PEACE ACT AS EXAMPLE
TO WORLD
MR. HENDERSON'S SUGGESTION Mr. Arthur Hondorion, President faith in the work of peace. That of the Disarmament Conference, was a big task. apeaking at the Labour Conference}··
AMERICA AND RUSSIA.
THE HONGKONG TELEGRAPH. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1933.
MASS MARRIAGE.
FESTIVAL CELEBRATED IN ROME
Ronio, Oct. 01.
Over 2,000 couples wore married at dawn at the same, moment in various churches of the city and province to-day, in celebration of the Fascist Marriago Festival, at Hastings said that millions of the common people, whom they re-
When they camo to the inter- The Festival was arranged in prosented, had shown a determina-national sido of their task of order to counteract the savero de- tion that, so far as lay in their organising peace they found there cline in the Italian birth rate. power, there should be no more was one political instrument-and
wor.
It was a dedication, a solemn VOW, pledging them to the work of peace,
It was a formal break with tho old traditions, with the blind! loyalties that had made the workera the victim of war..
only one the League of Nations. Each couple received a photo
PEACE
FAR EAST
CONFERENCE
TO CURE
WIRELESS SUPPORT
IN GERMAN CIRCLES
DISEASES
WAVE
The most argent need was to graph of Mussolini and a gift of BY ULTRA-SHORT
500 lire, presented by the Secretary bring two great Powers, the of the Piscist Party, together with United States and the Soviet Union, Into partnership in the task of organising peace.
ROTARIAN: TIFFIN
CHINA LOTTERY
FIRST PRIZE TOKET NOT SOLD
H.K. MEMBERS MEET. ON PRESIDENT HOOVER
Hongkong Rotarians had a treat
Shanghai,.Oct. 81. yesterday when they were invited Before an immense crowd at the to timu abroad the 8.8. President Canidromo, the drawing of the Hoover by thair president, second' China National State Rotarian T. B. Wilson,"
Lottery took place to-day Welcoming the membore and Ticket Number 485,328 drew the guests on behalf of Capt. F. An-first prize, but it was found to be dorson and himself, Mr. Wilson unsold and a special drawing was. said the Captain regretted his in-made later to decide the destina- ability to be present as he had tion of the half million dollars. boen detained ashore.
The figure will stand, to deter Dean Swann, who has recently mine the winners of "terminal returned from leave, was welcom- prizes" (holders of tickata. with ed back by the president, and in numbora ending in 28).
The second prizes, onch worth raply stated he was very glad to be
travels he had not been in any tickets with the numbers 074,718 back. Ho remarked that during $100,000, will go to those holding place where Rotary met and had and 181,674, Ithus bech unable to make use of As a result of the special draw-
his International tickot.
ing, Ticket Number 289,770 won The following guests were in-first prize in the Lottery-Reuter. |troduced and welcomed-Rotarians. James M. Henry, A. E. Quin, R. H. JEWISH REFUGEES. |Gormon, J. ML X. Chollot, S. F.
Chien, Geo. Burdick, J. B. Har LONDON CONFERENCE TO rison and Dr. Tennyson Howie (all|
ENLIST AID or Canton), O. Stapleton Cotton! Berlin, Oct. 31.
(president, Tientsin Rotary), T.
London, Oct. 81. The suggestion by the Japanese . Southam (Amoy Rotary), Mr. A Jewish conference, now being War Minister, General Araki, D. S. Wylie (Toronto), Eng. Cmdr. kold in London and attended by who`recommends the early con- R. P. Ninnis, Rev, R. F. Lankester one hundred delegates from forty- It would have the duty of in-
(Yunnanfu), Messrs. F. A. Perry, five countries; including America, is vestigating and publicly reporting complaints such as internal absoes vocation of a Far Eastern Peace 3W Plait C. L, Shank, P. D, Now planning to appeal to the world of on the state of each country'sses, pneumonic tuberculosis, and Conference, has aroused con- man and F. G. Mounder. armament and war industries.. almple headache, all without siderable interest in Germany.
the traditional sugared al- monds, given at all Italian weddings.
Considerable progress had al- This now spirit, this willingnoes ready been made in this direction. Holy See, the first children on the By special arrangement, with the -to-dare and to risk-all things in He believed it would be possible marriages spleniulsed to-day will the cause of ponce was, ho was to get these two countries into be baptised in St. Peter's Romo. convinced, the beginning of wisdom some system of world-wide con- This privilege is usually severely and the best guarantee of victory sultation through the Leaguo on restricted.-Router. in the battle for a securo peace. all matters affecting world peace.
INTERNATIONAL SOLIDARITY.
This new and wlder spirit led first of all to the recognition that to have peace we must look beyond the boundaries of our
own country.
We must make a living reality of the international solidarity of the workers.
