P&O B.I. E&A
COMPANIES.
PENINSULAR & ORIENTAL S.N. CO
PASSENGER/FREIGHT SERVICE
I.raves London 'Dua Hongkang 18th September 18th October
October
5th November 13th November
Outwards "CANTON" "CHUSAN" "CARTHAGE" 10th October "'CONFU"
10th November 13th Decembar
Vis Southampton, Port Sald, Adep, Bombay, Colomba,
Penang & Bingapore
Leaven Hoogkong Das London
Hubiewarda
“CANTON"
19th
October
J0th November
"CHUBAN"
提出产
November
9th December
"CARTHAGE"
2) at
November
2nd December
"CORFU"
VIA Hingapore,
17th interber 131 Jass. 1963
Penang. Colombo, 'Bombay, Aden, Port Baid & Leadon
FREIGHT SERVICE
"SUNDA"
Outwards
Arriving "SHILLONG" 211 Ort,
12th Nuv
From
UJK
U.K.
Batle For Otaru, Yokohama
& Kobe
Japan
Homewards
Loading *"SURAT” 14th Ort.
Kalin Betawan,
"SHILLONG" #41 Nat
Fot
Singapore, Purt Sweiten- ban, Perană, Colombo, Aden, Port Said, Genoa. Marrellies, Hovre, Lon- don, Antwerp, jtotter- dam & Hamburr
With Uberty to call at Belawan before or after Birkit Porte and at Bombay it inducement offats,
Tanka available for carriage of Oll in Bulk.
Limited Passenger Space for refrigerated cargo.
accommodation
BRITISH INDIA S.N. CO., LTD.
from Japan
for Singapore, Hongoon, Chittagong
Calculta trom Calcutta, Chilla- BUTE.
Hangoon
"WARORA”
Ist e
SATIN
12! Det
“FULTALA"
dur 121 let
Straits
salls As Ot
for Japan
,"SIRDHANA" dur 1975 (x1
& Struita
tor Japani
B
trum Calcutta, Rangoon
EASTERN & AUSTRALIAN S.S. CO., LTD.
"NELLORE"
"NELLORE"
dur 12th Cel mulla 13th Oct.
due 8th Nov คง tot Nov,
from Australia for Japan
from Japan
fur Bandakan, Rabau}, Artabane, Sydney Mel- bourne & Adelaide
All vessels have Uberty to call at any ports on or off the route & the route & sailing are subject to change or amendment with or without notice.
For full particulars apply to:-
MACKINNON, MACKENZIE & CO. OF HONG KONG LTD.
Telephone Nos. 27721-4.
CHINA MAIL
HONGKONG PUBLISHED DAILY (AFTERNOONS)
THE. CHINA MAIL, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1954
Price, 20 cents per copy,
Saturdays 30 cents.
Bubloription: 40,00 per month. Postage: China and MACDO $3.00 Der month, UK. British Possessions and other countrice $7.00 per month. Nowa conskributions, alwEYE WOL- some, should be addressed" to thiê Editor, businous communications and advertisements to the Bocretary.
Telephone: 26d11 (5 Litw0}. KOWLOON OFFICE: Balisbury Hond, Telephone: NIČJE,
TÍTULOODTURNANISUR
Classified Advertisements
20 WORDS $4.00 for 1 DAY PREPAID ADDITIONAL INSERTIONS
$1.50 PER DAY
10 cents TER WORD OVER 20 Births, Deaths, Marriages, Personal $5.00 per insertion not exceeding 25 words, 25 cents each additional word. ALTERNATE INSERTIONS
10% EXTRA
If not prepaid a booking fee of G0 cents la charged.
WANTED KNOWN
JOOTSONE? Consult Dr. Scholl's Foot Comfort Servier, Folephone House Mezzanine Floor) Hongkong. Qualified Chiropoda) in attendance, Telephone 27101. Air-conditioned.
