1952-01-14 — Page 2

China Mail 德臣西報 中國郵報 All

***

2

STAR

Kim ve a la SAIN

197 Hankow Road, Kowloon

TO-DAY ONLY ---- AT 2.30, 5.30. 7.30

9.30 P.M.

UNIVERSAL-INTERNATIONM

Robert WALKER

A GARDNER * Dick HAYMES

ONE TOUCH of VENUS

A

SROADWATS

MUSICAL DE LIGHT BOUGHT TO THE BOHREN?

TO-MORROW

"The LEMON DROP

KID"

COMING SOON!

JAWAITED - ILONG BE REMEMBERED

BURT LANCASTER TEN TALL MEN

TECHNICOLOR

JODY LAWRANCE

Seni Sena - Camps f

BP by AMD KDE TRA at Pd by WBOLD PONTA HORM) PRODUCTION-Wucted by WL125 GOLONG

THE CHINA MAIL,

MONDAY, JANUARY 14, 1952.

ECONOMIC AID FOR INDIA A

NECESSITY

New York, Jan. 13.

Mr Chester Bowles, United States Ambassador

to India, said here today that economic aid to India was absolutely essential.

Mr Bowles, who has returned to the United States for talks with President Truman and the State Depart- ment, arrived by plane from London, and left New York again immediately for Washington.

nice! the President attributed this to the human and propast, re-desire of people to better them-

ANA: 10' selves.

"The rising of the standheet ques of living is a slow, evolutionary three process that we cannot wait for,”

M BAR N Hunge should be done to prevent ¦ be said.

Communism in

1:

For

int

inic

muld be given a

The United and Alan the stads for.

chemenabe forre and

ser gratext

at

;!:! י. :*

assels.

1 present

Mi Bowley said

believe 21

"pertains:

ald 1 ezunumie cent. India has job in

clone on exordinary

an

EVERY

air yours since! and all by its

the next tour al

CHANCE

if we were to put in India:

Bowies Sand

- Char

Sh

kea than autis

there!

M

He espapp that the amount

The Ued States pat no Chin 1948 w later describes a

to hittle art to late

(31

thnk toe last thing As I e Indion prople them-

anci in the desire elve

P:

1 r

י

neet issue.

wards

Bowl, said.

buy

that

given

of

economie aud Lo India

of whether there is

The imulation was that early aid was needed for raising the Standards of living in India.- Router.

Helicopter Convoy Protection

Lancken. Jən D The British and American Navies are to use in some con- voy escort duties large hehrop- ters with sensitive listening gear that run be lowered into the water

1

upon!

decided The scheme after secret tests in the North Atlantic recently, will help tr overcome the acute shortage nt escory destroyers and frigates. The helicopters will form the outer anti-submarine convoys' screen

In the tests American naval helicopters from aircraft-

marines cruising below peris-

Cogument element in India carriers contacted "enemy" sub-

o Mr Bowies said He declmed amount of aid.

to discuss the

uz to Congress," he

KEY TO ASIA

Inia is the kxy La Soul- East Ama. There is a arvellous.

un going espertroent

Litere. They are holding the biggest

be world, and it is Roing on with free speech and no disorder," Mr Bowles aetded. Intra -1 d.my Hale in

Arin

(1)

WATCH FOR THE is going to succeed."

OPENING DATE AND THEATRE

SHOWING

TO-DAY

QUEENS

CLARK GABLE

CROSS THE WIDE MISSOURI

TECHNICOLOR

· MONTALBAN ·

QUEEN'S

Warner Bros.

M. Bowles said.

The Conammist Influence was

Indu jueren ing in

and

AT 2.30, 5.15,

ALHAMBRA 7.20 & 9.30

THE BACK M-D-

P.M.

NEXT CHANGE •

ALHAMBRA

Samuel Goldwyn's

"MAN OF BRONZE" | "THE COWBOY &

Burt Lancaster

Steve Cochran

THE LADY” Merle Oberon * Gary Cooper

ROXY & BROADWAY,

SHOWING TO-DAY AT 2.30, 5.30, 7.30 & 9.30 P.M.

The Longest Stretch of

lenger in

orical

THIEVES HIGHWAY

CONTE COREESA LIBE LAWRENCE

CHANGE

SADDLE TRAMP

cope depth. Hovering at about

50ft. they lowered secret listen- ing gear into the sea to plek up certain under-water noiser

that three or It was proved for hellcopters, working as H tean, could quickly pin-point ! any submarine moving sub-

merged over a wide area,

Many taval officers believe the new technique, combined with the latest Asdic and radar devices, will eventually make atmost impregnable convoys against conventional submarine attack.

