1937-11-15 — Page 2

Daily Press 孖剌西報 All

A VARIETY REVUE

produced by

ANN ELLIS

Under the auspices of

HONG KONG Y'S MEN'S CLUB

in aid of

NORTH CHINA WAR RELIEF FUND

QUEEN'S THEATRE

Wednesday, Nov. 17, at 9.30 p.m.

Tickets: $4, $3, $2 and $1

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Reservations may now be made at the Theatre..

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HONG KONG DAILY PRESS. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1937.

WHEN CHRISTIANS

MAY FIGHT

Securing Reign Of Public Law

In his sermon at St. John's Cathedral yesterday (Remembrance Sunday) the Rev. Rev. H.-W. Baines said, inter alla:-This is a day when, ES the perspective lengthens, we look up as we hear the call of the fallen.

It may

be that to the older generation Armistice Day is above all else a day of memories of those who have laughed with them and shared familiar tables of home and lingered at play or fought beside them: Day of sacred memories.

But what of the younger genera“ tion who stood last Thursday won- dering at the meaning of this an- nual pageantry? The very "sim- plicity of the two minutes' silence compels the man and woman of the generation physically

un- scathed by the war to ask to what purpose was this expenditure of life. How, indeed, can the young- er generation, help 'crying out to this waste? what purpose WBS Stan. Hill's cartoon last Sunday is a true picture of the bewilder- my generation and of 'ment of those who are younger as we watch the shapnel biting chips off the Memorial to our Glorious Dead?

ALTERNATIVE AMBITIONS How easy it is for us to say that they who showed a love, than which none is greater, by giving up their lives for their friends, fought for an ideal which got us nowhere. Fight for yourselves and get some- where or yow never to fight at all

these are the alternative bitions claiming my generation. But it is exactly at that "point that the message of November 11 comes home.

am-

com-

It is the focus of our memoration of the dead whom we call glorious, and gallant, not be- cause we wish to heap adjective upon adjective, nor because they aled trying to wreat another mile or two to add to the British Em pire.

The war for the average Eng- 11shman was. I believe, not an im- perialist, war but was fought to keep a promise.-

NO EMPTY BOAST

To call it selfish and commerical When ls as unjust as it is untrue. It was Bald that the war was "fought to end war and to¬make-

the world at for heroes

or de mocracy there was no empty boast- ing. The attempt may have fall- ed, but that is not the paint. What I am saying is that our fallen fell for England, yes, but equally truly for a moral ideal to win back the legal framework of interna- tional society. Inside which the good life could be Uved.

ordered conditions. Let me take an example. The Powers have been faithful to the intention of the fallen when they made their decisions at Nyon to police the Mediterranean, because by so doing they took a step towards collective security and gave a sedative to panic-stricken Europe.

If declaive action by a group of Powers can thus banish the menace of piracy from the trade routes of the Mediterranean, what may not be possible on a bigger scale in delivering civilization as a whole from the ultimate brigandage of war?

THE COMMON TASK

Three graceful pupils (H. Merriman, J. Millard and S. Cooper).

as they will appear in Miss Capell's forthcoming Dancing Dis- play at the King's Theatre on November 24,

WATER METER

CHARGES

to bring to Alleged Tampering And Theft

I have said that I believe the fallen gave their lives for a moral ideal

and in order birth a just international order; that the peace treaties are an at- tempt to legalize and to reinforce tnat order; and that on Armistice Day, the Cenotaph during the two minutes* silence summons us in loyalty to the dead to give our- selves to the same task.

So much anyone thinking care- tally about the last two decades of English history might say to the perplexed Englishman of my generation. But how does such an Ideal seem from the standpoint of Nazareth? There is for a great many Christians the misgiving that this whole attitude of collec- tive responsibility for the sake of collective security involving the use of armed force in the last re- sort is at best sub-Christian and at worst wholly incompatible with the Christian spirit.

Such people would say what, you are advocating may be true to the fallen, but it is untrue to Christ. I affirm the contrary. Nyon, some will say, is anti-Nazareth. That, of course,

is true in the sense that in a Christian world recourse to military methods would be in- conceivable...

THE CHRISTIAN'S TASK

il

But the Christian's task now is to translate Nazareth in the actual circumsances in which we are living: Without assuming the in nocence of our own record or pass- ing judgment upon national con- duct in the East and West to-day surely it is true that with national irresponsibilty and disunion grown to such a pitch, order-even stern and repressive-is not itself more hostile to the Christian idea than anarchy and rapine.

