THE CHINA MAIL, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14,· 1935.
FOUR FRENCH ARMY COLUMNS ON MOVE
Duke Loses ANGLO-SOVIET NAVAL VISITS
Riotous Welcome For R.N.
Troops Encircle Riff Rebels Escort
In Frontier Area
TAX EXEMPTION
REVOKED
Washington. Oct. 13.
The Internal Revenue Servico sald today i had revoked the tax exempt status of the American Institute
Inclik of Relations but sich 狸 could not give a reason. Now
This profit organisations engaged in such activities
religion. education. research or „elarly, and who do not actively seek to influence legisla- ttan. generally do not need to pay taxes.
In a statement from the Institute's Headquarters
New
York. the executive scerclary.
M William Hellain, sald of the Revenue Service acilon:
officials
Our
consider the action to be
extremely
quite
view
unfukr and unwarranted of the recard of
the Institute AM a non- partisan private institu- tion for scholarly ге- "earch. discusstou and
Fur
publication
Eastern problems. "Sty work is well known
by Far
and respected
Eastern experts through. out the non-Comunizuisi work. We are convinced that
fsir-minded any
af examination
activities and publica
tions will show that It Just as entlűri to exemption as dozens of oller American
private
organisations concerned with the study of later. national affair.”—China Mall Special.
Fierce Resistance
Expected
Tribesmen
From
Rabat, Oct. 13.
French troops and armoured cars took up positions along the frontier of Spanish Morocco today to cut off rebellious tribesmen in the Riff mountains who rose against France 10 days ago.
Four army columns were reported to be lining the frontier along the area of insurrection, completing the encirclement of rebels in the "guerilla triangle". formed by Aknoul, Boure and Tizi Ouzli, in North- east Morocco.
KOREA TAXATION cult
Possible Relief
For Americans
"Washington, Oct. 13. The taxation of United States
in business men Korea, which hus of friction
South been
a source
Д
The coloumns linked after snail's pace advance over dim- ground. Some French Foreign Legion troops led by Colonel Francis Breille were forced to seale Mount Merzınık, which rises to 5,200 feet,
8,000 Troops
An estimated 8,000 French troops were tonight beginning to clean up the interior of the triangle, Rebels entrenched ont the crests of the sand-coloured hilla are expected to put up fierce resistancë,
Officials said tribesmen who enriler le trom their villages of the first mountain soute of gunfire wore now retuning in great numbers.
South of the RT mountains, about 100 Marmoucha tribesmen between the two govern- from th Middle Atlas WÛTE ments concerned, may short-reported to be trying to break settled, through north to link with the United States State De Riffian rebels. partment spokesman said here tonight.
Canadian Immigration be satisfactorily
Regulation
Ottawa, Oct. 13.
A b children will no longer be admif:lle to Canada unless
are
both the father and mother have already been lander landed concurrently, according to new immigration regulations. The object of this policy is said
to ensure the maintenance family groups.
أن
It is also announced that, as
Strong detachments' of troops are deployed south of Tazo, French strategic centre, to stop Informed sources said here 10-the Marmouchas. sight that the United States Am-
The French bustader in Seoul, Mr William nunced last night that they had Lacy, was thought to have sent arrested 10 terrorists alleged to letler to South Korean Presi-be members of four cylis
authorities
dem Syngman Rhee on Septem-operating in Camblinen, Fedaia ber 22, after falling to receive and Agadir. satisfaction from Korean officials about the taxation rates,
These fources added that
an experiment for one year, in President Rhee merely passed Mr
order to facilitate the ruinion of family groups, applications for the admission of aged parents would now be considered from Canadian citizens in a postulon to care for them.
ལ་་་
Lacy's letter on to the Foreign Ministry without replying to it.
The American Governinen? spokesman denied a rumour that
One of the cells, called "Hund st Mohammed," made its own bumbs and used them in 18 at- tacks in which eight people wero injured during the past year, they said.
1
Other Victims
Other victims of terrorism
Mr Lacy was about to be re- during the past 24 hours i The parents would be admitted called, but said that if the Am-cluded Hud] Ahmed Ben Rhaea, to Canada under normal rehussador, who is in poor health,
a member of the government quirements us to health and | asked to return to the United
council, who was mortally character, provided the mother | States for medical treatment, his
is at least 60 years of age and request would be sympathe-wounded by gunfire is an Arab the father 65.—France-Presse, tically received.-France-Presse, market near Settat.
13
A British Crossword Puzzle
1 Veto (6).
ACROSS
4 Clergyman's land (5).
7 Sentry (8).
B Slack (3).
