1933-05-22 — Page 10

Hongkong Telegraph 港電新報 士蔑新聞 All

10

“THE HONGKONG TELEGRAPH❞

AMATEUR PHOTOGRAPHIC

COMPETITION.

$250 CASH PRIZES.

From 1st June to 31st August, 1933. SECTION ONE.

Bathing and Picnic Photographs.

First Prizo

Second Third

SECTION TWO.

$50,00

20.00 10.00

Views, including Architecture and Street Scenes.

First Prize

Second

Third

$50.00

20.00 10.00

SECTION THREE.

Chinese Studies (Figures and Faces).

First Prize

Second

Third

For the-

SECTION FOUR,

$50.00

20.00

10.00

BEST STORY-TELLING PICTURE.

The Prizes in this Section will consist of valuable cameras offered by the:-

EASTMAN KODAK COMPANY,

Details will be published later. SECTION FIVE.

Snapshots taken by Children under the age

First Prize

of 14 years.

Fivo Caméras as Consolation Prixos.

$10.00

The following Rules will govern the Competition:-- 1The Competition photographers.

canfined

exclusively in

aninteur

The Prizes will be awarded to the competitors sending in what are adjudged to be the best photographs in each Section, and which reach this Ofce not Inter than 31st August, 1913. The decision of the Judges shall be final.

3. The right to publh any Gr al of the entries in the

Telegraph is reserved.

4-Photographs which have been already entered in heal

competitions are ineilgible.

G-At the conclusion of the Competition, entries will be returned to competitors on application at this Offee within seven days.

G.-No responsibility will be accepted for non-delivery, loss

or damage.

7-Photographs which must not be lean than 24" x 34" (excepting in the Children's Section) should be printed in black and white, with the name of the competitor in ink on the back.

8-No correspondence will be entered into in connexion with

the Competition,

Entries in the Children's Section must bear the name, age and address on the back in ink, countersigned by a parent. 10. Members of the Staff are not permitted to compete.

"TAKE YOur camerA WITH YOU !”

M

ASSEUR R. SHIMIDZU ASSEUSE S. HONDA

ASSEUSE S. KISAKI

Revammended for many years by Govern ment Civil Howpitat, Peak Hoepfia), and by at be incal Decists.

kin

24. Wyndham Street. Telephone 24945.

Jimmy's

1. D'Aguilar Street.

THE HONGKONG TELEGRAPH.

DEATH OF MR. W. A. STOPANI

WELL-KNOWN RESIDENT OF HONGKONG

Residents in Hongkong will hear with regret of the death of Mr. William Alexander Stopant; of East Point Terrace, at the age of 67, Mr. Stopant had been in ill- health for some months.

Born in the Colony, Mr. Stopan! was the son of the late Capt. Stopani, and was educated at St. Paul's School. At a very early age he joined the firm of Mesars, Russell and Co., which later be- came Messrs. Shewan Tomes and Co. He relired in 1928 and up to that date had had an unbroken connexion

36 with the firm of

time in years, being for some charge of the shipping department.

Mr. Stopani had some remark- able experiences during the Great War. Soon after the outbreak he was returning home on leave by a Japanese boat when the vessel was attacked in the Indian Ocean by the famous German raider Wolf. All passengers were taken on board and the merchant vessel ank. For more than a year Mr. Stopani was a prisoner on board and during that time was taken to all parts of the lobe and witness- ed raids un many merchantmen. At last the Wolf returned to Ger- many and Mr. Stopani was intern- ed there. At the end of the War he was repatriated to England.

In 1919 he returned to the Colony and served as godown manager of the China Provident Loan and Mortgage Co., Ltd., un- til his retirement.

In his carly days Mr. Stopani was well-known in the Colony as an athelete and won many prizes for running, swimming and row- ing.

Mr. Stopaul leaves three sisters, one being Mrs. Maitland. of May Road, the others residing in Lon- don and Liverpool and a brother In Australia, other near relatives of deceased residing in the Colony, are a nephew Mr. A. Gordon, of Messrs. Jardine Matheson's and Mr. G. Stopani Thomson, of the Hongkong Electric Co.

CINEMA SCREENINGS.

NOTES SUPPLIED BY THE THEATRES

"Jack's the Boy" is English hunsour at its best, and Jack Hulbert is the lender of the art of maintain- ing an audience in a condition of continual merriment. There was a forotaste of this quality in "Sunshine Susle", in which he held the stage for long periods with absurdities that were intensely amusing. In "Jack's the Boy" he has even more abundant scope for his delightful fooling. The charecter he plays not only fits where it touches, he lives the part so thoroughly that all the time he is creating amusement in which he is admirably, assisted by Cicely Court neidge, who runs the Loch Lomond enfe on lines tending to be quite original.

