with
FULLY-SHAVED
PHILISHA
ELECTRIC RAZOR
“GILMAN & CO. LTD. GLOUCESTER ARCADE
COMMENT OF
HE
THE DAY
CYPRUS
Tnow renched and of its
Cyprus diaputo ins
most dangerous and im- portant stages and only delicate handling of the situation will avoid further outbreaks of violence.
The new Governor,
Sir
Hugh Fout is currently consulting the Ankara Government and apparently sounding out their opinion of his plan for a settlement.
Since Sir Hugh
WOB 1.3- pointed Governor some Advances bavo been made. although in the opinion of the former Governor,. Fleki Marshal Sir John Harding, there is no solution in sight. But the outside parties to the dispute have begun to react to Sir Hugh's plan which, although not offelally dis- closed, seems to have some basis for discussion.
Declined
THE
THE Turkish Government maintains its stand that partition is the only solu- tion and although the Athens Administration has so far declined to make a statement the Government- inspired press and radio has urged it to enter the fray.
This is in complete contrast with the previous position taken by the Greek Govern- ment that Britain alone must take the Initiative.
Archbishop Makarios_applied to go to Ankara and discuss
the dispute but whether this was a propaganda move or not it seems to indicate a shift in position that he would not take part in talks if the Turkiak Government was represented.
PHAPS
THE WEATHER: Fresh-moderate to fresh NE.winds; over-. cash
CHINA MAIL
No. 36962
Established 1845
THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 1958.
Price 20 Cents
RELAX IN
DAKS Whiteaways
THE KARONU KANEBRESET IN AKTEEN TROUSERS
KOWLOON...
'MAD DOG KILLER CAPTURED We Won't
Alleged To Have Murdered Ten
People In A Week
A
Douglas, Wyo., Jan. 29.
tenth victim of "Mad Dog Killer" Charles Stark- weather was found at Natural Bridge, seven miles from here, today at about the time the
· 19-year-old_Lincoln, Nebraska, man was cap- tured by officers.
The latest victim was identi-
ed as Merle Collision, believed to be from Oregon, The Con- versc County coroner, Cecli Stark, sald Collision had been shot "many times" In the head and body.
cap-
State and local police tured Starkweather in a run- ning highway gun-Bght.
Girl-Friend
The riftentan's girl-friend, Carol Fugate, 14 was captured with him, She was unhurt, but Starkweather suffered cuts about the face.
bern
Carol mld she had held captive by Starkweather since he went on a killing Tampage last weekend,
LLOYD TO
BE REPLACED?
Londen, Jan. 30. Mr Selwyn Lloyd is “Tikoły to coase to be Foreign Secretary" after the re- turn of Mr. Harold Macmillan from his Com- monwealth tour on February 14, the Daily Inside the island the reaction
Mirror reports today. has been one of demonstra-
political tion and violence. A week The newspaper's
extreme ngo
right-wing correspondent writes that a elements Foreign Office switch will come as no surprise to Conservative
Greek Cypriot
Law-Abiding
union
with
According to the Wyoming State Patrol, Starkweather and the Fugato girl were stopped alongside the highway near Natural Bridge when a motorist, as Joc Sparkle, of lented Cosper, Wyoming, stopped to offer assistance.
Sparkle told authorities Starkweather pulled
rife from the black Packard sedan the Nebraska man was driving and threatened to shoot him.
At about this time Deputy Sheriff Willam Romer drove upon the scene.
Sought Refuge
As Romer stopped, the Fugate girl leaped from the Packard and sought refuge in Homer's CAT. Starkweather jumped into the Packard and turned around, speeding south into Douglas. Romer, meanwhile, radioed
State ahead and both
and County authorities took up tho chase in Douglas.
www
Five
miles south af here Starkweather's car crowded from the highway bơ parming officers.
He suffered a cut below one ear but it was bellevod it was' inflicted by flying glass, not from & bulfot. The Packard was "riddled by gunfire during the shane, according to the patrol deer in Casper.
