1951-01-18 — Page 3

China Mail 德臣西報 中國郵報 All

Italian Reds New Delhi Worried

Rebel

Rome, Jan. 17.

Three Parliamentary members

of the Italian

Socialist Parly today roś

·belled agalsist the pro- Communist luc followed

by their leader.

In a motion submitted to a five-day Congress of the Hallan Socialist Party, opening at Bologna today, they urged the party to adopt a "new and realis- tlo" policy of caution.

Signor Pleiro Neopi's party claims a membership of 700,000,~~~Renter.

CONFLICT

OVER U.S.

ALLIANCE

TERMS

Washington, Jun. 17. The Secretary of State, Mr Dean Acheson, said to- day that there legal

By Defence

On

Position Northern Borders

Kalimpong, India, Jan. 17. The Indian Defence Minister, Sardar Baldev Singh, was reported today hurrying Northward to bulwark his country's Northern frontier against the threat of expanding Chinese Communist operations.

An informed source said that Baldev Singh and his party were en route to Gangtok, capital of Sikkim, Indian princely protectorate.

At Gangtok, there is to be a conference with representatives of Sikkim and adjoining Bhutan which border Red-invaded Tibet.

America To

Double

Air Forces

nt

Washington, Jan, 17, Lieutenant-General Edwards,

Deputy Chief WRS no Air Force the Staff, salt obligation on

Air Force was being built to a

Treaties by which undertook their defenco signed recently.

India

were

But arrangements are said to have been made for his in- spection of the registration of Tibetans entering India and also operations by frontler

night guards

Indians ficials

of

Government of-

were represented worried

reports

by the collapse of the of

Tibet Eastern defence and Qie unopposed Chinese advance. (In London today, India's

on Wednesday the Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehm told reporters he did United States, as an Atlan-strength of 95 to 100 air groups not consider the Red Chinese tie Pact partner, to send about double its pre-Korean | entry into Tibet a "military troops to Europe.

effective

sizu.

he

threat to India, but added India liked neither the act nor it was done, the way it

becausa "It does bring into the situation rather now factors certain which may cause trouble.")

SERIOUS PROBLEM There

official was no

con- firmation of the stories of Red It had been announced

into pro- penetrations

Assam and vlously that the goal was sub- Nepal, nor was there any in- stantially

than 80 air formation as to whether

Korean Invading the

Communists were groups. Before

48 Chinese or Tibetans. had

Some

He told reporters that the

General Edwards' statement, United States hud undertaken

made before

Armed a House le discuss and work out with

Services sub-committee, was the treaty partners the steps rst official ts

word of the Air to make Article 5 of the North Atlantic Force's latest goals. Treaty, which

an attack on tories to regard one partner as an attack on all.

The New York Times said consult the President should Congress on questions of post- war, the Air Force

ing

obilges signa-

although groups. troops overseas

he has "oruple power" the Constitution to do so.

under

more

General Edwards did not fix a target date for reaching

the The chief reason for obtain-new goal. However, Air Force,

the

the

sources here report Communisty have entered Assam and Nepal in frontier areas the Chinese claim os their own. ing Congressional approval is sources said it was hoped the Informants said. India was new strength could be reached being faced suddenly with # between Jan. 1 and July 1, serious if not impossible task of 1953-Uuited Press,

Preventing

that "a policy so crucial 35 this ... vannot be as success ful in its purposes as it should be unless it eommands bi-par- tisan support in this

country

and imless bl-partisan support has been demonstrated beyond

af pessible doubt."

WHOLLY NECATIVE

"wholly The paper said the negative" Wherry resolution should be pul side in favour of a more positive statement on the issue.

The Times proposed that the key test vote in the Senate shouhi he on a-resolution–which "would put the Senate on record

the the

Nehru's Talks

In Paris

The

Oerlikon's

Sales To

Egypt

infiltrations along! almost 1,000 miles of bor- der from Nepal to Burma.

This Grea of tremendous mountain ranges, large rivers and jungle is unexplored for the most part, with the inhabitants possibly having closer ties with Tibet and China than with India.

and

Anti-Eisenhower

Outburst

17.

Rome, Jan. Italy's 2,000,000-mem- ber Communist party called for a general wirike and widespread demon. strations in protest against General Dwight Elsen- hower's visit to Rome on

Thorsands of police are

ready

Communist

diaperso дву demonstra-

Hons. Security MICABUTCH are the strictest since the war.-Unlied Press.

Liaquat Ali Calls On

Attlee

London Jan. 17.