MUSICAL
SPECIAL SALE. Now and recon- dhioned upright and grand_pisnos of well known English and Gerinen mak Munteal instruments includ- Ing saxophones trombonem clarinets. trumpens, ourneta, šļutes, celion violas. Baroons, Englishorne, pio- colo, violins, guitare etc." Mayfair Music Co., 23. Chiu Lung Street, telephones 22835, 21310.
To ADVERTISERS
SUNDAY POST-HERALO Space for commercial advertising should bo
booked not Fater than noon on Wednesdays.
For
MORNING POST and the
The Royal Tour ship MacArthurFought
will now go
round world
London, Oct. 11.
Lying in the River Blackwater, waiting to take a place in the London docks, is the Royal Tour ship Gothic. She will come up the Thames to embark passengers and cargo for a voyage to New Zealand by way of the Panama Canal.
-The Royni suite has disap- peared from the Gothic, but for £200 to £250 Orst-class passengers can make the voyage harass the world on the limited boat-deck space that was used by the Queen and Prince Philip.
MORNING COFFEE
They
can take their morning coffee on the veranda lounge, which will be the same section
verted jato smoke-room and lounge,
Much of the Royal furniture that was in the ship was taken, out and placed in yacht Britannia when the two the Royal vessels met at Malta.
Before her passengers vrrive, the Gothic will be taking o large amount of cargo into her holds.
IL will include motorcars, of glass-surrounded deck used industrial machinery, general
a private veranda by the cargo and fertiliser bags, Queen.
As
The Gothic is a one-class ship and all tho 70 passengers, travelling at first-class standards,
will have their Incals in the
saloon which Royal and staff use during the Queen's voyagu.
was divider for
(London Express Service).
FLYING COLUMN'
TEMPTRESSES
Brighton, Oct, 11. Members of the local home Amidships, the Uner's No. 1 Suile can be
by two guard accused the British Civil used
Defence forces at a meeting here passengers. It costs £630.
today of employing a
Paying cabins in column" of ambulances—com- and Princo plete with "charming nurses"— Phillp were able to relax, listen to persuade members to change to the radio, and play gramo- | their allegiance.-China Man phone records, have been recon- | Special.
The Royal day which the Queen
MESSAGERIES MARITIMES
P.O. Box 53
Tel: 28631 Queen's Building
FAST PASSENGER/FREIGHT SERVICE "CAMBODGE"
"LAOS" the SOUTH CHINA
CHINA MAIL, 48 hours before date,of publiéstion. Special Announcements and Classified Advertise- menta as KONSENČI
sailing Nov. 7th sailing Dec. 4th
FAST FREIGHT SERVICE Accept Direct Cargo for London
"IRAQUADDY”
"PEI-HO"
sailing Oct. 12th Bailing Nov. 6th
MANDRAKE THE MAGICIAN -
BUT-- NARDA NEVER LEFT THE BUT--|| PLANE. THIS GIRL WAS ON
172 SHE TOOK. NARDA'S COAT, VEIL AND HAT--AND LEFT IN NARDA'S PLACE.
IT MIGHT HAVE WORKED, BARTUN DIDN'T KNOW I'D BE AT THE AIRPORT. HE CADERED ME NOT TO COME.
I TOLD YOU,
I DON'T KNOW
WE'LL SEE ABOUT THAT!
A THING!
FERD NAND
EMBASSY
THINK, YOU'RE A DOLL
REALLY?
VERETT LINES
EVERETT ORIENT LINE
Fast regular freight-refrigerator-- passenger service to Korea, Japani, Philippines, Indo-China, Slam, Malaya, Rangoon, Calcutta and Chittagong. "REBEVERETT"
Arrives Salis
Oct. 20 Oct. 20
from Singapore, for
"LENEVERETT"
Arrives Sails
Kobo & Yokohama.
