Wednesday,
HONGKONG TELEGRAPH
August 9, 1939.
Lifimary. Supranta Court
Beauty Expert LOST 26 lbs UGLY FAT
Those who desire to be file active and healthy must guard against excessive fit. And 10 ma woman can fatness be greater handicap or cagedy than to the ileauty Expen. Read what Ates Corriise Bwing, a famous Beauty Hapert, says J
last albe, taking Denkosa, | Preduced monly through hips and abdomen where I wredit to law she most. This healthful way to reduce ovoided off wrinkler and Robanen. 11, diwe, ended mu pheumatism, ramach troubis, aridity and constipation. I am complemented on my locks. People say Where has your fat one of 100% better; full of ps and I
FAT GOES QUICK — NO DRUGS NO DIETING - NO EXERCISES
Honkers alone can make you, slim, and slender Mauraity, Hankoms is • brquld, which dispalver away when the auteurs saules 29 $1
·AUSE 07. Terrfere with Benkera tiere, la mo penculty of developing Wrinkles and Plebbiness shuough retuting, Flesh is firm, healthy, ta the frok and cash, and health benefits, a welderably, Get rid of your ugly fat 1 Wear fashionable clodiel, not US Live a full, energeile hel
Bon Hora Safely Builds up Health
Reduces fat Quickly.
Beržos draws the polrona (tole scads) from the kleed stream, so that all the fratili troubles from which is folk always buster, disappear my ugly fat Give Dunkuža a trial. At effects the inost marvelous results after all else fails.
Ben Kora is sold by all Chemists, Stores, Bazaars, Cic.
Sole Agenta: W. S. Sherly & Co.
20 Queen's Id. C.
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Ardent racing for at running o' the Grand Prix race, Paris, was the Duke of Windsor, in top hat. With him Is the Duchess.
Time Clue May Trap Murderer of Pretty Wife
DEAL.
Modern Parents As
"Poor Things"
never promote
DR. DOUGLAS MacCALMAN, effection, could only inhibit and re-
Aberdeen University, told strict and could
development. the Royal Sanitary Institute
Sir Henry Bashfurd, chief medical Congress at Scarborough recent
officer to the Post Office, stated that. ly that, after reading books and investigation of UUD records showed papers on the subject, he was that the modern 18-year-old boy was left with the impression that 3in. taller 20th, heavier, on the parents were but poor things-average, than his predecessor in
1878. inefficient, thoughtless. um- tutored and a prey to their un- conscious impulses.
There might be a great deal at truth in this. He thought they had swung too far away from the un-
worship questloising pricestral Victorian times.
nf
"Our grandparents," he said, "pro- muted in their children unquestion- ing obedience, humble, worship, and a blind, rather stupid, kind of love. This however, can be said for those Old Testament parents-they had clear-cut ideas about upbringing which gave not only confidence but security to the children."
their children that sense of "all's
Many things contributed to the general health of workers in Indus- try,, but by far the most important was supervision by the right kind of foremen and department heads,
Warrens Of Whitehall
WHILE Sir John Anderson sets his face against deep shelters for the pro- tection of the publle, Whitehall is dig- ging in-and digging deep.
below
It might be a good thing that parents were no longer dictators in Underground shelters are being their own homes, but the changes to- provided for Civil Servals and their day were not wholly for the better. urchives, and tons of bricks, steel, Parents lo-day might be more cement and limber are going under- loved than feared; there might be ground to reinforce the refuges and less cruelly, less hypocritical avoid-make them bomb-proof. SCOTLAND YARD detectives and the Kent police force were ance of difficult moral and social :
Wherever there are Government recently following a new line of inquiry in the murder of Mrs. problems, but they no longer aveces, you can hear, from Margaret Jackson, pretty golden-haired wife of a local colliery Fight with the work!" which was the ground, the incessunt clamour of the official, at hor home on the London Rond, Deal.
first essential of normal develop (pneuinatie' drill. Sir Bernard Spilsbury travelled from London to make a post-ment.
