DONALD DUCK
HOW DO
YOU SPELL *DAISY"
MET WHY D-A-1-S-Y OF COURSE!
Cope, 1941, Was Doney Producto?
World Rights Reserved.
Wednesday,
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HONGKONG TELEGRAPH
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SPELL
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(DAYS-E-E!)
May 14, 1941.
By Walt Disney
DAYSEE LOVES
DOMULD
DAYSEE
WALT DISNEYE
ANCHOR
BUTTER
THE WORLD'S BEST/
Obtainable from All Leading Stores.
Sole Agents: LANE, CRAWFORD LTD.
GRIN AND BEAR IT
1941,
Reky Then, Ine.
U. Tt, co, all 86 ton
By Lichty
"You know perfectly well I never hit anything head-on~!
always back into things!"
Crossword Puzzle
АСПОБА
1- Narrow opening.
Unclass
&-Pestive
12-Crazy (lang)
is-Datace
it-wing-like 15-Imitator
16-Abbor
IB-Individua) 20-Maledictione
31-Alberton river
-Pirst Holy
Roman Emperor
23-Charitable gift
20-Period of time 25-Agitaten
33-Course genie 14-Man's DIAMO
jake
28-valent
-Bick 41-Likel? 42-Gmail, plant, 14- would
Good new
Teavenly betag
53-ad for und
at mengy
64-Rack part
By LARS MORRIS
ANSWER TO
PREVIOUS PUZZLE
Go-Tree fulce
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DOWN
07-ver in colland
-fit with palin
55-Lega) paper
2-Gallop 1-Practer
2
3
4
by - Probialstonis
18
4--Trunk
>-Paricat
-Peace (Latin)
7-Put up
Executa ut strangling 9-Exclamation 10-raids
-God of wat
İT-Kauba
19-tonian disirtet,"
-Pertlie apot in desert
Weapon-ג
«Ma'a naMO
Ataten
-Bun god
-Man's name
-Tear
-ATTENGO
33—Check-toires la
stave pipes
35-Man's "titekname
18-Performer 40-Fabrication
43-Bledgen -15—Die-urules—watat 46--0 47-Effective roke
{BİRDAİ
48-Remain -Tread
50-Town in New York 51- Proper
62-Delent
44~Occas
7
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10
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1
19
22
23
24
26
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128
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130
132
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131
Eats "Death Powder" To Destroy Hoodoo
A Government patrol officer, in Papua' ate some "death medicine" to prove to native villagers that It was harmless. The natives had warned the officer that he would die if the "medicine" merely touched his skin.
The story is told in the annual "Several men warned me to leave report of the Acting-Adminis- them alono or I would die. trator of Papua (Mr H. W. "I poured some of the powder Champion), tubled in the House Into my hand. Women gasped and of Representatives recently.
The officer's report anys that the "death medicine" ennelled of two parcels of grayish powder.
He seized them at a village where, a young man was reported to have faded away and dled through the ageney, of the "death medicine.”
yelled. and the man drew barle am: shouted to me that I was doomed,
"The powder was made from seashells, coral, and wood. A desd stone-fiali and a caifish had been burned with it.
"To complete my demonstration of the futility of such death sorcery, I ate some of the stuf
"The" "villagers werd convinced As I opened the parcels the vil Ingers-moved away, the report that I would die, but I'm still on
We wer deck."
A
UNIFORMS
MAN'S tailor told a reporter the other day that it is months since he has had an order for a new suit of evening clothes. One would have expected. this, for in a time of severe economy evening dress is one of the luxuries most easily dis- pensed with, as are those large parties at which men in the black-and- white of evening dress look so much more agree- able than in the clothes they wore at lunch.
Apart from this, even- ing dress is the uniform of pleasure in a world rich in superfluities or, at least, in a society rich in superfluities, and is, there- fore, symbolic of some- thing at variance with the spirit of the hour.
I hope, however, that the disappearance of even- ing dress is only tempor. ary, that it will return with the return of peace, and that our children will live to world in which a suit of evening clothes for
cheerful
see ¿
By
a kilt, a fourth in a sailor suit, a fifth dressed like me
who in such circumstances could take the game serious-
ly
To have aport at its best you must have uniforms. I remember some years ago going to a football match in Galway in which one of the players played in his bare feet. Even this small de- clension from the regulation costume of the game made one feel that this. was not football up to the Charles Buchan standard.
The genius of golf, it is said, has survived the dis- appearance of the scarlet coats that used to make it so lovely a game among the sandhills; but I cannot help thinking that golf would have evolved into still greater per-
POCKET CARTOON
Field
i1'm afrald
the Marshal's losing his grip he's worn the same uniform three nights running."
fection if the red coats had Searchlight on a
not beer allowed to vanish.
