Thursday
“sr Barbados eas Advocate
Bustamante Wants | | Allies Speed
‘New Deal’ Elections | |
Attacks In N. Korea
Government Defeated on Transport Bill |
(From Our Own Correspondent) nha :
Red Chinese 40,000 Reds Dead
nF. And Wounded
KINGSTON, Dec. 27.
jNDICATIONS that new elections would be held |
Korean Front
TOKYO, Dec. 27.
Says MacArthur UNITED NATIONS aireraft ceaselessly pound-
in Jamaica next year were given tiix evening} -
by the Honourable W. A. Bustamante, “Prime!
Minister’, followine the defeat of his Government |
in the House of Representatives on the vital|
transport issue in the Corporate area when three
members of his party defied threats of party dis-
cipline and voted with the P.N.P. Opposition.
P.N.P. members called for the resignation of the cia ane SUCCESS, Dec a. ing the massing Conymunist ose in a
ener S MacArthur saic t |
Government. today that the Chinese Commune:| orea, had by tonight flown 301 sorties in their
ere inst ata Later, Bustamante terming the
attempt to break wy the Communist offensive in
the areas just north of the 38th parallel following
a night of heavy bombing in clear moonlight.
Below them Communist reconnaissance nore con-
tinued prodding the United Nations line braced
for battle before Seoul, the Southern capital. They
constantly sparred with Allied units in the no-
man's-land between the two main armies.
Otherwise the four-week gen-, a3 sectors uf “the Aled!’ Mont
eral lull prevailed, and the OX | ode a i “Bighth A spokes-
pected large scale Communist | OCS. id - ny
ee, oo oe about 80 miles | “Moderate fighting’ was con-
pele hon nad ne ' “ . pi} Hnuing in the area northeast of
The United Nations Eighth! Ghunchon, where 1,500 North
Army holding the defence line Koreans Were reported surrounded
across the peninsula had been south of the 38th parallel,
: had apparently taken over direct
recalcitrant |=members traitors BRITAIN’S latest in light bombers, the Canberra, which is highly theyry't of by American aviation responsibility tor the whole of the
- intimated he would force General experts. It is reported from America that the U.S. Government #&°* ytly to-begin large purchases North Korean front : ; 6
Asks Adult Elections next year, three years of these aircraft,—L.E.S. 4 - ace ae ye ape ogre 2,
before the time, to have a new wo = . s a
deal Government. Bustamante Faas bs : he Daa r ee ing.
said “Traitors may come and [ K D t EMPIRE PREMIERS Wil [ j He said this in a report to the
Suffr e traitors may go but they never oc ors ] 4 , oe Shoe ae The
return. One member said he is k report referred to the menace of
BBE soviet “| WantMorePay| DISCUSS REARMAMENT | irc
i not be. I have it in my power to y f ‘ ' — Nations lines. The guerilla
orces were estimated at from
hold new elections next year and c
or + â„¢ il will do just thatâ€. DISCONTENTED LONDON, Dec. 27, 30,000 to 35,000, and it was said
Wotenkn . ; : ame | ere was evidence that their
re ee LONDON, Dec, 21 ence and rearmament will be the main problems activities were controlled by the
GEORGETOWN, Dec. 27. France Refuse Many British doctors’ who oper- for Commonwealth Prime Ministers when they begin their] Communist High Command
- ate the National health plan and 10-day closed door conference in London on January 4, One report estimated that “com-
The Constitution Reform Com most of
an , x a get their income from} Meeting under the continuing anxiety of the internation-|Plete organised†Chinese Com-
mission began taking evidence in B | i { ‘ a . c § 8 \ oC t e internation aa ; Sai i ;
public tein in onder to obtain] DOUA GEL Cuts jigesioce, ate dtcomenied| i siciation, the eonference Will deal with issues say ter [ mnie tetany mre i
people’s views as to the type of their pay based on 1939 data on} DPeyond the Commonwealth itself. It is expected to dis- ’ :
es rh ¥ a b " ‘ with a strength of approximately | strengthened by 100,000 men of The neg acti Seoul so
John Waddington puding wee ing Sees Pee. Ale Ween a living is too low. close some of the strains and stresses in the loose-knit | 250,000 had already crossed into] the Tenth Corps evacuated from fas wale Satrol clash with enidiin
John Waddington opening today’s} Finance Minister Maurice However it is premature, says a Commonwealth relationship. North Korea and attacked United | Hungnam the north-eastern | tiqed Communists yesterday on the
session explained to the crowded|Petsche told the French National spokesman of the professional or- ee ung OUTS oe
Political observers feel that] Nations forces.
India through her Prime Minis- General MacArthur reported
ter Jawaharlal Nehru will play a]that 35,000 people mostly non-
hall that witnesses may be asked |Assembly to-day that the Govern- | ganizations, to speak of “a strike
questions by the Commissiomers,}/Ment refused to accept any of the /against the health service.†Pros-
but this would bé with the object/Cuts proposed by the Finance|pect of mass withdrawals from
beachhead, Lt. General Matthew] north bank of the Imjin River, 30
C. hidgeway in charge of this uni-| miles to the northwest. About 500
fied force was understood to have}to 700 enemy troops in this area
oy eeaining, Cursner cxplanatsontliment budset “of “ses aooanbooultne gece mrogramme is remote | QUIN WME ips dart hs tals, eepean| combatants | were | etimatea to | 220,000 men now under his com- | were tad to be moving south.
» ‘witnesses statements. “These francs a A oe arakes it camber ts Pepeecons 1 raise many controversies, as the] atrocities†by North Koreans. An Battleweary though many of attacking Communist forces in the
questions might sometime appear}! 0° represents France’s|ister Aneurin Bevan feces Sn e SPOT last Commonwealth conference] organisation had been established | these sevape ait, a otiiion tations nokec ok tke Renn
to take an oone view to mae first year’s contribution to the sharp negotiations with aroused discussed the North Atlantic alli- to investigate and detain people said that with “unchallenged air|from the east coast after being
% ie Naerden ar bees ara ee ee Toe Pree tonne doctors. A new organization, the For 12 years: widow De caeeet hens ie Suetews suspected and accused of “con |and sea supremacy and an over- driven back yesterday.—Reuter,
indicative of any views carried cussed in Washington last sum- British Medical Guild, has sug- Amelia Griffiths, 63, kept a on the policy _ affecting ihe. Far ventional war crimes whelming superiority in armour,
i the C ‘aian.†Ly : gested that under certain circum- bottle of whisky in her home || fragt : In another report General Mac-|they could hold out agains e
vt ‘ommission. ‘ ‘The Government intends to}stances doctors drop the health at Pencoed, Wales, just in : Arthur said there had been a} 10,000,000 Chinese if necessary in Reds uestion
Sir John also ane ee ae pangs eee. 08 the adop- service en masse and resume pri- case of emergency. Britain, ‘fndia, Pakistan and} decrease in war crimes and sug-|a& 120 mile perimeter around the .
Essequibe, MacKensie Tamar which, includes 166,000,000 600 fie tig, he Shyablem, woe hor The bottle has just been Ceylon have recognized the Chi-] gested that the Communists arate aegu-Pusan bridgehead in &s P e
mines and other places in order|francs of new taxation including|to do under the health plan the ee ace Seer ae nese Communist government, but] possibly been influenced by_ the} the south U. e risoners
to give residents outside of|an increase in income tax rates. |Guild is the creation of the pow- Australia, New Zealand, South|threat of post war punishment This would create a stalemate
7 i" 5 + ‘ i j reé Africa and Canada have not done —Reuter which observers here say would
e rtunity to]. The general debate started ear-|erful British Medical Association its back in a frozen stream euter. sage Moce case “3 :
connate nase tunity ly this morning. More than 20|and stands parallel to it. It was near Amelia’s house. iis ‘cada ts: ddkaabaatt cl hurt Chinese morals note was IN KOREA
First witness heard today was|Deputies have announced their | necessary to set up the Guild to iat coe ee ee eek Uinionie-Chae a ek wae ee ee TOKYO, Dec. 27
the Honourable Theophilus Iee,|4¢cision to speak. The clause by make the strike threat because night trying to get the horse akg nie, ee ina — pais “of , allies, Russian officers in uniform have
MUO athe web Ger eet jy (lause discussion of the Bill is due jthe | constitution of the British |} out and were considering ||Recogn Sve members of! ON. Can Govern: The Asierioan Air Force esti-lintecbanted Atnorionn’ enenann
a apah anal or universa!!to start to-morrow when no doubt | Medical Association bars it from whether to use a humane e Commonwealth would no 16 sammerioan ft ; . 8
adult suffrage with compulsery|the Government. will put the] trade union activity—c.P. killer when Amelia heard
voting; a Legislative Council con-| question of confidence on each of the horse’s plight.
doubt help towards this.—(C,P.) 7 mated today that it had killed|of war in Korea according to in-
The World
sisting of the Colonial Secreteery,| disputed clause.
or wounded 40,000 Chinese sojformed military sources here,
She took the whisky from Ald far in the Korean wa: An American officer oarearae
; ; aad ; . i iy Force pilots cls »i{by Chinese was release after
‘Financial Secretary and Attormey| The finance Minister described was its hiding place and walked De uties e If Assembly Is Directly Fifth Air t wee pilot claimed queitioning by alakaslaa seca
General as ex-officio members, 27]/the economies and cuts proposed , ronation across the snow-covered p El, ed { to have killed and wounded ne 10 the Sons. > iinet Russians
elected members with property|by the Finance Commission as " field and put the top of the ‘ ect approximately 800 troops in dich an-gatehin have questioned
and literacy qualification for| “unrealistic†and as “very difficult eo a Diba ite: hie’ ames Sit Down Strike NEW YORK, Dec. 27, today s atta is alone they also the Americen at the Chine anata
membership. A Council life of|to realise on the eve of the next tone issing mouth. Albert Einstein is quoted here/ Claimed to have damaged 234) dona) headquarters in Chorwon
five years dissolving earlier omly|general elections.†This brcught One swallow and the TEHRAN, Iran, Dec. 27. | as saying that the United Nations) Uildings, two supply dumps, about 20 miles north of the 38th
by a no-confidence vote of 75 per|Protests from the popular Repub- LONDON, Dec. 27 horse started to kick. Half Sixteeri Deputies and editors|could only become a world Gov.) 0M airfield, one pillbox and 20|haraleL The Russian spoke flaw
cent, of the elected members; an|lican rapporteur of the Finance ThesBBC tonight ‘br ee a the bottle ana he turned Gi bsed to- Iran's. Government}érnment if its Assembly was) °% &!!ts . less English and was said to have
Executive Council consisting of|Commissien, M. Charles Barauge ie onight broadcast an were camped in Parliament to-| directly elected by the le Stunned by the fury of an air|treated the Ameri¢an tn # friend.
ith|2nd from its Socialist Chairman] appeal to everyone in Britain to on his side. A final gulp ‘ P ; This statement | Fats battabk 100° Communists threw ly w
three ex-officio members with M3 R ac give all possible help in the recov- and he heaved himself up- day in the Persian version of a atement by the physicist | ®t Poe Leeched oll GEE 6 aa: ia
seven elected members of the|™: ~e4n Raymon uyon, : Ae athe “ze ‘ sit-down strike, They are pro- W&@S made public last night by| “way their weapons and came The American who made 8
Petsch he C ’s]ery of the historic coronation right and walked up the : y 1 che ip shal licies aid
Legislative Council elected by sche said the Commission’s : f aEOE dl i i tha thes testing recent suppression of op- three Americans on their way to| out of their foxholes with their|report in the last few days si
: .|proposals would produce a total}Stone taken from Westminster a rom the stream un- 2 p |, meeting of world federalists in} hands up at one point in the front|the practice appeared to be one of
secret ballot by elected members:| Gegcit of 89,000,000000 francs in} Abbey. aided, position newspapers for pub-| Geneva Switzerland eee », it was reported assigning Russian officers to each
Ministero, £0.,Pe, deslmated|tye 1951 ordinary and re-arma-| A message from the Dean of considered ‘insulting ever | DY Hinstein's statement contin-| A’ strong concentration of Chin= |Chinese™ divisional headquarters
eine te I ret i * en em ment budgets, which could then| Westminster included in tonight’s pe mcrgy te aeons toy OVER“ T yaa: “The mounting danger of a ‘ regul i‘: tr op Mv 1 reported j the sources added.
ollos, the Governor to nominate] oniy be financed by inflation. news bulletin from London told eae yy je ment officials. totally devastating ¢ tis fape| be 1ieited.- Riera Tolielticerce |. A TOMO spokesmen sald: ie
the chairman of the Council; each eA di oh aan Fats oo said: | the country that King George British Troops Will . idly vanwiaets a 4 eS Thigh, | by, United States Intelligence ae “no eanetiet †of the alleged
minister subject to removal uPON|upemember that on tl S other cida| Was “greatly distressed by the The Demonstration started on 8 the world that al today to be in the area between
. “Re r that on the r side a ’ a 2
5 world federation Gove . , ,
+ i i 7 †yy December 20, when three Nation- . zovernment | the Yesong and Imjin Rivers a few
a no-confidence vote by two-thirds}, subtle game is perhaps bei removal of the stoneâ€. B d aR sine ; must be created.†“T. rovide : =
of the elected members; the Gov- Nawear “ae eit fuchvata net}. Radio and tele-printer - e l'ransferre al Front Deputies walked into! such a representative bode ice | miles above the 38th parallel
presence of Russians in Korea.
—Reuter.
ne : arli fs , h body is the] ik ced witt Nort!
ernor to have reserve powers with j f iat ili sages warned all British police ‘ Parliament, and announc ed they | main objective of the Geneva con. | LheY were mixed with no North
matters concerning public order, faa tun fae ier ae stations today to watch for a To Atlantic Pact Army would stay there until Govern-| vention,†MEY GOT Korean formations and w ere be-
public faith and good Government jjegration of the state, inflation can |Stolen yellow painted motor lorry LONDON. D a9 ment attacks against the Press lieved to be operating under a
which he shall exercise with the! provide the easiest chance of vic- |i" the hunt for the historic British t il “a “~ __| Stopped. ie fe msn hee sat eanats y
assent of the Executive Council or|tory.†coronation stone missing from ish troops wil e trans-| They were later joined on their |OUTPOST REC Chinese forces were around Yun-
failing that with the approval of| “Between the path of effort and, Westminster Abbey. ferred to the Atlantic Pact army| sit-down in Parliament. They APTURED chon six miles above the parallel
TELL THE ADVOCATE
—Reuter,
unified command The main| THE NEWS
Ring 3113 Day or Night.
1
sr THE ADVOCATE
the| sacrifi t -| _ Police suspect Scottish Nation- |immediately General Dwight D.)/cannot be molested even though ae ai north-east of Seoul PAYS F ‘
eae of ‘State for Sear aa ead te emo ee ee a alists of having taken away the|Eisenhower sets up his command,|the Government is sorely dis- the: Nor’ SAIGON, Dec, 27, Light and scattered activity | †a oes
= effort and sacrifice as the Gov-/1,100-year-old Scone stone from]a Ministry of Defence spokesman | pleased. | ie Northern outpost of Daghuc| took place in the central and east- |
said in London to-day. Editors are carrying on their| °@Ptured by Vietnam forces 24
ernment has done. Th ountry|Place under the seat of the 7 ae
: pe Bee He added that tne British forces|publishing business as usual, hav-| 2048 ago was recaptured by |
4 †Coronation Throne in the Abbey.
Algiers Motor Rally SR Pe ORME a8 TS hey The lorry was stolen on Decem-
- r ; ber 23 from a factory yard in
to be placed at General Eisen-|ing transferred their offices to the Prepth foross ba this morning
hower’s disposal, would include] Parliamentary Press Rooms.—(P)| ted ‘ fed atteck
gg Sr gre one ee ar’ a concerted attack on
; is outposts in the Phucyeh Pulo
area about 50 miles north of
: Glasgow —Reuter,
Begins To-da as a
sali y __ | Holy Door Closed | | ;
The Aimee to Capsttaen rally, | VATICAN CITY, Dee, 27. Truman Wil! Talk
one of the most strenuous motor-; Workmen of Saint Peter’s Bas-
ing trials in the world will begin |ilica to-day completed the walling} On Europe Defence
tomorrow from four points, Turcis,|"P of the Holy Door begun by the
Algiers, Oran and Casablanca. Pope himself on Christmas eve, WASHINGTON, Dec. 27.
and placed a big bronze cross iii President Truman in his “State
The 46 competitors are expected|the centre of the wall, of the Union†Message next week
many, Australia and Trieste.
Although no immediate official| Hanoi,
‘ritish statement was made on! the aids aah ad
the matter, it was understood that| | POCKET CARTOON beets “ina eee Pees ee
British forces would be included! | by QSBERT LANCASTER outpost of Binhlieu was stili
in the Atlantic army and a for-!| ae under Vietnam attack this morn
mal announcement made as soon| TST1C ing .
as the constitutional procedure! BAAS A column was moving up t
¥ i ri €
ty reach Capetown on February 22) In the first half of January alis expected to reaffirm United net Deen See a i « ECANRD'
after covering 9,050 miles. box will be deposited in the wal!| States determination to defend Gee |
|
GILBEYS
Spanish Wines
reinforce the garrison there.
Reuter.
aa
AFRICAN PRINCE IN BG. |
(From Our Own Corre pondent) |
Of those taking part, 32 <«re}containing a complete set of Holy| Western Europe against Commu-
French including Moroccans amd)Year medals and documents re-| nist aggression. Particular atten- ° : fi
Tunisians, two are American, twolcording the events of the 25th) tion will be paid to this part of Six Charges
Belgian, two Swiss, one is &|Holy Year, his message because of the appeal r
Egyptian and one is a South Afrl-| Pope Pius to-day received in! of the former Republican Presi- |SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico, Dec. 27,
can, / general audience in the Hall of; dent Mr. Herbert Hoover for a] Pedro Albizu Campos 63-year- |
—Reuter- |Benedictions about 7,000 pilgrims, contraction in United States com-|]old Nationalist Party Leader of
from European countries, the,;mitments outside the western|the October 31 revolt heard six
. charges against him read in Court
to-day. They include, attack with
intent to kill. Subversive activities
and four violations of laws re- |
quiring registration of firearms. |
He was given 15 days to reply to |
the charges. The charge of attack
with intent to kill was based on
the wounding of a detective in
police cordon which surrounded
> Quality as
) shipped to
, GEORGETOWN,
Eze Anganwu Ogueri grandson
of King Nwokoro of Obibi Terri-
tory Nigeria arrived in British
Guiana tonight On a seven-day
visit as the guest of the Britisi
Guiana branch of the League «o
Coloured Peoples. Eze received :
royal welcome by the negro popu
lation and was escorted into the
City from the airport in a trium
phal procession of motor cars and
cycles,
JAMAICA SWEEP
United States, Brazil and Argen-| hemisphere. At the same time
Expensive Dog Nite: President Truman may indicate
During to-day’s audience the Doh ceutelae tnt them ap tees
DENVER, COLORADO, Dec, 77. |Pope blessed the foundation stone frearmament programmes to the
A woman is suing Paramount)of a Catholic university to b pace of current United States re-
Pictures for $125,000 for the loss|puilt in Rio De Janeiro.
armament,—Reuter,
past fifty
years. ,
of her dog used in the Bing —Reuter.
Crosby film ‘‘The Emperor Waltz.â€
Mrs. Florence Peschel of \ 44: S,
Denver in her suit says the DRIVER KILLED t Griffis Nowe ¥ i
movie company rented her trained , 2. dene Ambassador 0 opal
fox terrier “Tippy†and used ROME, Dec. 27. | WASHINGTON, Dec. 27.
Albizu Campos in his home during Pog
the rebellion.——(CP) 7 A
him as a foil for Bing Crosby in| A driver was killed and about} The White House announced . hol Miss Penny
a es a + oper ym + p ¥ (From Our Own Correspondent)
the film, Mrs. Peschel’s lawyer|50 passengers were injured to-|today that Mr. Stanton Griffis - ! uring juel cuts ponder
said “this thing is a real tragedy.†day when ore eet ego head} would be nominated as ambassa- Jet Plantes Stand By | and Erie's Aiseses Mudhiede of neds te
Mrs. Peschel is described as “‘ajon at great spe on a slippery 3 nay me amaica
childless eeeaa†who “lowes|highway near Palestrina, 20 miles} when the new Congress convened NEW YORK, Dec. 27. in t! Christmas Sweepstake went 1
All-weather jet planes are
guarding New York and the in-
dustrial coast of the United
residents of the South Caribbea:
ors One of the three first prizes «!|
$15,250 went to Waverly Syndicat
this dog.†—Reuter. southeast of Rome.—Reuter.
KEEPING COOL
in January.—Reuter,
These include
States on a 24-hour stand-by i in care of I. C, Edwards, Kettly |
Te f alert, the American meteorological! | Girl Drowned Street, British Guiana, | toe f
nv GC , ‘ office stated tonight. The jets| From Our Own Correspondent) prizes of $5.750 went to J. J | 9
F-48 with a service ceiling of KINGSTON, Dec. 27. Waithe, 54 Edward Street, Port-o ae
45,000 feet are equipped with The Christmas season passed off |Spain, Trinidad with several oth
dor to Spain by the President
radar and devices to give them quietly here with a few accidents. | prizes going to St. Kitts, Barbado
extra power for combat or faster| One fata] accident occurred when]| Trinidad, and other colonies in tl
climbing, the Air Force said a ten-year-old girl was drowned Boxing Day draw at Knutsfo
—Reuter.| while crossing a swollen r ver. Park
U.S. COAST GUARDS LAY DOWN —
NEW SECURITY RULES
,. WASHINGTON, Dec. 27 that they followed the Communist dition, or has engaged in espion-
The Coast Guard to-day laid party, programme—threatened a age or sabotage.
down new security rules to kee Strike unless regulations
& SHERRY |
You can enjoy
PORT |
|
|
: .
ne pro- People employed, “or subjec them again in
eee away from ports.and posed a month ago were changed. to the influence of a foreign Gov
ayene e:nment under — circumstance c tit
These were ordered for imme They contended that the “secu- which may jeopardize the securi! greatest quantity
diate effect by Commandant Onel rity card.†should be cCenied only
in the face of a strike threat xt to people convicted of, or known
west coast ports, embarkation to be trained for spying or saho-
interests of the United State
are also debarred
4
points for men and supplies to tage. Other people to be rejected GARDINER AUSTIN SA Co., Ltd.
Korea The new provisions now put include members or recent ex :
Heads of two unions—both of into effect, deny cards if there is members, affiliates and associate
a which were expelled from the “reasonable grounds for the of any totalitarian fascist con
-
; Congress of Industrial Organi- belief†that the applicant has munist or “subversive†organisa
| .. YOUNGSTERS enjoy a game of cricket om the wide beach at Rockley, Christ Church. Sations this year, on the grounds committed acts of treason or ge- tions,—Reuter,
PAGE TWO
LOWER and orchid growers
have until March 17th, 1951
to get their exhibits ready for a
flower show which the Horticul-
tural Society are having on that
date at Q *s Park.
Marriea Yesterday
ME JOSEPH WALLA, Jnr., and
Miss Grace Calvin, two
Americans living in Venezuela
who arrived here over the week-
end by B.W.LA., were married
BARS Gewch, séncnohe Lene 2s
emmo e, Fr.
A. Parkinson, »erformed the cere-
ony.
aoe ee a wee honey-
at the iew Hote!
where the recep’ which toc’
the form of a lun: Party was
held after the ce: ny. Among
those invited were . A. V. Ny-
Ten, American Vice Consul and
Mrs. Nyren, Mr. and Mrs. Tony
Lewis, Fr,A. Parkinsm, Mr. and
Mrs. John Simmons, Mi. anda Mrs.