In war-time the helicopters

the would circle

convoy day and night, lowering their "sub- marine cars" ut regular inter- vais.

Once pin-pointed marine would be attacked by depthcharges. The listening gear is known to the US, Navy as the "Boar car"

2 SUB-

Politician Reports To Ancestors

Tokyo, Jan, 13.

MOTHER KEEPS A WATCHING EYE

Rearmament Issue Stirring Up Controversy In Japan

Young Doreen Jackson shepherds day-old Suffolk lamb triplets into position for their first photograph but mother Peggy keeps a careful eye on her little ones. Picture was taken on the farm of Mr S. A. Jackson at Little Eccleston Hall, near Blackpool-Reuterphoto.

Girl Artist Said To

Have Lived Two Meals A

On Week

London, Jan. 13.

Mr J. L. Pratt, West London stipendiary magistrate, was confronted with a slice of Bohem- ian life from 1952 Chelsea, the London artists' quarter.

Tokyo, Jan. 13.

The rebuilding of a Japanese Army, Navy and Air Force is becoming one of the hottest political issues here. Best estimates indicate that about 60 per cent of the population, if asked to express a view, would be opposed to rearmament at any price, The fiercest opponents of rearmament the labour unions, who want "peaceful trade" with Communist China, the Communists and the Com- munist-inspired groups who are now openly accusing the United States of "war-mongering," and the students.

But powerful ex-service- men's groups have already publicised tentative blue- prints for Japan's rearma- ment.

Some plans, claiming inspira tion from the Japanese-United States security pact, give de tailed Agures in "pounds. skuilings and pence" down to the number of troops, tanks,

planes and guns,

worships which Japan should have,

These

blueprints, together with the frequently ambiguous replies given by the Prime Minister. Mr Shigeru Yoshida, to questions in the Diet rearmament. have caused

storm growing criticism.

10

are

The first steps towards the of The three lobishment armed

services have, in the opinion of foreign observers here, already been made,

The

so-called "National Police Reserve," with a strength of 75,000, many of them former officers and non- military commissioned officers, has taken on such

un-policemanlike ac- tivities as battalion drill with rifles, light and heavy machine- guns, tank-like armoured cars and modern anti-tank weapons such as bazookas.

Soccer Fans Run Riot

Catanzaro, Italy,

Jan. 13.

Farty people WETT in- jured, and many were de (ained by the polic", in a

fight Curing A fcotbal

#

match here today.

A vialting Brindisi team was awarded

penalty kick against the home side. Catanzaro fans invaded the field to protest against the referee's decision.

They harted stones and exchanged blows with partisan supporters of the The police visiting team. baffled for half an hour before they could restore order. Among the injured were 12 policemen. Reuter.

AMERICAN

AID PLANS FOR SPAIN

United

New York, Jan. 13. The Times correspondent, C. L. Sulzberger, in a Paris deapatch NAVAL NUCLEUS

said it was hoped by March 1 to have agreements signed in Madrid and Washington covering The "Maritime Safety Board," on with its fleat of more than 100 economic and military ald pro-

big radar-equipped, patrol boats grammes between, the

tons States and Spain. public ranging from 30 to 700

craft). 越 (plus 200 smaller

£0 by commonly An indication of the intensity Japanese of feeling on

and foreigners alike the rearmament

nucleus of question was that, for the first time

the

Japanese Navy. since

*Emperor System" was revived in 1867,

fleet is at present commoners recently demonstricted to anti-smuggling duties strated before the Emperor,

plus protection of Japanese Over 500 university students fishing

boats, at Kyoto.

thej.

anti

rearmament Jostled round the

by

D5 the

The

referred

the

new

12-

The despatch also said that the Mr US. Ambassador to Madrid. Stanton Griffis, possibly will return to Washington before that time and submit his resignation. The report said Mr Griffle per- sonally played a large role in the ground

between

frequently bonding

been

uniy have ended in life- Most backward has Before him stood 18-year-old Miss Phyllis imprisonment for the students aviation. Japan's first step to Mary Hanson, a struggling artist. Her lawyer, and suicide the hapless wards a return to flying was the Mr H. A. Oliver, told him she was living on two! meals a week.

The story might have come

from an straight

opera La Boheme," for instance of a novel like George Du Maurier's "Tilby."

