THE CHINA MAIL, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1958.

Chief Of International Textile Organisation Says-

HONGKONG CLOTH NOW WORLD PROBLEM

Manchester, Dec. 11.

The question of growing textile exports by India, Pakistan and Hongkong had become an international problem,

a top textile authority sa d tonight.

He is Dr W. T. Croese, new president of the

17-nation International

Federation of Cotton and Allied Textile Industries.

Dr Crocse was diseteng

the nigollations aimed at

reaching a voluntary ceiling!

61 1'ommonwealth textiles

shipped to the UK.

The problem did not

ds the Lancashire coften toe!

o De Croese snick

Content

1th W

closely th

efforts made fo And A

matient solution to this problem | because they are themselves

fly interested

Cand

Dy Creeze sa il it was not sulle mutly reathed that the Putter went far besond The cation Industry and bud

Ruch wider Implleailuz

1-tall

C

H

י.י.יו

Grabes ed th

1st Diesel milla nation To thot treat Laut. andare today.

Coastale in Lot de trashfiy wy dermed source sold the

whit

ieved to have die

jest- with

the Pete Mini Lancashirec

Now B

App Jim.ai

4! ༣

The Hongkong

There was to Anadily at the ង.'

Hongkong negotia"intis su fit, Dough hopes

fan vetural continued.

"HK Workers Will Starve”

Manchester, Dec. 11.

who are Cam-

cutes

חן

Politicians

palgning for cotton. goods imports ore displaying "national selfishness," according to

Church of England minister in the heart of the Lancashire Colton area.

ชบ

Tag:23

Rev 13

Browns, St Stephen's Church, writes in

Paisl

we have her a det ab at the conquities of importing (UL100 goods From Hongkong workers whom k 1 831

יד

Squabbles Postponed As Afro-Asian Conference Ends

Delegates at the Afro-Asian

Cairo, Dec. 11.

Conference post-

poned their squabbles today and rushed through a series of unanimous resolutions to end the four-day meeting.

A fight to bar Russia and to admit Nationalist Ching and South Korea will continue in committee unt it is decided by the new economic conference next your.

No Fresh Trial For Jacqueline

London, Dec. 11.

My Jacqueline Gray, 41-year old former photu- graphres model, was today refused a new frial on her claim for the return of jewellery fram tier CX- lover. Sir Strait Ralli, 82- year-old baronel,

The Court of Appeal re- Jealing her petition zave for with costs judgment the baronet, a former Lou- don merchant banker.

Miss Gray then told the Court she would apply for leave to take her sull be- fure the House of Lords. the highest tribunal Land.

MIIN Gray maintained thai Nir Stratt Ra

miten she whuse

had benn had fujsely sworn that she had been blackmaling hip stace 1950,

that

thr

Whe claimed harozet had made various gift of jewellery to her £12.000 Kierling worth

and had then taken them insured but had

T

Gever returned them.

121

r.

ir

Chi Leath

kurd, Artesa vint

dens

10

seven

Cal vanda

1.1

J1422:1

itsel

wel

taken a any from

well belea 11

"The [ugh me

1

21:

kat

"

18

The baronet dented Miss Gray's allegations.--China Mail Special.

A British Crossword Puzzle

13

14

115

18

ACROSS

22

23

3 iteally contrary (8).

# Useless (2, 4).

@Borutifully executed (4, 4).

11 lustrious (0).

12 Valo (4).

13 Fainting at (0).

18 Dawn (6).

10 A Kennington shape (4)..

22 "Just a nowyż

(8).

nt twilight"?

24 Think about it (0)..

20 Potito (0).

DOWN

1 Dog noise (B).

2 Extreme cuffering (5).

3 Polovers (7),

4 Ex-promier's paradiso (4).

#

S. African territory (4).

@ Well-established objection,

maybe (0).

7 Possible result of putting one

and one together (6),

10 Frully reply (5).

14 K.0.4 (0).

16 Think of a number! (7).

20 The boy who went to war 18 Short sergeant, perhaps

(0).

17 One of the big guns? (0),

20 To discouraga in mainly

relative (5),

21 Famous diarist (5).

12 Sediment) (4).

Martin Philippine delegate Tinto was in allowed to pre- sent a resolution from the floor Is the Anal plenary urgdug the invitation Emalist Korea.

China

sesion

and

of Na- South

But he said Conference Pre- sident Mohamed Rusaid 1H sonally assured him they would be invited next year.

Tinio said if they weren't, would lay the Philippines home.

