1950-09-02 — Page 9

China Mail 德臣西報 中國郵報 All

Back-garden swing for quads

THE CHINA MAIL, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1950.

IDDON'S

No chlid can resist a swing and when, like Mr. Robert Taylor, father of the Edmonton (London, England) quads, you have four children of the same age, there is nothing for it but to provide four swings. Go he built them in the back garden and now the Taylor quads, who will be two years old on October 21, just can't halp swinging. Here, left to right, are Kevin, Annette, held by her father, Paul and Robert.-AP Photo,

U.S. WILL WITHDRAW FLEET FROM FORMOSA WHEN KOREA WAR ENDS

Washington, August 31.

President Truman today gave assurances that the United States Sovanth Fleet would be withdrawn from Formosan waters on the tormination of the Korean war.

At the outbreak of the Korean wor President Truman ordered the United

States Seventh Fleet to prevent any attock on Formosa.

LIMIT TO KREMLIN SUCCESS

Lake Success, August 31.

Mr. Warren Austin, chlef United States delegate to the United Nations Security Council, today sald the Krem- lin cannot fool all the peo- ple all the time.

Mr. Austin told the nation in a radio address that the Russian delegate, Jacob Malik, had tried all the obstructionist tactics he knew to paralyse the Security Council during his Presidency in August,

"I believe the people of Asin, the people of Europe and people of America

share

the

anc

The President was asked at dise coming to the United States. his Press conference whether These unions did not have any his recent letter on Formosan business doing a trick like that. policy to Mr. Warren Austin, not set up

Foreign policy, he observed, was United States representative unions.

by longshoremen's Asked if he intended to

to the United Nations, meant do anything about this situation, that when peace and securly he said it would be taken care of,

were restored in Korea the Seventh Fleet would be with- drawn.

the

this

DON

DIARY

and

New York, Tuesday. ing heat and ace their sons being, girl, in the whole wide Now Are there any bids from the shoved into uniform, the goods World.

I like this loyalty, floor? The U.S. Government in the shops dwindling, and the

The Ra taxes mounting. calls for .contractors to build leadership and they, are not gut-men.

They long for publie is full of stalwart King's And it would be a pra- hydrogen-bomb factories andþing it.

sperous acquisition. sites on which to construct

Wall Street 'booms back Understandably, the magic of the bull market market tosses its them.

the Roosevelt hame lures them, bors, Arkansas offers her lonely and there is a full-blooded move- hills, and Tennessee, Mississippiment in town to gat Franklin and. Alabama are all staking Delano Roosevelt Jun., elected as claims na Ideal spots for H-bomb |Governor. manufacture,

But there are no bids from Bri- tain. We, who helped to develop the atom bomb and even HOW

Man to watch

When I first came here in 1937 the United States had a $50,000,- 000,000-a-year economy. Now it is well on its way to becoming a

That, $300,000,000,000 cconomy. is Mr. Truman's avowed goal.

It's a lot of money. But is it in Korea? not-not

haven't a slagle ono of our own, uke his father, talks ilko hin. The bleak reports say

Young Roosevelt looks just helping the soldiers are not being consulted about the hydrogen Hell-bomb

mlies like him, and attracts | 301. which the scientists say will be just tolk like him. about 1,000 times more powerful than anything its the atomic stockpile.

The British Government is up parently. not interested In hydrogen bomba.

It wasn't interested enough In atom bombs to collect a nestful

The wedding business is also elding the prosperity wave. The Watch him-he might wit In bridal march has been the hit the White House some day.

parade since the fighting began.

Couples crowd the register offices, and the sales. of ringa, liverware, jewellery, wedding dresses, and furniture soar. Only the cynical suggest that defer- ment of married men from mill- service may have something to do

Already the political campaign is warming up, and every sort of issue is being dragged on to the platform.

Some candidates even suggest

with the

of eggs of its own, and It is in- that this would be a good time with this rush to the altar.

'different to assembling some hy-for Canada to merge drogen bombs.

United States,

The policy of "We can always borrow the stuff from Americh is again being pursued, The kumiliation grows worse,

Our American friends nre Duzzled by this British lack of self-assertion.

They felt alightly guilty about using British and Canadian brains to invent the atom bomb and then claiming it as an all- American possession; but as Hrl-

Everyone is buying clothes, und But strangely enough the

in fashions the trend is the Span- Canadian response has been moat ish style cummerbunds, boleros, rigid, and two spokesmen train and bicornes adorn the women, North of the border, Mr. James and matador's pants are being Roc

and Mr. Hugh Boyd, say worn for lounging. To look like this: "We feel Canada ought not. a

or bullfighter to disregard any reasonable offer. grandea is to be smart.

