10
THE
HONGKONG, TELEGRAPH.
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST
25, .1987.
SPISIDENT LINER TRAVEL SERVICE
is Yours to Command
President Liner' frequent sailings and their unique stopover privileges allow you to travel- just eexcily me you choose And Dollar Steamship Lines and American Mall Line worldwide offiore and agente ara maltained to serve you ashers in whatever place you chance to be. Make your next trip more enjoyable, travelling "The President Line war."
TO SAN FRANCISCO NEW YORK. AND BOSTON
Via Shanghal, Kobe, Yokohama, Honolulu, San Francisco, Panama
Canal and Havano,
4.00 pm. Aug.
Pres. Hoover
Pres. Lincoln
Pres. Coolidge
Pres. Wilson
Pres, Hoover
Pres. Cleveland
Midnight Sept.
8.00 a.m. Oct.
TO SEATTLE, VICTORIA "THE EXPRESS ROUTE"
Yla Shanghai, Kobe and Toko-
ham
28 Pres. McKinley Pres. Grant
Noon Sept. 18 Pres. Jackson
Noon Oct.
Pres. Jefferson 18 Pres. McKinley
3 Pres. Grant 0.00 .m. Nov.
EUROPE, NEW YORK
AND BOSTON
Via Manila. Singapore, Penang, Colombo, Bombay, Suez Canal,
Naples, Genoa and Marseilles.
Pre, Pierce
Pres. Garfield
Noon
4.30 p.m. Aug. 28 Midnight Sept. 10 Midnight Sept. 24 0 Midnight Oct.
21 Midnight Oct. Midnight Nov. &
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Pres. Van Buren 8.00 a.m. Sept. 12 Pres. Lincoln
H.00 a.m. Sept. 26 Pres. Grant 8.00 am. Oct. 10 Pres. Coolidge 0.00 am, Oct. 24 Pres. Van Buren 8.00 a.m. Nov. 7 Pres. Jackson
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Pres. Adams
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8 Oct.
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OUR BRITISH CROSSWORDS
ACROSS
18
3 Painters: You know them, of,
course, if you are in the swim.
8 It may be Double Gloucester,
but never Double Dutch.
9 Laundry hand.
10 Was thile the apple the Commis-
sar consumed,
11 Hatches easily.
12 This means bed for naughty
Uttle Pierre.
13 Continued development.
14 Half wood and half man-but has he a wooden head, or is it timber-toes?
17.There is character in this style
of writing.
19. The investment of
Japanese
money in Cane keeps many a Frenchman from a life of crime. 23 You can sco this lower in
winter.
27 Very old clothes you may find
in the box-room.
20 Black salt.
30 Unlike the Weasel, which only
went pop, this went bang
31 Sailing bare-headed, and not
too well.
32 There's a lot in dress: Any
woman will tell you.
33 Detest. (Anog.).
34 "Don't, Mr... Chancellor, too much," is the citizen's prayer in these days,, (Two words, 3, 2). DOWN
All the same. You'll get a snad low in price In this Kanit.village.
Advice, to an idle person, always on the move,
They easily peopiga sen pets,
120
016
3 A form of design suggestive of
· pokerwork.
1 Inhaled and exhaled in the Commons (Two words, 3, 3.).
7 Feminine name,
13 Gues
stitches.
from side to
side in
15 One must admit that this Eng-
lish city sounds rather fishy.
10 Has a lack,
18 After which anger implies risk.
20 Draws.
121
uniform though it
Make like a very ordinary
22 The dog "ex trap Y" can't fly.
(Anag.).
24 All but: this may gel yolit gont. 25 Deer.
20 With a tenner you can make a
lot of junket.
28 Not kind, but more Bu
E
Yesterday's Solution
EULANTINE FLIÉR A AABI MO U GENTTAN BITUME N]
La A A B IN EDEN GIPSY FREE INFOLS Y ER BUBTLES YIELD"| 8)
ET APOBER VERBS AP IN 1EEMASTER' 8 ILK STILL FEED IT LE BIERS 1 A BININE DIETING LO SM DL1 KINGS TRUCULENT
A
ESCAPE FROM SUDDEN DEATH
This poem was written by Julian Bell, whose death in
the Spanish War was reported recently
BUT the grey skeleton may stand more close Than sixty years a-cupboard: flying chance May jolt her shuttles to a swifter dance. And Death be nearer than we could suppose.