Laffan Mr. ana Mrs. Wilcox.
Mr. Walla is a Geologist with
one of the Oil Companies in
enezuela and his wife
a school teacher at the school in
The Chief's Son
Wwe at the year’s end, Lord
McGowan Reaves the chair-
manship of Imperial Chemical In-
dustries his family’s active associ-
ation with the business will end.
For neither of his sons works with
the ve
But one of them, the Hon. Wil-
iam McGowan, now an insurance
broker, can fairly claim that he
owes his life to LCI. After being
up fighti in the
East, he became the first
Allied soldier to be treated with
penicillin.
At that time LC, had almost
ed experiments with the
new drug. It was decided to make
the supreme practical test on the
chairman's gravely wounded son.
A supply was flown out to
Africa, and for days the drug
was ied.
Bill McGowan recovered, and
had arrived as the war's
grea life-saver,
ith T.L.L.
Ame on Christmas Lay
from Trinidad to spend a holi-
day with his parents was Mr.
John Lenagan, son of Major and
Mrs. Denis Lenagan of “‘Dona
Zoylaâ€, Rockley. John is with
Trinidad lLeaseholds Ltd., in
Pointe a Pierre.
Footballer and Cricketer
At present holidaying here is
Mr. Roger Blackman, Barba-
dian Intercolonial footballer and
cricketer who is at present living
in Trinidad, Roger has been in
Trinidad for several years but still
comes over periodically for a holi-
day. is wife and two children
accompanied him.
Mr, kman is the son of Mr.
and Mrs, H. D. Blackman of
Christ Church. E
Annual Dinner
members of No, 6 Club of
the Girls’ Industrial Union,
held their annual dinner at Hotei
oyal, Hastings, Christ Church, on
esday hight.
i a of honour were Mr.
ubrey Douglas-Smith, Dr. H, G.
‘ummins, M.C.P., Miss J. Ross
and a B. Broomes. a
were rs. .
aybeniias’ Riss P. Bymmonds, Mr. A
iy’ Mr. N. Symmonds, dls
Husbands, Miss P. Harper, Mrs. Aor
Mr, E. R. McLeod, Mr. D. ‘Pil-
Miss F. Rice, Mr. C. Riee, Mr. and
K Jones, Mr. and Mts. Frank
berbateh, bic. Mebennes, Mise
rl . . onney, Ss,
Arthur, Miss
Mrs’ H. G. Cummins, Miss A. Cummins.
Mr , Miss N. McCaskie, Capt
A.
L. id, Mr. E. Weir, and Miss G
Cumberbateh.
BY THE WAY
A MAN who grew weary of
the crowing of a cockerel
by t fixed a bit of wood
above its perch. When the bird
raised its head to crow, it banged
it against the bit of wood, and
the crowing died on its lips.
To stop his cockerels crowing
by day Dr. Strabismus (Whom
God Preserve), of Utrecht, fitted
each bird with a kind of brass
umbrella-shapeq hat. This was
suspended on deélicate wires
above the bird’s head. When it
to crow, the wires, con-
nected by tiny string pulleys to
the muscles of its throat set in
motion a cardboard lever. As the
t muscles contracted this
lever released a catch on the
s hat, which opened slowly
like an umbrella, and descended
over the bird’s head, thus muffling
the noise. When the crow was
over, a spring clicked back, and
the hat rose and closed of its
Own accord, thus freein e
bird’s head. es
Moving About
T a a visitors to next
year’s Festival must have been
interested to read that those for
there is no accommoda-
tion in the bomb shelters may
be housed in London’s military
barracks; and, I suppose, in
back-garden shelters in the
suburbs. The troops could be
moved to police stations, ana the
rr ett en,
Correct Fitting,
A A A A AT SL PTT
A
of styles for broad and n
these precious service
a ne a es
‘4 suppose it is rather bright
—but | gust eouldn’t refuse
rry.â€
Ha
Eventually
M®* JUSTICE MANNING whe
was a Judge at the Victoria
Law Courts, B.G., and is now sta-
tioned in St. Vincent, is now holi-
daying in Barbados accompanied
by his wife
Mr. Justice Manning has seen
service abroad in many parts of
the British Empire including Mom-
bassa, Nyasaland and other parts
of Africa as well as Palestine.
He has paid several visits to
Barbados and eventually hopes to
retire here. They are staying at
Cacrabank
Sugar and Oil
ME. BARRY FISHER, Caroni
Ltd’s., Accountant who was
holidaying at Cacrabank, has re-
turned to Trinidad. Mr. Peter
Thurston who was also holidaying
there has returned to Trinidad
where he is an Engineer with
Trinidad Leaseholds Ltd., in
Pointe a Pierre,
Barbadians Come Home
EVERAL Barbadians came
home for Christmas over the
weekend, Mr. Lisle Webster, who
is in charge of Bovell and Skeete’s
office in Grenada, arrived on Sat-
urday.
Mr. Malby Trimmingham, Miss
Sheila Lewis and Miss Nell Farm-
er came in on the Trinidad
flight on Saturday. Mr. Trimming-
ham has since returned to Trini-
dad,
Mr. Robert Macdonald, though
not a Barbadian, although he has
lived for meny years here, arrived
from Trinidad on Saturday by
B.W.1.A. to spend Christmas
with his mother, Robert is with
the Canadian Bank of Commerce
in Port-of-Spain,
Two Trinidadians, Allan Vieira
and Andre Jardine, apparently
refer Barbados to Trinidad.
hey were also on the Saturday
morning flight from Trinidad. Mr.
Theo Alleyne is back in Barbados.
He returned from Grenada over gr
the week-end. He will manage
Newcastle Estate in St. John.
New Administrative
Secretary
M*: C. A, GROSMITH, O.B.E.,
newly appointed Adminis-
trative Secretary to the Comptrol-
ter for Development and Welfare |
in the West Indies, last week said |
King, Mr. and Mrs. P. Browne, Mr. and ,Soodbye to his colleagues at the
f Colonial Office as he prepared to
G. Winter, Mr. O. Harris, leave for his new job.
Cay.
e « « BY BEACHCOMBFR
police to the newer Government
offices. Displaced civil servants
could be billeted on householders,
Any visitors left over might sleep
in disused railway carriages in
railway sidings, or in broke.
buses, lorries, kennels, hen-
houses, and rabbit-hutches. Only
868 shopping days to Christmas
1951. High water at London
Bridge, 8.16 a.m., 4.28 p.m.
Size in collars, 174. Watch-key
number 64768 G,
Old Occurrence
T a coneert the other night a
+ man in the stalls got up and
tapped the conductor on the
Shoulder, while a lady was play-
ing the violin. He said in a loud
whisper, “Is it the lady who’s
making that noise?†“Of course
not,†said the conductor irritably.
“It’s her violin.†“Thanks awful-
ly†said the man, and left
the theatre roaring with laugh-
ter.
Oh, I Say, Look Here!
WHO in my time havea
crossed and re-crossed some
forty-two thousand seven hun-
dred and _ thirty-one Pyrenean
passes, was particularly entranced
It is under-
stood that he is coming out by the
Golfito which leaves England to-
Children’s Party
H JGH SCOTLAND of Trinidad,
Secretary of the 77 Cultural
and Social Club, arranged a
Christmas Party for 200 coloured
children in London. He secured
the free services of some European
and celoured artistes in London to
entertain the children “This
party†says Hugh, “is always one
of the annual highlights of our
Club’s activitiesâ€â€™.
Bewildered Calypsonian
ORD KITCHENER, King of
Calypsonians, was bewilder-
ed; he reeeived too many invita-
tions “to sing calypsoes†during
the festive season in England. “My
real headache†says Kitchener,
was this--I didn’t know which to
accept and which to refuseâ€. So he
tried to be present everywhere
Lord Kitchener may soon become
“ubiquitous Kitchâ€.
Liaison Officer
R. CHARLES MILLS, West
Indies Liaison Officer at the
Colonial Office, says that he has
been busier than ever during the
past few weeks. With the Uni-
versities on holiday, many stu-
dents from the Provinces have
eome to London and nearly all of
them are desirous of seeing
Charlie about one thing or the
other. “The pressure at the office
is great,†says Charlie, “but we do
our best to help everyone.â€
Rootes’ Agent
RRIVING on, Friday after-
noon by B.W.LA. from
Trinidad were Mr. and Mrs.
Jimmy Reid and their daughter,
who came over for Christmas.
Mr. Reid is a_ director of
Messrs. H. E. Robinson and Co.,
Ltd., who are agents for the
Rootes Group in ort-of-Spain.
They are staying at the Hotel
Royal
Returning In January
RS. FLOR URIBE and her
grand-daughter Marie Flor
Alacon have returned to Vene-
zuela. Marie Flor, who is a pupil
of che Ursuline Convent is the
daughter of Dr, and Mrs. Alacon
of Caracas. They hope to return
to Barbados in January.
B.B.C. Radio Programme
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1050
7 am. The News, 7.10 a.m. News
Analysis, 7.15 a.m. Sporting Record, 7.30
a.m. Music Magazine, 7.45 a.m. Bertrand
Russell, 8 am. From the Editorials, 8.10
“&.m, Programme Parade, 8.15 a.m. Janetta
McStay, 8.30 a.m. Books to Read, 8.45
a.m. British Masterpieces, 9 a.m. Close
Down, 12 (noon) The News, 12.10 p.m.
News Analysis, 42.15 p.m. Programme
Parade, 12.18 p.m. Ldésteners’ Choice,
1 p.m. Life in Britain, 1.15 p.m. Radio
Newsreel, 1.30 p.m. Ray’s a Laugh,
2 pm. The News, 2.10 p.m. Home News
from Britain, 2.15 p.m. Sports Review,
2.30 p.m. Ring up the Curtain, 3.30 p.m,
We beg to differ, 4 p.m. The News, 4.10
p.m. The Daily Service, 4.15 p.m. Paul
Temple and the Vandyke Affair, 4.45
p.m, The Cathedral Organs, 5 p.m.
Listeners’ Choice, 5.15 p.m,. Programme
Parade, 5.30 p.m. Light Orchestral Music,
545 p.m. Merchant Navy Newsletter,
é@ p.m. A) alia vs. England, 6.20 p.m.
Interlude, p.m. From the third ‘0-
We see ae p. mer ret ia
sell, 8 p.m. 5 0]
Think on these things, mm. Lite in
Britain, 845 p.m. Kathleen Recrritt, 9.30
p.m. London Forum, 10 p.m. The ton
10.10 p.m. From the Editorials, 10.15 p.m.
Vanessa Lee, 10.45 p.m. Special Dispatch.
lt p.m. What the Londoner Doesn't
Know.
CROSSWORD
Across
1. Lowk cautiously for this chirp)
sound. (4)
3 and 6 Down. Stored, (10)
i. Look upon as silly, (8)
0. Pudding. (4)
1, Both the bad tad and the bath-
ing belle may get it. (7)
2. Old English gold coin. (4)
4. Step backwards, (4)
5 Removes portions of fluid from
vesse, to vessel. (7)
7. A long stride gives this. (4)
18. Proves a mistake was made. (5)
1, Briefly No, 3 in the ring. (3)
2. Costs a penny to see the river
at twilight. (4)
a4. Money a rail ? s*)
4 super change. )
6. Thoroughbred Arabian camel. (9)
Down
Comes out of his portal to go
his rounds, ‘er 2. Coop ye (3)
and ¥. Pretentious but insignifi-
cant fellow. (7-7)
Student pastime. (3)
They were laid somewhere, (4)
See 3 Acvruss.
Ails or goes to sea. (6)
See ¢ wh.
It's a nasty look (5)
Willingly. (4)
This era is a pavement tiie. (4)
Fifty more and it would belong
to the country. (4)
Antiquated, (3)
Never try to pass one. (8)
A solution in tteelf (a)
ESUSomsor & Pp
BSE —eee
exc
Solution of vesterday » puec Necross:
1. Demeanour: 6, Oil: BR Menute, 21,
Gigantic: 15, Neglect qd, 15,
+ s : . . + 20. ei, 26 obliwor;
to read in a piece of travel lit- BY" fipe: 98 toa: Ys.’ dep 2B’ Down:
erature the following statement] 2. EuE® ota sidcsltnde: 7, Thue:
about Spain: Cut off from the] 4%) 4. Out: 3. Rectitude: 7, Ne ross,
rest of Europe by the Pyrenees TA ie igh ee os -
which have only two passes, , . _| Void: 21, Lary: 93.
aa ape, pitino, Pilly (neta
E vans and
Whitfields
Remember: Youget morethan a pair of shoes
ee etm (in ei tench nnn
YOUR SHOE
STORES
the best materials, personal attention. Wide range
arrow feet and the knowledge of your needs—
s always await you at these two stores.
|
|
|
ee
a a i ge
SY SN
BARBADOS ADVOCATE
i
EMPIRE CLUB
DANCE
Under the Distinguished
Patronage of Sir Allan
Collymore, Kt.,
In aid of Tour to Grenada,
AT BANK HALL,
on SATURDAY, Dec. 30th
Music: Perey Green's
Orchestra
CASUARINA CLUB
jnounce
NEXT SATURDAY,
with Bertie iayward's
Orchestra,
Year's Day),
a Special Attraction from
10—12 p.m
THE KATZENJAMMER
(Trimidad’s Juvenile Steel
Band) .
i SS SSS SSS
CINDERELLA
So eee genre
Walt ee &
DISNEY’S ee
“CINDERELLA*
=) 7 .
4 snows 4
On
FRIDAY 29TH & SATURDAY 30TH 9.30 am., 1.30, 4.45 &
8.30 p.m. and continuing daily at 4.45 & 8.30 p.m
Also the Color Short
SEAL FSLANDâ€~
PLAZA THEATRE
ae BRIDGETOWN
=
_ /TECHNICOLOR
——
PLAZA Theatre—sridGETOwn
Last Two Shows TO-DAY 4.45 & 8.30 p.m. (RKO Radio)
“ Samuel GOLDWYN presents ** QU VERY Ownâ€
with Farley GRANGER Ann BLYTHE—Others
Also Jan AUGUST in “PIANO RHYTHMâ€
SRECrAS MAT, TO-DAY 130 p.m. Extra Special Notice |
Two New Pictures (Monogram) FRIDAY & een ewe
4 sHOWS
Leo GORCEY & Bowery Boys in 9.40 mam,—Ldeoaas & 8.30 p.m,
“DOCKS of NEW YORKâ€
and
Robert MITCHUM in
“AND 8O THEY WERE
MARRIEDâ€
and continuing Daily
Walt DISNBEY'S
“CINDERELLAâ€
also The Color Short
“SEAL ISLANDâ€
at 4.30 Show—Save your Half Tickets
Last ‘Holiday Hamper†Saturda:
—
PLAZA Theatre = OISTIN
Last 2 Shows TO-DAY 5 & 8.30 p.m. (Warner Double)
“KING'S ROW†and “CONFLICTâ€
FRIDAY and SATURDAY 5 & 8.80 p.m. (Warner Double)
David Niven & Jane WYMAN in “KISS IN THE DARK" &
George BRENT in “GOD'S COUNTRY and the WOMAN
ea Midnight Show Saturday 0th (2 new Pictures)
Leo Gorcey & Bowery Boys in Johnny Mack BROWN i:
“BOWERY BOMBSHELL & “LAND OF THE LAWLESS
Last Holiday Hamper†Sat. 30th at 8.30 Show Save your Half Tickets.
GAHTETY (The Garden) ST. JAMES
Last Show TONITE 8.50 (Warners Double) s
L L 8 WERSâ€" a WALKING DEAD’
ene een (Not suiable for Children)
MEDNITE Sat. 30th, (2 new
Friday & Saturday 8.30 p.m. Pictures
John LOVES MARY Leo GORCEY & the East Side Kid
Ronald REAGAN and MR. MUGGS RIDES AGAIN
“ E IMINAL†and
1 eee toe TEX RITTER with his horse
Lin
with Sally GRAY and WHITE FLASE
TREVOR HOWARD “MAN FOR TEXA
AQUATIC CLUB CINEMA (Members Only)
TO-NIGHT at 4.30
HUMPHREY BOGART INGRID BERGMAN
in “CASABLANCAâ€
A Warner Bros. Picture.
Commencing FRIDAY 20th - - -
RKO's Sensational New Thriller
“THE WINDOWâ€
with BOMNBY DRISCOLL
emy Award Picture
TO-DAY 5 & 8.30 P.M. ONLY
“THE HOUSE OF DRACULAâ€
“THE MUMMY'S TOMB"
LON CHANEY & JOHN CARRADINE
SESS WE NG NG NIG NG NE NI NS NS NS NN BN
and Friends
We Extend
BEST WISHES
CRORE 4
A PROSPEROUS
168 AEA ss
PEACEFUL NEW YEAR
®
STHE KRAREADOS CO-OPERATIVE
COTTON FACTORY LTD.
MU OS CEES
%
| GLOBE
TO-MORROW |
POG FIFE SOSSO,
>,
Â¥
and NEXT SUNDAY, (Old ;
“THREE
LITTLE
WORDSâ€
Technicolor
from M-G-M!
WATCH FOR IT!
The Super
STAR TALENT
SSL
OLD YEAR
FESTIVITIES
OES
Darryl! F. Zanuck presents
Richard Widmark — Linda
Darnell, Stephan McNally
SSSt
BARBADOS
§ POOPPOSSPOSS OSS ODOOSSSSSSOSPOOSOG OPO?
“No Way Outâ€
(Members only).
with Sidney Poitier
DINNERS will be served in a ai om
Ballroom between 7
on SUNDAY.
To-day and Tomorrow—
Very Special Menu
MEMBERS are requested to x4
Republic Big Double;
Allan “Rocky Lane and
His Stallion, Black Jack
make Reservations as early
from 9 p.m, to
ATTRACTIVE BALLROOM
DECORATIONS.
MUSIC by Sydney Niles and
his Orchestra.
POPPE ESPP PPS CELI OO
Dorothy Patrick and Arthur
28.12.50—4n, Franz.
BOLO
-
GS SSSSSS
i Bh BX DK GNA Hi BA XA GNA AA SSN SDK DX DRE GK NBA TK GG DN GANT GN TN BSN RN ENN
Cordial | Greetings :
To all Our Customers &
Se
SSN A GDH GN GN AN DON IN BA ON BN NIK I EN
z
Â¥,
NG NG NG NN Na WN NN NN 8 NW Ws NN NNN
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1950
ORCHESTRAS
CLUB MORGAN
The Regular Club Morgan Orchestra
Arnold Meanwell and His Orchestra
2 =< SNR I†i a Spiga ~~~; vagitya
FOR DANCING FROM 9 P.M.
THROUGHOUT THE NIGHT
2s dS VA HE 6 > #9
TURKEY—CHICKEN—OR STEAK DINNERS
Served from 8 to 11.00
SUPPER AT ANY TIME
HATS ! BALLOONS ! NOISEMAKERS !
To Greet The New Year
DINNER 3.50 DIAL 4000 DANCE 1.00
? SEV ————— EE = .
ROYAL
Last Two Shows
4.30 and 8.30.
20th Century Fox Double—
EMPIRE
To-day and Tomorrow,
4.45 and 8.30.
June Haver and Lon
McCallister in
**“Scudda Hoo
Seudda Hay~
in
*The House on
92nd St.°°
with .
Lieyd Nolan and Anna-
bella.
OLYMPIC
Last Two Shows To-day
Mildred Joanne
ROXY
4.30 and 8.15.
and 8.15.
in .. Republic Big Double—
Rober! Rockwell and Bar-
“Sundown in bara Fuller in, .
Santa Fe* ** Unmaskedâ€
» and.
and
** Tarnished â€â€™ “Law of the
‘ae Gold Westâ€
with .
Monte Hale and Paul Hurst.
=
GAHAN TN GR DR DARDS TN REIN ON ON ON ONIN ON GR NN SAN DR ON DNDN ON DEDN
Ga
Jo all of
You
jrom all
of Us
WE EXTEND
to all our
Customers and
Friends Best Wishes
for a Very Happy
New Year
NGG NG NG NU NG NN NW NN A MN
Fa
$
CHURSDAY,
| ee aapaene tei aemiamaaas
SNL ooh 3 eM LC «= HARBOUR LOG | sc cue
|) VYING FISH CLUB
\\ t
In Carlisle Bay i will be closed to members Cleanse the system from blood
| ALY. Sedgefield, Seb. Wondert ee] from 3.30 p.m, to Midnight impurities ; rmany sufferers from
|. n'osarene, Se: rOrtac, MV ii da FRIDAY: Decéeaber 26, rheumatic aches and pains, lumbago,
eS nce re Rags on the eceasion of a privaté neuritis, pimples, boils, sores and
| Lucile Smith, Sch Belquee ete minor skin ailrments, can derive great
{FP MV. Lady, Sch. Anita H { > TY
a ee ere ae benefit from this well-known medicine.
SORE A Poe otras ta tance | being given by Mrs. Betty
thei: I. sant te ee i ee ee oe on ® Im LIQUID er TABLET FORM
OUTER MONGOLIA a V Bhue Stag, 130 tone net, Capt |
Fergusson, from Nassau os a
ea hialie Ae e| sivain, from Glasgow." "P| Aesop oe eeen ees
figures for Red troops,
black for anti-Red
Bryant, for Trinidad Ber ee cen ae
$3. Lady Rodney, 4,007 tons net, copt | 8, LEONARD'S CHURCH “8 handsomer by far
} LeBlane, for St Lueta ‘ DANCE x
Des ———OCEAN — x SOCIAL and : when you treat it te
— : . +
Spel seadeetel ciShadiwomipeaciatoaes pa ERTS *
© test Ships In Touch With |} cuus witow, rassase 3] ‘Vaseline’ Hair Tonic,
FORMOSA SSS Barbados Coast Station * Road. PRE
Q we Cant : (NAT) ——— Cable and Wireless (W.1,) —Limited x Licenced 28, use a tow rops
spin ] dviss that they can now communteate
By i sass 7 pp 660000) SS, recat acest 8 a day... then see
—— Barbados Coast Station:— ae
HONGKONG——-_—_. S& Egero, SS, Casablanca, SS * 9p.m. —3 a.m the difference!
