T
THE HONGKONG
TELEGRAPH,
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1938.
Liberry, Supraud Cocry
Just Because a Woman was Photographed—
THE POTATO MAKES HEADLINE
NEWS TO-DAY
No Two People Can Agree About It
The point to be decided, ladies and gentlemen, is-Should we, or should we not, peel our potatoes?
Freed-With Baby Dead,
Expenses
Thwo men convicted in Glas- row of hausebreaking maintain- od that the police had extorted confcmions from them by threats, followed by a blow.
They were sent to prison for thirty days.
Recently the appeal couré In Edinburgh quashed the convis- Hon and awarded each man seven guinean expenses,
Miny
Doris Felce, Hampstead I like them best the way It's very we cook them at camp. casy.
Abandon for a moment the grimmer worries which beset you and join light-heartedly in the pow-wow about Gulder: potato-peeling, which, it seems, is going on in thousands of (otherwise) happy homes of England.
Cause of it all is cheerful Miss Alison Gifford-Harvey, who recently started her new job of "pushing" the potato on behalf of the Potato Marketing Board. She obligingly act to work on a prime Lincolnshire specimen so that a photographer could show how thoroughly she knew what was expected of her.
The result was remarkable, and serve them up with lots of salt It became immediately obvious and gravy." that there are two schools of thought on the potato problem the Peelers and Anti-peelers.
PEELERS AND THE ANTIS' The cleavage was complete. But at least some interesting things were
made known.
CUT THEM IN HALF
Catering for a multitude every day (and therefore both a Peeler and an Anti-pecler), M. Rene Lebiegue (maltre-chef at Grosvenor House, W.) a recipe contributing helped by which ought to suit both schools:
potatoes
tor bake your
akins.
in
You just wait till the camp- tire is glowing and put them in the red-hot ashes with thele jackets on. This way they lose none of their nourishment,
NEW WAYS WITH THEM
Soccer Star
To Play On
Just before he heard he had been selected to play football for Wales againat England at Cardiff, Mr. George Green, Charlton Athletic F.C.' right half, found his 10-months-old son Brian drowned in a pond in the garden next to his home in Rochester Way Blackhead.
"I shall play on Saturday, despite this," Mr. Green said.
my
"I must try hard not to let it sffect
bo game; it will dieult." Mr. Green described the tragedy:
Scene taken at the Cenotaph in Hongkong after the recent Armistice Day celebrations,
EMPIRE NEWS
QUEENSLAND WATER SUPPLY SCHEME
Sydney.
while his wife stayed in the house Dr. J. J. C. Bradfield, who was chief engineer for the construc-
next door with her dead baby,
"Only a few minutes before it hap-tion of Sydney Harbour bridge pened," Mr. Green said, "Brian was and the Sydney Underground laughing and playing in the garden Railway, has submitted to the while I was helping Mr. William Queensland Government a vast Grant, my neighbour, to pull up scheme for watering the inland arcas of Queensland. It is estim-
£30,000,000. nted that the cost would be
fence at the bottoin of my garden.
Miss Olga Turk, who lives at home with her mother and father in Bays water: "I eat no end of them. ilke them best served in their jackets -you know, the way you get them from hot potato men in the street. "The moment we had made on jackets at home I hate them, I sup- through to explore, and found his But when they're done in their opening in the fence Brian went pose it is the novelty of buying them way into Mr. Grant's garden through in the alreet.
a gate in another fence.
"Later I milased him, and found him lying face downwards in the pond in 20in. of water. I tried to revive him,
"I think Drian must have stopped to look at the goldnah in the pond, and felt in, striking his head on the bow! containing water lilies."
Mrs. Mabel Partridge, of Eccleston- street, Victoria (who has so cook for a family of five): Potatoes are rather uninteresting vegetables, so I try 10 Cut them in half when think up ways to make them attrae. but it was no use. Miss Frances Day (0s light us Onished. Mash the insides and add live. I sometimes bake them in an feather despite thousands of poin- butter and milk. Then replace into electric oven, scrape the potato out toes) said that by instinct she was the The results are pommes of the jacket, mix it with butter, an Anti-peeler.
milk, tomatoes, and other vegetables, Miss Ellaline Terriss (equally well and slide it back into its jacket "I have potatoes in their jackets whenever I can," she said. "I even known as the wife of Sir Seymour again."
Said daughter Rowenn: I think Hieks) remembered the nourishment
"I like try to eat the peel ng well.
them in their jackets because its suel most people are Anti-peelers at in the skin of a potato. "What heart. But anyway, a lot of nonsense mistake to lose it" she exclaimed. a fag peeling them. They ought to is talked about potatoes, peeled or "Potatoes in their jackets are nicest bave zip-fasteners on.
anyway" not, making us fat. They don't."
and best," Forty-years-old red-checked Mrs.
Rose Joy, of Lewis Trust-buildings,
Fulham, widowed mother of three, is
Peeler.
赶
Just
I can't cook,
Australia Lends To Citizens
The plan contemplates irnpounding a huge volume of water from the watersheds of northern Queensland. It would be carried by tunnel and
wou aqueduct through the Great Dividing Range, and emptied into the intend rivers for irrigation and the flowing watering of stock in the Great Aus- trailan Basin extending to the New South Wales border.