Nine Dead
Earlier in Lincoln, 600 miles from Douglas, police found the bodies of a steel company pre-
ident, his wife and their mold which they sald brought to nine or more the murders for they sought Charles Starkweather, 19 and his 14- year-old girl-friend.
Assassinated left-wing Members of Parliament who lenders with the apparent have been quietly agtiating for object of eliminating op-
2 change for some months." position
The correspondent says that which to the original demand fur
Mr R. A. Butler, Lord Privy Seal and Home Secretary, and Greece.
Mr Alan Lennox-Boyd, Colonial Secretary, are being named as possible successors,
The report is confined to this newspaper and political quarters point out that Mr from, office Lloyd's departure
previously has been forecast not on a number of occasions.— nided their cause. For-China Mail Special. tunately, though, the enner and
have winer leaders
control the managed to
HE
TITHERTO the Cypriot Turkish community had been a low-abiding society, und the demonstrations of the past week have
unruly factions.
But while this violence is to
im-
be deplored what transpires in Ankara is more portant and it remains to be seen whether the Turks will agree to
in a change from approach immediate partition to one of partition as an option at the end of a period of transition under the British Crown..
one
While it must be admitted that Britain's defence needs have influenced a change in attitude the fact neverthe- less remains that she has come a long way from the days of the "never, never" policy.
Goodwill
Lincoln Police sald the three murder victims were C. Lauer Ward, president of the Capital Steel Co, Mrs Ward and their mald, Offloers sald the two women apparently had been shot - while they were in bed at home, and Ward was killed pear the door.
Starkweather and his girl-
have Fugale,
friend,
FRANCE NOT sought since Monday.
TO RETURN ARMS: PINEAU
Paris, Jan. 29. The French Foreign Minis
ter, M. Christian Pineau, said today the French Government could not agree to return the arms seized from the Yugoslav ship, Slovenija, off Al- geria 10 days ago.
He told the Foreign Affairs Committee of the Council of the Republie (Upper House) tho arms were "contraband."
been
The Ward home, a fashion- able structure, is in the Lincoln County Club district.
it · is on
the garbage route which Starkweather has worked recently:
Car Stolen
Near, it was found the Ford been sedan which he had driving, stolen from one of the xine persons whose deaths were attributed
to the black-coated redhead.
rlot guns
the
WATC
Neopolitan Students Object.........Riot
BAGDAD PACT
CONFERENCE
ENDS TODAY
By JOHN EARLE
Ankara, Jan. 30.
The Ministerial Council session of the five-nation Bagdad Pact ends today with a communique expected to cover the Pact's military, economic and counter-subversion activities.
Let's Have A Lottery
Washington, Jan. 28. Representative Paul A. Fino said hopefully today ho had the means
by which
Government the could fap the estimated $30,000 million Americans gamble annually.
Holution--a national lottery, He said it would raise
of this one-fourth year's $40,000 million de- tance budget,
The Bronx, New York, Republican ham Introduced a bill to establleh avo man lottery commission. Tickets would be printed
Government by the
and sold only in post offices.
·Nane would be sold to minors. United Press.
MACMILLAN REVEALS PACT
The communique, according to usually realiable sources, will not refer to such crucial issues as Palestine, Cyprus or Kosh- mir, as
had some delegates hoped.
About 2,000, words long, it is expected to refer to reports by the Pact's committees, notably the Counter-Subversion Com nitec, whose activities will be expanded to counter Soviet in- iltration in these regions.
Joint Projects
It is also expected to sum up the
and Economie Military Committees work on the pro- posed establishment of a com bited planning staff in Bagdad
Thousands of striking Neopolitan students and police clashed in a two- hour hattle last Saturday, when striking students closed the University. The trouble started when the Ministry of Educa- tion ruled that Unlyer- sity students had to take State examinations in addition to their normal examinations to secure degrees. Photo shows police man-handling one of the students as they quelled the riots-Key-
stone.
Radioactive Fallout Hits Fleet
Honolulu, Jan. 20. Rear Admiral Sadayoshi Nakayama revealed today that his fleet was dreriched with radioactive fallout from Asla of 500 miles north when Entwetok on its cruise from Japan.
and various joint economic pro-ence, Jects among the Pact, members,
New Bill
Accept Enosis:
To Second
UK Civil Servants
London, Jan. 29.
