7-25
BY
DONALD DUCK
YEAH, JONES' STATIONERY. STORE IN THE UMPIRE STATE BUILDING, AND GET ME A REAM OF TYPING PAPER ! ...AND MAKE
IT SNAPPY!
Coupe 1846, Wah Duaney Productions World Right Reserved ·
CONTRACT How to Play
BRIDGE
How to
BY JOSEPHINE CULBERTSON
Timing a Squeeze Play
DY nil oxids, the most difficult) would make no difference and, there- feature uf squeeze plays i fore, let us assume it would be the timing. It is
Ignorance on that heart jack. We win with the nee point that has kept the ranks of and, as before, eash the A-K of squeeze masters ng thin as they are. clubs, then enter dummy with the Consider the two apparently similar. clubs nine
to nesse in diamonds. holds. We
We then cush the Our ten but actually different, methods of playing the following hand:
rest of the clubs, at which point we reduced to five cards--the A-5 of spades, the
lx of
and A-J hearts, of diamonds. West holds the J-10-7 of spades and
and the
of hearts. Q-10 Dummy has its three spades intact. and the K-4 of hearts. East proper-
has kept
the Q-0-0 of spades
Match-point duplicate, West, denter.
North-South vulnerable,
AJ 1073
♡91008
762
AK42
<7K 43
063
498542
N W E S
AQ986 VJ
O K Q D 8
72 *196
AS
O AJ 164 SAKQJ3
The bidding:
Wert
North
Pa
Pass
W
Earl # l'ans
South
INT
ANT
Poss
.lbtגI
+
ate
Tyte 1-0 of dimmorts. We now
ami
eash the diamond are and
Chise
West neute discomfort. Ite ennnnt let
RO D
a heart because then dummy's K-4 would become goot, hence he I must reduce to the J-10 of spades. Thereupon we let go dammy's four of hearts. East, of course, follows sult in diamonds. Now we lend a heart to the king and is East's turn to squirm. If he lets go the diamond king.
return to palence and cash the diamond
༢r
hu
Friday,
HONGKONG TELEGRAPH
September 5, 1941, By Walt Disney
UMPIRE PTATE BLOG.
HIGHEST IN CITY
THE LAND in which
**
C
OME NORTH
FOR SUN- SHINE! Leave the cold. dark, winter days be- hind! "All rooms with North aspect.". “Buffalo for Winter Sports!"'
In this land of astonish- ing contradictions and blasted delusions, such posters now fail to cause
more than a mild snigger among the Hongkongitės domiciled in Australia. And, by the way,
WC
Jark: If the lets go the spade eight puzzle and slightly annoy the native born product by referring to "Austra- lia"
Равн ONT Pans Pass
we rad to the spade ace, lend the Obviously, East and West's bid-five, to the king, and cash the four- ding had only one object to make spot for the winning trick,
Obviously. this substantial dif- matters us dimcult as possible for ference results merely from ducking their vulnerable
Six opponents. cluba would have been a laydown the first diamond.
for
and especially at match-
point duplicate, the
notrump
cum-South, but under the cir-
contract was fairly cla-
West opened his
mond. East played the queen and
He casted the acel declarer won
entered and king of clubs, then dumuny with the club nine, and led a diamond toward the 3-10 East was not so accommodating as to
put
up his king, however, and from that point declarer struggled in vain for the twelfth trick. No squeeze could be developed, and the slam contract was down one."
Now let us hofe the result of a
To-morrow's Hand
Mafch-point duplicate. South, denler, Both skies vulnerable.
AJ 10 ÖKO7A2 OAQZ
AST
★ KQ 75
MR 0653
N WE
AÅ? VAJUDA
OJ 104
K 10 5
48632
Q10
O R987 J04
very simple change in the timing. How should this hand be played Let us make East a gracious pre- at a four heart contract? Opening sent of the first trick. His return tead spade king,
122
Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
- By LARS MORBIS
PREVIOUS PUZZLE
I-Kind of warship
BDaring light.
