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Ceble Address: SWANSTOCK
AT
TODAY A KING'S
When He Yells
See the Big as
'sed flying fists of: super mea clash, lo
THE
TIMBER RR
It's Your invitation
to Action, Thrills, Excitement!
KING
OF THE
LUMBERJACKS
JOHN PAYNE GLORIA DICKSON
Bangaram as slyszatolm?
STANLEY FIELĪĮS
Du er teal by Wen. Chemmat
It's the
King of
Timber Topping
Thrillerat
Wednesday,
HONGKONG TELEGRAPH
August 21, 1940.
GOOD USED CARS
Make of Car
Miles Ly. No. Price
1
Vauxhall 10-4
1938
Morris 8 Salcon
1930
20044 5403 $2400
11881 3715 41100
Vauxhall 14 Saloon.
1035
... 31752 2341 $1700
Morris 10 Saloon
1034
25830 6076 $1000
Ford VB Saloon
1934
Chevrolet Sedon
1935 Studebaker Sedan
1036
16341 4313 $1200
16530 TD $1000
31810 2101 $1200
Standard 12 Solcon
1037
20541 4512 ` $2000 Ilumber 12 Salcon
1934
54 $1000 72420 Studebaker Champion Coupe
1940
300 $3000 ** 02403 Chrysler Roadster
1930
18352 4240 $1000
All cars serviced the samo at
for now cars ADDITIONALLY
All units of $1500 and over in value carry the Hongkong Hotel Garage guarantee for three months. Inspection and trial invited
Hongkong Hotel Garage
Phones 27778-0
Stubbs Road.
REQUIEM MASS.
an-
The Portuguese Community
nounces that a Requiem Mass for the repose of the soul of the inte Governor of Macau Dr. Artur Tamagnini de Sousa Barbosa, will be held at the Roman Catholic Cathedral, Caine Road, on Friday, 23rd August, at 9
a.m.
The
Thongkong Telegraphı.
Wednesday, August 21, 1940. Wyndham St., Hongkong Telephone: 20015
THE prenx "Special to the Telsgraph" je nied by the "ilangkong Telegraph" to fadicate news which is strictly copyright under the provisions of the Telecommuni- cations Ordinance, 1916. Buch news ar bear to Indication ~UT is received in Jongkong on the date Publication by
the United Press Associations, who re serve all rights and forbid republication, either wholly or in part without previous arrangement.
The Air War
Air
at sea.
IT IS "UP
"UP THE DESTROYERS"
UR men of the destroyers are in the
Wherever there was dan- ger, there they were.
With the speed of greyhounds and the manmuvring capabilities of a London taxicab, the destroyers will go on leading the Navy in the war at sea however long it may
. Whenever there is a war, when- ever an emergency arises, someone always calls for more destroyers.
*
In 1017, when there were 263 de- stroyers in home watres alone, Jellicoe told the War Cabinet that the demands for destroyers ex- ceeded the supply by 90 ships. He had taken into account those which had come to join us from the United States.
It's the same to-day-destroyers first, whatever the danger. Оп these light, swift, heavily armed craft, on these "ferrets of the
HOW
By A. J. McWHINNIE
Special Naval Correspondent who tells you about the men and the ships in the front line of the war that is raging at sea.
sea," Britain's zen-power ulti- starboard, have the finest eyes in mately depends.
Before you can understand the ships you have to know the men. I've been out in the North Sep with our destroyer patrols.
They're young, they're tough, they're jelly. They will laugh with you as they tell you they are the maids-of-all-work.
At a moment's notice they must be ready to dash off, at nearly 40 knots, to any emergency.
They may be out in the war- zone screening the battle fleet. They may be sending, their tor- pedoes crashing into an enemy warship.
They may be escorting convoys or standing-by prepared to enter battle with U-boats or Nazi planes to protect minelayers.
The look-outs, to port and to
THEY
THE modern destroyer is 35521. in length, costa £150,000 to build, mounts eight 4,7-Inch guns, seven smaller guns, and four 21-inch torpedo tubes,
Tie Arxi torpedo-boat destroyer forerunner of the destroyer of today—was built in 1833. She was only 180 feet long and mounted four small guns. She carried one torpedo · lube.
Indies are Important
to U.S.A.
By HENRY WOOD United Press Staff Correspondent
AMERICA'S stake in Nether-
lands India, whose future fate the entire world is watch- ing since the conquest of Hol-. land by Nazi Germany has been an ever-growing one for years past, according to the Institute of Pacific Relations.