U~ Uranium deposits Gabibsihisibicshietmeibtalbindsitaibelsiattice Empress of Scotland, S.S. Maria Leti in ADMISSION:
S.S, Chrysanthy, S.S. Lady Nelson, SS
Troop strengths : White aeetoneteriytesyett ‘ ae ;
Boo S.S. Folke Bernadotte, S.S. Rio Dale
denne SSH Leéorre SS. Bonito, S.S. Sculptor, SS. Matine, 2$66996669660666696660604
. A
tina’s promotion to the status R ER Siam, Malaya, Burma, and even develop her mineral and indus-
1 Great Power arises nee By OB T JESSEL —, : : trial resources. It is improbable
1 the collapse of Japan an ie bt cite: . ce ina’s and inks with that Russia could provide this /
Many than any real increase fay > Red meeiene ie ae Russia (via the Trans-Siberian help or that Mao would want to EW: (MPROVED TRADE MARK
@ peace or war potential. © Gommunist alliance into an equal railway) and Indo-China are put Soviet technicians in key CAPLETS tp the os St ewade mark
a caraine a primitive, over parthar’ ae Weddin nk ee eegemunte ioe, mato traffic, and positions throughout China. ODEX SOAP ge hts. Ge Come'd
yulated, under-developec 7 @€asily vulnerable to air attack
try which has been torn by flee hae Give tie, Secale = Inside Chima, there are fewer 5 Mao hopes that the whole
since 1931. But she has all
Matural resources to become
Olossus—given 50 years of 1 With 4,000 miles of coast- air defence of her own, years WITHOUT open, general Qe Banishes perspiration odour
e. line, China has no adequate navy : war. He wants to be in a posi-
tal war with the United to defend her vital sea outlets — 3 Her main workshop and tion to transport and use its © Leaves body sweet and dalaty
se f the Canton; Foochow, Shanghai, arsenal area, in Manchuria, is an petroleum, rubber, sugar, alum- : i i ,
ivy eee the indefnite Tsing-tao, Tientsin, and Dairen easy target for enemy bombers. inium, manganese, and iron ore, Odex makes a deep cleansing lather that
DECEMBER
28,
1950
LER INDO 4
\ CHINA
his mind:—
—and so reap the fruits of any
Dairen
ia
5
Tsingtao—
Tientsin
Tsinang ~
= g
BARBADOS
oe -KOREA—
SS Oranjestad, 2.850 tons net, Capt
ors Hazelhof, for Madeira Belmont Road
M V_ Duerwood, 94 tons net, Capt. De
> ee
——— PHILIPPINES
nw
than 8,000 miles of railway track,
equally vulnerable. China has .no
of South-East Asia will fall into
Reds hands within the next ten
a i a
ADVOCATE PAGE THREE
S S, Lady Rodney, 4, 907 tons net, Capt
LeBlanc, from St, Vincent
S S. Cottica, 2,312 tons net, Capt. Burat
from Funchal
S.S, Oranjestad, 2,850 tons net,
Hazelhoff, from Christobal
SS. Inventor, 3,840 tons net,
Beyant, from Liverpool
Sehooner Philip H. Davidson, 87 tons
net, Capt. Sealy, from British Guiana
DEPARTURES
Schooner Gloria Henrietta, 55 tons net
Capt. Glynn, for St Vincent
Schooner Phyllis Mark, 58 tons net
Capt MeQuilkin, for St. Lucia
SS Alcoa Pilgrim, 3,931 tons net, Capt
Haagensen, for St Vincent
S S. Cottica, 2.312 tons net, Capt. Burst
for Trinidad
THANK YOU
We thank you for your pat-
ronage during 1950.
And wish you a Prosperous
1951
THE LISMORE AGENCY
A. H. CLARKE,
Capt
Capt
reed
|
Coteau, for Grenada
SS. Inventor, 3, 840 tons net, Capt
Your hair will be
Regina, $.S, Detender, Gents 2s. — Ladies Is. 6d.
8.S. Northern
S.S
Lights, S.S
Dolores,
S. Gaspar
Bay a bottie eudes!â€
S.S. Gascogne, S.S. Atlantic Exporter, ALL ARE WELCOME
SE
TTT
© Gets skin really clean
i $ forei + i f Id and gentle for face, hands and
a ‘ 4 China must look to foreign If genera] war comes now, this 2 x : ,
ame -tun, : “ ‘ .o aily baths :
Deen jst — future victories in Indo-China, countries for technical help to will be impossible, —LES daily baths, Odex is ideal for family use
¢ 7 es i a
Bottles Fenders Damaged American Column
nes : , > of the rear fenders of the
‘ESH from their three-day One of. : or
after a few weeks of travell- car X.522 was damaged yester- e re S e
about the country to get bot- day morning at about 10.45 when
to sell to aerated drink it became involved in an acci-
ars, bottle traders are again aent with the van M.594 along
eting the many bottles that
used over the holidays.
Lower Bay Street. The car is the
property of Dear’s Garage while
the van which is owned by God-
dard & Sons, was being driven
by A. Hewitt. The car was being
driven by Arthur Chase.
Scotch?
From Newell Rogers
they went about the districts
wday, their call was, “any
es for the bottle buyers?â€
bottle trader told the Advo-
NEW YORK.
; scarcity. So they hoard in fear of
yesterday that always after —- ‘i oe the midst of the shopping controls, of rationing, of shortage
stmas she could buy over 300 ush, a business mystery dev:|- SPRING FROCKS are to be
gill bottles from a district CALF 7O LBS AT BIRTH ead tonight—the strange case of shorter and tighter, Dressmakert
bout 25 residents. Those are _ ‘he missing Scotch. agree that the stylish Amerie
y sold at six cents a dozen. A bull calf when weighed in Not just one case, but millions woman must be tempted inte
Said that it is just before and shortly after birth yesterday of bottles, throwing away her old loug
‘Christmas that the bottle morning, registered 70 pounds, It
Imports of Scotch this year ave
the largest since th > re peal of Pro.
hibition, more than 7,500,000 bot-
dresses and buying new models,
MONOPOLIES are hit in a Bit)
#is at is best. is owned by Everdene Alieyne of
Eagle Hall, St. Michael.
————
passed in the Senate by 55 votes to
€ said that women of her tles above 1949, 22. Tne 1k mtn
; : ; - yy ‘ keep- M 22 ne law, if also passed by the
® deal Bg three-gill _ BP fogs ato ree ee Yet little more is going dow! House “of Representatives, fe
because B.B.C. and coca-cola ing * ser a Pts American throats than last year. forbid a corporation to buy. (ne
@s are usually returned by the Advocate that it is seldom that orbid poration y. |
trink sellers to the makers of In some cities, drinkers cannot
| CoO OO ROC CBC U EES
Po i 2 ssets of a rival if the deal reduce
iw “aeinine * en ae ah pp By find their favourite branc areamenttan. Br eae in Nice .
Been weight, he said, was 40 to 45 res £ Sex A ad xe’ SECRET AGENTS of the Fe
cotchn . “ stigati i
MMONWEALTH BEAT °."°* Says Harry Lourie, vice-presi-, America's Scotland Yard adjouro
The mother of the calf is a = sei the Liquor. Importers’ oq gq crime detection class {¢é Look what this
' Holstein. ssocia ron, in an offic ial report round liceme hey led their ; ; ;
IGAL GOVERNOR'S x! “The ineredsed ‘Import figures cv Sein wo a dsngstore and auveste| — ACisthesremetwck | WAY g-TON 10 Horse-Power
‘ALCUTTA, India, Dec. 26 Seen not justify the conclusion ‘thal Gq “Mad Dog†Glen Wright, a i ah La rays hace . ’
@ Commonwealth cricket gy oo: increase in thease deubstantio! gunman and one of the country’s] — Youthadmititsetsanew | MORRIS COMMERCIAL has got. White clothes are whiter — coloureds are y
t defeated the cn 5 Canadian Rates otter, aaah ane oa ten most wanted criminals — peers an Dene POUR Yee 1 Norength ronerve" brighter, with the rich lather of Rinso! //
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PAGE FOUR
BARBADOS > ADVOGKTE
Printed «7 the Adveentse Ca,, Lid.. Broad St. Bridgetown.
nS ny
Thursday, December 28, 1950
GOOD METHODS
DURING the debate in the Legislative
Council on the resolution to provide funds
for the completion of the St. Leonard’s,
Coleridge and Parry Schools and the Pine
Housing Scheme a note of caution was
sounded by Hon. H. A. Cuke. He advised
that we should take stock of the good
methods which had been adopted in the
past, find out in what way they were bene-
ficial, and, where necessary stick to them.
This raises another point which might
well be adopted in dealing with the ex-
penditure of public funds. There should
be a Finance Committee comprising mem-
bers of the House of Assembly to examine
resolutions and bills which have been re-
ferred to a Committee. This committee
would have it in their power to co-opt any
member of the public or of any other body
who could contribute anything to their
investigations.
This-suggestion has been made because
of the obvious lack of scrutiny of the votes
from the Treasury to the Architect ond
Planning Officer who was allowed to erect
these schools and houses without the
supervision of the Public Works Depart-
ment. The result has now been seen.
If these votes had been subjected to
thorough examination by a Committee of
the House it would have been realised that
the estimates were too low. If the votes
had been subject to the practical handling
of the staff of the Public Works Depart-
ment it would have been seen that, judg-
ing by similar votes in the past, they
>
}
|
|
|
|
BARBADOS
ADVOCATE
“The Red Threat In|
Latin Amerieaâ€â„¢
By MALCOLM JOHNSON
WASHINGTON, Dec. 26.
Intensified communist activity
in Latin America is regarded
today as a serious threat to the
security of the United States.
The situation is such, in view
of the world crisis, that Secre-
tary of State Dean Acheson has
called for a conference of the
Foreign Ministers of the 2!
American Republics constituting
the organization of American
tates.
In calling the conference ic
diseuss further economic, politi-
cal and military co-operation,
Acheson warned that the “ag-
gressive policy of international!
communism, carried out through
its satellites, has brought about
a situation in which the entire
THIS is the
highlighting 4
first of five
little-realised
articles
phase
of the worldwide communist drive
against democracy—the Red threat
in Latin America. Existence of this
threat to hemispheric solidarity in
the present crisis has been under-
scored by Secreta: ot State Dean
Acheson in his call for a meeting
of the Foreign Ministers of 21 Ameri-
can Republics to discuss measures
of meeting it.
Maicolm Johnson, writer of these
articles, is a Pulitzer Prize Winning
Reporter of National renown He
went for his facts to the highest
diplomatic and intelligence sources
in Washington, including the men
dealing specifically with Lat‘
American affairs as they affect .ne
United States This series points
out and explains how communist
activities spell danger for the United
States in the current emergency
Througi tireless agitation they
are generating a campaign of hate
age...st the United States, They
are creating civil unrest, trving to
free world is threatened.†foment revolutions against noia-
bly instable governments, infiltra-
The plain, ominous fact — of ting trade unions, other political
which the State ent is parties and the governments
fully aware—is that while world themselves.
attention is focucsod on the crisis
in the Tar Feet and the threat, All this is a s-urce of enormous
jot wer vith Soviet Russia thepwotential damage to U.S. inter-
corimenisits are working cease-iests, particularly if war comes.
tocety in Latin America.
The-r objective is clear. They
ro ceeking to drive a wedge
Cen tho Uniled States and
'.-alin America and, in the event
«. war, to prevent us from
cceiving strategic supplies which
culd conceivably spell the differ-
{cace between survival and†total
would have been exhausted before the ,
buildings were completed.
The members of the House are respons-
ible for the funds drawn from the Public
Treasury. That responsibility does not,
however, end there. It,is their duty to see
that the results from this expenditure are
the best which can be obtained under the
circumstances.
In the case of the Schools for which fur-
ther sums must now be voted, it is not
only that the funds have not been spent
well but that the objects for which they
have been spent have not yet been
attained. Educational facilities in this
island are extremely unsatisfactory. There
is a shortage of teachers and all the schools
are overcrowded, These new schools were
to answer the public criticisms against
superannuation and to satisfy those
parents who claim that they are willing to
pay but cannot get places for their
children in the public schools.
The money has been spent and education
is still suffering from the same defects.
Meanwhile public dissatisfaction increases.
Close scrutiny of resolutions would be a
means of preventing this unsatisfactory
method of spending funds and asking for
revotes. It would, of course, cut across
the recent practice of the House of allow-
ing resolutions to be sent down from the
Executive and passed the same day on
which notice has been given by having
rules 88 and 89 of the House suspended.
The greatest Speaker the Barbados House
of Assembly has ever known, the late Sir
Frederick Clarke, warned the House a few
months before he. retired that the Rules
of the House were made for a specific pur-
pose and that the suspension of these two
Rules would lead to trouble not then en-
visaged by the House. It was then an in-
frequent practice and used only in cases
of extreme urgency. Today it is the rule
rather than the exception.
In the House of Commons a Committee
is appointed to assist the Speaker to cer-
tify money bills, which cannot be amended
by the Lords. In Barbados there is no
necessity for a certificate by the Speaker.
The matter seems to settle itself. But such
a Committee would not only be effective
in saving time, but would ensure that pub-
lic funds were handled in a more satisfac-
iuvry manner. This in fact, is the peculiar
province of the House of Assembly.
OUR READERS SAY:
Agriculture
To the Editor, The Advocate—
SIR,—I come again to this sub-
ject to add a practical supplement
to my letter of the 19th inst. based
partly on your stirring. leading
article two-days earlier.
I then voiced lively satisfaction
at the recognition which the vital
importance of agriculture in the
West Indies is now increasingly
receiving from several direc‘icns,
and mentioned some of the steps
we in Barbados are taking to give
it the attention and promitlence it
so emphatically merits. And I
closed by referring to the immedi-
ate plan for & “Farm Institute†in
Trimadad, and urged that we need
to go much deeper and wider into
the subject and deal with it on
larger lines.
That scheme—quite good, prob-
ably, as far as it goes—looks like
another effort to provide scientific
instructors or directors, and will
give Barbadcs only places for four
students, at quite considerable ex-
se, whereas I think we need
primarily to’get down to those who
do the actual work of tilling,
planting, and reaping, and arouse
in them interest and respect and
liking for their position and duty
Scientific instructors or directors
ing.
tion.
tive manner.
sure them,
interested
the same time
; samme
cannot accomplish anything much
unless the rank and
workers are interested and will-
I now come to offer two simple
practical suggestions at this point.
It may be they are stale and al-
ready recognised by wiser people.
If so, please have me excused,
The first concerns the boys and
girls—especially of course the boys
—to whom we have to look to take
on the work now being done by
the generation that is passing, and
the suggestion is that we should
enlarge and build on the School
Gardens scheme already in opera-
It is said that some of the school
teachers are not interested in this
Gardens section of their curricu- : !
lum and perform their part in it I mentioned j
in a very perfunctory and ineffec-
If so I do not think
the community should hastily cen-
The school master has
naturally turned away
iand and stockyard and directed
his thoughts and aims in quite an-
other direction, and it would be
surprising if he were still greatly
therein and keen to
point others to such work and help
them to become efficient in it.
I feel sure many
efeat.
That is the official over-all view
Washington todmy. Highest
‘ources point to specific develop-
rents in specific Latin American
untries in support of that view,
nich can be summarized as
. llows:
ac
The Communist programme in
Latin America is by no means
w, but is a part of communism’s
nnounced program of world
quest through revolution.
In furtherance of that pro-
in Latin America they
cre exploiting historical weak-
rasses in relations with the
United States.
Their influence extends far be-
_ ond their numerical strength and
they are now redoubling their
eYorts in the light of the world
: tuation and the growing danger
: a third world war.
What’s more, they appear to be
making some progress, despite the
fact that officially most Latin
.imerican governments are friend-
ly to the United States,
Their methods are familiar, but
in Latin America they are finding
much fertile ground.
RED PLAN FOR
By ELIE MAISSI
PARIS,
Reliable reports from behind
the Iron Curtain revealed to-day
that the so-called “African
Cominform†has taken — far-
reaching decisions aimed at
overthrowing western domina-
tion of the strategic, raw mate-
rial producing continent of
Africa.
The “African Cominformâ€
drew up its programme during tts
fivst meeting at Bucharest.
Since November 17, three im-
portant meetings have taken
place in the Romanian capital
eoncerning Communist action in
Com-
Africa. Native African
munist leaders participated. The
discussions concluded December
17 with adoption of an over-all
programme of action for the Com-
munist parties concerned.
Tt was decided that Africa pre-
sents a favourable terrain for
national, racial and social agita-
tion.
Strikes and street demonstra-
tions will be the principal meth-
ods and the primary objective
will be to createy an economic
crisis designed to disrupt one of
the western world’s chief sources
of raw materials.
According to reports received
by qualified agencies in western
Europe, the Communists aim to
combine the effects of an eco-
nomic crisis in Africa with the
restriction of raw material pro-
duction in Asia, The African
Cominform believes this scheme
will multiply the difficulties of
the United Nations western pow-
ers in Korea,
Leadership of Communist activ-
ities in Africa was removed from
the hands of the metropolitan
Communist parties, This measure
principally affects the French
of the existing s
file of the
perform their du
ly. Then again,
for it, with a ful
must interest the
train the hand.
were possible
and given as a
not look for a r
tellectual interest
or even total ig
from the
Not long ago I
and though he
school only a shor
At thing much about
the importance of the subject and
But we do really need to make
the item a suecess, and especially
to provide the intellectual stimu-
tus of “Nature Knowledgeâ€.
teachers with expert assistance.
Suppose a competent and enthu-
siastic Instructor could be found
visiting the schools and_ helping
the staff in the matter,
of interest and efficiency on the
part of the young generation?
surprised at the scant knowledge,
land worker of the multitude of
interesting facts and processes of
Nature which surround him.
a little garden work at my place,
he did not appear to know any-
interested in them. And a year
The average U.S. citizen scarce-
ly realizes how utterly dependent
we may be on Latin America in
the event of war with Russia.
If there is war, the communists
already are boasting that not a
drop of oil or other strategic sup-
plies will reach us from Latin
America for use agzinst Russia.
It is, therefore, vitally import-
ant for us to maintain the friend-
~ Well, you see, ductor,
I'm a newsagent, aud I
always carry the foreign
papers with my right arm
and English ones with
my left!"
Lonion Express Service
Communist |Party, which previ-
ously has exercised strong control
over Communist activities in Mor-
oceo, Algeria, Tunisia, Senegal
and other key regions. It also
affects: the Communist Party in
Belgium, which had _ controlled
Communist activities in the Bel-
gian Congo, an important uranium
producing area,
In future, Communist leadership
in Africa will be entrusted to Mos-
cow-trained agitators, most of
whom are natives of the regions
in which they will operate.
The reports added that funds
for these activities are centralized
in Cairo and dispersed in several
banks under cover of accounts
of various firms of the Russian
satellite bloc.
The Bucharest meeting decides
the preparatory phase should cul-
minate in violent agitation some-
time next Spring. It is known, that
certain French authorities gov-
erning French-African territories
believe outbreaks may occur at
that time.
The reports
“African Cominformâ€
‘meetings came from the same
sources which in 1949 asserted
that the Peiping meeting of the
World Federation of Trade Unions
in reality sheltered an Asian Com-
inform meeting. In November,
1949, these sources predicted that
a military attack would be launch-
ed against South Korea by the
Communists. The military attack
was launched last June.
concerning the
Bucharest
This time these sources pointed
out some similarity between the
Peiping meeting and the Buchar-
est meetings.
The Bucharest meetings took a
double form. There were public
meetings of the World Federation
of Trade Unions. And, in addition,
there were the private Cominform
meetings concerning Africa.
taff do recognize or so ago I had
much the same
ty conscientious-
what about time the commonplace
1 curriculum?
and
We
mind as well as
Suppose then it
to furnish the can the enlarged
and what would
transforming the
whole time job den into a kind
think the success
Might we
ich development
ie
I have been
ust above
in the
norance, of the
in
fe sheet.
had a boy doing
This was introd
must have left
t time previously ence,
with good results.
plants nor to be
and at the end of
beg Be
member speaking to him about
fertilisation in the life of flowers
system based on an efficiency
retired planter with wide experi-
who had himself tried it
ship and active cooperation of
Latin America, te counteract the
progress being made by the Com-
mun sts and to keep Latin Ameri-
eans convinced that their interests
coincide with our own,
Stressing the economic import-
ance of Latin America, Assistant
Secretary of State Edward G.
Miller, Jr., in charge of Inter-
American Affairs, pointed out re-
cently that 1950 purchases by the
U.S. will total at least $2.5 bil-
lions worth of goods.
Miller also said;
“More than one half of the value
of our imports from Latin Ameri-
ca consists of strategic raw ma-
terials. Latin America provides
all our requirements from abroad
of vanadium, quebracho and cas-
tor oil.
“It is a source of more than
90 per cent. of our purchases of
antimony, cadmium and mice.
From our neighbours to the
south we secure from 75 to 90
per cent. of our imports of petro-
leum, berylium, bismuth, copper
and iodine, and from 40 to 75
per cent. of our imports of sisal
tin, lead, zine and tantalite.
“In the future the importance
of Latin America as a source of
strategic raw materials is more
likely to increase than to decline.
The case of manganese may serve
as an example,
In the past a large proportion
of our imports of manganese has
come from the Soviet Union.
Two great new deposits of this
essential commodity have recent-
ly been located in Brazil. Plans
for the active development of
these deposits are now under
consideration, and eventually
Brazil may become our most
important supplier of manga-
nese.â€
GENERAL |
‘és Kkh’’
Hope Of The West
Hy GEORGE MOISE
WASHINGTON,
Dwight David Eisenhower, the man who
might have been President, returns to the;
scene of his greatest triumph for what may
be his toughest job.
|
|
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 23,
D. Vv. SCOTT TO-DAY’S SPECIALS
& CO., LTD. at THE COLONNADE
Usuallyâ€
Tins ORANGE JUICE ........----:: 44
Tins LAMBS TONGUES .........--- 70
Bots. McEWANS BEER 26
SANA DN DENN DN ON NCH RT
PAPAS AAA AA ARA ARE
General of the Army Eisenhower, Supreme | je
that crushed Nazi Germany, will return.
again as Supreme Commander of Western
Forces.
But this time he will have only a compara-
tive handful of men and airplanes — plus the
powerful weapon of atomic superiority — to,
‘ace a threat greater than that posed by
Adolph Hitler at his peak. Eisenhower is
tharged with organizing and leading the
forces of the North Atlantic Pact Powers to
meet the Communist aggression of Soviet
Russia and her European Satellites.
If the Kremlin should decide to move
against Western Europe, General “Ike†will
be called upon to stop her. It is an unen-
viable task, one that could have been turned
down, but Eisenhower will take the job. Like
any other good soldier, he knows he is ex-
pendable.
Eisenhower is believed to be the unani-
mous choice of the North Atlantic Peet
Powers for Supreme Commander. He is the
,one man considered most capable of welding
a solid, powerful, cohesive force out of the
varied and scattered elements available to
him.
If he is successful in his mission and builds
Miller stressed the importance} a force strong enough to stop the Kremlin’s
of Venezuela as a new source of
iron ore and added:
“{masters in their plans for world conquest
“These facts may well serve | Pefore they engage in further armed aggres-
to dispel the notion so widely
held in this country that the
United States is economically
self-sufficient. How outmoded
and unreal this concept is, be-
comes clear when one examines
the list of basie foodstuffs and
raw materials from Latin Ameri-
ca which are necessary to sus-
tain human life.â€
The communists are fully
aware of Latin America’s im-
portance, and that is why they
are working night and day to
enhance their influence there, to
the detriment of the U.S.
(To-morrow: What the Reds
Exploit)
—LNS.
lm eG ae
Assuming these reports are
accurate, there now exists a
European Cominform, an Asiatic
Cominform and an African Com-
inform—all with a joint executive
body operating under direct
instructions from Moscow.
According to the reports the
principal tools for the contem-
plated Communist activity in
Africa will be local trade unions,
whether or not they are affiliated
with the WFTU,
Aside from an effort to cut pro-
duction of strategic materials,
especially uranium, the Comin-
form also hopes to be able to
force the western powers to pin
down in Africa most of their
native troops such as the French
Senegalese as well as the Tuni-
gians, Algerians and Moroccan
forces,
The Communists also plan to
exploit the independence granted
to Lybia by the United Nations
as a pretext for requesting U.N.
intervention for “liberation†of
territories now under European
tutelage.
The political masterminds be-
hind the Communist African
drive are reported to be in Cairo.
From there Muslim agitators,
trained in Soviet schools created
in Soviet Muslim republics, will
set out for the Communist African
adventure.
In both the North African
countries and in French Negro
territories, the first move will be
to create numerous and active
trade unions. Later it is expected
the attempt will come to join
these unions to the WFTU.
Special attention is being de-
voted to Nigeria, a country of 406
million inhabitants under British
regime. Trade unions are
reported active there and the
Nigerian Communist political
leaders are believed to have had
recent contacts with sepa 5
sion, his already great stature will be im-
measurably increased.
