"THERE ARE NUMEROUS BEERS STYLED
"PILSNER" BUT THERE IS ONLY ONE ORIGINAL AND GENUINE
Bier
Birgerlichen Brad IN PASEN
PILSNER URQUELL,
brewed at the town of Pilsen, from which it derives its name.
Insist upon PILSNER URQUELL, the original PILSNER BEER,
Call for
"U" BEER
Sole Agents for Hongkong
A. S. WATSON & CO. LIMITED.
ALL TALKING-SINGIRA -DANCING ·
Harry Richman
PUTTING RITZ
-JOAN BENNETT
IRYING BERLIN
UNUPE KOSTS PICTURE-
After you have Seen & Heard this Excellent
Motion Picture at the Queen's Theatre.........
Come to us for the Theme Songs on Victor Records.
No. 22293
No. 22306
“WITH YOU
Waring's Pennsylvanians-with vocal refrain THERE'S DANGER IN YOUR EYES, CHERIE
Waring's Pennsylvanians-with vocal refrain
SINGING A VAGABOND SONG
Shilkret & Victor Orchestra-with vocal refrain FUTTIN' ON TEX RITZ
THE HONGKONG MA
Reisman's Orchestra-with vocal refrain
'THERE'S DANGER IN YOUR EYES, CHERIE No. 22335 A YEAR FROM TO-DAY (From "New York Nights")
Sung by James Molton
S. Moutrie & Co., Ltd.
Tel. 20527,
(VICTOR DISTRIBUTORS)
Chater Road
Charming Frocks
of the moment in
Tel. 20527.
DAINTY VOILES
and
ORGANDIES.
IDEAL FOR AFTERNOON
ALSO
"FLANNEL DANCES"
Lane, Crawford, Ltd.
LADIES' DEPT.
TELEGRAPH. TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 1930.
The Hongkong Hofel Garage.
Main Garage, Stubbs Ed. Tel, #7778 & 97770 Manager, 4th. Floor. Tel 27770
Accounts, 4th. Floor Tel. 23:24
Sales General, 3rd. Floor
(Entrance)
A
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-
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Livery & Coach Service Hongkong-The Hongkong
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Tel. 57374. Peak Hotel. Tel. 29202. Repulse Bay Hotel. Tel. 27775
The Hongkong & Shanghai Hotels, Ltd.
The
Hongkong Telegraph.
TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 1939.
THE KING.
.1
the
and love of the people, and in the dignity of their public and pri vate life. By this standard, King George V. can rightly claim to be placed amongst the truly great.
08
DAY BY DAY.
WOMEN
THAN WHEN THEY ARM THEMSELVES WITH THEIR WEAKNESS,--Defaud.
ARS NEVER STRONCER
The P. and O. 9.5. Karmala, from Singapore, is due here at 3 p.m. on Thursday,
One case of typhoid fever oc-
The King's loyalty to the Con- stitution and to his Ministers is unswerving, but,
8 writer recently remarked in summing up His Majesty's twenty years' occu- pancy of the Throne, behind the Constitutional monarch there week-end. stands the man of flesh and blood, watching paternally and tirelessly, and too often with anxiety, to note what may serve to help or
what might tend to hinder his country's interests. Happy the Sovereign who can represent, aa King George so abundantly does, and incorporate in his own per son just the qualities which have formed the national character and on which the national character has been built up if modern Institutions have done something to relieve sovereignty of its bur den, there still remain more than enough to cause those to whom the King's life is precious-and every Briton is included in the category -to pray that circumstances may tend to lighten the care which is his main concern: the care of the people who have been commit- ted to his charge, and whom he seeks, in the teeth of great dif- ficulty, to "preserve in wealth, peace and godliness." Hongkong, small jewel in the Imperial Crown though it be, joins in the prayer that His Majesty may long be spared to reign over those whose well-being and happiness is his great and constant concern.
Church and Parish.
curred in the Colony over the
The P. and O. ss. from Hongkong arrived on 30th May at 2 a.m.
Rajputana at London
The Empress of Canada, which left Hongkong on the 15th May, arivred at Vancouver on the 31st May.
Mrs. Bernard Brown was rived here by the amongst the passengers who ar- 8.8. President Jefferson,
Mr. E. Lambert, of the Public Works Department, reported to the police yesterday that his pocket was picked and $100 In notes stolen.