Spiritualist moeting (6).
11 Resisted (7).
18 Luck (7).
15 Humbled (8).
16 Correct (5).
19 Turned into cash (8),
20 Tax (5).
21 Threefold (6), *)
21
4
DOWN
1 Abstains from food (6).
2 Staff (5).
3 Underground cell (7).
4 Equine galt (0).
6 Raunes (8).
A
6 Streich (0).
10 Overbearing (0).
12 Countryman (7).
13 Fall to remember (0).
14 Falso (0).
10.Spry (3).
17 Trick (5).
YESTERDAY'S CROSSWORD—Across: 1 Cede, 4 Message,
8 Moor, Lamb, 10 Doctora, 11 Aged, 12 Tear, 14 Leonces, 17 Allko, 10 Tribe, 22 Ensigns, 20 Elan, 37 Tint, 28 (upened, 20 Uras,:30. Near, 31 Pollots, 32 Nåde. Downs 2 Enamel, 3 Embark, 4. Model, 5. Erodes, 8. Snies, 7 Gorgo, 12 Tale, 13 Alda, 15° Evll, 16 Soen, 10 Intent, 20 Return, 21 Dennel, 23 Naivo, 24 Ideal,
Terrorists shot dead a month-
old baby and her two teenage brothers in Rabat. Their father is a Moroccan journalist working for a pro-French newspaper,--- Router.
Eisenhower Shows Big Improvement
Denver, Oct. 13. President Eisenhower} showed such improvement today that he had his first cup of coffee since his heart attack and waved at fellow patients,
The President's doctors in their 1000 GMT bulletin Bald that his morning examinations
continued to show his "tem- Derature, pulse and blood pres sure to be normal" and added:
"His cardiogram now shows well advanced change.”
Wine Growers Elect Queen
At Fair
Copenhagen, Oct. 13. THE Duke of Edinburgh
was surrounded by ex- elted Danos today on visit to the engineering section of the British trade exhibition in Copen hagen,
They frequently separated him
from his entourage 06. he
made his way around stands, stopping here and there to chat with officials and dis cover how British goods are selling in Denmark.
The Dulce, on the second day of
visit to Dnmark a vo-day showed keen interest in an anti-rolling device clesigned for smaller ships.
Plastics also attracted his attention.
A portrait of the Queen caught the Dulce's eye on a photo- graphic stand. "It is very good of her," he said.
The Danish newspaper Ekstra- bladet commented today that the Duke's unofficial visit was being made too formal. "We' must hope that he will be able to escape from the off- cials who follow him around during the visit and be able to walk at ease round the British exhibition to see tho British goods on display," it cald,
Luncheon
|
|
Sailors
By Sidney Weiland
Leningrad, Oct. 13.
Thousands of Russians, excited and friendly, gave a riotous welcome today to British sailors from the aircraft carrier Triumph and five other warships when they landed for their first shore leave in a unique goodwill visit,
This is the first big-scale visit of the kind by the Royal Navy since the Bolshevik revolution and the crowds surging across the city gave the British a reception of such warmth as they can seldom have experienced in a foreign port.
Everywhere
they went in against pollee cordons, and groups of two or three on foot ulmort barred the way.
or in organised bus tours of the | Once they set off, "the sailors elty they were followed by the were pursued by excited boyn laughing Russians anxious toon bicycles, Whenever they talk, exchange photographs and stopped they were mobbed by autographs and to shake them inquisitive Russians. by the hand,
The scene was unprecedented: Apart from organised sight- seclog tours, off duty sailors in Leningrad und W83 one
were given liberty to wander of the greatest
spontaneous freely around the elly. They demonstrations In genuinely
had the greatest difficulty in feeling friendly
for foreign
from the crowds escoping
to visitors seen here since the Com-reach the centre of the city, munists came to power 38 years
Wherever they walked on the- embankment or go.
along Lenin ¦ grad's broad Nevsky Prospect, Russians come to talk to them including scores of school- children using fairly
good English,
Reminiscent
Observers sait! } was miniscent of. the reception Bri-- tish ships got In European ports on their missions of liberation in 1944 and 1943.
