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THE CHINA MAIL, NOVEMBER 23, 1940.

NOISY NIGHT IN LONDON AIR RAID

MORE LONDON children were killed and more families made homeless by Nazi ́bombing from the air. The raids were heavy, but after the "raiders passed" signal had been sounded early in the morn- ing there was a quiet spell for an hour before an- other alert period began. The raiders approached London from different directions, and from time to time were coming over in steady streams one after the other.

It was a noisy night, but much of the noise was due to our own heavy and long-continuing A.A. fire. A black night at the beginning, before the moon had risen, was lit up by flashes from the guns, by searchlight concentrations, and by what seemed to be a new flare used by the raiders, which cast a yellow glow lasting some seconds. Later there was bright moonlight, but still the continuous flashing of London's guns was not eclipsed.

It is said that people are get- ting used to the heavy gunfire suf- fciently to be able to sleep on un- disturbed, and probably an ad- vantage of Tube nights is that the noise does not penetrate to these deep shelters.

Londoners arriving in town for a new week of work looked cheer- ful and fresh enough. Some of

an

age in a neighbouring stract. Another woman was rescued after being imprisoned for hour and a half. Two workmen were trapped for an hour in a small building which caved in on them, but

escaped with

abrasions and shock.

The statue of the horse Pegasus fell to the ground from the steeple

that

the girls who work at stores which of the Inner Temple Library. A have been damaged in recent raids German bomb recently struck the were on their way to prepare for, clock tower, over which Pegasus the latest thing in bargain hunts stocd, ripping a hole in its side, for shoppers salvage sales.

Being out for the night on war-the

and the authorities decided den's duties

lower must be demolished. (writes reporter) When workmen pulled down the

structure Pegasus fell clear

the statue of and was

of the debris, damaged.

picked up almost un-

I saw much of last night's activity upper in one sector of London, and, if one could forget that death and destruction were being aimlessly let loose, the sky, with its chang- ing pattern of flashes, piercing searchlights, and bursting shells, was thrilling to watch.

SALVAGE OF CRASHED AIRCRAFT

When the red glow of a fire started by the raiders appeared in the distance it seemed as if the gunners put 3 specially heavy barrage round this possi- ble attraction for further raid. craft. ers. Before long the firemen hadi done another good job of work and the tell-tale glow had gone. ing from serious injuries in the

"Like An Express Train"

Mr. E. V. Bowater has been appointed by the Minister of Air- craft Production to take charge of the salvage of all crashed air-

A building in Central London was hit during the second warn- ing. The bomb.exploded on a parapet, and threw massonry into the basement area. People in the building heard the whistle of this and other bombs, and roof wat- chers said that the blast was like an express train tearing through a tunnel. There were many peo-

Mr. Bowater is chairman of the Bowater

paper campanies. He entered the businese after recover-

last War.

1

"Four Sons," stirring 20th Century Fox drama, features Eugenio Leontovich, as the mother, and (from top down) Don Ameche, Alan Curtis, Robert Lowery and George Ernest as her boys.

At the King'a.

COAST ARMY STANDS

AT THE

READY

THE ATMOSPHERE along the coast is grim but

ple in the building, but none was confident as the people wait almost hour by hour

Later the

same

hurt. They were taking shelter, and, having listened to the rum-for Hitler's attempt at invasion. Now many of the ble of the explosion, went drinking tea.

on shops are boarded up. The peaceful country lanes building was hit again, but a girl which visitors to this country like myself find so at- standing within a few yards of tractive resound to the rumble of trucks and the roar where this bomb fell in a base of motor cycles, writes a correspondent.

ment area in the centre of the building escaped with cuts.

brick wall.

Make Buick Sedan

oiris 10 Saloon

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Would you clean your

with

teeth

SAND?

which is scratching your teeth in just.

