NANCY
WELL, WELL--- I'LL BET. YOU BROUGHT THOSE PRETTY
FLOWERS FOR ME!
NOPE!--- THEY'RE' FOR MY VERY
SPECIAL BOY
FRIEND!
Friday,
HONGKONG TELEGRAPH
April 12, 1940.
By Ernie Bushmiller
«ERNIE BUSHMI
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From $425.—
Large selection of Fitted Cases with Chrome and Duco finished Toilet Requisites
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Beauty cases con- taining a number of Bottles & Jars
$115.-
Gents Writing Attache Cases
$50.-
WHY BRITISH SHIPS M.P. SAYS: WAR DOOMS
SEARCH U.S. MAIL
NEARLY three months are the "Telegraph" published this cut-
Ling from a German paper in the United States. In doing so it called attention for the first time to the way in which German
was obtaining
foreign cur- rency abroad.
The calling in an adverti Kement offer- fug Amerleans an opportunity to send fand stuffs to "star-
ving friends In Nazi Ger- many. During the past three months, accord- ing to offcial figures publish-
Nazis Seek Food
By Charity Plea
BY A SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT
LIEBESGABENPAKETE and DEJTSCHLAND "OSTRACO," 108. Deoadway, Til Worth 25748
xanım in Zinamonibus MA, KA Auttacken Orgiamerat de Duričtines alter Lungebcamndsagen
No
back and sign Varocherung und ping Spran khan in | Proodkruška 65 (5 Spada tangga nerden balanse sugar Ashanti karamelijat, arışım
ed recently, tha traffic in
these parcels has become
enormous, and this is one of
the chief
reasons
American malls are
why
being
searched. Here is another example of how Germany is trying at all costs to ac- cumulate foreign exchange. The advertisement in New York paper offers cheap rates for ex- change transfers to the former territories of Austria. Czecho-Slovakia and Putand,
"Aurban"
TRANSCONTINENTAL
EXCHANGE COMPANY
DRAMA ANAJAN TE
GELDÜBERWEISUNGEN
$100,000
THE B.E.F. AS A FRENCH AUTHOR SUMS IT UP
SIX points in favour of the British soldier were enumerated by Captain Andre Maurois, the French author, at a lecture to French liaison officers with the
B.E.F.
Captain Maurois is himself a liaison officer. Lord Gort was among those who heard his address. The speaker finds that the British soldier is a
1. Hard worker,
2. Has a sense of humour.
3. Never boasts,
4.
Capable of prolonged silence and
suspicious of people who talk
too much.
5. Not inclined to be sulky.
G. Very brave, but is inclined to be
dshamed about It.
"You must do your best to live up
to British ideals and requirements," Captain Maurols sald.
The 3-Year Test
"In the mess do not talk much until you have found your depth.
"When you have not opened your mouth for three years the B.E.F. will say, Thin gentleman is a nice, quiet fellow
BROKE BABY'S LIMBS' Charge Against Father
THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS
THE war spells the doom of the Public Schools, Mr. Lees-Smith, M.P. for Keigh- ley, told the House of Com- mons recently.
He was leading for Labour in
a debate that ringed over the whole field of education,
"It is impossible for the Public Schools to stand un their own feet any longer," he asserted.
"Such schools ns Rugby, Charter- house, Uppingham and Marlborough have reached the greatest, crisis 'in their history."
Monstrous Foca
Fees were about £250 a year for each child, and that meant that after the wur not more than a tenth of the boys or girls would be able to go back.
The system was so extravagant that 90 per cent, of the public schools would have to close down.
Suggestions had been made that the public schools, like the secondary schools, should be given State grants. That raised the question: Should taxes bo used to perpetuate the greatest elasa distinction in our social life?
"Certainly there can be no public nld without pubile control and with- out public entry. These schools will have to accept, as did the secondary schools, a large proportion of chil dren from the elementary schools."
The proportion would have to be increased rapidly until it reached a substantial Ogure.
Public school fees, He
"extravagant to
a monstrous degree," were partly due
to the boarding system.
Mr.
Lees-Smith thought it un- natural that the most comfortably- off section of the community should Wish
to send their children oway from home for nine months every
wa
It was a crowd lift, u herd life.
tary Secretary to the Board of Educa
Mr. Kennel Lindsay, Parliamen-
AUSTRALIAN AIR MINISTER
Mr. J. V. Fairbairn, Australian Minister for Air meets in Aus- tralian pilot during his visit to the R.A.F. in France. Air Vico Marshal P. II. L. Playfair, Commanding Officer of the R.A.F. în, France is between them.
NEWS FROM AUSTRALIA FOR THE RESERVISTS
MELBOURNE.
