Thrilling Hours of Pleasure

that come with picture-taking

VACATIONS, week-ends,

travel...happy hours at the seashore, in the' moun- tatus or abroad-keep a permanent picture record of what you do and see.

You'll enjoy taking the

pictures and they will keep romance and advelture alive and fresh

in your

memory in years to come.

Kodaks

and - The new

Brownjus in colour are de. lightful holiday companions.

Both take excellent pic-

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and both start at very modest prices. Ask your Kodak dealer to

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or mail the coupon for an interesting free "booklet describing the entire range of Eastman-made

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KODAK

THE HONGKONG TELEGRAPH.

EASTMAN KODAK COMPANY

me

67, Des Voeux Road, C. Hongkong. Please send your interesting booklet describing the latest Kodaks and Brownies.

Nante

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Street and nuntbera

City and Country

THE HONGKONG TELEGRAPH

AMATEUR PHOTOGRAPHIC

COMPETITION

$250 Cash

Prizes

Section 1. Bathing and Picnic Photographs. 1st $50, 2nd $20, 3rd $10

Section 2.

Section 3. Section 4.

Views, including Architecture 1st $50, 2nd $20, 3rd $10

and Street Scenes,

Chinese Studies

(Figures and Faces).

1st $50, 2nd $20, 3rd $10.

For the BEST STORY-TELLING PICTURE.

New Kodak 616 with K.A, 1.4.5

1st Lens (Pictures 2/2 X 44--Roll 2nd New Kodak 620 with f.6.3 Lens

Film).

(Pictures 21⁄2 x 3%-Roll Film).

Presented by the Eastman Kodak. Company

Section 5. Snapshots taken by Children under the age 1st $10.

of 14 years.

Fivo Consolation Prizes of No. 2 Eastman Hawk-Eye Box Cameras (Pictures 24 X 34-Roll Film) Presented by the Eastman Kodak Company.

The following Rules will govern the Competition:-

1The Competition is confined exclusively to

amatour photographers,

2 The Prizes will be awarded to the competitors sending in what aro adjudged to be the best photographs in oach Boction (Boction enterod to be marked on the back of each picture) and which reach this Oleo not later than Bist August, 1938. The decision of the Judges shall be final.

3. The right to publish any or all of the entries

in the Telegraph is reserved,

4.-Photographs which have been already entered

in local competitions are ineligible. G-At the conclusion of the Competition, entries will be returned to competitors on application at this Office within seven days.

No responsibility will be accepted for non-: delivery, loss or damage.

Photographs which must not be less than 24" x 8" (excepting in the Children's Section) should be printed in black and white, with the name of the competitor in ink, on the back.

1

3. No correspondence will be entered into in con-

nexion with the Competition. 0-Entries in the Children's Section mast bear the name, age and address on the back in ink, countersigned by a parent.

10-Members of the "Staff are not permitted to

compote..

READ THE RULES CAREFULLY.

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28,

1933,

INSURANCE CASE and the latter had become ellent

JUDGMENT

COURT REJECTS CLAIM

FOR $20,000

when he found he was being inter- rogated by a representative of the Company

The submission he wished to make for the interveners was that not forth- this information was coming because it would not bear scrutiny,

"I think that if this is an at- tempt to get money out of the Insurance Company, it la vary carefully planned and thought out," added Mr. Potter.

A fraudulent man had to die' The case of a "mystery" man, sometime like everybody else, but whose Identity and death were it was curious that this "man of bound up in an alleged drowning straw" as he could call him, should drama and a claim under a life in-dio in this manner. surance polley for $20,000 Straits money, came to an end before the Chief Justice, Mr. J. R. Wood, at the Supreme Court yesterday.

A motion by the widow of Yap Chee-meow late of 21, Shanghai Stroet, Yaumati, to presume his death by drowning in the Pearl River on September 0 Inst year, was refused. A similar applica- tion before Sir Joseph Kemp in November, 1932, had also been un- successful.

Interveners were

His Lordship: Are you suggest- ing that nobody foll overboard?

