WE'RE BUILDIN A BOAT

OUT

DONALD DUCK

IN THE GARAGE! CAN WE!

HAVE SOME MONEY TO BUY SOME

NAILST

· NO, DOGGONE

IT I CAN'T AFFORD ITI GO FIND SOMET USED NAILS!

C'MON) BOYS;

I WANTA LOCK UP THE GARAGE-TIME:

FOR BED!

Monday,

HONGKONG TELEGRAPH

QUIT ARGUN AND STEP. EVELY--

I'M IN A

HURRY 1:7

May 20, 1940.

By Walt Disney

“WELL, GEE YOU SAID

FIND SOME

USED ONES,

UNCA DONALDI

R.A.F. MEN TOOK THIS AS THEY BOMBED U-BOAT

#

A NEW SHIPMENT

MONUMENTY

DANISH

PURE THICK CREAM

3 tins $1.50

(each '6 ox. Nott)

DELICIOUS WITH FRUITS, ETC.

LANE, CRAWFORD, LTD.

Tel. 28151

-RADIO-

ZBW, 355 metres (845 k.c.) and 3149 metres (9,520 kilo-cycles)

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

By Dr. A. D. Lindsay 8,30 A Dance Programme.

Baritone) with Orchestra.

0.15 London Relay-News Bum-

9.30 London Relay--"I Belleve in

Radio Programme Broadcast by mary. ZBW on a Frequency of 845 .c's. and on Short Wave from 1-1.13 p.m. and 8-11 p.m. on 0.52 me's. per Democracy" A talk by Dr. A. D. second.

H. K. T.

Lindsay.*

9.45 Selected Plano Bolos, Valses Nebles, Op.77, Nos. 1-12

12.15 pm. Short Service of Inter-] (Schubert), Lil Kraus; Minuet and cussion.

12.30 Lea Allen (Vocal) Primo Scala's Accordeon Band,

Trio (from Fantasia Sonatu in G Major, Op. 78-Schubert); Prelude and in C Sharp Minor, Op. 3, No.. 2

(Rachmaninoff), Arthur Rublustein,

1.0 Local Time Signol and Wen- ther Report.

and

1,03 Dance Muse 1.30 Fleuter

Rugby Press Weather Forecast and Announce ments.

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

2.15 Close down.

Closing local Stock Quotu-

0.0

"For the Children.”

0.30

tions.

6.32

10.02 Two Songs by Georges Thill (Tenor).

of

"Werther"-O Nature, Full Grace (Messenet), The Damnation of Faust" O Vast Nature (Berlioz), Sung

in French with Orchestra, 10.10 Berlioz~~Symphonie Fan- tastique, Op. 14,

Orchestre De La Sõelete Des Cón- cerls Du Conservatoire cond. Bruno Walter.

11.0 Close down.

Jubilee Music Hall Parade American

1010—1035.

6.52 Kelelbey-In A Fairy. Reali |--Sulte,

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

7.05 Variety with Frank Crumit, Hildegarde and Sydney Torch.

7.30 London Relay-The Newa

0.0 Local Time Signal

Weather Report.

8.03 This week's programmes. 8.07 Music of. Coleridge-Taylor.

and

Seaman Misses His Ship

William Lawson, Smyly, an Ameri- can seaman, appeared before Mr. E. Himsworth at the Kowloon Magis- tracy this morning. charged with entering the Colony without a poss~- port and being a vagrant..

Smyly was committed to the House of Detention.

It was sald defendant was found

Unmindful of the Roses, Arthur in Peking Road on May 12, under. Reckless (Baritone)) with Orchestra; the infuence of drisk.: Spring

pring Had Come (Hiawatha'), Elste ́Smyly' said he missed his ship and Suddaby (Soprano) with Orchestra; was left in the Colony without his Four Characteristic Valses, 1. Valse; papers which were on board nhlp. Boberalcane 2. Valse Rustique, 3. He was told that the agents of his Valeo de la Reine, 4. Volso Maures- ship would be contacted and in the que, New Light Symphony Orchestra; meantime he would be detained.

Glostora

That well-groomed' op- pearance can be ruined by a fow unruly hairs.

Glostora conquers unruly hair-keeps every strand in its placa-brings out the patural lustra of your he

hair

Glostora

... JON INI, TERAIR

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 pilot oficer In the RA.F., was killed in a plane .accident at on East Anglion

aerodrome.

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

HIS BROTHER CO-RESPONDENT

A BROTHER elled his own brother na co-respondent in the Divorce

Court recently,

He was Mr. Reginald. Malcolm Burge, of Brockwell Court, Brixton. S.W., and he cited has brother, Mr. Edward Burge.

lillda Burge.