He again, in 1952, would have the privilege
of turning down supplicants asking him to
run for President. In 1948 both parties
wanted him and he refused.
If he cannot create a powerful force, or
if Russia strikes too soon, undeterred by
American atom bomb supremacy, he couid
lose everything he has worked to gain in his]!
career.
The appointment of Eisenhower by Presi-
dent Truman may well go against the Gen-
eral’s wishes. He repeatedly has said that
he was happy as President of Columbia Uni-
versity, and he has expressed the desire to
be allowed to work quietly as a civilian for
the good of the country, and the country’s
youth,
In addition, less than a month ago he ful-
filled a 32-year-old dream and bought a 189-
acre farm near Gettysburg, Pa. The farm was
to be the place where Ike and Mamie Eisen-
hower could retire to the rural life and rest
they so well deserve.
But the farm will have to wait. So will
Columbia University, and so will the poli-
ticians,
The smiling, balding, blue-eyed leader of
the West has always been a professional
soldier and an outstanding one. He was born
in Tyler, Texas, Oct. 14, 1890, and graduated
from the Military Academy at West Point
in 1915.
Eisenhower did not get overseas in World
War I, but his career has been one of the
average regular army officer, except that he
has moved faster than most, and has risen
higher than all but a very few.
In World War II he was Chief of the War
Plans Division of the Army’s General Staff,
Assistant Chief of Staff for Operations, and
then Commanding General of Allied Forces
in the Mediterranean and European “heatres.
After he left the job of Supreme Com-
mander he was named Chief of Staff of the
Army.
But even after he left Eisenhower kept an
office in the Pentagon, and he was in Wash-
ington as a consultant, expert and elder
statesman as much as he was at Columbia
University.
Now he is back in full harness. He is no
longer a schoolteacher planning retirement
on a farm.
He is the hope of the Western World.
—IN.S.
a young man in marks
condition, I re-
ours
but vital fact of
uced to me by a
An “Efficiency JOHN SHANNON If Hollywood's “Snake
Sheet†is given to every worker Tenby, were to be exhibited now, it
each. week hon- Rockley. would be given the X certificate.
are
earned—by the Overseer or man-
ager. Then at the end of an agreed
period a bonus is awarded. This
profits the plantation or factory as
The notice was published over A
two weeks ago, and one should
have expected that by this time
a confirmation or denial] would
have been published.
\V.A.X. Films
LONDON, Dec.
The British Board of Filn
Censors has ruled that childre:
under 16 will be barred fron
recorded — if
_ number of French and
Italian movies have been held up
while the new
considered.
j ENGNG TN GN GH LN DN GN DN GN DNDN RAIN RN
rule was being Dd
Commander of the powerful western forces | gg
na Na NaNO NO NG NG NG NG NG NG NG NG NG NG NSIS
Pears.
Peaches.
Apricots.
Mangoes.
pps Fruit Hearts
Pit†|
PRN BK ARK NDEI BN
A Happy and Lrosperous
New ‘Vear
Go all our Friends and Customers
WILKINSON & HAYNES Co., Ltd.
Successors To
C.S. PITCHER & CO.
Phones — 4472, 4687, 4413 & 4251
— Sl sf
With pm without Motors
NOW'S
TO SELECT
THE TIME
YOURS.
DA COSTA & CO., LTD.
Our Rest “Wishes
for Lrosperity
in the Coming “Year
DRY GOODS DEPT.
fruits, and the wonderful well as the worker. movie-theatres even if they ar : WE OFFER THE FINEST
saa tk a Ee ic i accompanied by adults, when th | 3B
So in PR io oe none The ‘Nature Knowledge†sug- a ol. shown is marke At MEATS DESSERTS
sects and birds, the wind, and so 8@sted above for the boys and girls | With an Bevis ; Chickens . Royal Puddings.
on, and ‘he was astonished and ap- would also help materially with This new movie-grading—Cer | 3. Vanilla, Caramel,
peared to be interested. How far the adult workers, especially the|tificate “xX†— will appear o | & Rabbits Chocolate.
view of nature Younger ones, if ® could be im-| British screens in the New Year | 2 Lamb Legs Jelly Powders (5 Flavours)
thus indicated be communicated, Parted to them. Digging and man-| : Lamb Shoulders Marsh Mallows. :
be the effect of Uring without it can be a very e new certificates will replac; Cocktail Sausages .
canefield or gar- ull job. the present “H†for Horrifi Turtle. LIQUOR DEPT
of fairyland? I 7 19GRANCIS GODSON. |¢lass which also barred childre’ | $ SOUPS Gold Braid R :
ess of the “judging Dec. 27, 1950, rom the theatres. PB Tomato Top Notch Rum
rings†initiate y r. Halcrow ‘ M ; ; ’ ‘
suggests a very encouraging an- What Is It? te ane, Winey: a anaaaiieae aor bond vn ae Beef. + ee a ian pong
swer to the question. children will al ' ae ; page.
1 also get the new|$oOx v1 Louis Roiderer Champagne
, The Editor, The Advocate, marking. Asparagus Creme de Menthe 3
My second suggestion is direct- SIR,—Surely it is time that : 3 ; Dutch Gin 7 3
ed to those workers now engaged the public be relieved of the sus-], The three certificates will now Tuborg Beer
agricultural work of the pense which was started when|be; V—for general exhibition; A FRUIT in tins :
island, and especially on the sugar an official notice stated that there|—™ore suitable for adults; X— it tageake
plantations, and it may be stated was a case of suspected Small}for exhibition when no child bd s. Aft
a couple of words—-a Bonus Pox in the Island, under 16 is present. 3 , er Your EMPIRE
COFFEE — serve
VIELLE CURE
PHONE. GODDARD'S EARLY
TERI PRON OR GEGEN DERE.
1950
a
Now
40
Da COSTA & CO. LTD. §
I NINN EPS IE EPRINTS PEIN TRS LS NN NIE IRR IN IN TON BS TRON AK
,
eae Es
Nysty,
eran NSEaRA DNC
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3
:
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nn ner ONT NENT NS TANI TLE NS ETL RE TTR NANT. ONES ETL TBAT Ne IN
THURSDAY,
DECEMBER
28, 1950
Car Overturns
MOTOR CAR struck
bankment and verturne
at Horse Hill on Tuesday evening
The car was eversing into a
parking space
No one was injured, but the top
of the car and the windshield
were damaged. Residents of the
district and holiday makers as-
sisted in putting it back on the
road
HIEVES stole two five shill-
ing pieces, a gold locket
and two golq bracelets from the
home of Gordon Lewis at Spark
Gap, Garrison, between 5.30 p.m
on Saturday and 8.00
Ss Jay
provision chop of
Gulstene, at Upper Dayrells Road
was broken and _ enterec’
tween 7.45 p.m. and 8.00
on Saturday and a
articles to the value of
stolen.
Walter Carrington <«f Utility
Village, St. Michael, fell asleep
at Queen's Park on Christmas
Eve, with a dollar in his pocket.
Wren he awoke the dollar was
gone
A pair of gold framed glasses
valued $25 was stolen from Her-
man Inniss’ meat stall at the
Public Market between Friday
and Sunday.
HE BOYS at the Bay Street
a.m.
Boys’ Club will soon be
doing carpentry. A workshop at
the back of the Club will be
completed shortly.
During the Christmas season
the interior of the Club was
decorated. The hall is painted
green and yellow.
T CHRISTMAS the Police
Constables that were on
duty had no cause to feel home-
sick. The Police Canteen was
decorated with a Christmas tree.
Throughout the day various
Constables played carols on the
piano while others crowded
around and sung
ITHIN another month or so,
Speightstown will have its
first modern store.
Messrs. D. V. Scott & Co., Ltd.,
proprietors of the Colonnade
Stores are building a general
store at Queen Street.
The site of the new building
formerly accommodated a garage
which housed buses of the Lee-
ward Motor Omnibus Company
It is just about 20 yards from the
surf of the sea.
HEOPHILUS THORPE, the
- owner of motorcycle M.1151,
was injured in an accident along
Cheapside Road at about 4.30
o'clock yesterday evening. He
was taken to the General Hos-
pital and detained.
Thorpe was riding his cycle
when it became involved in an
accident with a Central ‘Bus.
Fred Johnson was on the pillion
but escaped with slight injuries.
T about 11.30 o’clock yester-
day morning motor lorry
M. 1918, owned by Seibert Hope
of Fifth Avenue, Nurse Land,
Tweedside Road, and driven by
Eric Grandison of School Road,
Carrington Village, crashed into
the paling surrounding the house
of Eileen O’Donald at Nurse Land
and damaged five galvanised
sheets. No one was injured.
Stole Coat:
2 2
Fined £10
“This is a serious matter—taking
up people’s clothes’—His Worship
Mr. A. J. H. Hanschell, Senior
Police Magistrate of District “Aâ€
told 23-year-old Cuthbert Hazle
of Holder’s Land, Deacons Road
yesterday, when he fined him £10
for stealing a jacket valued at $30.
Hazle pleaded guilty of we
offence which was committed on
December 24. The fine is to be
paid by instalments of £2. 10s. per
month or in default three months’
imprisonment with hard labour.
First witness was Colin Beckles
of Black Rock and he said that
the jacket is his. He left it in the
Blue Lagoon Club, Nelson Street,
on December 24 about 1.30 p.m.
After he found that his jacket was
missing, he reported the matter to
he Police.
' Later the same night at about
10.15 Harbour Police Constable
Gill saw Hazle near the Plaza
Cinema, Bridgetown with a coat
over his left hand, Hazle went to
the Bridge Post and there he was
charged with the larceny of the
coat.
“LADYâ€â€™ ON DOCK \
M.V. Lady and_ the fishing
schooner Lindsyd I, were on
dry dock yesterday undergoing
repairs,
The Lady a
dos a few days ago for the main
purpose of going on dock while
the Lindsyd Ml made its usual
arrived in Barba-|
eall from Martinique.
an em-
a.m, on
Miriam
be-
quantity of
341.88
XMAS MUSIC
BARBADOS
ADVOCATE
EAGER LISTENERS crowded around the bandstand at Queen's Park on Christmas merning as membey
of the Combermere Glee Club joined the Police Band in the singing of carols.
Small Pox Still
“Suspectedâ€
The suspected
pox at Pelican
“suspected case†as
are concerned, the
Medical Services
Advocate yesterday
He said that the Department
had endeavoured to bring the
case to a conclusion or otherwise
by certain tests, but these tests
had not proved valuable in any
way.
Whether there was a suspected
case or otherwise, he said, the
main point was the protection of
the community and this had
started from the beginning and
was still going on.
“The small pox epidemic has
started in quite a mumber of
cases because the disease was
not suspected in the first instance
and ine protection of the com-
munity had not started
immediately.
“Owing to the low state of the
immunity of the community to
this disease which may come
among us at any time, the vaccin-
ation campaign is going on and
will go on as an ordinary prudent
public health measure in the in-
terest of the community.â€
2,680 Vaccinated
“Up to Boxing Day a total of
2,680 persons had been reported
vaccinated in the island since
the campaign began, Of these
2,151 had been vaccinated in St
Michael and the remaining 529
in the other parishes.â€
The Director said that as fai
as it had been reported to the
office, St. Peter, St. Lucy, St.
Andrew and St. Philip had been
active as regards the campaign,
but there were aware that the
work was being carried out in
Christ Church, St. George, St.
James, St. John and St. Joseph.
Figures for these parishes were
not.available to date.
accination centres were now
set up throughout the island, and
they were still appealing to
people to be vaccinated as that
was the only measure of
protection,
small
stil a
far as we
Director of
told the
case of
Island is
CITY STREETS STILL
CROWDED
There was almost as much activ-
ity on some of the City streets
yesterday morning as on Saturday
the last day before Christmas.
Busbey Alley and Lower James
Street were among the places
where much business was bein
done, There vendors of vegetables
and fruit were doing a good trade.
Most of the stores in Broat
Street and Swan Street still ha’
a good many shoppers in them
but the groceries did not seem tu
be doing much business.
Postcard sellers were again out
in force, This time they were
offering postcards with New Year
greetings.
FRIED FISH VENDORS
DO GOOD BUSINESS
MANY a hungry, and
therefore dispirited late night
walker has taken heart again after seeing the twinkling of
the light from the tray of a friqd fish seller sitting on a
shop pavement.
27,000 XMAS
PARCELS
Twenty seven thousand Christ-
mas parcels and nearly 350 bags
of letter mail were handled by
the General Post Office during
the Christmas season, the Post-
master told the Advocate yes-
terduy.
The parcels started coming
in from November 1 and the
letters near the end of the same
month. Alj were distributed by
Christmas Eve,
The new Parcels Department
on the wharf had considerably
relieved the Christmas pressure,
and had made the disposal of
the parcels possible, the Post-
master said,
A belated mail of over 300
bags from England arrived on
Boxing Day and these were now
being dealt with.
The volume of the business
done during the season had made
it necessary for the clerical staff
and postmen to work about 11
hours each day. This was done
{
’ This business is a brisk one, especially
during the flying fish season.
Baxter's Road is a big centre for
the business, and so is Nelson
Street. Another place where a lot
of frying goes on is the busy junc-
tion of Barbarees Hill, Spooner’s
Hill, Bank Hall and Black Rock
Those are the really big centres
but there are vendors in almost
every dstrict
They buy fish from the beach in
big quantity. To-day’s prices are
22 cents a pound for dolphin
bought from the beach and 26
eents retail; 14 cents a pound for
shark; and for flying fish from the
beach five cents each and six cents
each from the road vendors
After the flying fish are season-
ed and fried one costs about six
pence, A steak of shark will cost
14 cents and a steak of dolphin six
or eight cents more. A penny loaf
of salt bread usually goes with it
These fried fish are usually sold
on the pavements of liquor shops.
Many men like one after having a
drink or two. For one thing, a
steak of fish will take the taste
of the liquor out of one’s mouth,
and then the pepper and other
condiments with which they are
rion FIVE
Venezuelans Spent [ndians On
\mes Here
m
Caristm.-+ Goodwill I our se
Venezue.ai:
A é& ie sy
eveligis were tne
lourisis who came over iast week-
end, and they sea-—patnea, weal
signt—seeing and dined — Gane pau) Indian Missionary Monks *
ed at some of the island's soci! h have vowed themselves to OF
cubs
celibacy and delegated their lives
to socio-religious work landed in
Barbados yesterday. To-day they
leave for Trinidad
The Aquatic Club scored a h.t
on Christmas Night when iney oe
only served special Venezuela...
food, but provided the visiting
Latins with music from South c:
the Border played by the Pan-
American Sextette, This orches-
They are four delegates of the
Indian Cultural Mission deputed
by Bharat Sevasram Sangha. The
deputation started from Calcutta
tra is composed mainly of men . — ae. ee
who were either born in Cuba oi ae ¢ b Bove: ea’ a So
who have lived and played musi: oe Cahora: ecu eae Ca me Sf si
iain a - time. Th lero:, Via . Me s anc ape f
there for some time e bolerc Town on M.V. Betwe.
guarachas and rhumbas they dish-
ed out at the Aquatic Club 0.1
Christmas night had the authen-
tic rhythm and were much ap-
plauded by the Venezuelans of
which there were about four
dozen
Among the guests were Mr. anc
Mrs. Vernon Knight, Mr. Verno.
Knight is Venezuelan Vice Const!
here and he mixed with the
tourists from that country as-
sisting in making them feel
home
More Venezuelans are
arrive early in January.
Eagle Hall Choir
Wins Contest
Eagle Hall Choir carried off
the first prize in the singing
competition at Queen's Park on
Boxing Day. This choir of 22
Names of the delegates who are
making a two-year world tour t
spread Indian Culture among In
dians overseas and other races are
Swami Advaitananda, the leader
Swami Vedananda, Swami Ak-
shoyananda and Br. Paresh
The leader of the delegation told
the Advocate yesterday that apart
from spreading Indian Culture
among Indians, they are out tc
preach peace propaganda to al!
races. He emphasised that the
movement had nothing to do with
politics. They preach the funda-
mental liberal ideas of Indian Cul-
ture, and want to bring about
unity among the diffvrent races of
the world
due 1»
Religious Principles
They believe that the cause of
the world’s miseries is the spirit
of selfish nationalism, and to re-
move this, the Mission is preach-
voices was conducted by Mr. ing the broad principles of all
Charles Hinds and scored 82 religions and all cultures to peo
points. ple everywhere without distinc
Their nearest riva] was the tion of colour, class or creed
Church Village Choir, St.Philip, The Mission consists of 200
who got 75 points, This choir had monks and 500 volunteers. They
28 voices and was conducted by
Mr. Cecil Skeete
Eleven choirs from five parishes
took part in the competition which
was sponsored by Mr. Sydney
Skinner of Baxters Road, The test
piece was the Christmas Carol
Now to God on High be Glory.â€
Mr. Gerald Hudson and Capt
C E. Raison were the judges and
are carrying on a good deal ot
social and religious work in India
and other countries. Last year the
Mission visited East Africa and re-
mained there for 14 months
The Mission embraces all India,
and part of their work is to ren-
der aid in times of famine or epi- \
demic, They also carry on schools, {
commented that the singing of with free boarding houses for
the choirs had improved con- students
; rey Terie helpful criticism. The delegates showed the Advo-
The result of the contest was cate letters of introduction from
is follows: some of the topmost leaders | in
Fagie Hall 82 Points India, including Mohan Lal Gau-
Chureh Village, St, Philip 75 ,, tam, Secretary of the National
Government Hill St. Michael 13 Congress, 8 Kirpalani, eXx-
Plum ‘Tree, St. Thomas pi President of the National Congress
King a pork, st. Philip. 65 and several Cabinet Ministers of)
Hothersal Turning, St. Mi the Indian \!overnment
chael 58s |
Edgecliff, St. John. and Half After leaving Trinidad they will |
Miao Ror ro a visit the other British West Indian |
. sans, St. Michael Ae visi ve other “ItLS :
fii a st Michael 53 sslands and British and Dutch |
Guiana, They were the guests |
while here of Mr, D, A. Thani,
City Merchant
e =
Dhituary
and already we
ESSE in orange coloure M4 * e
obbessep in oranse cotoure |My JASON JONES & CO. LTD.- Distributors
a PURINA CHOWS
AEE ESSERE EEE Ee
tn ——
BERR ERR EBRERREeeS
Season's Greetings from
Butter
and
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MARMITE
The Vitamin B Yeast Food
So tasty and so good for you / Tasty because Marmite
gives that rich, appetising flavour. Good becausé the
B2 vitamins are contained in Marmite — essential
elements to keeping the body fit and free from
illness. Marmite is just as delicious in sandwiches—
watch how children love them!—also in soups,
stews, gravies and all savoury dishes, You only need
a litth and what's left in the jar keeps for ages.
Made in England
WE ARE NOW ASSEMBLING
100 HUMBER CYCLES
have received orders totaling nearly
flavoured have a sobering effect . ea {°SSCSSSSSSS GPO 9O POST. :
for two weeks before Christmas. Mrs. B. Collins |x % half the shipment,
During the period 11 more a FREE HRoOoK x
postmen were taken on at the ° 2 THE death occurred on Christ- . ‘ : ‘“ â€
main offices. Extra a Resisting Day of Mrs, Beatrice Collins which makes ‘ | So highly is the “HUMBER†esteemed in
were made by the regular . : stow and her funeral] %\ «6 ’ . eae
postmen. For the same time 4 Lionel Moore of Nurse Land, St. 0 En thd ao tebrniton: in GOD’S WAY OF % England that the Makers, have by Royal
additional stamp sellers were Michael, was yesterday found | nesat iin a large gathering S :
used, and the public were served guilty o1 1.sisting Police Consta- ' : Sateen ors oe ed ie | % SALVATION % Warrant, been appointed
at the time-checked rate of ble Allan Longe and refusing to of =P 8 $$ PLAIN†%
twelve persons per minute. leave a rum shop when asked to ‘ Ate Collins whose husband | % x ; .
Bae tee IPR. RRR abo on Dean: predeceased her many years ago Q Please write for one to % { CYCLE MAKERS T0 il M THE KING
Mr. “Ay J. H, Hanschell betorg Jas, of a cheerful, disposition ee ee eee et ’ cern
STUNT CYCLIST whom “ite cases Sore heard or- Shé lived in St. are for eee ee, wee ee s
ane a. 2 vars yhere wi ner , 5 ‘ » ¢
Tie Ah awnas Aa dered Moore to pay a fine of £1 Year Wits en a aveee* or N. Ireland.†‘ it de son
ebity be caught ‘ns uk noe in each case. daughters she carrie! ata ane % 5 % and every “HUMBER†bears the insignia above
at times Shen e0 ie ignore his Police Constable Longe said making esta Sp ‘ ntatoder SOOO FOP GOO OOOOOOOO.
signals. i that when he tried to make returned to ae arena Methodist { the nagne-plate.
_, Yesterday a cyclist hamed King oe were ty rare ieiateds 5 as eer rites were con- | $866660090900900006600007 |
* deus - Thee neu . " » became troublesome and resisted, © Ms annie ‘
~ Yeh ata, tines Gamaging a watch = strap he ducted by re cee ener ARE YOU CHAINED .
as e re e . F 5 ? eaves 0 i a : Ty ah ‘p> veo . ‘1 a " _
Dolibartat on point duty by the (Longe) was wearing She pees aoe te sae WITH RHEUMATIC ‘ NO OTHER CYCLE CARRIES THIS
Canadian Bank of Commerce In his defence Moore said that oa a tas ' Verna Collins ‘,
King, on finding that he was he did not know what he was SOr#y, |? i, St. Michael. PAINS ? ; HALL-MARK OF QUALITY THE
being stopped by the policeman, doing as he had been drinking mavens Mstwick and one son % \ eS
tried to peo after he had passed for some time Mrs. Hazel Estwick anc e § & : =
the poecnnan’ ene a phinaty ODEO OSD VO POPPI LP PDH DOOV PDD SPD DODD OVO, 3 . THE “HUMBER†IN A CLASS BY
“Bobbyâ€, smilingly and c iy ,
said “Go Ahead, King; Go Ahead! % % : % ITSELF |
the King can do no wrong.†st ; s| 9 x
% $] 8
“ x Ris 5
. s » .
BG. RICE COMES 8 eI SII go Don't Wait —
. :
Schooner Philip B. Tegiier $ FOR : Simply apply |
brought, 1,000 bags of rice for) ¢ â€% %, ’ 7
arnatoa over the week-end x % SAC ‘ROO! Y BOOK YOURS 1 O-DA Y
from British bie grec oi “ae s . $| 4 t
Other cargo of this vesse] was] ¥% to itis * attest
, sharcot The rected parts and 7 7
fire wood and charcoal. The} ¥, % affected
fre wood , and, charcoal om alo Ta’ poesia a tea AND REMEMBER ITS—
y rs? riat ¥ -
Schooner Owners’ Association 4 @ 9: Travel Kin Diichk Cann. SACROOL
+
Belladonna Plasters Douche Tubin. % CONQUERS 9 F
*
Strengthening Plasters Douche Fittings >} | .... PAIN HARRISON \ Oo HUMBER
%
Jon-Caps lee Caps % | On Sale at R
Oil Silk. Kidney Dishes. %| r
¢) KNIGHTS DRUG STORES
Bandages. Spirit Lamps ’
KNIGHT'S
LT
—SSSSSOPOSSV FOS SS OSS SSS IOSFOF
Rubber Catheters
—
—————_—_—_—_—
|
% me ee ee ee
Sa PIOOCEL ABA A AAA
| ac ia a
-
D. — All Branches
=
=
“
| e
GOUDA CHEESE per ib ..... 1 a 11 0 OOM OOOO DODO, |
TABLE BUTTER per Tb a a siciaan lg IMA ates dined atidiaelii | Va
TABLE RAISINS 1 Ih Pkg. 0.0.0. - ++ 30 NG NG NG 8 WG NN WN BN NN NN NN
TURBAN DATES per Pkg. .......-----5 05 3 ae |
MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE 1 1% Tin 1.63 = S|
CHIVERS RASPBERRIES per Yin 1.00 a ie iia ot otic’
E tation >, | e206 a Ciners im ....