Spunish We shall therefore be glad

The entertainments circuit re- absorb the United States,

mains jittery, Several actors have applied for entertainment duty at the front.

'King's men'

to

#

Al Jolson, now 02, asked the

tai didn't seem to mind, why No, there are no takers in the War Department to send him to should they worry?

Dominion, It prefers to remain Koren, and when told about the And now they embark upon part of

the British Common-discomforts there said: "I'm not the building of the hydrogen wealth.

worried about rats-I'm used to bomb, no doubt, using British Sometimes I think the United them in Hollywood." brains again, and no one in Bri-States would like also to be a

tain has the Initiative to Jay: "Look,

some of these marbles should belong to us."

have

They

no

to

Britain's Alexander Korda and part. There is almost as much America's David Selznick Interest here in the Royal Family,renewed their dispute, particularly the Princesses, as in should get together this is Britain.

time for Anglo-Americans It's bad business There have been long reports wrangle,

all the week in the papers und There has rarely been such on the air about the new royal self-effacement. We

be- baby, and Princess Margaret is coming mere swingers on Uncle easily the most-written-about Sam's coat-tails.

are

We rush troops from Hong Kong to Korea at American in- sistence, but never even request an American popgun for Malaya. Malaya is not merely the for- goitch war here: it has not even been heard of.

worst

ATLANTIC PACT SECRETARIAT

London, August 31. The 12 North Atlantic Pact deputies today agreed on the

Hero No. 1.

Hopalong Cassidy, as played by Bill Boyd, is way out in front as public hero No. 1. Two years This year ago Boyd was broke.

ho will net over $1,000,000,

Bing Crosby and Mrs. Frank- lin D. Roosevelt will appear in "March of Time" documentaries on the Marshall Plan,

Is

Arnong

He replied that Formosa situation was one settlement within the framework country had been trying to get obviously be the burning issue of reaching a decision the proposals politicians a narrow mind and a of the Japanese peace treaty. similarly When this effort

This framework, he added. concerned the Allies who fought in the Japanese war and those Allies who now had forces in Japan,

occupation

It would not be necessary to keep the Seventh Fleet In Formosan waters if the Korean war were settled.

Questioned about the possibility that Communist China would in- Larvene in the Korean war, Mr. Truman said he hoped that there Mwas no great danger that Com Malik "sold "just" did not make munist China would become

quality in common-good sense," sold Mr. Austin, "What

in-

tip

is

will

In response to a question con- corning, reports that the United States would increase its forces in Western Germany to streng- then Western Europe against any possible Communist aggres- alon, the President said he was not giving thought to such an ing crease of present-Reuter and United Press.

Albania lodges

We

Nailing a lie

FOR

SMART

HEALTHY

HAIR

BRYLCREEM

to be sure

When you use Brylcreem, your hair will never let you down. It will stay in perfect position throughout the most hair-ruffling day | Soft, glossy, without a trace of gumming—that's what Brylcreem'd hair means to you, And it means much more than that. For Brylcreem controls your hair the healthy way. Iu pure emulsified oils give the roots a chance and banlits Dry 'Halt, Dandruff and Tight Scalp. Ask for Brylcreem-most

mea do.

BATDE

Keep Fit & Fresh

in

AERTEXT

This well-cut sports shirt is mado in Aertex, the original Cellufer fabric. It is specially designed to keep your body at an even tem- perature. Tiny cells in the weave enable your body to breathe. You will keep fit and stay fresh in Aciter. Always choose Aertex for coolness and fit-in men's, women's and children's shirts, underwear and pyjamas,

AERTEXS

-look for this tab

BB.JP/7

on every garment Write for fully illustrated catalogue to Cellular Clothing Co. Ltd., 165, Oxford Street, London, England

NOW OPEN

KOWLOON'S LARGEST FINEST SERVICE STATION

The tempests all rage abour

Margle Hart, the strip-teaser Kordo, and the American row has

who is now playing straight become raucous, The

"It's more The President

nsked to Was

casualty is America's bi-partisan arrangements for the organisa dramatic roles, says:

fun speaking your lines thun there is tion of their permanent Secre- showing them." comment on claims that control foreign policy, and of American exports to Russia scrious crossfire, as the States tariat.

Latest slogan In the anti- become disunited. American controls overall was too lax.