The other day I saw his face.
True but for half a moment's space. But now a shadow's at my back, and grows *As if a guttering candle burned apace.
Thinking of you, it had been hard to go To the damp worms, and solitary sleep: But were you gone? How little I've to keep You in my mind. How little do I know.
As ploughman near some ancient mound Have an old treasure found, Straight buried it again, and doing so Scarce called to mind gold glimmering under-
ground.
A handful of poor memories, there is all: Oh, well enough, if only I not know The more profound, hidden extent of you. My.knowledge mocks whatever I recall.
Could we but snatch a hasty spring. And snare the god, not yet a-wing. * Hear nightingales before the cuckoos call, Hear to brave primroses the skylarks sing. Then let us fill a summer with delight Forestalling slower time, and swifter fate, And make the flowery pomp our subject state, And garland memories both for day and night.
Pan and Apollo let us pray
For the wild rose and wreathed bay, “And, when we've spent our gifts in the gods'
sight,
Look back upon a happy yesterday.
From "Winter 'Movement" (Chatte and Windus)
PIECRUST CIVILISATION
-
DISTINGUISHED archaeologist By AN OLD STAGER has been holding a careful in-:
quest on the death of civilisations.
to the
The into
Inost
Dictator states preach war now, not as a vital defence against bar- barkan assault, but as a means in The efficient Coroner is Mr. Stanley a sad testimony to the decay that has itself of curing Internal disease. of men deliberate segregation twentieth century. In Casson, a well-known Oxford Don, set in. The and his exciting verdiet is embodied fact, reverts to the Bronze Are, only groups between which communica-
Lion is
is as deliberately denied is "a thrilling: volume, "Progress and without its gigantic up-lift.
fantastic
move back Catastrophe: An
An Anatomy of Human
Second Adventure." Quite
in antiquily only to the primitive conditions." Impartially I
Ifis general diagonisis of the symp- commend it to anyone sufficiently in Sumerian is the Egyptian civilisa
Yet it has bequeathed us prae- toms of civilisation's breakdown in terested in the destiny of the human ton.
value, and its de- any age is the failure of moral and race to devote a few hours to that tically nothing
cay came, despite an ideat geogra- material progress to keep equal pace. fascinating theme.
is a widespread popular phical cradle, from within and not I confess, if this diagensis is correct, There
first as very well may be, our present- superstition, fervently shared in even without. When the
circles though went to Erypt, declares Mr. Casson, day symptoms strongly suggest the the best democratic
and over-falal Inequality. G.
vved by its antiquity B.
The conillet long ago satirised by Mr.
whelmed by its multiplicity of gads, Fascism and Communism within manirind Shaw, that the of
one slow but astes, and ceremonies, what they national States is a normal develop- this globe has
primeval really found was a nation of fellahinment in the process of disintegration. steady advance
ruled with a rod of iron by a Society "The suppuration that ensues takes and of Antiquaries!
the form of demagogues and dicta- tors."
brutality, through
from
the Dark
light of twentieth century civilisation; that the minds of men have broadened with the process of the suns towards what Alfred Lord Temyson called "one increasing pur- pose,"
Middle Ages, towards the len
Britain's Long Peace
Grecks
A Doinnward Trend
Our own place in the pageant of the past is vividly stated by M. "The untappy League of Nations," Casson. "From A.D. 100 to A.D. says Mr. Casson, "failed almost at Mr. Casson effectually stays that 400 all British except in the north birth to justify itself, and grow to at the outset. He tells was pleasint and peaceful a land maturity, through the inner wicked. Jabberwock as that progress, which made greater as it is to-day. Never since haveness of man, still apparently ignorant
we hat PAX Britannica strides when men talked less about end that Ingled for the vast space
of this that to survive he must combine."
He tells us that America departed It does in fact occur on occasions, as
hundred years! But by from the venture through stupidity, except a fool would deny.of three nobody But that it is cumulative and inevi- A.D, 500 it had all vanished, and the Germany and Japan through malice, country had reverted to a condition and Italy "remnina only because she table no one win accept..