Colonel R. B. Skinner, O.BE Chief Engineer, China Command, in North China on s.8. Hector on left Hongkong on inspection duty Sunday and will not be returning) here until about the middle July.
of
.
According to police reports last night, a Chinese named La Ching, who was serving eight months for returning from banishment and two months for the larceny of prison yesterday afternoon. wood, escaped from the Lalchik
Detective Sergeant Poyntz seiz- ed a quantity of luggage belonging to a passenger who was.about to board the President McKinley yesterday afternoon. On the trunks being opened they were found to contain about 2,500 taels of prepared opium. The owner
has been arrested.
A SENSATIONAL -
WAR BOOK;
ALLEGED IMMORALITY IN
THE ARMY
STORM OF PROTEST. The sensational war book written by Brigadier-General F. P. Crozier has aroused a storm of criticism.
General Crozier has outdone Re- marque in his attempt to show by lurid pen-pictures certain of the worst aspects of war, but, in that effort he has run the risk of making it appear that the whole British Army in France was both immoral
and undisciplined, says a Morning Post correspondent.
Mr. R. C. Sherriff, the famous author of "Journey's End," strong ly deprecated the growing ten dency to show the darkest side of the war picture.
"I am no advocate of glossing over unpleasant subjects," he said, "but it does seem to, me grossly unfair that only one side should be shown. As well write a book about. railway porters, and show them all as drunken and incompetent. This would be terribly unfair to a large body of workers. In the same way certain war books are just as un- fair to the British soldier."
The Very Idea!
How to Keep Books.-Put them. in a safe deposit box inside the vault of a large bank and then throw away the keys.
Buy only cheap books. No one borrows books with inexpensive
bindings.
Arrange your bookense so that you can press a spring when neigh bors call, causing them (the booke) an invisible wall
to slide inside panel."
Have your books printed in Chi- Buy books with cactus covers. nese.
Bury your books on a desert is- land. Make a careful chart of the island, then destroy the chart.
*
•
'Street Singer: "Yus, lidy, it is monotonous singing the same old song. Fifteen years I done it, and me father before me, but it wasn't so monotonous for him 'cos hé knew the words."
The time clock strikes the knell
of workaday,
The honking cars begin to
crawl and creep;
All tired toilers homeward wend
their way
And leave the watchman to his
All-night sleep.
+
He (awkward dancer): "It was
could come from accentuating the
In his view no possible goodnice of you to give me this dance." of the nobler side. evil side of war to the exclusion is a charity ball."
She (sweetly): "Not at all-this-`
Army Libelled,
I also talked with soldiers who, like Brigadier-General Grozier, commanded mer in the deld and had every opportunity of knowing what the conditions in France were.
"I say," cried the bright young store, "father's chased by a bull!" thing as she dashed into the village
"Good beavens! What shall I do, miss?"
"Give me a roll of film for my pocket cine-camera, quick!"
First Golfer (starting the after- noon round): "Fo-o-o-o-re!" lunch): "Hee-'s a jolly good fel- Second Golfer (suffering from
..
They one and all expressed the view that, judging from the ex- tracts given in a recent Mort ing Post, the whole Army had beerl libelled because of the presence, among the fighting troops, of an 'low!" inconsiderable number who had brought dishonour on their units.
The low moral standard which the nineteenth hole was complain- The golf club's best grouser at Brigadier General Crozier empha-ing of the worm casta on the greens sises in his book was, "they state, and through the fairways. In apparent only in the few; the many strolled the captain, to whom the honourably upheld the great tra- grouser turned and said, "By the ditions for which the British Army way, isn't this the time of year to is rightly famous.
treat worms. 7" General Sir fan Hamilton, who
"Yes," the captain admitted, commanded the troops in the Dar- "what will you have?" danelles campaign, stated: "All I was entirely and absolutely alien can say is that the alleged conduct to anything that took place in the Dardanelles."