Oct. 23 Rangoon & Calcutta Oct. 24 for Singapore, Penang,
from Manila
(Accepting cargo for transhipment Kobe/Pusan and Hobe/Okinawa)
EVERETT STAR LINE
Fast regular freight-refrigerator-- passenger service to Korea, Japan, Philippines, Indo-China, Stam, Malayu, Colombo, Bombáy, Karachi and Persian Gulf.
LAO.
Arrives Oct. 13 Salta
from Japan.
Oct. 14 for Singapore, Port Swelten- lam, Madras, Colombo, Bombay, Karachi, Barraḥ, Khorramahalı, Kuwait & Bahrein.
“STAR BETELGEUSE”
Arrives Oct. 31 from Japan,
Salis Nov: 1 for Singapore, Port Swetten-
ham, Madras, Colombo, Bombay, Karachi, BasraṀ, Khorramshahr, Kuwait, & Bahrein
(Accepting cargo for transbĺpmans Kobe/Pusan, and Kobe/Okinawa)-
EVERETT STEAMSHIP CORPORATION
(Inegrporated in the léýublie
Chinese
BANG!
.NANCY
YOU DON'T LIKE ME, DO
YOU, TOM ?
OH, I WOULDN'T
SAY THAT
JOHNNY HAZARD
BOTH ÉSCARRE, AND THE
JN FACT, I
NICKINGLİ'L JAWN/.
Swiss Expedition Turns Back?
Kathmandu, Ö§À IL Unponfirmed reports from the Sheeps bentre of Namche. Basaar today sald' the Swise expedition, try, ing to conquer the 25,410- foot Mount Court Shankar, highest Malayan peaks had abant- doned the attempt. No reason was kiven.
tito
The expedition, fed by the Bwiss guide. M. Ray- mond Lambert, Includes « French
Mille Woman. Claude Koran. The report wald
the Swiss would prob- ably join Dr Herbert Tichs, who la leading three Aus- felans in att dekauft On
the
26.750-foot undangnered peak of của bạt the
world's seventh highest in the Everest, regian.
The Jant lotter from M. Lambert, dated Septem- ber 27, reported tho establishment of a Swiss 结婚 base
that day camp 4,960 metres (10,076 feet).
Reuter.
77 Mau Mau
Killed
Enemies And Personal Foes
Washington, Oct. 11.
A new book on Getteral Douglas MacArthur charges that the retired military leader always fought a "two-front war" - against enemies. In the field and personal foes in Washington,
"The Untold Story Of General MacArthur”
a book by veteran war correspondent Frazier Hunt, is a ringing defence of the policies and actions of MacArthur from the sneak Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour on December 7, 1941, to his discharge by former President Harry Truman on April 10, 1951.
It also is an equally ringing | denunciation of Stato Depart- ment policies which, the author says, were
controlled by "the internationalists, the Europe arators, the Red appeasers, the U.N. worshippers...
LITTLE REAL HELP *"Always" Hunt seriłeś, MacArthur had to depend largely on his own en- thusiasm and demand for victory and his own will to win, with little real help from Washington.”
The book, copyrighted by the author, will be published by the Devin-Adair Co., New York, on 20. Excerpts were
October Nairobi, Oct. 11.
Eleven terrorists were
C.
A total of 77 Mau Mau terror-printed in the October 13 issue ists were killed in Kenya last of U.S. News and World Report, week, an official communique a weekly news magazine. stated..
Hunt takes as
his special General wound target
Georgo ed and captured and 916 sus-Marshal, Army Chief of Staff Security forets during World War II, former pects detained. lost one African killed, and Secretary of State and Defence and winner of the Nobel Peace three wounded:
Nine African civillane
Prize
the post-war relief murdered and six wounded. programme that bore his name,
The deaths of another 12 ter-
At one point, Hunt shyc, rorists were
the "Marshall reported in
and his associates were too absorbed in planning post 24 hours.-Reuter.