AS THE results of last week's Ger- man air ruids on Britain come to be sumuned up by neutral observers, becomes increasingly evident that one of the most important victories of the entire war has gone to the Royal Force. The Nazi losses have been so staggering that doubts have been cast on the authenticity of the Air Ministry reports. These,
A complete survey of Ameri- however,. have been
been confirmed in unmistakable can interests there recently com fashion. The initial stages of the pleted by the Institute reveals aerial blitzkrieg has seen victory won that as a source of vital raw by morale, by endurance and energy materials for the United States, and will power, and defeat sustained by mass force. It would be idle to the Netherlands, India has pretend that have yet attained full are alr attack worked up from fifteenth place that the defeat full proportion, or in 1933 to eighth place in 1938
sustained by the and seven place in 1939. Germans in last week's series of ranids
for
the German
assures us that
our
Is final. Nevertheless, the results of At the present time, the Institute those encounters
reason revealed, "American oil companies] of many now control 40 per cent of the oil and dan
interests of the islands through the struggles and most re- cently of the breaking-point of Ger-Standard Oil Companies of New many in 1018
Jersey and Callfornia, and occupy of rub- initial successes in the air last week fourth place among holders of are a happy augury for the auteone Brought the U. 5. Goodyear Co.,
ber investments In
Indics
Firestone Tire and Rubber Co., and The percentage of destruction of the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. Nazi machines is much heavier than
The entrance of the American was expected. Co-operation between rubber Interests In the Islands was our fighters and anti-aircraft
of the war.
The
guns for the purpose, of freeing them- has clearly reached a high pitch of selves from dependence on foreign efficiency. The discipline and com- sources, according to spokesmen. mon-sense of the people in the dis- Turn to Page 7, Fifth Column '
tricts attacked has been, by all accounts, udmirable. Britain hus many on attack to beat off yet, and the people at Home must be prepared for raids on a larger scale and the certainty that a large proportion of
GREW
Year by year, ships to smash the torpedo-boats became bigger and bigger until to-day we have the Tribal class destroyers with their 44,000 h.p. engines..
Starting with all tanks full and running at economieni speed our modern destroyers are capable of maklig a non-stop run of 6,000 miles,
Whro war started Germany had only 22 destroyers against Our 170.
the Navy. They have to be the quickest "spotters" in the Flect to see things clearly at high speed.
The men of the destroyers don't get "hard-lying" money, as they did in the old days. There is There is pillow upholstery now. mechanical ventilation.
Still, you'll never get landlubbers' comfort when you're the liveliest nghting craft in the fleet,
Certainly, there was little con- fort for the destroyer men I met out in the North Bee, when icicles hung from the rigging, the decks were coated in ice, and the wind on the bridge, froze you to the bones.
Just the same, they went on. looking for adventure at top speed.
Having talked to the men of the destroyers since the war started. I can imagine them in action off the Norwegian coast-men of steel. trained for, the very battle they find themselves entering.
I can imagine these men, who have patrolled thousands of North Bea miles escorting ' convoys and searching for submarines, quoting their slogan as they went into battle: "It's up the destroyers."
Somewhere out there off the European coast are the destroyer
HULLO! IT'S A DIFFERENT RAID
ULLÒ HULLO
TANTIVY.
TANTI
TUTHF SHELTER
TANTIVY
ALWAYS BE A
ROLL OUT THE HARDENS
THERELL
Warn us with music.
WE
SHELTER
men I talked to in a Plymouth tavern a few weeks ago,
They said then that their guns and torpedoes were ready for the German Fleet to come out, and that they would give all they had to "have a go at them.”
They'll be "having a go at them "now.
Aboard each destroyer will be about 175 men, each with his own. Job to do manning' 4.7-inch and smaller guns, ready at the tor pedoes, whipping up the engines full speed ahead, or ready to send their depth charges thundering through the seas to smash a U- boat,
Some of the destroyers will be dashing through the lines of our battio
to Neet-forging ahead search for the enemy, rattling their anti-aircraft guns at sky
acting 0.3 raiders, and
links between the main fleet and the advanced forces.
They won't be coming back for a while-not while there's some- thing doing. They won't have to. A destroyer of the latest type can make B non-stop trip for thousands of miles.
They don't fight shy of the storms
they have been having across
Their the North Sea. decks may be awash, they may be pitching and tossing, but our modern destroyers can stand up to anything.
In the last war, whenever there was a dirty job to be done, some- спе in authority always said,
Send a 30-knotter."
The only difference in this war Is that they'll go out and do the job at more than the speed they dreamed of in the last war.
When you read the news of what the Navy is doing in this vital
phase of the war at sea, think of the men of the destroyers.
Italian Hospital And Church
To Keep Open
Two Italian institutions in London, at any rate, hope to be able to keep their doors open throughout the war,
Even if all the Italians in London [are interned there are sufficient trish ' men and women employed there to see the war through,
The two institutions are the Italian Hospital, in Queen's-square, and St. Peter's Italian Church, in Clerken- well-road. Both are carrying on as usual,
The house surgeon of the Italian Hospital is an Italian, but most of the nurses are Irish, as very few Itallon giris in England take up nursing.