lost
When the sailors left the laucches which tcok them
Like The English
The ships, led by the 13,350-ashore they were greeted with fon Triumph and under the calls of "We are very glad to command of Admiral Sir Ece you here." The Duke spent 90 minutes at Michael Denny, arrived
the exhibition before retum- night and are staying six days. ing to the Royal yacht Britan- The crowd swelled this even-
Russian women on à pleasure nia to entertain King Frederik ing to hundreds of thousands. steamer lying alongside the and Queen Ingrid of Denmark |- Ať nightfall the British ships Triumph shouted in English "we
were illuminated and the band like the English people." of
Royal Marines the
was A Heutenant from the playing in a Leningrad park. stroyer Dlana
surrounded by a When 750 sallers and officers crowd of at least 200 blocking from Triumph and other British his way back to the ship said the Neva landing if a man from Mars landed in ships teft stages to board buses for a England I think he would at-
of the city, tract the same attention. sight-seeing tour
"It is extraordinary." thousands of Russians crushed
to lunch.
In of
The picturesque town of Krems on the River Danube was the scene of Austria's first ever "Wine-Grower Queen" contest. Winner was luscious young" Eleonore Selitsch Koenigsbrunn, pictured here after her election. All can- testants were not only pretty, but experienced in the wine- growing industry. Taking part in the contest sontallyca from the five msst Important wine - growing districts in Lower Austria.—Express Photo.
were repro-
HID WITH HER - AUNT
Fame Was Too Much For
8-Year-Old Artist
London, Oct. 13.
NEWSMEN and photographers
were streaming up the tiny puth of a Council house garden
tion and received high praise for her work in Tokyo and provincial cities.
at Kingston on Thames today6ho will receive a medal," he
sald. Chira Mad Special. seeking an eight-year-old girl whose painting has made her the rage of Japan.
But little Marin Hennessy, whese picture of "Mummy at the Ball won the acclaim of critics and publle throughout Japan, was hiding in another house, afraid of the fame her painting had brought.
While her mother dealt with
requests for her to broadcast for the British Broadcasting | Corporation and to appear on television, she stayed with an aunt so afraid there were "butterfics in her tummy." Maria has been hitting the headlines in the British press since Japancze Embassy off- cials launched campaign to And her, and give her a prize for her entry in a Mothers'
by Day competition run Japanese sugar company and the United Nations. Her signature was illegible but experts were sure her painting was the work of an eight-year-old girl,
8
д
Moria was found after her painting had been flashed on the television screen by the British Broadcasting Corpora- tion:
'That's Mine*
Her father mentioned it to her
by
Other members of the Danish Royal Family and Government leaders, diplomats and officials of the Federation of British Industries attended the lupeli. the afternoon he inspected British
yachts moored in the harbour here la display marine engineering products. The Duke was giving a cock-
tail
party aboard Britannia before
going to
in Meanwhile
London Castle tonight to
seamen saw take the salute at the final party of Russian naval offers challenge game, performance of the British sight-seeing today had little in
which more
terest in the normal round of military tattoo than 200,000 Danes have tourist attractions they wanted
to see an Američuri. seen.
Rosenborg
the
de-
Russians Stalk Americans
End.
To see a real llyn American Tomorrow he will meet British they intimated to their guides,. residents at the British would be the highspot of a visit Centre in Copenhagen and to the West. attend a dinner given in His The guides stalked potential
the Federation of Americans honour by
around London's British Industries. The Duke West will spend the weekend with It was not easy-most of the the Danish Royal Family at tourists have gone home and the Fredensborg Castle, outside close season for Americans, la Copenhagen, before flying to beginning. Germany
Monday Reuter.
on
Ah! Greetings Signor
this friendly
Tonight in Portsmouth Rus-
were sitting in sign scamon seats at the cinema and theatre. drinking beer in pubs and walk- ing out with English girin.
At one local dance a group earned to
do "the
Lambeth Walk and the Hokey Pokey.
About 1,000 of them attended a civic reception given by the Lord Mayor of Portsmouth and his Corporation,
There was plenty of food and drink and a gay party deve loped. Both the hosts and the Russions an
gave unrehearsed singing and dancing nets,
Surprised
But they found
obvious American tourist after the Bus
dans had dutifully photographed Piccadilly Circus and fed the pigeons in Trafalgar Square.
•
At a dance attended by
The Russians gaped at the another 500 of the visitors the anonymous American and drarik local girls were surprised to ste
the sight to Imprint his features on their memories.
Their
guides recalled their one "seemed comment later they to be surprised he was behaving himself so well."
The party of Russian officers came from six Soviet warships row paying a goodwill visit to
Britain.
Had Tea
the
Twelve of them and Admiral Arsenal
of Golovko, squadron, had tea this afternoon with Loridon's Lord Mayor, Sir Seymour. Howard,
Tho
other
Russian
scamon,
however, showed little Interest in Americans.