"THIS is a crusade, not against the light, but for it. These men of the Australian Imperial Force will be much more truly Crusaders than were the men whose enigies lie in the Templars Church in London," said the Australian Premier, Mr. R. G. Menzies, announcing details of Australia's further war effort.
He said that the War Cabinet, after considering Australia's own defences, had decided to recruit and train for service two sixteen thousand. divisions, each of sixteen thousand men, plus a corps of another
WAT.
tion, speaking for the Government, did deal with other points raised by made no reply to this case, but he Mr. Lees Smith as follows:-
With adequate reinforcements this vessels for Britain during the -Compulsory-Education would involve raising ninely thou- mainly of smaller type such as loops and coastal patrol-craft, a number of Lecs-Smith:
is the sand men by June 1941-including which are now under construction in "What Government's time-table for restor- the twenty thousand already raised, local dockyards for the Australian navy, ing compulsory education? I want,
of
Mr.
u return to maximum normality."
Mr. Kenneth Lindsay: "The
Board
would also be a number
of the R.A.A.F.
It is rentined every effort must be made to stimulate local shipbuilding as a matter of war neccanity and an in- cronze in the scope of the present heunty may be approved.
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STARTS
TO-DAY
AT
THE
KING'S THEATRE
DREAD WAR DRUMSI
THE VALLEY AFLAME!
the
A special report is being prepared for The Cabinet had been gulded by the Government on the question of ship
building in the Commonwealth. When of Education alms at full-time educa- expert military advisers as to every this report has been considered the tion and the administrative machin-step taken, in accordance with the Cabinet will frame its wartime bulld. ery has been speeded up to secure Imperiat Defence wor plans devised ing polley. release of buildings. I cannot give in Empire consultations before war any one date on which full-time began. education will be resumed for the After referring to the plan for area training 75,000 militia by June, Mr. whole country, because encl has to meet a different situation." Menzies went on to reply to critics
who say that Australia is doing too The Prime Minister (Mr. G. Men- Youth Committees
little. He quoted figures showing the sten) naid to-night, Government build-{ Mr. Lees-Smith: "You should vastness of the Empire Air Scheme, Ing of merchant ships had not been develop physical education rather and the enormous expansion of the conaldered by the Cabinet, but than physical recreation. Set up miltin and the permanent forces as Minister for Commerce had had dis-j eivie health and recreation centreswell as man power which is being terests: Naval yards were working at cussions with private shipbuilding in- “DIABOLICAL cruelly" to where young men and women can used on the industrial side of the full pressure and rapid progress was
have structural defects put right war.
being made in Sydney in the construc his baby boy was alleged against without any personal expenditure." Then he turned to the erities who tion of the first of two of three tribal He illustrated the close relation- an 18-year-old father at Kenil Why should medical inspection have been saying that the Common-class destroyers. ship between British and Frenchworth, Warwickshire.
come to an end at the age of 147 wealth is doing too much. He said The main dimeultles facing Austra troops by saying that French troops The baby is two months old and Defects revealed themselves during that Australia would be as much en-lian shipbuilding are high cost of pro- In the Maginot Line had learned “On the Bonnie Banks of Loch Lomond is now in hospital with a broken leg adolescence and the period of rapid dangered in the event of a British duction and limited resources in anulp-
growth."
defeat in Europe as if a hostile forcement and technicians, So far the re from, Illghland regiments which had and arm, it was stated.
ception given to the bounty offered for His father, Malcolm Yates, 0 Mr. Kenneth Lindsay: Before long landed on her own shores. been serving with them.
miller, of Warwick-road, Kenilworth, there will be 200 or 300 Youth, Com- "The programine already put in the construction of vessels up to 1500
tons hoe bron diappointing. WUR committed to the Quarter mittees. We arc
concerned hund will involve a total cost in the Scesions on a charge of causing the solely with fitness. Eighty per cent. first two years of war of £180,000,- KILLED BY SHARKS chiki grievous bodily harm.
of those between 14 and 20 are young 000," he said, Yates sister-in-law, Mrs. Lucas,workers." who lives next door, said he told her New approaches to training both 3.000 MEN HALT BUSH FIRE The was playing, and the child slipped for leisure and "adventurous service":
from his knee. He caught the baby's were needed. arm and heard the bone break.
She then asked him. about the Mr. Lees-Smith: The "Fisher Act" broken leg, and he said he awoke providing for part-time education up and found the baby under him in to 10, with eight hours a week taken STEEL from the hull of the bed.
out of the employers' time, should be Gorman battleship Graf Spectrates that Yates stated:
A police sergeant told the magis-revived. But it must not So the scuttled outside Montevideo, may "I got hold of the baby's arm and school age.
alternative to the raising of the able timber and graes country and kill of the shore. Ile was dragged from the eventually be used in making twisted it, because he annoyed me. British ships and guns.
