SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1938-
Girls' and Boys' Corner
Address
Name
Dear Kiddies,
This is all my own work
Lels of entries again this week, Kiddien, Many of the entrants, however, did not rent to understand that the fre Was made of dend leaver, One or two even painted the tire white as if made of
know.
The prize-winners this week are:- Mary Grace Asche faged 12447. Stephen's College, Stanley,
Як
Anthony Cutelier (aged 75%), Metropolr Hotel.
Eleanor Mary Bray (aged 6), No. 16, Cheung Chow.
Coupons have been sent to Mary Grace, Anthony and Eleanor which I want theni to bring in the "Hongkong Telegraph" alees In Wyndham Bireet. The coupons will then be exclinnged for money prizea,
Specially
commended for excellent work are the following:
Senlors: Charles Edward Clark, Jayce Wood, Pal Cattre, Belly Becker, Stephen. Може Paul Versonna, llo Shuk-chun. Ruby Hartcain, Wang Chung-choan.
Arc
Intermediates And Juniors: David Aschr, P. Wong. Shona Mcintyre, Dorothy Coates, Agnes Cheung, Dawood Ilux, Bernord Brown, Teresa Marcal, Ann Itunter, S. A. Bux. Lelia Gann. 3. 9. Dux, Galfoor Bux, Moira Patey, Jean Hunter, Violetta Remedios,
Patsy Cottee: I want to welcome you *n your return as a competitor in the Girls and Boys' Corner.
This week, kiddies, we are having an. other colouring contpetition as I know zau ke them very much. Colour the above pleture a gally as you can with your painis or crayons and send your entries to Uncle Eddle. c/o "Hongkong Telegraph. Wyndham Bireel. The com petition closes at 7 p.m. on Wednesday.
Three prizes will again be given-one for the bent in each section. Age and neatness wil be taken into consideration.
Rest of luck, kiddles.
Uncle Exdia
GH 田
M
SNAPSHOT GUILD
The SNA
CHRISTMAS CARDS
HONGKONG TELEGRAPH
Snapshots such as this can be posed any time now-and will make cherming, Inexpensive Christmas cards.
ABOUT this time each year, I blocks with big loiters on them, try observo n ring of red inklining up the blocks so they apell around a date on my calendar, and "Morry Christmas," Thon pose the a note on the margin—"Timo to child besido thom, holding, perhaps, think about Christning cards.” It's n] the last letter ready to place it in warning that has saved me lots of position-and you have a sok-up for trouble in the past, and that is why a story-telling picture. I am passing it along to you now.
Naturally, every dyed-in-the wool photographer likes to design his Christinas card around one of
own snapshots. However, many of us tend to put it off unül the last moment-and, In the end, have to send out ordinary cards That are not at all individual. So my advice 1-gel busy now, and have your cards ready for early masing.
No two photographic Christmas cards aro alike. That is what makes them so personnt, and thero are thousands of ideas you can adapt, The picture is the important part, and a clever picturo lden gives the card more appeal.
your child has a set of building.
Special pictures such as this load
to charming cards, well worth the little planning they require. How- ever, a good group snapshot of the family at home is often preferred and most albums contain such snapshots. A picture of the house- capocially with snow on it—makes an attractive card, and you may have a acliahlo pleture from Inst winter that can be used.
Run through the album, and soe what you can find. Some of the pleturos may give you Ideas for new snapshots, especially sulted to Christmas card uso. The chief polut 34-decido early, for Christmas ar river almost before you know it.
John van Galder
ARE YOU SURE ? ANSWERS
QUESTIONS ON PAGE TWO
1. Sidi-bel-Abbes.
2. Manfred, Gonsalez, Thery,
Polecart,
3. Peter.
4. Hera.
5. Mercury, Minerva.
6.
France.
7. Old Bulley, Lincoln's Inn, Court
of Arches.
8. Amundsen.
0. Astern.
10. Species of lizard.
11, Volga (2,325 miles).
12. (a) Venice and Cyprus; (b)
Verona; (c) Ephesus;
(d) Athens;
(e) Sicilia and Bohemia; (f) Vienna.
