FRANCO-GERMAN ECONOMIC UNION TALK PREMATURE
Paris, Mar. 26.-M. Robert Schuman, the French Foreign Minister, said tonight that sugges- tions for a Franco-German economic union were still premature.
An economic union cannot be attained before a certain degree of political understanding has been reached, M. Schuman said in a speech to the National Committee of the Popular Republican Movement.
for France-German While stressing that flere¡ conditions
WH Germany's had been a "rapid evolution"derstanding
the Council of adherence to in French policy towards Europe.
SAAR PROBLEM Germany during the past 18 months, M. Schuman said: "We cannot skip any of the rounds" in Franco-German relations.
Observers here believed that these remarks were a reply to puggestions by the West recent German Chancellor, Dr Konratt Adennur, før n France-German economic unit.
France does not consider the ob- to be a Saar question single to an understanding. The Saar problem will be reviewed
whole Gritana que with the
When prace negotiatums lon are begin. M. Schunnan said.
"We shall then have to tal- of the wishes of the Arronnt
the rights of results whics secured," said M.
It in ton parly perhaps to har population; da away with the barriers be-1 Pruner, and the
adding that in any tween Franer and Germany M. have been Schuman Airl "We cannot Selaman. evade the political problem by case there would be no ulla- talking only ecomanies," he feral deel-lon, titled,
The French Forrith Abstr
of the principal said that one
ADMIRAL SHERMAN
ON TOUR
Bremen, Mar. 26,- Forrest P. Admiral Sherman, Chief of the Operational Staff of the United States Navy, arrived here today for a tour of inspection of American occupation forces in Germany.
Admiral Sherman commanded the Sixth United States Navy Squadron in the Medi- terranean until 'October last year.
Tomorrow he is due to meet Mr John J. Me- United States Cloy, High Commissioner. chiefs in and Service Frankfurt and leidel berg.
On Tuesday he leaves for France. Reuter.
The Colonel Does Not Like Labour
-מין
Referring to the Council of "We cannot Europe, he said:
a transfer at undertake. *l Soveretraty but we can visage it. First we must obtain! for the Europan Assembly that military authority that it needs and prove relations between and the Co- the Assembly
Ministers mittee of
Foreign
Thel
"We must put out the ters in great hatte," the Frenci, "Tot Aloister said, Foreign
does not prevent us from
Forri
that
[ plonolog for
for the future.
we wish a lasting solution of the France-German problem, then the French Union of Na flons and finally, perhaps, the Milante community, would remove from the Atlantie Pet it too exclusive mimary character," M. Schuman said.
"RESISTANCES"
*Whitehi
situation was
Forein. Minis. The French ter said that the present lui! the interntional perhaps due to "rertain resis tances" which the Soviet Union has encountered and also due 16 the difficulties which Russia bad met in China.
endled that he believed ahead the United States were
of the Soviet Union with atomte weapon-Reuter.
THE HONGKONG TELEGRAPH, MONDAY, MARCH 27, 1950.
Wedding Of Kashmir Heir
Tribesmen Await Seretse
Serowe. Mar. 26. The British authorities selzed all arms and ammunition on! the Bamangwato reserve to duy as native drums bent in the jungles the expested re- turn of the banned chief. Seretse Khama.
The British action was.almed among at preventing violence the tribesinen when Seretse re- forms from London, where he was told by the Colonlol Once that he could not rule his tribe. Scelte is expected to arrive at Livingstone South Rhodesin, in a Dritish airlines flying boat
his journey and continue chartered plane fix by However, the dying-boat-was
delayed by engine trouble
Ly
car.
ot
Khartoum,
In the
Anglo-
Egyptian Sudan, and
Sercise
was forced night.
to stay there
14
Phone Sè335
STAR
17 Hankow Road, Kowloon.
March-27th-
2.30, 5.10, 7.20 & 9.30 p.m.
A WOMAN IS SOFT
AND
WARM...
