt able to revise the classification REGISTRAR
were
was
of the receiving areas in the region. Some of these areas might be open to criticism, but what he had to decide thirty, of Dellygiff, Florencecourt, near When Mrs. Lilian May Dowler, was whether children would have a Enniskillen, Northern Ireland, better chance of safety there than in accused at Enniskillen their homes in the large congested her. sixty-year-old husband, George-
of poisoning towns.
had called at a registrar's office and- Frederick Dowler, it was stated she-
made inquiries__ about getting mar- - ried.
The fundamental principle of the Government's evacuation scheme was dispersal.
YOUTH TOLD
"KEEP AWAY FROM GIRL"
A father who objected to the at- tention paid to his daughter by a youth was summoned at Eastbourne for assaulting the youth sh
She was accused jointly with James. Willoughby, thirty, her servant..
John Brown, clerk of the Enniskil-- len Rural Council and registrar of: births, deaths and marriages, said on. June 14 Mrs. Dowler and Willoughby called at his office, and the woman asked for particulars of procedure for getting married in a registrar's office..
!
Brown asked her who was get- - ting married, and she replied it! was a girl from Dublin'.
Mrs. Dowler and Willoughby were » remanded in custody.
The man was Fred Lindly, a cafe proprietor, a. Seaside, Eastbourne. He Lindly said he complained to Pot❤ was summoned for assaulting Bertter and told him to leave his daugh Potter, nineteen, of St. James's-road, | ter alone. On this occasion Potter Eastbourne.
called him a "liar" and he lost his
Potter said Lindly came to the shop 'temper. where he was employed and asked him. if he had seen his daughter the previous night. When he replied no, defendant hit him on the jaw.
The magistrates dismissed the sun- mons under the Probation of Offen- ders Act, and the clerk advised Potter to leave the girl alone...