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CHARMING story has been brought back by one of those Journalists who, also served while only standing and waiting on Southampton quay for four days before the Queen Mary salled,
During the Royal visit to the boat last Monday It was reported that Princess Elizabeth upent some time in the children's play- room sliding down the chute.
What was not reported was the met that the King also spent some time dcing exactly the same thing as hia
niece.
King Edward has always shown a king for doing the least expected thing when making a tour that bears the slightest suspicion of bring con- ducted
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3.
I remember being told by Battis- combe Guna, who is now Professor of Pyptology at Oxford, how he took King Edward, when Prince of Wales, to the top of the Step Pyramid,
It was a hat day, and a weary climb feet high. When the up "sleps"
Price reached the top he took our Took at the view, druve a golf ball que Into the blue, and climbed down again. I don't believe the helpht of this Te has ever been execeded!
✰✰
ANOTHER curious incl
dont from the Queen! Maty may be explained by those who know thể ways and habits, Ukes and
likes of tropical fish.
It appears that several glass tanka were fitted, for purely decorative Penkoms, with exalie and expensive impical fali, During the Queen Mary's Trials they died,
The same thing happened to the banis sort of fish ln the same eirchm- vances on the Normnnelle,
Khiter Niere Dish don't Mke being
TO-DAY'S
by
SPIKE
HUGHES
looked at, or else they just don't like ocean liners,
Or perhaps nah are particular what kind of water they get out of
**
་
LONDON at this moment 1 full of interesting exhibitions Di plctures. AL the fine Leicester Galleries there la. a collection
paintings, Cartoons and drawings by Henri Daumier, the French artist who lived from 1808- 1879 and got into trouble inad jall) for being too bitter about the monarchy of his time.
The French wouldn't throw him t prison now, perhaps, but in other places at least one of his cartoons would not be allowed, even in 1938.
This is nu oddly topical work entitled "L'Empire d'est in paix "-a picture that shows smoking ruins and corpses lying in the streets.
Even the caption reads like recent speeches on # recently acquired **Empire" and the 'peace it has brought about.
*
* TN at countries but this Edward Forbes might well And himself on A diet 01 castor oil and concentration cam339. Hr. you Bee, 1s another painter who paints (not always kindly) rome of the ruins that publle opinion bar nlready knocked about a bit.
BOOK
From Tory M.P.
to Peer
And Democrat
IVE-AND-TWENTY years ago
there lived in Buckingham- shire a country gentleman distinguished was also 11
who Inwyer.
He was Conservative member for one of the county divisioon: he was, as a father before him, Chairman of
Quarter Sessions: he was, as his father before hini, a K.Cs he was a
· prominent churchuman, and Vlear- General of, the Province of Canter- bury,
It gave no surprise when, in Janu- ary, 1014. n. Liberal Prime Minister asked Alfred Cripps. tlien 62 years old. In necept a peerage and a place in the Indicial Committee of the Privy Coun- ZZA, high judicial past.seemed the.It... tiny elfmax and end to such a life,
What lay ahent was nat end, but netamorphosis, The career
ipps, K.G., was over: the-life of Lord Panoor was about to begin,
All has suddenly éhlinged.” he wrote in his diary on August 6. 1914. But he could hardly have foreseen that the change would lead him to be Lor President of the Council in two Labour Governmens,
Yet A Retrospect (published to-day og Heinonati, 159.s, which is his mo biography, makes 11 nobly cleur that Cripps and Parmoor, the Tory MP and the Babour Peet,, were through 11 the change the same essential minn.
Glyen his deep religious conviction, uja lofty sittidard of honotir. his pro- found humanity and his clear mind. given with these the circumstances of The times, the evolution was inevitable. He could do ho other.
Can I be of reat help in the Wis. Iructed conditions abroad and to fur ther good will at home? wan the ques- tion he asked himself when Mr. Mac- Dould invited him to joh: the 1024 Government.
* * *
His passionate desire was for "a new world pence policy, founded on a sym- pathetic Christin understanding." He had striven for reconciliation with Ger- many in the days when to urge fair- ness wns to ae denounced for some- shing akin to treason. He had pleaded for friendship with Rizssia ip the days whin the Bolsheviks were regarded by all respectability as blood-soaked ene intes of humanity.
As Milaister he worked with Arthur. Henderson,
timt critical 1024
Assembly Geneva, to strengthen the Covenant by the Protocol. MacDonald forbade them to sign, and before the matter could be fought out in Cabluet the first Laboter Government hud filles.
For Parinoór it FAAK a deep lis- appointment. Even then ho sensed whist fiture dlanster might be caused by that failure of courage in. hla lender.
Seven years. Inter came the second failure. Parmoor, the ex-Tory, might uy sine have been expected to follow MacDonald when the break came in 1031 Ale never hesitated for n mtoute.
His sense of honour, his lawyer's
appreciation 0. the harm done
to the Consti- tution,
Lord Parmoor"
human abhor- rence of the sacrifice of the unemployed at the peremptory demand of the bankers, made decision clear. He wrote to the Prime Minister that he re- Rarded
This whole action as wrong in Itself and based on d misunder- standing of the true meaning of the British Constitution."
Since then he has seen and face disappointment-after disappointment-- the fallure of daarmament, the failure the of the League in Manchuria, tragedy of Abyssinia, the twin growth uf arms and of fear in Europe.
HARLEQUIN (1918)
by Picasso
His show, at the Leger Galleries, in Band-street, is called "Humour in Art" Ulle that invites the bird or the laughs.