Xmas Crackers, Xmas Tree Decorations, Presen § 3 |
Pa 7} . Ports d Sherries os Ti ; 2 earete
ee ie’ tianheces. whise?, Anqestats Bitters; er | QUALITY & STYLE
Liqueurs, and the finest brand of Rum. 2 | Available in...
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‘ 400 or this race iar
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Pa % | SP WISH A VERY iw ‘Nl RNR 4 225
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a: os 10, 11, 12 & 13 Broad Street
TRADITION DEK AN ORDA DN TN RTE TEN REDS!
PAGE SIX
: ° =
She says will we ple
About This
ase be very careful as it's a trinket
You Ought To Know
Little Red
Book For Red Bandits
Prank Owen sizes up the guerrilla
Struggle he has
left behind him
in Malaya
CALCUTTA,
DURING the Prime Minister’s visit to America he told
President Truman that, in Malaya, Britain is holding a
vital sector of the free world front line.
it is true. Britain has 20,000 troops in Malaya. Also
based on Malaya we have Royal Navy units and the Royal
Air Force.
As long as these facts are understood, and not just used
as excuses for doing no more, there is still some
South-East Asia.
If it is not realised that Malaya
as the master key in the politics,
strategy, aMd trade of this rich,
crowded far corner of the vast
Asian heartland, then the sooner
we retire on the Isle of Wight the
better.
There is no reason at all for
going—except funk, or the mud-
dled emotion which stampeded
us out of Burma ard let in civil
war.
Certainly the larg¢
the people—-and especially the
native people, who are Malay,
not Chinese—are content for us
to stay.
The Communist clatter about
a “Malayan people’s liberation
movement†is about as genuine
as the Sheffield “Peace†Congress.
Unfortunately for us it is a
little better organised.
Kremlin-led
IF things. are to be called by
their right names (it helps clear
thinking), then these 5,000 or
10,000 “bandits†are advance
guerrilla troops of the Red Army.
That is, they are mobilised,
trained, officered, and led under
the direction of the Kremlin,
No need to argue otherwise
As I write I have before me a
handbook on “Tactics in Guerilla
Warfare (2: Attack),†It is com-
piled ang published by the Red
Flag Library, West Pahang. The
‘oreword.explains why Number
{wo is phblished before Number
One. .
“Up te now our attacks have
been baséd purely on the general
lines of guerrilla warfare, It
means we-have not yet acquired
the necessary knowledge to launch
major offensives on
Bolshevik preecting.â€
ltch Germs
Killed in 7 Minutes
Your skin has nearly 60 million tiny seams
majority of
the enemy
and pores where germs hide and cause ter-
tible Itching,
Cracking, Eczema, Peeling,
hope for
Ambushes .. .
THE “gen†follows. And very
good “gen†it is. It shows low,
where, and when to lay an am-
bush (if possible, at a road bend
ina defile at dusk); how to
scout and spy out the enemy's
movements and strength
It shows how to hide, deceive,
distract, decoy; how to win, or
compel, local good will, and so
secure supplies, information,
funds—or, at a pinch, recruits,
The manuai sets out the drill
for cutting, or tapping, telephone
wires, Stealing identification
ecards, burning buses, derailing
trains, and shooting up the wreck.
There are instructions about
slashing rubber trees, and thus
denying to the British enemy a
vital dollar-earning and strategic
asset. But another, overriding,
top-level order says go easy on
this: the “bandits†expect to take
over the country themselves
soon, when those rubber trees
will eome in handy
If this is “banditry,†then it
is big-time banditry. Maybe that
is what Big Brother Bolshevism
has become.
But so far the manual merely
deals with platoon tacties. Wait
for it!
Shortly, we are up to half bat-
telions, and are dealing with
concentration, dispersal, rein-
forcement, organisation, sig-
nals, rations, training, discipline
and at this point, comrade, w
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approach, though not in _ this
Number Two manual, the grim
subject of executions.
Other captured “gen†tells
you about these. Death is the
penalty for desertion, spying, sur-
render, rape, or robbery (that is,
unauthorised, private robbery).
Offenders are also flogged with
a rattan cane, tied to a pole for
five hours in the blazing sun, then
made to do a day’s work
Few desert. Fewer surrender.
Don’t let us kid ourselves. Let us
know our enemy. Who is he?
First, the trained, resolute, fan-
atic Communist, sometimes indoc-
trinated here in Malaya, some-
times smuggled from China.
Second, the sincere but muddled
idealist
Third, the adventurous, the
young men (and women too) who
want to live dangerously.
Fourth, the criminal and
perennial brigand of legend.
Murder...
COMMUNISTS have hammered
all these into a formidable fist.
Make no mistake. You have to be
hard to be a “banditâ€.
Their pay? About £3 a month,
with few allowances (there is
little difference betwgen ranks),
Their diet? Rice, bamwoc shoots,
and wild bananas.
Their day? When not fighting
or looting, P.T. at 6.30 a.m., then
drill, weapon training, and pro-
paganda until 6.30 p.m.—and then
three hours more of “political in-
struction.â€
the
All this highly organised mili-
tary activity (they ail wear uni-
form in action, also badges of rank
before and after it) ties in with
plain-clothes terrorism by the
“special service squads’ who op-
erate in the towns.
Their tasks are laid down as in-
cluding intelligence; subscriptions,
i.e, extortion and blackmail;
assassination,
All bandits are controlled by the
Communist Party of Malaya, act-
ing on Cominform orders. If this
is not war or something infinites-
imally short of it, perhaps some-
one of the intellectual appease-
ment movement will explain.
The Cost
THIS is the abiding and overall
battle which General Sir John
Harding, Commander-in-Chiet in
the Far East, and General Sir
Harold Briggs, his Chief of Anti-
bandit Operations, face.
General Briggs did not come to
Britain recently to ask for more
troops. He came to ask for more
civilian powers.
Why? To organise and mobilise
the several separate State Gov-
ernments of Malaya into
On
cuts,
set and the one she sent last year got broke
1 really
lice, civil administration, transport,
BARBADOS
London Express Serviee
concerted drive with troops, po-
agricultural, social, and commer-
cial services,
_ Incidentally, this “bandit†war
is costing us all of £40,000 a day, j
dear friends of the “Friends of the
Soviet Union.â€
But regular troops and regular
police are not made for fightin«
guerrilla troops, which is what, |
repeat, those bandits are. |
There is only one way to beat
bandits, or guerrillas—be better
bandits, or guerrillas |
Deep in the heart of the jungle}
there is a Drilsh-Malayan force
eavable of doing it.
The troops are all
volunteers |
|
They are drenchex, |
in jungle lore. Disci
plined
schools of
In hard |
War, com- \
, 5 mandes, paratroops,
i desert and Jungle ;
Mad Mike’ ‘> °-tange__— penetra-
Cal on groups. Dedi- |
cated, mayle doomed.
Colonel “Mad Mike†Calvert, |
who communds them was wit
Wingatc
I would like to tell you about
him and his boys, but, as Kipling
said, “that is another story,â€
—L. E
Ss
“Old Style Fighting†|
WASHINGTON, Dec
General J. Lawton Collins,|
United States Army Chief of
Staff said in an article to-day that |
American war experience’ in;
Korea must not deter the United}
States trom devloping the use of
atomic weapons by army troops.
Writing for the Coronet maga-
zine he described progress in de-
veloping these weapons as “en-
couragingâ€â€™. |
The Korean war, General Col-}
lins said, was “a reversion to old
style fighting more comparable to
that of our own Indian frontier
days than to the modern wayâ€
and could not be seen as a pre-
view of a future war.
—Reuter.
TRINIDAD CINEMAS
ARE UNCLEAN
(From Our Own Correspondent)
PORT-OF-SPAIN, Dec. 21
The majority of Port-of-Spain’s
cinemas have been refused _li-
cences to operate next year be-
cause of insanitary conditions. Dr.
Roderick Marcano, Medical Officer
of Health, declared that the re-
fusal was because of the “the
highly insanitary conditions pre-
vailing.â€
27:
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BARBADOS ADVOCATE
PAGE SEVEN
M.C.C. Dre 2nd Div. Cricket: Results Of T.T.C. | os Wik
New Ball Won Test ‘ze; Gane 4. Outright. Ymax Me Muddy Track | COUGHING |~ =
Xmas Meeting At T.T.C. Meet
Fo rA ustralians Age Cement Victories © Prins nent AS pdctows.2| MR. “SLE WARD, Mcp.
~ 1S DANGEROUS oi ee:
you cough
esponde
~ d remse BRACE lof the rrinidad Turf Club's
LONDON core |. Love Potent (Quested) $37 }Christmas meeting returned from
ir are strained,
‘ ane 4 cart ig over
“4 C. Os 7 39 Taking advantage anme . Careful Annie (Belle $8.3 | Trinidad vesterday afternoon v vorked Stop ‘YOUR
hs Eb CALL Y rp yee Bs sande gs CARLTON, Central, Regiment Cod’s Roe (Lutehmant $11.08 | BOW.LA,
cough by taking VENO’S
COUGH MIXTURE! This
world-famous remedy
Stops coughing, makes
breathing easy, soothes
bowling, the M.C.C. batsmen in- . . Forecast: $2,011.48
P dulged in some lighthearted bat Ane —— ones squad hn 1 1 “SECOND Saee | He told the Advooate that the
(F rom Our Own Correspondent) ting practice against a Queensland sion cricke* victories over PiCK- i andscape (Singh)
7 o nok ‘ , : a, 2. Ostara (Lattimer)
Country XI in a two-day match Wick, Lodge, Leeward and Foun- 3° pilinGra twilder)
a2 j track in Port-of-Spain on Boxing
Day, after over an inch and a
POR
wwe
=
z at Toowoomba which ended in a @&tion respectively when their Forecast: $173.12 halt of rain the night before was
| away soreness, comforts
ERE r : MELBOURNE, Deec.. 27, draw. Simpson, Evans, Compton matches ended on a sy Sad 1 FF cae paoe aaa 2.06 ge een “vias ra on 2
‘ Hassett s decision to take the new ball when the Eng- and Sheppard all scored treely in — =< cae rama § Top Flight SS Wall its Fe son oon
lish total Stood at 115 runs for 6 wickets was the deciding “¢ “St innings and Parkhouse 24 for | od Condor N35 and 'Vorccag Stara Sd | ns, But Atomic Ii whic was
factor in the Australian narrow victory who has not had the best of luck 24 for 1 and Combermere 35 and Pore QOuRTH
‘e wa te tse + a either in health or cricket seized . , :
ee ger seg gs the opportunity to peatgiie Central, Regiment and Empire
140 FOURTH RACE wins, but Atomic II which was
bred by him and is now owned
54 |} by Mr. Chin, won the Governors
half century in each innings won decisive victories while Paris (Quemea) ¥
c “4 > Ferd 962 ®;Cup. In that race, Elizabethan
The MCC forced the pace arlton won after Piekwick had ee Soe | trained by Hon. V. C. Gale placed
trem the word “go†and by tea- put up a good show in the second Leading Article | second.
The Jester He (Lutchman)
Rock Diamond (Newman)
wim
~~e
=
On
uit i ony
‘ , || Get © bottle Y,
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~
5 The IDEAL
,__ FAMILY REMEDY for ws rar Z.
COUGHS « COLDS - BRONCHITIS > 1L/GATNING >
)CATSRRM * CATARRHAL ASTHMA, eee 2
IGHT COUGHS - CHILOREN’S
a st or several loose balls
or on r ty snicked boundar
shots 2 i have sealed the game
in Mavour time on the first day were able aE - ey _ {M. Gonzales : $3.06 | it was impossible to recognise 5 COUGHS
filler the new ball to declare their score at 428 for Carlton scored 37 and 88 while 2 no — Islands suk either jockeys or their colours AAA RAAAAAA
e a a c i†> ick *k scor a juested) 2.3 after eac re 1e ‘ 2 © 4
bowler wit ndwall was takea six. In the time remaining he- 7 te scored 1G and 80. In t. Rosalind (Yvonet) $ 1.54 ak Sao shee as they were com a .
off. smar Mwhen Parkhouse hit fore stumps were drawn, the ees SPCR Sees L. Forvcasts, 908.13 ee
six. e over, But Lind- Queensland Country XI lost Foster scored 23 and A. M. Me SIXTH RACE (Governor's Cup) e258"
fe » § e, os , 1 omic †'
three wickets for 88 runs. Ene 24. W. Greenidge took 2 Dlienbothan Crctder) 3
Compton was the chief enter- 3° Pickwick wickets for 37 runs — 3. Siiver Bullet (Singh) $
tainer of the afternoon, follow- sng. Cox 3 for 13, POreeVENTH
@ Brown's and Evans’ i
ee runs hit off him,
Métue. Each: of these
te no
Treasure..*
* INDIGEST|ON?
Fallin ata i the SEVENTH RACE
back defensively ing On after Simpson and Shep- |, eee ue eee eae for 0 1. Rosemary (O'Neil) $ 4.24 J Y ont
Sine of flight, Lut had pard had opened with 168 in 105 ‘CC'S, 99, While Lodge scored 3. ali Baba (Wilder) $ 3.18 | i rom Sc vt] i Ff
the ip knocked pack minutes. “~ 148 and 30. C._ E. Hinds cap- 3. Happy Union (Belle) sa8 | |... heasepr a Y ¢ n < (Oa A ke
T Wn ought te have Compton and Parkhouse made tured 8 of Lodge’s second innings " ar b |
wickets for 10 runs and R. D. Baby mind Gk ase a RELIEF WITH
adopted Ore belligerent atti- THE FAMOUS
114 tuns in 53 minutes ang of
. ‘ 3 ; 1 $ 4.28
tude | nging the batting these Compton contri : __ Austin 3 for 12 runs. In Central 2 Mardi Gras (Yvonet) $2.36 | —
oneal = Hutton batting 0 fore he threw away agg ara second innings A. Nichols scored | 3. Cataract (wihess +e) a ROUSE BR PY
well, he’ have sent in Evaris, running yards out to slow-bowier *9,.20t out. eens f
Druery—and. missing. Of his 92. , PUndation scorsd 28 and 16
WHISKY
ehance the arm
thing within reach
lter innings at thet
would have added tre-
to the morale-bank
Bedser = himself. with in-
struc : my
Evans receivin further sound | Foundation second innings
Support from Parkibuse and, in wickets for two runs. For Horses
i passive mood, Bailey, tried to hit _, Regiment scored 132 for 8 de- :
nstead Dewes, Parkhouse and a four off nearly every bal) —- clared and 98 for 8 declared and f LONDON. | Whenever you're troubled with
Close wefit in to try timidly t? except when he tried to hit a six. Leeward 40 and 131. Fabulous sums of dollars were | painful stomach acidity, just
sneak pirregularly in a man- R. LINDWALL From 80 he leapt to 94 with a six Following are the details: claimed to have been offered to suck two Rennies, one after the
ner "made the job look and two fours off medium-pace _PICKWICK vs. CARLTON the British Show Jumping team other. The blend of — enrcids
practically impossible. But re- bowler Hunter, and was then Pickwick : 18 and go ‘or their horses — one thorough- | Tennics orings you iumeduce
criminations are easy to make. caught at cover trying another Carlton . 81 and gg YG and two half-breeds — fol-
relief because it’s specially bal-
The one outstanding feature of WL Will Not Play big hit. His 94 made in 46 min- _ Pickwick’s 2nd innings, L, oWing their successful tour of
|
|
j
|
| anced for _fast action. Alwaye
A alia’s, close call in this match utes included one six and 18 fours, Foster 23, A. M. Me Kenzie 24, the United States: and Canada, Sasdula ‘nideseell ix vee Gare
|
|
> 4 ; -
64 were made in t avtie ~ and Empire 121 and for 4 wickets 2 ®
chiens a a boundaries, in- Geclared 39. S. Rudder captured High Prices Offered ) ba
; ; a + in eee eee alee ee = ; One of the riders, Lt.-Colonel | tapped separately) in your pocket
is our supremacy in the game e = Warr showed a fine turn of pace S. Simmonds 11. For Carlton W. ; nia "1 ‘ tt
iis being whittled away. The Eng- Davis Cup Tennis when Queensland batted and Greenidge took 3 for 37 and H. SRY’ JS aelnae hee bia hacoughe So eae ahdeee Coving taf e
1 have twice gone close to Uinta Oveniiaeeianbaaioas Wright, after shaving the stumps Cox 3 for 12. bred Foxhunter . the consequences, If Rennies don't
. This time without Comp- SON HEN at least four times, finally hit , : : kelp yo ’s ti y , yo
i ; have ORT-OF : ae CENTRAL vs. LODGE “Another would-be purchaser | %C!P YOU. its ume you saw your
ton, Our Australian selectors hav¢ PORT-OF-SPAIN, Trinidad. them to get rid of Philip. Central .. 95 and for 2 wkts, $8 said, “the sky is the limit for | ‘tr Get Rennies at any chegnist,
tly, I think, chosen the The West Indies have failed _ Some accurate bowling by Eric og may aa St :
Same 42 players for the third test to gain entry to the 1991 Davis Hollies baéked up by Wright kept “C*"."iiinds took 8 Lodge 2nd tion of selling†Llewellyn DIGESTIF
" ba has been prove® Cup Tennis competition for the the Queensland batsmen on tie 1 :
. T r \ In S vickets s ared. j
brittle beyond any brittleness 1 second time. Mr. Neils Noth- defensive when they resumed oa ia ny aie’ Re oo youngest of the British | IES
can recall in Australian cricket. nagel, Secretary of the British the second day and only a fighting [ynings, A. Nichols 49 not out, team, 2i-year-old Peter Robeson,
Py alg eee Caribbean Lawn Tennis Associa- innings by T. Allen, who contrib- ie , r ’ ’
; rs : : C. Shepherd 19 and R. D. stin said that he had been offered Tae agait te
CRIPPSGETTINGBETTER {1% id,’ fort-of Spain, last ited, 85, saved them rom col- 13 not out eth $1L940 for his tare Craven, A) NO SPOON MO Oke sea
2 lg : tio in Pe Sue
(9) zuRIcH, Dec. 27. Pecause the Caribbean Associa- Although in a position to en- FOUNDATION vs. EMPIRE Gearciaghiared > pe ey —— —
Sir Sta Fd Cripps’ condition ton was not affiliated to the force the follow-on, Compton Foundation ++ 28 and 16 shout $112 five years ago, until
has Lady “Cripps said International Lawn Tennis Feder- acting as captain in place of mpire 121 and for 4 wkts. we found she could jump.†oS
a e “his doctors. are 2tiom, It was for similar reasons Brown, decided that further bat- decid. ..... : ... 39 Farmer Wilfred White, who
Ee the West Indies were not ting practice would be more proi- S. Rudder took 7 Foundation gwns_ eight-year-old _Nizefela,
x With his progress’. admit {mk ad : : . pte ; f
who is suffering 2 ted as a nation in 1950. itable than a victory which would 2nd innings wickets for 2 runs. told the same story:
Sir SE ibercular itankicin a This year* another effort was do nothing to raise the M.C.C. REGIMENT vs. LEEWARD = “1 originally bought him for
’ entered a clinic here|™2de after finalising the con- stock. pF Regiment 132 for 8 decid. and $324, the first time he went into
stitu.ion of the B.C.L.T.A., in The decision w2s rather unfor- 98 for 8 decld the show ring. Before that he
Britis: Guiana. Application was tunate for Close who repeated his Leeward .... : 40 and 31 had been a plow horse
made to Australia, champicn first innings’ failure by again get- Regiment 2nd ‘innings Phillips —i.N.S.
nation, and they forwarded it to ting out for a ‘duck.’ But Shep- jg J[shmael 16 Brathwaite i
the bresident of the International pard, Parkhouse, Evans, Bailey : : } .
: . 7 A dle ds 10, innings .
Lawn Tennis Federation in Paris. and Wright all had breezy knocks Son aS ae ae Wife Of Dead Gunman
Reply came a few days ago. It and the crowd went home well gq “sh .
rete ech aks Wrest Indias could eee See ae ethattatmnant. tae, teem 6 Sor: 26. Freed Without Bail
NEW YORK, Dee. 23.
not be admitted as the central provided. COMBERMERE vs COLLEGE
body as the British Caribbean Combermere ...... 35 and 140 = =wirs Carmen Torresola, widow
Lawn Tennis Association was College 105 and for 1 wicket 24 of Grisello Torresola, Puerto
Rican gunman, killed in the at~-
| not yet affiliated to the Federa-
tempt on President Truman’s life
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ee ‘ their growing bodies need, Its malty-sweet
ye GUADELOUPE flavour is so pleasant too. Aduvits will find
oe MARTINIQUE ‘Kepler’ a real strengthener im convalesceace.
__ $T. JOHNS
|. ST. LUCIA
| PORT OF SPAIN
*
The Clipper CV-240 is
acknowledged to be the
Moee ENJOY T. ...... .appetizing flavor you like
Sa
ee
Serve The Encray Breakfast!
Boil 2 cups of water, Add salt. When boil-
ing, add 1 cup of Quaker Oats. Cook it, stir
ring, for 242 minutes. That's all
Maralyn is a fine bed-time drink Footwork is as vital as wristwork in the
and helps you to sleep soundly. NO NEED TO ADD
And nothing could be nicer... MILK OR SUGAR
Maralyn is creamy milk deliciously
flavoured, and enriched with ener-
gising sugar, malt and yeast. MARALYN MILK PLUS
A BOVRIL QUALITY PRODUCT
*KEPLER’
‘BRAND
COD LIVER OIL WITH MALT EXTRACT
x
A BURROUGHS WELLCOME & CO. PROBUCT
split-second timing of modern table
tennis, Dunlop Flash sports shoes alone
give the spring and comfort of the
Dunlopillo Latex Foam insole and that
, Gele Agents for Barbedes: Collins’ itd., 28 Broad Sevens,
NG NS NU NN NS NN NN NS NU NU NNN NS NSE
&
A Lrosperous
New SVear
IS_ OUR ‘
spot of extra speed whieh often means
505 NSN 8 NH NNN,
:
A e
most advanced type airplane
of its kind. Its extra large
picture windows, wide aisles
Be
&
&
2
:
§ HAPPY ;
:
3
and its,40 roomy, recline-to-
your-comfort seats, assure
possengers the utmost in
comfort and luxury in flight.
MNES NE
NEW
By providing this most mod-
ern, fast, dependable Clipper
on this route, PAA is con-
the matcl White self - ventilating
Ventilex canvas, Men’s 6-12, Women’s
6-8. Boys 3-5.