120 FEET DEEP mortem examination and reported that the woman had been Dr. H. Edelston, East London Child! The Houses of Parliament have Intensive police inquiries have shown that Mrs. Jackson was problem child, said fear, whether of been equipped with underground wir petual physical punishinent or of and gas locks. Emergency doors and probably murdered between 9 a.m. and 10.30.
moral censure or of withdrawal, of double gas-tight fixtures are in posl- tion, for instant fitting by the Office juf Works.
strangled.
It had been thought preciousty that she mist have died between 9 am, and 1 pan.
The arrowing down of the time In wijch the kilig probably took place is regarded as of great import-
nice.
With Sir Bernard from London rame Chief Inspector Salisbury and | Detective-Sergeant Bell, of Scotland Yard, who are assisting Superinten dent Stuchfekt, chief of the Kent C.ID, who is in charge of investiga- tions.
ROBBERY NOT MOTIVE Robbery as motive has been ruled out as nothing was missing! from the house.
A theory that the murderer may i have posed as an electrician is based | on the fact that the electric light un the landing was burning when Mrs. Jucka's body was found by her husband, and that underneath the
steps, light was a pale of locked as though they had been placed there by someone intending io climb to the loft.
which
Apparently Mrs. Jackson put up a hure strugte when attacked in the bedroom for part of her clothing was
torn vil.
Police Inquiries are being made at Betteshanger Colliery where 2.500 men are employed, and at a military camp nearby.
She Was Left
A Fortune
30-YEAR friendship between
two women, one-a-peer's- daughter famous before the war
Guidance Clinic, speaking of the
Douglas (Wrong Way) Corrigan, 32, recently took a flight into matrimony. Here he is, at San Antonio, Texus, airpori, with his wile. She was Elizabeth Marvin, 32, schoolteacher and
Doug's childhood pal.
"Unfit To Fly" Charge Against Bomber Pilot
A LLEGATIONS that an R.A.F. officer was under the
A
as a violinist, and the other a influence of drink while on duty at an Empire Air well-known pianist, her accom- panist, is recalled by the death Day display at Stoke-on-Trent were made at a general of Miss Amy Hare, F.R.A.M., at court martial at the Finningley R.A.F. station, near Don-
caster, recently. POREAUERNICA Oakwood Court, W.
Hongkong.
VERY POPULAR SANDALS FOR
CHILDREN
MADE OF NATURAL
COLOUR LEATHER
Price now only $2.90, $3.50, $3.90
Rafa
Portman, daughter of the second
Miss Hare net the Hon. Mary Flying-Officer James Nelson Culverwell was charged Viscount Portman, through their with being drunk when on duty as captain and first pilot in England and Berlin for about 30 of a Hampden Bomber.
love of music. They were together
years.
Son Is Born To Tragic Bride
There was пл
The warrens of Whitehall vary in depth, is said, from 28 to 120 fect.
And while nobody obleets to deep shelters for public servants, the pub- lie which pays them none the less feels justified in suying; that what's sauce for the goose should be sauge for the gander.
Concrete street trenches will 1• provided in Newcastle for house- holders unable to erect the Anderson shetters-if an experimental trench proves successful,
Each trench, constructed beneath the carriage-way, would accommo- |date 100 people,
EYESIGHT menace
Meanwhile, hospital authorities re disturbed at the lack of emergency provisions to deal with eye injuries.
One potential war emergency hos- pital has in hand nothing more than two aluminlum eye balhs and 72 eye shades. No instruments are available with which to extract glass and metal splinters likely to cause permanent blindness.
Middlesex Hospital has been first with a powerful recruiting idea in the form of "Flying Squads" for blood, donors, which is havingt Excellent results.
Cars go out into the streets com- plete with doctors, student-aide and secretary. Crowds are fucking to these ambulatory empanelling cen- tres, where the simple blood lest is made in one minute and a half.
Situation In The Far East
LONDON,
A question was again asked in Parliament recently regarding the
present situation in the Far East:- Minister whether any Governments
Mir. A. Henderon asked the Prime
of
civilians; now
with representatives in China huve now obtained full information re- alternativegarding cases of bonbardment by
uircraft Japanese When the Hon. Mary Portinun died
charge of conduct prejudicial to whether such information has In 1831 she bequeathed to Miss Hare £30,000 on trust for to. £5.100.
good order and Air Force dis-been sent, to the Council of the her "Joseph Ole Bull" violin daled
cipline in that when it was his League of Nations in accordance 1738, her car and two pianos. Miss llare said of the time that the violin.
duty to fly a service aircraft he with its resolution of May, 1939; and whether His Majesty's Government's which the Hen. Mary Porting used
Mrs. Joan Smyth, widow of six rendered himself unable to per-representative on the Council will al converts, was worth £3,000.