Labour had agreed to the suspened hundreds of head of stock. On the second occasion I shook the son of the school-leaving Act until SHIPBUILDING jchild in a fit of temper."
after the war on the strength of the That, at least, is the hope of the Yates was granted baff but was "most solemn assurancea" by the Argentine business man who for forbidden to see the child in hospital. Government.
£1,000 has bought the sunken wreck,
Mr. Kenneth Lindsay: "The prin- battered by British cruisers.
ciple of raising the school age has
BRITISH GUNS FROM GRAF SPEE
The Ministry of Supply is in the Coastal Black-Out
market for scrap Iron and steel all over the world, and if the Graf Spee can be raised her 10,000 tons of metal |
would be worth more than £30,000.
Abandoned
rrot
School Ago
TWO people have been killed by sharks within a fortnight while swim- ming at North Brighton, New Bouth Water.
MELBOURNE, AFTER a day and highi struggle, 3.000 Aro-fighters, helped by hundreds The first was Ahoy named Arthur of soldiers, to-day halted two bush fires Parrin and the second an Englishman, which inst night word threatening Mr. John William Eke, aged 66. Mr. homesteads and townships to the Mitts Eke was swimming about 40 ft. from the and Ovens Valley districts of Victorin, besch when a shark attacked him. It The Mitta fire extends over a hundred, gashed his left arm and broke his wrist. miles. That in the Ovens Valley has
He managed to swim to within 25 ft. already burned out 30,000 neres of valu-
woter and died in hospital." FENTON FORCED DOWN
1T
MELBOURNE. was stated oMelafly to-day, that Australia will build a number of naval
be accepted. There can be no nos mechanics and tradesmen essential to
DRISBANE. The "Flying Doctor," Dr. Clyde Fin- Cloncurry to ton, while flying from Katherine, hound for Darwin, yester day, was forced down A Brunette
own by engine trouble.
ing back or failing to put it into the resources of adult education are less to Cloncurry until this afternoon, a modern mechanised force, but all Word was not got through by wire- operation us soon as circumstances permit. The 1930 Act was pastponed being offered to the fighting services, and not repented.".
Army Education
and the demand is considerable."
Now Revolution
owing to weather conditions,
Dr. Fenton made a normal call at Brunette Downs. It was not until ho
结婚
CAPETOWN. Many thousands of tons of steel darkness and silence, South Africa's AFTER more than five months'
Innded he found engino repairs word obtained from the German warships lighthouses
Mr. Leer-Smith: Education for tho Mr. Lindsay admitled that his necessary. He stayed overnight scuttled at Scapa Flow after the beam guides and fog sigmala
and lightships, radio troops should be developed by lecture Department, the Board of Education, left for Darwin this morning. Great War have already found their to-day put back into service.
were courses in conjunction with bodies "could do with some reorganisation, way into British munition factorles.
like the Workers' Educational Asso-] "I should like to have on all-party At Simonstown, the British novel ciation The Graf Spee lies in compera- use near Capetown, an officer ex- authorities should also provide "a members to the Importance of these and the Y.M.C.A. The comunitice in this Hauso to aroune tively shallow water and the difficul- plained that the black-out
was quiet room away from the clamour inattere,"
ties of salvago are not expected to be imposed at the beginning of the war of the camp and the wireless and great.
About evacuation he said, "We because enemy rakders were known arrangements If she is raised and docked it will to be. in South African waters.
for correspondence have discovered that within six)
months the ninds the munners, the probably take a year to cut out the "Conditions have changed now," Ateel of her huli.
Mr. Kenneth Lindsay: "Not only outlook and the physique of the chil- The said.
ore technical Institutes, « training dren have changed."
courses.
METROPOLE HOTEL
CENTRAL - CLEAN
CONFORTABLE-FIREPROOF
SAVAGES SCALING THE STOCKADE WALLSIL MUSKETS BLAZING AND SWINGINGI
WOMEN FIGHTING SHOULDER TO
SHOULDER WITH THEIR MENT
DARRYL F
DRUMS ALONG THE MOHAWK
starring
Claudette Henry
COLBERT - FONDA
EDIA MAY CLITER - HESIODE COLLINS » PORN LARKADINE » DORNIS BONDON SIE RALPH ARTHEN GUSELDSTA BERENT LOWERT, ROGER UNRE
Directed by JOHN FORD
“Kandela Produser Beyond Betta – Sonst May by Lamar Ban
A 200 CENTURYJOR PICTURE
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