A
The China
CASE OF " "TIGER" Nitty-Third Year of Publication
FOR A GUESS
As from Wednesday, the 14th September, up to and including Tuesday, 20th September 1938, there will be displayed in the lobby of the King's Theatre" an extraordinarily large Tiger Bear Bottle filled with candle sticks of varying sizes.
All you have to do to win a handsome prize is to guess the correct number of candlesticks contained in this bottle,
As many guesses as desired may be submitted but each guess must be accompanied by the counterfoil of a ticket to see Metro- Goldwyn-Mayer's picture entitled
“THE EMPEROR'S CANDLESTICKS"
a story of Royal Intrigue co-starring the ever pópular WILLIAM POWELL & LUISE RAINER, twice winner of the Motion Picture Academy award Robert: Young, Maureen - O'Sullivan 'and the ini- The picture will mitable Frank Morgan are in the picture too! commence at the King's Theatre on Saturday, 17th September, 1938.
All entries must be submitted on a special form provided for the purpose obtainable in the lobby of the King's Theatre and must be addressed to "THE EMPEROR'S CANDLESTICKS GUESSING COMPETITION”, King's Theatre. The contest closes at 3. p.m. WEDNESDAY, 21st September, 1938.
There will be three main prizest, and 12:consolation prizes which have been donated Jointly by A. S. Watson & Co., Ltd, the distri- butors of TIGER BEER, and, the management of the King's Thea tre. The first entry received with the correct solution or nearest thereta will be awarded the FIRST PRIZE, which will consist of
One case of 96 bottles of TIGER BEER and a Sincere Co.'s Merchandise Coupon to the value of $15.00.
2nd Prize—48 bottles of TIGER BEER and a Sincere Co.'s Merchandise Coupon to the value of $10.00.
3rd Prize—24 bottles of TIGER BEER.
12 Consolation Prizes each of 2 bottles TIGER BEER.
FIT FOR AN EMPEROR!
TIGER BEER
Made from the Finest
MALT HOPS ● YEAST Distributed by: A. S. WATSON & CO., LTD.
Columbia
LARRY ADLER
THE MOUTH ORGAN VIRTUOSO.
FB1933-HOW I PLAY
FB1886 A FOGGY DAY
REMEMBER ME
FB1753-I'VE GOT MY LOVE TO KEEP ME WARM
THIS YEAR'S KISSES
FB1776 CARAVAN |
NIGHT AND DAY. TIGER RAG
FB1775-NIGHT OVER SHANGHAI
YOU CAN'T RUN AWAY FROM LOVE FB1703 I'VE GOT YOU UNDER MY SKIN
WITH PLENTY OF MONEY AND YOU
FB1911 CREOLE LOVE CALL
STORMY WEATHER
FB1825-MOON GOT IN MY EYES
LITTLE OLD LADY/
FB1714 THEY ALL LAUGHED
THEY CAN'T TAKE THAT AWAY FROM ME THE ANDERSON MUSIC COMPANY, LTD.
ICE HOUSE STREET.
prospect id, amly
leasant one; but there de litt. hope for Europe so long as the military idea holds the field. Every great Power is armed and is increasing its armaments. For
SA Wyndham Street, Hong Kong, a long time is has been only a
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Notice: To Contributors.
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simple sum of arithmetic to see how long such a policy could last.
No-one can say with any cer- tainty in what direction events will now move. They can only say that the gravest responsibil- ity rests upon Herr Hitler. The provocative actions of the Sude, tens could never have occurred without the full approval of Nazi
the Ehould be addressed to lenders. The six-hour ultimatum
and be accompanied by bore every appearance of an
other stage in a programme well 1 defined. Acceptance would have
a guarantee of pood faith.
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the Writer's Name and Address,
1901 involved; complete surrender of not necessarily for insertion but aa sovereignty as well as every prin- Ciple under discussion in the nego- tiations of the past months, and even then Prague's attitude in rejection was conciliatory. The extra police measures were taken in reply to demonstrations and rioting on a scale which, foreign correspondents, who made per- sonal observations, describe as organised and the reverse of spontaneous. For Prague to have backed out would have been fåtal and futile. Only by Prague Hong Kong, Thursday, Sept. 15, 1938. |standing firm, and by france and Britain making it clear thất thếs
they are not to be deluded into in- activity by exploitation of any German pretext for intervention, This much can be said to bols- can any real hope exist thất sec- ter the hope that peace will yet ond thoughts will prevail to the
satisfaction of Europe. be preserved in Europe, that un- til Germany commits herself be-An Encouragement yond recall and lends military
SACE IV MUS
PEACE OR WAR?
"
support to the Sudeten Germans, Cordell Hall, the American Sec- It will not be the fault of Mr. dangerously fired by Herr Hitler's
retary of State, it his Nuremberg speech, opportunity men do not believe that, we are all country for mediation may be presumed members one of another and that, to remain. Nevertheless, the out-whether they like it or not, they look is as grave as it could pos-revolutionary tides that threaten are and will be affected by the sibly be, short of actual conflict. now to sweep over what is to Whilst hoping most earnestly for them the "outside" world. More the best, there has developed a persistently even than Mr. Roose- growing feeling of helplessness, is happening elsewhere and what velt he tells them to mark what
an uncomfortable conviction that may follow it. Several times late- inexorable pressures are leading ly, he has said, in varying terms; CONTACTERES The invasion of territory of sov- the peoples of Europe to catas- trophe. National 'honour and fully constituted Güvernments ereign States, destruction of law- prestige have already loomed and forcible seizure of hitherto their fateful heads. The resol-independent political entities and ute action by, say, Britain and affairs of other nations, whole- interference in the internal France, which might conceivably sale violation of established save the situation, might, on the treaty obligations, attempts to other hand, - merely provoke the adjust international differences war that it would be exerted to by armed force all these appalk ing manifestations of disintegra- avoid. At the moment, the facts tion threaten the very founda- are very simple. The Czechs are tions of our civilisation. prepared for war and
and on the other
His second step is to say that hand Hitler remains in a threat- the United States believes in a ening attitude on the border. He policy of law, self-restraint, econ- knows that this proposition is a omic reconstruction, and intellec very different thing from the tual freedom. The third is to capture of Austria, and he is not drive home the consequences to at all sure of succeeding in a war. his own people of the present His brave words at Nuremberg drift to anarchy. do not mean necessarily that he
When the dignity of the hu- is sure of himself. In fact it is man soul is denied in great parts possible that the future may not of the world and when that den- appear to be too rosy to Hitler. ial is made a slogan under which He has played a bold game and propaganda is set in motion and thus far played it successfully, armies take the field no one of us but he has not yet met any can be sure that his country, or European army and that, of leven his home, is safe. course, must be the testing point Mr. Hull mentiona, no names,? of all his plans and efforts. He utters no threats, makes no has not yet met a real soldier, mises. He is addressing his own fash and he cannot fulfil his full am- people and, for the outside world bition until he has done this and speaking in their name.
amales jam established his own position in plain again where their sympathy an the world hrmán 16 he has fies and how their. the mil
rity will be
war of princi “feet will be noted
though little
discourage
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