13. Rusalan Whites.
14. Hebrews (Genesis 14. 13).
15. Morry Peggolty (In "David Copperfleld").
16. (a) Birmingham; (b) Glosgow)
Live murgh; (d) Manchester; (e)
(c)
17. Vandals,
18. Herminius and Spurius Larlius.
10. Norway, Sweden, Denmark.
20. Adverb.
I'VE STOPPED GOING
TO LECTURES
Say. A STUDENT"
It has always been a favourite practice for students to "skip" certain of their less important classes, but very few of them fail to attend lectures entirely. That, however, is the policy which I have recently adopted; so far it has proved most successful,
instead of hurrying over my breakfast In order to be in tune for a nine o'clock cinas,. I spend an extra half-hour in bed and gain that rest which a student so much requires. Then 1 breakfast and depart for the Public Library, where I Gave formed the habit of studying, in this way my day usually begins about
10 Jn.
While my fellow-students are striving with might and main to take down nates at the speedy dietation of their lecturer or professors I am slowly, but surely, Basimilating knowledge from some
suthoritive lexibook. i may even on consulting the very book from which the Clasa lecturer has derived his twiem,
in this way I am learning to work for myself and, above all, to work at my own pace. Perhaps I may be life behind the other members of my class, perhaps I may be a 10u 11 front of them. But in any case I am the master of all my studies, for am 1 not puzzling everything out by myself?. And is not inla the best method of studying?
The student who attends lectures 1 very apt to miss half of what is dictated to him. The lecturer may not even trou- ble to spell any terms which are new to his students, in which case the loan là entirely that of the student. Moreover, the nales of the lecture-altending studenta are usually 'a confused ́mass of strange words and unintelligible phrases. How much nester are those of the student who takes his notes at leisure from authoritative booki
some
Of course, I will attend those small tutorial lectures which sto so valuabia to the student as an individua). Here it is possible to obtain in one half-hour an Amount of Individuel tuition taat is more valuable oven, than twenty clam lectures, These tutorial lectures i nøver fail to attend,
| Nút I have certainly stopped going to the general lectures which take up tush at amount of a studen!'s" kima, Thess" I conuder of very iltis value to the student who can work more efficianity when he is working alona. - Whether my policy is successful or not only the ax imination retults will fall,
V
WEEK-END SECTION
"Peth-and-Pank Days"
tow
ERY
British Labour leaders have had to undergo Concentration Camp" brut- allties. One who has is Emmeline Pothick-Lawrence, who has just written My Part in a Changing World (Gollancz, 155.). Another is her husband, Fred, who was Labour's Financial Secretary to the Treasury from 1029 to 1931,
Bix times she went to prison in her Suffragrito daya. She and her hus band both experienced the horrors of forcible feeding
It was on the day that the Gover- ment decided to submit them to it that George Lansbury strode up the floor of The House of Coinmons and shouted at Asquith, You will go down to history as the man who tortured innocent women."
+
"Will the country not cry 'Halt!' before this horror is upon us?" thun- dered the Daily Herald."
But the Government refused to budge. The Lawrences started their hunger-strike, and both were forcibly fed. Emmeline was soon released. So was her husband later, because "he became very weak."
Those days in prison were like a watershed in the life of the Lawrences.
A day or two before they had both stood side by side in the dock with Mrs. Pankhursi-on trial for "com" spiracy" because one afternoon their women followers had emarhed hun. dreds of plate glass windows all over the West End.
They made a tremendous trio in the dock. Fred's defence of himself wRA s masterpiece.
But that was before their days l prison. When they came out, there came the split,
Mrs. Pankhurst wanted to go ahend
Puzzle Corner Answers
Cryptogram: "The good which bloodshed could not gain your pouceful zcal shall find."Whit-
tier.
An Enigma: Betsy Ross. Letter Juggling: Missile, similes Find Two Fractions: 11/4 and 77/0.
.
tragic end like a car on a apred track. powerful, passionate,
with an even greater campaign of violence-burning ancient buildings. Bensational, finging chemicals into letter-boxes tough.... and all the rest of it. She and her followers went ahead,
Dut the Peinlcks could not go with them. They were prepared to destroy Government property-but not the property of private individuals.
Be the movement divided self into Llo Peths" and the "Panks “....... mostly into the "Tanks."
Bix years later women got the vote. Who won it for them? The militant "Panka or the not-so-militant (but the -KAME very formidable) Peths"?