"They were deeply attached to one months, whose secret Gretna Green form such duty by indulgence in ask for its publication forthwith?
Mr. Chamberlain: My Nobic Friend another," said Miss Tilly Koenen, a wedding was revealed only, on the alcohol.
death of her twenty-two-year-old
has had no reports on this subject friend of Miss Hare.
Similar charges will be preferred from the Secretariat of the League of "Miss Hare, who was 78, was the husband last December, recently gave! first woman Fellow of the Royal birth to a son at her home, Ainsworth later against Pilot-Oncer Robert Nations. It will be recalled that ot
Maxwell, Coste, the navigator.
the time when the resolution was Acadleny of Music.
Hall, Bury, Lancs.
adopted. His Majest's Government. Her husband, Alexander McKinlay
Squadron-Lender H. H. Sherlock, in common with other Governments Scribbled Will Valid Smyth, Glasgow University medical prosecuting, said that at
the time represented on the Council, agreed student, was found accidentally shot Culverwell was supposed to take off that reports received by the Council
uncle, (UP)-The in the offlee of his GETTYSBURG,
Mr. Ato fly past, Wing Commander Rogers, should be published, provided that seribbled will found between the McKinlay, wealthy racehorse owner who was in control of the display, the Government which furnished
Mrs. Smyth (who is also twenty- pages of a cook book has been ruled
came to the conclusion that he was, them raised no objection. valid by an Adems county jury, The two then announced that they had drunk and gave orders that under no testament
Jakob been married drawn by
four years. They Heist, who died in January, 1938, lived apart for a time so that her circumstances was he to take off.
Barwell Squadron-Leader and directed that his $1,000 calate be husband could continue his studies; tuned over to his friends. Mr, and later there was a church ceremony Culverwell was not drunk. He was Ifcist's in Glasgow, where they set up their standing perfectly steady, but he was Mrs. George E. Kemper,
home.
doubtful whether he was at to be in relatives contested the will.
charge.
WILS
Pa.
Goes In His Own Yacht
To See Tennis
lounge on. the upper WHEN Mr. Daniel Hanbury the covered WHE
wants to avail himself of deck in which meals are served; the cabins which enable Mr. and Mrs, his membership of the All Eng Hanbury to sleep four guests abourd, land Lawn Tennis Club to watch | the two bathrooms. the Wimbledon Tournament ho She is 118 tons," he said. comes 200 miles to London from "She was built in 1923 for Lord his house, Castle Milwood, Lynd- Inverclyde, but she's changed hunda hurst, Hants, by his own private motor yacht, the Mandolin, and spends the fortnight anchored off Westminster.
several times since then,
Faith
Wing-Commander J. B. II. Rogers said Culverwell appeared to have dimculty in walking straight and seemed to be trying to pull himself together.
"Measured in aircraft-Nying terms. ho was drunk," sald witness.
Flying-Officer Culverwell pleaded not guilty to bol charges and said during the day. He did not think The had at the most four pints of beer this would make him Incapable of Performing his duties.
Akker about a civic lunch, he at- tended before the display, he saldi h had only one beer.
Arc
TOOK TWO DAYS Last year I wanted to watch some Squadron-Leader Sherlock: lawn tennis and I simply sailed up you telling the Court that during the from Southampton Water.
Javish civic lunch you had only one
Culverwell: Yes and I had to pay.
for it.
Mr. Hanbury, 03 years old, "It took two days, for wo don't beer. gery-haired, broad-shouldered, with travel by night: wo put in at Dover sallor's eyes, takes a quiet prido for the night, and then came on up is his enchanting vessel.
the Thames. The trip was auch a Mr. Hanbury painted out the super success we did it again this year. pressure stove which copes with five "I carry a caplain, two ABs, burners and an oven in the galley; cook-steward and an engineer.".
He admitted that he had nine half- pinta during the day.
The hearing was adjourned.
