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THE CHINA MAIL, TUESDAY, AUGUST 25, 1959.

Your

Probe For Suspected Keep

Second Bomb Near The Tate

London, Aug. 24.

ARMY engineers began probing for a second suspected German bomb to day at the rear of the famous Tate Gallery on the Thames River bank near Westminster.

STOLEN TREASURE FOUND

London, Aug. 24. Charles Davios, 67-year-old gardoner, sank a shovel into his new Walsall Cor- allotment--and paration

uncovered a gold pyx and 0 silver communion set Potor's stolen from St

Church, Walsall, about a year ago.

Mr Davies, the father of severn. who lives at Whitehouse Street, Walal), has since received a letter from the town's Chief ----Constable Mr K. M Wherly. thanking him for returning the property and affirming that : had been stolun.

Mr Davies all: "1 wan ditzing away when up came the golden box and two silver cups. It was like burled treasure, I thought to myself this 15 A bit of gooi, this is and took them to the police."

The Vicar of St Peters, ho Rev Edward Parsons said: "Of go along and course I shall thank him personally the set

The windows of the gallery, with its huge store of priceless art treasures, were all sandbagged to- day in preparation for a final assault on a suspected 1,000-pound unexploded bomb dropped during the World War II blitz when word came through that a second bomb was believed buried within 25 yards of the list.

Woman

Student

Stabbed

To Death

1

Shirt On

London, Aug. 25. The Taflor and Cutter, Bri- tain's authority on style and clothing, has offered the "full weight of its im- pressive authority" in support of officials at Lords cricket ground who insisted last week that spectators should keep their shirts on. Under the heading, “Keep Your Shirt On," the magazine said 31 an editorial

The that majority of men with shirts €17 looked *C pleasant, more distracting, even more grotesque, that when they have their shirt: on."

The engineers were still several feet away from the first

when they were toki lai hall work for the time being. Mojor William Hurtley. in charge of "Oration Tale" Fald he hoped 10 Suppers would reach the first womb-{] ||

bot..some time to- morrow. "Memwhile, we've started another squad lonkingi for the second bomb, Hoth at them could be 1,000-pounders," he added.

'Herman Satan'

*

The report

on the second bumb

fron Kame

retired Cardener. Some former Civil Defence official said they be

German "Heman Satan" was still buried in Mil- bank Gardens. The welpired a ton.

а

lieved Los Angeles, Aug. 24. The unclothed body of an attractive 21-year-old 'University of Southern California music student was found stabbed three times lato last night at the foot of stairs leading to her tionco's apartment.

Satans

The Army Sappers had ex- the pected to get throught

first bomb today but they were: held up by brick foundations- the remains of the centuries- uld Millbank gaol which stood]

u the site.

The fiance, G. Robert Kinzie,

Hundreds of persons may be 27, a graduate art student, was questioned by pullee but was evacuated If the "objects" turn is worth at least 150 and was at considered a suspect, ae-out to be unexplodeci bomba us

a present to the church in 1885,"corting Now the vicar has written an | Rerdiri, article for

next parish

magazine on crime and punish- iment.-China Mall Speelal.

TAX PLAN

Los Angeles Aup 24. A disgruntled faxpayer, John: Chucles Ow12),

Culton. California. Is backing up his

اده

10

be

distributed relatives will be community

Transport London Inselor Thomus belleved,

Hand will providą; sperini buses and special police and fre TEL victim, Linda Exina patrols will be institute. Martin, WITS found by

two children wili police fleers ealled to the among friends and serne by neighbours who com- while their parents plained of hearing 13 woman billetes in speciul Screaming. Ofters said they

centres.-UPI. found Kinzie's apartrinnt door

They said they walked i through and fouted Miss Marlin's hody on the back sults.

ווייז

All Miss Martin's clothing was found neally hung up FIL

belief Dat the Government put away in Kinzie's apartment,

shruki

after, nut

taxvallade Heidin Agure income

before, living

expenses are dechizleti,

in

Kinzi showed

at the apartment ofter midnight with He led a suit in the Federa, several friends. He said Miss Court claiming that on the busis | Marlin spent the weakeni of his tax plan he would get his apartment, but that back some of the taxis he paid ha.fn't seen her since earlier in in 1968 and 1958.-U11.

the day. UPI.

A British Crossword Puzzle

33

ACROSS

1 Disfigure (4).

4 'Not clear about an Indian

elly plan (7).

8 Declare (4).

Before very long (4).

10 Brag about a degree in ex-

travagant language (7),

11 Rural cleriet (4).

12 Emblem of salritliness (4),

14 Defent or the opposite (7).

17 Unfriendly type (5).

19 This chair is carried on four

legs (5).

22 Scrop (7).

20 Dried up (4),

27 Many consume this (4).

28 The serf sounds unscrupu-

fotes (7).