General To

university officials,

But the affair was smoothed over with the suspension eight students, and newspapers proudly stressed that such an cnding was proof What majeste" had Indeed abolished in the Inderalic" Japan.

been new "de

States.

for

...

new

the

shouted in Central Japan, harassed by Russian and Korean United States and Spam.

patrol boats along the "Mac: Mr Sulzberger reported: "The

long-term policy Arthur Line" which defines the US. slogans and Emperor's car when he visited fishing waters between Japan gradually to induce Spain to

university--a "disgrace" and Siberia.

play an increasing role in a which, betore

trend toward the continent's the war, could

on while, at the same time, political and economic integra-

encouraging public opinion re-opening in October of a such strongly enti-Franco lends domestic airline using American as France to drop some of their planes. Foreign observers here objections to the Madrid regime, believe that any question of Japan rearining must hinge on to press cautiously for gradual The United States intended what financial and military aid political reform in Spain." "Jese Japan can expect from the United

The despatch said American ald will be conditioned Japan's

BITS-the general acceptance by Madrid present In it was featured a room

bazookas, ißes, machine-guns,

of the basic objectives of the in Beaufort-gardens, Chelsea,

pistols, etceters, of the National United States Mutual Security where the artist lived, sketching

The main argument advanced Police Reserve and the Maritime Act and the attached Benton and drawing arid fighting to

agreement. by those in favour of Japanese Safety Board-are still the pro- make her way, and another to

The correspondent said, two realmament is the catch perty of the United States which she dare not return, be-

phrase, borrowed trom Pre-

separate agreements were being For Japan to make or buy her drafted for simultaneous signa- £15 back rent. cause she owed

sident Truman's treaty negotia-own

and My Oliver was deffading her

attempt full-scale ture, one tor, Mr Paris, Jan. 13.

economic and one John Foster Dulles: rearmament from a charge brought by the

must mean one, or anillary, for a total of less then The body of General Jean de "Japan must not become a both, of two things: the use of $150,000,000-United Press. police that she had solen

Lattre de Tassigny, former £ 10 wrist watch belonging to a

French High Commissioner and fellow-lodger. They said the

Commander-in-Chief in Indo- watch was lent to her and she China, was today placed in the sold it for £2 10s.

Invalides Church where it will lic in state until Thursday.

*NECESSITY

Be Buried

Beside Son

CATCH PHRASE

power vacuum."

American counterpart funds The most detailed milltary (accumulated by the Government plan so far put forward publicly from sale of American aid goods) came from a former colonel of and/or continued reliance, after the Japanese Army General Anal ratification of the peace Headquarters staff, writing treaty, on American economic aid. be laken to under the well-known nom-de---Reuver.

In the plume of Tadanori Bakai.

"She has been an exlienely Later it will silly girl and she stole under Mouilleron-en-Pareds, the force of necessity. Mr Vender Country In Western

in France. was

for burial

Oliver

sald. She

זי

of

Sakai proposed 20 divisions of beside the troops, totalling upwards financial dificulties. Because General's son, Bernard, who 250,000 man. 1,000 modern je she feared to return in her was killed in action in Indo- planes in a 20 000-men eir fores former Indgings to collect her China last year, clothes her wardrobe consisted The

dock.

to-

Premler, M. Rene

and a 300-ship navy with 50,000

men.

quired 800 200-millimetre anti- In addition, he said, Japan re- aircraft guns manned by 12,000 ཝ་ Such a

claimed. force, he could be built up in two years

men.

at a yearly cost of 260,000 million

of the clothes she wore in the Pleven, today received a tele- Ichiro Haleyama, who VES

of condolence gram

from Mr politically "purged" on the eve of becoming Japan's Premier She had ambitions to become Winson Churchill, who descri- five years ago, has reported to

an artist and recently had been ed the General as "a true son his ancestors that he will make living on some small savings of France, whose loss will be a political comeback.

and on the sale of one or two felt throughout the free world." Mr Hatoyama, who was

sketches. She seemed anxious de- several months ago and to "try and

In New York, in an editorial | yen (£200 million). pull herself Purged

of General Jean de Lattre de Tassigny, the Times said: "So long as she produces men with the courant and resourcefulness of General de Lattre, France and the French Unton will survive."

The Times described General de Laitre's

career and re- marked: "It was fitting that

allowed to re-enter public life, gether" and was also keen to on the death visited the family tomb al get a permanent job. Ueno in Tokyo yesterday and

Mr Pratt put Miss Hanson on mode known his intentions on

probation for a year and gave the anniversary of his mother's her into the care of Miss Sin- death, Такую newspapers

clair, a probation officer.

ported.

re-

The custom with Japan's ancestral cutt of Shintoism,

is in accordance

spirit

EX-PREMIER'S VIEW

Red Planes Stationed

In Albania

Russia squadron

Rome, Jan. 13.

has stationed

of 40 aircraft at

said

SHELTER FOR WALL ST.