DIFFICULT YEARS FOR CHILDREN
It's when children start to shoot up suddenly that they need your special attention. Children who are growing fast often tire castly, get pale, listless and do poorly at school,
The trouble is that children have a double job of work to do. play and at the same time they They use up energy in work and
nre growing!
Doctors and nurses have re- commended! Horlicks for years for children who need this extra energy. Horlicks moreover builds sturdy bone and musele. You'll And that paleness disappears, and school-work in proves. And the children seen to gain endless energy and "go." Get Horlicks to-day,
(4)
Glostora
At school or at play....
Here's a manly way to neatness, the Glostora way! When Son camba his hair let him use a little Glostora, as well-groomed man do, Glusioro keaps bair neat, Keeps It actually glossy too, because Glostora means healthy hair and vigorous scalp.
Glostora is for ladies alsof They marrel how delight- Tully soft and lustrous it keeps their hair-how well it sets and holds a ware.
KEEPS HAIR NEAT
PEPSODENT
TOOTH PASTE
and POWDER
MIRIUM
CONTAIN
FOR GREATER CLEANSING POWER
The
Papsode
Hongkong Telegraph
NINTH
ANNUAL
AMATEUR PHOTOGRAPHIC COMPETITION
June-September, 1939 CASH
$250 $250
PRIZES
(Donated by "Hongkong Telegraph”) · TWO SILVER TROPHIES, VALUED-$250- (Donated by ILFORD, Ltd., London)
SEND YOUR ENTRIES IN NOW CLOSING DATE & TIME:
29th SEPT. AT 5 P.M.
THE ILFORD TROPHIES WILL BE AWARDED TO THE BEST AND SECOND BEST ENTRIES IN THE COMPETITION, IRRESPECTIVE OF CLASS,
Prizes will be allotted as follows: SECTION ONE:
For Story-Telling Pictures, 1st. $30. 2nd, $15. 3rd, $10. SECTION TWO:
General Pictorial Section: Landscapes, Seascapes, Architectural, Street Scenes, etc.
Ist. $30. 2nd. $15. 3rd. $10.
SECTION THREE: Portraits, Informal Close-ups, Human Studies. 1st. $30. 2nd. 515, 3rd. $10 SECTION FOUR:
Still Life and Table-Top Studies. 1st, $30. 2nd. $15. 3rd, $10, -SECTION FIVE: Snapshots taken by children under fourteen years. lat. $15. 2nd. 810, 3rd, $5.
RULES
The following tulen will' govern the Competition!
1-The Competition is confined ex-
clusivaly
photo- to amotour graphers
a-No employee or member of any frm in the photographie trade f permitted to compete.
3. The prites will be awarded to the compeiors sending In what are adjudged to be the best photo graph in each Section. Each eatry must be accompanied by a form which will be published during the period at the Com- petition. and which must be pasted on back of entry. -The right to publish any or all
of the entriex is reserved to the Tiongkong Telegraph. B-All photographs entered must live been taken in the Colony of fiongkung. Photographs which lavo been already entered in other Competitions are Ineligible. 6-No responsibility will be accepted for non-delivery of, loss of, or damage entries.
All entries to be either black. sepia, or toned picltires, and must
USE THIS FORM
AND PASTE IT.
ON THE
BACK OF EACH ENTRY
photo-
be mounted. Coloured trophe are ineligible. B-Pictures submitted in repla tanes should be accompanied by a smaller print in black and white. D-No pleture to entered in more
than one Section, 10-Mounts to be only white or
cream. and, except
the in Children's Section, must be of one of the following aires:-10x12, 18x20.
11.- eurrespondence will be entered Into In connection with the Com- paillion.
12---Entries in jha Children's Section must bear the entrant's name, aga and address on the entry form. counter-signed by a parent. 13-Members of the Staffs of the
and Hongkong Telegraph_
the South China Sforning Post are not pernitied to compete. 14-The decisions of the Judges shali
be Onal.
15-At the conclusion of the Com
polition, entries will be returned To competitors on application at the Telegraph offices within seven Jays.
SECTION
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
ENTRY FORM.
Meme en block lotters and parts this nn back of each Entry. It entered u Children's Section, parent please coun tersign kors.