Their
many. of the Russian sailors. dancing with one another.
Others chose English girls as partners and danced quicksteps and other, modern ballroom
dances,
A Russian orchestra and choir performed and the choir was cheered to the echo for a render- ing of “It's a Long Way to Tip perary."-Reuter..
Jordan River
Project Review
Jerusalem, Oct. 18,
Mr Eric Johnston, President to
Elsenhower's special envoy
the Middle East, today conferred
tourist interests ap- peared to run in this order,
Nylon stockings; 2, Ball point pens; a, Safety razors and blades; 4, Souvenir scarves; 5, Women's silk underwear.
There the Russians, bought here with Mr Moshe Sharett, nylon stockings at the rate of smell. Premier and Minister for five pairs a mlaute in a sworo TORT
attended for them. In specially set up.
by Israel irrigation experts, dealt Portsmouth Dockyard.
The store sold out its stock of with
Johnston'a
45 dozen pairs of nylons in 30 Joint Israell-Arno use of the
minutes.
wators of the Jordan and Yar-
An assistant said: "There' was mouk rivare in a vast irrigation
terrifle demand for nylons and hydro-electric project.
The special envoy bus boen especially the ones with fancy heels,"
the
a
chance, described painting, and said: "Oh! That is mine. I did it at school. Then she added: "But don't tell them, please don't tell them." Today Mrs Hennessy, wife of a
bricklayer, Bald: "Wo wero all very thrilled. Of course I have never been to a ball in my ufc.
evolutionary | "But last Christmas my husband
This apparently means that the healing processes have been very satisfactory.
In Sun
The President's bed was roll- ed out to a terrace porch on the eighth floor and he spent 35 minutes in the warm sun."
His bed was raised to the point where ho could raise his right hand in a wave to a dozen or my other patients of Fitz- almons Army Hospital or lawn eight floors
brought me my first evening dress to go to a local function. Maria was terribly impressed by it and could talk of nothing else for weeks, Sho wants to bo a dress designer." Now n photograph of Maria's painting is stuck in her sketch book-the pride of a number of portraits of the mother she adores which Include "Mummy at the Fishshop," "Mummy doing the Washing and Mummy by the Christ-
10, mas Tree,"
dog
on the Mrs Honneasy does not know what her daughter's price will be. "But slik would like a Pekingese dog more than mything dish.T Today 3 manese Embassy #poletszana mid Moria WEB
Scores of gifts- and "hundreda of mesinges began arriving_at the hoopital naho and Mrs Eisenhower : prepared to chie brate the President# dith birth.... day tomor -Routor, s
Greetings for Venetian gondolier Luigi Fanto, right, from London waterman Dick Phelps, after Signor Fasate arrived at London Airport with three other Venetian gondollers to attend the premiere of the film "Summer Madness": Sletior Fanti was per- monal gondollar to Princess Margaret during her, visit to Italy. Mr. Phelps in Queen's Waterman and an Olympic sculler.ummer Madness A which stars Katharine Hepburn and new Italian siar: Rossano Brazzi, was filmed entirely in Venice Dally Express
attemptízis to get the support of
The Russians did not appear Israel, Jordan, Syria and the
to have enough money to buy Lebanon for the project for the
the more expensive gifts. One last two years-Eronen-Pres
of
officers, Senlor
Lieutenant Androw Marchenko, American
said: "The sailors are not
to obtain safety razors · very caally That's why they are buying them here. Most of the other gifts are for their wivesĮ and sweethearts in Russia.
The
Legion Objects To India Aid
The store sold far more goods than it expected but -the national
The
Miami, Oct. 18. American
Legion's
convention today
ald given
States
assistants had one embarras adopted a resolution, proposed mont. W is Foreign Relations Com
tho proprietor said later: mittee, which "Many of the assistants had continuing economic learned the Russian words, for by the good morning. It was a pretty India long morning because I don't "That think any of them loariled the professing, metta lan
Russian for good afternoon.
Soccer Match
United
aid to Com Mod states the rom
giving material munist Husain,!!! |solution.
*ng “India • continues
Late this afternoon, 'd', nöccer, palad, Bad, aboi, Red „Bitas!
team drawn from the tumularis drew one goal each will a Loami 201
of British naval acumen in our Goverment should refure Portsmouth, HRONOMAT) to glyk ang material aid of say
A crowd of 5,000 Including hd to indi 2,000 Britist, and 1,000 Soviet adds
the":"ronaluation
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