They also reviewed without "Don't be a Grabbit."

boarding cumpaign

called fur were sufficiently strict, and

The conduct of the war

Wit

.other countries to lighten

compensating the election this autumn, and fur

governments President Truman's Democrats who have switched factories from wide mouth usually go together.

export production to rearmament effort on a shoestring will only Footnote: Running the defenco successful he added, there

look like getting badly charred. be no further trouble.

I think this "bitter brawl is

The deputies were still await result in a bed lacing. bad, business for everyone, partling the report of the Working cularly as the British, despite our Group of five on the revised unstinted aid, are on the receiving defence proposals of the European end of many of the insults,

The Governments.

delay understood to be due to the Incu merely that the Group is not collating the revised defence con- have had to digest the tributions of the Atlantic Pact Russian crabmeat, and now the Governments which were sub- Hearst Press talks of Britain sell-mallied to President Truman carly ing the Soviet "One old English In August. barbed wire on which, even now, our. G.Is may be impaled."....

Mr. Victor Riesel, the industrial columnist, writes: "Isn't it true, Ernie Bevin, that you, the old teamster, the old Labour chief, want to do business with the troops now killing our GIS?" Lake Success, August 31. Of course, it is a damned lie; The United Nations Secre- but Riesel prints the poison and tariat has received a letter from hundreds of thousands of Ameri- |M. Michal Prifti, the Albanian | cans swallow it, Neither would he comment on Deputy Foreign Minister, con-

When the Working Party have At the moment the voice of completed their report, forecast of opinion over his difference

Dougies plaining of nine alleged armed America is a shrill scream, and for tomorrow afternoon, it Formosa with General

It gives me a largo-sized head-expected to contain estimates and MacArthur, All he said was provocations on the frontier by ache. that he regarded the Incident as Greece between June 9 and 25

Every day there are new shouls recommendations on

points, The letter, dated July 7, claim-

from the politicions "Let's jus the Reds. Republican Senators promptlyed that these "provocations were

The Korean war may The deputies are still hoping to re-committed "Intentionally" by the call fron! hell-hole."

last seven Mr. Austin pointed out that the denounced the President's

10 years Troops conclude the present session by Soviet delegate had

Saturday, though they still have vowed, marks as an invitation to the Greek Government against the when he walked out in January, Communists to grab Formosa, territorial integrity and national baking pavements in the blister-them-Reuter.

The patient people pound the all their major decisions ahead of that he would boycott the Coun-

[sovereignty" of Albania. c until the delegate from No- tionalist China was expelled. Mr. Austin then pointed out that Dr. F. Tslang, the representative of Nationalist China, was still sitting on the Council.

good sense. Nobody, not

Kremlin,

can fool all

people all the time."

even volved.

the

No answer

Mr. Austin sald Mr. Malik had failed to block United Nations) military assistance to the Re-

public of Korea, to weaken the United Nations through spurious proposals for peace, to sow dis- sension among Council members and to label the United States the aggressor in Korcu. The United Nations had gained strangth and purpose through

ro-

He could not answer a porter who asked if United Nations forces would -cross North of the 38th Parallel.

Mr. Malik's return to the Security

*** | closed..

Council.

"In ordering Mr. Malik to re- turn to the Council, the Kremlin did the free world a good turn," he declared.

+

Senator Alexander Smith, member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, pased the question: "Is it a bid to Russla to end the Korean war with the offer of turning Formosa over to the Communists in return?"

Senator. Kenneth Whorry, Senate Republican leader, said it was wishful thinking to believe

a complaint

M. Pri protested against what he called "these new provocative acts of the Athens Government,' He declared that they "continue to be convincing proof that the Athens Government deliberately provoked serious incidents to dis- turb peace in the Balkans and in Europe.”

Mr. Malik's return had turned Formosa could be kept out of The letter stated that eight in- the world spotlight on the Seeur-Communist hands without thecldents were due to penetrations ity Council and had made the help of the Seventh Fleet, Issues of the Korean case as clear

of Albanian territory by Greek Mr. Truman was asked if there soldiers. claimed that the was any good news he could Greeks opened up machino-gus

It is also tackling the two male issues before the present series of deputies' meetings. These are to make an estimate of the gop between the total of the overall defence

and the pro- programme posed contributions of member Governments, and the more dim cult problem of deciding how the gap is to be bridged.

both these

Russians force "British Ally" to

stop publication

London, August 31,

as the water of Lake Champlain, pass on to the pubile from reports and mortar fire and threw hand-"British Ally”, the Russian-language official British

United Press..