New York, Jan. 18, The New York County Coun- cil of the Veterans of Foreign Wars plans to build a million dollar atomic bomb shelter designed to protect 12,000 peo- ple in the Wall Street financial district.

The shelter will consist of two buildings connected by an underground tunnel tind Sun above-ground

the structure,

Council sald.

The VFW has acquired a site,

DOWN

Tirana, capital of Albania, and and building will begin early in Sakof's plan was similar to a the country's Communist rulers April. dozen or so others, all proposing are building focifications along The VFW hopes to build in all a peacetime army of from 15 to stretches of coastal roads, Al-55 atomic shelters in Manhattan.

with as many as

--Reuter. 20 divisions,

barian refugees said. LOT OF FRIENDS

50 divisions in the event of an

The immediate threat.

report WAS published The housekeeper at Beaufort- gardens sald: "Miss Hanson left,

These plang have been pub today in "Albanian Newsletter," helped by a girl friend, taking General de Lattre should have licised in newspaper and maga-organ of the refugee Albanian TRUMAN CLIMBS articles, usually Mr Hatoyama, former leader all her

under Agrarian Democratic Party. belongings. She had come from a village in Vendee, zine of

Red The publication. Japan's dominant Liberal

lived here about a fortnight. as did Clemenceau,

assigned names. Party, lost bis chance of be-

Two of "Miss Hanson told us she was "Their unconquerable

Japan's most influen- fortifications were being built coming Premier when occupa-

Lial political an art student and that she was could symbolise the

figures favour the along a 35-mile stretch of the from Seman to authorities discovered attending an art school.

querable spirit of their native rebuilding of the armed services Adriatic coast some of his wartime writings

possible at the Vlora. "When she left there

overwhelmed hari land, often

by as quickly as -Nazi

taxation and therefore been some arrears

of heavy were pro-Na

The island of Sereno, where In her rent adversity

butt

maintaining cost beneath the

from possible inflationary trends. the Russians are reported which her friends have settled.

pressures The Premiership

They are the former Occupa- have submarine installations, is Shigeru Yoshida - who still She seemed to have quite a lot within and from without that

tion Prime Minister, Mr Hitoshi just of the coast from Vlore of friends."

hard core of toughness, of re- holds it--and the two are now

whose of determination Ashida,

Government fell The publication Bald the 40 solution and considered rivals for the Party

after his name was mentioned Ruzaion aircraft at Tirana.

now leadership and post of Prime

that does not crumble."--Reuter

from in conne

connection with a £1,000,000 were brought Minister-Associated Press,

and Ualted Press,

bribery case, and the men be- the Boylet U wam palement telephoned Heved most likely to be Mr They were later put

put together course de being followed at the Yoshida's, successor, Mr Ichiro by Russian technicians, it request of General Clark, He Hatoyama, behind-the-scenes added. "No Albanian technicians added that the President plane leader of Mr Yoshida's, Liberal were permitted to wist during to subenit another nomination at Party.

this work-United Fres,

later time,--United Press:

barmed him from politics-

BARKLEY ON JAP TREATY

to

Washington, Jan. 18. Vice-President Alban Barkley this the Senate will un- doubtedly rotify the Japanese peice fronty and affirmed that Japan was "rently to go along Pilih ùa. In the fight to

to preserve

democracy

Mr Barkley, who was being Interviewed on the radio, also thought the delays in conclusion ktm Korenas pantielike were due |to „Communist-

to save

A member of Mr Oliver's Arm said: "Miss Hanson has settled at another address. She comes from a good provincial family end does not want anyone" to. know the trouble she was in. It is on the cards that she may spend a little while in hospital,"

·STAFF ENTRANCE

Bangkok, Jan, 13. Rice talks between India and Siam have been fliked provision- olly, for Friday-Reuter,

THUNDERLAND

ALL WE ASK IS A WORKING MAJOČÍTE

STAFF

ALL I ASK IS A

MAJORITY

WORKINI!.

and

Staff and nonsense

to

Washington, Jan. 13. The White House announced tonight, that the nomination of General: Mark Clorid to be Am- bassador to the Vatican will not be re-submitted to the Senate for confirmation.

The Freulental Press Seme- tary, Jomph |_Short, in a brier to res

îate today, said. "This

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