THE CHINA MAIL, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1954.

ATOMS-FOR-PEACE PLAN ON WAY TO Marie Louise Wrote

West To

Ask For

Clarification Of Criticisms

RED AMENDMENTS

New York, Nov. 14.

The Western powers are expected to press Russia to clarify some of its criticisms of the Western atoms-for-peace scheme when the United Nations debate on the plan resumes tomorrow.

The Russian delegate, Mr Andrei Vyahinsky, submitted on Friday a list of amendments to the seven-power proposal, which is being debated in Arriving at the Fureinthe Political Committee.

Offer in Londen to present

во

Setters of appointment

Chr Foreign Secretary, Eden, Le Bir

8 Anthony

Huan Halank.

matir

firsi diplo

voy from the Peking Government to Bri- Lat. As be is a Charge d'Affaires and noL A Ambassador Minister, he will tot

present letters of

to the

eredence Bruter,

1

New Evidence]

Against Mossadeg

The

Tehorne, Nov, 1d.

J Jasa Peni Par Tory spaper, anad, todas mulled for a new trial les

Pourta .:TTY

of Former Pruner Molainimed Moscadeg, or the strength of fresh evaderen, allegedly luking him with the out-

Clamamasd

lowed Party.

Tudch

The bow naprastai the ms

Fuseini Asadence during recent thals in Con- munist remy leaders. It aceleri

that renewed

the

ex-primer,

hi seventies.

days.

who

P

would las

The resolution would set up an international agency to develop peaceful uses of atomic energy by means of negotiationi ending in a treaty, and would call for a con. ference next summer in Geneva,

k

Mr Vyshinsky maintained | end, and if he meant to suggest

the agency should be under krer connection between the

Security Counell (where, Council prisc thy agency, Westem observers noted, the might be parable to came to velo could be used) Instead of im agreemeret, I was believed being set up

speelalined here AS 4

autonomous agency as visualised i Mr Herary Cabot

chief

by the West.

OBJECTION

Ile also objected that the Went was trying to predeter- mine the functions and char- ngler of the agency before negotiating with the Soviet

Inion. 13011.

Western observers believe that

the United States and its allies

Lodge, the delegate,

United States I who is due to rpenk tomorrow, has alrendy said the United Nations ha not refused connection with the Security Council.

any

At the

however, same time, he expressed the hope that this matter will not get bogged down in the vetu,“

A usually well informed unalterably opposed to any Western source seld today that

| suggestion that World muke there were 'ail Junds of con- decisions of the agency subjec!cetvable arrange:nents which

to the Security Conmed vete might involve the Council but

But i was

not at all certion which would not involve a veto." that Mr Vyshin-ky

actually meunt that when Speaking

Friday

dwen study

Delegates have us mincedinvnts neer the w

Monarchists In Spanish Elections

THEL

Madrid. Nov, 14. Four well known Monarchists,

including Senor Joaquin Cule au, Solela, Brother of Juse Satelo, ten whose murder in July, 1936 pre- Jelpitated the Spanish civil war, ennidates pro- Farman 1 fee que -Soning Gamed here today for wottid laie player

Gasertions next Sunday. preon, where De Mediq Serving his sentence of liter

ber

were

ly

There were also four Falang-

years soltany wonilne ment for justs and four independents an- tres, imposed lout Decem»nounced as vandiciutes To #11 four of the 24 seats on the Chy Council, The vote is the only For Rael

prosecutor, direct popular vote in Spain, as Brigadace Husser Azmooudeh, parliamentary elections are sadd today be had no knowledge | Indirect,

army

of any regated nvestigation

ته

depurs t

Perchez

Par Gavan

T

.

Kreater

Mossarless

serious Heule.

118

20

ד'

AMERICAN NOTE

the

re-

the

PRISON

Members of the scorel branch of the Moslem Brotherhood, on their way to a military prison in Cairo, after their recent arrest. It was this branch which, it is alleged, had prepared plans for the assassination of all members of the Revolution Council, and to eliminate 160 Army officers.—Express Photo.