Zz yr Pa
|
tributing to the advancement | igh paae (hed
of the rapidly growing tourist SINCERE WISH = = ! ramp bc s Sol °
area in the islands between bd
Puerto Rico and Trinidad. 2 e " BAR §
S To all our 2 &
For Be aca a2 z = IS ‘OUR SINCERE 5 ee earn ( ey oe
corer: ions, consy our 3 WISH TO ALL | ‘ ar “ourt olir Junlopillo
travei agent or 2 Latex Foam insole.
| i CUSTOMERS and FRIENDS. @\§ serene AG. ne ’ a
Pr†S : eS GENERAL PUBLIC z ag
Paw AMERICAN & a e ‘ . + ae;
won Amuars BE City Garage Grading §@ ROBERT THOM LTD == | ¥ | sPORTS SHOES
o ‘2B COURTESY GARAGE - @ Ee wh FLASH
= Co., Ltd. aS Whitepark Road & oe | ween area,
= & ye p DUNLOP RUBBER CO. LTD. (FOC gresps
Pi NPN GA GH FA GN GK DH ON AN GK OK TE A RN OE DE ADR DE ADRS TAN TATRA NTA DS DE 2S GA DA DR DN AN AS
x
STOKES & BYNOE LTD.~AGENTS
~
ee
es
‘
=“ er |
PAGI EIGHT < ss BARBADOS ADVOCATE THURSDAY, DECEMBER
; - re : ‘ :
Sor e Mo uth
Bleeding Gum Sore Mouth and
Teeth mean that yo Py
nch Mouth or perha bac
HENRY BY CARL ANDERSON
FRESH SUPPLIES OF
CHIC
rte Amosan must
well and save y¢ t
n back on return of empty pack-
age. Get Amosan from your chemist
today. The: guar-
Amosan °)°:¢°°""""
for Pyorrhea—Trench Mouth
BY WALT DISNEY
THEY'VE SOT
[THEY Say T TAKE 17 EASY THIS) PTuE ESCAPE \-l DON] SA
A NERVE, s ) Sette
CAN (SET IN WHOLE THING LOOKS HATCH! IT’S DN'T WARN YOU!
THROUGH THR *. FISHY TO ME ! OPENING! a
ESCAPE HATCH!
ITS MORSE
CODE! GEE
SWEETHEART
TOILET SOAPS
ARE AGAIN AVAILABLE
a a it
ype so wee yo Fes sugeesa: 1 PRICE! ONLY 15¢. CAKE
* = ¢ c A ; e
© (wend TF ro ieubs OFA AN'T CM woEUF |
M7 BUT IM Too. Weto? AR) « ANY MORE | |
I COULONT LIFT oS ry ~ | S(SCO Paint for every
| prucpose .. :
TAKE HOME A PEW ‘SISSONS BROTHERS
B& COMPANY, LTD...
veer & LOND OC KN =
ad A Y BISCO PAINTS Stocked by T
Herbert Ltd Plantatior Ltd., Carter
& Co Barbado »-Operative Cotton
arbé c
Factory, N. B. Howell, G. W. Hutchin-
son & Co., Ltd, T. J. Sealy, Central
Foundry Ltd., Watkins & Co., Manning
& Co., Ltd., C. S. Pitcher & Co., Ltd,
ond The B’dos Hardware Co., Ltd
PLEASE, PETE, DONT TALK | Pravee BY TONIGHT YOUY WHERE a
‘WE EXTORTIONISTS WILL ===] | CAN RAISE SOME p->7" “2 «GO
KILL MY FATHER AND ME 57 Lu 11!
eerie
ENJOY THESE MEAT
DELIGHTS
AUSTRALIAN BEEF -- Steak, Roast and Stew
ND aerecen, Wns ras ere seer en) [on Proeen’ Cokin Winn
IAG © ANT K T Y IS Is JRE “S Ett y HIM WANT YOU j | wih
TIGHT THIS HOTEL ROOM FOR LONG! | UTO KNOW WERE ALIVE] | TO COME HERE IN DISGUISE 7 | pois tay anadian Salmon
ae | sero eeinasttiaah td 2h BACON 6£(Sliced)
=e © oe HAM (Sliced)
: APPLES 30¢ per lb. $12.00 per case
: Liqueurs. Wines. Gins Ete.
~T
® Botton MWIORNTE. ic detec seraseerdSvosesicins $5.00
2 » BOLS: CREMP DE CACAO... 4.00
" BOLS: MARASCHENO ........ on: A
hs FORDE GE ccncicisteisecrneenn. SD
re ) ~ BOOTH'S GIN cu B50
“ ; †PETIT CHABLIS ($943)... 4.00
*, BRINGING UP FATHER BY GEORGE MC.MANI’: io, TERROR RR... Co iiernmataanticin GR
is So ee ie ee PR Saree rene es eer nae eee eal ea to aCe ,
in oo teenie Sh ig | he : Hh nM ae cei ee CEREALS
LISTEN - DON'T te cc YOU'RE MAGGIE'S 1 if io a | ea ———— ~~ Ti
YETI oor oT Biss couRe Ma | { war as ue) (1 wouneR ins MALTABELLA BREAKFAST FOOD ........ 86
omer) | enna ||| Sve you some cos> |———~||| “tONeu 3 || Cowescr pe REI IRIE orcs certs nse 10
aid ARI aN ee PEARL BARLEY ‘Sl Wilk Foods f
|| Woes Boe we PF e~] ALLSON’S WHITE OATS... 48 Mi ood:
sag | Phas. QUAKER CORN FLAKES ... Taal f 7 er. ‘
gs MMI BURNB. oe ucchssatetin 53 > :
BUFFED WHEAT... 188 he Family
siluink hecointossolleots lew PMN ns cigscateitedsieioc 73
» TONO ve 921, 198
2 ‘ ay it DHARMA 2 abAi ii os Ai cnecesesasgseneions soccscgeccongeoeer ‘
Pickles & Sauces eee ae
Bottles MORTONS CHOW CHOW ..w....c00 53 + Eee a ee ae
; » MIXED PICKLES... 53 Me oy eo eerie
; Pg MEAL: coferinch sextovine 50 ss et Lene SOON i ast -
KING STUFFED OLIVES oo... 166 a ee
PLAIN OLIVES ..... 100 ; :
eS sive Gees†- Marmalade & Syrups
7B A) a0... THEY WERE a 4 Tins LYLE'S GOLDEN SYRUP 00... 42, 28
s WA\ FEAR, SiR...I'LL MAKE Bottles AUST: HONEY ............... vid
SURE TM NOT Tins CHOCOLATE SYRUP
FOLLOWED... a S.A. MARMALADE (2-1b)
“yee Lweracts Bottles GOLDEN SHRED MARMALADE ....... ‘47
SILVER, Bock lean A7
HARTLEY'S MARMALADE 0.0... 38
and Tins LETONIA MARMALADE 0000-000 48
Condiments Mousehold Requisites
Bottles BOWL cic... 160, 90, 60 Wine Mam See ee Ps oo 80, 47
BONOX (Beef Extract). 70, 40 , SHINIO .. ee 36
a siicinieied ’ S SMAMMIIE focus icc. 97, 60, 32 At WEES cca : 36
ae me ibhsg | ‘Tims COLMAN’S MUSTARD ........... 57 "MIN CREAM 4020
. MADRAS CURRY a 76 “1.0.1 CLEANSER ___ re 4
BY LEE FALK & RAY MOORES /f} MBO occ eee sh a3 ' VIM CLEANSER _. ee 24, 16
ee crete © GMO CUBES ok. tcncs 22 | WINDOLINE ........ 31
SHE) Pottles KRAFT PREPARED MUSTARD 17 C NMED “LUAdie ce a8.
WENT TO THE
PENITENTIARY.
YOUVE SURPRISED ME!) OHsER«1S
WEVE PRACTICALLY
KNOW 1 WAG COMING. | | FORGOTTEN ia YR
SAVAGE
| WANTED TO SURPRISE YOU + AND THAT HERE?
AS DIANA PALMERS MOTHER FINISHES
THE BREAKFAST DISHES. FA A]
3 RBELL.100
> hers = 5
ta ube . a es 3 = 2
jet
- Hi
if
{ ‘ \
A
DECEMBER 28, 1950.
CLASSIFIED ADS,
BARBADOS ADVOCATE PAGE NINE
NG NON NENG SONS NES
oN
%
PUBLIC NOTIC } | | A
NOTICE. Seg | nay eee [ae _ NOTICES ii FoR TOUR INSURANCE x
NEED CONSULT
“PERFIT" —
\
TELEPHONE 2508 (Dressmakers) bex to t
Be or notify their customs that they will te The public are hereby warne: zinst | ROYAL NETHERLAND | | | CaReRani opulence walle ne caeemamaanm if ANDREW D. SHEPPARD =
eo 7 a aturday, ember 23rd] &'ving credit to my wife G. N Representing
, DIED wate ‘aaa 3rd meee HUSB NDS inee atone GALE m~ STEAMSHIP co Sontetees Life ,—_—- Sz
INEZ. On the 24th FOR RENT 23.12.50—2n,| not hold myself respohsible for her o . The M.V. “CARIBBEE will Cro F. cathabrowh tine LTb.,
; a het late resiiitiiie Fustic oso else contracting any debt or Sailing fr Acneland I bs ‘el. 2840
sucy lebts in my rn e less by writter ‘om Amsterdam & Dover accept rao 4 Pas . }
ewster, Bleanor Corbin ee eee P NOTICE ux order signed a = : "Ty col a Sth. December, 1950 ss =—,* i. ane Shep, 0
Athelstan, a ARI . = . “Bonaire†5th., 6th. Januaty, 1950 j omit r ‘ }
helstan, | James and |__| VACCINATING CENTRES — vita DARRELL HUSBANDS, Selling from Amsterdam —m.s. “Willem ROKR†AMR,†Serer =. |
BEVERLY COURT — Modern Bunga-| Neva. P-M.G?s Hesidencf®. Etfenezer Four Hill stad†15th. De ber, 19: ‘Oranje 7 . . }
28.12.50—1n.} low near Bays Water Deacons Re. Gascline Station, Four Reads. Alims- St. Peter stad†19th January, tin, a Hersiia†ovis. 18 Bn. TERE CHIE Oat oT
Gi) ot Trot APply E. Stuart, Bryan, Popular Bakery, { !ouse, P-M.O's Office. Codrington Col- 28.12,50-—2n | 22rd. December, 1950. : Sts Seenadiantl “Sukie 10-DAY'S NEW N 1
oO! anon Tudor St 28.12 50—1n | lege. Mr. 4% L. Barrow's Residence Sailing from Hamburg, Bremen, and | January 196). SH
ce Ser = — seid taie agg Street. St. Margaret's School. Amsterdam “Boskoop™ ith. Decem vee
, LOGNE—St. Li . Near Newcastle ber, 1950, s.s. “Hermes†19 semnbe: . . . y |
Pap. to-day. Friends | furnished. Vacant from the toe Senusey RLS. FRASER, 1950. te a ee B.W.1| SCHOONER OWN- FLOWER GLASS i} :
Sieties oor ears a Telephone 8607 28,12.50--2n Clerk, Commissioners of Health, ee ee Sailing to Trinidad Ete.m.s. “Helena†| for DOORS r | AND ALL GOOD
* : rts St. John, llth, December, 1950, s,s. “Cottica’ 26th, | ERS ASSOC N c 1 HES
: Rs te se Anas Fully furnished. Pe eee ae — REAL ESTATE | a 1950, s.s. “Willemstad†Ist cAweOl : †JOmNAOW'S HARDWARE pel sie
, iy ‘urnished, for particulars ring anuary, 1950, ss. “Helder†2nd. January \
Pier iaiteos cae | __ ee NOTICE hhh tne who "ire Ste we at cae YEAR
be y h
t (cousin). “SEAFORD†— Worthing. From 1st| ,,NEITHER the Master nor the Con- | inten =e “Oketeeee†ea Toys, and we are certainly
SRO Wor am; | JARO: {oF turtner "particulars Powe wanees of the MV. LADY, ill IN| December. 1980. —— fe &@ record business C. CARLTON BROWNE
. : . J C, ts, Government Hill s s ass y accommods
5, at the : ei tonya rome Ha. contra ed by the oy SS Sia“ane | avstable’™ passenger accom rodation | n them. oe Wholesale @ Retail Drageies
Boxing Day} e - in port. S$ . P. MUSSON, SON & CO, LTD BE WI 126 Roebuck St Dial 281:
place from her late resi.]| WINSLOW—Black Rock. F GUY MASSEL—Master. Read ~ Agent Pens JOUNSON’'S
M ‘rom ist} MANNIN Agents, ea iN STATIONERY 5
n . Christ Church. } J; c G & CO., LTD.—Consignees. | ‘f
Pe Dame SS, So Sete peste, tie aia so : | PAG EH I
fa Brathwaite, Evangeline, eho , | ~
oe Sait | __ NOTICE ‘Canadian National Steamships | =
. 12.50—I1n, ©. Gordon Bolden, Motor Mechanic BLABDON |
7 —_ OFFICIAL NOT ICE a. Benne oe left by Plane on \ Sean Sails Sails Sails Arrives 2 Me s
u a BARBADOS. Bee ee cant tance Sie So Shits | Montreal Halifax Boston Barbados Ph Ringing in Our
Mate ela tebeevene hs IN THE ASSISTANT COURT January and in th na wonkrne AF.S, ny ee a a ee ee
and relatives for OF APFRAL hie tana — i meantime work at » W.VA. | LADY RODNEY .. + oo) †Jan 19 Jan, 2 Jan. 29 Jan.
other a Borns Ce Josima Genre Jurisdiction) ruption under ‘o peotignn of hia Formerly Dixon & Bladon {aay eer i ‘ e 1 Ave: ith “ae i Ne VW St les!
n confined to the Nursing | JAMES ELBERTON SATE art (roe Ses FOR SALE y ,
—Det
fd, tape age, Meum ofan Oras ae oar Lost , re Airintos page “aon shake
in the “ ae p arbados jos in . John
OND "We HUTEHINSON, [aay or Novena Mags oe te, 28 | MB) pDEANE HOLLOw"—st. Lucy. || LADY RODNEY .. 25, Dec a Dee. € Jan. 7 Jan. FOR THE CHRISTMAS
all persons having any estate, right or id B T—-On December 25th — one with shingle roof, containing 3 | Re = ven 43 Jen. 2 Jun. $3 Jan.
interest in or @y lien or incumbranee | £0 racelet with chain attached | @) ped +s LADY RODNEY .. 1 Feb i2 Feb. 21 Feb. 22 Feb.
Bisemory of Arlene Bannister effecting all that certain piece or parcel Between James Street Church, bus stand | Sane ticase “andar: quae | LADY NELSON 25 Feb 27 Feb 8 Mareh 9 Maren SEASON
of | yn. treet and National Paynes s, . Servant's a 3,
pet December, 1 ; ua jpituate at Dr. Gill's land in the! Bay Bus. ‘Finder will be suitably 2 garages and storerooms. 2% M.B.—Sublect, to change witnoat, noties. (° vewscw Jited with ooid more eham
pecial day ohn containing by ad ard fertile acres, option further 2% Passenger Feres and treigb'! applteation to :—
bu to my mind measurement one acre one rood and Antho z Fo a same to ie. acres. Offers considered ‘ er MEN’S SHOES!
Edo not think of you for nwa, a bytting and bounding Village. st. eee aileetee, Fitts . 3
rd to find: on lands o: iikie of C. L, Miller and = : “CASABLANCA†Maxwell's
7 § ai — May s ,
, Seana to fight ty ante ot Clarins Gikeeow on lags A GOLD PENCH.—On Saturday ard Coast. A beautiful property GARDINER AUSTIN & CO. LTD. — Agents. LADIES’ SHOES !
ar the blow, eto! ion on ds of Poo!| December. In Broad Street. Liberal embodying the finest prewar eackaiadaiaiad caealoadhidiied indians
:
ie
:
ever know.
"Pou lying in your grave
Part of my heart is buried there
Jean (mother).
‘themory of my beloved hus-
Franklin who fell asleep
December, 1948.
Wand my heartache
“ean heal
be a keepsake
in steal
“One has gone
Mot far away
et in the garden of
some day,
remembered by his loving
Franklyn of Long Bay,
27.12.50
Smemory of Mary E, Rock.
Lucy died on 28th
ar has passed since that
safe in the arms of Jesus
Tei gentle breast there by his
grace
is at rest,
remembered by her family
Carmen Rock, Cartila
field Roek and Wilfred
nm), Amy Rock (daughter-
isa Rock (grand child).
pers please copy.
1949 Hillman Minx Saioon, one
ibsolutely first class condition.
Ltd. 28.12.50—3n.
ELECTRICAL
ps Radio 1936, Console model
with pick.up. For further
Phone 2824, 28.12.50—3n.
— Very old Mahogany
rene Mrs. Peebles, Bayleys,
lew and Second hand Furni-
ders from $15, Washstands $10,
Mahogany Vanities $85.,
ng Tables $30; Mahogany
from $45; Mahogany
. Birch $16. Also lots ‘of
in excellent condition
BEARD'S Showrooms, Hard-
Phone 4683.
28,12,50—6n
LIVESTOCK
ine Graded Guernsey
_Jariuany the 5th 1951.
calf. Telephone 95.267.
; 28.12,50-—3n
Cow to
30 pints
Songs of Praise—Hard Covers.
Apply: A. L, Waithe, High
23,12.50—In.
[ON FIBRE—Fine quality Caylon
ust received. This Fibre is clean,
} amd springy. Price 14 cents per
‘Dial 4222, G. W. Hutchinson &
ad. 15,12.50—t.f.n.
One Gentleman's Winter Coat
@llent condition
P glace to fill
: and also extra large panes
% inch thick. Dial 4222. G. W.
on & Co, Ltd. 19.12.50—t.f.n,
in
designs and colours just open-
for you. Yes! It's at THANI'S
Henry St. Dial 866 and Swan
14,12.50—t.f.n.
ee
TRUCKS — 5_ single Mule
. one double, one Buggy, newly
spare wheel. G. A. Clarke,
, St. George. 28.12.50—3n.
BABY'S PRAM in good con-
. Apply to A. A. Browne, Eagle
Pharmacy. Dial 4004 or 2154.
23,12,50—Sn.
Phone 4683.
28.12,.50—3n.
‘ANENT NEEDLES for your
Fesors player, and needles of all kinds,
“yooms, Hardwood Alley.
jords of all kinds too. A BARNES .&
.. LTD. 22.12.50-—.£.9
| Snapdragon Seedlings.
one 2533.
2/- per dozen.
HUTSON, .
28.12.50—1
JOHN F.
PUBLIC SALES
a
REAL ESTATE
“PINFOLD HOUSEâ€, Pinfold Street,
with the land thereto containing 8,488
sq. ft. Excellent business site. ty
G. L. W, Clarke & Co., Solicitors, James
23.12,50—6n,
Street.
SEASIOF HOUSE—“CALAIS†situate
near Dover, Christ Church, standing on
imately 2 roods, 1| perch of land.
dwellinghouse contains verandah,
iiving room, pantry, kitchen, bedroom
and bathroom downstairs, four bed-
rooms and toilet upstairs. Electric light
and running water throughout. Garage
and servants rooms in yard.
The above property will be set up for
sale ay public competition at our Office
James Street, on Friday 20th
1960 at 2 p.m. Inspection on application
to the tenant Mr. E. S. Burrowes, be-
tween the hours of 9 a.m. and 12 noon
YEARWOOD & BOYCE,
12.50—lln Solicitors.
——_—_—————_$—$<——$s
15
No. 17 High Street,
at their Office,
1950, at 2 p.m.
“Sheldonâ€
of December,
Dwellinghouse called
feet,
Bay Street, St. Michael.
Inspection on application to Miss Est-
wick at “Luxmoreâ€, Upper Bay Street.
For further Particulars
tions of Sale apply to:—
COTTLE CATFORD & Co.
13.12.50—12n.
. Apply: Donald
: 20.12.50—t.f.n.
all needs, available
supply %†Plate Glass for
2 P—New h.p. National Vertical
i Oil Tedine also Water Pump
ch Suction, at Ralph Beard’s Show-
Deeember
THE undersigned will set up for sale
Bridgetown, on Thursday, the 28th bs
the
and
the land thereto containing 4,845 square
situate at Shot Hall Land, Upper
and Condi-
Plantation and on a right
however else the same may butt or
bound to bring before me an account
of their claims with their witnesses,
documents and vouchers, to be examined
by me on amy Tuesday, or Friday be-
tween the hours of 12 (noon) and
3 o'clock in the afternoon, at the Office
of the Clerk of the Assistant Court of
Appeal at the Court House, Bridgetown,
before the 3lst day of January 1951, in
order that such el. may be ranked
according te the natune and priority
thereof respectively; otherwise such
persons will be luded from the
benefit of the Decre®, and be
deprived of all claim’ on of against the
said property,
Claimants are also notified that they
must attend the said Court on Wednes-
cay, the 3ist day of January 1951, at
W o'clock . When their said claims
will be ra
Given under my hand this 28rd day of
November, 1950.
I. V. GILKES,
Ag. Clerk of the Assistant Court
of Appeal.
28.11,50—3n.
OFFICIAL SALE
BARBADOS.
IN THE ASSISTANT COURT
OF APPEAL
(Equitable Jurisdiction)
JOSEPH GOSLIN BLACKMAN—Plaintift
JAMES ELBERTON BRATHWAITE
—Defendant
NOTICE is hereby given that by virtue
ef an Order of the Assistant Court of
Appeal dated the 23rd day of November
1950, there will be set up for sale to
the highest bidder at the Office of the
Clerk of the Assistant Court of Appeat
at the Court House, Bridgetown, be-
tween the hours of 12 (noon) amd
2 o'clock in the afternoon on Friday, the
Qnd day of February 1951, all that
certain piece or parcel of sand situate
at Dr. Gill’s land in the parish of Saint
John containing by admeasurement one
acre one rood and fourteen percies but-
ting and bounding on lands of H. Wilkie
of C. L. Miller and on lands of ou
Glascow on lands of Colleton Plantation
on lands of Pool Plantation and on a
right of way or however else the same
may butt or bound, and if not then sold
the said property will be set up for sale
ou every succeeding Friday between the
same hours until the same ts sold for a
sum not less than £250.
Dated this 23rd ony Us gg 1950.
LICES,
Assistant Court
of Appeal.
28,11.50—Sn.
iil ace
OFFICIAL NOTICE
BARD THE Peg couRT
APPEAL.
(Rauitable SE RTHY
NORA
MYRA LEO! Plant
ALENE CONSTANCE DANIEL
_ ery Defendant.
irsuance of an Order in this
as the above action made on the
24th day of October, 1950, I give notice
to all persons having any estate, right
or interest in or any lien or incumbranee
effecting all that certain piece or pareei
of land situate at Kirtons in the parish
of Saint Philip and Island, aforesaid con-
teining by admeasurement three roods
twenty perches be the same, more
of way or
Ag. Clerk of the
IN
Court
~or less butting and bounding on
lands now or late of C. Larrier,
on lands now or late of J. R
deceased, on lands now oF
jate of M. L. McCarthy and on the
Public Road or however else the
same may abutt and bound, to bee
before me an account of their sal
claims with their witnesses,, documents
and vouchers, to be examined by me
on any Tuesday, or Friday between the
houre of 12 (noon) and 3 o'clock in the
afternoon, at the Office of the Clerk of
the Assistant Court of Appeal at the
Court House, Bridgetown, before the
Qrd day of January 1951, in order that
such claims may be ranked according
to the nature and priority thereof re-
spectively; otherwise such persons will
be precluded from the benefit of the
said Decree, and be deprived of all
claim on or against the said property
Claimants are also notified that they
must attend the said Court on Wednes-
day, the 3rd day of January, 1951, at
10 o'clock a.m. when their said claims
will be ranked.
Given under my hand this 24th day
of October, 1950.
I, V. GILKES,
Clerk of the Assistant
Court of Appeal.
26.10. fina.
~ OFFICIAL SALE
BARBADOS.
