TO-DAY ONLY
At 2.30. 5.10.
THE HONGKONG TELEGRAPH,
NEW EQUIPMENT
7.15 & 9.15 p.m. FOR HOUSEWIVES
MARIA MONTEZ JON HALL SABU
IN
WHITE SAVAGE
In TECHNICOLOR
with
Turhan Boy Sidnoy Tolor Thomas Gomez
Dan Torry
Paul Guilfoyle
Also SPECIAL CAUMONT BRITISH NEWS
TO-MORROW
Action On The Furlough Front!
Soldier and swoolia
have different ideas!
ROBERT YOUNG-LARAINE DAY.
ANN HARDING
MARC CRAMER - ANNE JEFFREYS
GLENN VERNON - LAWRENCE TIERNEY
and Introducing BILL WILLIAMS
Drected by LEWIS ALLEN » Produced by BERT CRANET Breenplay by Jeane Chodarze
ALHAMBRA,
BELA LUGOSI
in
TO-DAY ONLY
2.30. 5.20, 7.20 & 9.20 p.m.
"THE RETURN OF CHANDU” To-morrow! "AND THE ANGELS SING"
SHOWING
TO-DAY
80
MAJESTIC
At 2.30, 5.20, 7.20 & 9.20 p.m.
MICKEY'S NEWEST IS HIS BEST!
MICKEY ROONEY
in
00
A YANK AT ETON'
with FREDDIE BARTHOLOMEW
MARTA LINTON
A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Picture
NEXT CHANGE:
CATHAY
AWANCHAI ROAD WANCHAT-
"WATERLOO BRIDGE"
* TO-DAY ONLY
*
At 2.30, 5.15, 7.15, & 9.15 p.m.
FIRST SHOWING IN HONGKONG SINGS RIDES FIGHTS and LOVE
"THE FIGHTING DEPUTY”
Starring Fred SCOTT
Phoche LOCAN
TO-MORROW
THE HEART speaks in a Great Picture "LASSIE COME HOME” IN TECHNICOLOR
ORIENTAL
SHOWING TO-DAY: 2.30—5.15—7.30-9.30 p.m.
ELLEN DREW
ROBERT PAIGE —
PAUL LUKAS
IN AN EXCITING DETECTIVE PICTURE "MONSTER AND THE GIRL”,
Commencing To-morrow: "D U M B O”
CENTRAL
ALHAMBRA
DAILY AT 2.5 T 897 FM DAILY AT 220 520 7208920 PUL
COMMENCING, TO-MORROW.
They Had Music
In Their Souls...
He Had The Devil In His Eyes!
DOROTHY LAMOUR
The new domestic equipment, produced for homes in Britain and overseas are shown at the "Britain Can Make It Exhibi- tion in London.
The new designs in kitchen ware, pots and pans, brooms and brushes, carpet sweepers, mincing machines and so on, are all calculated to give greater efficiency and a high margin of safety when in use.
sc. Finger-grip handles of heat resisting materials un saucepans cut out the risk of slipping and burning. Some have an additional hand hold on the opposite side and lids fit neally and securely in place.
Plastics are used for mixing bowls. klichen containers, sieves and cruets, sleves with removable and inter- changeable bottoms and with varying gauges of holes. Plastle spray lins also been used on metal appliance
u finish which does not chip, is simple to clean ind hus a pleasing range of colours. Covered vegetable dishes in aluminium are among the designs which have been submitted in house hold goods.
a simple A design in laps has dovico for changing worn washers without cutting off the water supply. A composite kitchen unit combines a high chair for small children with! household steps and ironing board, a practical
idea
carried space saving in painted metal and wood. There is a mincing machine with n
out
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1946.
THE QUEEN ELIZABETH
These young cricketers are more intent on their game than in the giant Cunard White Star ilner Queen Elisabeth lowering over them in the background. This unusual picture was laken at Southampton, while the Queen Elizabeth, having finished her service as a troup carrier, we un dergoing rent it readiness for her return to the trans-Atlantie passenger service,
PHILIPPINES LOOT
Effort to Recover It
From Japan
BECAME CON. MAN BECAUSE WIFE NAGGED
OIL AND MEAL
FROM HERRING
have beon .Arrangements made in Britain for processing surplus herrings into oil and meal during the present East Anglian senson.
A Committee of Inquiry, on which the Ministry of Food, the Scottish Home Department, the Ministry of Agriculture and Fisherles and the Herring Industry Board nro sented, is examining the possibili
tles, both from the short-term and long-term views of developing the production of oil and meal from herrings.
