Friday,

HONGKONO TELEGRAPH May 9, 1941.

3-28

DONALD DUCK

CLOTHES PRESSED

FOR

THAT PIPE? WELL.SON,

THAT CARRIES OFF WASTE STEAM

FROM MY PRESSER!

Ober, 1911, Walt Disney Productions

World Rights Res

GRIN AND BEAR IT

By Lichty

"Don't tell me you didn't smoke when you were a girl, mother! what did you do whenever you felt you couldn't livo another minute without a cigaretta?”

Crossword Puzzle

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TELEGRAPHS”

everywhere

By Walt Disney

CUT RATE STEAM BATHS

DONAL PUCK PROP

WALT DISNEY

Distributed by King Postures Syndicstz, li

CONCLUDING the epic story of the

A NEW SHIPMENT OF "GOLD BAR" VACUUM PACKED.

COFFEE

$1.50 per 116 TIN, $2.75 por 216 TIN- IT IS A BLEND OF FINE COFFEES, CARE- FULLY SELECTED AND SCIENTIFICALLY. ROASTED. IT'S FINE FLAVOUR 15 CHARACTERISTIC OF THE MOH QUALITY OFFERED BY ALL, "GOLD BAR" FOODS. ONCE TRIED USED ALWAYS

LANE, CRAWFORD, LTD.

BRAVE HIGHLANDERS Swan, Culbertson & Fritz

OF THE

"51st"

The last act of the drama of the retreat from the Somme by one battalion of the Gordons in France in June, 1940, is reached. All around them was in confusion, but they, though fighting now in isolated units cut off from their supplies and their companions, had but one thought-to do their duty till their last ammunition was gone.

6. Gordons Fought As St Valery

St. Valery was ablaze. Its streets were crowded with refugees and troops. Thousands of stragglers still poured along the road on the top of the cliffs.

Was Blazing

Part of the battalion was defending a chateau. It was filled with men, many of them wounded. The medical officer set out with an ambulance to take some of them back to St Valery, but he had not gone half-a-mile when a bomb landed near his car. He is believed to have been killed.

As no more ambulances were available, a truck had to be used to take the remainder of the wounded back to the town. A truck, however, was likely to be machine-gunned or shell- edSo-with-much-in-- genuity the stretcher- bearers transformed the truck into an ambu- lance. They procured a large white table cloth from the chateau. It was spread over the side of the truck.

Then with red eiderdown they made a large red cross.

They succeeded in, get- ting through.

All the way back across the Bresle and the Bethune the stretcher- bearers and M.O. worked heroically to get the wounded back in face of almost insuperable difficul- ties. One party with an ambulance. reached Fe- camp and only escaped two minutes before the Germans entered the town. They made their way to Le Havre, where the wounded were taken. off.

Nothing reflected the spirit of the battalion more than the fortitude of the wounded. They knew that the odds against their getting away were tre mendous.

Perhaps the words of Sgt. Pettigrew of the transport, who handled many of them, form the best tributes "They all. had cheery faces. There was no moaning. Their only thought was that they had done something before. thers had been dott. The

α

wonderful. There was not murmur among them. And the M.O. did his part of the business."

*

* ☆

The remnant of the bat- talion was still fighting against overwhelming odds. The end of their heroic resistance, how- ever, was only a few hours away. Promised supplies of ammunition had failed to arrive. The men were worn out by marching and want of sleep and food. But their spirit was still undaunted.

German tanks had swept up through Rouen and along the Seine. They were at the very gates of St Valery, where the streets were packed with French and British trans- port and seething masses of straggling troops and refugees. The German artillery had come within range of the town, which was soon ablaze.

Through the congestion the battalion transport, which had been separated from the unit for about eight hours, was trying to establish contact. Only four trucks with the re- serve food supply and the Bren gun carrier were. left.

I'n farmhouses and woods several miles from the town, the Gordons were making their last stand on the morning of June 11.". Each company was now fighting as a separate unit.

At their head on a motor cycle rode Lt Hay seeking a

the way through

crowded streets to reach the men with food. In the end he got into country and drove

open

against the swarm of refu gees. German tanks could be seen in the distance, and shells icere falling all around.

Still he pressed on and reached the battalion, only to share the fate of most of them and become a prisoner of war,

one

All the trucks, however, did not get through. In narrow street in St Valory the Bren gun carrier was jammed in the traffe behind a hugo. motor lorry. By the time ho had extricated his carrier, Sgt. Preston had lost touch with the others. As he sought another exit from the town he met Sgt. Littlejohn with one of the trucks.

Sgt. Littlejohn, told him that

the Division had been: "sur- rounded, and the order was Neveryusman for whimsalí.

Some of the men had managed to get clear and make their way to St Valery and Le Havre.

Turning his carrier, Sgt. Preston made for the harbour but found it in flames. So he set out castward along the cliff, picking up some men be- longing to another regiment on the way.

After searching the cliffs for half the night for a place where they could get down to the shore they eventually reached Veules, where they ⚫ destroyed the carrier. Sgt. Preston scrambled down the face of the cliff and sivam out to a small rowing boat which he brought back to the beach.

With his crew and the men he had picked up he rowed out to a steamer lying some dis. tance offshore.

★ *

were con-

Dive-bombers stantly attacking the ships waiting to take the men off, and they saw one vessel hit by a heavy bomb. It sank in a few minutes.

now

-It-became impossible-for- ships to approach the shore be- cause German artillery was mounted on the cliffs. But the ship which they had boarded

the remained in vicinity all day and all night picking up survivors.

The fire from the shore be- came so hot, however, that a destroyer raced along the coast laying down a smoke

screen.

On the morning of June 13 they sailed for Southampton.

There is a postscript to this story. While the battalion was retiring towards St Va- lery, reinforcements were be- ing rushed from England. They reached Cherbourg too late, and were sent back to Southampton. Actually they crossed the Channel again and were brought back a second time.

With these reinforcements the battalion has been re- formed in Scotland. To-day it is on guard on the coast, watching for the threatened invasion. It is waiting for the day when it can repay the Germans for St Valery.

In the Gist are Seaforths, Argyll and Sutherlands, Camerons, Gordons, the Black Watch-the cream of the Highland regiments. They draw their men from the mountains, from the Gaelic- speaking west coast, from the granite country of Aberdeen,. from the wooded hills of Perth, and from the back streets of Glasgow and Dun- deo.

It did not need a fiery cross to bring these men at the run to join the new 51st. They have trained and drilled na only men with a calling in their hearts and a rendezvous to make can drill and train.

The 51st, hna a rendezvOUS with the Hunand is praying that it will bakteryizoon li

LEND

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