I-One who mimicks'
13-Tricks
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of Thes
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19-kusias ETNI
40-Bet paiɗa
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24-Jain closely
35 voice
25-blatoslo scale
25-redzi with 33-Bundle of twiga
used a broom Brother of Cain 35-Pala 35-Tertiary of
mladle Europe 37-In po WAY
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45—Wander
41-divit in Prance
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or calledra)
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58-Wil# of Tyndareusi
deceived by EVE
6-Wombip
2
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14
77
20
26 27 28
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sud
ANSWER YO
#1-Precipitated
molature $3--Eingle thin
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dollara
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to clothes 66-Ringlet of human
hatr
17-Durn
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PACE MOT
City 10 Germany TAL!! 19-las in Bearpla
constellation 11-Make sound like
bail
13-LA KO postici
11-Reddian
21-sealer co
13-In worthy manner
15-This evening
76-Groups
27-Approximately
28-Meltid 7IN 29-Demerlic fine 31-Mars sensible
13-Btructure of ritsa
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(2-BURAT
Kilmť trajtu 48-MOTE Powful 47--Kind of sup 49-Carry out in action So-Conjecture #1--Kind of fruit 6-City in Nevada 03-Prepare for
publication
B-Branches of learntes 65-Practice thrift
67-Ciri m 80--Mingle
G 7 B
12
36
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197
42
45
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46
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49
51.
52 55
58
159
23
COUNT THE TELEGRAPHS EVERYWHERE
137
F
1140
55 56 57
as a whole, ignoring as we do the divisions of States. And, indeed, they seem to have reason, for climatic conditions vary from Arctic to (I am tøki) near-tropical.
сап,
they live
must not enter a shop, or the sen, or peregrinate without à human attendant. Should
Mrs Melbourne or Mr and their progeny lounge upon the beach in bathing attire, such reprehensible conduct will bring (or so they say) unpleasant penalties. But the City Fathers, evidently relenting their severity and as a sop to the ultra-modern element, have vouchsafed here and there "mixed bath- ing!" To drink after 6 pm.
NORAH WHITESTONE
writes from Aus- tralia about our evacuees and some of the things that confront them. Yes- terday, she wrote. about the people of the land.To-mor- row, in her final ar- ticle of the series, she will tell you of "The Homes in which They Live."
ich of us ever associ
winter ated "cold, dark, days" with Australia? Why? Oh, why have we had dinned into our consciousness the fable of "sunny" Australia? Having lived in Melbourne (Victoria) for close upon a twelve-month I
hand
broad, (excuse &
derisive smile) is forbidden. And in upon heart, say that no day had-ever-been-hot, and-that-Sydney-one-must-not-grow
fruft in the garden. unpleasant, uncongenial weather predominates, the prevailing feature being the bitter, searching, Victorian winds. I have become en- tirely sceptical as to the do- sirability of paying any at- tention whatever to the pro- mise of "It'll be finer to-mor- row", or "You should just Wales!" New South. However, one consoling fact is that Apollo himself con- forms to our preconceived no. tions, and commences work in the accustomed place and knocks off in the west.
800-
WE SOMETIMES CON- SIDER our cousins
of the Antipodes as lucking In discipline. Should this be so, it is certainly through no fault of authoritative lack of endeavour. For n country priding itself upon freedom .and
democracy, the urban and suburban (and in'diversc circumstances, the country) natives are strangely dra- gooned and meeldy long-suf- fering; though, Incidentally, multitudes of irritating bye- laws are nonchalantly disre- garded. "Must-nots": are legion, and the plethora of garish notice-boards border- ing suburban; and · country walks irritates and depresses the stranger-wayfarer.
The Melbournian must not Сгона A street diagonally; must keep to the dotted line; must not proceed against the The resulting con-
red 18t corners is fear- gestion
some. The citizen, must not put.
a "pretty-protty"":"cove on his 'phone, book. His dog
In spite (or because) of this, no doubt well-meaning regimentation, Melbourne is, to my thinking, a most dif- ficult and dangerous city for. the foot-passenger. Motor- ists, probably feeling (and not unreasonably) that since the law takes such great- great-grandmotherly care of the pedestrian, think no onus rests upon the man at the
your
JONES STATIONE STORE
wheel, No quarter is given the fleeing and anxious un- fortunate caught twixt the Scylla and Charybdis of red and
foot green; with one upon the salving kerb, its fel-.. low in the gutter risks speedy amputation. That necessary second of reprieve to the mis- calculating wayfarer is sol- dom given. The Melbournian is either quick--or he is dead.. And the jaywalker is, of course, extinet. But, on the brighter side, the hooter is very seldom misused, or the white line overshot.
