Friday,
HONGKONG TELEGRAPH
DONALD DUCK
CLICK
ORR-RI SHE HUNG
UP ON ME!
February 7, 1941
By Walt Disney
Library,
FINEST AUSTRALIAN LAMB
LEGS (whole or half)
60c. lb.
LOINS
70c. lb.
SHOULDERS, (whole or half)... 50c. lb.
CHOPS & CUTLETS
80c. lb.
SCRACS & BREASTS
25e. lb.
Set, 1983, Walt Chowy naham
12-20:
NEWS IN PICTURES
BUILDINGS are never what they appear to be when Mr. Lonsdale lands in finished with them. Me: lands, once mn Industrial designer, is now Britain's No. 1 camouflage expert. Ite is seen experimenting with light and shade on a model factory,
M. PADEREWSKI, the famous pianist and former Polish President, with friends on his arrival in Spain. After being detained by Spanish police, he was released to continue his journey to the United States
Crossword Puzzle
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Apology To A Climate
When our gallant English weather
Keeps the bombing plane at bay. Aren't you sorry altogether
For the things you used to say? Fog we cursed with cough and weeping. Ice we called "the plumber's mate, Dear old pals, who now are heaping
Coals of fire upon our pate. Come each kindly gale, and hurry:
Let our climate play its part- Merry fog, that clears our worry,
And the frost that warms the heart.
L. B. W.
WE SEE THE JOKE
A Londoner going home the other night found a bomb dropped by a Ger- man airman lying unex- ploded in his flat.
He promptly carried it out. A policeman found him staggering.down the street with it in his arms -it was so heavy that he had dropped it once-and with that sense of the due dignity of things possess- ed by policemen of all 'na- tions, arrested him,
A bureaucratic minded magistrate, before whom he was brought, fined the man £100 for his bravery with the alternative that if he did not pay the fine he could go to prison for three months.
The man very properly refuses to pay the fine.. And it is not likely that he will go to prison for the sentence has provoked a national outcry.
4
But whether he goes or not, he has at least given the world some idea of what Londoners think of bombs.
Now I do not want to under-estimate the air Blitzkrieg. It has been a very horrible and terrify- ing experience. But it has been far from being un- endurable and the way in which Londoners have beaten its terror by ad- justing their lives to it, has been among the out- standing episodes of hero- ism in world history.
The first week of it was the worst of all. All the worst of the damage seemed to have been done in that week. The bombs tore very great gaps in famous streets of the City and the West End. They scared and scared the suburbs and the death roll was heavy, although only a tiny fraction of what we had prepared for. Since that first week Lon- 'don has not had one night completely free from the hom- bers. Yet in that time a tremendous transformation has taken place. The raids no longer seem like the crack of doom, and the nightly 'casualty "list" in the London area has shrunk to`n size that. would really not put any seri- ous pressare, on the ordinary.
by
weather, but the Italians are very inferior. Against our Hurricanes nnd Spitfires they stand no earthly chance. Recently, 80 of them tried a very spectacular daylight dash on London and were simply shot out of the skies. They could not drop a single bomb on England. The Germans were never as bad as that. Obviously the Germans them- selves do nol rate the Italians very high and I fear the Ita- lians will soon get tired of being used as practice targets for the R.A.F.
Wo shall miss them when they stop coming. They do no harm and they make an air raid quite an agreeable entertainment.
We are all hoping that one day we shall have among our visitors Count Cluno and Mussolini's two famous. air-
men
sons who bombed de- fenceless Abyssinians with auch heroism. But perhaps they are content to rest on their Ethiopian laurels. Some- how we fear they will fight shy of crossing the Channel.
JOHN GORDON very bright view of our posi-
"
casualty department of any one of our great hospitals.
The lesson we have learned is this. If you take the ele- mentary precaution of taking reasonable shelter, bombs do not harm you.
*
At first Londoners could not sleep. That is the greatest ordeal of a night air raid un-
til
you become used to it. Now most of them sleep the night through comfortably in shelters-many even in their beds-in spite of the noise of our guns, which is
far more intense and a far more alarm-
ing sound than either the
drone of a bomber or the whine of a falling bomb.
