1936-10-14 — Page 4

Daily Press 孖剌西報 All

HONG KONG DAILY PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 14. 1936.

6 3 66 6 66 A DO A OG A DO

Gloucester Hotel

Continued Engagement

OF

Kaili's Hawaiian Troubadours

WITH

"QUEENIE"

AND BER

BEAUTIFUL HULA GIRLS

MIAMI-MARY-MILLIE "

ALSO HER NEW SENSATION

NINA

& JOSÉ

Mexico's Dance Marvels ·

COMPLETE CHANGE OF PROGRAMME

TO-NIGHT at

at 9

P.M.

After Dinner Patrons

$1.00 Cover Charge

WEDNESDAY 14th

DANCING EVERY NIGHT

ΤΟ

Gellman's Gloucester Cossacks

Max Malini

SPE TAL CHILDREN'S MATINEE SATURDAY, 17th October, 3.30 P.M.

. Admission $2.00 including Tea

Reservation at Reception Office.

Tel. 28128 for Reservations.

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CA 16

TO-DAY'S RADIO PROGRAMMES

Broadcast By Z.B.W. On 555 Metres

12.30-12.15 p.m.-European Record-

ed Programme.

12.30 A. Ja Piano Recital by

Rale, da Costa.

6.53 p.m.--Call DE and DB

(German, English). German, Folk Song,

7 p.m.-Concert of Light Music

12.45 p.m.-Songs by Turner Lay-pm-News in English.

815 p.m.-Greetings to our Listen

ers in India and Call DJQ.

ton (Tenor)...

1 pm-Local: Time and Weather

Report...

1.03 D-Light Orchestral Selec-

...tions.

1.30, p.m.-Reuter Press. Rugby Press, Local: Weather Fore- cast, Time and Announce- ments.

1.40 p.m.-Dance Music, 2.15 p.m.-Close Down

4-7 pm-Chinese Programme. 7-11 p.m.-European Programme. 7 P.M.

Excerpts from Light Opera and

Musical Comedy.

Vocal Gems.-The Yeomen of the Guard (Gubert and Sulli- van).

Selection-Merrie England (Ed-

ward German).

Vocal Gems,-Ball at the Savoy, Belection-Lucky Break

7.30 p.m.-Closing Local Stock

Quotations.

7.33 pm,

A Recital by Stuart Robertson (Bass-Baritone),

1. The Bay of Biscay (Davy).

2. The Saucy. Arethusa (Tradi-

tional).

3. Limehouse Reach (Proctor,

arr. Greig).

4. The Spanish Lady (Hughes). 7.45 p.m.

Orchestre Mascotte... Danube Waves-Waltz-Ivano-

vich Greetings Siede,

to

Vienna-Waltz

Lehar Waltz Potpourri arr, Ro-

-brecht.

Spring in Japan-Waltz-Tada-

suke Ohno, "

8 p.m.--Local: Time, Weather

Report and Announcements. 8.03 p.m.

From the Studio.

The New Z.B.W. Dance Orches-

tra,"!"

.8.45 pm-

Vocal Variety Items. Moonlight on the Prairie The

Hill Bulles.

I don't want to make History

Francis Day.

Nothing's blue but the sky-Len

Bermon

Queen of Hearts-Gracie Fields.

8.20 p.m.--Concert of Light Musir

continued).

J

like THIS

WHY U.S. CAME ||WHEN YOU FEEL

INTO WAR

"U-Boats Alone Responsible"

Denying that either munitions makers or bankers, forced the United States, to the Wat br exerted any influence on President Wilson, Mr. Newton D. Baker, on the basis of his own experience as p.m.-News and Economic Re-Secretary for War and subsequent

view in German.

studies of official papers, places sole responsibility on Germany's announced unrestricted submarine warfare..

9.15 pm-The German Minstel

comes! Introduced by Johan na Angermann and Gotthold Frotscher."

μ

Writing in the October issue of 10 pm-News and Economic Re-"Foreign Affairs,” Mr. Baker fur

view in English on DJE, DJG ther questions the effectiveness of in Netherlandish on DJB. any neutrality legislation to pre- 10.15 pm-To-day in Germany. vent a nation. Its normal trade

Sound Pictures.

dislocated by war, from saving AL- self from business stagnation by making what belligerents want to buy.