If, then, uniform is so im- portant in work and in sport, is it not reasonable to believe that it is equally important in social life? Consider the part that evening dress plays in the theatre, for example. How gay is the scene in the stalls as even the ugliest man in a white shirt treads on women's toes on the way to his sent! I have sometimes thought that, the stalls seen from the gallery are often more interesting than the
occasions ROBERT LYND will be the
possession of every male citizen.
For one thing; I like uniforms. I like clergymen to-look-like-clergymen. Highlanders to looke Highlanders, and butchers in blue aprons to look like butchers very nice but chers.
What a commanding figure is the policeman in his uniform: out of it he is only human-no longer one's superior, but one's equal. Hospital nurses in the costume of their pro- fession insnire double con- fidence in their Samaritan skill and selflessness. I have always thought that the modern attack on the housemaid's cap and apron, though well meant, was deplorable, since, if it succeeded it would result in the disapearance of one of the comparatively few charming features of civilisation.
I should like to see chemists, publicans, drysal ters, loriners, shoemakers,. fishmongers, osteopaths, poets and cotton manufacturers everybody except journalists, indeed-wearing the uniform of thoir trades.
play which they certain- ly would not be if the oc- cupants of the stalls
were dressed in the evening as they are dressed at break- fast.
Opera at Covent Garden could scarcely have survived unless many people-have-been- willing to pay large sums of money, not to listen to music, but for the pleasure of seeing a crowd of men and women in evening dress.
*
I confess my heart sinks when I enter one of those theatres to Continental which men and women go merely to see the play and where nobody has taken the trouble to change from day to evening dress. How shabby the drama seems without shirts to white rows of brighten it from the audi- torium! That, no doubt, is what the late George Alex- ander felt when he made an order about evening dress in
St
Theatre, the
James's which resulted in Mr Bernard Shaw's being refused admis- alon to the stalls on one occa- the of slon on necount
irregularity of his costume.
To wear evening dress on some occasions, however, is not only a duty but a pleasure. After a hard day's work, to change one's clothes is like beginning day over again. It is an escape from the drab- ness of toil into the uniform of leisure, and one's spirits rise accordingly. One is ready to face cheerfully even the ordeal of a long dinner at a party.
The pleasure the eye re- celves from uniforms will be admitted at once by anyone who has ever watched cricket at Lord's. Imagine ↑ Test match in which Bradman came out to bat wearing the Blummocky evening dreas of a waiter in a bankrupt re- staurant, and Woodfull, his partner at the other end, ap- peared in a grey flannel shirt and plus-foura, with his braces exposed. Imagine too that tho English flelders stood in their
How nice to think positions, not in the uniform of the game, but in an within a reasonable time. anarchistic variety of cos human bolaga will be enjoy. tumes, ono wearing hiker'sing this freedom again! And, to my mind, thrò more the shorts, another dressed like a stockbroker a third sporting - merrier
Care evaporates as soon as, after desperate efforts, the -bow in tied well enough not to be likely to come asunder. One passes into a world in whch life is easier-less like a realistic novel and more like a comedy. Imprisoned be- hind a stift shirtfront, one luxuriates in freedom. This is, all make-believe, but it
works.. to think that
BLACK RECORD
66/OMMUNIST policy since October, 1939, if successful, could bring nothing but slavery and ruin to the people."
Who says that? Mr Victor Gollancz..
Coming from V.G., this must make a lot of people sit up.
For there was a time when the comrades at the Č.P. headquarters bowed their heads with touching verence whenever his name was mentioned.
rc-
All that has gone.. King- street has set up new idols.
The assertion I have quoted is taken from "The Betrayal of the Left," a 9s. book- edited, partly-written and. published by Mr Gollancz.
This book makes mince- meat of the Communists and their self-righteous claim to be the workers' only friends.. Indeed, it suggests that they are no friends of the worker at all.
Out of the mouths and manifestos of its leading spokesmen it convicts them of an indefensible betrayal of the anti-Nazi cause.
Change Of Face
In September, 1939, in a pamphlet called "How to Win the War," Harry Pollitt said: "To stand aside from this conflict, to contribute only re- volutionary-sounding phrases while the Fascist beasts ride rough shod over Europe, would be a betrayal of every- forebears have thing our fought to achieve."
He also said: "The Communist Party supports the war, belleving it to be a just war, which should bc supported by the whole work- ing class and all friends of De-
in Britain." Мостасу 菱
About the same ti
■ СР. time manifesto was issued stating: "We are in support of all necessary measures to secure the victory of Democrncy over Fascism."
These declaratlons are contrasted detail with the later in revealing "Party lines which frally harden policy of re- into the anti-war pollo volutionary defcatiam."