In the first days of air raid-
ing, the whole population took
shelter immediately the alarmn sounded. Now in daylight women continue their shop- ping and men go an with their work unperturbed. Transport is running almost normally. The civil defence arrange- ments are 80 efficient that there has been no extensive failure of any public service. Our food, our letters and to us newspapers come just as they have always done. Husbands go to work as usual and come home again at night, if not always with the same comfort and case,
at least with nearly the same regu- larity.
our
*
All this must be a great blow to Hitler and Gooring. They do not try now quite so hard as they used to. Their bombers still come regularly, but most days and nights the effort is not what it was. There Is a perceptible slacken- ing.
Why that should be so we have not yut decided, but we are rapidly coming to the opinion that there are pro- bably two reasons for it:
(1) Hitler is giving us as a hopeless job and turning his strength to the near East to retrieve his waning fortunes.
up
*
The Nazi Air Force has had such a hammering.that it cannot stand the pace!
There are indications that the second reason may prova to be the real one. One pretty sure sign is that the Nazis are now bringing Itali- ans to help them.
Tho Nazia have been good alrinen, courageous and per- tinacious even in the worst
Altogether we are taking a
tion at the moment. Our air blows at Germany grow harder every day while Hiller's blows at us weaken. The new head of the Air Force, Air· Marshal, Portal-Portal of the Bombers-has certain- ly kicked up
a dust in his short time as Supreme Com- monder.
The great raid, on Munich, and the spoiling of Hitler's Beer cellar speech, has been our greatest joke since the war began. It made the whole nation roar with laughter, and when the British laugh in a war, they are for more dangerous than when. they are grim. We have renched the laughing stage now after many anxious months,
Hitler promised his nation that the Batile of Britain would be over before the winter began. It was his one true prophecy. The Battle of Britain although not ended is
But practically
the end has not been quite what Hitler planned.
over.
One thing concerning the bomb damage strikes every visitor to London. It is the way in which German airmen, obviously acting under orders, have made a dead set at churches, convents and Royal Palaces. So many of them have been hit that the Blitz- krieg has almost taken on the appearance of an anti-God crusade.
That of course no more. wins a war than the slaughter of helpless little children and their mothers in suburban streets far from any military objectives. Actually it may be the deciding factor in the extent of the final punishment awaiting Hitler. For it has roused the temper of every Briton to a height that it can never before have reached in our history. There will be no forgiving and forgetting this time,
BOMB OFFER FOR BERCHTESGADEN
HALDERMAN Julius, a book publisher of Girard, Kansas, has
to written
Mr Winston Churchill:
"I offer to pay the cost of a half-ton bomb, plus petrol, if you assign a competent pilot to drop it on the Chief Butcher's Berch- tesgaden habitat, the scene of Hitler's conspiracies against civilization.” ·
LANE, CRAWFORD, LTD.