Telegram Went Astray

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

re-

A telegram that went astray had caused them a lot of trouble.

Denecker is in the Royal Army, Service Corps, and went to France with the B.E.F. soon after war began. He was married in February and not long afterwards was ordered back to England.

Mrs. Denecker arrived at Folicestone: to join him.

First Visit

It was her first visit to England— and she cannot speak English.

No one was there 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 an- other slation so the telegram neverj reached me.

"Later

found that my wife was somewhere in England.

"At first my elforts to trace her failed. Then I found that she was in Folkestone.

"She thought that probably I had returned to France and she decided

go back, too.

to

"50 she was waiting for an exit permit.

We're both very happy now.” Mrs. Denecker was the first bride of a member of the British Exped!- tionary Force.

MADAME KUNG ENTERTAINS

THESE amazing pictures of the

last minutes of a Nazi submarine were taken by the crew of na BAF. plane as they sank it..

Their bombs were actually in the air as they snapped the top pleture. In the bottom one you see the dis- turbed water which was all hero wis to show the fate of the Bloat after the boaibs and done their work.

You read in yesterday's "Dally Herald" an outline of the R.A.F. men's exploit, carried oul near Wil helmshaven on Monday. Here is the crew's own story:

"We were on reconnalsance over the Helgoland Bight, and when the submarine was seen it wgs moving on the surface only a few mits from the share,” said the bomber's epialu.

"We had to ael quickly or the sub- marins might have crash-dive, and

got away. We dropped our bombs. My dent impression was that they had fallen short, but the corporal air gunner shouted excitedly through the Inter-communication set, "A direct hit, sir."

"Putting the aircraft into a sharp turn I brought it 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 wald: “E was looking down on the submarins as we were passing over 11. After wa had dropped our bombs I saw two parts of the vessel sticking up cat of the water. All I could see in between WAS A white patch of disturbed water. Then old began to spread over the surface of the sea, Finally, first one part then the other dlanp- peared as though they had pona down separately.'

White man at

man at native trust'

camp 'broke

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.

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

Hatton-garden, London: The ala- shown in court in a

In London-at the Oil Bailey—he | mons were was sent to prison for fileen months sealed glass bottlo. valued at £15,000, knowing them to for possessing 1,224 uncut diamonds

And

Madame H. H. Kung, wife of the Vice-President of the Executive Yuan and Minister of Finance, who have been stolen 1s Hon, Chairman of the Hongkong Committee of the "Friends of the Wounded"

movement, entertained local Chinese women leaders at her residence yesterday, says "Central News."

Judge Beasley suid to him: "In addition to stealing a large quantity of diamonds you broke a great trust the trust reposed i you as the only white mon in a camp and in charge of a mine, You set a shock,,

example to the natives under

Mr. Christmas Humphreys, pro- "Botuling," "kald the impression Hatt | been given by the defence that the climate in Sierra Leone was such flint it would not be advisable to

take a white wornan out there. That was not no.

*** Matters relating to the "Friends of

The company employing Hutter He was granted a decree nisi, tho Wounded" campaign in Hong-

Hutler admitted stealing the dia- ndvised their employers to take their with costs, on the ground of the kong, which will shortly be brought adultery of his wife, Mrs. Dorothy to a conclusion; were discussed, in monds, and said he stole them bewives with them, but when flutter the course of a brief address, Madame cause he heard by cable from Eng-joined the firm he signed a state-

land that his wite whom he had ment that he was single Kung enjoined those present to con married two years previously-war Mr. Edward · Cjurko, defending, tinue their efforts.

11 in hospital and had no money to sald Butler told the im he was single because he thought it would Pay bills.

pah Said He Was Single- be easier for him to get the job. Ha He arrived at Liverpool on leave was paid £45 a month, out of which -with-the-v-diamonds--hidden-in-his-henslowed-his-wife-£20 a-menther

Mr. and Mrs. Reginald Burge mar ried in 1920. They lived in London hotels and in Xari

The case for Mr. Burge was that his wife left her in 1937, and he al- leged that she and bit brother after- wards cometitled "Hamlet":

Prominent among those present were Madamo Sun Yat-sen, Madame Sun Fo, and the Missos Hu Mu-Inh. Ma Fung-chi, Wu Yerchwang, Liao Mung-sing-and-Hau? Yuin-chan:~

U.B.Beer

LIGHT OR DARK

BREWERY

SHARO

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

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