The House of Commons to-
night passed a bill giving · the Government power to second civil servants for service in British colonies, Independent Common- wealth countries and foreign countries.
Tho bill gives legislative effect to government proposals on the reorganisation of the Overscas Civil Servico to take account of the growth of self- government in the colondes.
A special list of officers of the Overseas Civil Service in the Bervice of the British Government will be seconded] to the employing governments.
FALSE IDEA
The now goes to the House of Lords,
Mr Alan Lennox-Boyd, the Colonial
he Secretary, Bald hoped every government de partment and public body in Britain would rid themselves of any false idea that they were in some way weakening Britain If they spared some of staff for overseas servies.
their
"This is the only way in the long run in which the values we have in the United Kingdom will be preserved," he said.
The bill was' unopposed,—— Reyter.
TRIES MAN TO FOLLOW IKE-SEIZED
Kansas City, Jan. 29, Secret service agents today arrosted a man carrying a rosary, who tried to follow President Elzenhower into a Protestant chapel hora today, during the funeral services for the President's brothor Arthur.
Arthur Eisenhower died hero on Sunday.'
The President, accompanied by brothers Earl and Milton, was about to enter
the Pro-
the
In a 10-minute press confer-testant chapel where Arthur's he sald the fallout body luy, when the incident oc- definitely come from Asia but curred.
A min, holding a rosary in The Bagdad Fact links Bri- he only smiled when asked if tein, Iraq, Pakistan, Persia and he thought it came from Russia, his hands teled to follow
United Statca, Turkey. The
Nakayama said a geiger coun- President into the chapel, be-
Secret service men guarding though not a full member, longs to three, Pact committees. ter aboard the destroyer Haru-
kaze registered a count of "ten- the President seized the
and Yesterday, Mr John Foster thousandths radiation" for a clamped handcuffs on him Dulles, Secretary of State, who i-hour period but that there put him in a car. The man's
man,
was not revealed.-
France-Presse.
attended the Council session as
had been no noticeable effect identity token en observer, announced a
thus far.-United Press, donation of $10 million (about | *** £3,570,000) to the Moslem Pact members.
а
wita
Heated Exchange Representallves of the United States, Britain and Iraq met at Canberra, Jan. 29.
three-hour private lunch Mr Harold Macmillan, British
yesterday to try to smooth out Prime Minister, today gave the
what conference sources Australian Cabinet details of his proposal for "a solemn pact of described as an American-Iraqi clash on Tuesday over Palestine.
exchange A heated non-aggression with Russie," a Cebinct source here said today.
Behind closed doors, he spoke reported to have taken place Ward
Nuri Missing from
between General
*AI to the Ministers for un hour,
Sald, läder of the was a black Packard home
Iraql outlining British cold war tac sedan. Police with shotguns, les
and giving them a vivid delegation, and Mr Dulles when and riles
· statesman elder the
for the Tragi strugglo stationed on all roads leading picture of
pressed his case for forcing peice," this source said. out of Lincoln. They were
Teruel Into the frontiers laid Australian Cabinet. sources stopping almost every black gold that so for no positive down by a 1947 United Nations The 3,824-ton Slovenija was detained on January 18 by car they saw.
decisions had emerged from Mr resolution,
this French Naval units off the Now numbered among the Macmillan's talks here on Algerian coast and escorted to victims were the businessman, and other subjectsRouter. the port of Oran where its 160-Ward, his wife Clara, and their has often been said that lon cargo of arms and ammuni-mald, Lillion; the mother, step- tion was confiscated on charge father and baby half-sister of teenage goodwill on all sides to that it WOR destined for the Fugate girl;
Boga, Jan. 20. aceded; to reach a settle- Algerian rebels.
couple from neatby Benet,
West German Defence Minis- ment of the dispute, but it M. Pineau said it was im-amall farm hamlet; and a 70-
try sources said tonight the will be necessary for the possible for France to resume year-old. bachelor farmer.