Forbes gets the inugha, Not only do you laugh at the pictures when you see, them, but you laughi when you read what he calls them in. the catalogue,
A portrait of Hitler is captioned "Yol, you, what a game 1 is!" There 19 a Krand picture of Austen Chamber- lain coming out of church: "The Bridegroom-7 kove France .རྭ་ Woman."
Forbes is 11ke Max Beerbohm in oil. The same sense of caricature ("the Wicklow Hills" study of Yeath ja pure Maxi and the name Ilternry niter- thought comments. Then thero arc little gems of bittersweet study like the Dolmetch family, who look as if Hey had strayed straight from the home of the Nibelungs in "Rheingold" to Haslemere,
**
ICASSO (he has a slow ́at Zwemnier's gallery)
is aut nrtist who plenses all of the prople some of the time, and some of the people all of the time, but not all of the people all of the time.
And this exhibition, which includes work from each of his "periods," shows why. If you like your cubist Picasso there is plenty of that, if, ng I do, you prefer Picasso the superb d.aughtsminn,
there is plenty of inat, too.
Even if you don't like Plensso at all at least you can be impressed by somo of the prices asked for-and goi. The Harlequin on this page costs £1,050; a pastel.Woman in a blue hat," was sold for more than £2,000,
Yesterday the show was worth somic- thing like £20,000. To-day, when a rure "blue-perlod" pleturo in added, it will go up by about £4,000 or £5,000,
Picasso, let me remind you, is still alive, in Paris, and the French Salon would rather die than hang one of his pictures!
*
*
AUSTRIAN polities, in spite of one thing and another, st}} wears a delightfully Ruritanian air,
Recently, there was a Nazi meeting al an im in Upper Austria, Oulske the police walted,
A man came out, an he was ---------arrested_
But stm he can write: "I am no pessimist. A retrospect over, a period of eighty years brhigs conviction of steady progress in spite of periods of reaction and anxiety,“
W. N. E.
"But," protested' the arrestee, “I'm not a Nazi: I've just been thrown out of the inn because I'm a Jew!
"Oh, we've heard that one before," they sald, and look him off to fall just the same.
MUSIC
NOTHER fortnight of Covent Garden left, and the musical season will pack up until the Proms. Which isn't so long either. But within those two weeks two new productions are scheduled at the Opera.
On Monday (Whit-Monday at that and the darnedest day for any, now addition to an opera repertory), we att offered the Brst Rosenkavaller" for some years. Act I will be broadenst.
Not only is this the first "Rosen. 'kavalier" for some time, but the cust will have the hardest job ever to live up to the superb standard of previous productions
"Rosenkavaller" in this country -- and most others—means Richard Mayr as Ochs, Lätte Lehmann na the Prtu- cess and Elisabeth Schumann as Sophile.
Monday's performance includes agne al these artists. Mayr la dead. Leh- manu no longer sings at Covent Garden, and Schumaun secins, to have relired from operactivities.
this
ip
IT WE be hard listen to opera without cast-pre- Judice, but I am willing to predict one thing about Monday's company......... that Tina Lemnitz will be a revelation ns Octavinh.
She has the looks nud, itto volce and the acting ability that few singers con ever havo hnd who attempted the part of this seventeen-year-old boy.
Remember that I told you about Lemnitz, Ono day she will be the most sought after soprano in all opere.
In Mayr's part, you will be able to hear Emanuel; List; in Lehmann's Elisabeth Rethberg.
3
playing the ends in Wagner's boy- inits-girl epic.
N
•
OT available yet for radio con- sumption, ie the last Covent Garden production for the year- Offenbach's "Tales of Hoffmann, which, since it will be sung in French, Lea you will have to recognise na Contes d'Hoffmann."
The Brot performance is due. on Thursday; and the CASL Includes l'inau.
I they don't broadenst this opera before the end of the season the B.3.0. will be failing in its duty to everybody who ever liked a tune.
4
•
THE week's Foundations of Music.
deserve a better time than they get in B.B.O, programmes.
For five days next week they are going to broadcast some of the greatest chamber music ever written: Mozart' string quintela.
If you must miss any of them, dont miss the one in G minor, Mozart but'all he knew into this tremendous work.
GREENBAUM,
musica!
HTXAM
director of Television on loan to "ordinary" broadcasting, sppears on Wednesday with an orchestral 'pro- gramme called "Around Europe in 45 'Minutes." Albeniz, Verdi, Johann i Strauss, Saint-Saens and Vaughan Williams,
Greenbaum, I am told, is having the greatest dimeully forming his orches tra for television. Thero la A
of good shortaga
wood-wind, musicians. Sophie will be
particularly and so far he has chosen only' a. violinist, a flautist and a drummer.
A combination, I feel, flint has some possibilities, but hardly sufficient for an orchestra that is to be seen as well B. H As heard.
sung by the English Stellà Andreva,
The third and last broadcast instal- ment of *Tristan” is available to listeners on Tuesday, when Act III will be relayed from Covent Garden with Kirsten Flagstad and Melchior
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KOWLOON:
HONG KONG,
24th. June, 1936.
Messrs.South China Morning Post
and Hongkong Telegraph.
Dear Sire,
Before leaving Hongkong, I wish to record my appreciation of the splendid resulta secured through_advertising in the "Post" and? the "Telegraph.
My experience of newspaper adver- tising covers the English and Australian Press, and I congratulate you on the "pulling: power" of your advertising columns. I havo crnover known quicker response nor a higher
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I would also thank you for the ready advice and assistance when I presented my credentials to you. It is indeed a pleasan experience to enter a new territory with auch an effective backing as that provided by your oxcellent organisation.
I shall certainly advise Australian manufacturers who propose to develop trade in⠀ South China to first soak your co-operation,
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