the destruction of Hitler to Sheffield, Oct. 11. make any serious attempt to The Shefeld Fire Brigade is answer MacArthur's call for to have the most modern type help" to fight the Japanese in
of
were
tor
SECONDARY PLACE
radio equipment in the World War II, world. Every message received by the Brigado
be will automatically recorded on a tape machine,
By linking the system with a Post Office "speaking" clock" the time of every call received
also will
be automatically fecorded---China Mall Special,
By Les Falk and Phil Davis
| IT MEANS, AMBASSADOR,THAT YOUR
--WHAT DOES IT
Į PRINCESS NARDA
HAC BEEN
MEAN? KIPNAPPED BY
KING BARTUN
¡AND IS BEING
FLOWN TO HIS KINGDOM OF SAATAVIA
By Mik
YEP
By Ernie Bushmiller
“UH BOTH ALL
· PRÍTÍTY GOOD, SHADES
·LOW-HOON / HIRUG TÁRM
OUR DOLLARHE'S AND
ARTSLÄNGT HOW
By Frank Bobbins
He writes that the Inte President Franklin D. Roosevelt, British Frimo Minister Sir Winston Chur- chill and the late Soviet Premier Josef Stalin “agreed that the war against Japan
TALK
ABOUT
MAGIC!
Have you seen
Admiral
AIR CONDITIONERS.
AND REFRIGERATORS,
FROZEN FRESH
IN THE COUNTRY!
TRY
Libby's
FROZEN FOODS
TODAY! O
DAIRY BOX
MILK
CHOCOLATES
must be kept in its distinolly
··secondars pince,"
Hunt esys that 'MacArthur, through his post-war policies, provented Japan from going to the Commmlata while "Washing-
ton"
permitted China to go to the Reds.
Although MacArthuṛ Wag an expert on the Far East, he says, his advice and counsel was not sought. He says "The Isolation of MacArthur from the currents of policy in Washington was deliberate and complete."
of
Hunt charges that China was lost to the Reds through "gradual deterioration the Nationnist government in Chen's Isok of any intrigant brought about by long-range policy and by the deliberate plotting
Com- agents and their munist followers in high position in Washington...."
SOVIET PLANS
of
As for Korea, he saiA, **It was obvious from the start that the Soviet pocupa tion forces in Horen, knew exactly what they wanted to do and had drawn cont- plate plans how do
bo
But, he adds, "MacArthur's attempts to export the ever- whelming Communist threats in his part of the world appeared the almost
pathetic against general apathy and the Inspired
-Communist propagands that tinued in America.
He says that youft survij” of Korea by the now Secretary of
Sinte, Mr John Foster Dulles, three days before tho · Reds Invaded South Korea had appar ently convinced Dulles that the South Koreans seemed fairly well prepared to meet
any attack from the
100
*
WAS
Torming the Korean wär MacArthur permitted to win. Hant (MacArthur) Wilies, "He knew he was
war.
flabding & 10-front again. dayduring most of the early of the Japanese struggle his Southwest Pacific theatres had been throttled down and handicapped by Roosevelt and the Joint Chiefs of Staff," Hudt Bays.
"Now, for a second
had a difficult foreign
.ng
| bis hands, while bitter opposition
Was mounting nguinst
hith behind his back in Washington,th
Hunt says that MacArthur was "gagged" by Washington after an interview with Hugh. Baille, President of the United Press, in which the General critfelsed orders banning his threatened action against the Chinese home,
SECRET WEB
land.
Same hidden directing power, Hunt writes, “ezer- clsing its controlling super- vision in a secret web of In- trigue seemed to be pulling
the strings and calling the tance for cerisin of the piritle leaders to Wash and the D.N." Calling MacArthur's dias charge by United Nations Com- mander in Korea "the crime of the century," Hunt says that MacArthur had always 10A mained "Invincible und 'corruptible" with his only thoughts for the “success. of hlé. country."--United Press,
Mail Notices
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・ome begie: mazller, than: the times En paruvi. Dalia cum ve macei
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