DONALD DUCK
276*
Cher 1940, Walt Disney
CHECKING
OUT!
271
3-29
HITLER'S
Monday
HONGKONG TELEGRAPH
DEATH
MAD ATTACK
Prophesy By U.S. Scientist
By Glen M. Stadler
United Press Stat Correspondent.
NEW YORK, (UP)-Dictator Hitler of Germany will attempt a suicide drive of a million men against the Allies, a mad plan that will result in Hitler's death and probably an Allied victory within two years, Dr. David Sen- bury, noted, United States lec- turer and author, believes."
will bu
The frenzied campaign born from Hitler's psychosis; his peculiar mental makeup, according to the psychologist who in October of 1838 publlely predicted that the Hitler-Stalin pact would be signed becutise of Hitlera schizophrenia split personality.
Seabury sald Hitler definitely was psychotic insane although not to the point that he cannot always control
He sold himself.
the German Chancellor sufferes from both par
delusions of grandeur and anola, schizophrenia.
"Hitler has less than two more years
in which his mental equill- belum will be sufficient for any adequate continuing of leadership," Seabury said. "The Orst sign of breaking carne when his anger forced him to take Poland six months too soon, He should have waited until March, military men Bay.
"Hitler lost at that time to Stalin the control of middle Europe, which he had insisted up to then was the whole goal of the Nazi party.
"The next attempt of Hitler to dramalize himself as a great national hero will be his putting himself at the head of an army of a million men to drive around the Maginot line, at one end or the other.
He cares not in the least who gets killed. He might prefer to drive; through a neutral, just to punish it for being neutral. The French are an enemy an attack on the Maginot Une would be nothing but a contest.
But his psyche rages because a neu-
teal is merely neutral."
Nat only Hiller, but the whole nation is suffering from a psychologic split; between initarism and the domestic beautles of German music and culture.
He said German military leaders might encourage their leader to stage A mass attack, simply to rid the country of Hitler, But then, he said, Hitler's death might unite the nation in an absolute, blind fury of fighting, bombing London and Paris,"
Seabury, comparing the German and Russian dictators, said there was nothing insane about Stalin.
"Stalin's weakness is his provinc!- allam which caused him to belleve that the Russian submerged rann, not knowing what he was doing, could ensliy beat down the Finnish patriot who knew exactly what he was fight- ing for.
RITZ. BILT HOTEL
June 10, 1940.
By Walt Disney
PREDICTED
AGAINST
Princess
A photograph of the King and Queen with their daughters taken at Windsor Castlo during the week-ond. Elizabeth's fourteenth birthday was celebrated at the Castle.
PAID HIS DEBT FROM
OLD AGE PENSION
LONDON.--Every week for four years 76-year-old Mr. C. H. May has saved two shillings for his old age pension, which was 'all he had to keep his wife and himself. Now he has paid off his credi.
tors with four per cent, interest into the bargola.
He lost all his money when his music business falled, and, after
realising all his assets he still owed £18.
Mr. May, who lives in n small bungalow said: "It has been hard struggle to raise money and my wife and I have often had to go short. But I had never been in debt before and I was determined to pay It has taken a great weight off my mind."
BLIND MAN WALKS
ON AS BOMBS FALL
- - -
By GEOFFREY COX
PARIS.
THE Blind Man of Namur will be remembered, I believe,
"Hiller's weakness is his emotionni Bo long as people talk of these days... indiability. When Hitler came to power he had the totaliturion idea
for the welfare of the industrini Jenders
"As long as he would advance that
Fantastic
way, he carried along the idea. But Book About
when pressure of economie circum- stances and military accessities grew,
It was perfectly natural for him to Stalin
swing to the exact opposite-Stalin.
"All Hitler shifted,, however, was
lis. propaganda' centre. The shift
was all the easier because German
He has been photographed
in a French Army news reel. You see bomba falling in the narrow streets of Namur, as I saw them fall in Tournai.
You see the refugees break for shelter.
Then you see, tapping his way
LONDON, Dec. 12.-The first forward with a while walking stick,
staring up the Brure of the Blind
military leadera long had belleved and, perhaps, the most fantastic his lips moving, his sightless eyes they could not fight the Allies with of the many books which will Man.
a hostile Russia at their backs. probably be published to prove
"At the same time, Stalin desired that Stalin has always been pro-around him as he goes slowly on German friendship to remove the danger from his own path in the German la "I
Baltic and the Balkana.”
Rubble Is Aying, bricks are falling) Was Stalin's
alone, helpless, into the Inferno that Agent" by General W. G. was Namaur.
Seabury'e prophecies have brought Krivitsky, which has just been The camera moves upward. Above!
him many threats and protests. In published: San Francisco recently he received a
· package of polson.
The American psychologist bases his predictions on years of study of the mind and on the study of milt- [ary, history.
the smoke and the Blind Man circle bombers flown by Hitler's young
I saw this Alm. It symbolis- thon a million other [refugee pictures could, the massacre
days-srrinshed down to cumber up. He tells the following interesting the roads of the Allied armies.