The
Hongkong Telegraph
Morning Post Building,
Hongkong
Published daily (afternoons). Price. 29 cento per edition, Aubscription: 10.50 per month. Portage! China and Macno, 01.00 per month. VIC British Pomegaloesa and other Countries, $4.50 month.
per
News contributions, always wal- come, should be addressed to the Editor, businem, communications and advertisments to the Secretary.
Telephone: 26811 (5 Llacs),
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS
20 WORDS $3.00 for 1 DAY PREPAID
ADDITIONAL INSERTIONS
$1.50 PER DAY.
and
deadlier
10-cenis PER WORD OVER 20
Deathe. Marriages. Births, Personal $5.00 per insertion not 20 cente exceeding 25 words. each additional word.
Twenty-year-old Prince Karan Singh, sole heir of the Maharaja of Kash- mir, and sixteen-year-old Princess Yashorajya Laxmi, granddaughter of Major. General Sarada Shamsher Jang. Bahadur Rann and Rani Sarada of Nepal, after One of the largest gatherings of years attended the their wedding in Bombay.
(London Express wedding, at which the customary lavish wedding dinner was omitted due to nus- terity rules which forbid entertaining more than 25 guests. —
10
Service).
MILLION YUGOSLAVS RECORD APPROVAL OF
TITO'S BREAK WITH USSR
RUTH AT PARTY
10-
Seretse's spokesman during
to
ENTERPRISE JOEL MCCREA VERONICA LAKE DONALD CRISP DON D.FORE
than stealf.
"RAMROD
his absence, Teto Secoma, left; last night with a truck louded with tribesmen to meet Seretse where he Wils at Gabarones, expected to land in a chartered plane.
Although banned as ruler of the tribe by the British Govern- ment, Seretse has been allowed return to the reservation until the birth of his white wife's baby,
Last
nish Ruth. wife,
20
attended a fure-
well party for a British athleial, Allan Bradshow, and his wife, who had been suddenly called from this territory by Colonial officials. They Were her only close Europen friends here. Others of the European colony have ostracised her.
Throughout Inday bra911
return chief.-United Pres
of their
Belgrade, Mar. 26.-Ten million Yugoslavs today had their first waited the chance to record official approval of Marshal Tito's break with Moscow when they voted in their second post war general election. The voting was for 405 deputies to the Federal Council and 215 to the Council of Na-POCKET CARTOON tionalities.
Human Rights Commission To Meet
There were no Opposition tell into which box he dropped candidates, Voters could, if t
blank cust they wished, voles, but whatever the total of dank votes the People's Front candidates greenery would be elected.
Queues formed at
polling
In some villages, where pen- ants were not clear about the procedure, the People's Front! boxes were gelly decorated with
while the
box was left bare.
*blind" i
Marshal Tito himself voted at
station well before they open-a palling station near his villa ed at 7 a.m. Some voters rangin the residential part of Bel- folk dances to grade. As he entered there was performed keep warma in the early morirwave end houts of "Hero
Tito." ing chill.
Lake Success, Mar. 26.-- Com- The United Nations mission on Human Rights to- here is due to meet
Continued Aid morrow to finish drafting an
For Greeks
But the day was sunny, and The Marshal wore the blue the official news agency, Tan-
uniform ot bls rank with had that this
and jug. declared
scarlet and gold hatband the occasion real focinus. With him International Covenant onent to
were the feeling of a national celebra- Foreign Minister, M. Edward Human Rights.
tion."
Kardell, and M. Peter Stam Tilo's bolken, Prime Minister of Ser- Azure bin, Loud-
which
ديا
Gener
Pictures of Marshal
be-incdalled stocky adorned shop windows!
were
de
M. Stambolich drew laugh from the Marshal when he ins look the ballot boxes and ac- cidentally voled against the People's Front.
An
electoral' official, at AL
Put it back at once. Richard-it's nothing to
do with party politica!”
London Express Service.