29 Potentate in semi-retirement

-(4),

30 Carmen plus cox? (4).

31 The more varied type of pro-

position (7)..

32 Widow's child? (4),

125

O

20026

DOWN

2 Number two can dance! (8).

3 Ernie is such a selector (6).

4 Exclude bread maybe (5).

5 Smoothed things out (8).

Clark of nrchitecture (5).. Foolish cartiers? (5).

12 1er penny Bock (4).

13 Grasslanda (4).

15 Avold being taken for one

(4).

1 tene's bird (4).

18 in the end the fur will

belong to me (6).

20 Value highly (0).

21 Constable? (6).

23 These people have Kon

their flag (5).

24 Stringed Instrument (5),

25 Mutorial I mend? Possibly

(5).

YESTERDAY'S CROSSWORD-Across: 1 Co-M.B.-at, Anise, Paul-a, Nurses, 10 Aural. 11 Stulas, 12 Eros, 13 Augla, | 10 Animal, 18 Enig-ma, 20 Enter, 22 Fall 23 Spect, 23 Dlito, 20 Domino, 27 Or-pen, 20 Heart, 29 Delgns. Down: 1 Converse, 2 Mor-mose-t, 3 Apes, 4 Tasting, 3 Alabama, 0 Naw-son, 7 Spali 14 Gleaning, 1 Swallows, 16 Airport, 17, Impoded, 18 Nestor 21 Nolpo, 24 Done.

Maxims' Albert

Buried

STRONG TREND sild: "One wonders if there is any

the connection with fact that the last decade has witnessed, a strong trend in Englishmen towards the wear- Tay of the lekure shirt outside the Trousers." "After all pulling the shirt out is the natural prelude to pull- In It off-but there seems little excuse for the trend comfortwards when one con- siders that the players them- selves are retaining the good mariners of wearing the kind of clothes that the occasion

ends,"

GONE FAR "formally has gone for in eller sports but in cricket, which ivolves a large per- | centage of lady spectators,

PRINCESS AND A BEAR

Princess Alexandra,, who is aliending the Queensland Centenary celobrations, makes frlends with kaola bear when she attended a State reception in Brisbane-United Press Photo.

BARRISTER WITHDRAWS

FROM AUSTRALIAN ROYAL COMMISSION

Melbourne, Aug. 24,

undress has its special prob Discussions are continuing today among leading

lems."

"Oj

course if the trouble spreads to them, the officials

Lords with have to argue the thing out without sup- purt," the Tailor and Cutter zonéluded. - China Mall Special.

Stevedores

Poisoned By Fumes

Tokyo, Aug. 24. Police said today 13 Japan-

esa stevedores wore baliov-! ed to have been stricken with poisoning while work- ing aboard

British freighter in the port of Kobo yesterday.

Australian lawyers on the events which led Mr J. W. Shand, QC, a leading Sydney bar- rister, to withdraw from the Stuart Royal Commission in Adelaide,

The New South Wales, Bar Council, which met yesterday to consider the matter, Is meef- iny again in Sydney today, -

The Council of the South Australion Law Society, which meeta, on Friday, is also resum- ing its discussions today.

Mr Shand withdrew from the Itoyal Commission on Friday ader saying that his continued presoner would hamper, nol help, Stuart, for whom he 13 appearing,

Stuari, part aborigine, is under sentence of death for the murder of a nine-year-old miles girl at Ceduna, 600 northwest of Adelaide, last December.

The Commission was appoint ed to investigate all aspects of the case by the South Austra- lian Premier, Sir Thomas May- ford.

The 13 were among a group of 40 stevedores engaged in Paris, Aug. 24.

unloading drums from the Albert Blaser, better known 10,109-ton Perseus to Ughters. The Melbourne Herald, in a

15

"Albert of Maxims", One of them collapse and the front-page editorial, today sold was buried today in the pollee sald the drums

others complained

"hos of headache. Mr Shard's withdrawal

were brought a reaction of commeni Colombes suburb ceme-shipped from Rotterdam and and consultation among mani- tery

of Australian after a religious) were listed as containing dye- bers

Bar Asso- West Ger- cintlon Un G scale which service in the Protestant stuffs produced in

many. Six of the stricken emphasises that really serious church of Lorntorire, Con- workers

in were treated

a Issues are involved." tral Paris,

hospital and discharged.

Swiss-born Albert, head walter ut the Inmous Paris restau. Cant. dled in hospital o Thursday, aged 76. The restaurant was closed to-

The Health Research Institute Complexities

in Kobe said his afternoon Puranilno arllin Jinet been The newspaper continued: responsible fot the poisoning "Perlays there are legal com of the stevedores.

plexiles which the lay mind After the finding was made, does not appreciate. But there day, and manager and staff other stevedores clad in masks, is surely no room for doubting attended Albert's funeral rubber gloves and protective the intention or thie South together with distinguished clollies completed the unloading. Australian Premier, Sir Thomas clients such as shiou de Reuter.

