Monday,

HONGKONG TELEGRAPH

WE'RE BUILDIN

A BOAT

OUT

DONALD DUCK

IN THE GARAGE! CAN WE

HAVE SOME MONEY TO BUY SOME

NAILS?

NO, DOGBONE

ITI CAN'T AFFORD IT! GÖ FIND SOME--- USED NAILS!

C'MON, BOYS,

I WANTA LOCK UP. THE GARAGE TIME

FOR BED!

Our ARGUIN AND STEP

LIVELY TM NA HURRY

SLAMI

May 20, 1940. By Walt Disney

WELL

YOU SAID

FIND SOME

USED ONES, PUNCA

DONALD!

NEW SHIPMENT

MONUMENT

DANISH

PURE THICK CREAM

3 tins $1.50

(oach 6, ox. Nott) DELICIOUS - WITH

FRUITS, ETC."

LANE, CRAWFORD, LTD. Tol. 28151

R.A.F. MEN TOOK THIS AS

THEY BOMBED U-BOAT

ZBW,

RADIO

355 metres (845 k.c.) and 31.49 metres (9,520 kilo-cycles)

Baritone) with Crchestra.

Relay of Talk from London Life and Death, Peter Dawson (Bass-

By Dr. A. D. Lindsay 8.30 A Dance Programme.

9.15

London Relay-News Sum-

Radio Programme Broadcast by mary. ZBW on a Frequency of 845 kc's 9.30 and on Short Wave from 1-2.15 pm Democracy" A talk by Dr. A. D. London Relay-"I Bellevo in and 8-11 p.m. on 8.52 m.c's.. per

second.

H. K. T.

12.15 p.m.

cession,

Lindsay,

9.45 Selected Plano Sotos, Valses Nobles, Op.77, Nos. 1-12

Short Service of Inter-(Schubert), Idli Krous; Minuet and

and

12.30 Len Allen (Vocal) Pelmo Scala's Accordeon Band,

1.0 Local Time Signal and Wea- ther Report.

1.03

Dance Musta

1.30 Reuter and Rugby Press Weather Forecast and Announce ments.

1.45 Variety with Clapham andị Dwyer, Frances Day. Bing Crosby and Others,

2.15

Close down.

0.0 "For the Children."'

8.30 Closing local Stock Quota-

tions,

Trio (from Fantasin, Sonata in G Major, Op. 78-Schubert); Prelude in C Sharp Minor, Op. 3, No. 2 (Rachmaninoff), Arthur Rubinstein.

10.02 Two Songs by Georges Thill (Tenor).

of

Foll "Werther"-0 Nature, Grace (Messenet), "The Damnation of Faust" O Vast Nature (Berlioz), Sung in French with Orchestra.

10.10 Berllor--Symphonie Fal tastique, On. 14.

Orchestre De La Societe Des Con- certs Du Conservatoire cond. Bruna Walter.

11.0 Close down

8.32 Jublice Music Hall Parade MISS WOLFE ENGAGED 1010-1935.

6.62 Ketelbey-In A Fairy Realm ---Suite,

Albert W. Kelelbey's Concert Or- chestra conducted by the Composer.

7.05 Variety with Frank Crumit. Hildegarde and Sydney Torch.

7.30 London Relay-The News, 3.0 Local Time Signal and Weather Report.

Former I. G. P's Daughter

To Wed Sqr. Ldr.

G. A. G. Johnston

The engagement is announced in the London Times, of Squadron Leader G. A. G. Johnston, R.AF., to Kathleen Irend Wolfe.

The bride-to-be la the younger 8.03 This week's programmes.

daughter of Mr. E. D. C. Wolfe, 8.07, Music of Coleridge-Taylor!

former Inspector General of Pollec Unmindful of the Roses, Arthur in Hongkong, who retired on pen- Reckless (Baritone)) with Orchestra sion in April, 1935. Re and Mrs. Spring Had Come (Hiawatha"), Elle Wolfe are now living at 24 Kensing- Suddaby (Soprano) with Orchestra on Mansions, 5.W.5. Four Characteristic Valses, 1. Valse Bohemienne 2. Valse Rustique. 3.

Squadron Leader Johnston is the

Valse de la Reine, 4. Valse Moures-younger-con-of the late Dr. and Mrs. que, New Light Symphony Orchestra; A. H. G. Johnston.

Glostora

op-

That well-groomed pearance can be ruined by a few unruly hairs,

Glostora conquers unruly hair-koops every strand in its place brings out the natural lustro of your hair.

Glostora

MATH

KEEPS HAIR NEAT

METROPOLE

HOTEL

CENTRAL - CLEAN

"COMFORTABLE - FIREPROOF!

B.E.F. Man Finds.

His French

FAMED

RUGBY

PLAYER

KILLED

Bride

PRINCE ALEXANDER OBO- LENSKY, the English Rugby Inter- national, who was a plist officer in the R.A.F., was killed in a plane accident at an East Anglian aerodrome.