BROADWAY
SHOWING TO-DAY AT Stambolich's request, retrieved 2.30, 5.30, 7.30 & 9.30 p.m. and gave him another chance tử
the ball from the "blin" box
vote,
embody The Covenant will Athens. Mar. 26.-Gen-the principles of the Commis eral Lawton J. Collins, the 'sion's Brst Declaration of Human
Tights, United States Army chief Assembly approved by an over-speakers boomed exhortations to vote. First reports indicated of Staff, told reporters here whelming majority in 1948.
that the appeals were meeting Union The Soviet that the Greek Army, after
and its
good responsive. its victory over the Com-satellites abstained from voting is as-
Polling stations the Declaration, munist guerillas, would con-on tinue to receive Americansumed here that they will do corated with national flags and flowers. Inside electors found the same on the Covenant. train-
They have argued that the two pairs of boxes-one for the Paris, Mur. 26.-A third faid in material and
documents do not go far enough Federal Council and the other world war would surprise ing.
opposing "Fasciam" and for the Council of Nationalities. him because Marshal Stalin Before leaving for Ankara to-
alleged oppression of colonial
Each pair comprised one box two-day visit to had "very little more to gain day after a
But most Commission General Collins
Western press representatives met member believe Russia also for voter favouring the l'eople and the whole world to Greece.
voler was were given full freedom to ru lose," Colonel Robert Mc-Field Marshal Alexander Papa objects to the Covenant's pro-Front and the uther for ballots
they wished to hibitions of arbitrary arrest, im- ainst it. Each Cormick, publisher
watch the voting. of the mander-in-Chief.
prisonment without tcial, sud given small rubber balls to drop wherever
of totalitarian into the boxes of his choice. Chicago Tribune, said here.
The General expressed satis-other practices
Reuter's correspondent visit-! strccessful co-states. faction at the
several Dolling tonight
station! Covenant's main pro- vaters had to put his closed ed operation between the American and British Miltary Missions visions alm
turn, so that small industrial town about 30 official could not miles away and at several vill- the Greek news agency re-funt rights in every state. They
ages in between. forbid torture, slavery ported.--Reuter,
Ros, the
Com- Greek Army
17:
at protecting
To
secrecy, preserve
the
PRESS FREEDOM
Stalin would want to make war and the Greek Army Command. individual's liberty, privacy and fist containdog a ball into each near Belgrade, at Smedereva, J
"should not think March
and I should think that if
did the whole world would rise
up against him," he said
The Colonel, who is on a trip round the world, replying to a question by. newspapermen
General
about what he thought of the result of the British Election, said: "If the British want to elect a gang of tramps to office it 10 none busineza,"
of my
Mr Winston Churchill's sug- gestion for a new
Colonel
Portuguese cos
At The Hague
"moral Indignity."
the
ballot
bux In
supervising
be
states will Signatory morally bound to observe these
rules.
The Commission is to discuss of Implementing the meand Covenant, including an Austra-
an Interna
The Hague, Mar, 26.Generalian proposal for Jose Philippe Rodriguez, Por-tonal Court of Human Rights to tuguese Army Chief of Staff, hear arrived by train here tonight.
complaints of alleged
violations,
Onc man who omitted to place his st in all the ballot boxng was seen by a corrispon- dis- qualified,
AIR CRASH to have his vote
AT LAE
Melbourne, Mar. 26-A con- He was welcomed by Major- Rusia and some other states verted Lockheed Hudson bom- approach 10 General W. Bray of the Dutch have objected to any enforce-ber, which crashed into a house McCormick Army and by the Portuguese ment machinery, on the ground at Lae, Now Guinea, setting it
· Russla,
to the Netherlands, that it would Interfere in a na-oblaze, commented: "Mr Churchill and Minister I are very old friends, and I am Mr M.E.O. de Ollovela Barros. tion's sure I would not say anything-Reuler,
critical of Mr Cherchl. I have
known him since I was a child
at school
England."
" BEST IN TURKEY
Concerning the
newspapers
of Western Europe, he said: "I have admired the way the Bri-
ish have
carried on
terrible paper restriction.