Britain Cannot 'Go It Alone'

Says Ex-Envoy

London, Nov. 14,

Sir Oliver Franks, British Ambassador to Washington from 1948 to 1952, said tonight that Britain could not continue as a great Power with- out the Commonwealth.

Little argument was needed to show, the necessity of the Commonwealth to Britain's great- ness, he added.

If Britain tried to "go it alone" it would become either an off-island of Europe or an off-island of the United States. But Britons did not want to become absorbed into Europe nor live in dependence on the United States.

The source added that the American note to Russia on March 19,

their part earlier negotiations on Pre- sident Eisenhower's plan. had

that suggested agency should report quest to the Security Coun- cil of the General Assembly.

The source said he did not know whether that represented the precise thinking of

"All the more reason then for provent or limit this broad Western powers at the moment, making a success of the Com- polley. but sold it was

themonwealth," 'Sir Ollver one of

said.”

"Pakistan has links which it prob "This is the relationship which hopes to strengthen with would

the possibilities that ably be considered,—Router. enables us to play in the big Moslem pooples of the Middle

with the great Contin- and Near East. Any league

proposal ental Powers.

likely to diwart the "natural ambition to become the leader of a group of

of Middle Eastern states would not be entertained" Canada's future too was linked to the United

States while Australia and New Zealand could not do without their Pacific neighbour-the United States,

Queen Mother

Entertained

In Canada

She

this

FILL THE ROLE

"It ja success here which permits us to stand out of the queue and fill the role of a great Power which gives us reasonable inde- pendence among our friends and

2 part in the creat decisions."

s. They said so in the ANZUS

Sir Oliver Franks sald. "This pact is now. Let us be Ottawa, Nov. 14.

Sir Oliver was making the frank; n has surprised and This

is the 1st time That

Elizabeth Queen

the second of the British Broadcast-pained many people in Britain Monarchists have made a bid for Queen

ating Corporation's Reith lectures, that Australia and New Zealand Mother dined vutes under the present regime Government

delivered on the theme "Britain should enter into such an under- House

and the Tide of World Affairs." standing with the United States, in municipal contests in Madrid Thby

presenting

evening after a quiet day well known

The lecture series were found- but without us. which included only one ed in 1848 in honour of the. year age do wapnose i figures.

"This is precisely the sort of pabustineat

No political Possibly

propaganda is public appearance.

B.B.C.'s first Director-General, issue. In Commonwealth affairs we mure permitted in electioneering and

which wo need to look at with attended

Christ Lord Reith the

eyes

unclouded by candidates may canvass only on Church Cathedral service during

older mmunielpat Issues-Router,

They askond: "Why should not memories." the morning and lunched with Britain mako her great aim the Britain's future Was the High Commissioner for the

up with strengthening of the Common- ! "ound

its United Kingdom, Sir Archibald

and the Nye, and Lady Nye. Dressed in a warm, dusky rose and wear ing a silver fox stole, the Royal with a visitor was presented

Sir Oliver Franks claimed bouquet by Sir Archibald's nine- year-old daughter Harriet when that things could not turn out

in this way, Queen Mother arrived at

them

A British Crossword

10

ACROSS

1 Summary (0),

4 Beverage (5).

7 Tlek (8).

8 Fashion. (5).

To Figorous (6).

11 Toll

13 Registers (7),

15

Magnificant (6).

10 Caper (0).

19 Examines (8):

20 Blockina

(6).

21 Clippera (0),

3

[21

Puzzle

DOWN

1 Schemes (3).

2 Peal (5).

3 Salary (7).

4 Talented (6).

9 Shame (8). :-

Withdrawr (8).

10 Holiday (8).

12-Helps (7),

13 Wandered (6).

18 Portion (8).

14 Cookery instructions

17

Foundation (5).

BATURDAY'S CROSSWORD Acres: 1 Cain,

the

Earnscliffe.

wealth and, in its ever closer neighbours unity, flnd the full realisation States. of her inheritance?"