FATE OF CIVILISATION,
We must also welcomo as allies all in every country who would] join us in the struggle for peace on which the fate of civilisation depended.
ROAD THROUgh geneva.
On that commission Russia and He was convinced that it would the United States were to be re be impossible, over if it were presented. desirable, for this country under any Government to achieve an ex- these great countries. clusive alliance with either of
The road both to Washington and Moscow lay through Geneva and through world action for! constructive peace.
was an assurance that when it What the world needed to-day came to the point the world's peace system would be used:
DELAY AND DIFFICULTIES.
The Conference would reallee why he could not say all ho would
mont. like to say on the topic of disarma
They would believe him when ho The treaties guaranteeing peace told them that he fully shared their must be honoured and not regard-impatience at the slowness of the
as scraps of paper,
proceedings, at the interminable delay, and the difficulties that had been met.
The Labour and Socialist move- ment was international to the core It was against national and racialed as well as class barriors.
It stood for economic organien- tion, social justice and freedom; not only in one country, but throughout the world,
It recognised that international anarchy was as much the onemy of Socialism as was economic anarchy.
་
He suggested that the British Parliament should pass a Peace Act which would provide that in all cases the Government would submit its international disputes to one of the methods of peace- ful settlemont,
This Peace Act would not be an empty gesture, since the example would in all probability bu follow
ed by other nations.
TREMENDOUS TASK. If it abandoned its international faith it would be powerless to save the world from another war and from the dictatorships and the cussions at Genova revealed the awful tyrannies which were the consequences of the war.
It was a tremendous task. To have peace we must not only sign treaties removing the right to resort to war, but we must abolish the national equipment and institutions that made war possible and the private interests that lived by war.
The whole course of the dis-l
now univerRally necessity, cognised, of making coch country' armaments a matter of concern to all countries.
INTERNATIONAL treaty, To give effect to that principle the amount of other countries armaments must be fixed in an international treaty.
ANOTHER GREAT DISCOVERY
London
The use of ultra-short wireless waves for the cure of severe internal.complaints is advanced by u German scientist Dr. Erwin Schllephake, In the latest lasue of the "British Journal of Physical Medicine."
The doctor reports the cure of
| SYMPATHY WITH IDEAS OF JAPAN
GENERAL ARAKI'S MOTIVE
Greetings From Other Clube,
Jewry for two million pounde etorling to assist Jewish refugees from Germany to settle clacwhore. A Contral World Council will
operation. The primary wave la The proposal finds warm sup-| Rotarian Stapleton Cotton said he formed to lasue the appeal and
+
inclined
generated by an emittor designed port in Berlin semi-official cir- like a broadcasting het, and in cles, where it is declared that the that twenty months ago he came adminlater the funds collected. Hongkong knowing and will co-oporate with Mr. James making use of ultra-short waves he peace of the Orient la of the through found that large carbuncles heat-greatest importance, not only for nothing of Rotary. He thought it MacDonald, the High Commis- the Pacific countries, but also for was a back-slapping and hymnsioner recently appointed by the od in from 10 to 20 days after States apparently not directly singing body. But when he went League of Nations to aasist the concerned in events in that part to Tientsin he was enlightened, B to 15 days treatment.
of the world.
and shortly after Joining complain. refugees from Germany.
It is reported that the Cyprus "In most cases the pain and
ed about the chow and was put in Government. has toutatively feeling of tension subside after the General Araki, in making the charge of the tima arrangements agreed to settle. 50,000 Jewish first treatment". he states. "The proposal, seemed
to Tientsin's was the second oldest
refugees-Reutor. absence of pain is particularly ap limit its scope, but German cir- Rotary club in China, now bolur in
large-scale con-its eleventh year, and he brought and he had looked forward to res At the present moment the post-preciated by all patients because cles favour n
to the Hongkong Rotarians the maining hore longer. He had no tlon might not look too hopeful, the affected part is not nearly as forence.
NINE-POWER TREATY.
best wishes of that northern club doubt that the Hongkong club but at least it was becoming clear. seriously incapacitated as by the
and hoped they would make a would be able to do a lot of good We had come face to face with usual surgical or conservative
It would be of the greatest point of joining the Tientsin mem-work, and he made the suggestion" the fundamental political issue,
value, it is pointed out, in over bars at tiffin whenever possible. that the club consider whether or how to reconelle Germany's desire "In true migraine (apecial type hauling the Nine Power Treaty Rotarian Southam, who is not it would be possible to do for equality with France's anxiety of headache) ultra-short wave and the Naval Treaties of London member of the Amoy Rotary Club, anything to prevent war or make about security, and the whole treatment of the head affected and Washington, and in bringing the youngest such club in China, for better understanding. He had
rapid Improvement and world's need for peace.
cure. Japanese policy within the frame- brought greetings from Amoy, and read an interesting editorial in the These treatments are much more work of International polities. pleasant and less strenuous in these cases than present methods, a daily treatment of the head only requires half-an-hour a day, and is very agreeable to the patient.