The eldent touched off a public argument in the counci chamber after the session be tween Philippine delegite Armando Isip and Conference Sucretary

General Borbam Dajani.

But generally the conference

ended in surface harTIJODY.

Economic Pact

at

The main resolution recom- sealed establishment of a per- munent "Afro-Asian organisation for economic co-operatipa" with provisionul headquarters Cairo.

The Consultative Committee composed of Chamber of Com- norce delegates from 11 nations All draft charter rules and de- cido membership.

The whole thing must be approved by the conference next year.

admissions

The

over

night wlli come in the committee.

Resolution

wTe

Five resulullons in all Approx rá. They included:

Pingosate for extension of trade agreements among Afro- Arlon countries UN

ferential trasis

• Formation

037

рге-

producers' associations for cotton, rubber, tes and other raw materials to prevent harmful competition" taid to be a Soviet idea.

Estubishment of

for economic

encouragement vestment,

• more

A recommendation

fund

British Pacifists Storm Thor Missile Base

Gathered around a huge cement aro pacifists mixer (above), British doused with water from a hose after they invaded a U.S. air base near Swaffham, England, on December 6.

The pacifista interrupted the con- struction of a supposedly secret Thor missile project.

Members of a

Direct

group called the Action Committee Against Nuclear War, they had given notice of their intention to block work on the project.

At right policemen forcibly remove one demonstrator. Several others were

the dragged from the site and eventually retreated.

Not Beaten

rost

But the hardy pacifists were nol beaten.

After keeping themselves warm at night in nearby shelters with fires and hot soup they returned to the site.

Early in the morning they passed the barbed wire into the base and again stationed themselves by the concrete mixer.

This time they were removed from the site by Royal Air Force security police. UPI Telephoto.

Battle Of Applause In

U.N. Assembly

United Nations, Dec. 11.

A battle of applause varied the usually quiet procedure

15

"Lash No Deterrent"

London, Dec. 11.

of the United Nations General Assembly today American delegate Henry Cabot Lodge opened the Mr R. A. Butler, the British debate on the Hungarian question with a bitter attack against Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev.

development und! After Mr Lodge had been Nagy wes "put to death ns he appinuded, In- loudly

of a Soviet of capital

was the crowning net answered by Dr Janos Péter, reign of terror which is sl

ΟΙ Hungary, that delegate

whose being carried out today by Afro-Asian speech was applauded by the Hungarians who are in truth advanced

agents of the Soviet Union in countries help others economi- Sovlet bloc.

the presence of the Soviet oc- catly.

cupation any which remains the decisive force in the lives of the unhappy people of

The debate was on a report Preferential treatment of Afro-Asian ships and formation of the Special Comanittee o of transport companies,

·

Extension

Fi

Hungary, prosented by Dr

of bilateral Ronald Walker of Australia. Hungary." payments, agreements, and study of the question of settle- ments.

A Anal Tesolution that urged a study to see whether existing governmental organisa- tions were sufficient to promote Afro-Asian Economic co-opera- tion and, if not, formation of an additional new organisation of governments-U.P.I

who said the United Nations could never forget or abundon the Hungarian people.

Mr Lodge said that in lụn - faced with a RAPY "we are series of events which, for cal- Stallsbet cruelty and

Mr Lodge then charged that our My Khrushchev, "the highest | brazen defiance of elvilised authority of world Commu- standards In the world tradi- nism, came to Hungary two tion of the Czars of medieval months ngo in advance to times, has no parallel in the prepare pubile opinion for the annals of the United Nations." killing of Imre Nagy."

--France-Presse.

Home Secretury, said to- day that when he had more time he would do his best to satisfy the "quite reasonable apprehensiona” of M.P.'s about crimes of violence in Britain.

Earlier, Mr Gyrll Osborne (Conservative) had sold

there WIS public

disquict Over recent bank robberies wage

snatchinge and attacks on

defenceless women.

Mir

Butler

replied: "Evidence does not support the vlow that when flogging Was available for certain crints-and it did mos include all crimes of visioner-di hadi the specially effective influence as a deterrent now frequently attributed to it,

Not Plum IN

BULLY BEEF (Pudding

(Not

OLDEST CAN

WORLD'S OLDEST

Leatherhead, Dec. 11..

A band of hardy scientists got a bully surprise when they opened up the world's oldest can of pre-

served food today,

Instead of Christmas plum pudding, as expected, the can contained bully beef.

The scimists chloeled open

What they found, however, was a hoary, foul-smelling slab of beef which nobody cared to sample.