Mr. Potter: I don't know. It may be that he fell overboard but it was at a place only 12 miles from where his introducer Hyed.

There were four possibilities, ho continued. Yap may have fallen the China overboard and died, he may have Underwriters, Ltd., who did not got ashore, somebody else may nobody have been the victim, or ask his Lordship to make any

fell over at all. order for costa.

The hearing opened on Monday, when the bulk of the evidence was given.

Applicant was represented by Mr. Leo D'Almada, jnr., instructed by Messrs. Lo and Lo, and Mr. Eldon Potter, K.C., instructed by Messrs. Deacons, appeared for the inter-

veners.

Mr. D'Almada: Address. Mr. D'Almada, rising to address the Judge, said he hoped that his actions would never be interpreted by Mr. Potter, for however innocent they might be, they could hardly Call to assume a shady or dishonest aspect through him.

Although the means of deceased were not strictly relevant to tho present issue, ho would remind the court that his mother had affirmed the receipt of amounts ranging from $300 to $1,000 two or three times a year.

Identity Unproved. Addressing the Judge, Mr. Potter said he had opened the case very fully but wished to emphasise that in a case of this kind where Yap and his wife probably lived life or death had to be proved, the a retired life in Kuala Lumpur, and onus of such proof was afirmant. Assuming that tioner had satisfied the court Yap existed, she had now to that he was dent.

on

the the fact that the Company's in- peti-vestigations had failed to disclose that any confirmation of their presence show in Singapore was corroboration of the widow's inability to state ex- actly where they lived or for whom that her husband worked during

time.

The letter of introduction was obtained in a perfectly innocent manner, he stated.

It was common ground that there was no other property belonging to the applicant, so that the issue was between her and the Company.

Dealing with the facts of the case, he submitted that they must be taken as a whole and in that As to the varying accounts of light they were as far as ever from what happened on the ferry, he establishing the identity of Yap suggested that owing to the dark- Chee-meow. In fact he would go neas and the excitement among the passengers, there so far as to say that they were hundred or s0 further, because Chan On, when in were bound to be different vorsions. the witness box, had not taken the

Change of Attitude. opportunity given him of revealing

He was entitled to submit, too,. information about the man whom that the Company had not made he had known for 15 years and

(Continued on Page, 2.) who was his sworn brother. Chan On would not or could not, tell them of one place where deceased had worked, and though the inter- veners had tapped every source of information availabla they were in that position of ignorance still.

His Lorship remarked that the Insurance Company medically óx- umined somebody when they grant- ed the policy in Singapore, and that doctor of the Company again examined him in Hongkong. Was the there any question but that xubject of examination in these places was one and the same man?

A

Mr. Potter said there was no doubt that the man was the same, but the Company's difficulty was that they were not satisfied that the alleged dead man and Yop were ono and the same.

His Lorship said the fact that the policy was taken out in favour of the applicant pointed to It's bona fides, unless a campaign of dishonesty had been running on since it was taken out in Decem- ber, 1930.

"That will be our submission, my Lord," replied Mr. Potter.

Continuing, he said that there were no data on which they could trace events from Decomber, 1000, but his submission was that Yap Intended eventually to swindle the Company.

It was significant that though Yap was 16 years in Kuala Lunipur, not a single witness could, or would, put the Company in touch with anybody who had known him there.

Part of the whole arrangement was the fact that Yap wrote to the, Singapore office asking for a lotter of introduction to the Hong- kong office, intend of personally applying for.the-letter.

"A Man of Straw." Mr. Potter sald he did not wish to attack the honesty of the widow, but the "crass ignorance" that had been Imputed to her would not serve as an excuse for othòr wit- nesses. He suggested that Chan Shook-khow, who said ' he saw the man fall into the river but could not remember the number of his own house, actually lived with his brother-in-law 'Yip Peng-yes; Tho latter and Chong King-hoo, the In- troducera of Yap to the Company. had not given any information about him since his alleged death. The first had ploaded ignorance,,

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