STORM OF REACTION.
It was clear to all that to-day a storm of reaction was blowing through the world.
treatment."
On the wings of the storm, like an evil odour from the battlefields, The British Journal of Physical had come a revival of the base and Medicine," commenting on this, senseless creed of dictatorship, the states it has been found that the bellef in disputism and inter- ultra-short waves pass most freely national anarchy that brought the through the tissues which have world to the catastrophe of 1014. the smallest capacity resistance, We just destroy the narrow The exccution of that treaty Never would Labour succumb to and they traverse fat, brain tisstic loyalties and fanaticisms that must be placed under the super-that creed. Never would it aban- and bone without difficulty-Reu made men ready, for war, and revision of an international com-don hope or give up the fight for LUF. place them by a living creative mission.
peace..
QUEEN'S
AIR CONDITIONED THEATRE
NEXT CHANGE
AIMED STRAIGHT AT YOU!
-A FEATURE-LENGTH BARRAGE
OF LAUGHS, LOVE, THRILLS, SONG!
This big production hits the
bull's-eye of entertainment for a perfect score:
1-It has Laurel and Hardy as a pair of bungling bandits!
2-It has Dennis King as a brigand who wins the ladies (with his love songs!
3-It has 1.001: romantle thrills!
“FRA DIAVOLO”
with
STAN
OLIVER
LAUREL HARDY
DENNIS KING THELMA TODD
the famous comic opera. Fra Diavolo" by Aul
A Metro wyn-Mayer Production.
ASSAULT ON CONSTABLE
After Revenging Attack
on His Brother
An assault on a police constable in Wanchai resulted in two men, Lam Mak-wong and Lo Fo being bound over, in $50 each to keep the peace for six months, and second defondant being additional- ly fined $50 or six weeks hard labour by Mr. Schofield, at the Central Magistracy, this morning. Detective Sergeant Fitches anid that the complainant, Chan Sum, was a. Hoklo, as were the two de feudants, Complainant's elder brother had been assaulted by two men. In the Central district October 28, and on finding out that the two men lived in a boarding house in Wanchal run by his friend, he thought he would oak his friend to reprimand the two fokie. He accordingly went to Wanchai, and there by chance met his brother, the complainant, to whom ho unfolded his story.
оп
TOOK LAW INTO OWN HANDS.
Thoy both proceeded to the boarding house, but the friend was not in. The elder brother, however, saw one of his assailante there, and pointed him out to com- plainant, who took the law lato his own hands and gave the man a blow.
The brothers then went away, the elder taking a tram back to the Central District and the coast- able going on his beat. Ho had not gone more than eight-shop lengths away from the house when, ho was assaulted by several men, and given a severe beating. One of the assailanta was the accond defendant.The man whom the constablo had beaten was pot In the party who assaulted
Sergeant Fitcher said that the IGP. wished a serious view to be taken of the case, because the conte plainant was 80 svercly benton that he was, bruised all over tho body, kicked and punched, and was In hospital for two days, The complainant would be dealt with departmentally for having assaulted a member of the public.
The first defendant pleaded not guilty to the charge, and the second defendant admitted it.
The other Japanese sugges- tion, of a Non-Aggression Pact with the Soviets is con sidered very significant in view of Japan's coolness when the Soviet proposed such a pact last year,
.
LITVINOFF'S MISSION.
丼!
stated that their membership was Hongkong Telegraph the previous now about thirty, of which half day which applied to Rotary Clubs were Chinese and the remainder all over the world, especially to of other nationalities.
Hongkong and Shanghai, A para- Rev. Mr. Lankester said that graph in the editorial read, "More after spending five years in the than over must all mon of good interior of China as he had done, will work to fortify the institu- to come to Hongkong was like get-tions of pesco. They must within ting back to England.
Rotary and Peace.
their own countries and outside of
tbem, band themselves togethor
to declare that they will take no
The President regretted the im-step which will lead to war, and
The Berliner Tageblatt considers pending departure for Shanghai of will take many steps which will that General Araki's plan is Rotarian Gerondal. Mr. Gerondal, lead to peace." Towards this designed mainly to take the wind ho sald headed the attendance list, end he thought Rotary could do a out of M. Litvinoff's sails when he and the club would miss him dur-great deal. goes to Washington to negotiate ing his absence.
The president was thanked for for the opening of diplomatle re-. Mr. Gerondal said he was worry the invitation he had extended to lations between the Soviet and he had to leave. His stay in members, on the motion of Dean the United States-Reutori
Hongkong had been most happy, Swann,
in
Beauty
Wool
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