Dr. Bradfield estimates that the scheme would make possible an in- crease of 20,000,000 sheep in Queen- flocks and would, expand the anunt income of Queensland by
£10,000,000,
t present losses of stock caused by Canberra. drought in Queensland aggregate The Federal government has de- £2,500,000 a year, Dr. Bradfield Twenty-years-old Miss Margaret
cided to open a bank for granting states. At 4 per cent. Interest, that Richards, saleswoman, of Southtelda, Wimbledon: The controversy means Cows Eat White Lead loans to citizens of good character sum would pay the interest on a
Potatoes are
who are in some pressing need. The capital expenditure of £60,000,000. nothing to me.
food, I love
Syracuse, N, Y. loans are to be repaid in 12 monthly Battleship not wanted.—The Minis- food-but very nice
the Eleven cows died from lead poison-instalments,
charge to theter for Defence, Mr. Thorby, states wash them baked a golden brown colour
on the that the Federal Government will Well, ing on a farm near Syracuse. The borewer being 12 per cent. them with roast beef. Fattening?
the (It certainly cows kicked over a tub of white lead amount outstanding from month to not consider
by suggestion made short, does it look like it? n
and ate the contents,
month.
iralla should exchange two of her cruisers Cristy for
"We cat 4lb. at a meal," she said.
peel
"I give our potatoes a good under running water, quickly and thickly with worn-down table-knife, boil
them did not.)
U.BAMBER ALE
A STRONGER
AND MORE FULLY
FLAVOURED
BREW.
THE PERFECT DRINK
FOR THE COLDER
MONTHS.
UNION BREWERY IT
Adml. Sir Howard Kelly that Aus
Government's noval
Gove
battleship. The
programme, he
said. had been. defined after the
Delightfully New Woollies
for a mild or a very cold winter、
Perfect fitting,
Wool to keep you warm, Styles to keep you slim.
SOFT LIGHTWEIGHT ALL-WOOL PANTIES & VESTS In Poach or Ivory
$2.95
.95 por garment.
A daintier model with lacey offects
$4.50
por garment.
Silk & Wool
PANTIES &
VESTS
Which wash and wear beautifully
$5.50
por garment.
In Cotton & Silk
In Peach and White
$1.75 ea
Celanese
VESTS & PANTIES
In colours of Ivory, Peach & Sky. Directoire Knickers $2.25.
O.S., $2.95
closest consultation with the best Whiteaway, Laidlaw & Co., Ltd.
expert naval authorities in the British Empire and the Government
would
adhere to its udvice. Sir...ENESS....SENS Howard was
was a delegate to the British Commonwealth Relations Conferencs here last
month.
Botanist's Kew Appointment--Mr. C. T. White, Queensland Government Botanist, is to be sent to the Royal Bolanie Gardens. Kew, as Australian raison officer for not less than a year.
Jamaica
UNION OFFICIALS ON SEDITION CHARGE
Kingston.
Two prominent officers of the trade unlons organised by Mr. Alexander Bustamente, the Labour leader, were recently found guilty of sedition.
The case, which was heard by a Jury and lasted two days, arose from an article published by the two nc- cused men in a
in a Labour weekly journal during the rioting two months ago. Sentence was deferred.
The strike of labourers
on the sugar estales of Tate and Lyle, in the Vere district, continues, and sugar is being moved from there to Kingston under police escort. The strike has lasted a week, but so far there has been no disorder.
India
SHIPPING BACK TO NORMAL
Calcutta.
A number of steamships, the de partures of which from Calcutta and Mudras were stopped during the international crisla, have resumed their normal sailings.
The vessels were chartered by the Government for the possible move- ment of troops and atores.
Sloven Persons Drownkel-Twa men, three women and two children have been drowned owing to the turning over of a bullock cart in a flooded stream near Anantapur, Madras.
Canada
NEW FARMERS' UNION IN ALBERTA
Lethbridge.
The organisation of a strictly non- political farmers' union combining all agrarian groups in one body has been launched in South-Western Al- berta. Its aim is to protect primary producers.
A manifesto Issued after the first meeting of the new body states that will demand a more stable price for the products of primary produ- cers. This, it is added, will mean a more stable standard of living.
Policeman His Own Steno
Fort Worth, Tex.
The traffic law violators should be a little more careful what they say to Patrolman Fred Holland hereafter. Holland can write short-hand, and he does it to remember the things that some people say about "tho law.”!!
You can depend on CHAMPION SPARK
to REDUCE THE COST
OF MOTORING
Incomplete combustion results in wasted fuel,carbon formation and un satisfactory engine performance. Put in a new set of Champions and enjoy the power,speed, acceleration and fuel savings that come from complete combustion.They will soon pay for themselves.
General Olivibulart
DODGE & SEYMOUR (CHINA) LTD. Shanghai, Hongkong, Harbin
Champion Spark Ving Campany
CHAMPION
CHECK AND CLEAN SPARK PLUGS WHEN YOU CHANGE OIL
KING'S THEATRE
ENTER
THE CROWD ROARS GUESSING CONTEST-
TO WIN HANDSOME PRIZES
All that you have to do to enter this contest is to guess the number of people exproted to attend, by paid admissions, all showings of the opening day of the METRO-ĠOLDWYN-MAYER picture entitled 'RICH MAN, POOR GIRL' scheduled to follow the exhibi- tion of THE CROWD BOARS'.
Submit your guess with your name and address and send it to the King's Theatre earmarked "THE CROWD ROARS GUESSING CONTEST. All entries must be in by noon of the opening day of the production entitled 'HIDH MAN, POOR GIRL. Each contestant CAN submit as many guesses as desired, but each guess must be Accompanied by the counterfoll of the ticket to me THE CROWD ROARS', though no single person will be entitled to more than one prize.
As a partial aid to contestants, we take pleasure to inform them that the pleature, 'BICH MAN, POOR GIRL', will be exhibited for four performances on the opening day and that the maximum sitting capacity of each performance is 1,087.
PRIZES: 2. First prizes of "Spalding" Top Flite
Tennis Racquets. Donated by the King's Theatre and purchased from Mamak & Co., 10 Second prizes of palta of gumé tich to see the Laurel & Hardy pierul" "nili
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