*
STATION, which
is
FLINDERS STREET said to handle cach day the
heaviest human freight of any station in the world, at peak hours presents a self-asser, tive, "there's-only-me-in-this- burg" shoving, 'galloping, dense wad of humanity. The elderly or ailing with dif- ficulty remain upright against the heedless, headlong rush of young home-goers unwill- ing to wait four or five min- utes for the next train. And never by the slightest gesture will the delinquent acknow- ledge or excuse the collision. To both offender and offended this bump-and-tumble style of existence is a mere matter of routine, unworthy of mention weakest or apology. The literally go to the wall-they can be battered upon one side only! The less insensitive and perhaps more thoughtful will reach journey's end with. a somewhat controversial re- flection upon the merits of the undoubted survival of the fittest physically!
I had formerly supposed that д horde of excited, panicky, lower-class Shanghai Chinese to be as pressing a world the proposition as .could offer; however, as
denizen upon another tinent, I am now left with a chastened sense of haying woefully wronged that com- paratively considerato type.
GRIN AND BEAR IT
con-
Library, Supreme Cou
BALLY'S SHOES
A
NEW CONSIGNMENT
OF
DAY AND EVENING
MODELS
LADIES DEPT.
TEL. 28151
||LANE, CRAWFORD, Ltd.
RADIO
ZBW, 355 metres (845 ke) and 31,45 metros (9,520 kilo-cycles) The Prime Minister And Mr Mackenzie King Broadcast by ZDW on a Frequency of 845 k..'s and on Short Wave fromt 1-2.16 and 8.30-11.15 pm. on 0.52 in.c.'s per second,
11. K. T.
12.15 Short Service of Interces- sion.
12.30 Primo Scala's Accordeon Band and Al Bowlly (Vocal). ·
1.00 Local Time Signal and Pro- gramme Summary,
1.02 A Programme By Theatre Orchestra and Arlisis,
Princess Charming Selection; Ex- "The Importance of cerpts from
Palladium Merto- Being Earnest ries; Let's Put Some People To Work I'm Still Dreaming (Both from "When Knights Were Bold"),
1.30 Reuter and Rugby Press and Announcements.
1.45 Excerpts from
Puccini's
Operas,
2.15
Close Down.
0.00
Indian Programme.
0,45
Closing Local Stock Quota
tions
8.47 Dance Musle. 7.29
Piano.
Leslie Hutchinson at the
7.30 Portuguese_Programme. 8.00 London Relay-The News.
8.15 London Eclay-War Com- mentary.
8.25 London Relay — 'Listening
Examination of Points in Daily German Propaganda.
8.30 London Relay-Talks by The Kt Hon. Mr Winston Churchill and Mr Mackenzle King,
0.00 Local Timo Signal, Pro- gramme Summary and Announce- ments.
9.02 Variety Requests; Orchestral-June In January (From film "Here Is My Heart")..........Ilichurd Himber
mber and His Ritz-Carlton Orches ra; Vocal-Rainbow On The River (From "Rainbow On The River")
Breen
with Orchestra; Tango They Met In Rio (A Mid- night.
Serenade): Rumba-Chica Chica Boom Chic
(Both
from film "That Night In Rio)... Leo Reis-
Orchestra Plano man and His Down
мы
"Hutery Street (Noo):
A
(Lealle Fox-Trot-At The Balalaika (From
the
the
...Jack
Hylton and His Vocal_Mexicon
FELLOWS OF THE BELLOWS
JULY SCORE
435
Please Blow In!
The
Hongkong Telegraph Eleventh Annual Amateur Photographic Competition June-September, 1941; Two Silver Trophies Awarded by ILFORD LTD. For the best and second-best entries.
Threo Silver Trophies Awarded by EASTMAN KODAK CO. First Prizes in each of ibo three Seations.
$250
CASH PRIZES
SECTION ONE
$250*
interior scentes. Table Top and Still
Life Studier.
