Assam Reeling Still From Quake Havoc

Calcutta, Sept. 28.

Today, more than a month aftor Nature's mighty hand staggered a million square miles of the face of the earth with the greatest quake in half of a century, smitton North Assam yet reels from the impact of that colossal blow.

Abor

and

Mithmi

turned and cvilized Stomachs heads grew dizzy during tribesmen, in the vast thinly neral administered populated those stupefying minutes ferritory of India's northeastern on India's inauspicious In-up, signs are visible of what dependence Day anniversary might yet prove to be the Inva from -minutes that seemed like ewing of red-hot eternity. Few could have vitals of the earth.

While Reologists and selsmo visualised the trail of death Logists" wrangle over the and devastation those sick-siblity of an unsuspected

lying dormant for ening waves would leave Involcano

$52 hundred centuries having their wake.

belched again into and denty

activity, OVAT un the horl- zo snow-clad mountain-tops

Stupe walls cracker timbers creaked. Terrified etli-

zens, pulling out of momentary gitter scarlet and tow-hanging paralysis, fled screaming out of clouds dully reficet the mysteri dows. Few must have guessed jeus phenomenon below. these were but minor evidences HAZARDOUS FLYING

faress even

of the powerful then at work altering the very

ronfiguration

In the Up

rarched

nimo.

of a large pur-spiere above the stricken Hima- Jayam foothills, reconnaissance

hon of the world's surface.

and are, violently

The earth groaned and yawn-places drop nelplessly into deep ed at hapless believers in their pockets Nately of the great open spaces ituffeted by plunged headlong to a horrible that

swirling currents

ny init extremely

safely

over

the

make hazardous. "Cruting frontiersbronutra's lont Valley of

Ja the bleak mountain reglan far northeast, at the crossroads

TH three culate

one is enabled to com- more completely the peaks magnitude of the disaster that

where the phenomenos had its pretend tirilt.

capped ennw

trembled. Wild brad-hunting has ravaged this once peaceful. teibesmen on the lower slopes prosperous, beautiful reglen of stazed Kazed upward petrifled

whole hillsides

upon them.

ayalinched

as North Assam.

The

moved - the benefit of

Girst mountains

without the

Some rew

homes,

uuake-wrecked subterrancong rumblings, the earth, swallowing! faith, moving mountains, the tumbling

in stature, others bill, and the erupting volcano shrank into comparative insight. do not exhaust the list of terrorE

band woe. fleance,

AMAZON OF EAST

Its

In the upper reaches of the ighty Brahmaputra and

les impressive several hardly tributaries Nature bullt up dans in fewer minutes than the years it took mun to construct Bar- India's malve Sukkur rado.

At one

Not all the death and destruc-

ton immediately and directly

used by the rude August 15 shake-up and its intermittent after-shocks can together com- are with the watery havoc that

its trail. as followed

Brahmaputra, The majestic swollen by the raging torrents unleashed with the shattering of the Nature-made dams across neveral tributaries, has at points overflowed its banks, dive directly at miles apart, and is sweeping of its lushly fertile, well-

time it was feared "The Amazon of the East" had reverted to its prehistoric and was flowing

th

bed

debouch into the China Sea down over thousands of square

Instead of double-right-angling

south

and west into

Since then it

has burst ite

turn dam and returned to

Intented valley,"

its

in its inexorable advance

It

Nothing

normal course of modern times carries all before it. -with a vengeance, More than an stem the 20-foot walls of one miner waterway, however, solid water before which wise to have been dien flee and the unwary are are believed

verted permanently.

Up beyond the onee happy hunting grounds

of scarcely

engulfed.

FLEET OF FOOT

Women and

children share

the fate of their menfolk, the

Sir Owen Dixon old or the young. the rich or

Won't Talk

Sydney, Sept. 28.

the poor, the high-caste Brah- anin or the untouchable cobler. are swamped, with their All

their of hovels, homesteads

THE HONGKONG TELEGRAPH FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1950.

"Past

Champions? Parade

After the Parade of Past champions at the Empress Hall, London, a party was held at a Mayfair sporting club. Two of the "past champions" there included boxers Georges Carpentier and Kid Lewis with them a Miss Sylvia Shelley.