11
I
would hate to have to try and
do the same thing. that they
He belleved
the best
•
have succeeded in doing."
news-
the
in
read
papers
on this
Atlantic were
Turkey. "I
sido ut produced
could
not
them, of course, but their ap-
pearance is
Outstanding
On the Marshall Plan, Colonel
Baldi: McCormick
"From
my
point of view the Marshalt Plan is a matter of domestic polities and it would take too long to elaborate on it,
"Of course, there is a great deal of corruption in the Mar- shall Plan am speaking of American corruption. We have enormous people who made forlunes out of it”
con-
Some who had passions in !'Africa rot "tremendous
cessions," Colonel McCormicz
· said--Heuter.
1648
ter.
domestic
affairs.Neu-
EDITORE PERDE SERVICE, ING —NUTYA TORK
JAURQUEZ-]
"I don't remember his name: exactly, but I do remember it was a name about this long.... if that
will help."
a
killed a
raan and woman last night, according to a report received by the evi aviation authorities here today. The pilot, Harold Gibson Lee, of Victoria, was seriously in jured but was believed today to be out of danger. Lee
was
People met casually along the roads were on the whole refue- tant to tell correspondents how try voted. Some sald they thought if they voted against the Government the authorities
would find out pt it would not be healthy for them.
Others took the view that it was not worth risking voting against the People's Front as it would make no differnce to the result.-Neuter,
special pilot to the former Bri-CHECK YOUR KNOWLEDGE tish
Lord Prime Minister, Baldwin, for two years while Air with the Royal serving
Answers
kind 1. A
of swindile In Force.
which the purchaser is tricked into buying something pre- The dead man was Mr Stan-viously sold to him. 3. Radiolo- ley Flarey, Qantas Empire cator. 3. Iron in oblong bars, as Airways official
It comes from the smelding The bomber swerved into his tarnace. 4. Thoroughbred horse house when It got out of con- racing. 5. Europe. 6. The moon's trol while making acraali- passing between the sun landing-Reuter.
the earth.
INTELLIGENCE TEST SOLUTION
Blue
Er au: the three sets of answers so as to facilitate comparison, while
Dreverving their order;
GEORGE EDWARD WILLIAM GEORGE EDWARD While Pink Blue
Jink Pink Blue WILLIAM
* While
Blue Now a native's Grat and third answers are either both true or both Cute. "If G'a dray and third answers are both trite. † is 13 and Ela W. but & agrees with G about William. So d's arst and third surwers are Ali G's second sewer is a us a white. Then William Br anawer, and also be third are true, in Leaw Wiliam Le Blue Fimporrible as by anawers do not agree with 18h),
So a second answer sa truc la la ■ Pink, İying the Bret lime. And now, it is obvious that Willum "Ei miso a Kinks Auch Ameʻiring the Arst time, and that Baward is a'Bise
London Keprisa Kornicu.
and
TRAPPED ON A TRAIN OF
TERROR!
Marie
Robert
OBERON-RYAN
Charles
Faul
KORVIN-LUKAS
Berlin
Express
BOKE SCHARY
bad by 2011 22017 - Birnctoč Se SAZICES BUEN TE • Zervon Play by BARR MotarDES
NEXT CHANGE ROBERT MITCHUM BARBARA BEL GEDDES In
"BLOOD ON THE MOON"
An RKO Western Drama
PRESS |PHOTOGRAPHS
Copics of photographs taken by the South China Morning Post and Hong Kong
WAD PRESTON FOSTER BURYAHLEEN WHELANG
CHARLIE RUGCLES klášte
A METRO-GOLDWYN.MATER RELEASI
28th
March
Rita Hayworth Larry Parks
in
"Down To Earth"
In Technicolor
COMING TO THE
ROXY
&
BROADWAY
IT'S THE
CHEER LEADER
OF THE YEAR!!
Loretta
Young
Van
Johnson
is a
MOTHER Freshman
TECHNICOLOR
with
RUDY VALLEE-BARBARA LAWRENCE! 20. Directed B
LLOYD BACON-HEALTER MOZINCO
J
ALTERNATE INSERTIONS 10% EXTRA
IF NOT PREPAID A BOOKING FEE OF 50 cents IS CHARGED.
Nemes and addresses should Accompany Advertisements, not necessarily for publication, but to ensure that repiles are re calved by the person for whom they are intended.