COUNTING VOTES IN MOSCOW

A picture from behind the Iron Curtain shows members of the commission of election precinct No. 23 Stalin District, Moscow, where Generalissimo Stalin was candidate to the Moscow Soviet of Working People's Deputies, counting ballot

papers after Deputies' election.London Express Service.

Hoping For Solution Of Indo-Pakistani Dispute

London, Jan. 17.

Mr Robert G. Menzies, the Australian Prime Minister, dis- closed here today that it was his proposal that British Common- wealth troops should be used in Kashmir to maintain order during a plebiscite to decide the State's future.

Mr Menzies was speaking here at a press conference about the informal talks on Kashmir which took place in London The

Prime Minister of between the Commonwealth Prime Ministers. Pakistan, Liaquat · All Khan, cancelled plans to return to He said that if the Kashmir problem were not Karachi tonight and is now solved, "I believe the consequences will be very far-

reaching."

tentatively planning to leave on) Friday

the Prime Minister, Mr Clement

Mr Menzies said he agreed with the view that Liaquat All Khon visited the the difficulty did not appear to be insuperable. “I Attlee, last night to thank him still believe the Kashmir problem can for

the Commonwealth Pre-

miers earnest attempt to help straightened out," he stated. solve the Kashmir dispute and cultural

Tibet's Chumbi Valley thrusts dagger-dike between Silckim and Bhutan,

presumably would make it easy for the Communists to operate in the area.

Tibet's refugee Dalai Lama tras been het the Chumbi Valley town of Yatung, 16 miles from the Indian frontier, since Jan. 2. -Associated Press.

be

Mr Menzies made his state-time recognising that peace greatly regretted leaving Lon- ment about Commonwealth might be continued. They bad don with the deadlockt still un-roops in reply to a direct ques- to have a developing economy. solved.

tion on this subject.

"If we thought war was in- evitable, we could abandon all Meanwhile, the

He said: "Our proposal was these Indian

things. Possibly that is Prime Minister, Mr Jawaharlal that the internal and external what the enemy wants us to do. Nehru, who left London this security of Kashmir should be We must strike a balance." morning, cold Liaquat All attended to by a mixed Com- "Bertie, Jan. 19.

Khan had said things hervenght monwea

monwealth.fores Indeed this. Gun

not to have Oerlikin

said in disclosing was my own proposal." the Commonwealth Premiers'

They had a continuing desire to help. If they could at any proposals for Kashmir.

towards a time help

solution they would do so,

Mr Menzies said: "We know that anything which lends to differences in the Indian sub- continent is bad for us and for the world.”

"It is not Middle East private

The Oerlikon company stated Defence

The

cannons

added.

usual to disclose conversations," ne

Liaquat All Khan said he was returning to Karachi

the limit

was reaching Discussions

London, Jan. 17.

The meeting between Egyptian Ambassador in Lon-

don, Abdul Fattah Amr Pasha,

Swiss as believing American troops Works today denied reports should be sent to Europe for from Egypt, in comection with

strengthening the purpose of

of pending trial high defensive alliance of the Egyption officials, that the com- free nations against the threat pany had benefited from illicit of further Soviet aggression. It gains through the sale of arms said this rolution would better to the Egyptian Government. not be debated until General Eisenhower returns from Europe, It said: "Assuming a that the sale of Oerlikon guns favourable report on the part of and a number of rifles

to the Eisenhower, there will be Egyptian Government had been every good reason to look for- completely straight forward. ward with confidence to' the result."-United Press,

had already been made by the Spanish Gov- ernment's works at Reinosa, in Northern Spain, but technicians and the Pakistan Prime Minis- from the Oerlikon works had gone there to supervise the 1er, Mr Linggat All Khan, con- cluded the informal talks on manufacture of these guns.

Middle East defence problems

by-product! been a This had raised the price of which have been

Prime the cannons but the Egyptian of the Commonwealth

Conference, li Was Government was well aware of Ministers'

well- this and had accepted the understood in usually

diplomatic quarters estimates

The informed submitted.

here tonight. A company added that the

Today's talks was the second count had been settled by the

Premier's Egyptian Government and said during the Pakistan

present visit to London. that it there had been any in-

In usually well informed ternai irregularities in Egypt,

here it was thought it was something of which the quarters

that Mr Liaquat All Khan had Oerlikon company knew

given Amr Pasha an account of solu.ely nothing.-Reuter.

The provisional conclusions about the defence of the Middle East which emerged from the Commonwealth Premiers' Con- ference the belief that it may influence better Anglo-Egyptian relations on the defence of the Suez Canal and the Middle East generally-Reuter.