UK CATHOLICS

APPEAL

i by the Army Chief of Staff, grenades at frontler guards.

General Lawton Collins, and the

Navy Chief, Admical Forrest The ninth incident was alleged Sherman, who recently visited to have occurred when a Greek Japan and Korea, Mr. Truman plane flew over Albanian terri- smiled and said he could, not tory.

London, August 31, The British Catholic Young comment. Men's Society has usked the The President rejected Re The Albanlan letter, which did Secretory of the Labour Party, pubilean demands for the roalgn- not ilst any casualties, was sent Mr. Morgan Phillips, and the ation of the Defence Secretary, to the United Nations Special Labour deleration due to visit Louis Johnson, and said Mr. Committee on

the Balkans Yugoslavia this week-end, to in- Jonson had in no way embar-Reuter. tercede with Marshal Tile for the rassed him and he was giving no release of Archbishop. Josef thought to any change in the De- Stepinac, the Catholic newspaper, fence post. "Universe," said today,

..

Monsignor Stepluse, the Catho- lle Archbishop of Zagreb - and Primate of Yugosigvia, was sen- tenced to 16 years forced labour In October, 1960 for "crimes against the State"-Reuter.

* Teheran, August 31.- Promier All Bazmara said to day that the Irano-Soviet trade talks are progressing in a friend ly atmosphere, and hoped,' they would be concluded successfully, soon. KÖNNEN

Peace guarantoo

on

JEWISH ATTACK ON ARABS

certing his present views

Iti response to a question con-- Amman, Jordart, August 31. charices for success of his Point have attacked Arab territory neur Jews were reported today to

Four programme for aid to Hebron last night with two tanks underdeveloped areas, President carrying soldiers who pierced the Truman bald that he felt strongly. Arab Ines near Balijibrin, 10 it would be the best guarantee of kilometres North of Hebron, open peace that the United States in fire on the inhabitants, who could put: outs

exchanged fire and forced them to Smiling, he told reporters that retreat inside their own territory, some time he would illustrate to them on a globe how simple 'it'

wookly newspaper published by the British Embassy in Moscow, will coase publication next Sunday, the Foreign Offico announced today.

}

six from each side were killed. J'achievement in the war - against | Fordonis"; DONGJETA,,

An official statement issued The statement added that Im- here said "The Soviet-author-portant British foreign policy Illes have compelled the de-statements were always printed in full and that "British · Alt,” cision by restricting the cir-was the only accurate printed culation of newspaper.”

ource of such Information in the The fall in sales this year to Soviet Union, and 19,600 copies weeldy moans that the newspaper can only be pro- The British statement reported duced at a honvy loss, it was ex- | that when the unsold coples of plained:

the January, 1950, issue were re- "British Ally" was first pro turned to the British Embassy in 1942, as duced during the war in August, Moscow, they were in such a con. counterpart to thedition that there was season to publication by the Soviet Embellove that they had not been bassy in London of the Soviet distributed. war news weekly, now known as jɛ- the "Soviet Wookly.".

"Their insolled condition mada Today's Foreign. Office- siste- it clear that they had ⠀ not, in ment, says that its original pur fact, bean sent to the unini sel)- pore was to inforth, the Boviet ing points throughout the Soviet public or about «Great -- Britain's | Union. for distribution,"

Office After the war, ita purpose was is the common nomy

dible conclusion thet na deliberate described as being to give, full policy the Soviet authorities havo and securals laformation about decided to strangle 'Belish Ally" vr Britalo's recovery and about Brlei by denying Boviet. readers the Lah dominik ind forefan, poller chance of burma, It"—itoulari

The newspaper "Ellalast," would be to put this programme Monnwille 700 Arabs Living quoting an Informed source, said into effect MNALEN the Soviet Union has agreed to "The President gave a blum nearby within Israel territory the formation of an Irano-Sovial scolding to longshoremen unions were forced out from their homes "comumbaion to study border dis- which" bayo refused ⠀ to unload | scross the border near Beltjibrin.

putes United. Frozzi Seemed stilarents of Russian- merchan=|--Aerocisted Fresse

CALTEX

THREE ENTRANCES —— EASY ACCESS

· THREE WIDELY SPACED PUMPS—NO WAITING

FIVE FAST ATTENDANTS —— PROMPT· EFFICIENT SERVICE

EXPERT

CALTEX

LUBRICATION

JUNCTION OF NATHAN, LAICHIKOK AND ARRAN RDS,

Comments

Approved members can add comments, bookmarks, and private notes.

No comments yet.

Private Research Note

Private notes are available after approval.