The flist proof was the Near freezing Ottawa tem- existence of the Atlantic pact,

cornerstone peratures heightened the colour acclaimed the

Two Charged With Theft Of Body

41 #

Rushyford, County Durham,

Nov. 14. The police annonroed hern tonight that they had served ETİKET -man and a teenage boy for taking away the body of a nine-year-old boy from the family tomb of Bir Anthony Eden. Britain's Foreign Secretary,

Неге

Lime

Jroati

The tomb is at Windle- stone Hall, near

here. where Bir Anthony Eden was born. The body WRS said to be that of Robert Eden, who died in 1856. The coffin was found the grounds of the Hall about eight weeks ago.

It was reported at, that

that the

family mausoleum ted damaged. Durkam County police said they had served

summons on a man aged 21′ and a boy aged 15. The pair were charged with removing

the body from the tomb and causing £s worth of damage the mausoleum.

Sir

To Napoleon Three

Times A

Day

Stockholm, Nov. 14. ⠀

Details were disclosed here today of 127, love letters sent by the Empress Marie Louise to her husband Napoleon Bonaparte as he campaigned across the battlefields of Europe in the fateful | years of 1813 and 1814.

The letters, written on gold-edged paper boar- ing a watermark of Napoleon's profile, referred to the gradual cooling of her affections.

On August 3, 1814, she wrote: "I am very pleased with General Neipperg who my father has placed over me. He speaks about you in decorous terms.”

P

General Neippers became her All the letters except one are lover.

and Q werk later written in ink. the Empresa's

A pencilled correspondence letter had been screwed up into with

the now defeated a ball and then smoothed out

again.

Emperor ceased,

AFTER DIVORCE

The Empress married Napolcon after ho had

at the

divorced Josephine

1810. She often end wrote to him three times a day and eagerly awaited the replies which he dictated from horseback to a personal courier.

Napoleon's letters were found

in Austria in 1934 and the long

search for the Empreses's end- when they in the

paly

did cont

ed werd

archives of the Royal Palace in Stockholm.

In it the Empress told Napo loon, that she was a prisoner in

the castle of Fombouillet near Paris and unable to join him at Fontainebleau.

POLISH OFFICER

sun sending you this word with a Polish officer," who wrote. "There is an order to use force If neces- mary to prevent me from Joining you.”

Be careful my dearest,” she concluded, "they are deceiving

love you and

kim you

Dr Carl Frederik Palsterna who released details of the tenderly."-China Mall Special. letters today is the personal secretary to King Gustav Adolf and has boca authorised to publish the letters in France and Sweden.

He said Napoleon carefully guarded his wife's letters and KDVD them to bla brother, Joseph, for safe-keeping before setting out on the campaign which was to end in Waterloo.

Joseph later

handed the his

mister-in-law, Desireo, who brought them with her to Sweden when

her husband was nominated to the throne of that country.

lettere

to

DR

MALAN WILL MEET CABINET

Pretoria, Nov. 14, Dr Daniel Malan, who retires as South African

town

In the early letters the Em-Prime Minister on Novem« press writes as a devoted mother bar 30, will fly from Cape-

wife concerned with run- and

to Pretoria, next ning the imperial household at Wednesday to settle what the Tularies while Napoleon campaigned abroad.

"Your

ed from

Bon

political observers here (the three-your- described as an emergency aid King of Rome) has recover- in beep

the Cabinet over his cold. He hardly successor. his

When the 80- at all now,"

shy wrote

year-old Premier left here

to

Anthony Eden has not lived at Windlestono sinco his boyhood-China Mall Special.