Paris, Jan. 17. The Indian Prime Minister Mr Jawaharlal Nehru, and the French Ministers he would see during his stay in Paris, would discuss

said Indo-China, French Foreign Office spokes man today.

Afterwards a statement would be issued explaining the nature of the talks, he said, "and I hope some light many be thrown on the situation."-Reuter,

Shock For Nisei Handed Out By US Appeal Court

DC-

ab-

bc

Soviet Property Transferred

United

д

that

CANADIAN VIEW བ་མན|:ཀྱང ཡོད lhe Canadian Mr Louis St. Prime Minister, Laurent, said here that the Western nations

of the Com- monwealth had been told the offer to send composite armed force to troubled Kashmir to koop the pence might be "misinterpreted" in the Far East. The idea been to relieve

had tense situation by withdraw-

the

of India and ing troops Pakistan, involved in the dispute over Kashmir until a plebiscite ove could be held there to determine the future of the State.

a

feared

to the

Mr Menzies said he cause the People's impatience that there was no prospect of con- another attempt being made by cerning Kashmir and public the Commonwealth countries to opinion was steadily mounting solve the Kashmir problem be- lowards boliing

(The Prime Minister of Pakis- point-United fore the dispute went the Press.

tan, Mr Liaquat All Khan, told Nations. Discussing possible Japanese a press conference in London rearmament, Mr Menzies said: yesterday that the offer had "Australia regards the matter as been rejected by India).

"We did not one affecting our own national

want to appear security and we would distrust to be meddling in their affairs," deeply any measure of Japanese Mr Laurent said.

St The Prime which

Ministers of rearmament

Western nations of the Common- threaten the security

wealth

had only asked if it tralia.

upon would help if Indian Moscow, Jan, 17. "A good deal depends

controls that would be Pakistani troops were replaced. Tass News Agency reported the

to any rearmament "Our Eastern friends came today that au Soviet properties instituted in in wintenuria and resing were and on the relationship in which the conclusion that it would not transternad 10 the Chinese we would find ourselves with be advisable because it might icople's Republic according to the other Pacific powers.” provisions of the Soviet- Chinese agreement concluded Just year,

U.S. “BOMBERS”

PACIFIC PACT

of

would Aus-

Mr

the

and

St

be misunderstood," Mr Laurent sald.

"We are told it might be inter- Mr Menzies said that Australia pretéd as a move to set

up a did not present any proposals military state in Kashmir."

ultra- St Laurent was Tass ⚫sala the properties for n Pacific Pact to the Prime

Ministers' Conference because careful not to mention names transferred in the course of last

the idea of a Pact turned largely when he spoke of "our Eastern year by the Joint Soviej-Chinese

upon the attitude and point of friends"-Reuter. Commission Include mose held view of the United

United States. Australia would continue with temporarily or rented in Man- enuria and all buildings in the her immigration programme

military districts

In- about 200,000 former

niming at Feking-United Press,

year. This would migrants each

of

be in spite of the demands of a rearmament programme coming

New Carrier

Washington, Jan. 17. The House of Representa-

on top of great peace-time de- velopments. The problem of tives voted approval today for

Court INTERCEPTED France Appoints reconciling all the requirements the United States Navy to build

San Francisco, Jan. 17.

About 4,000 American-born Japanese who renounced U.S. citizenship during World War Two will have to prove they are loyal to this country if they want their citizenship restored.

The US. Court of Appeals Judge Goodman's ruling today revarsed on earlier ruling wrong. which held that Nisel (American-

born Japanese) who

renounced

Lakenheath, England, Jan, 17. - It was disclosed today that British jet fighters "intercepted" United States B-36 bombers over

Madrid Envoy

England after the Americans had

Paris, Jan. 17. The French Government has dropped "make-belleve" atomle

the advised the Spanish Govern- and hydrogen bombs in Atlantic Ocean.

ment of its desire to re- The B-30s, whose announced establish full diplomatic, reta ability to deliver atom bombe ions and has submitted for the in the world has been latter's approval the name of a was w by the United States

high French Foreign Office be the French Am- Navy, arrived after a flight of official to 5,000 miles and crews disclosed bassador

in Madrid, it was

It said that of the 4,315 named that Brush je's carried out an earned after today's Cabinet their citizenship while confined in the Attorney General's case, at the Tule Lake, California, he only exceptions were 58 who interception mission over Britain meeting..

at more than 30,000 feet-

detention camp during the war, went to Tule Lake solely to be Unlled Press. did so under duress and compul- with their families; eight who sion of imperiai war-mongers were not of sound mind, and among their countrymen.