(Londen Express Service). ALS)

Robey's Hope

George Robey, comedian, admires Bob Hope, come.

dian at the premiere of the film, "The Heiress," in London. (London Express Service)

Whitesand Bay

Diversionary In Korea

Made

Raids

(FROM FRANK GOLDSWORTHY)

With the Float, Sept. 28.

Obstruction Expected By Truman

.:

Given

Priority By Tories To Empire Affairs

[BY OUR OWN CORRESPONDENT)

London, Sept. 28.

Gibr

Hongkong Telegraph

Morning Post Building. Hongkong.

Puhilabed daily (afternoona). Pries, 20 cents ber edition Subscription: $4,80 per month.

Postage: China and Macao, 15.00 per month. UK Billah Pommession and Gthey countries. $4.30 poř month.

News contributions, always wet. business communications and

The Conservative Party places the Common-me, hould be addressed to the wealth and Empire affairs second in importanceversements to the Secretary, only to the defence and foreign policy. This is Telephone: 28011 (5 Linea), shown in the agenda for their annual conference K which will open at Blackpool on October 12,

CLASSIFIED

There are four motions In the Colonial Empire, and down for discussion on de- urges the Conservative Party ADVERTISEMENTS

fence and foreign policy. exeri every effort to restore

the confidence of Colonial 20 WORDS $3.00

$1.50 PER DAY.

The first is an emergency peoples in

Britain's capacity motion which will be sub and will to fulfil her imperint mis for 1 DAY PREPAID mitted on behalf of the alon, and declares that while wel-

INSERTIONS coming advances towards self- ADDITIONAL Executive Committee andu

Government within the Empire will probably be the basis as and when the baste require- of the Conservative pelley ments for self-government are 10 cents FER WORD OVER 20 on these matters at the fulfiled, it is firmly opposed to | next General Election.

any breach of these trusts,"

CONSULTING COUNCIL

Births, Deaths, Marriage Personal $5.00 per insertion not exceeding 25 words, 25 cents each additional word.

call for the ALTERNATE

Another motion on defence in i the name of Brigadier Ralph Other motions Rayner. M. calls for an im- tormation of a permanent con- mcdlate Commonwealth consultative ference lo review and streng-elected

counsell comprising representatives

INSERTIONS

10% EXTRA

from IF NOT PREPAID A BOOKING

then the naval,. military and the United Kingdom, Dominion FEE OF 50 cents 15 CHANGED air defences of the Common- and Legislativo Assemblies of wealth.

-had

been tabled

by Mr

10

the Colonies; revival of Empire] Names and addresses should The first motion on Common Day celebrations; effective steps rccompany Advertisements, not wealth affairs-on which to increase

knowledge among necessarily for publication, but Idebale and vole will be taken members of the Party of Com-to ensure that replios are To C.J.N. Alport, M.P. It reads: onwealth and Colonial affairs: colved by the person for whom Washington, Sept. 28.

"That this conference

and closer unity and integration they are Intended. views with President Truman at his with great alarm

Empire administrations We will forward reption to the continwards mutual harmonious the stated address if the ad- press conference today ex-ted unrest and declining stand-

well-being in all of ordered administration pressed the hope that the ards Korean war would be a peace wound

up with satisfactory to everyone.

The President said that he had no Information regarding peace feelers rumoured to have been put out by North Korea.

Mr Truman repeated a state- ment that he made last week that the United Nations would have to act first on the question of their forces proceeding north

of the 38 Parallel,

A State Department spokes--

GROUNDNUTS

GO SLOW ORDERED

accepted vertier desires.

Gold."

All advertisere purporting to Later at the conference the loan money must publish thair

and

addresses in the delegates will discuss a motion nam

advertisements. expressing concern at the grave threat to the Empire resulting If the wants of advertiser from the spread of Communis- are quickly met and they do

views

Colonial not desire any further replied amant; students In this country, It urges forwarded, we shall be glad to

to immediate action

that counter be notified promptly to Commulst propoganda among effect when a suitable acknow. these students and high priority tedgment will be insorted in Colonial development plans of charge.