IN THE ASSISTANT COURT
OF APPEAL
(Equitable Jurisdiction) .
MYRA LBOMORA MeCARTHY
Plaintiff.
MADALENE CONSTANCE DANIEL
Defendant.
NOTICE is hereby given that by virtue
of an Order in the Assistant Court of
peal dated the 24th day of October,
| Apes there will be set up for sale to
the highest bidder at the Office of the
Clerk of the Assistant Court of Appeal
at the Court House, Bridgetown, between
the hours of 12 (noon) and 2 o’c
in the afternoon on Friday the fifth (5)
day of January, 1951, all that certain
piece or parcel of land situate at Kirtons
in the pent of Saint Philip and Island
eroreedia containing by admeasurement
Coppin,
Acting
and on the Pubtic Road or however else
the same may butt and bound, and if not
then sold the said property will be eet
up for sale on every succeeding Friday
between the same hours until the sam*
is sold for a sum not less than £166.16.4.
Dated this 24th day of October, 1950.
I. V. GILKES,
Acting Clerk of the Assistant
Court of Appeal.
26.10.50—3n
WANTED
HELP
WANTED IMMEDIATELY — Compet-
ent Stenographer preferably with ex-
perience in Commission Agency business.
Apply in person Room 304 Plantations
Ltd. Building between 9 and 12 a.m.
28.12.50—3n.
___ MISCELLA NEOUS —
PAYING GUEST
Mrs. Rose, Minister House, Marine
FOR SALE, LEASE OR RENT Gard
lens would like paying guest.
PIONEER, Upper Collymore Rock.) Charming house and garden. $4.00
that desirable family ee ee ae breakfast and tea. $1.20 other meals
or 27,000 square feet of lan House in
; ore three bedrooms with when required Telephone 2758
perfect
ing water, all modern
d Servants room
Inepe
conveniences
da Dia
rieffe
immedia ate
three roods twenty perches be the same
more or less butting and bounding on
lands now or late of C. Larrier, on lands
now or late of J R Coppin, deceased
on lands now or late of M. L. McCarthy
16.12.50—4n
pitt pin cere
SEWING MACHINE
No
ndition
Singe
atter
Phone
28.12.5 50- cM
model preferred
must be ir
11,30
good
before ar
Jock | Merchandise or otherwise as the law directs
reward, if return to Advocate Adytg. workmanship and well planned
Dept. 28.12.50—3n with 2 reception, 5 large bed-
rooms, verandah, kitchen, pantry. |
NOTICE Sarage, storerooms etc. The land
is approx. 2 acres with flower
and vegetable gardens,
orchard and coconut
acre of walled garden
sold separately
—
Re: ESTATE of
JOSEPH ALONZA PERRE
deceased
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that all
persons having any debt or claim upon
or affecting the Estate of Joseph Alonza
productive
grove. |
be
site
may
as building
-
“SUNSET HOUSE" — Prospect.
Perre sometimes called Joseph Alonza St. James. Due
St. es Bungalow with wide , ve
, late ¥ The Garden Land. County sea-frontage and good baat ‘a Vessel From Leaves Barbados
this Island whe ied in ele “) oF a anchorage, 3 bedrooms, lounge, | SS. “DEFENDER†London 7th Dec 81st Dec.
the 2ist day of January 1p42, a by separate dining room, verandah S.S. “COLONIAL†Glasgow 9th Dee 25th Dec
required to send in partioutarn of “thelr i garage and paved court- | 3.S. “INVENTOR†. Liverpool 10th Dee 24th Dec
clains duly attested to the undersigned r . “MULBERRY HILL†London 23rd Dec. 8th Jan.
C/o Yearwood & Boyce, Solicitors, of “ROCK DUNDO’—Cave Hill. “INTERPRETER†Liverpool 24th Dec fth Jan.
No. 14 James Street, Bridgetown, on or
before the 15th day of Februamy 1951,
after which date I shall proceed to dis-
tribute the assets of the said Estate
among the parties entitled thereto hav-
ing regard to the debts and claims only
ef which I shall then have had no 5
and that IT shall not be liable for asset
so distributed to any person of whose
debt or claim I shall not have had
notice at the time of such distribution,
AND all persons indebted to the said
A well maintained and productive
Estate of some 32 acres in a very
lovely position 2 miles from City
The house is worthy of especial
notice and poss@sses great charm.
Its general structure is excellent
and there is spacious accommoda-
tion
Estate are required to settle their ac-
counts without delay. AUCTIONEER
Dated this 6th day of December 1950. PLANTATIONS BUILDING
SERPs, (DFORD
Qualified Executor of ne eetate of
Joseph Alonza Perre, deceased.
13,12.50-—4n.
|
naan setae acmer |
Phone 4640
GOVERNMENT NOTICES
V—_—_—_—_——S
HIS EXCELLENCY the Governor-in-Executive Committee has
appointed a committee with the following terms of reference:
“To examine the conditions in the port area in regard to
the loading and landing of cargo, pilferage, the control of traffic,
wharves and warehouses, and to make recommendations for their
regulation and improvement.â€
2. The Committee invites persons and organisations interested
to give information orally and in writing. All such persons and
organisations should communicate with or send memoranda to the
Secretary, Mr. F. J, Odle of the Labour Department before 1fth
January, 1951.
3. It would be of considerable benefit to the committee if eight |
eopies of all memoranda could be supplied. |
4. The committee wishes to obtain as much information as pos- |
sible and it is hoped that anyone who can give any relevant infor- |
mation will not hesitate to make it available to the committee.
22,12.50—3n |
TOKEN IMPORTS FROM THE U.S.A. |
Importers are hereby notified that the list of items published, for |
which audited statements are requested for imports from the U.S.A..
during the years 1946 to 1948, is amended as under.
Delete: —Machinery f
Raw Materials. !
Add: —Cigarettes, Minerals, Earth Pigment. Rayon Fabrics, Rayon |
Dresses, Cotton Dresses, Cotton Shirts, Electric Fans, |
Radio Apparatus, Freezers & Parts, Electrical Household
Washing Machines, Manufactured Plastic Products, Office
Appliances & parts, Industrial, Chemical Electric House-
hold Refrigerators,
(Sgd.) F. A. BISHOP, |
Comptroller of Supplies.
2ist December, 1950. 23.12.50—2n |
BARBADOS
TRADE MARK CAUTION
DE WITT & COMPANY, LIMITED, of
Export Drugesists
Marks :— |
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that E. C
2, Cherry Orchard Road, Croydon, Surrey, England, Wholesale
are the owners and exclusive proprietors of the following Trade
OINTMENT
|
MANZAN |
BRAND
. pawns
ey Sg
» ANTACID
POWDER
DE WITT’S
upon Pharmacheutical Preparations,
in selling the said goods,
Register of Trade Marks kept under the Trade
law in certain British
with the
that the said Trade Marks
Marks
Possessions and
all used in connexion business of
the above named Company
have been registered im the
Act, 1938 (Imperial) and are protected by
Foreign States; and that any infringement, fraudulent imitation or improper appli
vation of the said Trade Marks ‘or any of them) or violation of the rights of the
aforenamed Company in respect thereof within Barbados will be dealt with under
the Merchandise Marks Act Theo to amend the law relating to fraudulent marks of
28th day of December, 1950
REGINALD W. BARKER & CO
British and Foreign Patent and Trade Mark Agents
61, Cheapside, London, E.C.2, Engiand,
For and on behalf of
E.C, DE WITT & COME
Dated this
THANKS TO ONE AND ALL
for your splendid support during the year.
WE WISH YOU
a Happy Christmas and a Prosperous New Year.
THE CENTRAL EMPORTUM
(CENTRAL FOUNDRY LTD.—Proprietors)
Corner of Broad & Tudor Streets,
ENGEL NS WOON
WE BLENDERS OF ..
Gaylor’s Special Riended Rum
(With The
WISIHING
A Very Happy New SVear.
“nommuaunuawsnat
Distinctive
you
Flavour)
ALL
TAYLOR & SONS LTD. |
9G 9G NG NG NB NS 8B 8 8 8
Ia
S.S
For further information apply to - - -
|
Roberts & Co. - = Dial 3301 \2
HARRISON LINE
OUTWARD FROM THE UNITED KINGDOM
HOMEWARD FOR THE UNITED KINGDOM
For
London
Vessel
“SPECIALISTâ€
Closes in Barbados
5th Jan
DACOSTA & CO., LTD.-—Agents
; > {
CANADIAN SERVICES
From Montreal, St. John, N.B., Halifax, N.S.
To Barbados, Trinidad, Demerara, B.G.
t
LOADING DATES Expected
Halifax St. John | Arrival Dates
Bridgetown
S.S. SUNDIAL 18th Dec, { éth Jan
S.S. SUNJEWEL and, Jan 29th Dec 16th Jan
8.8. SUNRAY } 1th Jan | 27th Jan
UK, SERVICT
Arrival Dates
Expected
Bridgetown
5.5. LONDON MARINER 8th Jan
S.S, BEECH HILI 18th Jan
PLANTATIONS LIMITED-— Agents
PHONE 4703
SAGUENAY TERMINALS
CIE. GLE. TRANSATLANTIQUE
(French Line)
S.S. “GASCOGNE" Trinidad & French Guiana on
)
Sailing to
26th, 1950 |
)
December
Sailing to
Martinique and Guadeloupe on
3rd, 1951.
Sailing to Trinidad, La Guaira, Curacao,
i
Cartagena and Jamaica on January 17th,
1950. \
S.S. "GASCOGNE†Plymouth and Le Havre via
January
S.S. “COLOMBIEâ€
S.S. “COLOMBIE"†Sailing to Plymouth and Le Havre via tl
Martinique and Guadeloupe on January )
28th, 1950, ie
All ships accepting Passengers, Cargo and Mail. =
“GASCOGN First Class passages Only.
“COLOMBIE†First, Cabin and Tourist Class passages
For further particulars apply to:
R.M. JONES & CO. LTD.—Agents.
BROWNE’S NAUTICAL ALMANAC
FOR 1951
As we approach the close of
another year we look back
with gratitude to the support
ind cooperation of those we
have had the pleasure of
serving throughout the year
and take this opportunity of
expressing our sincere
“thanks†extend:
Best Wishes for
e A
FROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
DOWDING ESTATES AND TRADING
Bhd anoint
and
a
CHILDREN’S SHOES!
ALSO THE LATEST DESIGNS IN
PUMPS and SANDALS
Also
Fully-fashioned Hosiery and a great variety of
Polishes and Cleaners.
available: Swimming Rings & Water Wings.
WILLIAM FOGARTY LTD.
INC, IN B.G.
We
are now
receiving a
Shipment — of
PRESTCOLD 4.4
REFRIGERATORS
Will who
those Customers
could not obtain theirs from
our last shipment
PLEASE CALL IN AND
BOOK NOW.
So
= WILLIAM FOGARTY [tD.
TAILORING DEPARTMENT
Our long-Established
reputation for....
QUALITY AND
CRAFTMANSHIP
continues to win
NEW CUSTOM
among MEN who
enjoy the feel of
FABRIC
EXPERT CUTTING
PRECISION OF
STITCHES
and fine styling oi
SUITS
je carry a comprehensive range of - - -
HARRIS TWEEDS, WORSTEDS, =
DOE-SKINS, TROPICALS AND
GABERDINE.
:
WILLIAM FOGARTY LTD.
Ya PARK DN EN SE AK PK EE DEIN DE GR PA RNIN
t
eEENNnseemnmNN.
4
E
&
&
:
PAGE TEN
Boswell Beats
Al Browne
{Feo Our Own Correspor t
GEORGETOWN, B.G. Dee. 27
Boswell St. Louis, Caribbean
lightweight chempion won 1
jecis on over Al Browne, British
Gliana featherweight champion
in-a 10+rounder before a record
erewda of yelling fight fans on
che G.F:C. ground Boxing Day.
Browne weighing in at 133 Ibs
comceded tive and three quarter
ibs, to Boswell.
Towards the end of the ninth
round. Browne floored Boswell
for n@ count and on three other
ceeasions Boswell hit the canwas.
The tenth round was a thriller ag
the “crowd shouted themselves,
hearse, while both men stood tc
to toe and slugged it out. ~
Fight fans broke into derisive
booing as referee Tommy Wheat-|
ing raised Boswell’s hand in vic-
vory. © Police ‘had a- difficult tim
yo ‘preserve order as round
“crowds invaded the ringside
swarmed into the ring
In*the preliminary bout Calvin
Garfaway was awarded the figh
in the last round of an ei
roufider. with: Young Bibbs whk«
was Gisqualified for not trying
Queen’s Horse Wins
Steeple Chase
LONDON, Dec. 26
The ‘Queen today saw her new
steeple-chaser. Manicou win it
thirct’ straight race against high-
class opposition at Kempton Park
Manicou, a five-year-old bay. i
his first. season of jumping
seored by three lengths in
three mile King George VI Handi-
. Silver Fame and Colored
School. Boy both veteran
"National
and third respectively, The vic
tery was. worth about £2,000.
Manicou sired by Last Post out
of Mylaé paid 5 to 1, Monaveen
previously the No. | jumper ir
the Queen's stables fell and hac
to be shot during a
weeks ago.
Today the holiday
race three
race crowd
cheered itself hoarse, and threw!
their Hats in the air when the
Queen’s horse won. A few min-
utes after the victory, the Quee |.
was down in the paddock to shak:
hands with jockey Bryan Marshall
and to pat Manicou’s nose cP)
WINT SETS NEW RECORD
CHRISTCHURCH, New Zealand,
Dec. 27
Arthur Wint, Jamaica’s Olympk
Champion won the 400 metré
final to-day in the Canterbuly
Centennia) Games. He finisoed
18 seconds ahead of Ameri-
ican Mal Whitfield and his time
of 46.9 secs. was believed to be
the fastest recorded in Australi:
or New Zealand for the distanc«
The 100 yards final was wo:
yy W. Degruchy of Australia i.
9.7 secs. A. R, Bragg, US. wa
segond and E. McDonald Bailey
é6f Britain was third.
Miss Marjorie Jackson of Aus-
tralia, Empire Games Champion
won the 75 yards in 8.3 secs. to
beat the New Zealand record by
1/6 of a second,
—Reuter.
LADY SPRINTERS
(From Our Own Correspondent)
PORT-OF-SPAIN, Dec. 2!
After strong criticisms appear-
ing in the Press, the Amateut
Athletic Association in. Trinidad
have issued invitations to Eileen
King, Pearl Gooding and Julia
Charles, the island’s top women
sprinters, to get ready for the
trials to be held prior to the selec-
tion of the Trinidad team for the
Pan American Games at Buenos
Aires early next year.
errr Canasta
* by M. HARRISON-GRAY
T. ts normally considered
bad Rlay to meld without
taking the discard pile when
Falnersbilitye he your
—tLe. when your
score is between 61500.
io 80, you are
secueing the number of cards
oR id, and will thereby
er the initiative to your
Opponents. They will be able
freeze the pack, 1
e mathematica!
. with
in their fayour—for each
em will have his full
quota of 11 cards.
As always in this fascinating
game, however, there are
ptions to the rule
uppose you are dealt:
K, 16, 10, 5, 5, 5. 5, Joker,
2, 2
is is @ very good hand
put only for going out quickly
does pot contain a sufl-
ctent variety Pairs to
ryt to con-
Unue the game Until a 1
until @ large
pack has been lected. e
they so
of
col
You should at once meld
6 5, 6, Joker. This is a
mal to your partner that
are almost ready. to go
If he has any Pives, he
add them. If not, he will
what he can ge he
may be ape 30 9 out before
the ave made
thet fret meld.
you
out.
8 Gordon express Service.
Grand
Time
re ee
cTARLY
her to the water
Outsiders Win At
Trinidad Races
(From Our Own Correspondent)
PORT-OF-SPAIN, Tuesday,
The T.T.C. Christmas meeting opened on Tuesday in
the most miserable weathe1
day, outsiders won the majority of the races although in
one or two cases the favourite came home as in the Derby
class Fernandes Trophy over a mile
and the C
Of course it was a good day
for the Jamaican breds and when
the last Xmas meeting is remem
bered, one is tempted’ to believe
that the Jamaicans run better in
mud than those bred in Barba
dos and Trinidad
One Jamaican however who
might have won whether = th:
going was hard or soft was Foot
mark, winner of the Derby. This
upstanding colt by Merrymar!}
out of Goody-two Shoes, I under
sfand from his owner Mr. F. M
Watson, prefers the soft going
but he won in such impressiv:
style that it would have taken
Watercress at her best to give
him a race
Unfortunately neither Water-
cress nor Bowbells ran true to
form and this left Footmark with
an easy but hollow victory It
reminded me of Ligan’s victory in
the Trial Stakes in 1948
Footmark was not bred
owner but Mr, Watson owns his
sire Merrymark as well as ten
broodmares and revealed ton’znt
that in future he will breed in
Jamaica and race in Trinidad
because he was very pleased
with the general setup of racing
in these parts and thought the
public very sporting in the way
they received the first Jamaican
victory in a Trinidad classic. In
as much Footmark cannot
return to Jamaica I look forward
to seeing his future career in ‘the
South Caribbean. I think he will
make a good one from six fur-
longs to a mile and later possibly
nine furlongs
The other classic of the meeting
went.to Jamaica also, when the
Jester II, another Merrymark
horse ran away with the Breed-
ers’ Stakes He is not however
owned in Jamaica and the
first major successful purchase
of his owner Mr. S. W. Branke:
who has already bought a fev
Jamaican creoles
by his
was
In the case of the Jester, how-
ever, it would be unwise to say
how good he is as the start wa:
a bad one which he got the bes
of, and most of the best two-year
olds out here were off colour
Most notable of these was
Best Wishes who closed down jie
a clam after
running three and i
half furlong Cross Roads ra®
well, but was one of those pat
ticularly badly off
The other very impressive vi
tory for the day was when Atomik
II barely nosed out Elizabethan
on the post, to take the Governor ;
Cup after a gruelling stretch bat
tle with the imported mare, Tue
honours were almost equally
divided, as it was discovere!
afterwards that Elizabethan slip-
ped badly on the final turn and it
was at that precise moment (hat
Atomic If drew level with her.
Whatever might have been the
ig Be 2
MONTHS OLD MARGA is supported by a sling as her
famous swimming mother Nel Van Vliet Dutch champion introduces
Nel intends swimming this season
START
S. Fort
Gas
bigge
PNG
Expres
imaginable. Throughout the
possible result, this does not how-
ever detract from the fine victory
of the best miler that the champicn
sire O,T.C, has produced
This makes the first Barbados
creole ever to win a Governor's
Cup, and it also made it the last
major event in the South Carib-
bean to be won by the progeny
of O.T.C. Few horses could have
fought a more determined battic
at the finish and in a chat with
Frank O'Neil who rode Atomic il
after the race, he told me that
he thought that the big horse was
still feeling his leg a bit and that
explained why he was bearing
slightly on Elizabethan
Holder on Elizabethan told me
he did not think this interfered
with the mare’s chances of wih
ning. It was in fact the best finiso
for the entire day.
|
|
|
|
PEPE ALIN DN DEA TN ARAN NIN NR NN
What’s on Today
S.S. Gascogne arrives from
England, 6.00 am.
Barbados Advocate’s Photo
Exhibition at Barbados
Museum
Meeting St. Thomas Vestry
1.00 p.m ,
Sale of “Sheldon,†Upper
Bay Street, Messrs Cottle
Catford & Co,, 2.00 p.m
Police Band Concert at the
Leper Asylum 4.00 p.m
Darryl! F. Zanuck’s “No
Way Out†at Empire
Theatre, 8.30 p.m.
‘House of Dracula’ and
“Mummy's Ghost†at
Globe Theatre, 8.30 p.m
Samuel Goldwyn’s “Our
Very Own†alt Bridge-
town Plaza, 8.30 p.m.
Total for Month to Yester-
day: 3.41 ins,
Temperature (Max.) 82.5°F
Temperature:
(Min) 71L.5°F
Wind .Direction (9 a.m.)
E.N.E
(3 p.m.) E.N.E.
Wind Velocity: 11 miles per
hour.
Barometer (9 a.m.) 29.970
(3 p.m.) 29.878.
[==
eis cttrnrion ——«B Jimmy Hatlo
=
r
The Weather
TODAY: 1
Sun Rises: 6.15 a.m.
Sun Sets: 5.48 p.m
Moon (Last Quarter) Jan-
uary 1.
Lighting: 6.00 p.m
High Water: 7.13 a.m;
6.25 p.m.
YESTERDAY:
Rainfall (Codrington) Nil
a
= >
W
iS
| x
MAI
BARBADOS
vi
—————
| WHAT
Amher ill
t Office u
»nabiy
rte
"Wf
Reuter
la
and «New
ique
a fF
viv
1956
1 Refrigerate
tin
t this
ELECTROLUX
L NOTICE
Antigua
A SAV
e
York by ¢
» closed at t
ed Mail
st
h
ADVOCATE
t
m. TO-DAY
ING
»speciall
priced sé€cond hand
Refrigerator
working
NES ZNEA
ee
m. Owner
Why
at your
bought
not call
|
|
\
|
565966 OSSO0OS OVOP SSS
Love A
Pe" +
c e nd Enjo Yourse! to the
and Buia
Qld Year's Eve Dance
sponsored by
Mr. JOSEPH SMALL (Printer?
PARK
QUEEN'S HOUSE
SATURDAY NIGHT 30TH
DESEMBER. 195
SUBSCRIPTION
oid worries to
Supplied by
Lestie’s Orchestra
€ miss 4 lifetime
28.12.50-—2r
New
Dance awa
9 SSSC SSS S SOOO OO
necdet | 2SGS%*4-4-* ttt ALELOMNLE EO
SSS
QUEENSLAND WINS
ADELAIDE, Det 27
GQuee recorded their first;
t five game this seaso! j
I h eteated South Aus
by eight wickets today in
1 Sheffield Shield match Colin
Harvey 95 and K. Jack 86 gave
Quee a fine tart with i
pe t 181 but the sice?
| were all out for 298. Jeff Noble’
{took 7 wicket 70 runs i
| Scuth Australia could core |
} Orly 136 in reply and were forced
}to follow on They scored 239
lin their second innings leaving |
yueensland with 78 runs
; to win They quickly knocked up!
79 uns {fo the los of two
vickets
RAZOL
POMADE as your IIAIR dress-
ing. It straightens tne hair, and
ea AEA ELE LEGS FOG
POSSESSES
rids the scalp of dandruff. USE
RAZOL Pomade as directed, ana
distressing your pocket,
Distributors :
|
: get startling results, without
TO YOU
Â¥OUs
. AND YOU
A Very
Prosperous
THE BORNN BAY RUM CO.
BATAAN ATTAIN
\
\
ant
AND
New ‘Year
BARBADOS HARDWARE
LIMITED
Marine Hotel
New “Year 195]
Magnificent New Year's
Gve Dinner
in our newly Decorated Dining Room followed by
COSTUME PRIZES
TRADITIONAL
NEW YEAR'S
DANCE
Perey Green’s Orchestra
DOOR PRIZES
Rocket Firing at Midnight
Dinner & Dance $5.00 — Dance $2.00
Telephone 3513
Mr. Peterson for Reservation
©P.C.S. MAFFEI & Co,, Ltd.
and Friends a very
SSSI SOFT OPES
=
=
We wish all our Patrons
9 OLAS,
PALES
ILE CCM
SANG A ES
: STOCK-TAKING
&
2
DECEMBER 28, 1950
THURSDAY,
—————
For pretty Dresses
POPPE PPPIP DF
THE ANNUAL DANCE §
of
CENTRAL CRICKET CLUB
will take place on
SATURDAY, DECR. 30th,
at Y.M.P.C. at 9 p.m.