When he was landing his plane hit an obstruction and turned up- side down

HIS BROTHER

-CO-RESPONDENT

Telegram

(Went Astray)

QUARTERMASTER SER- GEANT WILLIAM DENEC- KER and his 32-year-old French bride has been re- united.

A telegram that went astray had used theen a lot of trouble, Denecker is in the Royal Army Service Corps, and went to France with the B.EF, soon after war began. He was married in February and was ordered not long afterwards back to England.

Mrs. Denecker arrived at Folkestone to join him.

First Visit

It was her first visit to England- and the cannot speak English.

-No one was there to meet her) because a telegram sent to tell her husband of her arrival went as-

tray. After their reunion, Denecker ex- plained: "I had been moved to nn- other station so the telegram never reached me.

"Later 1 found that my wife was somewhere in England.

"At first my efforts to trace her; failed. Then I found that she wDS In Folkestone.

"She thought that probably I had returned to France and she decided to go back, too.

So she was waiting for an exit permit.

"We're both very happy now."

Mrs. Denecker wis the first bride!

of a member of the British Expedi-]. tionary Force.

Pet Led Her

To Death

THESE amazing pictures of the

last minutes of a Nazi submarina were taken by the crew of an BA.F. plane as they sank it.

Their bombs were actually in the nir as they snapped the top picture, In the bottom one you see the dis- turbed water which was all there waE to show the fate of the U-boat after the bombs had done their work.

You read in yesterday's "Dally Herald an outline of the RAF. men's exploit, carried out near WB. helmshaven on Monday. Here is ig crew's own story:

*We were on reconnaissance over the Heligoland Bight, and when the submarine was seen it was moving on the surface only a few miles from the shore," said the bomber's captain,

We had to act quickly or the sub- marine might have crash-dived and

White

got away. We dropped our bombs, My first impression, was that ther had fallen short, but the corporal air gunner shouted exclledly through the inter-communication set, a direct hit, sir."

"Futting the aircraft into a sharp turn I brought fi round in time to be able to see the stern and bow sticking up out of the water. The submarine must have been split In two,"

The corporal air gunner sald; "I was looking down on the submarine as we were passing over 1. After we had dropped our bombs 1 saw iwo parts of the vessel sticking up out ef the water. All I could see in between was a white patch of disturbed water, Then oil began to spread over the surface of the sea. Finalis, first one part then the other diap. peared as though they had gone down separately."

man at native camp 'broke trust'

OUT in Sierra Leone, British colony on the West African coast, Donald Harold Hutter, aged twenty- four, had charge of a native camp and a diamond.

mine.

have been stolen,

He was the only white man clothes, and tried to sell them in within seven miles.

|lation-garden, London. The dia

Blown in court in t In London-at the Old Balley-hemonds were was sent to prison for fifteen months sealed glass bottle. for possessing 1,224 uncut diamonds valued at £15,000, knowing themtosecuting, sald the Impression had Mr. Christmas Humphreys, pro- |

And Judge Beasley sald to him: been given by the defence that the "In addition to stealing a large climate in Sierra Leone was such quantity of diamonds you broke that it would not be advisable to great trust the trust reposed intake a white woman out there. That you as the only white man in a camp and in charge of a mine. was not so: You set a shocking example to the

A BROTHER'elted his own brother SEVENTY-YEAR-OLD Mrs. 打我 co-respondent in the Divorce Mabel Stevenson, of Cliftonville |~--

road, Brighton, had two pel

Court recently.

He was Mr. Reginald Malcolm canaries. Burge, of Brockwell "Court, Brixton, Every night shio hung the csgo con- S.W., and he elled his brother, Mr. taining one of them on the kitchen Edward Burge, -.

wall.

Mr. and Mrs, Reginald Bürge mar-

The company employing Hutter

natives under youting the dio-advised their employees to take their

He was granted a decreo nisl, The other cage she placed on the

Hutter admitted with coris, on the ground of the plate mck above the gas stove.

monds, and

and said he stole them bewives with them, but wher Halter adultery of his wife, Mrs. Dorothy

This practice cost Mrs. Stevenson cause he heard by cable from Eng-joined the firm he signed a state- Hilda Borge.

her life.

For in putting the cage on the land that his wife whom he hindment that he was singlo.

married two years previously-was Mr. Edward Clarke, defending, ried) in 1929. They lived in London plate rack she accidentally turned all in hospital and had no money to aid Hutter fold the firm 110 was hotels and In Paris.

loose tap of the gas stove.

pay bills..

single because he thought I would The case for Mr. Durgo was that] Neighbours who broke into her

Said Ho Was Singla⠀ be easier for him to get the job. He his wife left him in 1937, and he al- fat found her and the cantries dead.

„Ho_atrived at Livernool on leave

we paid £45 a month, out of which Teged that she and Hits Diöller, after verdict of death by misadvent

with the diamonds, hidden in Bat he allowed his WI 20 a month. wards commilled adultery,

ture was recorded at the inquest,

U.B.Beer

LIGHT OR DARK

BREWERY

UNITED

UB

1

SHANGHAY

W. R. Loxley & Co. (China), Ltd.

Page 5Page 6

Share This Page