C

frap

for the expansion of establish-

nents of

university status,

The importance the Parly

WANTED KNOWN

domestle affairs is reficcted in glassware, furniture, de

London, Sept. 28 Britain today decided to "go slow" In its vast multi- man explained today that million sterling plan to

places on n dynamic policy in EXPERT PACKER: For chinawat President was referring last

Woodca week

of the raise food from East Afri- the number of motions on the Flease write Xiu Kee, 24, Hennessy to the question

strapping muppliers forces

occupy Northern

can groundnuts.

housing problem which have Food, 1st floor. Tel. 25261. 3-6 p.m. and not to the purely

the The Overseas Food Corpora-Leen placed on agenda. whether question of

tion, the

There are 19 down for discus Government agency MacArthur found It

for the controsion in the third session, versial programme. announced the that it would stop planting at Kongwa, Tanganyika, one its biggest centres.

Korea

millary

General

necessary to pursue the North responsible

Korean Communists Parallel.

over

of

PRESS

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Ansient CHIVALRY

Script. An

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to be reconsi- PHOTOGRAPHS attractive stationery

report by a of experts that large-

The President was reminded of this State Department inter-

Schemes for the development pretation of his remarks today of Gongwa are and it was pointed out that the dered following a

resolution passed

by group original the United Nations' Security Council included instructions to scale plantation should be dis

continued.

photographs Morning Post take action in the "area"

The Corporation acte Korea and not just south

mediately after the experts en-taken by the South China New the 38th Parallel.

nouneed their view that fur- The President agreed that ther work on glens drawn up Morning Post and Hong Kong the original Security Council test year would be "ill advised." resolution was very broatl.

of

ot

Coplon of

They urged that only 12,000 Telegraph Staff Photographer: neres should be cropped In Inench of the next three years

at

The President warned that there should be no ict-up United States defence efforts the end of the Korean war.

Ec

the United said that 12:31 2 tremendous job for whead in i preparation

States

Tho British frigate, Whitesand Bay, it can now bo rovealed, carried a mixed American and British raiding force to make diversionary landings near Kunsan, on the wast Korea coast, two nights bofore the main amphibious force defence, landed 100 miles furthor north at Inchon.

When some of the mem- with

wartime night landings.

experience of

He said fit there would, of be an efTurt by some course, people to block the whole pro- granite but he hoped that they cattle and crops, their goods and bers of the raiding party They trained together under would not succeed, th-were left behind after with great secrecy in Japan.

tu latte questioning he made enemy fire, Whitesand Bay,

commanded clear that he was referring druwal under

Lieut-Commander J. V. to his political opponents in Con- the Whitesand Bay sailors by went to the beaches twice Brothers, was sent to a Japanese grey-Reuter,

to port with in the ship's motorbent pick them up.

For Owen Dixon, the United Nations Bedintor for Kashmir, their chatteis would make un comment on his For the fleet of font the reach- fatture to find an acceptable ing of sanctuary in highlands, solution to the deadlock between in the tall roofs of sturdy Juda and Pakistan whin be re-lags or in the tree-tops. It is turned here yesterday

not journey's enrl. It is only the All he would say was " was beginning of new expericures

terrifiedly

watching the of terr received with courtesy by ha

rise of His creepint

the muddy and Pakistan

of watching for the

The 111ixitd forre tepunt is in the hands of the waters,

from plone which volunteers United Nations Sip Owen will food-dropping

his duty Australian High Couri Bench Reuter.

now resume

leaders."

included Amerivin

indication of her mission. Not until the troops Jcame up the

stangway did the

officers or crew know they were Four-Power Group

Elu aid in the landing operations. |

trigl the ship

crept Report Denied

At va the might provide the wherewithal Army units and from the Royal

the gnawing pangs Marines, and crews of British through shallow channel. T appease of hunger, or watching for the ships in the United Nations fleet boat-borne rescue squad that

Lovell Rejoins Marshall

ny never come.

Meanwhile, the

turbid flood waters hurry past, heavily laden with bloated corpses, uprooted trees and the debris of wrecked homes.

The

extensively in. nost A former Under-Secretary of State, Mr Robert A. Lovell, was undated area is the 5,00 square Subansiri chosen by Presiden: Truman to-miles between the

Washington, Sept. 28.

day to be Deputy Secretary of and Dilang basins north of the

Delence.

Brahmaputra, of which the hordest hit portion in turn is of worth 1300 square miles

1e succeeds Mr Stephen Early, who is leaving the DeLakhimpur Sub-division. fence post on Saturday to re-

It has been olleially estimated that knowIL fatalities to date property damage

Unicial rupeca.

turn to private business.