We will forward ropiles to the stated address If the ad. vertiser dealres.
All advertisers purporting to loan money must publish their the addresses in names and advertisementa.
if the wants of advertisers ere quickly met and they do not desire any further replies forwarded, wo shall be glad to be notified promptly to that effect when a cultablo acknow. ledgment will be inserted free of charge.
LOST
3500 REWARD offered for informa 11m jending to the recovery of one Kolinsky full length mink coat, ona cloth cunt and one brocade three- Jacket slojen in quarter ngth Maent on the 131 February, In- formation to Box 152, "ILK. Tel,"
FOR SALE
NEW EDITION. The
"POST" Typhoon Map incorporating amend ments to the Local and Non-Local Storm Signal Codes Mounted $5.00. Unmounted $4.00. Obtainable from "B. C. M. Post."
WEIGHTS AND MEASUREMIANTO of Cargo exported from Hongkong and South China complied by the Sworn Measurers. 815 trom the "South China Morning Port"
II.K. Government Import and EX- port Licence Forma. 10 cents such Obtainable et "S. C. M. Post." CASTLETONE FINE STATIONERY. Three pleasing shades in boxes of 23 envelopes and 23 loota note- paper. $3.00 per box, oblainable at
9. C. M. Post"
THE COMPANIES ORDINANCE 1937 Anual Return Forme now an sale at ", C. M. Post, Lid." AIRMAIL Writing Pads, 13. Berib. bling Pads, three sizes 20, 50 centa and $1, "8. C. d. Post"
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS
MAY BC BOOKED AT THE EVERGREEN STORE CORNER OF. NATHAN AND JORDAN ROADS, KOWLOON.
-
ON SALE: "Vegetable Cultivation in Hongkong" by Dr G. A C Ilerkiots. Uver 200 pages: 85 draW- Obtainable st inge. Price $12.
"B. C. M. Post."
WILL FORMS, Power of Attorney Forma Tenancy Agreement Form on sale at "S. C. M. Post" THOSE MAGAZINES you wish to keep will look better and lat longer neatly bound. We speciali In Bookbinding. 23. C. M Post Ltd."
OFFICE STATIONERY, Letter Heads, Metnorandum Forms, Visiting Cards Envelopes ela. Orders taken, 8. C. M. Port PRUNTING of every description in eluding sokleis, Reports, Balenos Isheets. Articles of Association, Prompt service. Apply General
Manager, South China Morning POEL, Lid.
Bookings Now Open! PAPER. White, in sheets 174′′ x
JOHN
BUBULANG
ST. JOHN AMBULANCE
BRIGADE
KOWLOON SUB-DISTRICT TO: KOWLOON RESIDENTS WANTED Books, Periodicals & Maga- zines for distribution to Service Camps in the New Territories. Please communicate with:- I. A. EDWARDS,
c/o Kowloon Hospital WE WILL ARRANGE TO COLLECT
Note. If Donors wish to hand
Tolograph Staff Photographers | books in personally they can do
aro oni vlow in the
Morning Post Building.
ORDERS' BOOKED.
so at the following places:-
1. Despatch Omer, Kowloon
Raliway Station
2.
Kowloon Tong Club.
4. Kowloon Hospital, General
Omco.
FORD'. DRITISH BLUTTING
23" cut to any size, 20 cents per
per 100, sheet, $10.00
Pg. C. Past"
St. John Ambulance
Brigade !
FREE AMBULANCE SERVICE
Tel. Hongkong 26093 Kowloon 50000
NOTICE
TO ADVERTISERS
Advertisers are requested to note that not less than 24 hours netice prior to the day of pub- fication should be given for ail commercial display advertise- sta. ments, change of copy Notices and classified advertise. monta will be received up to 10 a.m. and urgent notices until 11 am. on day of lacus. Batur- daya not later than 0920.
Printed and published by WILLIAMALICK GRINTASK FOR and on behalf of South China Morning Post Lilled at 1- Wyndham Street, City Victoria, la The Colony Hongkong.
of