10.30 p.m.-Topical Talk.. 10.45 pm-Works for Chamber Orchestra. Cantata "Die Flam- me" by Fritz Buchtger; Bulle by Helmut Jorns following the text of

the Doets of

some

Mr. Baker insists that President firm determination to Wilson's

neutral keep the United States Memelland; two peasant cannot be questioned. He quotes choirs by Rudolf Lamy. The extensively the writings of both Orchestra

of the German the British and German smbassa- Short Wave Station: The dors, Str Cecil Spring-Rice and Choir of the German Singing Count von Bernstorf, to sub- Society. conducted by Rudolf stantiate this point. Lamy. Soloist: Paul Niermann. baritone.

THE LUSITANIA

He says the sinking of the

12 midnight.-Close DJE DJQ, DJB Lusitania "literally overwhelmed

(German. English). "

RADIO MANILA

America, and public opinion never recovered from it," but he feels that if the submarine campaign had ended there the United States might have remained neutral, due

gerents who were accessible and

5.30 am--Breakfast Hour of News to the President's stand.

Mr. Baker declines to blame and Music-English and Span-

America for setzing every oppot- Ish Current Events and Vaude-tunity to trade with those belli ville of the Als, conducted by Dan Aiva. Morning Exercises by Prof. G. T. Suva of the in- sular Life Assurance Company 7 a.m. Sign Off- 9.30 a.m.-Nielson Financial Review

and MokiesTM“Varlétlés. 11.15 am.-Sign Of

2.30 p.m.-Nielson Financial Review

and Musical Varieties, 3.45 p.m.-Sign OF.

1i

6 p.m.-Sunset Dance Programme

by the Lyric Orchestra. 6.20 p.m.-Spanish "Informational

Period.

8.35 pm-Eriglish fnformational

Period.

6.55 p.m.-Stock quotations, through the courtesy of Swan, Culbert- son and Fritz.

9 p.m.-Daventry News and An- 7 pm--La Insular Cigar and Ciga-

nouncements.

8.20 p.m.-

Syncopated Piano Medley by

9.40 p.

Charlie Kunz.

1.

Tito Schipa (Tenor). Grace Moore (Soprano), and Albert Sandler and His Orchestra.

Orchestra.-I want your heart

CHaydn Wood).. Orchestra-Masquerade (Loeb). Song-Little Princess (Padilla). Sona-Farewell, my Granada (Calleja - Barrera) Tito Schipa. Song.-Musetta's : Waltz Bong- "La Boheme" (Puccini)-Grace Moore.

..

rette Factory presents "Atres Filipinos," with Juan Silos, Jr. and his String Ensemble. 7.30 p.m.-Question Box Reporter. 7.35 p.m.-Studio Music.

who had means of payment.

"I hold a brief for war pro- sperity," he writes. "On purely economic grounds it is in the long view expensive and unreliable, but I think something can be said for a nation endeavouring to amelior- ate as far as it can egonomic dis- aster thrust on it by the war në- tivities of others, and I venture the observation that the lessons of history indicate that in any fu- ture similar situation it will be extremely difficult to induce our

people to keep from seeking such

relief when they begin to suffer too cruelly as the result, of wars In which they have no part.”

* BANKERS' ROLE

As to the popular charge that the munition makers and bankers forced an American entry into the War, Mr. Baker points' out that America lacked any sizeable muni- tions industry, and with the entry 7.45 p.m.-Elizalde y Cia. presents of America into the World War.it Monserrat Iglesias - Marzoni, was necessary to depend on Bri- assisted by Jullo Esteban- tisi. and French manufacturers for Anguita

virtually all typės of arms

Those making ammunition for belligerents had everything to lose and nothing to gain, doce the entry of America, into the, war his would bring either the nationalisa- tion of their plants or the drastic limitation of their profits...

4

8.30 p.m.-Basque Presentation. 845 pm-Stock Quotations and

Local Market Reports. p.m.-N.E.PA Programme, 9.30 p.m.--Tirso Cruz and

Manila Hotel Orchestra: 10 p.m.-ign on.

Orchestra.-Mulkona, Orchestra. Give me your heart.'|-·

(Gade).

Song--Quests O Quella,-"Rigo-

letto" (Verdi). -- Song-Sogno, Soave e Casto- Don Pasquale (Donizetti). Tito Schips.

Song.They Call Me Mimi-"La Boheme** (Puccini) Grace Moore.

Orchestral Cuban Serenade

(Midley).

Orchestra.

Leur).