Music by Hoppy Jordan
and his Orchestra
Tickets obtainable from
any time
the new
Members and their Friends
; NAMRIT
A TOOTAL FABRIC
in Floral Designs
suitable for day or
soi sep
Dresses.
» 36†Wide
Per Yd.
WHITE NOVELTY
CREPE
Suitable for Smart
Frocks or Evening
S$) 66
Cave Shepherd & Co..
Per Yd.
10, 11, 12 & 13 Broad Street
NOTICE
We wish .tq inform our
Customers cand’ the gen-
eral public that our Parts
Dept. will be closed for
STOCK-TAKING
from 27th—30th Decem-
ber
inclusive, all other
Departments will be open
ee
as usual,
COURTESY
BERS 8 RE I NG WN A NG NI A NNN
s WE WISH
Customers and Friends
Our
A PROSPEROUS
NEW YEAR
T. HERBERT LTD.
PA GN IN GAIN PRIA DR PAIN DR PNT SRT PRION,
RGN DNDN NIN DR DETR TA DRA GR DARIN NN IAIN P
Robert Thom.
Ltd.
White’ Park Road
eee
GREETINGS
WE WISH OUR CUSTOMERS AND FRIENDS
my
i
&
&
é
&
&
&
:
‘
=
Al Prosperous New Yearé
&
° &
ALLEYNE ARTHUR & CO. LTD. S
BUCCCCSww wows wwwww wwe
ee
()
BEST
BAKED
BREAD
To all Our Friends and Customers
is the wish of
Wilkinson & Haynes Co., Ltd.
SHH HK SR EN,
NEN NE NE NE NEN NN NN NNN A NEN
& TO ALL OUR
FRIENDS AND
CUSTOMERS
That's Why
it
is enjoyed
|
by
Everybody.
WE WISH
A VERY HAPPY
New Year
C.B. RICE & CO.
OF
945 9 NE NG NG NN WN WB GE EN OR DE DN DK BRR GK RE
| PROSPEROUS 195]
| SN “Top Scorers in Tailoring†BOLTON LANE. ;
ioe lie leant ; SS
Sway SGEGEGGSOGOSGS9GOOGP OS EEG GEIEC EHS | SS UICC ON LS RI
~~
Friday
December
1950
Atom Bomb Would |
Split kast— West
Says Archbishop Of York
NEW YORK, Dec. 29.
D&. CYRIL GARBETT, Archbishop of York,
second ranking Anglican leader, said to-day
that the use of the atomic bomb in Korea “would
never be forgotten or forgiven and would resuit in
an irreparable breach between East and West.â€
He wrote in a pastoral letter: “Use of the atomic
bomb could only be justified as a final attempt to
save Western civilisation from catastrophic ruin
by unprovoked aggression.
Declaring it was urgent to se-
feure a good understandin with
Britain May S soon | China, Dr. Garbett weiter “The
| very thought of the possibility |
Name Duheesador jot war with this patient long
suffering people is hateful
TO SPAIN “The use of the atomic bomb
| Against their cities, would out-
LONDON, Dec, 28. |Tage the conscience of our} MOTOR CAR X-466, own
Britain has asked Spain 1 for it] PERCH
agreement to the appointment o: He called for another attempt
a new Ambassador to Madric | “at the earliest possible moment
usually well informed quarters jrj@nd at the highest levelâ€, to reach
London believed to- day agreement with Russia—without|
Asked today whether Spaiu’s| which there could be no peace in
agreement had been sought, the] the world.â€
Foreign Office spokesman re-| Referring to
Callendar Road, Christ Church
Motor Car
Burnt Out
Communism, he
plied: “It is not our custom tc] wrote, “in many European coun-} Motor car X-466, whicl
comment on such matters.†Hej tries, a widespread mood of des-/ being driven along Cal
added that the news of the ap-| pairing fatalism is destroying the| Road, Christ Chureh
pointment of a British Ambassa-]| will to resist, Wiggins, on Wednes
dor was likely within a few days. “Unless there is a definite con-| caught fire. The uph
The new Ambz Jor is © ,_.| Vietion that Marxian Communism} Wood-work were burnt out,
od tp he Sie emnirone expect! is so evil that it must be resisted} Cpl. Hurdle, ussisted by Henry
to be Sir vohn alour present) 4+ all costs, the atmosphere of} Goodman, owner f the car
British Ambassador to Argentina 7 : ; »| extinguished the blaze. U
pap ‘ wid do “cad ‘| helpless frustration will spread HTB Oe ,
Since December 1946, when Sir yesterday mornings he ca
Victor Mallet was withdrawn ii Unless Britons were prepared| still on the spot—parked at the
accordance with the United) to resist, there was the grim] side of the road. It was filled with
Nations resolution forbidding} probability that they might share] dirt and the seats h
member Governments to be repre-| the fate of Eastern Germany,| dragged out of the cat ‘
sented by a Spanish Ambassador] Poland and Czechoslovakia. | |the gutter. Two of th |
or Minister, the British Embassy} «phe Church must oppose| were wide open
in Madrid had been headel by a vigorously, this materialistic form be eticet 4
Charge d’Affaires.—Reuter. of Communism,†he wrote
> : ,
—Reuter. ¥. , , +
ones Fish Price Control
Police Dredge River
For Coronation
Likely In U.K.
LOND( NY, Dex
Britain's neat hortag¢
U.S. Tells Italy to Go
_ Ahead With Plans
= creating such. demiar
Storte WASHINGTON, Dec. 28. | that the Governm
LONDON, Dec. 28 The United States is reported! Sider the restoring of
Police were to dredge part of|t@ have told the Italian Govern- eae ry clas : tee
the River Crouch in Essex to-day| ment to “go ahead†immediately a7 $y oa red Thursda
in their hunt for the Coronation} with plans for manufacturing] 0) guy wae treed at pt aaah =
Btone stolen from Westminster] arms worth about $400,000,000,) (oc). jast April. Prices first rose
Abbey on Christmas Day | next year. sharply then ; ; time
j : An official said that the State] non meat wa plentiful
During the night police} Department had assured Italy Re ey tly hes E + ain
launches patrolled a stretch of] informally, that financial aid] anq in’ mar frort
the river banks following @]| would be forthcoming in the shi ena hb than the
mysterious phone call that a European rearmament programme ’ st i —~(CP
“heavy bundie’†ad been trans- P old, controlled rate ,
ferret trons to help them,
A Gubseanent fener maid’ the The’ “amount of dollar aid, it eee
ae ty oe ape 4. | Was emphasised, would depend on Bal TT? 7
ae ee been. Cuapeg mio | the Italians own production Britain W ill Scrap
Police suspect it was t effort,
eet ome ee eee The Italian plan called for the Old Rail Motors
—Reuter, | turning out of rifles, mortars,
machine guns, transport vehicles, LONDON, Dec. 28
| cargo lorries and large quantities Britons soon wiil say farewell
. ‘ of ammunition, it was reported. | t® the wheeled Methusel on
Brazil Communists —Reuter. | their railroads. These incl 1co-
motives dating back to and
passenger < vintage with
Plan Action Jan. 3 | E J shutoff compartments which 1 ust
' gypt Preparing wae fr ) ide rather
reported that Com-| For Next War Under the 1951
are planning further agi-| ing programme
RIO DE JANEIRO, Dec. 28.
It is reliably
munists
railroad build-
innounced on
tation throughout the country fol.! \ Wednesday night, most of these
lowing trouble which broke out| m CAIRO, Dec. 28 ,!museum pieces will be scrapped
last week when more than 1,000 Fearing that the Middle East jn their place will be dozens of
were arrested. will become one of the battlefields} diese) locomotives and inds
Brazilian Communist Leader|im a new world war, Egypt is) of ultramodern cars
Luiz Prestes said that strikes,!aking elaborate civil defencé But the old crocks wont be for-
political veet‘ngs, distribution of; Preparations. Sit pene preter mea expect
= © i 4; é c C quiries om regular
subversive pamphlets and posting Experience gained in the second ot nett hs c ee me an ats
propaganda bills were being plan-
» Barbados &
COMPLETELY
a
HURNT
‘Soceee-ceneennnnaninremnerenemneen ene
| Asia Urges
U.S. To Listen
| To Peiping
|
AKE
Tense
ited
iy, are
SUCCESS, N.Y., Dec. 28
Asian countries
Nations, it was reporte
pressing the Unite
tates to negotiate with Commun
China for settlement of all Fa
tern political problems. The
said to feel that such negot '
tion are the only possib|
ieans for a Solution to the Korea
ana ian J OOps \ r without a military knockout
in the
pe! Oo ie ove
Henry Goodman wre c@ipictety burnt out Wednesday night along
Ever since the Chinese Com
Will Return Home
a, the countries of Asia with
ten to
exception of the Philippines
urging the US. t
Communi
ve been
Peiping’
; : OTTAWA, Dec.28 emands that it
Most of Canada’s 345 man army advance party in Kore Withdraw its troops fron
will return home probably wy ithin a mo nth | Korea ;
A » se »Tit Tleet
The Canadian Press news agency says this confirn Withdraw the Seventh * Flee
Formosa
Its opposition to the
he Communist Chinese
the army no longer desires that 10.000 of its spec
should go to Korea,
seating of
regime
It clears the way for the foree to go to Europe nex} spring | jin the U.N
the agency added . | They believe these concession
* Part of the advance: party vould bring peace to Asia
Korea on administrative| est. temporarily This view we
i 9 ) » aso
infantry battalic lied in a 12 power resolutic
ONE DREAM [Poo
wt expected to be the o 1ey put before the U.N. assem }
r ’ Mi > fmnit committed there two weeks ago (CP)
rHAT CA} E i» The Canadian Army ee hi |
|
|
|
|
fe
© TRUE hig fled ge a nia Si
|
boasts of a 26 per cer
@ A Barbadian groom had increase over 1949 o » oe 1 Reds Denounce
i dream on December 23, *forward to continued y . eS
He dreamt that Elizabethan |j next year, The bulk of the i US. Foreign Polie.
was Winning the Governor's increase arose from the fort .
Cup in the Trinidad Races ftion of a special Korea force NEW YORK, Dee. 28
Suddenly just when Eliza- +The overall total includes son American Communists de
bethan appeared to have the | 20,000 men in the regular fort sunced the United States foreigt
ce in hand a big strong 110400 in the special force at oliey at three public — rallic
horse drew level and forged Fen by it 46.000 in the reserves } penin their Party Gonventior
ahead to pass the winning t 7 | here last night
post first, Elizabethan fin- An official review on Thursday; Benjamin Davis, a former Negré
ishing second. In his dream Psaid the present tota; is 15,5 ity Councilman and one of the
he could not recognise the higher than in 1949 and quot ommunists convicted of conspir
horse but he did remember } Defence Minister Glaxton ng to overthrow the Goyernment
that the dream jockey wore | hailing this growth a u | old a negro audience that Chinese
a red cap ; Blanding sign of the t i | and Ke is had handed America
Feverishly consulting his which the Army has g the “greatest political setback
Trinidad racebook the fol- nomesaf age since iar reorgan ver
lowing morning, he, ciscov- “bed as a peacetime po This, he said, gave. him, double
ered that the rider of Atomic | four years ago —Reuter & (C pede, because American imperial
Il would be wearing a red were suffering from “the very
cap. So with no delay and ne opie they hate and despise.â€
pinning his faith in his In Brooklyn, Simon Gerson, a
dream he got $2.00 sent to Gen. Motors Build | ~arty Leader in New York State
Trinidad and invested in the toes his listeners to “c¥rb our
forecast Atomic II—Eliza-
Car Of The Future’ The. coueenton will meet in
bethar To-day his dream
ame true, he is richer by DETROIT. D ai rivate teda) iets
$54.00 r if Lec 20 —Reu r.
s A lot of futuristic ideas about}
automobiles are t¢ iin al te ee
" ~~ + ew ¢€ x perime ital be ,
German Bishop alls oo Gest woos. "| British Warships
Drain child o ariey . sill (
‘ on... y a M. Vice President in charge i
Ik or Unity Talks tyling the car, is a low sleek! Visit U.S. marty i
oid ; os, ports unit with eping | | LN rf |
KS He. BERLIN, Dec _ 28 that gave ppearance | ne ott ~ oe poe
Bishop Itto Dibeliu: of Berlin, | many recent contents of the car >! hree sr 4 warships ar
leader of 37,000,000 German Pro- the future ke a five-day informal visit
testants said here to-night that h: Barl se eda he the United States naval oer
avoured get gether talks g base at t i
ny! prec ee! to er aaenns ait future, only in. the arti in ‘ : a et mo, Cuba
e mm MSts t ce 7 = mnt n t
ins nit ome of its design or mechanic ‘bs a soe +
nan unity features may appear Git , They are the cruiser Superb
: 8,000 tons) flying the flag of
Che Bishop said he would open standard automobile
|
{
i
}
|
Berlin oe | ice Admiral R, V
|
Sy mmonds
world war is to be used in settiMf| engine or carriage is taken off the} his private home in Magnesium and aium o Commander-ineChief of
ned for January 3 tL up protection against both old and] run. talks between Germany's two pre- | loys will be used in constructi he Wi ‘ Edie Waticn oad me
Security police however: were) new methods of warfare, Egyptian Their quest will be for souven- | Miers, Otto Grotewohi from East |ithe car named Le Sabre. | bl rehentne t I 1.600 tons)
suid to be taking necessary steps ; - ; . , rigates Bigbury Bay (1,600 tor
DE ee ten ae aga ear missions in the United States and) irs of their old faithfuls perhaps a}and Konrad Adenauer from We bo b PoWares with an experimet nd Sparrow (1,500 t }
to prevent Communist action. Britain are studying the latest] whistle or numb plate or even | Germany if it would help Germa engine with a 10 to { ni ey _—Reuter
—Reuter. methods of civil defence includi'iz|a steam lever,(CP) unity. pres pi ratio plus a su har :
protection against the atom bomb I \| make myself available | will have a dual! ystem|
In Pani A f d tment vl coketeall aloos to soe = permit “rele es of enriches) Dime-Bomb Killer
S A Civu Defence departm is EVA CHANGES V ne ge 2 s fuel at certain speed level "
Audience vii alc bein wahaen ritk h roval that unity which is so fervently Cy ; ) . :
aing created with the approve ; 18. engine ill develop more inj y
HAIFA. Dec. 28 of the Council of Ministers HER MIND desired by all of us, 300 horsepower with the super-| Appeals Senterce
f AA; ec, 26. ut une
A first night theatre audience oF BUENOS AIRES, Dec, 28. rhe emergence of Dibelius as a) Ars (cP) es! | QUEBEC. Dec. 28
listening to the Corsican-born Eva Peron changed her ad nd. GP can = eS! ea Bea ween | CKnoraux Roust, watchmaker
enact Sir, Bees See h twice in a week and decided aftet Bauer is tramniny d Teply to East ARTIE'’'S HEADLINE ‘under sentence. of death in con
th as a tear gas bomb was 320 Old People Lunc all to accept the contribution of 3] Gorman “peace†overtures de | nectior vith the time bomb
thrown among them . ° . iay’s pay wh d employed] auned to | peact ‘ tures eon a Umi ahs
av oe : . signec ring all Germany under } which blew up a inadian
} aay were made to leave the With Italian President person in Argent m domes- nae Demoe ratic†Gbvarainen iner 15 month ago killing 23
bea ROME, Dec. 28 tic to public d t©} Christian Democrats in Berlin people has appealed
F Before et pertosmanes Stee President Einaudi of Italy and}make to het cial foundation last} said today that Adenauer was giv- | His appeal which questions th
* ee: dd soit Tino Rossi his wife to-day gave a lunch to| Octobe 2 ling “minute attention†to a draft legalit of evidence admitted
wen re Te ee h the Nazis 320 old people in the sumptuous Last in-l of the reply is trial will be heard here
He collaborated with th banqueting hall of the Quirinale|tributions returned the —Reuter. February. Reust was convicted |
Later Rossi took the micro-| Palace. lisagreer ent of i ; t wer n oe c Alb pert Gua |
phone as the people walked back ‘ Chosen from the poorest in A eilowing oh ef 1 i ng ; he i ve h y Gest } at wh :
into the Armon theatre and said:| Rome, they afrrived in specu veneral Labour Confederatior ane - > be nC on . 1
“You know I have always been] buses, entered the _ presidential| other tate controlled Labour EARTHQUAKE IN Le nurdering his v Reuter |
with youâ€. They cheered palace by the main gate and | organisations - 1ecept re ane STi KITTS v |
He is to give a series of ‘per-| mounted the stairease of honour)ment on behalf of their alates ie a |
formances in Israel and then g°]/to be received by the Presidert! however he lecided to keey (Pre Our ou ag at * BOY KILLED BY TYRE
to France to make two films, and Signora Einaudi, | the money : : a ST. KITTS, Dec. 28, —o BUENOS AIRHS. Dev 28
—Reuter. —Reuter. —Reuter, here were severe earthquake od Bea RT has a8,
iit ——-—ee Hchocks from 2 P.M, yesterday to V4 ee | QO DOYS paayieng Wi . Ta }
. rg early morning to-day. No damage eee LOR ou Oe a garage in oronel |
: ; : ‘ T AS SHOPPIN * vas reported in St. Kitts but there “a i UAT IRL Bueno Aires provinces
4 4 ‘ tt } i ute ume
have been reports from Nevis that Cow fini Neieierao j | attache nm automatic “air pur
ome buildings have been dam eels a= | of tl fi ty t It ¢ 1od
aged “JTe's this unofficial crike ne ur grave
Inhabitants of Charlestown left at London Alyvpors.
their houses and slent in the oper — —Reute:
one of tores yesterday;
the City
TOURISTS from the “Gascogne†shopping at
CRITICISM F ORBIDDEN |
IN CZECH ARMY
|
|
PRAGUE, Dec. 29, being re-organised ‘ the neetin ov for failing i |
Communist party members in Soviet model the duties of a member of j
the Czechoslovak army _ have The regulation appeal to Cornmmunist party?’
been forbidden to criticise then jlefine the rel ve compete The regulations give ever
officers “in service mattersâ€, the of army officer an ) ti 1unist n the army. tl |
army newspaper Obrana Lidu branches in the army ght to go traight to Com
reported to-day They emphasise the rit munist party headquarters wit }
New regulations ssued to of officers ly ( en complaint about any other |
party branches in the army sa} ifstinct f ff f munist in the army re rd
th have no right to: emand tf t nk
Control or criticise the in the Obrano Lidu id the pre
activities of commanders his strength†to ensurt ine of the Czechosl
» Dd reports on scrvi eving out mr 1¢ ordé enant
fi tie and to strengther la
Criticise officers orders, or thereby creasing the ght de “
4 Give orders ‘concerning treneth of he arty t embarki
risdiction of commanders†But the t { developme
t the’ same time the an officer can be criticise egulatio
ré ilatior give Communist r violating the at ( ere ase
he army full freedom in puré statutes of the party, criticisir yerier pa |
4. matter the ¢ ‘ f ‘ { r r t 5 n the Soviet i
Czechoslovak army is party ngresse nference —Reuter
on Decen
Pri
FIVE CENTS
Year 55
le
te 38th Parallel
TOKYO, Dec. 28.
(,ENERAL MACARTHUR’S Intelligence Staff
estimated today that the Chinese could throw
150,000 men against the Eighth Army, covering
the South Korean capital of Seoul, between New
Year’s Day and January 10.
Limited attacks in lesser strength could be launched
“at any time’’, the Intelligence officers added. The
Chinese could reinforce this strength in the west
by between 100,000 and 150,000 troops released by
the United Nations evacuation of the northeast
coast.
American
Shooting Star yet
duelied with a greatly uperioi
force of M.I.G’s this mor
| the air force said, the pre
38,325 U.S. des
ruction of two Commun
. . jets and the damaging of a this
Casualties | was claimed
| American Intelligence ¢
WASHINGTON, Dee, 28, believe that part of the Cnhines¢
Announced United States | foreés in Korea is now sout
casualties in the Korea war | ‘he 38th parallel
rose to 38,325 by mid-night | Iw Chines army corps of
December 22, an increase of free divisions each have now
1,904 over the previous been identified massed along the
week. Of these 6.432 were 8th. parallel north of Seoul
deaths, | Intelligence report pul then
} withi 35) mile ot the South
The Defence Department Kore capital one north of
releasing the ligures to-day he Imijin River and the other :
said that they represented |} the Yongchon area
only the notifications sent to | I t eattered — actir
next of kin. —Reuter } occurred on. the central ar
| eastern ectors rf the United
= | Nation front yesterday ar
m 4 American Eighth Arm pokesman
French Evacuate |
Phe four week genera! full
* * prevailed eon the ground
Binhliew Outpost } Allied warplane eneeteaaly
ou ‘ ] + eed .
SAIG( IN, Indo-China. Dee, 28. | neces iy ee rad) ~haeaMel
‘rench Union fore have | sai : :
vacuated Binhlieu, one of thei : Se ei,
ast outposts near the Ci bo ey beeper tot ee sae
r, French army official oped exceleny†neu
unted. hare today their bombing raids on the
The post is 12 mile rth of the | Communist positior mmediately
French stronghold of Tienyen ehind the line central. and
he Tonking coast stern Korea
The railtown of Kumswa
Most of the Binhlieu garriso iles 1 theust of Seoul received
ficceeded in joining up with af the brunt of the attack The
elief column sent to help them upe i et no opposition
They said they had a “sharp and ithe: he r or from tt
unequal fight with Vietnamh round
guerillas The plane: flew 717 combat
French forees have also evacu orties on Wednesday The
ated Chauson defence post on the] United States’ Rar @ast Air Foree
northeast sector of the Tonking reported nearly 1,000 Communist
front troops casualties and 450 supply
—Reuter,
buildings and barracks destroyed
} or damaged
This mornir
48 U.N. PLANES SHOT | {°\, 0"
Russian type
Sibre
damaged
M.LG 15's ir
American
probably
Â¥ in encounter with a grou, {
DOWN REDS CLAIM them over Korea the Fifth Aj
ile F Force announced, No details ¢
LONDON, Dec 28 | the ngagement were vailable
The a Koreans claimed} A totn of 34 Russiar ! et
aay they shot dow tl wis sighted yesterday bs
United ition plane betwec
VNovembe 16 ave Jecember @ on page q
vo of them American 829 Bombe |
| ————-
|
ome y radio sid the Peoples|| TELL TRE ADVOCATE
Viosco oO Sait e People
arm had completely liberated†| THE NEWS
iber 24 an area in the
Hamhung region 6 miles
ihe Allied held
beachhead
Ring 3118 Day or Night,
THE ADYOCATE
PAYS FOR NEWS.
from an
Hungnam
—Keuter,
_,Where Man may not
‘> Venture Alone
Men
tains in
climb
the
moun-
company
of others and with ex-
perienced guides . . . linked together so that each
individual is protected by the skill, strength and
of the group.
experien
To protect the financial future of his loved ones,
the family man needs safeguards not unlike those
of the mountaineer. '
First
whe own Lite
he must join the thrifty, self-reliant people
Insurance.
Second — as a policynolder he will be linked with
thousands whose combined unity and strength
guarantee security for the dependents of one and all.
Third — the experienced guidance of a Life Insur-
ance representative will direct him along the best
THE MANUFACTURERS LIFE
INSURANCE COMPANY
HEAD OFFICE (Established 1887 TORONTO, CANADA
RTEVILLE « ALCULL
MONROE & Co Ltd ag 1
431 High Street, P. O Box 102