The complete dinner

WOS

had

TH-77

Ron

ROMC-

with potentials went after It

Four generations of the 135-year-old -can-which | composed of four cans of pre- olirala and old-fashioned family had saved the can until

a sterilo today, cra openers inside survived a shipwreck and two pervet food, including the 1823 Arctic

It explorations with the item which was to have been glass case.

was presumed that the ).dea of having a historic meal part, of the dessert

When the pudding turned out Identity of the Dan's contents The other cans--all of which | to be bully beef, Mise Joan Me-

been mistaken of plum pudding.

turned out all, right and acNeel Caird, donor of the tin, where along the line dariva tually tarted rather good→ | exclaimed;

travels between iho steaming contained a plum pudding D "Oh, horrid, 1 dard. It og e Brasilian Jungles and the dold

Aretic, years old; a

roast doorstop for years. I'm terribly

The mution dating from 1949 and | disappoinlod, but fi's meal.”

date 1823 Whe The pudding-bully beef; that a can of chocolate that was Mike Caird, of Edinburgh, legiblo, but there were no ether Iwas to hayo been part of, a | sealed in 1910.

Scotland, is a descendant of identity marks. Captain John Ross who found According to its history, the Christmas dinner put on by the

Food Manufacturere The can of supposed· 125 the spven-pound, Bye-ounce tin can was put ashore on the lee British Industries Boscaroli Association year-old plumm · ·pudding 'was among the stores of Sir Edward; after Party's ship was wreched the last to be opened, and tho | Fwery'n alilo "Fury" which was anil, alandoned, "and remaining Turpelso wie thick as the wrecked in the Arclic in 1824, * there for four years-URI.

21 Red-lotter counsel (4).

-Ve GEET KENT MET JEWEL

YESTERDAY'S CROSSWORD-Across: a Llongate, 7 Index,

o Colnbash, 15 Pouter, 13 Bimilar, 18 Lave, 17 Bo-late-d, 10 80-a- itle, 20 Odds, at Elegant, 20 Frodos, 27 Solitude, 20 Caper, 20 Distralt. Down: 1 Limpar, 2 Odlum, Excel, 4 Nonli, Ararat, 6 Feved, 9 Arable, 11 Otled, 12 Tints, 14 Rooled, 15

, 10 Vema,, 10 Su-used, 10 Adults, 22 Ercel, 23 Adept, 24in the entrs of pelengo not in Tours, 25 Star,

Í the interest of goodvedlike,

#ill

TR-610

Page I

Strike Makes New York Newsless

Now

New York, Dec. 11.

York's five million readers were looking olso- where for news and diver- sion today as the city's three evening and four morning nowspapers stop- ped their presses because the two-day-old de- Ilverymen's striko,

of

Five newspapers decided to Buspend publication after the morning Daily News could not put out an edition because the composing room staff retured le cross the deliverymen's pic-

kot lines.

Radio and television networks increased the length and tre- quency of thair news grammes, and ore the itonal Broadcasting Company------

even printed

-

Na-

namall nowy-

paper, which gave away in railway stationa. About 150,000 copion were distributes.

One railway line left a one- sheet news digest on the sents

in its carriages-Reuter,

Why do so many

Doctors use one

particular

Soap?

HAVE you ever wondered why so

many doctors in quer eran morgerles

use Wright's Cowl Tar Suap to weat their hands?

The reason is that (hay tuve found Wright's keeps their hands softer, so sepsitive and, of course, completely

If Wright's can do this for Doctors. what eam it do for yon und your children? Wright's Coal Tur Squỹ to tho kinde tolici soap of all. 'It la klod to your skin; kind to your complexion, kind to your childrepiedad to refreshing to ule,

WRIGHT'S

COAL TAR TOILET SOAP

The Cheldon Tabletín Bath Be Tollar slegs

CILMAN & CO., LTD.

P.O. Box 56, Hạng Kong

MY SIN

EVERYONE'S TALKING ABOUT IT!

ON SALE AT ALL LEADING STORES

Faste Agents K. CALDRON French Bonk Building,

ONY

HI-FI TRANSISTOR RADIOS

Ladies' & Gentlemen's Wisest choice...

Widely acclaimed we the Best - Designed

TR-74

DAND

M-88

2 BAND

Sale Agents: TRINITY DEVELOPMENT CO. LTD. 310 BANK OF KART ÁSIA BUILDING HONG KONG

TELO, 30020, 20707

OSTAINABLE AT ALL ĦADIO STORES

17

Share This Page