Maruschka .{de

10.20 p.m.--"Sousa Medley!" played

by the Band of E.M.

Cold-

stream Guards.

10:30 pm.

Dance Music.

11 p.m.-CIOSE Down.

BERLIN PROGRAMME

1.05 pm Call DJA, DJB (German

:: English),

German Folk Song.

1.10 pm Musical Variety Hour. 7 p.m.--News in German...... 2.15 pm-Musical Variety Hour

(continued),

2.55 pm-Greetings to our listen

ers t

3 p.m.-News and Economic Re-

view in Engilsh. -

3.15 p.m.-To-day in Germany,

Sound Pictures.

3.30 p.m.-Harvest of the Grapes. 4.40 p.m. Listeners and station broadcast simultaneously. 4.45 pm New German Light

Music, Kwa Orchestra direct ed by Eugen Bonntag 5.30 pm-News and Economic Re-

view in German. 5.455.m-Women's Hour: Train-

ing of German girls for Over

sea

6 pm-Cabaret on recorda

d

0.15 p.m.-8ign off DJA and DJB

(German, English).

IN DEFENCE

OF KING

OF ARMS

His Right To Be In Coronation Procession

Ecotsmen, gang warlly!

That redoubtable champion of Scots rights and privileges, Mr. W. A. Martin, secretary of St. An- drew's Club (London) has sounded

Mr. Baker belleves that the bankers confined themselves to their legitimate function of finan- cing proper trade with the Allies

CONDEMNED - MAN REPRIEVED

Thomas Albert Clay, aged 21, Nuneaton-road, Dagenham, whọ was sentenced to death at the Old Bailey for the murder of his sweet- heart, Phyllis Brace,, a 24-year-old nurse, in Epping Forest, has been reprieved.

"The sentence has been commuted

'to penal'servitude for life.

This is the eleventh reprieve granted this year.

more, but slack!

a "spot of

Beehive

a call to arms! He is rallying the sentative) would burnish a clay- clansmen, the lowlanders and Scotsmen in exile wherever they may be in a spirited defence of Lord Lyon King of Arms. He sus pects ä slur or Scotland's ancient rights and is filled with indigna- tion

Bo to the College of Arms"in] Queen Victoria-street to discover the truth of this matter.

In a letter to "The Evening News" Mr. Martin draws attention to the position of Scots Heralds at the coronation. He says:

The Lyon Court will play its part in the Coronation ceremonial us it has done in times past.

All the other Kings of Arms. in- cluding Lyon and Ulster, will walk in procession before the King ar- rayed in their tabards and babili- "It is proposed to invite to the ments. Lyon will be attended by Coronation the Lyon King and his Heralds, Marchmont, Rothesay his Heralds, only as guests, AsAlbany, Falkland, Unicorn and officials of the State the Lyon Carrick. and his colleagues should be pre-m

CLAIM ESTABLISHED,

sent officially, and not as guests. At the Coronation of King: E4- and the point should be kept ward, the Lyon Court petitioned, clear in the minds of all Scots the Court of Claims to establish who have a particle of pride left their right to a place in the proces

sion, in "them."

Mr. Martin tells of "the greatest liberties taken with various Scots pierogatives in the matter of arms, and declares such action to be due to "the fallure of England. to implement the conditions of the

Act of Union."

*** APETITION

It was stated then that they had been present at every coronation since, the Union of England with colland, except the coronation of William IV and Victoria. On those two occasions, the Earl of Kinnoull then the Lyon King, preferred to be summoned as a peer.

I that were true, I for one The Court allowed the claim and (writes an Evening News" repre-It has not been challenged since.

·

will make you feel like THIS

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THOUGHTS ON ELISSA. LANDI

The news that Metro-Goldwyn- Mayer are featuring Ellasa Landi in a picture called "The White Dragon" prompts thoughts on the strangeness of that girl's alm career.

Years ago when she was a Lon- don stage actress still fighting for proper, recognition, Fox Films pre- sented her with a Hollywood con- tract and proceeded to make her ne subject or a world-wide boost that would have even drawni ap

or Shearer. proval from Garbo But, principally because of bad stories, Elissa Landi'never quite won a place in the first flight of stars.

A few years passed. Recently she has been making pictures in Europe. Now the executives of M.G.M, who are just about the shrewdest lads in the dicker busi ness, are reiterating faith in her."-

Elissa is never out of a Job. Which is another way of saying the inspires faith.@

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