The contributors to this book- John Strachey and they include George Orwell show with a mass of evidence how completely the Communists have furned them- selves Into Hitler's biggest allies in Britain.
It in
In a black record of misre- presentation and distortion by the Communists. More, it is a pathe- account of intellectual sterility and political ineptitude-meaning
Those innocent, people who are the stooges for each recurring camouflaged Com-
Hot
hunist manoeuvre will surely have their eyes opened to reality by this book, I recommend you to hold of it at once, whether you' have any illusions or not about the Communist Party Bus S
rice:
Webb
Mr W. J. Spreadbury and his bride, the former Miss V. M. Jounilho,
who were married at St Margaret's Churcli on Saturday---Ming Yuen.',
Tuberculosis Talk
Chinese Doctors Meet
An address, "Modern Methods in Ine Treatment of Pulmonary Tuber- culosis,' with lantern slides was ven by Dr Li Shu-fon at last sht's meeting of the Hongkong Chinese Medical Association.
COMPANY REPORT
H.K. Fire Insurance Credit Balances
insurance Co., Ltd, for presentation The report of the Hongkong Fire
at the annual meeting on May 21,
វា
1030
Dr Li said: Innumerable claims states: - for the discovery of specifle cures The General Managers and Con- for tuberculosis have been made sulting Committee have pleasure in from time to lime but no one of submitting a statement of the ae- « them, be it drug or serum or any counts of the Company, made up to other agent, including the much December 31, 1940, in Sterling and vaunted gold therapy of recent years, Hongkong currency. has stond the test of time....
Account this Account shows Collapse therapy however, is the surplus of $660,035.45, and it
this sum be ap¬ recommended that only therapy introduced, which has propriated as follows: received universal acceptance. This To pay a Dividend of form of therapy originated with the
of artificial re-discovery mothorax 00 years ago, and is the basts from which the modern con- cept and practice of collapse therapy is evolved.
$11 per share....* $440,000.00 pneu- To add to Reinsurance
Fund.
229.036.48
$600,035.43
During the last decade, particular-
on
¿
.1940. Account-The balance a ly the last few years, phenomenal credit of this account is $741,100.92. strides have been made in the dave- Consulting Committee. Mr J. H de lopment of intensive collapse therapy. Taggart resigned his sent
this, refer to the evolution and torture from the Colony on retire. improvement of thorsele surgery, mont and Mr P. H. Suckling was with the result that numerous sur-invited to fill the vacancy This gical collapse methods arc now appointment requires the confirma-
By
available for the treatment of almost lon
of Shareholders. Messrs C. every early type of pulmonary tuber- Bernard Brown, A. II. Compton,, L culosis.
K: Lo, T. E. Pearce and S.. T..
eligible but, being Williamson retire In our view there is one important | Will factor which vitally influences the offer themsleves for re-election. choice of any form of collapse (reat- The accounts have been audited ment in this part of the world, and by Mossrs. Lowes Smith, Seth &
that is, comprehensive consideration Matthews and Percy
Bingham &c.
of the patient's social status. The Fleming, who, being, eligible, offer following are some pertinent ques-themselves for re-election. tions:
Is the patient sufficiently educated and Intelligent to co-operate with the therapist to
tho the conclusion treatment
In the absence of some form of national health insurance, is the patient in
10 a Anancial position undergo lengthy institutional ireat- ment?
With the limited finance and time avaliable, which form of treatment}
applicable to the particular
謝
case, with the view to short hos pitalisation, speedy convalesence, and a minimum of follow-up treatment?
Dr Li then described the various aspects of the subject fully, the forms of collapse therapy being dealt with mostly Ima technical terma. The forms were Artificial Pneumo
Intrapleural Preumonolyala othorax, Phrenlo Interruption, Sculentotomy, Extrapleural Phoum- othorax, and Thoracoplasty.
Patients' In Hospitals
It is understood the Committee of the Tung Wah Hospitals will hold à meeting on May 20 to decide whether to put all T. B. patients in the Tung Wah, Tung Wah Eastern and Kwong Wali Hospitals under one building.
CHINESE ARMY MISSION.
12. Singapore, May The
mission Chinese milltary. hended by General: Shang Cheni arrived here on the night of May 10 from Kusila Lampur, Malaya, by motor-cat. The party, which has visited India and Burma, is expected to ally here a fortalten De
A touch, at "alia chlot" adds an air of charming chla to your outât... whether you're dressed for work or 'stepping out."
gay. sophisticated Iragrance has most unumial attraction
and it always keeps
12
first,
Intriguing
fura
undies
freshness frocks, hankles.
SAVILLE'S
Mischief
APS COSMETIC SHOPPE
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