The Herrlug Industry Board has during the recent Scottish season operated a small plant in the Shetland Islands and the present project involves the use of existing processing plant at Hull and Lon- don,
|
MIDLA
NEWSLETTER
(By R. C. Scott)
. tho
If the Ministry of Food ap- prove, a young Birmingham man recently demobbed from his RAF job of flying food and supplies to troops in Burmese jungle will run a motor caravan snack-bar in Bir- mingham for the use of hungry crowds emerging from cinemas,
and dances night.
show
theatres late at
Geoffrey
Iden
inte-
was.
Ex-Warrant Omeer Stephens, son of a Birmingham The quantity of herrings that can restaurant manager, got the be processed is necessarily limited when he came away from a recently. He by the capacity of these plants- night about 4.000 crans a week. If this en-hungry, but all the cates were shut. pacity is fully taken up during the He feels that his mobile sack-par East Angling fishing, the production would be good for the entertainment will be about 69 tens of all, and 120 business in the city as many people ·
functions are deterred from late fans of meal a week.
because of the lack of catering foul-
lies afterwards.
on
The costs of processing, and of transporting the herrings from the landing ports to the plants would
German NCOs are now being used make the commercial price payable
an "storm troops" by Rugby Rural to the fishermen for herrings for this
District Council to speed up work purpose unremunerave. The Gov.
Dunchurch, pre-fab sites nt Brinklow and Wolston. ernment, therefore, in view of the
The con. London, Nov. 5 (UP)-Fifty-one-shortage of oil and feeding stuffs, his tractors had difficulty in getting
the East Anglian sea- during the
British Inbour for the sites and the year-old William Asticy Dutton be
son a subsidy on herrings sold for Ministry of Works supplied about sentence to- Manila. Nov 6 (UP). The Secre- Kán a 50-month gaol
which processing which will bring the sixty Germans from a Nuncaton Affairs, Elpidio day for a confidence game quick release of the knife for easy tary of Foreign
"slalog Though the work that he devised because his wife nagged price to the fishermen up to 308. per
eran. Only herrings which are nolly cleaning and
claw Quirino, yesterday unmounced ап adjustable
soon him about unpaid bills.
taken up for the home or export fairly satisfactory progress was rather
Then the which would grip any kitchen table, the Philippine Republic will
markets will be sold for processing, through their interpreter approached
German NCO however thick,
All metal Ironing send two representatives to Japun
As Dutton left the Old Bailey yes boards, new developments in carpet to locate property rated from the terday Mrs Dutton admitted she nuw
Mr N. Benson, the general foreman. "We don't sweepers, clothes wringers in painted Philippines by the Japanese.
realised she had made her husband's
with working metai. ure Included in the range.
life a "perfect hell." Everything is light and easy to clean.
DUTCH REQUEST FOR GERMAN TERRITORY
Government offelals said the loot included autombiles, valuable Fill- plniana from the National Library and machinery.
A
representative
will also
was con-
With another, Dutton victed of organising a wine society to which 1,800 members subscribed be each for the privilege of buying sent to Japan to the Combined Tex-three bottles of wine monthly and a tile Committee to sludy distribution bottle of whisky every other month of 50,000,000 yards of Japanese of which very few were supplied. textiles among the Allied nations.
of British Officer
Washington, Nov. 5-The Nether lands hus asked. for annexation of terri- 700 square miles of German tory, containing a population of Search For Murderer 120,000, in
a Note presented in Mr Dean Acheson to-day requesting re- adjustment of the frontier line with Germany by reducing it from 325 miles to 220 miles and improving local communications and water- works.
alia, The Note also asked, Inter
mone- guarantees against renewed
harmful to Dutch tary measures economy; prohibition of construction of new canals which would divert Rhine traffle into other than its na- tural channels; guarantees against any renewal of German preferential charges on
railway, and German
to detrimental water transport Dutch ports and n number of Ger- man mining concessions on the left banks of the Rhine Central News. British Sympathy London, Nov. 5.--Holland's quest is certain to receive sympathe- British tic consideration from the Government, n Foreign Ofce spokes- man stated.Reuter.
BRITISH-U.S.-ZONES MERGER
re-
SERIOUS RIOTING IN KOREA
JAPANESE CLOTHS
Wool
British
Textile Industry Apprehensive
iško
Was
They complained, "Put va
and
We
will get on better."
---
The general foreman complied with tho their request and since then
at NCOs on German
their own Wolston have brought the site ahead of schedule. The gangs at Dun- church and Brinklow are not doing
well 80 London, Nov. 5.-The Manchester aut
quite so
the NCOs Guardian writes: The wool textile operating as "storm troops" to help industry has reason to be very ap- the Council achieve its target of fifty prehensive of Sir Stafford Cripps completed pre-fabs, in the three vll- statement on future polley regard-lages by Xmas. Ing the Japanese Industry.
Between two world wars, Japan-
of fabrics ni
.'