U.S.

Attorney

Howard J. McGrath had hold that 4,315 of these, renunciants were danger- ous enemy aliens and should be deported to Japan.

The Minister of Information, M. Albert Gazier, told report- that official agreement From Madrid has not yet been received, French Socialist pppposition within the Cabinet to this appointment appeara

from 300 to 400 who were Premier Goes For fro minors, and consequently not legally capable of signing citi zenship renunciation.

The new ruling said "the At- torney General Indicated hist

who

Check-Up

Prime

Minis

now to have been overcame.-- Reuter.

Menon For Paris.

London, Jun. 17.

London, Jan. 17. Mr Don S. Senanayake, the trial ast year, therealisation of his duty to pre- Prime Minister of Ceylon, had In a

of citizen a heart examination at King's Japanese appealed on the ground vent a restoration

today. to the disloyal - College Hospital hero that they were coerced into a ship mental condition causing them nunciants

gave up their The 60-year-old Prime Minis citizensilip vol- er, who has been

attending the to excoute documents renouncing American

untarily because of their Commonwealth American citizenship.

in London, The Indian High Commissioner: sympathy with Japan, and who ter Conference Fedorat Judge Louis E. Good- hoped for the latter'g victory was seen by Dr. Samuel Oram, in London, Mr Krishna Menon, will be flying to Paris tonight specialist thot cach over the country of their birth.

a Harley Street "The record shows with car-

A member of him staff said: to take part in the meetings of Prime Minister to quite heads of Indian missions in each plaintiff be restored to UB,tainty that many of the 4,815 well but felt that an examina-Europe, over which the Indian citizenship.

plaintiffs were disloyal to the tion before he returned home Prime Minister, Pandit Nohru, * But the Appeal Court declared US"amAssociated Press.

would do no harm Reutes. will presideRouter..

man

then ruled renunciation was null and void;

and that each be cancelled; that

had the

a 57,000-ton aircraft carrier was, he said, "acute."

Australia

of same capable

launching atom dimculty as Britain in pre- bomb-carrying aircraft-Reu- paring for war and at the same ter.

Dr.94

BY THE

Adenauer

Broadcast

To

Boon, Jan. 17, The West Federal Chancel- lor, Dr Konrad Adenauer, will broadcast to East and West Germans, probably on Tues- day, on alt-German unity. Government apokesman saldi tonight.

а

Earlier today the spokesman said he thought the broadcast might be made tomorrow even- ing-Reuter.

"SHOWING

TO-DAY

A PERFECT

HIT IN COLOR BY

NOW OPEN

5.C.M.POST,LTD.

Branch Office

SALISBURY ROAD

KOWLOON

(One minute from

Poninsula Hafol)

RODO HOUSE

240, Tal Po Road, Kowloon,

1 Tel. 00070

Cable Address: "RODOHOUSE"

1st

class' and comfortablo living quarters available at moderate prices.

Meals aro chorp ($0 for (moxis) but they are wholesome,

Hotel Car provided for our: quest.

now.

Reglator in the RODO HOUBE

Y. H. CHAN,

Manager.

STAR

Phone 58335

17 Hankow Road, Kowloon FINAL SHOWING TO-DAY,

AT 2.30, 5.15, 7.20 G 9.30 P.M.

The Funniest film surprise

in 5 years!

DONALD O'CONNOR

Patricia Medina - Zasu Pitts tay Collins

John McIntire

FRANCIS

The Talking Mule!

TO-MORROW (19, JAN.) "RIDING HIGH"

|AT 2,30,-5:15,

QUEEN'S ALHAMBRA 7.20 & 9.30

THE BIGGEST MUSICAL

TECHNICOLOR-M-G-M's

ANNIE GET YOUR GUN' Starring BETTY HUTTON

ENTREDUCING

COLDEN TOEKHOWARD KEEL 10-IRVING BERLIN SONGS

SPECIALIST

in

EYESIGHT TESTING

and

GLASSES MAKING

P.M.

Quick Servico Forty Years Experience Satisfaction Guaranteed

CHINESE OPTICAL CO.

67 Queen's Rd., C.

OPTICIAN

Tel. 23368

PORK

TENDER!

Chops $3.00

TASTY!

Leg of Pork $3.20

Knuckle $3.00. Loin 83.20

Hocks and Feet $1.50

Fillet $3.40 Belly $2.00

Rolled Shoulder $3.00

THERE'S NO PORK LIKE THE PORK GROWN AT

J

Comments

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

No comments yet.

Private Research Note

Private notes are available after approval.