General Krivitsky cialms to have bom been Chief of Russian Military men. telligence in Europe for two years, and he broke with Stalin in November ca more. 1937.
In Paris, the Star Gazers publlen- He has escaped the assassin's knite of the Belgian people in the last ten tion Stars and Waves," predicted on two occasions since then.
that the stars definitely aro against
Hitler, according to latest calculd story of an English radio engineer tiona of the kasvens,
hamed Friend, who married a
21 The publication sold, that Hilera Ruslan and was an enthusiastic anti- There were countless, similar dis-
Popis appearances carefully laid plans will fall and his Fascist. And gett
General Krivitsky states that he Writing about the Ogpu ho-rug- the signs of the Zodiac for those bora was lured on to a Soviet vessel byats that Hussians earn their livell-
end will be unpleasant... It said that
in the period including Hitler birth the Ogpu in Spain on the pretext hood mainly by mying on each other, repair the and Stalin, spying personally on his thet required ensly then too easily lost, ship's ruild
Tinjaurik: 20(1859) wealth wed-that-hegyen taken, onun super-sples who pled ont
He will Day: for his crimes and straight to Odessa, thence to Morow Ogpu, tinearthed the only genuine loso his stolen acquistions, the pubs prisust, on AprI-12-2017 Aince which plot mera las been to assassinate lichtiori: asserted, a
* Idato: he li14 101 Identi
IN
ALLIES
Men To Knit For The Forces?
LONDON.-The Mayor of Wakefield (Mr. J. M. Jolly) surprised an audience of women at Wakefield when he hinted at the probable formation of a men's knitting and sewing group in the town, in con- nection with the Wakefield comforts and hospital supplies funds.
He was speaking at an exhibition of work done by women for these funds, and he stated that there were men in Wakefield who were already plying needles in the making of garments for soldiers, sailors
and airmen.
CHURCH SERVICES
Thanksgiving Offered
For B.E.F. Rescue
Days Of Chivalry
Not Yet Dead
LONDON. The days of chivalry are not dead.
There was a touching case of it this week, Wilfred Page, 20 years old Darlington engluwer, was driving a girl friend home when he ran out of The recent successful and
heroic Petrol, withdrawal of the British Expedition-
He took a tin and went to a near-
Napier Johnstone's
OLD HIGHLAND CLUB WHISKY $6.25 per bottle $68.25 per case
EXTRA OLD
12 YEARS IN THE WOOD
LANE, CRAWFORD, LTD.
AIR MINISTRY DELAY, FIRM CLAIMED £185,000
MISTAKES COSTING thousands of pounds are mentioned in the Air Services Appropriation Account for 1938 published recently with the cominents of the Comptroller and Auditor-General:
The most costly item to public funds arose over the erection of buildings at three R.A.F. home stations, con- tracts for which were placed in 1936 and 1937 with one firm.
In November, 1988, the contractor put forward claims for excess costs incurred through dolay by the Air Ministry in súp- plying plans, drawings and other necessary particulars.
Investigation of the firm's books by Air Ministry represen tatives established that to November, 1938, a loss of £130,300 had been sustained in addition to a loss of profit of £55,600.
£12.000 OVERPAID While not admitting the claims in their entirety the Ministry recognised that the contractor's losses were duc, in large measure, to the causes alleged which, states the report, were un- avoidable for the special circumstances jof the rearmament programme.
Something Of A Gate-Crasher
ary Force from Bellum had an by garage but when filling it there reto in Hongkong yesterday, when was an explosion and he was severely all Protestant Churches held Thanks- burned-in fact all his clothes were
LONDON-Not content to gate. giving services in this connection. burried off.
crash in the visual way, a man was All these services were fully attended. was for the girl and he stopped a Although in agony his first thought
An independent check afterwards recently fined at a London, police A large congregation attended at motorist who drove him back to her. revealed a probable overpayment of court, for having visited a lady in St. John's Cathedral. Among those
He then ordered a taxi for her, £12,000, which the firm were in- present were His Excellency the made arrangements for his car to be formed would be deducted from the company of a friend of hers. Omeer Administering the ment, Hon. Mr. N. L. Smith, Admiral Hosped and asked to Le driven to future advances.
hospital. Sir Percy Noble, Commander-in- Ho died 24 hours later. Chief of the China Station. Major-| -
Govern-
During, the tour of his visit he At a site for a proposed aircraft threw a chair at her, kicked her head. repair depot, costing £1,000,000, ex-tossed beer over ber, tore out the
and tensive pilling was necessary, General A. E. Grsell, G.O.C., and He rescued me from so ierrible eventually the work was abandoned, telephone, and threw a £250 fur coat
His Honour the Chief Justice, Sir Atholl MacGregor, t
death, He rescues still and I have good hope that He will continue to The report states that a formuli Dean Wilson of the Cathedral de- rescue," from 2 Corinthians ch. 1, has been adopted to limit the profits: livered a sermen utilising the text: | verse 10.
of aircraft manufacturers,
1
in a bath of water,
A gate-crasher in every sense of the word.
BREWERY UB
a19
U.B. BEER
LIMITED
WR. LOXLEY & CO. (China), LTD.
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