Union's ac Authorities alto belleved that. Western European Greeks and the Turks
further 3,600 trafic wany Tunisian part in the December slaying of to withdraw a
troops from Germany was "un- "collusion" with the Algerian in- a service station operator.
United Press;
pleasant news here."-Heuter,.
r
to negotiations with Tunisia
ok
1
a
General Nuri is reported to have received a sharp rebuff from Mr Dulles, who took the line that the Palestine prob-
the frame-work of the Bagdad Pact but under the auspices of the United Nations-Reuter,
Unpleasant News Iem should be settled not in
travel-part of the way in outstanding problems as long as Starkweather may have played a quioscence to the British plans Asked To Leave
search of a solution.
If the Greeks are procrastina-surgents continued-Reuter.
ting in the hope that a Labour Government in Bri- tain would give them what run they want and, thus roughshad. over the Turkish minority there will be plenty of trouble.. A solution must be found as noon as possible, as further. prolongation, of the dispute will only leave the open to the spread of Com munism in the troubled waters of the Eastorn Mediterranean.
way
FRENCH. MAY ARREST RED
Frenob
Alafors, Jan. 20.
oficiala Government threatened today to arrest an
International Red Cross
Tanis negolisting for prisoners". Algerian rebel loaders.
the
relosso
with
delegate, Jean de roux, if he The rebels, my tho soldims,
entered French authorisation to visit
Algeria without
moždium hald
four Fronats prisoners by the rebels,
de Presis currently Is In
captured on January 11 near Tunisian border, the sonazwbere ta Algeria, M. de Preux premiosłably would hard to orbes : £as heavily»feriidei
CROSS MAN
Algerian-Tunisian frontier, in the company of, rebel' guides to visit them.. Sources closo to France's Minister for Algeria, Reberk Lacoste, sala at a prem DORA forence today, however, that buch passage by M., do Preux I would be až kla
and peril. Unlied Prem.
Belgrade, Jail 29.
Mr Sidney Welland, Reuter's correspondent, was asked to leuve Tirana, Albania, today at short notice folowing a com- plaint that a story'ho had writ ten about Albanla' wan' den famatoryRouter. ››
A Present
Damascus, Jan. 29. Rusmin today, turbed över d twin-engined Ilyushin 14,- oquipm Iped with an offes,, a living room) and bedroom, to President Shukri Karwatiy, as a prevent from the Soviet President) 2114 ment Veroshitovi, Unitech Press.
We are
Turks
Ankara, Jan. 29, The leader of the Turkish..
Cypriot community, Dr Fazil Kutchuk, said to. night the Turks would accept continuation of the present British re- gime in Cyprus if Britain ruled out the possibility of Enosis Union' with Greece.
But he said as far as the Turks were concerned the only prac- leal solution to the problem was still partition. "Partition is the only solution wo Turks can see," he said.
Willing
But Dr Kutchuk qualified his statement by declaring they wêre willing for a continus- tion of present regime
if "the possiblity of Enosis is ruled out by Britain and pro- tection of Turkish rights guaranteed.":
Foot Still In Ankara
пог
Nicosia, Jan. 29, Bir Hugh Foot, Gover
of
today Cyprus, delayed his return hore from Anglo-Turkish talks In Ankara on the island's future.
An officiat spokesman ascribed the delay to A possible last-minute change In hlo programma In Turkey, where he has baền. advising Mr Belwyn Lloyd,, British Foreign: Bearetary, in his talks with Turklih, Isadore He was due back Har this morning.
"His arrival late tonight To not ruled out, but it le very unlikely," the spokes- man sald-Router.
The British Foreign Secretary,
Selwyn Lloyd, and Turkey's Foreign Ministry, Fatin Zorlu, are scheduled to hold another discussion on Cyprus tonight before Mr. Lloyd's expected departure tomorrow.
Deadlocked
The talks between Britain and Turkey appeared frigidly dead- locked. Neither side was re- ported ready to budge from Its position. Turkey was reported holding out for purtition, British sources insisted partition is #quite the last of the solutions to be considered." The cald Mr Lloyd was stick- ing firmly to his position in
the Press
negotiations. United
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