Sick and Tired
Loyal subjects in all parts of the Empire will to-day join in wishing for His Majesty the King many more years of life and activity as the living symbol of the great British Commonwealth of which he is the head. King George to-day celebrates his 65th birthday, and although tem porary Indisposition makes it inadvisable that he should per. sonally participate in the big. public celebration in London, there will be widespread gratifica tion that His Majesty is now well on the way to complete recovery from the painful attack which he has for the past week or so had to bear. Happily, his sickness istions-older far than Parliament It might be said that to attack the in no way associated with
parish is to undermine the founda- serious illness which brought His tions of the whole ecclesiastical Majesty almost to death's door structure, but the parish was some eighteen months ago. Those made for man, not man for the dark days have passed, but to-day parish. The organisation is un- we can recall them as having, if doubtedly crumbling in parts of possible, brought King and people England where villages have well closer than ever together in the nigh disappeared leaving the bonds of love and affection.
church and parson and # tiny roup of parishioners. Glaringly Some few weeks
ago, His disproportionate conditions pre- Majesty celebrated the 20th an- vail, but these facts do not neces- niversary of his accession to the sarily mean that the parochial Throne. The occasion was mark-system is doomed
entirely. The or ed not only by loving messages long continued shortage in from all parts of the world, but to tell disastrously on the prac- dination candidates is beginning also by glowing tributes to his tical work of the Church, kingly qualities. To have occu- only are many, inadequately train- pied a European Throne from 1910 ed men being ordained in England to 1930 is to have crowded into but well staffed parishes, which | twenty years the history of almost are normal centres for trainingt
a century. The world has been in the clergy in pastoral work, are convulsion; dynasties and Empires becoming fewer and fewer. The and States bave disappeared.
closing of superfluous buildings But through it all, King George parishes
and the suppression of superfluous
are probably has quietly and unselfishly carried urgently wanted now than addi- more out the duties brought him by histions to the number of buildings. birth. To-day, the British Throne and parishes. The Bishop of stands as secure as ever it was, Durham's views will probably and it is a mere statement of fact
leave old-fashioned Churchfolk
According to the Bishop of able within the next few Durham, Disestablishment is prob and he suggests that Church years
Objecting to the intrusion at the people should take it for granted formerly employed there, a fore
venereal disease hospitals became Kowloon Godowns of a coolie and concentrate, attention on 4 man in charge of workmen was
full during the war; or as to how reorganisation of the Church | engaged in a fight early this which will minimise the shock. morning with the unwanted coolle,
the Expeditionary Force canteens, The Bishop goes further, however, who, as a result, received a nasty
despite the fact that they suffered. He challenges the parochial eye-stab in his neck necessitating his The view of Lieutenant-General action, made millions out of selling huge losses of stock from enemy tem and suggests a drastic hand-assailant was taken into custody.ral of the Territorial Force from been at school or at work, or at removal to hospital. The alleged Bethune, who was Director-Gene-spirits to boys who should have "hardly distinguishable from its ling of it which he admits to be
abolition."
1912 to 1917, has already been any rate in a comparatively shel- given. "I am sick and tired," hetered environment. The latter sugges-
added, "of these people who talk "I stand by my statement that, tion involves a bigger change than
about soldiers as drunken brutes. in the conditions which aroge Disestablishment, 23
Miss Violet Douglas-Pennant, during the war, it was almost in- the Church parish is one of the oldest institu-
formerly Commandant of the Wo- evitable that numbers of those men's Royal Air Force, said: "I taking part in it should indulge certainly did not experience any-in free love.... THRILL IN STREETS
I attack the thing of the kind, and allegations whole system which made such a OF MONMOUTH.
of immorality on a whole scale thing possible. are absolutely untrue and most
"When you go to war, I maintain Visitors to the annual Mop Fair unfair."
that you automatically put aside. at Monmouth received an unex-
Commandant Mary Allen, of the all safeguards of soclety. pected thrill when an elephant Women's Police Service, said: break down your moral code.
You suddenly rushed out inta the "There really were extraordinary | "The message of Christ is peace, street.
temptations which made immoral- When you go to war you cut across Men, women and children dash-ity just as inevitable as "the rising that message. For that reason, I
and setting of the sun, as General Crozier says. But this was pri- marily a matter of circumstances, rather than of sex.".
Not
to say that this is so because of somewhat breathless, but it is the high sense of duty and the that some re-organisation in the becoming more and more evident fine personal worth of its present Church is necessary. There would occupant. As Professor Nicholas appear to be no need to abolish Murray Butler, President of one the parochial system as developed of America's greatest Universities, by our ancestors in their wisdom, expressed it the other day, "King but there is a very real need to George's, gracious sympathy with adjust the system to changed
conditions every form of human aspiration, and his manifest support of all movements to bind the nations of
The rainfall during last month
Gardens. There were 15 rainy
ELEPHANT RUNS AWAY.
ed helter-skelter for safety while the keeper and attendants began
an exciting chase,
The animal was attached to n circus which la one of the attrac- tions of the fair.
to
Apparently it was disturbed by the sight of a number of cattle being driven
the adjoining market as it was being led by its trainer near the Monnow Bridge.