Playford, when he said on July signer Pierre Balmain, and )

30 that the Royal Commission Count Hubert de Póligðuc. i

was being set up "to ensure a Albert wu!! hendwaller ul

inquiry into all sevarai restaurants here be

usperts of this case" fore going to Maxins in 1034,

The Sydney Daily Telegraph He held the Gold Medal of

said: the City

Baltic Fleet thorough

of Paris, awarded Commander

for "60 years of Parisian life."

Paris, Aug. 24. He resonally supervised every

detail

Di the running

Admiral Nikolai Kharlamov Vice- Maxima and Insisted on has been replaced by ecrupulous pect

of

for the Admiral A. Örel as commander

Shah Of

Persia Hopes To Be Crowned

Teheran, Aug. 24. The Shah of Persia told a

press conference here to day that he hoped to he crowned next year on the occasion of the 25th cen-

the tenary of

P'ersian monarchy.

who The 30-year-old Shali, came to the throne in 1941. still lacks the son required by the constitution before he can be crowned.

He has an 18-year-old daugh- ler, Princess Shabnaz, who is married to Ardeshire Zahedi, Persia's delegate to the United Nations,

The Shah divorced his second wife, Sornyn, in April 1058. be cause she had failed to provide him with an heir. They had been married for seven years,

RUMOURS

Coronation rumours arise every your trounch August 19, the anniversary of the Shah's return to Persià after the fall of Mohammed Morsadeg in 1953, He was reported to have ruik In then his coronation would be on

"Pubito disqulet ts unmis takably

growing over tho Stuart Royal Commissian Adelaide."

| Aupusi 19 "one of these' years." The newspaper added: "Aus-¦ Since then loyal followers. scelal precedence of its guests of the Soviet Baltic Ficct, the traila has a deservedly high turning their backs on the con-

Krasnaya of newspaper

mdc very

un

Zvezda, judicial

reputation

commission continues.

4 af

coronation,

2011.--

cate!

overseas, silution, have urged him to be of the Soviet Defence which could well suffer if the crowned But neututional etiquette.

Paris Two of the restaurant's best-Ministry received in

- present controvery over the amendment would be nessary ichown dicher Are Albert's ported. Inventions-Solo Albert, in Admiral Kharlamov was coin- fish la bolled in mander of Soviet naval forces in which tire vermouth, and Steak Albert, the Baltic from 1954 to 1055 and then from July 1957 unul the cooled in pepper and cogne. -Reuler.

jesant time-AFP.

ten that the

before the Shah's "And It should not be forgot-failing the birth

millions J the Reuter. newly-independent Asian coun- tries oro particularly sensitive to the civil rights of

black minorities."Keuter.

TEEN-AGER CONFESSES TO

KILLING NEGRO GIRL

New York. Aug. 24. The 17-year-old "war counsel

'lor" of a teen-aged street gang defiantly confessed today ho filled a 15-year-old

He smirked as ho admitted boMiguel Castro, another teen-

fired the shot that killed

zger, Wis charged with felonious assault for stabbing Torese Gee during a “rumble" last night.

д youngster during the "rumble."

Negro girl during a gang Seven Wounded was shot down during on

battle on the lower East Side But he broke down and bawled like a baby when told he faced pooble death in the electric chair for his crime, John

Cruz woaring black trousers, black shirt and wiilto termia shoco, aważgored past hypterically weeping mother in a police station corridor.

his

Detectives told the boy he

would be charged with mur- der. Within a few hours, the sobered. 'young man Was al arraigned on charges hornicida

felouicus and nomult Magistrale T, Vingent. Quino, held grua 'without ball for A hearing on September. E

..

apparent reprisal raid by the Forsythe Street Boys' Gang after an carilor.clash with the Sportsmen Gang. The Forsytho ging is predominantly Puerto Rican and the Sportsmen are mainly Negroes, Seven teen-agers were wounded In the battle, Twenty boyt were arrested. Police recovered the alleged death weapon, toy gun that had been modified to dre real bullets.—UPI.

Highball

SOCKTAIL: LOUNCE

PIANO-BAR

SALLY CONTRERAS

+ COZY

Uruct Price

⚫ ELEGANT

+ INTIMATE

Prostitute Sent To Gaol

Birmingham, Aug. 24.

The first woman to be gaoled under Britain's new anti-vice lows was sent to prison here to- day for one month.

She was Maria Anderson, aged 23, who pleaded guilty of lofter- ing for prostitution in Birming- ham last night.

Anderson said she was preg- nant and the man she had been living with had left her.

The new Street Offences Act which come into operation al midnight on August 15 Increased fines for soliciting and for the first time gave magistrates the power to sentence common pro- Elitules tor up to three months for a third offence,

It also makes organizers of vice liable for sentences of up to seven years — China Mail Special.

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