Scientists

Confer On Radioactivity

on

tho

coughs in one

In hotter she said two weeks ago for the he had toothache but I stopped Cape, where he is to stay pain, puiting wad of after his retirement, it cotton wool in the cavity."

was stated that he would CONFIDENT Napoleon's battles

return to Pretoria only in never far from her thoughts an emérgency."5" and on the eve of one she wrote: "I am confident of your victory bos eternally afraid

Leat

anything should

WELO

befall you." When her father, the Emperor

of Austria, who was fighting against Napoleon, urged her to return to Vienna before the allied armies entered Paria she Napoleon: "1 wrote to father would have as much

wish

-my trouble with the Russians as He would then go you have. over to your side. The Russlang, oro a wicked people and one feels horror riding in the news- papers of all he atrocities they commit.'

Dr Malan's visit to Pretoria is Junexpected, and is believed to have been prompted by the dis- pute, which has arisen in the

Tokyo, Nov, 15. United

After a dramatic letter in States and also Japanese scientiste

which sho said "The allies stand meet

at the gates of Paris and I must Western today for a five-day con-y," she wrote Napoleon short

United

ference

the subject letters describing her wanderings ** which caused the greatest through France with his tarally, popular anxiety here during the desire to join Napoleon

They show her torn between recent months-radioactivi-Fontainebleau, where he was to ty.

abdicate, and the promptings of her own conscience urging her ta Hysteria over radioaclivity | obey her father and swept through the country after | Austria.

BRITAIN AS LEADER

But the Commonwealth could

Itself proŽICES without Britain as leader, Britain' was expected to give

1000

a lead but only on merit.

of

Th

at

Dr Daniel F. Malais

4 Japanese fishing bout, the Atter surrendering to the in her face but did not keep Britain's defence by Conserva He concluded: "What will in- "Lucky Dragon" was showered Austrian troops she continued capital residents from lining the tive and Labour governments. duce our partners in Common with radioactive ash from writing to Napoleon drom Vienna National Party since · be an- streets and the Church entrance. "I am clear that a policy of wealth to expect and welcome United States hydrogen explo and fold of her attempts to obtain nounce his impending retire-

Tomorrow's schedulo will

more Ottawa and Hut going it alone would split and He loadership of Britain is the sion at Bikini on March 1. The permission to join him in his ment

destroy the Commonwealth it it conviction sustained by example hysteria gradually died but the exile on Elba,

Dr. Malan had left here for that we labour with intelligence Japanese are still particularly to see the was ever submitted chanco

seriously

The letters still ended with Capetown after maidrig all his Queen Mother as she visits the for decision,

and determination for the sanity sensitive about anything atomic.

endearments like "I kiss you last fenowells, confident that "ho Fald. National Gallery in the morn would be untecoptable to both of the world."-Reuter.

tenderly" but became rarer ps the veteran Finance Minister, ing and Hull City Hall in the the Asian and African mem-

givo citizens

afternoon. Hor Majesty also berg,"

hopes to have a private drive through the Grilineau Hills which so impressed her in 1940, but the trip depends on the changeable weather.

was

M.PS ENTERTAIN -Yesterday's luncheon in the Parliamentary restaurant attended, by over 300 Members of Parliament, Senators and their wives, some of whom had trá- velled thousands of miles for the occasion.

The luncheon menu included Jobator hors d'oeuvres and phonsant from Oko, Québec. The Queon Mother'p health WIB

tansted in 1945 champagne fol- lowing a desert of

couted log rolls of ice cream,

BUT TOP

Every sinen "Lucky Dragon" | General Nelppery came home Mr Nichoins Havengo, would returned home, Japanese scien- and more into her life. discoveries of high radioactivity

He added: "In the last few Jimmy Stewart's it have been making regular

years it has been obvious that India la devoling sustained effort to cultivating friendship with Its Far Eastem neighbours. India would accept no proposal or commitment which would

Father To Re-marry

Indiana, Penn., Nov. 14. Alox Stewart,

80-year-old father of the screen star Jimmy

Canadian widow here on Decem-

Nehru Cheered Stewart, will marry in elderly

Now Delhi, Nov. 14. ber 11. Cheers and shouts of "Long Live Uncle Nehru'! rang through the National Stadium here to