Nuneaton Memorial
Bre
ese trade with the United Kingdom Nuneaton ex-Servicemen who dis-
the purchase of
agreed with the borough's proposals developed from
for a war memorial are to have their
come Home Fund. With the £4,000 ideas considered by the adicinistra-
raised the committee. (which includ tive committee of the Mayor's Wel-
ed nobody with World War Two set- vice) had decided to provide a first- class sports ground in the town. At public meeting called at the re- ex-Servicemen their Squadron quest of the spokesman,
asked for a Loughan,
mory and a
Seoul, Nov. 6 (UP). The Ameri- former can military government announced nished goods to increasing imports Berlin, Nov. 8 (UP)—A German storm trooper was sought to-to-day that 10 rioters and two police of yarn, followed by tops, and Anal- day by the British German authori- were trilled on Monday at Kwang-ly raw wool. Exports of finished ties in connection with the double juk, capital of Cholln Numbo, where wool and woollen goods from Japan murder of a British Army captain serious rioting flared up again after began with her import of yarns and
a gradual buik-up
rices with which older established sweetheart near a brief respite. and his fraulein
Two hundred Korean police rein-centres of the wool textile industry not compete, and there ure Devil's Lake, in Berlin's Grunewald
forcements with ample arms reached could Forest on Sunday..
few signs that her extremely low Kwangju to-day from Seoul. newspaper The British-licensed
labour costs would increase enough Omcials expected further trouble to put her competition with other Telegraph reported that the former
countries on SS officer was at one time engaged in the Nanka area, 15 miles west of wool manufacturing to the slain gitl..
Kwangju where the provost courty
anything but
advantageous is rioters to
footing yesterday sentenced
and years' imprisonment
Sir Stafford affirmed that there is vic four another 16 to two years. Two were little hope of effective action to im
Inbour prove Japanese
standards released and 20 held for further in-
within the next three or four years, vestigation.
All Allied occupation personnel in which perind will almost certainly which see the end of conditions south Korea would be restricted to their billets after 10 p.m. to-morrow created the present sellers market. In anticipation of further disorders By that time, Japan may be able to resulting from the 20th anniversary enter the market still with some of the Russian revolution.
substantial advantage in the way of low labour costs in hand.
Capt The murdered couple were George William Dickinson, aged 29, of the Royal Ulster Rifles, of Becken- hum, Kent, England, and Ruth Isa Lehmann, 39, of Berlin.
Inspection of British
Military Stations
1
this
of
very
(UP). The
Leader J. Garden
Hall of Memory
the
could be used by all ex-Ser- vicemen's associations for meetings
When and social functions.
a vote the ex- matter was put to Servicemen won and now they are to submit names for representation on the existing committee.
When the Rev Eric Weeks, curate- in-charge of St Nicholas, Leicester, was a railway employee he worked Now hard to beautify his station.
he thinks the churches should emulate the Big Four of the Railways and
churchyards in the
the country. WHI
inst in
London, Nov. 6-A tour of inspec
Shanghai, Nov. 6 (UP)-Forty-WOMAN PHYSICIST DEAD instituto contests for the best-kept tion of camps and stations of British four Filipinos here have formed a troops overseas is to be made by Mr Philippine Women's Association
have clected cabaret London, Nov. I was officially Freeman, Financial Secretary of the China and British War Ofee, beginning
month singers Mrs Raml of the "Hula Baby" Philadelphia, Nov. announced to-day that the and American zones in Germany will He will be away for six or seven Casino and Miss Gloria "Philippino death occurred here to-day of Dr be merged into one economic unit weeks, taking the closest interest in Canary" Andicobonh, President and Mary W. Griscom, 00, planeer woman on November 12. A conference is the living and service conditions of Vice-President respectively. Mem- physicist who went to China in 1913
War bership
limited to work with British and American present now in session regarding the subject the men, Mr Bellenger, in Washington, added the announce- Secretary, told the House of Com-to those born in the Philippine but doctors after a hand induty ended
will be extended luter to foreigners. her career as a surgeon, ment-Central News.
who Including Chinese Spaniards
She later did relief work in Persia married Filipinos.
and taught at Indian medical schools.
mons to-day. Reuter,
Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
-Pass belwenn
Deska
4-deer
Brp pain
13 --Part
13-Pers. 10 (aircraft 1-Bection
15—Russian's color
16. Leaflets
16—Coveringa 20-Even sport.i
-Noblemin 22-ian wATUD
bottle 25-Kind of earth
Popular hero 29-13ükita? nota 10--A ALGI
19
11
125
2
31-Cloistered woman 32-Man from
Glasgow
Compus polos 35-nation
26-Jokesters 7-KULINDSEN 40Follow cjoziy
43-Everything
45-What shiga DAITS 43-Frenchmen
<--Quablon
Botohengrin'e
sweetheart
81-One upposed Ba-Night befaso
63-Require
Hendisha
117
₤23 ₤2/1
29
34
158
32
[404
2
47
Deer, be ketel Pradorn Brodienda, Son,
ANSWER TO
REVIOUS PUZZLE
DOWN
1-W.