If
he can gel some of our up-to-which it had never perhaps seen be-believes ahe can do more damage fore." Yet the preceding standard inside than outside."He thinks civili- date emotionalists to digest just that of public security had been greater sation is not on the brink of collapse. one elementary fact, Mr. Casson will than at any period in British history but has already some years ago col- not have written his book in vain. before the middle of the nineteenth lapsed. "I wonder exactly how long He emphasises that We usually century. attach exaggerated importance to the relatively insignificant period of hunkin existence known as A.D. which is not yet two thousand years old, and not nearly enough to the preceding 548,000 years B.C.
Almost at a Standsti
And so
we come to our author's verdict on contemporary symptoms I am not quite convinced that this is as purely setentific as, his recon- struietion of the past. But it is im- pressively sincere. anl certainly
it will take us to awake to the fact that before our very eyes the world we ived in in our youth has passed away, and with it the main props of civilisation."
So there you have the net result of this scientifle crowner's quest. Yet Mr. Cusson is not a complete Jere- based on close selentifle analogy. miah. He drops in the very last
Ue reads all around us in Europe sentence of his remarkable book just- We throw a chest, and pat our- a hint at the reappearance of an age one tiny crumb of comfort. "Con- selves on the back, about our won-of Retrogression. The centrifugal seiousness of the position alone may derful modern discoveries, mechani- movement of States away from contribute to stopping the cel und otherwise, Mr. Caissons, re-common ideal of life. Is the modern trend of modern civilisation, garding the aeans through the im- disaster. The first step on this de-courageous cynic might perhaps pre- partial spectacles of archaeology, cline was the World War. "With the fer to scrap this decrepit brand of finds comparatively little evidence dead who perished in that cataclysm, civilisation, and look forward to an- of human progress in the last two there perished also the major part other acon rebuilding a better. Or thousand years,
and
boasted of international morality." no boll
would he really be a Superman? modern discovery even comparable with "the genius who first connected sparks with fire or associated copu- lation with childbirth for the first time." Attentively to ponder these scientifle assertions may be as intel- lectually bracing as a cold douche.
It Is an engrossing experience to follow Mr. Cosson on his shrewd re- searches into the dim and distant Holmes fiction past. No Sherlock
can furnish anything like the meti- culous skill and courageous Intuition that these arelineological sleuths dis- play in
of unravelling, amidst the dust
ce: turies, the faint
clues of human history.
Yet I doubt whether Mr. Casson's book will equal the best-seller circu- lation of the intest cheap detective thriller. It la comle what the ground- lings miss in art. Hterature, and life. will queue for some Indy
up callow improprielles who would shup full-blooded old Sru- tonlus like a plague. Perhaps it just as well. But certainly the High Brows can afford a quiet chuckle over the imbecililles of the Thick Ears,
velint's
Progress Intermittent
The oldest detected experiment in civilisation, erroneously called Pro- gress was made by the Sumerians In the Tigris-Euphrates valley. It endured, before being extinguished
the by Mongol invasion of three cen- taries after the Arab
conquest of for four tho Persia,
thousand years. Compare that security of tenure with the eight hundred years of Greece, the nine hundred of Rome, and the thousand of Byzantium. Mr. Casson shows us how twice the march of civilisation has been arrested and put back by a Dark Age, Brst after the collapse of the Hittite Empire- partly
due to neglect of sea power. by the way and then after the fall of the Roman Empire.
The plain moral is that: "Progress
Is an intermittent phenomenon, and not a continual move forwards." He
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sion of their mode of life to a more Telephone 28031 brutal and savage state."
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"HONGKONG TELEGRAPH”
Amateur Photographic
Competition
EXTENSION OF
CLOSING DATE
In consequence of representations made by intending competitors. It has been decided to extend the closing date of the "Hongkong Telegraph" Amstour Photographic Competition to September 30, 1937.
Entry is free, and there is no limit to the number of pictures which may be sont in, but no,picturo`may be entered in more than one section. Competitors are advised to read the rules carefully before forwarding their entries.
Page 10Page 11
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