Monster Raffle
in aid of the War Fund inaugurated by the "South China Morning Post" and The Hongkong Telegraph"
PRIZES TO DATE
Sunbeam-Talbot Sports Car (Gilman & Co., Ltd.) $5,050. Frigidaire cubic ft. (Dodwell & Co., Ltd.) $900. Mortal Electric Cooker and sel of cooking utensils, (Hongkong Electric Co., Ltd.) $309, 5 prizes en, 1,000 Gold Flake Cigarettes; 5 ca. 1,000 Players Cigarettes; 5 ca. 1,000 Capstan Cigarettes; 10 en. 1,000 Players Clipper Cigarettes; 10 ea. 1,000 Embassy Cigarettes (British-American Tobacco Co. (China) Ltd.) $500. Pilot All-Wave Radio Receiver (Hongkong Motor Accessory Co., Ltd.) $330. Prize to the value of $250' (Mackintosh's Ltd.), Prize to the value of $150 (Directors and Staff, Mackintosh's Ltd.), G.E.C. Radio Set (MP. F. A. Mackintosh) Approx. value $150.- Vanity box and compact (Mrs. F. A. „Mackintosh). Filmo Camera (Filmo Depol) $220. Prize to the value of $200 (Ous Elevator Co.) Imperlat Portable Typewriter (Reiss, Bradley & Co., Ltd.) $375. BSA, de luxe model Bicycle (The British Bicycle Co.) $200, Empire Baby Portable Typewriter (Ů, Spalinger & Co.) $138. Tavanne Chronometer, Eterna Chronometer, Election Chronometer (Ed. A. Keller & Co., Ltd.) ($100 each). Case Pommery & Greno Champagne, quarts (Caldbeck, Macgregor & Co., Lul), Copy of Collection of Famous Pictures, Sungt Dynasty (Commercial Press, Ltd.). Two paira Ladies' Shoes (Gordon's Ltd.) $50 each. Prize to the value of $100 (Anonymous). Centenary Souvenir Silver
Falconer & Co., (ILK.) Ltd.). Three
bottles
Value $200 (Georrette Box, value $200; Empire Silver Salver, of wine (Anonymous), Silver "Lotus". Centrepiece (Mi2 J. I. Barnes). Silver Cigarette Case (Mr. A. C. Ellis). Down Quilt (Whiteaway, Laidlaw & Co., Ltd.) $65.
$65. Four
Innoxn Beauty Cases (Colonial Dispensary) Respectively $37.50; $30; $30 and $22.50. 12 ft. Canoe and Paddles (A. King; Slipway), Lafayette B-tube All-Wave Superheterodyne Radio and Phonograph Combination (China Electric. Company) $300. Two cases ten-1-gallon tins Texaco Motor Oil (Texas Co. (China) Ltd.). Cale Spey Royal Whisky and Case Canadian Club Whisky (Central Trading Co.). Ten ea, one ton household cpai (John Manners & Co., Ltd.) Broadway Model Radio Receiver (R.C.A. Manu- facturing Company, Inc, in conjunction with the Clipper Merchandising Company) $265. General Electric (U.S.A. Console Model All-Wave Radio Set (Andersen, Meyer & Co., Ltd.) $800. Case John Halg Dimple Scotch Whisky (Gande, Price & Co., Ltd.) New Yacht (Wing Ôn Shing ---Shipbuilders, Cheungshawan) $4,000. Twenty cases Ewo Beer and Five cases White Horse Whisky (Jardine, Matheson & Co., Ltd.) "Ebel" Diamond Wrist Watch (J. Ullmann & Company) $400. Cuse Grant'a Whisky: Five each cartons Schlitz Beer: Three cases Foster Export Lager Beer (H. Corre-Agent L, Rondon & Co.) G.E.C, Overseas Ten Radio Receiver General Electric Co. of China, Ltd.) $550, Fitty bags each 49 ibs. "Battleship" Brand Australian Flour (H. Skott & Co.) $275. Majestic Water Cooler (Majestle Corporation) $50. Case Port Wine (IL Buttonjee & Son, Lid.) Case HB, Beer (Hongkong Brewery & Distillery, Ltd.)