Alm "Moon Over Ba" exluding portraiture, plants and
Serenade
Dorothy Lamour with Vocal Duet The (Adamson); Only film "Rhythm On
Ferryboat Ser
(From Bowlly and Jimmy Mesene with 7
The "TOTAL
bach)....Nelson Eddy with Orchestra; Tango-Hear My Song Violetta. Emil Roosz and His Orchestra; Vocal-Good Morning (From Alm "Bubes In Arma").... Cella Lipton with Orchestra; Tango- South Of The Border (Kennedy Carr)....Jack Harris and His Or chestra.
guitars; Vocal-Trees (2
9.45-10.00 News in French (On Bhort Wave Only).
9.45 Variety Requests (Continued). Samba-1, Yi, Yi, YI, YI (From film That Blo
Night In Rio")
10")... Leo Reis- mon and His Orchestra; Vocal and Instrumental-Our Love Affair (From Alm "Strike
Strike Up The Band")..... Anona Winn and Her Winners; Or- chestral-When You Wish Upon A Star (From "Pinocchio")....Geraldo and The Savoy Hotel Orchestra;
By Lichty Pand-Let The Curtain Come Down
GENERAL FUFFLE
and tell them fighting,in this sector troops. have' dropped their rifles the blue army with, their bara fistulit.
Turner Layton
10.00 London Relay-The News and News Commentary,
10.15 A Wagner Programme. "Rienz Overture; Excerpts from "The Valkyrie."
11.00 London—“Makers of His- tory"
McCarthy an
Talk by Desmond Byron.
11.15 Close Down,....... Month's Broadcast
The monthly broadcasting report for August, of the Hongkong station, states that actual hours of transmis alon totalled 450, of which 207 were devoted to European pro- grammes, 217 to Chinese programmes, and 25% to Indian programmes, follows:
ZEW
(European)-Morning trans- mission. 6834 hours; evening trans- mission 138 hours. During month apart froin recorded pro- following items were
tha
BrandStudio recitals 11: studio
plays 1; feature programmes 0, studio talics (including book reviews) 10, local relays (including Church scre vices) 0, Sunday evening epilogues 6, Daventry relays (including news) 155, programmca in French (now etc.) 31, programmes in Portuguese
0.
ZEK (Chinese)-Morning strane- mission 62 hours; evening transmis- sion 155 hours. During the month spart from recorded programmes the following items were broadcast Studio concerts. 23, studio talks 32, children's concerts 8, Daventry Tow Jaya B
ZBW (Indian)-Evening mission only. (including talks records and recitals), 25% hours
New radio lleences tesued during August totalled 299, and renewals of licences -565. The total of Hcences Issued during 1941 is now 11,300
and flowers).
1st KODAK SILVER TROPHY 2nd $40, 3rd $30. 4th $10
SECTION TWO Portraiture.
1st KODAK SILVER TROPHY: " 2nd $40, 3rd $30. 4th $10 SECTION THREE Plants and Flowers.
1st KODAK SILVER TROPHY 4th $10 2nd $50. 3rd $30.
RULES
The following Rules will govern the Competition:
1-The Competition' is open to all
photographers.
-The entries awarded the ford Trophies for the best and second- best pictures in the Competition. will not be entitled to any other prizes.
1. The prizes will be awarded in the competitors sending in what are adjudged to be the best photo graphs in each Section. Each entry must be accompanied by a form which will be published during the period of the Com- petition, and which must be pasted on back of entry. 4-The right to publish any or all of the entries is reserved to the Hongkong Telegraph, - - 5-All photographs entered
have been taken in the Colony of Hongkong. Photographs which have been " already" entered in other Competitions are ineligible.. 4-No responsibility will be accepted
for non-delivery of, los of, or damage to entries,
All entries to be either black, epia, or toned platures, and miast „be mounted. Coloured · photo-
graphs are ineligibin, &-Pieturis subinftled In sepia tonés should ba accompanied by a smaller print in black and White, -No picture to entered in more
than one Section.
10.–Mountừ to be only white or cream, must be of one of the following
· 1), ~~~No correspondence will ɓe entered
into in connection with the Donne c pouillon,
12-Rembers of the Blacs of the
Hongkong Telegraph
the
19
:South China Morning. Port Are not
permitted to compete. 1573e decision of the Judigon shall
De final.
At the conclusion of the Com→ ...palition, entries will be returned to competitors en application: at the Telegraph, omons within seven days,
forbidden.
15-The
NAME
of silamme is strictly
ENTRY FORM
SECTION
#ADDRESS prenderaser block, letters and" paste
#one of these furina" on duck.
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