In spite of the full moon and sleep I have had for a week, The Among the killed in a South, the high tide, however, there has quiet was almost oppressive, no West London area were people been a strong gale blowing in the alarmis, no droning planes, no who had been removed from Straits of Dover, which has led bursts of gunfire. It seemed al neighbouring houses because of delayed action bombs. Less than declare that the equinoctial gales the world may soon be a battle- many of the local inhabitants to most incredible that this part of two hours after several hundred have come early, and that it may feld on which will be decided you wouldn't dare to olean your teeth || polishing ingredientin Gibbs can never people who had been hastily eva- now be impossible for the Ger- the most important issue civilisa-with sand, because you know those scratch-it polishes. Gibbs penetrating cuated had settled in their tem- manis to pilot their flat-bottomed tion has ever known, porary quarters a heavy bomb boats across the Channel with was dropped in the district and any success.

A hotel not far from where titty particles would soon destroy foam will keep your teeth thoroughly stove in the side of a stone and

we were standing had been hit | the delicate tooth enamel. Yet you clean and healthy, and give, thèm's a few days ago. One section may be ating a harsh, tooth-cleaner of the hotel had been com; the same way.

brilliant shine ; after even two or three pletely demolished where the

days' use of Gibbs Dentifrice you see bomb had penetrated all four HARSH TOOTH-CLEANERS HAVE⚫ difference in your teeth. storeys. Two Journalists who THE SAME EFFECT AS SAND — had been on the top floor in the they roughen the teeth, which through had had an unbes in time get dull and lifeless, room the bomb had gone Ievable escape. They had Don't let this happen to your teeth. fallen when the floor collapsed Use Gibbs- Dentifric and been buried on the ground by twelve feat of debris. They had dug÷their way - but with, only minor injuries,

Awaiting Tocsin :

A woman living in a tall, old. fachloned: house said that half an hohr after she and others prepared and waiting.

At any rate the Army is fully had left the house it was level the men have orders to sleep fully Most of led to the ground. Civil da-dressed, so that they can be ready fence workers were quickly on at a moment's notice, and the the scene, and they found that civilians go to bed each night. many people were pinned down prepared to hear the church bells by wreckage."

has come. tolling, to tell them that the hour

Faint cries for help could be heard, and at once, regardless of danger from the crumbling build- ing, rescuers began their work. In less than an hour the masonry, and earth which had imprisoned peo- ple as they lay asleep in-chairs and on mattresses had been moved,

Behaved Magnificently

Awaiting The Fight

I climbed up on one of the aliffe outside Dover and with

• the aid of glasses I could make out the coast of France, ́ ́1 -saw, the church steeple in Boulogne and the lighthouse near Calals. Idined with three officers in But what was most ironical of [one of Great Britain's crack-re- all was to make out the tall giments, They were in fine spirit thin monument set up after the and confident of the ultimate out- last ward in memory.. of the come if the Germans should-de- famous Dover, Patrol,

cide to attempt invasion. I talked with two farmers on

They told me that their › men

Seven of the people, including two women and a child, were dead. the cliff, and they told me that were eagerly awaiting the fight when reached. Others were ser the R.A.F. had bombed the Ger-In fact, would be disappointed if iously injured, but helpers say man barges and dispositions all it did not take place. that all behad magnificently. A night long. They had sat on They said that although many little girl of about five was saved, the hills and watched the red of their troops had families in but her mother was killed and tracer bullets and explosions London and were worried about: her father was talcen to hospital which went on continuously for them, due to the difficulties in in a grave condition. A rescue many hours during the night, getting news through at the pres worker said that it was amazing They have watched many of sent time, they had all decided that more people were not killed; these attacks, and in their opinion that the best way they could pro- many who were partially buried it was one of the heaviest bom-tect them would be to put up a had little if any Injury,

bardments of the war. find fight on the coast that would go The bodies of a woman and halimang were recovered from three miles from the coast, and it greatest battles. Great Britain had I spent the night in a house down in history as one of the beneath a great plios of wrock was the Arat peaceful:

aver fought

Gibbs. Dentifrice does everything a

dentifrice should do in the most thorough manner, gently but surely.

Your whole mouth feels fresh-when The spécia you tise Gibbs.

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