-Two Credit Coupons $100 each; One $50 on the Sincere Co., Ltd. (China Provident, Loan & Mortgage Co., Ltd.) Magazine Cine Kodak (Eastman Kodak Company) $540. Bench Canoo and Paddle; Silver Rose Bowl and Card Case (Major and Mrs. Wilcox) Ten each 1,000 Banker Cigarettes; Seven en. 1,000 Banker Cigarettes; One 500 Banker Cigarettes: Five each 1,000 Golden Dragon Cigarettes; Four each 1,000 Golden Dragon Cigarettes (Nanyang Brothers Tobacco Co., Ltd.) $414. Lady's White Curly Lamb Jackel (Anntole Zaitzeff & Co.) $100. Mofall Electric Refrigerator 6.9. cubic feet, $900; Moffatt Electric Cooker 7.6. kilowatts $410 (Shewan, Tomes & Co., Ltd.) Set four Seiberling Passenger Car Tyres (Union Trading Company, Lid.) 3200, Lady's Silk Dressing Gown (Tajmahal Silk Store, Ltd.) $40. Now Morrison Mini-Grand Piano and Bench (Tsang Fook Plano Company) -8050---Solid-Gold-Imperiai-Rolex-Oyster-Chronometer-(Lace, Crawford- & Co. Ltd.) $400. Burco Electric Bath Water Heater, (China Light & Power Co., Ltd.) 25 pairs leather shoes (Bata Shoe Co., Ltd.) $250, 200 lbs. Kwan Yin Brand Black Tea (China, National Tea Corporation) Sliver Tea Set: $110; Silver Rose Bowl $150 (H. Ruttonjce & Son, Ltd.). Goods to the value of $250. (Directors; Wm, Powell, Ltd.) Prize to the value of $1,000; (Harry Wicking & Co., Ltd.) Westinghouse Re- frigerator, 5 cuble ft. De Luxe Model, value $1,050. (Davie, Boag & Co., Ltd.). Gold Chronograph Stop Wrist Watch, value $230, (Standard-Vacuum Oil Company). Gift Menu to the value of $200 to be served to the winner at either the Golden City or Ying King Restaurant (The Golden City Restaurant, Lul.). Silver Cocktail Shaker (Messrs. Carmichael & Clarke), Single Stone Diamond Ring value $500 (Messrs. Sennet Freces), One Pair Murble and Bronze Book Ends value $100 (Messrs. Raoul Bigazzi), 1,000 Gladioll Bulbs, value $73: Flower and Vegetable Seeds, väluo $25; (The Clover Flower Shop). One Canteen Set, 40 pieces, value: $230 (Mollers', Hongkong, Lid.). Prizes to the value of $500, (Mr, Eu Tong Sen). Four coupons each for $100 for goods at any of the Company's Stores. (The Dairy Farm, Ice & Cold Storage Co., Ltd). Lody's diamond and platinum wrist watch, value $3,000; (Directors Messrs, Ipekdilan Bros. Lid. per Mr. T, M. Gregory). Jade necklace, value $300; (Mons. R. Ohl). Cheque for $500; (Sports Club). Ancient Ivory Carving, value $500; (Mr. J. L. Lowry). Second-hand "Motocamera"! complete with Pathe Baby Projector and ten films, value $300 (Mr. F. L. Lam). Chinese Blackwood Cabinet, value $200 (Mr. E. B. David). "Nogatco" Botany Wool Pullover, value $30 ("Commercial Traveller"). Single". pass for one year for Queen's Theatre: Single pass for one year Alham- bra Theatre: approximate value $300 (General Amusements, Ltd.) Oil Painting (Mias Mitzi Glover); Silver Satver, value $90: Crystal Bowl, value $20 (Anonymous); Prize to the value of $230 (Hongkong Engineering and Construction Co., Ltd.); Five cases U.B. Beer, valuo $172.50: Two cases Vat 69 Whisky.
value $175: Five cases Sunkist Assorted Canned Fruits, value $102.60; Five cases Sunkist Assorted Canned Vegetables, value 305; Five Sets Cutex Latest Manicure Sets, value $35 (W, R. Loxley & Co. (China) Ltd.). "An Old Chinese Garden A Three-fold Masterpiece of Poetry, Calligraphy and Paint- ing by Wen Chen Ming, value $50, (Chung Hwa Book Co., Ltd.).
TICKETS ONE DOLLAR
Further announcements will bo mado by the Hongkong War Effort Committee when tickets are placed on saló.
HONGKONG SOCIETY FOR THE PROTECTION OF CHILDREN
The Society asks for
$28,000
in 1941 to meet the Increasing needs of sick and destitute children in Hong Kong.
The number of children assisted last year was 5,100.
A copy of the Annual Report for 1940 may be obtained from: Bir. McKellar, C.A.
c/o Mackinnon Mackenzie & Co.,
P. & O. Buliding, Mr. Kwok Chan,
c/o The Banque de L'Indo-China,
Hong Kong. Hon. Treasurers,
COUNT THE “TELEGRAPHS" EVERYWHERE