The bridge was crowded, and elephant suddenly lifted its trunk people ivere astonished when the and trumpeted terrifyingly.
Then, to everyone's amazement, dashed away from its keeper, and thundered ponderously to wards St. Thomas's-square.
The people scattered. Two men were on the point of jumping from the bridge into the river, but re- them and away towards the square. trained as the animal crashed past "To add to the excitement, horses attached to vehicles bolted.
Doors Locked.
Other Views.
maintain that chaplains are quite cut of place during a war. There were some very fine chaplains at the front. They served a useful purpose when they gave out cigar-. ettes and that sort of thing. But.. their usefulness was limited to that."
Other views expressed were: Mr. Boyd Cable: "It is a rotten shame for authors to pick out one or two isolated instances of Immo- rality. We all know that such isolated instances existed, but to WHO WAS drag them out and parade them unfair and dishonest." in this manner to-day is absolutely
Mr. Andrew Boutar, who served in the Air Force during the War, said: "I am sorry that any man, be he private, sergeant or brass hat, should deem it necessary to make money out of a great adven- ture."
Mr. Jonathan Cape (the pub-
Crozier has written it from his leher of the book): "I think the book, defends itself. General own experience, and has confined it to those areas in which be actually served. He wrote it, I imagine, as a corrective to aspects Women rushed into the nearest which have been shown in some house, slamming the doors be-recent war books, and I do not re
The elephant attacked no one, ism," hind them..
gard it as a plece of sensational- however, but swung out of the
Mr. R. Boswell, a partner of square and into Drybridge-street. John Lane, the publishers: "The It careered along into Wonas-wind must blow freely, so to speak, ton-road, where men leaped over and it is not a publisher'e business walls for safety.
to suppress any particular side."
Wonaton-road leads to open General Crozier Replies. country, and once out of the town, the animal alowed up and its
"People who think that my book trainer was able to approach.
disparages those who fought in the war have got hold of the wrong "All right, Rosie," be called.
end of the stick,” General Crozier and Rosie was soon shackled with my book must see that the reverse Then the attendants came up stated. "Anyone who has read heavy chains on the forelegs.
the world together more closely, totalled 7.99 inches, according to have made him a truly powerful the records taken at the Botanic
is the case. influence in the great events of days out of the 31, the heaviest cording to plan, the animal then a sytem which I consider to he As though it had all been ac "I have deliberately attacked his time." As another commenta-rainfall being on the 8th with 2.60 allowed herself to be led docilely vicious and bad, and that system tor remarked, Kings who deserve inches, the next being the 11th back to the circus.
is called war. I do not attack the victims of that system.
not dis-
the title "great" do tinguish themselves in battles and conquests, but excel In the degree to which they can win the respect
with 1.42 inch and the 24th with 1.03. The smallest precipitation was on the 29th with 02 Inch and the next sinallest on the 27th with .03 inch.
"This is the first time Rosie las ever behaved like this," the pro- Prietor said later.
"She is only four years old, and I hope she will not do it again."
Referring to criticisms of the passages in the book relating to sex and drink, General Crozier stated: """It is impossible to in- vent fairy-tales as to how the
BOLINGBROKE?
Banished by Richard II, be- cause of a well-founded fear that he aspired to the throne Henry Bolingbroke returned and gathered an army together to England a few years later
for the ostensible reason of regaining his estates from the King. His real intention soon became apparent, however, 'for he lost no time after the victory of the rebel forces to
depose and imprison Richard and seize the crown himself, the deposed King being murdered by an over- zealous, knight who took Bolingbrokee words t
too literally.
"
According to Shakespeare's magnificent plays, the king- ship seems to have brought Bolingbroke but acant joy. Conspiracy was rife in the realm, and in no long time there was open rebellion, hie- eides which, he was very much concerned about the dissolute behaviour of his son; Prince Hul, the boon companion of Sir John Falstaff. He came to the sad conclusion that "uneasy, is the bead that wears' the crown," and died a broken. and disappointed old man.
You may read about him in "Richard II, and in. "King Henry IV"-two plays aflame with the pageantry, of "old" England.
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