According to his confession the Thai wife was killed in the room he occupied at the Hilton hotel in 1972.
Lim Ewe Hin was the grand nephew of Lim Nee Soon.
Lim Ewe Hin was the grand nephew of Lim Nee Soon.
Yes! a canteen, a stall there sells a yummy Char Kway Teow ( with HUM), which I will make it a point to go there to eat..there is no finger pier now. If one and all can remember, near there was the Prince Edward Road Car Park Street Hawkers, in the day it is a car park, at night the hawkers will appear like "toadstools after the rain". My favorite is the Indian Mee Siam, the one with the pink colored gravy made by those Indians with the surnames "Ram" from Gujarati India ( I think). the same kind of Indian, that sell bread with kaya, margarine, sugi cake from the back of the bicycle with a box, that open downwards.
There was a bus terminal around those parts, finger pier area..
A friend of mine, who passed on about 7 years ago left me a Sword, which he claimed was from a former Japanese Imperial Army officer, for who he worked for at a food ration centre in old Kim Chuan Road during the Occupation period..
If his claim is true, this sword MUST be very old and in demand by antique collectors.
He also left me some stop-watches and other stuff.
Wonder if people may be interested in the Sword.
How do I know whether it is genuine or not ???
Toys:
Anyone remember - Pogo sticks, coca-cola yoyos black version the most expensive, the weekly contest at MPH etc, Mastermind, Risk,
Yes, I remember that Indian mee siam. Where can u get that in singapore?
The American, a refrigeration expert killed his Thai wife at the Hilton hotel, chopped her up into pieces and moved them to his apartment on the 6th floor of Cairnhill Court
which he rented from the GM of Hilton hotel, the late Mr Lim Ewe Hin.
Poor Ewe Hin got to know him as a long staying guest of the Hilton hotel and was happy to rent to him his Cairnhill Court apartment.
He summoned his son who was living in the USA to his deathbed in Melbourne and confessed the killing of his Thai wife and concealing her body parts in a chest in Cairnhill
Court. After his funeral in Melbourne his son came back to S'pore to report to the police and according to the Pinoy maid she was surprised that there was not stench of smell
during the 5 years she worked for him.
After the discovery of this gruesome murder, poor Ewe Hin couldn't sell nor rent out the apartment for about 8 years and eventually had to sell it to an Indonesian for $290,000
in the late 80's.
In 2003 Cairnhill Court was sold en-bloc to Li Ka Shing and each owner collected $4m.
ya, man _ slide rule ( pain in the ass )
wonder they are still using this nowaday
No, this what we call the "analog" days, where we have to precisely read the rule for readings, like 13.45 on the scale. You give that to any students today, they won't even know what to do & tell them to refer to the log tables, it like hoping that pigs can fly!
and for some of the calculations you had to decide for yourself where the decimal point should be
Mastermind, Risk.
We were financially poor, so we made our own version of Monopoly, Scrabble, etc.
Even better value for money were those Compendium of 8 games board game sets, usually had 4 x cardboard sheets with game printed on each side. Snake & Ladders, Ludo, Draughts (or "dum"), etc
Think the game you played is Space Invaders. Tried the 40 cents game, Galaga, Rally-X, Donkey Kong and Pac-Man?Posters of a certain age will no doubt remember the video arcades all over the island in the 70s - seems they were phased out in the early 80s, but i might be wrong. Most games were just 20cents and the technology nothing like today's fancy Xbox/PS3/etc, but time (and money!) spent in an arcade was probably the best few hours of a week for any kid in those days.
Think the game you played is Space Invaders. Tried the 40 cents game, Galaga, Rally-X, Donkey Kong and Pac-Man?
Hehehe. Think the main difference between the 20 cent and 40 cent arcades is that the former is b/w whereas the latter is color.Played all those and others (Scramble comes to mind) but they were all 20cents when I did - think they became 40cents later on when the games became a bit funkier too
That's one bro. Thanks for details. After a few toks, stomach growing.
Variations in Msia, dry version with some roots from LOS (Siam place, not siam as in verb:p)unique Mee Siam ( not mai hum).
not found Mee Siam in Malaysia, I use to search Jalan Leboh Ampang & Brickfields in Kuala Lumpur for MEE SIM, they have not heard of, or Hatyai for Mee Siam!
Anyone know why it is called Mee SIAM??
Hehehe. Back to early food again.
Anyone remember this dish call "Richshaw Noodle" or "Kan Chia Mee". It's a simple yellow noodle soup with some ikan bilis and Chye Sim. I cannot find this anywhere now in SG.
Here you go. Seems Raffles Place still gotcall "Richshaw Noodle" or "Kan Chia Mee".... simple yellow noodle soup with some ikan bilis and Chye Sim. cannot find this anywhere now in SG.