1950-11-07 — Page 2

Hongkong Telegraph 港電新報 士蔑新聞 All

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After the ceremonial opening of the new Chamber of the House of Com- mons, this group of Speakers and Presiding Officers from Commonwealth Legislatures was taken on the Terrace of the Houses of Parliament. In the front row, left to right, are Ceylon, India, New Zealand, Canada, Colonel Clifton Brown, Speaker of the House, Australia. South Africa, Pakistan and South

Rhodesia.

WHAT DOES CHINESE RED INTERVENTION MEAN? Situation As Seen

From Seoul

By ERNEST HOBERECHT

Seoul, Nov. 6. Military observers here believe the Chinese Communists will pull out of North Korea after looting the big electric power generating plants.

The North Korean Communist radio in Sinui- ju, the emergency capital of the Communist rem- nants who fled from Pyongyang, said on Monday the Changchin power plant near the Chosin reservoir had been dismantled completely to keep it from falling into "enemy hands.”

and

Some of the greatest power lots of wishful thinking, plants in East Asia are scattered some of it was being done, through North Koren. Feeder On the other hand. military lines radiate from them far into experts have said from the Manchuria. The loss of these very beginning the time for the; power sources would be a heavy Chinese to have entered the war. blow to the Chinese Communists. was when the Americans and American military authorities South Koreans were clinging had suspected for some time that shakily to the Pusan beachhead the Chinese Communists might in south-east Korea and were

Bomb Used As

p.

Support

Siegen, Westphalia,

Nov. 6

An oblong metal object which railway engineers. here had been using aa à railway track support has now been found to be an unexploded 500 pound bomb dropped by the Allies dur- ing the war.

The bomb, almost buried, had always been thought to be part of a discarded pieco of plant from a nearby foundry. Hundreds of heavily laden trains had rolled over it since the war. A bomb disposal squad rendered it harmless—Re¤- fcr.'

Soviet Navy

try to dismantle much of the about to be thrown out of it. To “Increase”

generating equipment" in Korea Following that line of reasoning, for shipment across the Yalu many experts believed the river into Manchuria. The head belated Chinese entry now. long rush of the United Nations might be a last-minute effort to forces through North Korea salvage something from the after the fall of Pyongyang wreckage before they pulled threatened to forestall any such out, ---- United Press.

But the undertaking.

North Korean radio announcement was the first concrete evidence that

ží k bb k kismantling actually was going

"The Woman Who

Plays With Fire"

A Chinese Picture

SLE

Peking Radio

Diatribe

The

Vigilance

London, Nov 6. The Soviet Minister of the Army, A. M. Vassilevsky, to- 'night accused the United States and Britain of “bloody Interven- tion" in Korca' afiä wärned that opposition to their action, was growing among the "supporters of peace." by!

* Mr. Vassilevsky's charge was

and

PRESS PHOTOGRAPHS frontier of north-west Korea: The radio attributed this claim

contained in an Order of the Day to the Soviet Army, broad- cast by. Rádió Moscow and dis-

tributed here by the official So-

|

viet monitor.

POINTS OF ACTION Notably, Chinese Communist divisions in Korea have gone into action along fronts south of

San Francisco, Nov. 6,

Peking radio some of the greatest of: these

today hydroelectric plants. They have claimed that the United States fought United States marines General Almond, Church south of the Changchin plant others commanding on the

Another Order of the Day and launched their heaviest at Korean front, "are refusing to called on the Soviet Navy to tack south of he great Chang-recognise the Yalu river as the increase vigilance and pre song setup, on the Yalu riverbörder, of China and Korea."!

paredness because of Anglo- American aution, in Korea. Some quarters in Korea. be- to American news agency reNeither Order mentioned Chin- lieved the Chinese' had not ports.. The broadcast said these ese Communist Intervention in thrown their best troops into the American generals were "openly: Korea United. Press. Copies of photographs Korean combat, but had engag- clamouring for a crossing of the taken by the South China they can afford to trade

ed second-grade units which river."

for It said the United States was New ECA Credits Morning Post, South China time--"expendables" sacrificed using Korea, Formosa, Vietnam, Sunday Post-Herald, China away valuable equipment,

for time to, rip-up and haul Burma and.". Hồnglồng, as

Paris Nov. 6. springboards. for invading The Paris Headquarters Mail and Hong Kong Tele- WISHFUL THINKING China," Therefore all Chinese of the Economic Co-operation graph Staff.

However most United Na- must go to the forefront, Administration to-day en- aff Photographers.

tions sources in Seoul were resolutely resist the Americans, nounced die opening. of new are on view in the .!!

admittedly searching for support the Koreans and defend credits totalling $13,507,000 to Morning Post Building. some dependable explanation our homeland.” !!*

Germany, Austria, Denmark, of the Chinese Communist The radio sald numerous France, Holland, Ireland, Intervention, and were look-students and workers through- Norway, and the United --King- ing - hopefully for some signs out China, including a fair perdaman that the situation might not be centage of girls, were volun- as serious as it appeared on the teering for service on the surface.

was, room for: Korean front.--United

ORDERS BOOKED

aredits were for the

chemical and oir.

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