2-Wolding
orders
the
is
According To Culbertson
Copyright, 1946. by Ely Culbertson)
The "conservative" course pur- sued by North in to-day's deal left his partner in a highly uncomfort- able position.
North dealer.
Both sides vulnerable.
WEST
+3982
Larg Bouch American animal Bests
a-diri's name
❤873 +K6
f-Brof
Whilter
'g-Öport's ring
10-LATE
*17-Mend
19-Wrongs
13-Things that
11-Idie talk VASMIAMI
don't change
-Whip
21-Diges
23-Meditat 23-06d of war
20-Deirra
2-$
B-Drug ved ko purgative
Aiunt
VANĪJA
Frammatically -tomer wrcle 16 41-λocented
syllable
Walking wilck
i-Tool edge
45. Let 11 and
17__DevStage
FRIEND'A DAMA
PARAMENNT PRESENTS,
And The
ngels
FRED MACHURRAY BETTY HUTTON.
BIANA LYKN
Sing
CHANDLER
NANCY
NOBODY HAS NOTICED MY:
NEW HAIR RIBBON.
Ribbon Marks Spot
WATCH THIS SPOT
THE SKING),ZINGAT
THE BIG, 860 RAND
THE WHOIT DAIMED
Of The Sensees -
Catchiess Tunen
+3774
NORTH
•
VAJD
+J 10854
108 3%
EAST *AQ758
100 +A2 4Q085
SOUTI ◆ K 100
KQ542 +2073 +A
The bidding:
North
1 space
rai
Рас
3 diamondi Pan
diamonds Pota
Beh Double
PMID
2 spaden Andre
four-diamond North made his contract, all right, but 80 points were not good compensation for the game in hearts that had been miss- ed.
Superficially, it might appear that Eouth was to blame for not men- tloning his five-card major sult at
In the parish magazine he says: "There should be prizes for the best churchyards in the Diocese and inter- all Diocesan competition open to England." He is already making n which start in his own thistles, weeds
"overgrown with teers to help him set the
example,
Club and dandelions and asks for volun-
Social Alvis Sports and (Coventry) is providing seven seats on the hills at Mountsorrel, near Leicester, "In memory of Ave years (wartime) happy reudence" in the village.
who 'ran Two Rugby schoolboys
home becauso they away from "wanted, to go to Amerien to join the cowboys" were found by the police any time, but this was not the case.
at Daventry twenty-four hours later. ta South did mention hearts, almost as
Leicester schoolchildren definitely as though he had bid the plant trees on paths bordering the suft, by making a vulnerable takeout new roads and cach child will be double of one spade.
are
asked to see that his or her particu This is a point too often overlook-lar tree is not damaged by vandals.
of
to
TWIN-ENGINED HELICOPTER
The United States Navy is experi
ed by average players. The double of one major auit-in this case, the double of one spade"cries for" a
major suit. U.S. EXPERIMENTS WITH response in the other South, with some reason, was afraid to bid two hearts over one spade if he ran into a concentration hearts in West's hand, he might suffer a large penalty. It he doubled, however, he would be indicating hearts while permitting North
rotor helicopter, said to be the largest show a possible diamond sult; and menting with a twin-engined, twin- if North had to respond in clubs, of its type of craft. South then could show his hearts
The helicopter, bullt by the Mc- at least, he would have had more Donnell Aircraft, Corp., here, has 60 than one string in his bow.
many instruments for flight research Many fine players in North's post- that is builders described it as
United tion, recognising South's double as
laboratory," says "nying Press. a plea for a heart response, would consider the ace-jack-nine ample
Designated as the XHJD-1 by the strength for a response in that suit. But even if North had come. In then Navy, the helicopter is the first such craft to be powered by two engines, showing diamonds,
some
Details of the XHJD-1's dimensions have been strength, South would safe in trying out hearts. The fact have not been disclosed and its per- that North passed again, and bid formance to date is a closely guarded only when he had to, in response to secret. South's repeated (and risky) double, virtually barred South from further bidding...
with
By Ernie Bushmiller
ERNIE BUSHMILLER,
New Demands By
Singapore Strikors
Singapore, Nov: 0 Te-day's meet. Ing between the representatives of the wharf workers on strike and the harbour authorities. was adjourned until to-morrow when, in the midst of a meeting, a messenger from the Coastal
and Harbour Workers' Union brought a fresh set of demands, including one for rations.
This in the union which supplies advisers to the strike committes and two meals daily to the strikers, though it is not the inen's recognised union. The wharf workers", re- cognised union his not taken part in the strike, negotiations and has told the harbour officials that it was: afraid
to intervene-Reuter.
No comments yet.
Private notes are available after approval.