The hospital is visited by several famous Harley-street specialists.
Of the Italian church's two priests. one is an Irishman, the Rev. R. Ken- nedy. Many of the congregation, though Italian by birth. arc naturalised.
Father Kennedy said:
"Things will go on as usual here. In this district most of the Italian people are disgusted with Mussolini's action. They have lived here for many years and are really English."
THE PARASHOTS SHOULD HAVE GRENADES
the Nazi bombers will get through, TTITLER and his general|
There are sevelul purposes in Ger- man air raids besides the defnite
HT
staff have about 100 days!
By O. D. GALLAGHER
to go to crack this hard nut of military objectives of aerodromes and Britain. The same stores and factories. They are de-
as Napo signed--and this will become increas. leon's disastrous time from El-r postiless in France for nine thing taler), nor his revolver, nor
ingly evident-to terrorise and to re- duce efficiency of production through fatigue and nerve strain. That at- tack every man and woman in the United Kingdom will undoubtedly do their part in beating off by refusing to be flustered.
ba to Waterloo,
In about 100
bombed and machine-gunned a nun-' ber of times, and hardly ever did the right thing, which was to take cover, That
was all right in those wart, Not the one. It's all-in. A thou- sand times more dangerous,
If it starts and you've, no cover near by, for heaven's 'sako get as close to the ground as possible. Lie to deal with these down wherever you are. In a de-
Give
epression, a cutter if there's nothing Parashots heavy hand-grenades, elso,
Homurderers?
months waliing for him to start. *| folding bike. It is his terrorian. belleve he delayed it for the express purpose of allowing his sples and days his
Columnists to most Fifth
report 2000- trustworthy, ally gets cold, wet feet; pletely on our preparations.
We once said. individually. the clve the Farashots sub-machine- the ally without whom his wheeled German soldier Lan't so good as a guns as soon as sufficient numbers you dolar his. There were thou- Ideas about dignity may prevent and tractored columns could not Frenchman
or Briton, became he can be produced. Paul then--hai- Initiative. Scrap that,
sands of civilians in Holland, Bel- have rushed deep into all those eight lacks
grenades, Strange thing to say, but parachutists. I schoolborn can use them, too, because the uulmportance of that frayed self- gium, and France who would tell you countries from Poland to France examine the Nasl
can't quote my informants, because who handles a cricket ball more na-portance-if titey could speak this
French and turally than they? wha have fought
4
against
them
1.50
day.
TFTH COLUMNISTS, Sples.
you have reasonable
They can do tremendous damage
No one thould think of the air wor
WHAT have we to face la Dutch soldiers
they orc numerous? as a series of raids on Britain. Our
WHA Air Force is taking the offensive.
these 100 days? Wel
About the parachutist's gun. It Every bomb exploding among the
know Hiller's methods, now. When Bat parachutists are anything but isn't a "ammy" gun, as so frequent- factories of the Ruhr and the
he began his blitzkrieg we didn't. the supermen that they have been reported. It is made by Skoda suspicions about a man or woman, | Rhineland impairs the German war Hitler let us stew impatiently in made out to be by defeat-drooling It carries, two clips of sixteen 3.8 report thent.
machine. A single successful rald on
Fifth Columnists. If they are met cartridge. They are fired together. by determined definders the moment with tvo hammers. The rim is oll stores and oil-producing plant and there. have beer many-Oll supplies are drawn from resources they try to go into action on the accurser but more deadly for close to the armed forces who fight for
with them. round they are defeated, because tango butchering than the gangster you France was (and is) riddled diminishes the power of Germany to beyond the reach of Germany. On they cannot be landed in such great, Thompson gun
I know of ene· R.A.F. »quadron strike Britain's own production of the home front Britain Oghts the air compact numbers as to become Im A shower of heavy hand-grenades which moved to % new, airfield dur- north- aircraft has recently, risen beyond war with the national stubbornness, mediately a powerful and established would ullence them. Consideringing the withdrawal from
their_destrucklvo' power against hu-| eastern France. The planes and men: optimistic expectation by better dis- the practical gealus which built up fighting unit,
man beligs, they are probably this had been installed about two hours. tribution of craftsmen and above all her industries and the daring enter-
cheapest weapon to produce.
when the Luftwaffe bombers camer πουτ
raids. T Unfortunately, that, was not an ex- lived through throw-wars | 90tional, case,
N
THE
parachutist's most by the devoted work which has prise which established: the Britlab
powerful weapon is not yielded a much larger output per Empire. Nazidem challenged Britain his belt of hand-grenades (explosive head. More and more plenes are in the air. Britain has taken up the and incendiary), nor his -, Skoda going over from the New World. challenge and Britain shall win, machinegun (of which I'll say sons-i as a civilian. As reporter, I've been Turn to Paga 7, Fifth Column