WFTU MAN

NOT WANTED

IN CEYLON

Kunsan and anchored a mile off shrines, The raiding party were paddled silently in by rubber boats.

A

London, Sept. 28.

Office British Foreign poitesmais denied today a report Powers that th Big Western had suitgesled to Turkey, Greece, Yugoslavia and Italy that they should "join together to promote prosperity and rein- force their defences against the Russian-led Cominform".

Commenting a press report,

They were

the already on beaches when they came under fire from machine-gun nests.

COLONEL LEFT

on a

It was never intended that he said that so far as the Bri- they should hold the beach tish Government was concerned indefinitely, so a withdrawal the report was quite untrue. was ordered. One officer, one Reuter. Colombo, Sept. 28,

one corporal, all Sergeant and The Ceylon Government American, were wounded. has ordered Thomas Fulton

The corporal was carried back McWhinnie, who arrived to the ship, where he led, of the Secretary of Defence, will amount to thousands of here by air yesterday, to Shortly after the withdrawal General George C. Marshali, milions under whom

he served as opinion is that it will be months leave the country by tot was realised that an Ameri- can colonel had been left on Under-Secretary of State, He before anything like my exact morrow morning as his pre-shore, There was no time to

sence is undesirable" banking toll of life and property can be is in the investment

the present time. business in New York-Reuler, computed.--United Press,

Mr Lovell is a staunch friend total 1,000,

KOITONG PRESS PERVICE, INC. -NUKVA YORK LY Y

GENCY

of

Kollet

"I'd like to marry you, Heary. The only thing that holds me back is a little common sense.”

slow rubber

Centenarian

Celebrates

London, Sept. 28. at send

back the

A Yorkshire businessmanı, boats. Sub-Lleut J. A. Craw Theodore C. Taylor, who tord of Whitesand Bay and

cently celebrated his 100th birth- Mr McWhinnie, said to be volunteer crew of sailors with day, welcomed over 100 guests

ju British subject, is an employce Bren guns for protection went at a luncheon in his honour at

of the Press Division of the in the ship's motorbaut and the Savoy Hotel today. World Federation of Trade found the colonel on a neigh-

Unione

bouring island.

A wool manufacturer, Taylor

A Fergeant is known to have is u pioneer of sharing profts with workers in the Industry.--- A spokesman of the External been led, and two officers are Reuter. Affairs Department said that in missing. Commonwealth citizens who had From the beach came the fashi valki passports did not need of an emergency plek-up algnal. visas for Cusion provided they | A motorbool went in again to were genuine tourists.

rescue un American offleer who and stayed behind in a desperate effort to carry a dying fellow pinced before the Prime Minis-enteer down a cliff to the beach. ter, Mr D. S. Senanayake, before only to ind that the last rubber

Mr McWhinnie's

case

ו לחיר

it was decided whether he coula Lent had been deflated by

stay.

machine-gun Are.

the

1.

INTELLIGENCE TEST SOLUTION

Madison nomad 13).. 3. Roosevelt voler lose). 3. Washing- ion (no night waal. 4. Won

[slow in 5. Adams tas mad).

London Exters Service.

Answers

who were 1. Shannon. 2. The alchemist,

Earlier this

month the There were no casualties CHECK YOUR KNOWLEDGE Government refused visas to among

Navy crew nor delegates of WFTU reprezenta-among the British members of tives of Soviet and Chinese the ralding force,

of Lieut. Brandt of Hamburg in 1860. 3. Inbour organisations invited to under the command attend the annual sessions of E.G.D. Pounds of the Royal The selence of the atmosphere. the Communist-d Ceylon Marines.

4. Forte, meaning loud. 5. This Trade Union Federation, which Later both American and Bri name was given to the Puritans opened here today,

Hish-members--of_the_ raiding who sailed in the "Mayflower" force wore landed at Inchon to from Plymouth, England and

It had been expected that Mr Join the marines and army landed at Plymouth Rock, Mas- McWhinnie would address the troops moving towarda Seoul... sachusetts in 1020. 0. William Sessions-Reuter

London Express Service.

McKinley.

instead of the 80,050 acres planned in the original scheme. The report is to be accepted in Its "mal essentials," the Corporation suid.-Reuter.

are on view in the Morning Post Building.

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