اله
It is hard to say. The splendid thing about this book is the tremendous credit that Mrs. Pettilek-Lawrence gives to the "Panks."
But in the long run the Lawrences come out on top. In 1927 Mrs. Pank. hurst was adopted ns Tory candidate for Whitechapel. She had lost interest in making great social changes.
Not so the Lawrences. They stuck to their job as reformers. For them bulfding a better Britain did not stop at winning votes for women. Not by a very long way,
W. B.
ROMANCE
ITH very odd. but the more "out
spoken" the romance nowadasa the more inen seem to be struck dumb when it comes to saying those Three Little Words. "I love you." The shyest Victorian, I fear, would have put them
to shame,
Yot even Mr. Cain falters. On Page 101 the singer tries to make himself say. "I love you." and falls dians trouzly. What a hero
Kate O'Brien is almost old-fashioned In comparison. In Pray for the Wanderer Heinemann, 78. 8d.) one of the lovers is star-crossed and another is rejected. But they could boll teach Mr. Cain's young man a thing or two when it comes tá proposing.
The plot? A successful novelist, dis. appointed in love, retreats to the home of his childhood in Ireland and almost losra his half-broken heart to Nell. one of the most attractive women you 210 has could ever hope to meet. to return without her. though she- but that shall be Miss O'Brien's story. She is an author who prefers the pleasures of a jaunting car to the ex citements of an Alfa Romeo, But the never falters, Her scenes and her people live.
✩
We'll end romantic reading with Anfact Sabatini's The Historial Nights' Entertainment (Hutchinson, 89. d.), the third volume in a series which started over twenty years ago.
Henry the Eighth and Anna Boleyn, Queen Elizabeth and the Earl of Essex, Catherino do Medlel, Christina of Sweden, Maria Theresa, Catherine of Russin-here they all are, stepping out bravely in the Love Parade of the
Witnesa James M. Cain's new story Serenade (Cape, s. 6d.). Incidentally you may remember the author as the man who warned us that the Past Centuries. man Always Rings Twice.
For Mr. Sabatini is a generous show- With him It's always tuppence
His tale of a singer who runs away mATH with a Mexican girl roars along to its coloured, never penny plain.
INSPECTOR PLAYFAIR
(Solution)
Each penny red, as we have been told, bears two distinc- tive letters. By the selection and appropriate arrangement of variously lettered stamps, Wurzer was able to com- municate in code.
Mere Books and Their Authors: Vanity Fair-Thackeray; The Rivals--Sheridan; Lorna Doone—| phy-Van Loun: The Great
While Blackmore; Heavenly Discourse Meadow-Roberts;
Home
Answers to Week-end
Problems
Problem 1
The Oral Examination After Bella, the examinces in English in order were: Ella, Ada, Dora, Clara.
Five Digits
I stand to win.
The five
Wood; Captain Blood-Sabatini; Burns--Woollcott: Journey's End digits are 2, 3, 6, 8, 9, and my Robert E. Lee-Freeman; Geogra-| -Sherl
Tragedy
NEXT MORNING
of a tired-
It's going to he GLORIOUS
looking bridesmaid
I don't want to
see the wedding Betty darling! picture. I know what is the I look dreadful!
matter. You even wake fired these days. You ought
TWO MONTHS LATER
to see a
doctor!
What a lovely couple!
-and the bridesmaids, aren't they sweet. Pity Betty looks so dull-spoils
it rather
From a wedding comes a wedding,
but not for Betty
if
you
ask me!
AT THE DOCTORS ||
"expectation" is 138.
THAT
Where's my
bouquet?
I'm so thrilled
THINKS
How I dread this. I look awful,
NIGHT
...this waking
fired tells on your whole appearance. During sleep you burn up energy by breathing and other automatic actions. if this energy is not replaced- of course you wake
tired. It's Night
Starvation!
Oh, mummy, I'm so thankful to you for helping me!
beside the others! my face so dull- and this
tiredness!
and so every night :
Does your daughter make tired?
WAKING TIRED affects a girl In her appearance and personality, She never looks and never feels her best. She's unfairly handicapped. Give her Horlicks -- a cupful regularly st night. She'l wake refreshed ---- full of energy and sparkle. Get Horlicks today.
HORLICKS
LAGUARDS AGAINST NIGHT STARVATION