Law in the sense of decent order- ed society is an indispensible pre- Hinary to love meaning perfect- ed human relationships. Hence it is a genuine part of a Christian And I believe that whatever the polley to defend public law as the failures and injustices of the condition of any good life at all Versailles Treaty there is no posal- and of Christ's commandment of ble doubt that the peace settle-love. This is not a plea for mull- ment and

the generation of the tarism which was one of the moral. League of Nations were drawn up

enemies which those whom fundamentally to establish, rein-.

commemorate to-day fought to ex- force and perpetuate the moral terminate. international order. It 19 well called the Convenant and it is a Just memorial to the fallen...

SAVING CIVILISITION .. We say that our Elder Brothers died that we may live. They did, but not just that we might sur- vive. It mattered to them whe- ther we live who survive them in non-moral anarchy or 10 well,

I

SNATCHER GAOLED ́

Woman Tells Of Incident In

Tonglowan Road

we

I am not saying that war and Christianity are compatible. They

are not. But I believe that not only the fallen but also Christ, do not condemn the concerted use of force in a world in which Christ is not yet acknowledged king as an instrument for love, to prevent war and help to secure the reign of public law..

AMNESTY IN DANZIG

Danzig, Nov. 13. Seventeen political prisoners were released from Danzig prisons yesterday as a result of the am- nesty declared a few days ago.

Described as a broker, Leung Po, aged 22, who appeared on remand before Mr. R. A. D. Forrest at the

Thirty-one political offenders Central Magistracy on Saturday, still remain in gaol, as their terms Was sentenced to two months of imprisonment are over оле hard labour and ten strokes of the year.— cane when convicted on a snatch- ing charge.

t:

Complainant Was Mrs. Chan Yan-Eze whose purse containing $72.66 had been snatched by de- fendant in Tanglovan Road on November b

Defendant dented the charge, and, giving evidence, Mrs. Chan Bald she was by the bus terminus about 2.30 p.m. when someone came from behind, snatched' her ́purse, and ran away. She turned round, and saw it was defendant, whom she recognized. Several pe-

destrians chased and caught

Leung.

Transocean News Service

REICH-HUNGARIAN DISCUSSIONS

The

Budapest, Nov. 13. Hungarian Premier, Dr. Daranyi, la to visit Berlin on No- vember 20,

Accompanied by the Foreign Minister, Dr. Kanya, he will leave the Hungarian capital on that day and will arrive in Berlin on Sun- day on a visit which is scheduled to last four days.-- Transocean News Service.

commended Ngai and another man, Yuen Man, who had also assisted in the arrest, for the help they had given Mrs, "Chan....... and: ex- pressed, the hope that she would. reward both men suitably.

Sub-Inspector H. G, Hallam pro-

Ngal Mok-ching. 23, à båker, said' he was one of those who chased Leung, and being the near- est one to him, stopped him. Be- fore this, however, he noticed Leung ding the purse to the ground, but retaining, a number of banknotes in his hand -

Passing sentence, his Worship | secuted.

Of. Covers

An adjournment tfl to-day was ordered by Mr. R. A. D. Forrest at the Central Magistracy on Satur- day in the case in which Wong Kau, 23, unemployed. is charged with tampering with a water meter at No. 37, Des Voeux Road West.

Defendant was remanded until to-day for the law officers of the Crown to be consulted by the prosecution, as to whether defen- dant's alleged offence could be brought within the particular sec- tion of the Ordinance under which he was charged."

Ng Tu, 48. unemployed, also ap- peared before Mr. Forrest charged on four counts of theft of water meter covers from four different addresses in the West Point dis- a man trict. He claimed that gave him 10 cents to carry the covers for him.

Mr. Sayers said that such thefts were becoming a very common oc-

and currence.

was costing the Government an enormous sum of

money to replace the covers. The thieves sold the covers for 10 cents perhaps, but their actual worth was about $1.50.. Once the covers were removed from the meters they were able to damage as they were

ADULTERATED MILK

Dishonest Delivery Man. Sent To Guol

Remarking that what defendant had done was a serious menace to public health, Mr. R. Edwards sen- tenced Lau Kwan, coolle, to six months' hard labour at the Cen- tral Magistracy, on Saturday on a charge of larceny of a quantity of milk from the Dairy Farm Ice and Cold Storage Company.

DUART CREME OF MILA

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LIPSTICK

Appearing for the Dairy Farm Co., Mr. W. A. Mackinlay, of Dea- sons, said that early on the morn- ing of October 28, Lau was handed a number of bottles of milk to be delivered. The same day a com- plaint was made to the Dairy Farm by Mr. Lam Wing-kam, of No. 45 Lee Garden Street, Arst floor, that the milk delivered was not as good as it should be. The milk was analysed and it was found by the Company's analyst that it contain- ed about 10 per cent. water.

Defendant denied knowledge of the added water but was convict- ed and sentenced as above,

of added

exposed, and quickly went out of ection.

Defendant denled a previous conviction against him, and was remanded until Monday. Detec- tive-Bergeant J. Allen

in both cases.

prosecuted

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