"Jack's the Boy", is showing to-dny at the King's Theatre,

"Madame Butterfly"

Kissing has become respectable in Japan. Age-old prejudice against this form of expressing affection-or more than affectim-have yielded to the stendy Westernization process which has been going on in the islum nation for the just half-century,

MONDAY, MAY, 22, 1933.

You will lose

your teeth!

through Neglect

PYORRHEA'S attack is invisible

THE

E ugly mouth disease, Pyorrhea, can lurk for 10 years, unnoticed. It is an invisible enemy which attacks the gums. But only later makes itself known in many horrible ways. Its first warning may be your tooth bruth just a bit pink from bleeding gums. Then the gums get soft, spongy, ten der. Next the teeth loosen in their sockets and what may happen then, worst of all, the reef drop out, or have to be pulled ent

The price you pay for neglect, is the dreaded disease, pyorrhea, and all of its attending ille. ...

Loss of teeth often leads to general bad health and loss of vitality. Your healthy smile disappears and with it. popularity and adinitation... and your friends!

You don't have to risk this! Start Bow. Sate your teeth. Use Forhan's for the Gums. More din an ordinary tooth paste, it prevents pyorrhez. 19

will keep your gums healthy, you tresli beaudfully white, and sound. Remember, there is no substitute for fine, healthy seed and the salle of youth and no finer dentifrice than Forhan's for the Gums.

Forhan's for the Guns is the formula of R. J. Forhan, D.D.S., specialist lu mouth diseases. It wontains Foritan's Pyorrhea Astringent developed by Dr. Fochan andused by dentists throughout the world in the treatment of pyorrhea.

Sales Agents Mulira, Macuran & Co., ti....

Forban's

FOR THE GUMS

MORE THAN A TOOTH PASTE-IT PREVENTS PYÖRRHEA

1933 Marches On!...With One Of The World's Undying Romances!

We Usher in a New Year with the Most Magnificent. Production of this Immortal Story... the Love-Drama of a Yankee Sailor and Japanese Geisha Girl ...

MADAME BUTTERFLY

with

SYLVIA SIDNEY CARY GRANT CHARUE RUGGLES

A B.P. SCHULBERG

PRODUCTION

a Guramount Gicture

QUEEN'S THEATRE.

FROM THURSDAY.

was call from Barrymore, a stranger, who judice against kissing that it always eliminated from motion pic-bestowed warsi praise upon her "mar- tures. To-day, however, censor have vellous performance." become more lenient, and the Japan- ese are permitted to enjoy love scenes on the screen.

Sylvin Sidney, black-eyed screen beauty, learned that fact from Michic Ito, Japanese netor, who recently re- turned from his native country to serve as technical advisor during the filming of "Madame Butterfly," modernized screen version of the treasured romance, which comes the Queen's Theatre on Thursday, t Mies Sidney heads the cast of the film, with Cary Grant. Charlie Ruggies, Irving Pichel and Helen Jerome Eddy in other important roles.

to

Kissing is not a Japanese custom, the younger generation has adopted this method of expressing affection. Until recently, so strong was the pre-

FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS

Convinced of his sincerity, Miss Landi decided to remain on the stage Jand she became one of its outstading leading women before she was out of her teens. Barrymore in stili an admirer of her work as an actress.

"A Passport to Hell" Elissa Landi, who portrays the

Miss Landl's latest production is leading feminine role in "A Pasport A Passport to Hell", in which she

Hell" coming to the King's

to save herself from deportation, Theatre on Thursday, might have portrays the role of an outcast who, confined her activities to writing manager a marriage with a young army oflcer at a post in Africa where novels, but for John Barrymore.

London crities were anything but the action of the picture takes place. kind in their reviews of "Kismet, in She is supported by which she played her first important includes Paul Lukne, Alexander Kirk- role on the English stage. She wasland, Warner Oland, Earle Foxc. on the point of giving up her intended Donald Crisp, Yola D'Avril and Vern carcer when she received a telephone Morrison.

cast that

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FRECKLES!!

IF ALL THE. PROVISIONS

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BOY! THAT'S WHAT

I CALL A BOAT....

TALK ABOUT CLASS!

Wow!!

AND FROM A PORTHOLE IN THE BALLEY, THE FIRST ONE TO SEE THEM 15 SHAM POO, THE

cook

Ho! HON. HARRY COME.... LIKE REGULAR ĠLOCK WORK

HE SLIDE FROM

SKY !!

Page 10Page 11

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