Indian Prime Miniboiled

A mass gathering of

Mr Stewart, a hardware store owner, id he would wed Mrs J, J. Stothart, 76, of St John, Canada, in a quiet ceremony at

in almost anything from cab- bages to race-horses. Tons of

| fish caught in the Pacific have be thrown away as too "hot"

GERMANY

for safely. High radioactivit REMEMBERS

hna been found in rain contaminated both" by Bikini

atomic tests in Siberia.

explosions and by Russian

AMÉRICANS ATTEND

succeed him,

But

according to political observers, .Dr. Malan reckoned without the Impetuous Ro publicans within his party,

OUTSPOKEN

Bix thousand miles across tho sen, where he is holidaying for fine in Europe, the

WAR DEADsvand lander of the Nations

wars.: -

Flats, flow

pealing church, and cathedral | Dr ·Melanie: NONERED HRV are

allets and most butapokery Borin, Nov. 14. Republican 61-year-old : Hane French bloons mixed with Strijdom, backed by a majority A team of Fever American

the wwirling leaves of late of the party's supporters, has scientists are attending the con ference, including Dr Paul Bout Germany today as the no- test the premiership against Dr autumn in cemeteries through-Irxilented dis willingness to cons Poarsen, chief of the biological

tion remembered staggering Melan's division of the Atomic sheets toll of dead and missing in two Me Star W

Mr the home of the brido's plopp.. Commission, Japanese scientists,

threatened to She said in reply to would 100,000 children to celebrate hears go to Elizabeth Rudh body, Include Professor Kemiro all members of the Japan 'aclená

› resign, rather than Mr Stewart was first married Council, a private but induential

at half mos nd fight Mir

la awaiting that she hoped the Queen

Strijdom, 6th birthday, have many opportunities of

bells broke through the over-

Influential quarters Later Bar Mohru, whoso birth» Stowart,/ daughter, of a Civil Kimura of Tokyo Univerala vlating Canada,

Capital society turned out for day, was celebrated throughout War veteran and steel company

cast skies to summon the people uspeted torungo sme The conference is being held agiltlesting Blute dinner and Indds as children's bedral, executive. She and two yeate at the busseetion of the Jepan noooptions at Government House released a white pigeon, as a ago, survived by her children Science Council. The scientists I right. The Royal rupt of symbol be peace, prosperity and nine grandchildren.

will discuss, firally the

deter honour appogred in full reegl and freedom."

#Wp will have a reception for mination of maximum per lived in

immediate family and masible exposure to radiation.

Becondly, decontamination.. of. friends adver the ch

radlonetiva sobetanoes.

Thirdly

standardisation Pelaborate la planned.

and and his two, matern, of Pennsylvania

Mr Nehru has resolved birth- the Hend sown of willo ance day greetings from Me Ghulam

8 Ruin, Arla, 10 Violent, 11 Blas, 12. Oval, 14 Loungos, Repel, 18 Stola, 22 Lossima, 20′ Edit, 27. Thin, 28 Capture. Duty, 30 Edge 31 Parmies, 82 Rare. Downi 2 Arrive, 3. Arabi”, 4 Rival, Unison, 6 Talon, 7 Camos, 12 Oral, 13 Apes, 15 (1904, 16 Sust, 19 Entres, 20 Tender, 21 Liter, 23 Bruno, 234- Baking

Var..

embroidered

with

AXE DINGINännent of Pakistan,, oquins, Ho

evens of munist mpada, and rubies ; and (shi | Malenkovou Tuul

à, tipmond and ruby, dipelaj nant with

msiching earring? | minis, (d

ter

to special Remembrance Day not to withdraw candida ceremonien,^,

ture. But it is also know that With the thought of 9,000,000 many other National would war dead in their minds and the like to do Mr Berijdom, d sill-shattered cities surrounding them, the theme was peace, Dr. Malan of the party, t

"Byeaking at a ceremony, in the then Mr Havonga, flower, *, bedocked

Ferniment At the crisis niears

Hours here,

**Chancello

Adenatior fold

nrad, there, wên, no, hi-

ther

Share This Page